HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-01-09 - Orange Coast Pilot• omesm
Did Divoree
. . ...
Threat Trigger
fl/
~ass Slayings?
MONDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 9, 1978
VOi. 11, HO ' ) SECTIONS, 14 PAGES
I Mourning Mom I
r. . . -"
..
* * * Showers
·-
Again
.Predicted
.............
ANN NELSON AND HER AliORNEY, KARL WINKLER
Photo by Karen Engstrom Copyrighted by Chicago Tribune
Threat of Divorce
'Link' to Murders
ROCKFORD. l11 . <AP) -
Simon Peter Nelson reportedly
learned that his wife planned to
divorce him only hours before
hls six children were found
bludgeoned and stabbed to death
in their beds.
Nelson. 4&. was to be ar·
raigned today in the killings,
which Winnebago County
Coroner John Seward said oc· curred late Friday or early
Saturday.
Police said the children were
found in several rooms of the
Nelaon home oo a quiet, middle-
cJ au street. The bodies of
Roseann, 5, and her sister, Jen·
atfer, 12, were round ln their '*!room, beat.en and stabbed re-
peatedly.
Inc. last week to find Nelson
completely changed in his at·
Utude toward bis troubled 14·
year marriage.
"He said the whole thing start-
ed to come to a head over the
weekend before," said Weldon,
"and that Ann bad set down
rules. There were certain thlnes
he was doinf that bad to stop -
drinking, overwelsht and facial
hair."
Ann Nelson, 38, had gone to
her attorney about a divorce but
had been advised to get away
and think things over (or a cou-
ple of days, accordine to the
Rockford Morning Star.
With her husband's
knowlechze. the checked Into a
<See JaLLINGS, Pa'e A1)
By MICHAEL PASKEVJCH
OI tlle o.ltf Pllet s..tt
Sparkling weekend weather
gave way to new showers along
the .. Orange Coast today and
weather forecasters say more
rain is on the way tonight and
Tuesday.
Coast.al flooding remains a
possibility near west facing
beaches if high tides link with
waves whipped up by a new
storm pushing into lhe area
Crom the Gulf of Alaska.
Sall water made its way
across streets in Seal Beach and
Sunset Beach early today, but
authorities said the roadways
were still passable to drivers.
And high water from Newport
Bay overflowed onll> Balboa
Bouelvard this morning. forcing
the closure of one Jane near 44th
Street.
However, surf that pounded
the beaches of San Diego and
Malibu Sunday was not evident
along the Oranae Coast.
Forecuters are still
predictlni the posslbWty or
breakers as high as 10 feet late
today and Tuesday morning.
The latest storm front moved
into the area after dropping
substantial amounts of rain In
the northwest and in the San
Francisco Bay Area.
Forecasters are calling for
continued showers tonight and
(See RAIN, Page A%)
Cops Wound Six
JOHANNESBURG, South
Africa (AP) -Police opened
fire and wounded six persons
stoning them during funerals for
four black.I believed killed by
security forces in recent unrest.
newspapers said today. The
shootin1 occurred Sunday tn
black towmhipa around Port
Elizabeth.
ave • I
j
t
s-GivesWay
To More Rain
Aero~. the ·<At1mty.
r
Tax Upheld ~ I Sandbags 1
Couples' Appeal Fails
WASJilNGTON (AP) -The U.S. Supreme Court
ref used today to hear an appeal challenging the in-
come tax rates the federal government imposes on
• married persons filing joint returns.
The justices turned down without comment the
appeal of two Indiana married couples who con-tended
that the tax rates are unconstitutional because when
both hu s band and wife h ave sig nif •
icant income they must pay more taxes than single
persons with identical incomes.
In urging the court to reject the appeal, govern-
ment lawyers said disparities in tax liability are "in·
evitabJe."
"A marriage-neutral income tax is impossible,"
the Justice Departme nt said, adding that while the
government's method of taxing income is not
perfect, it is constitutional.
William and Wanda Barter and Ralph and
Paullne Blair of New Haven, Ind., s ued the govern-
ment over their taxes· for 1971, the first year the Tax
Reform Act of 1969 became effective.
'
Five-foot Waves
Slllfting Sea Saves
Malibu Residences
MALIBU CAP) Surf
pounded to the doorsteps or the
exclusive Malibu colony at high
tide toUay, but a shift in the seas
apparehUy averted damage lo
homes.
Waves up to five feet high
washed up to the aand~ags and
board barriers erected by
residents after six-Coot seas,
washed into some homes
Sunday, smashing fences and
sta1rways.
The tide was smaller today
than eq.ected, both in Malibu
and f\.trther north in OXDard,
authoriUes reported. uThiJJ ii like a Sunday picnic·
compared to yesterday." said
county flremu Tom Bater, who
was off duty but stayed behind
to heJp if needed.
Officials said about 50 county
Fire Department camp crews,
who helped residents place
SANDBAGS IN Sunday's seas,
remained behind but were not
needed.
Most of the affected properties
were oceanfront homes on
Malibu Canyon Road just north
of the colony which is heavily
populated b.Y entertainment.
celebrities.
The homes were situated on
blulfs or sWts and so were not
hit by the tide.
.Stave Off I
. ~
BigWaVes.'
•
By STEVE MITCHELL
Ol llW Dlill, Pllet S™f
High tides and heavy surf
brought troubles to several
areas of the Orange Coast Sun·
day and today, including a
stre tch of home s along
Capistrano Beach where waves
damaged a breakwater and
several windows in a beachtront
home.
About a dozen volunteers were
sandbagging homes along Beach
Road in Capistrano Beach th.is
morning, following Sunday's
high tides and surf which broke
several large windows in a home
owned by John Reynard, 36787
Beach Road. .
"We've got the windows in
front barricaded now," Reynard
said this morning. He said fami-
1 y m embe rs and neighbors
shored up the front or the home
after six and seven fool waves •
broke the two windows Sunday
mornLng.
"The last time it was this bad
was seven years ago," Reynard
said. "But we built a seawall
after that incident and the
damage is reaJly moderate this
lime in comparison.
"We've probably got problems
for a couple more days," he
said. Most of the damage Sun-
day was restricted to the south
<SeeTIDES, ~age AZ)
Coast
Weather
Their tour brothers, Matthew,
'7; Andrew, 9; Simon Peter Jr.
10; and David, 3, were stm1tarty
it.in, Hld police Capt. Richard
Anderson. The family's pet
dac:b1hund was round with ill
&.broat 1lasbed.
Elvis Shades DISCols
Aided by about 50 county
firefighters, lifeeuards and
volunteers, residents frantically
du& ditches and put up sandbags
to try to avoid more of the
damage suffered Sunday, when
several expensive homes were
flooded by waves that ume
crashing through windows.
Authorities said waves
. Cloudy throutb toolabt.
Chance of abowers In· creasing to 90 percent
t-0nlght and decreasing to
50 percent Tuesday. Lows
tonight 50 to 56. Highs
Tuesday 80 lo 66.
lnve1U1atora Hid the chtldren
had been killed, apparenUy as
they alept, wllh a rubber mallet
• ud • bunUna knlte. Mlcbael Weldon, NelJon'•
employer and friend, aald ht~
turned from a vacation to the of.
tlce of Mana8ernent R cnilt.era
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -Rock mustc 1ymboU1td by
sldebuma anct .. atety pin• met lo ·
Memphlt when El~I Preal,y
Can• catJMred to obMrve hl•
birthday Ule same weekend tho
Sex Ptltols lbtrOchacild tbe clty to
punk rockl .
Sabotage Blamed ·. su~::.ri=·~ ~~C:
SACRAKl:NTO (AP) -dead k:tDI of rock 'ft' r0U dNw labot,qe 11 belDI blamed by·· more ot a crowd Ulan th• UvinC,
adftc T~• otnctall tor · breathlnl Bti~ rocken. now
Hblt cuttlDI lh•t tdled a 100 on a U.S. t.oUr.
!lelepho••• in Dortbealt Securttt·· offlchlt at ttalMnto. Gracellnd, tM manaloo where
~ I
Pt'ealey llved, died and ls .
burled, said 9,600 fans showed
up du.rtn• the weekend to com·
memorate what would bave
bHn Etvl1' 43rd birthday.
Praley died Aua. 11 of a bean
ailmenL ·
Tbe sex PiltOli -wboM fans
1ometlmt1 adorn themHIH•
with 111«7 ptnt 1tUck t.btw"1 •
thelr .. n or cheeb -drew an
audtctMe of ao and bed a toua1l
time boldla1 on to Uaat. llan7lD
the aUdleaee walked out miiultM attn tb• lbow be1u 1'rid.a.t
DJibt.
reached six feet in 'this beach
.community and nine feet in
Ventura on Sunday.
FoJ"ec:~n blamed A severe
storm in tbe Gulf ot Alaska tor
(See MAUBU, Pa1e AZ)
Claims ConOict
BANGKOK. Thailand (AP)-
Cam bodia claims ita f9rcu have
re&a!Deid control ot the Parrot'•
Boak aallent oo the Vletnameae
border, bat Vietnam derued th8
clalm aDd accused CambiOdla ol
attacks at widely separated
point.I in th• Vletnamesa tide ol
tho border. .
INSl.DE TODAY
Ar•o ~-II that bu1in••• Junch11 .ore .a
thre.-t?JCllrliN routil'le. T~
. are . o legttlmat• pare of th1 buff""' acm., tlteJI IOJI, Set Featurtno, P.o(ll CJ.
••••• • • I ,
: . 12 DAILY PILOT S
l·2 Puneh
Mond1t January t 1978
Troops Fight
North's Storm
Uy The Associated Presa
Galc·\\h1ppcd seas threatened
a 12-mih.' lt>11gth of Northern
California bt•achfronl property
today as anolh<•r l'ac1f1c storm
unlcashL'<i ht•avy rains
throughout lhe already-soaked
region
Recluse Hid
32 Years
BELCRAUE ,
YugosliJvia (A f>J A nTan
who hid for half his ltfo
fearlni punl1'hment for
pro-Nazi w.1rt1ml' iJCl1v1ty
says he used to try when
he heard happy voltl'S out-
side, and dan:d not show
himst•lf even at his
mother's funeral
J an(•t. Rus "a.., a 32·
year-old shoemaker when
he went into h1dm~ at his
sister 's farmhouse in June
1945, he told th1· Ht>l,c:r;.1dt•
ncwspapt•r 1'ollt1ku
Now 6-1. Hus was d1'\
covered last week aftt•r
his sister bought a !urge
suoply of bread 10 th<.'
nearby village of Zain a. 1r1
the northwestern Sl1JV(•n1u
region. and a SUSPICIOUS
resident Jlerted poltct•
Potrer Li11e
Work Reszlnied
LOWRY. l\ltnn. CAP I -About
150 stall' troopers began
patrolling a frigid, wind swept
portion of west central ~finnesota today. but lhere was
no sign of prot<;...,t1ng farmers as
e11n-.tru1'11<111 cn•w... rN.umed
\~Ork 011 ,, 1·ontrov(•rs1al ,
high volt<1J.lt· power llnt·.
The tcmpcruture was nearly
20 degrees below zero and
norlhwt·..,tt·rlv wind'> of 15 miles
per hour drciµp<.'d lhl' wind chill
fac·tor to uround 50 degrees
below zero
"I pl;in to JUsl enforce the
law." sau.I LL Col Gerald
Killridge, assistant State Patrol
r hief. from nearby Glenwood.
Wl· hav~· to havt• law and the
r·nurt ha.... ordered the
••h,truttion of lht• power lmc to top ..
Gay Applies
For Cop Job
SEAT'fLE CAP) -A 26-year-
old man who acknowledges he is
.1 homosexual is among the top
JO eundidutes on the list of those
l..'ligiblc lo become a King Coun-
ty police om cer.
On Lhc basis of written tests,*
\1 arc Calija r anked ,higher than
ahout 700 other candidates for 22
police positions which are open.
Lawrence Waldt, director of
the county Public Safety Depart-
ment. says the hiring or a
homosexual is a "legal issue"
which he has asked the county
prosecutor's office lo examine.
Bomb Stand Hit
MOSCOW (AP) -Pravda
claimed Sunday that President
Carter's position on the neutron
born b contradicts his ad-
ministration's espoused Interest
in furthering detcnte and arms
limitation. The commentary ap-
parently was aimed at Carter's
statement In Warsaw, Poland,
that the neutron bomb would
have less effect on the East-
West arms balance than the new
Soviet SS.20 mobile missile.
OAANOE COAST "
DAILY PILOT
•
A bout 100 soldiers from Fort
Ord were ordered Into Santa
Cruz County with sandbags to
help protect the beachfront
against a second day of funous
tide:.. (Related photo, AS>
The front covered most of the
western Uruled States and was
the second in a 1·2 combination o~ storms The first hit last
feek, drcnchm~ Cali fornia and
t covering the S1crrn with ~now
The current storm moved in
early Sunday. bringing rain
from the coastlrne into the hieh
mountains.
San Rafael was thumped \>Y
more than an inch of rain during
u 2t-hour pert~ ending early
today: Most other j)Oint.s
ree<."lved between a third to a
full inch or ramfall, the National
WeatherServicesaid.
Small boats were warned to
stav out of the stormy Pacific
sea·s. where 35-knot gales were
expected throughout the day.
County officials said the Army
agreed to send the m en after the
federal Disaster Assistance
Administration refused a
rl'quest to have a 12-mile stretch
nf beach near the community or
Las Olas declared a disaster
area.
Sunday evening the county
Board of Supervisors declared a
state of emergency· ·~beyond
which local government can
cope." Earlier In the day, the
high tides and rough seas
damaged beachfront property
and rooted CapitoJa Pier from
its pilings.
County Administrator Bob
Nyman said local officials also
would appeal for aid from state
agencies in Sacramento today.
Accompanying the forecast of
more hr gh tides were predictions
or heavy rain from a strong low
pressure system centered a~ut
1,500 miles northwest or San
Francisco.
The storm brought heavy
snow. ram and gales along the
Alaska and British Columbia
coasts and moderate rain from
Washington to extreme
Northern California on Sunday.
The National Weather Service
reported a gale warning was
posted and extremeJy hazardous
seas we re In store for the
Northern California coast, with 12
to20-footswells likely.
A hlgh pressure area
extending from Southern
California to Utah was expected
to move eastward , permitting
the spread or rain over most or
California today with heavy
snow in the Sierra.
* * * Frona Page A 1
TIDES ...
end of Beach Road, near Poche
Beach.
Reynard said the seven-year·
old rock breakwater is protect-
ing about five Beach Road
houses, but added that Sunday's
high tides and surf damaaed a
wooden seawall adjacent to his
home.
He estimated damage to his
home at about $1,000. •
Further south, San Clemente
lifeguards were n ght on top of
the high tide situation, with
lifeguard Sheridan Byerly re-
porting s urf eating away al the
lifeguard tower.
"It's not ~oin~ to do any
damage," he said today, "but
it's taking sand away from un·
derneath me right now.''
He said a potted palm tree in
front of the lifeguard station.
"isn't going to make it through
the morning."
Newport Beach Lifeauard
Capt. Logan Lockabey said his
beaches are experiencln1 no tide
or surf problems today.
* * * Frm11PageAJ
MALIBU ••.
turning usually calm swella into
dangerous breakers. They aaJd
as long as the low pressure area
exists off Alaska, homeowners
will need to worry about each .
new high tide.
One of the moat aeverel.y
damaaed residences tn tba
Mallbu Colony was a rental unit
occupied by Selena Lee, a writer
who awoke SUnday to an
unpleasant surprise. M1. Lee,
who moved in JUlt a week qo,
stepPfll out ot bed and into water.
* * '*
. l'NmPllflfJAJ
RAIN •••
Tucsd11 end Pot•lbl.Y
WedDesd'f. st••• are ~ to nmas.n cloudy wttla hfo·:1empera&QiW
near eo 4UNel and ove~t
IO'Wt near so.. -."" • •
Small craft ailVlJOrtH were
l11uld toda;.
Today'• btab ddt, up to M¥tn
feet, ocCunta at t a.m. The tkte
wlll be "-arty as hl&h Tu:eedaY
momln1 at about 1:30. I
. .
,,,.1,..,.... ••
PRESL"EY FANS REACT TO SIGHT OF GRAVE
Devotees Brave Freezing Temperatures
'Pop Science'
Pepsi Testing
Drl!UM Protest
SAN FRANCISCO {AP) -The
P epsi Challenge -a TV com-
mercial in whjch Coca-Cola fans rick Pepsi after tasting two un-
a be led cups -is being
challenged as unscientific by a
California researcher.
"This Is pop science, not real
science," said Harvey
Wichman, Claremont Men's
College psychology professor. at
the annua l meeting o ( the
California State Psychological
Association.
His experiment on 42 people,
run with what he called the prop-
er controls, c;howed just as
many P e ps i drinkers picked
,Coke as Coke drinkers picked
Pepsi. Wlchman himself prefers
Pepsi.
One fl aw in the two-year old
advertising campaign, he says,
is that no Pepsi drinkers are
asked lo say which or the com-
peting colas they prefe r .
Another is that the drinkers nib-
ble a cracker after the first sip,
distorting the taste or the second
sip, he said.
Confronted with the challenge,
Pepsi-Cola Co. public relations
vit·e president Joe·Block said the
tests were done by Independent
marketing research firms.
Of 3.000 tests, 44.2 percent of
Coke drinkers chose Pepsi and
37 .3 percent of Pepsi drinkers
chose Coke when presented with
both options, Bloek said.
"Besides," he said, "we just
know Pepsi tastes better.'•
Long Beach
Man's Body
Recovered
The fully.clothed body of a
20-year-old Long Beach man
was recovered Sunday after be·
ing •i&ht.ed floating about five
miles off the entrance to
Newport Harbor, Orange County
sheriff's officials said today.
The victim, who authorities
estimated had been in the water
for about one week, has been
identified as Ernie Rettlneer.
A shertfrs spokesman saJd It
will take an autopsy to de-
termine 1f foul play was involved
In the man's death.
A Coast Guard crew recovered
the body after it wu sighted at
about 1 p.m. Sunday.
Flynt Seeks
JFKKil"ler
E'roa Page A 1
PRESLEY ...
one of his beds were on display.
T he convention center exhibi-
tion. brought to Memphis by pro-
moter Ed Say of Columbui.,
Ohio. offered fans copies of a
home movie of the Presley
funeral for $33, and candid
photoeraphs of Presley concerts
in several cities. Admission was
$2.50.
A number of complaints about
the quality and nature of the e>c·
hiblta were reported, and Dick
Grob, chlef or security at the
Presley mansion, said he was
sorry that "the people feel
they're gelling ripped off."
"Everything El vis did was
firs t -class." Grob said. "I've
seen him stop in the middk or a
song that wasn't right, apologize
lo the audience iind start 1t
again. What's beine done m bis
name isn't first class. I don't
even think it's fourth-class."
More than 1,000 flor 11l ar·
rangements -includina a
wreath of red and white cama·
lions from Colonel Tom Parker,
the architect of Presley's career
-were sent to the mansion
Snowfall
To Cover
Country
By The Assoelated P~ss
Harsh weather today brought
snow to the East. as Midwest
and Mid-Atlantic states were un-
der as much as a foot of snow.
High winds whipped through
much of the Nort.hea11t -top-
pline.treesand power lines.
Poor weather stretched aa far
aouth as Florida , where
tornados were blamed for at
least two deaths and nine in·
juries.
One apparent victim or the
windstorm was a brid&ekeeper
blwon into the Manatee River at
Bradenton, Fla. Search partlea
were still scourinft the area today.
Sno w stretc~d Crom West
Virginia thrOUJ?b.,_sections or New
York atato; from Nionttota
south to North Carolina.
Travel adviM>riu wer'e poec.eca
In many areu; 1om1 road• wtre
Jmpa11ablo.
T emperatures in Mlnnesot1
fell to SO below with the wind
chlll factor.
Greater Clnclnnatl Airport. rt•
ceived tf\ree inches of anow and
closed for a 1hort Ume 8und1Y·
nlaht after a taxUnt Jet 1Ud olt
the runway and bedme atuck.
Nearly 1lx lnch11 of anow ftU •
on Cleveland's Hopkins Jntema.
tional Airport, and two planes
were s tuc k on different
runways. The airport remained
open , but those two runways
were clooed for a time.
Frma Page Al
KILLINGS. •
Milwaukee motel Thursday
morning. But the next day, she
called the lawyer and told him
to proceed with the divorce, the
Star r eported.
Weldon said Nelson left the of· fi ce abruptly Friday.
Nelson later arrived at the
motel, and around 6 a.m . a desk
clerk telephoned police saying
there was trouble in Mrs.
Nels on 's ,.oom.
Police said they found Nelson
b eati ng his wife In th e
bathroom, and they arrested him.
On Mrs. Nelson's advice.
Milwaukee police called
authorities in Rockford 11nd tpld
them to break into the ·Nelson
home, where they found. the
children's bodies.
..
u,.
CANCEROUS TUMOR
Juattce WUlfam Brennan
High Court's
Senior.Judge
'Has. Cancer'
W ASHiNGTON <AP) -U.S.
Supreme Court Ju.st.lee WUUarn J. BffMln Jr., the HnJor
member ol the nation'• hiaheat court, haa a cancerous tumor on a vbc.111 cord, a coun 1pok11man
sald'today, ,
Br.unan, 71, w., not on the
btneh whtn tbe court met today after a four-week recess.
Barrett McGum, the court's
spokesman, said Brennan is not
expected to participate in those
cases the court will hear or
consider for the next 10 daya:
'•A biopsy of a Dec. l•
laryneoscopy revealed a small
squamous cell carcinoma -a
malignant tumor -of the left
vocal cord," McGum said in a
written statement. "Cobalt
radiation treatment beagn Dec.
22 and is contlnuJng."
McOum said that Brennan has
not been hospitalized but is
travellng from his Washington
home to a nearby hospital for
treatment.
• McGum quoted Brennan's
doctors as saying the justice ls
doing well and "that full
recovery with cure Is expected.•'
Brennan and Justice Thuraood
Marshall compose the court's II beral bloc.
Brennan has been a member
of the court since 1957. He •
served as a New Jersey
Supreme Court Justice before
being nominated to his pre$ent
post by President Eisenhower.
Here are the facts. Savers who have certlrlcate
accounts at Mutual savings can barrow up to 90% of
their savings account balance without Incurring
the usual substantial Interest penalty required by
federal regulations tor early wlttldrawal.
EXAMPLE: You have a certificate with us earning
at the annual r ate of 7~% cs 1.000 minimum.
6 year term>. A need arises-vacation.
e new car. emcrqcncy. what-
ever -for you to have some
cash. You c1n bOrrow up
to 90% from u > ut only 8~%
Annual Percentage Rate.
white the account continues to
C>arn at 7~0., A d1rfcrcncc
of only l o . ~lmltdr urrange-
ment'> can be made on any
n f our tcr m sav1n<Js certificates
·1 n<' acJvantaqc b obvious.
oan You can afford to put your
s;wf ngs in a certificate
tnat pays conslderably higher
Interest than a passbOok
account without having to
concern yourself abOut
•
h . ~ s.
or ks.
• •
U get If.
the required penalty should
you need funds from the
rJCCOunt before It matures.
Naturally. Mutual Savings
accounts are Insured to
S40.000 by an agency or t11e
f cderal government.
Compare where you presently
save. All savings Institutions
are not the same. You w111 find It easy to open an
account at Mutual Savings since we can arrange to
transfer your funds from wherever tney are now
located. Call or visit any or our 16 soutnern ca11tomra
offices tor further dctalls.
MUTUAL
SAVINGS --•uoc....,.
AN t!OUAL HOUSING Lt!NOl'.ft
N4 •OUA&. ~ftTUNITY IMl"LOVE,.
CIPI~ Oemtrite-i
570Clmlno~ e.sttenat,.9J•!eSI Corene~"'"' 2807 East CO&~ HIQt'IWay/8'75-5010
flountaln V.tttY-c 17000 Mc1()n011a Stre.tl~l 98
Do.mown S.nta Ana: G~I Nortn M11tnl54'N~7,.1
'Orlen .... ~m IOAMto~I..,.
I , '
•
Orange Coast
EDITION
VOL. 71, NO. 9, 3 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY 9, 1978 C TEN CENTS
Co~tal Floods
Bitter Cold, Snow,
Winds Slain East
By The Associated Press
Snow 5qualls In the Great
Lakes. sub-freez.lng weather in
the South and coastal Ooods with
plum meting temperatures and
hurricane.force winds in the
Northeast -not a nice day in
the nation's eastern half today.
Hurricane·force winds swept
across Cape Cod at Chatham,
hurricane tide gates were <llosed
a cross harbor channels to shut
out the battering surf at New
B edford, Mass., Providence,
H I . and Stamford, Conn.
Also in Connecticut. two Am·
trak trains were delayed for
hours by a stuck drawbridge and
a third was baited by windblown
debris on the tracks. Waterbury
police said the wind triggered
burglar aJarms, and in Hartford,
firemen said the wind and rain
apparently set off the city's air
raid alarms, awa)$ening resi·
dents around midnight.
Heavy rains in Massachusetts
took atleastone lire.
Tax Upheld
Couples' Appeal Fails
WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S. Supreme Court
refused today to hear an appeal challenging the in·
come tax rates the federal government imposes on
married persons filing joint returns.
The justices turned down without comment the
appeal of two Indiana married couples who con-tended
that the tax rates are unconsliJJJtional because when
both hu sba nd and wife hav e s ignif·
icant income they must pay more taxes than single
persons with 1ctc•nt1cal incomt·-.
In urging th<' court to r<.•1cct the appeal. govcrn-
m<'nl la\\)'t'I'::-. !-1..tld d1spantic!-. in tax lia.b1l1ty arc .. m.
t•\·itable ··
"A marnagc-ncutral income tax is impossible.··
the Justice Ut.'partmcnt said, adding that while the
go\'ernmcnt's method of taxing income is not
perfect. it 1s constitutional.
William and Wanda Barter and Ralph and
Pauline Blair of New H aven. Ind., sued the govern·
ment over their taxes for 1971, the first year the Tax
R eform Act of 1969 became effective.
Military Bases .
Deadly Chemicals
To Leave County
By GARV GRANVILLE
Ol IN Di lly P'tl<>I Sl1tl
1 Deadly World War I vintage
war gasses stored at two Orange
County military bases will be
11hipped to Denver later this
month in a trial program aimed
ultimately at the chemicals'
"environmentally safe" destruc·
tion.
A spokesman at the U.S.
Naval Weapons Station in Seal
Beach said the shipment date
for 94 chemical warfare test kits
kept there has tentatively been
set for Jan. 25
No firm date has been set for
the shipment of six similar kits
stored at El Toro Marine Corps
Atr Station. according to Capt.
John Shotwell.
He said the chemical warfare
agents were declared obsolete in
1970.
"We've been wailing for in·
strucliotlS on bow to dispose oC
them ever since," Shotwell said.
Included amon1 the chemicals
ln the kits is Phossene, a World
Coast
Weather
· Cloudy throuib tonight.
Chane• ol uoweu Jn·
creasing to 90 percent
tonight and decreuing to
SO ~rcent Tuesday. Lows
ton\1bt 50 to se. Hi&h• Tuesday 80 lo M.
pmaETODAY
ANO 11111a.rwmn denr that '••f•••• luftch••.ore .a tlt.tu·marltili ~. TJww . ar• o ~ pm o/ _,..
bwmlc*' ~. tlwJ/ ICIW· S.. FfatllrinQ, P.-. Ct. .
••••• Q
~ ... M •w M a M ...
War 1 gas that Shotwell said was
responsible for 80 percent of the
gas·caused fata1JlJes during the
Great War.
Also included in the shipments
to be made from the two bases
is Cyanogen Chloride. Lewisite
and those chemical agents that
make-up what was known in
World War I as mustard gas. <See KITS, Pa&e AZ>
Divorce Plan
Triggered Six
Kids' Slayings?
ROCKFORD, Ill. CA P ) -
Simon Peter Nelson reportedly
learned that hJs wife planned to
divorce bim only hours berore
his alx children were found
blud1ecioed and atebt>ed to death
in their beds.
Nelson, 46, his burly frame
clad in a blue.gray jail
jum pa ult, appeared before
Judge David Smith of Circuit
Court today to bear the charges
placed against him and to re-
ceive a court-appointed al·
torney.
Nelson stood lelharatcally, his
hands clasped behind his back,
as be listened to court proc~·
ln11. He entered no plea, b\lt
Judee Smith set Jan. 13 for
another hearlns.
Wlnnebaao County Coroner
John Seward aald the alaytnp
occurred late Friday or early
Saturday •.
Police aald the children were
found ln aeveral roorna of the
MebOa ~ c:m a quiet, mlddle--
c laaa street. The bodlea of
ROIHM, 5. -ber •liter, Jen. mfer t t2. We1'9 fou8d ln their
bidroom, ibeat.eD Ud Nb~ re·
peattdlY.
TbeltJCIOr brGtben~ Matthew,.
7: AnclieW, t: 11,.on •Peter Jr.
. 10; an4 David, I; W-. t1mu..-1y ·
1Jalli, Mk1 ~ Capt. RlcbUd
Anderton. Tb• famll1'• ~J t
d•OllibciDd WU found wiU. ti u.t.at tla1bed. 1av91\A1akft:a.w U.. CbUdrtn
bad ... ~.,,......_U, U ·
they ............ nabber·mauet .......... ~
( ... llLUNOI, PapAJ)
The Great Lakes east to New
York stat& area bore the brunt
or the snow -seven inches fell
in parts of Ohio -and the Na·
tional Weather. Service said snow squalls that reduced vis·
ibility to zero at some lakeshore
points would contmue throl.l&ll
the night.
As much as seven Inches of
s now had fallen in Southwest
Virginia by mid-mo.-Nng.
1''rom the mid·Atlanllc states
<See BITTER, Page A2)
U.S. Tests
Cruise
lWissile
WA SHINGTON (AP) -The
new Tomahawk cruise missile is
being tested to find out whether
It would be vulnerable lo de-
fens i ve missile systems, the
Pentagon said today.
OUiciaJs said the first lest was
held Saturday at Nellis Ai r
Force Base, Ne-.. . and was a
~uccess. Hut they declined to
describe the basis for their JUdg·
ment. The announcement gave
few details. C..ll'J Ptle4 ...... 111J •le .. ~ ICMll!w
During the test. the cruise
m1ss1le was fired from a Navy
plane. Radar described as part
o{ "a representative air defense
system" then tried to detect and
track the missile.
WAVE CATCHES PAIR CHECKING SEAWALL THIS MOANING IN CAPISTRANO BEACH
Hlgh Tides CauHd Window Breakage; Aealdenta Sandbagged Agalnat Surging Sea
There was no attempt lo knock
down the crui&e mJnlle with a
defensive w P.apon, the Pentagon
aald. Such an attempt wilb live
defensive missiles is expected
later.
Some critics have challenged
the cruise missil e concept, con-
tending it could be neutralized
by sophisticated Soviet air de-
fenses 1n the 1980s and be\'ond.
The cruise missile is a :.mall
p1lotle~s jet bomber. about 14
feet long and very narrow. It is
designed to hug the contours of
the earth while flying toward its
target after being launched from
U.S. bombers, s ubmarines or
surface ships outside Soviet ter··
ritory.
Its backers say the cruise mis·
sile's small radar profile, plus
its low aJlitude flight, would ena·
ble it to penetrate air defenses, especially if launched in clouds
of possibly several hundred
weapons. all heading for targets
inside the Soviet Union.
Nixon's Birthday
Plans Undisclosed
"Happy Birthday, President
NLxon" the billboard read today
at the San Clemente Inn on the
occasion of the former presi·
dent's 65th birthday.
A ramily spokesman could not
be reached today In regard to
the Nixon family's birthday
plans. In former years, family
members and close friends have
1athered for a quiet birthday
celebration at the Nixons'
secluded seaside estate in San
Clemepte.
By Sl'EVE MITCHELL
OI U. DMlf ...... Matt
High tides and heavy surf
brought troubles to several
areas of the Orange Coast Sun·
day and today, including a
* * * More Floods?
s tretch of homes aloni
Capistrano Beach where waves
damaged a breakwater and
several windows in a beachfront
home.
About a dozen volunteers were
* * *
Weekend's Sunshine
Gives Way to Rain
By MICHAEL PAS.KEVICH
Ol l .. o.11, P'li.t tu"
Sparkling weeke"1 weather
gave way to new shOwers along
the Orange Coast today and
weather forecasters say more
rain is on the way tonight and
Tuesday
Coastal Oooding r emains a
possibility near west facing
beaches if high tides link with
waves whipped up by a new
storm pushing into the area
from the Gulf of Alaska.
Salt water made its way
across streets in Seal Beach and
Sunset &?ach early toda)'., but
authorities said the roadways
were still passable to drivers.
And high water from Newport
Bay overflowed onto Balboa
Bouelvard this momlne. forcing
the closure of one lane near 44th
Street.
However, surf that pounded
the beaches of San Diego and
Malibu Stmday was not evident
along the Orange Coast.
Forecasters are still
predicting the p()sslbillty of
breakers as high as 10 feet late
today and Tuesday morning.
TJie latest storm front moved
into .the area after dropping
substantial amounts of rain in
the northwest and in the San
Francisco Bay Area.
Forecasters are calling for
continued showers tonight and
Tuesday and possibly
Wednesday.
Skies att expected lo remain
cloudy with high temperatures
near 60 degrees and overnight
lows near 50.
Sm all craft -advisories were
issued today.
Today's high tide, up to seven
feet, e>«urred at 9 a. m . The tide wm be nearly as hlgb Tuesday
morning at about 9:30.
Elvis · Shades Pistols
Fans Honor Presley Birth, Sldp Punk Rock
MEJrf Pms, Tenn. (AP) -
Rock mualc 11mb0Uied by
aldeltums and aatety pins met In
Memphis when Elvia Presley·
fao1 1athered to obaerve his
birthday the Hme weekend the
Sex Plst.oll lntroduced the city to
punk rock .
Some complained about con·
sumer ripoffs, but In the end the
dead ld.nt of roek 'o' roll drew
more of a crowd than th• IMn,,
breathlnc BritiJb rockers, now on a U.S. tour.
Security offlchll at
Graceland, the inANIOQ wbere
l'rHle1 lived, ~led and ia.
burled, 1atd t,800 lana POWed up diartnl the week.Md to cam·
memorate what would bave bHa BlYil' Ord blrtHaJ.
Pnt1q a.cl ~. ,11 Of • bean •
I •
.
san4baging homes aloot Beach
Road in Capistrano Beach this
mornin1, following Sunday's
high tides and surf which broke
severel large windows ln a home
owned by John Reynard, 36787
Beach Road.
"We've got the windows fn
front banicaded now." Reynard
said this morning. He said fami·
ly members and neighbors
shored up the front of the home
after six and seven foot waves
broke the two windows Suhday
morning.
"The last tim'! it was this bad
·was seven years ago," Reynard
·said. "But we built a seawall
.after that incident and the
damage is really moderate thi5
time ln comparison.
"We've probably got problems
for a couple more days," he
said. Most oC the damage Sun·
day was restricted to the south •
end or &?ach Road, near Poche
Beach.
Reynard said the seven·vear·
•old rock breakwater as protect-
int about live Beach Road
houses. but added that Sunday's
high Udes and surf damaaed a
wooden seawall adjacent to his
home. <SeeTIDES, Pa1eA2)
Murder Eyed; ·
Body Found
Off Newport
An autopsy was 1cheduJ~ to-
day on the body ot a North Long
Beach man found floatln1 about
four miles off Newport Beach
Sunday afternooo.
Police. who say tliey do not
know bow Emle Gene llettlnaer,
20, died, ll1 they have tent9dft.
ly U.ted his de•th ... homklcle.
CapL Richard Bamlltoo ~the
Newport Beacb PoUce Depart-
ment eald the a~psy wu or-
dered to aid ln\'«ttlCAtorl fa ptn.
nln& down the cause of death.
He noted that Relt1D1er was
found wtt.b an lndeo.tat.ion above
the naht eye and that the enUre
riCht eye area was bndaed.
The body was spotted from a
commerclal fi1hlnc bOa.t, lhe An·
na Marta.
The crew of a Cout Guard cutter recovered ttw. body at
about a p.m. and broucbt tt to
th• OraD•• County Harbor
Dtptrtm•t Madquart•n 1D
Newport ....
Aa •1,....atlc1" ot UM bodr lw
• lDv..Uptor troni the ....
oatt•1 oftl09 tndlctltH R~ • J\~d be.a ill t.be waltf f~ :~
&o 10 44". ~ce sald. ,.
\,IZ DAILY PILOT c
P....,PageAJ
KILLINGS .. •
Michael Weldon, Nelson'•
employer and friend, said he re-
turned from a vacaUon to tbe of.
fice of Manaaement .RecruJcen
Inc. last week to find Nelaon
completely changed in bia at-.
titude toward hie troubled 14-·
year marriage.
''He said the whole thina start-
ed to come to a head over the
weekend before," said Weldon.
··and that Ann had set down
rules. There were certain thfnp
he was doing that had to atop -
drlnking, overweight and facJal
hair."
Ann Nelson, 38. bad gone to
her attorney about a divorce but'
had been advised to get aw~
and thlnk things over for a COU·
pie of days, according to tbe
Rockford Morning Star.
With her husband's
knowledge, she checked into a
Milwaukee motel Thursday
morning. But tbe next day, she
called the lawyer and told him
to proceed wjth the dJvorce, the
Star reported.
Weldon said Nelson left the of-
fi ce abruptly Friday.
Nelson later arrived at c.ne
motel, and around 6 a.m. a desk
<·lerk telephoned 1><>llce saying
t here was trouble in Mrs.
Nelson's room. ·
Police said they found Nelson
b e ating his wife in the
t)atbroom, and they arrested
him.
U ..,......_ c.rrtlllltd W Clllc..-Tft._.
ANN NELSON AND HER ATTORNEY, KARL WINKLER
Pollce Say Divorce Action May Have Been Tr1$1ger
On Mrs. Nelson's advice,
Milwaukee police called
authorities in Rockford and told
1hem to break Into the. Nelson
home, where they found the
t'hildren's bodies.
Youth Series
Will Resume
At Library
The "Wednesday Afternoon at
the Library" and "Saturday Af.
ternoon Films" programs will
resume this week at the Mesa
Ve rde Branch Library in Costa
Mesa, according to children's
librarian Lynn Eisenhut.
The six -week librarv oro~ram for fourth and fifth graders
begins this Wednesday from
3 ·J0·4:30 p.m. The program Is
designed to introduce children to
the hbrary and will include ac·
tivities such es ma1ic. sand-pa inting and puppetry.
Students must sign up at each
!'>ession and enrollment is limlted
to 25 children.
The mm series buins this Saturday al 2 p.m. with Laurel
a nd Hardy in ,";Brats." There is
no admission charge for the
·IS-minute program.
For more information phone 546-5274
I"...,,. Page Al
KITS ...
Spokesmen .it both military
bases emphasized there ls no
nerve gas or a n y of its
s ophisticated derivatives in·
volved in the shipments.
They also •aid there are no
biological or germ warfare
materials involved in what wtll
be the sending of obsolete
chemical warfare weaponry to
its ultimate destruction.
Joe Harkins, the public In-
formation officer at the Seal
Beach weapons station, said the
!->hipment from there will be five
pallets of material weighing
3.000 pounds.
Among safeguards taken to
~ee the deadly vapors do not in
some way escape to the at·
mosphere is packeting of the
chemicals In vapor proof baas.
Harkins said.
He also said the shipment will be accompanied by a trained
Army escort unit equipped with
devices that can detect any
leakage.
OAANOECOMT c
DAILY PILOT
·-"--*"'-"'*'~
Fro. Page Al
Bl'ITER WINTER •••
to Maine. winds toppled
transmlasion towers. blew out
windows alone the coast and
drove tides to more than 6 feet
above normal levels.
Jn Minnesota, where the wind·
chill factor drove temperatures
to 64 below at Rochester near
the Twin Cities, residents dealt
u~. ,_.
CANCEROUS TUMOR
Justice Wiiiiam Brennan
High Court's
Senior Judge
'Has Cancer'
WASHINGTON CAP> -U.s:
Supreme Court Justice William
J . Brennan Jr., the senior
member of the nation's highest
court, has a cancerous tumor on
a vocal cord, a court spokesman
&aid today.
Brennan, 71, was not on the
bench when the court met today
after a four-week recess.
Barrett McGurn, the court's
spokesman, said Brennan is not
expected to participate in those
cases the court will hear or
consider for the next 10 days.
"A biopsy of a Dec. 14
laryngoscopy revealed a small
squamous cell carcinoma -a
malignant tumor -of the left
vocal cord," McGurn said in a
written statement. "Cobalt
radiation treatment beagn Dec.
22 and is continuing."
McGum said that Brennan ~u
not been hospitallJ(!d but is
traveling from his Washington
home to a nearby hospital for
treatmenL
McGum quoted Brennan's
doctors as saying the Justice is
dotnc well and "that f W!
fecoverywithcureisexpected."
Brennan and Ju.sUce ThureOOd
Manball compose the court'•
liberal bloc.
Brennan hu bei!n a me:tnbtt ot the court •Ince 1957. He served u • New Jersey·
Supreme Court Jmtfee bdore
being nominated to hi• p...aent ·
pt l>Y P.resident .tiaenhowtt.
with burst water pipes and had
trouble starting can.
Temperatures ln Georgia fell
from the 60s to the teena during
the night, Icing roads and caus-
ing numerous power outages. . .
Atlanta had a low of 12 Uus
morning, and thousands of power
customers were without electrici-
ty for varying periods during the
night.
F lorida citrus farmers were warned to prepare for the cold-
est night this winter as tem-
peratures were expected to drop
into the teens by early Tuesday,
with freezing temperatures
forecast as fa r south as the
Everglades. Jacksonv1He 's tem-
perature of 36 combined with the
wind ch.ill for the equivalent of 7-de~ree weather early; today.
Erie County in western Penn-
sylvania had 10 inches of snow,
while rivers approached flood
stage in the Pocono area of the
eas t , causing families to
e\'acuate low-lying homes.
The National Weather Service
issued gale warnings for the
c oa s tal area s o f the
Chesapeake Bay and the Atlan-
tic Ocean.
The Northeast dealt with
heavy rains and winds that,
com bincd wt th frigid air moving
m from the West, caused tem-
peratures to plunge.
Jn New York City, Central
Park h ad a high of 58 at 4 a.m.,
but by early afternoon, the tem-
perature had reached 32 and it
was s nowing. The National
Weather Service expected read-
ings in the teens by nightfa~l.
Charges Faced
By BB Man,
•
Two Juveniles
A 22-year-o.Jd Huntington
Beach man and his two juvenile
companions were arrested by
Costa Mesa police Sunday after
they allegedly tried to place old
receipts on new merchandise at
a South Coast Plaza store. J><>lice said.
Taken Into custody on a
charge of ausplcion of com.
mercial burglary wa s
Christopher Scott Sunbury, of
8452 Valencia St., HunUugton
Beach. The two male Juveniles
both aged 15, were arrested on ~
similar charge and later re.
leased to their parents.
Police claim Sunbury
purchased a tool set from a
Sear's store at South Coast
Plaza, then retumed and placed ·
the receipt on other m~rchan
dlse. He then Jett the store with
the iooda before retW11lna to try
the scam a second Urne, J>Ollce said.
He is being held today in lieu
of ~.000 bail
.EJ'ELFA.CES
ESC4PER4P
LOS ANGELES CAP) -Jnatead ot belnc chautf eured to
work from Ja.ll, atuntman £Vet ~tevel remeJned in hts Jail cell
.tocla1 awa1Un1 a court headn,a
onKa c1 b8!N! ot •cape. , n ev,. 1 wor).fui'loulb
prtvu.,., whim allowed bJm lo
conduct b1a bulllleu dui'tnf the
d81dm• ..Ure ~ a •ix-month ~ for uaNt. ... aJlo Jn jtlllpe.rdy f0ll01riq
bJ1 tard)r rttar'll to lbe HaU~ol
JutUce cm letard~. t
'. .
HoDies • m Malibu
~ MALIBU CAP) -One or the natJon'• moet •xpenslve corn·
mUJ:aiU., wa1 braced behind
sandbags for the second day to-
day as an angry Pacific Ocean
pounded at its doorsteps and
rain soaked what these a left dry. • ·
from Steiger's and other hous•.
The actor n.Jd there had been
some flooding at his home Sun·
day and a picket fence was
dam aged when the tides pounded on It.
"But we -I mean the county
firemen -put sandbags out,
and we were all right today,"
Steiger told The Associated Preu
as he stopped for 1as at a
neighborhood filling station in bis
Rolls Royce.
damage that was Immediately
apparent. said Los An1eles
County Fire Capt. Harry
Wllllams.
Ocean condJtions forced the
Ml thrust of the hl1h Ude on rock• and blutra just north(){ the
exclusive colony where Steiger
and aucb other atua aa act.or
Steve McQueen and alqer Lln-
da Ronstadt live.
While thundering seven.foot
waves washed into many ex-
clusive Malibu Colony homes
from the ocean side, rain water
trickled down hillsides on the
other side, and Kevin Rehm, one
o( 50 Los Angeles County firemen
who stayed tbe ni&ht to 1andba1
the area.
''In the summer when fiahtlng
forest fires, the waler is our
friend, but today 1l Is our
enemy," said Rehm.
Among the houses rescued to·
day was the rustle beachfront
home of actor Rod Steiger,
where pools or tidewater ac-
cumulated in front of the res-
idence. County. fire crewmen
dug treocbes to draJn the water . * * . *
Steiger said be had been bOQle
all morning.
"I went out at 7, 8 and 9, and
there was no damaee, '' Steiger
said.
The actor. who won a 1967
Academy Award for his role in
"In the Heat of the Night,"
praised the firemen wbo protect·
ed his house.
''They bad the patience of
God," he said.
Today tides were less severe
than anticipated and caused no
* * *
''Th ls ls like a Sunday picnic
compared to yesterday." aald
fireman Tom Baker.
On Sunday, waves amuhed
fences and stairways of ocean·
front homes.
WiJUams said one home was
flooded Sunday after a resident
madvenlenUy Jeft a beach-front
door ajar, permitting soo aallons
per wave to iJlwidate tbe dwell-ing.
TIDES .••
Troops Help Fight
Beachfront Erosion
Jte estimated damage t.o his home at about $1,000. •
. Further south, San Clemente
lifeguards were ri&ht on top of
the high tide situation. with
lifeguard Sheridan Byerly re-
portlne surf eatJ.ng away at the
lifeguard tower.
By The Associated Preas
Gale·whipped seas threatened
a 12·mile length of Northern
California beachfront property
today as another Pacific storm
unleashed heavy rains
throughout the already-soaked
region.
A bout 100 soldiers from Fort
Ord were ordered into Santa
Cruz County with sandbags to
help protect the beachfront
against a second day of furious
tides. (Related photo, AS)
The front covered most of the
western Unjted States and was
the second in a 1·2 combination
or storms. The first hit last
week, drenching California and
covering the Sierra with snow.
The current storm moved in
early Sunday. bringing rain
from the coastline into the high mountains.
San Rafael was thumped by
more than an inch of rain during
a 24-hour period ending early
today. Most other points
received between a third to a
full inch of rainfall, the National
Weather Service said.
County officials s aid the Army
agreed to send the men after the
rederal Disaster As sistance
Administration refused a
request to have a 12-mile stretch
of beach near the community of
Las Olas cfeclared a disaster area.
SuGday evening the county
Boarl of Supervisors declared ~
state of emergency "beyona
which local government can
cope." Earlier in the day, the
high tides and rough seas
damaged beachlront property
and rooted Capitola Pier Crom
its pilings.
TONIGHT
COSTA MESA PLANNING
COMMISSION._ Regular meet·
mg, City Hall. 6:30 p.m.
OCC LECTURES ...... "Uses
and Abuses of Anger," Dr.
Charles Leviton lecturer, Fine
Arts 119. 7:30 p.m.
TUESDAY, JAN. 10
NEWPORT·MESA SCHOOL
BOA RD -Regular meeting,
Co8ta Mesa city council cham-
bers. 7:30 p.m.
."BEHIND THE
HEADLINES" -Dr. Giles T
Brown lecturer. OCC Forum, 7 p.m.
"A DOLL'S HOUSE" -South Coas t Repertory Theater,
Tuesday.Sunday through Feb.
19, 8 p.m,
"ft 's not ioing to do ·any
damage," he said today "but
it's taking sand away fr~m un-
derneath me right now."
lie said a potted palm tree in
front of the lifeguard station,
"isn't going to make it through the momJng."
Newport Beach Lifeguard
Capt. Logan Lockabey said bis
beaches are experiencing no tide
or surl problems today.
Minor flooding along 1><>rtions
of Pacific Coast Highway in cen-
tral Sunset Beach, primarily at
Park Avenue and also Admiral-
ty Way slowed mid-morning
com muters as il lapped into tramc lanes.
The day's high tide caused
waters or Bolsa Chica marsh
and the inland bay in Sunset
Beach to occasionally spill over thj?lr basins.
Flooding also occurred on
Pacific Coast Highway near the
westerly bluffs of Huntington
Beach, where high tides sent
water sloshing over the beach
crest and into the road.
SecUons of the new parking
lots at Bolsa Chica State Beach
were also rinsed by the pounding
s urf as ft crested lbe beach, but
the runoff was contained easily.
"We're watching the surf pret-
ty closely," said a police
spokesman in Seal Beach, where -
in past years high tides and
storm surf have swamped sec-
tions or the downtown ocean-
. front dlstri£t.
Here are tne facts. Savers who have certificate
r1CCOUntS at Mutual Savings can borrow UP to 90°0 Of
their savings account balance without incurnnq
the usual substantial interest pcnc.1lty required by
federal regulations for early w ithdrawal.
EXAMPLE· You have a certificate w ith us earning
at the annual rate of 7%% <S 1.000 minimum.
6 year term>. A need arises-vacation.
new car. emergency. what-
ever-for you to nave some
cash. You can borrow up • e to 90% from us at only 8%%
Annual Percentage Rate.
whrfc the account continues to
enrn at 7:X%. A difference IR
n
f '
of only 1°, Similar arrange-. ·
mcntc; can be mucfr. on any
0r our term c;dvings certificates
r rir <1dv,mtJCJ~ i•, obv1ou· .
You can afford to put your
savings In a certificate
Wh tit is.
that pays considerably higher
Interest than a passbOok
account w ithout having to
concern yourself about
the required penalty Should
yo u need funds from the
account before It matures.
Naturally. Mutual Savings
accounts are Insured to
S40.000 by an agency o f the
federal government w WO
ug
ks.
·1.
Compare Where you presently
save. A ll savings Institutions
are notttie same.You w 111 find It easy to ooen an
account at Mutual savings s ince w e can arrange to
transfer your funds from wherever they are now
located. call or visit any ot our 16 SOuthem cilflt'Omfa
o ffices tor further details.
UlllWiilililitll~.W ••<1tw11•·~
AN !OUAL !10USINQ U!ND! ..
AN EQVAI. OPPO .. TUNITY IM"'-OYIA
Capf,i!rlnO-San Ciem.ntr:
570 C:am1no cie E!tretrat493·565 t
COf'ON def Mw: 2~1 Elt$t Coast Hlg.,way18?5-SOIO
flountllln Vetley*: 179()0 M:')9nolla St~t/063·83
Downtown santa Anet 631 North Moln/547"\i741
"OJ*' ~Ufc.J.'Y' tn AM 111 2 H14
---
Officer
Remains
'Serious'
A Fountain Valley Police
Department motorcycle officer
whose machine collided with a
car pulling out of a parking Jot
Friday night remained in
serious condition toda.y with rna
for inJurtes.
'KING' GETS NEW LEASE ON LIFE
SPCA'a Peter Saunder• Checks Pony
Ar> Wt .........
Patrolman John Masterton,
39, was admitted to Fountain
Valley Community Hospital
lollowing the 6:45 p.m. accident
on Brookhurst Street, just south
Tables Turn
Ex-ou:ner Reports Cruelty
PLAISTOW, NH. CAP) -The woman charged with cruelty
after a mlllnourished Shetland pony with 15-inch hooves was
found m her barn has become a victim of cruelty in the form of hate letters, says the local police chief.
Barbara Reed, 58, said that s he was not the owner of
"King," whose plight drew sympathy from around the world,
when the pony was found She said her life has been ruined by the incident.
AND A VETERINARIAN WHO treated the pony said its condition was not nearly as senous as had been thought.
Plaistow Police Chief Alexander Brown Jr. said hate mail sent to Mrs. Reed has replaced the letters of sympathy for the pony. Friends and neighbors ignore her, hesa1d.
. "We got hate mail from Europe, from Hawau, from every
slate m the union," he said. "People wanted to hang that
woman. They wanted to lock her up in that barn and throw away the key " • THE PONY, NOW IN T HE care of an unnamed owner in
Rockiugbam County, wai. found by an agent for the Society for
the Prevenllon of Cruelty to Aruma1s. It was standing on a pile
or manure in a nailed-shut stall. Its hooves had grown to such a length that they turned up like Turkish slippers
SPCA officials estimated Kmg had been shut m the stall for four years.
Mrs Recd said King was in the stall only about 14 months and that she did not own the pony when 1t was found Her
daughter had traded 1t to i.omcone elst: for a stereo set month!. earlier, she said.
Strangers R~spond
To Slain Boy, 31/2
of Talbert Avenue.
Police department spokesrn~
said Officer Masterton, a nirie-
year veteran or the force, •ut-
tered a basal slcull fracture, a
broken coijarbone, possible frac-
tured knuckles in his left h,.nd
and mulliple bruises and abrasions.
Callfornia Highway Patrol Of.
ficer Howard Whitnio.re, of the
CHP's Westminster branch of-
fice, whlch investigated the
crash, said lt appears the victim
will probably recover.
''He's holding his own now,"
said omcer Whitmore, who is a
friend of Masterton's from years
past when both were motorcycle
officers assigned to CHP duty in
Los Angeles and then Orange <:ounties.
The California Highway
Patrol always investigates acci·
dents in which city police
vehicles are involved.
Officer Whitmore said
Patrolman Masterton was riding
south on Brookburst Street on
routine traffic watch Friday
night when the car driven by
John Richardson. 51, or 18235
Crater Lake Court, Fountain
Valley. pulled out from a comer shopping center.
The right front fender of
Richardson's car collided with
OCCicer Masterton's motorcycle,
knocking lt over and sending it
careening down the pavement,
CHP officers said.
A uthorlties said Richardson
was neither cited nor heJd and
that investigation into the acci-
dent continues. •
Patrolman Masterton, who
wore his regulation helmet, re.
mains in a coma and cannot yet
be que11lioncd about what hap. pen ed.
Boogie Down tlae Line ' .
Tracy Hanks, a 15-year-old Oceanside
Boogie boarder. slides right on a T-Street
wave during first Invitational Morey
Boogie contest held Saturday in San
Clemente. Hanks went on to take third
place honors in the hotdogging event:'.
Roger Waller, 19, of Oceanside took over-
all honors m the contest which drew 25
contestants from Southern California.
Has Gigi Survived? ..
O~captive Whale to Be Hunted in Migration
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Whale
watching is a favorite sport in
January as dozens of California
gray_s s wim southward daily,
head10g for winter breeding and
calving lagoons in northwestern Mexico.
Marine Wins
Reduction of
Assault Term
The sentence of one of 14 black
M arlnes charged with assault·
ing whites at an illegal Camp
Pendleton barracks beer party
has been reduced by a Marine
general after his review of tht• case.
It's a bit soecial this time
People are looking for one
s pecial whale -Gigi, the only
one ever held successfully in
captivit.>
''If she is still alive, she would
be with the herd m the southern
and northern migration," says
marine biologist Raymond Gilmore.
"The Russians are whaling in
the Bering Sea, so they couTd
have bumped her off in the
northwest area close to. their
own shores. Of course, th~
wouldn't know if they did. The
Russians arc taking about 150
gray whales a year tn the Benne Sea."
Gigi wus captured in Scam.
mo n 's Lagoon oCf Baja
California in March 1971 at the
age or about eight weeks.
ASHLAND. Ohto <APJ
Someone placed a pot of plastic
poini.ettias on the grave or the boy
with no name A stranger sent
Sl.000 tohelpfmd his killer.
"We've gotten letters from all
areas of the country asking
about hrm." said Arthur Elk,
Ashland County proseouUng at· torney
children," wrote the man. who
asked to remain anonymous.
For the funeral Nov. 19, at-
tended by about 30 persons.
area residents provided a •
casket, a burial plot and Clowers
Elementary school students
raised enough money to J)rovlde agravemarker.
The severely inJured officer
and his wife, Penny, are Fowi.
lain Valley residents also. CHP omcers said.
Accwed Killer
Tries to Avoid
Marine Brig
Pvt. Eddie Page Jr. or Bay
Springs, Miss., was convicted by
a general court·morttal last
August and sentenced to two
years' confinement at hard
labor. forfeiture or au pay and
allowances and a bad conduct discharge.
Paae's sentence was re~uced to nine months confinement w11J1
time off for time already served
and good behavior following a
review of the case by Maj. Gen.
Joseph Koler Jr .. commander of
the Marine Corps Air Station at El Toro, Calif.
The 20-footer weighing 4,000
pounds grew to 27 feet and 12,000
pounds during 12 months of ca~
tivity in Sea World marine park
m San Diego. Her 55,()()().gaJlorr
tank finaJly outgrown and the-
studies complete, biologists
released her back into the seal
wondenng if Gigi could stil
cope with her natural environment.
lie 1s trying to find out who
krllcd the boy, believed to be no
more than 31 :: year:. old, who
Elk say!. w~ an obv1oui. child abuse v1ct1m
Elk -was i.ent a check for $1,000
to offor a!> a reward by a Con-
necticut man who read an As·
soc1ated Press Mory about the runeral
"It 1s my hope that others in
the general public will also con
tribute to a reward fund to at
least help in some way to ensure
that society's protection is not
denied to Innocent, dcfenst>less
The tiny marble tombstone
calls the child buried benealh 1t
!>imply "Ashland County's Little
Boy." Adorned with a carving of
a s mall angel, it says, "Someone cares."
Elk said authorities still hope
to learn the identity of the boy,
who:.e body was found Oct. 28 by
a highway maintenance worker
beside Interstate 71 near Ashland, a city 009,000.
An autopsy indicated the boy
died of head wounds, although
most of his body was badly
bruised. His right arm had been
broken and was in a cast.
Sgt. Earl J . Holley, charged
with killing two senior co-
workers at Camp Pendleton and
<itlempted murder of four more
in a wild s hooting-stabbing
spree, Js battling to stay out or ·
the brig while he awaits trial.
Koler's command was one of
those selected to review the
Camp Pendleton court-mart.Jal.
One black Marine was ac.
Holley, 24, of Staten Island,
N.Y .• was granted a continuance
Friday in his pretrial confine-
ment hearing until Jan. 16 by a
mifltary magistrate at Camp
Pendleton, the nation's largest
Marine base
quitted of charges connected
with the November 1976 attack,
another was granted immunity
Crom prosecution for his
testimony against others, and
the re mainder either pleaded
guilty or were convicted during · trials.
The young Marine photog·
rapher allegedly shot to death
Master Sgt. Daruel P . Hurley.
42, of Uniontown. Pa., and Staff
Sgt. Gilbert N. Donham, 38, of
Ladelle, Ark. Four other
Marines. all co-workers of
Holley, were either stabbed or
shot at the base audio-visual
center Wednesday, three of
them seriously.
Holley, represented by Capt.
Kip NaugeJ, his military defense
counsel, and San Diego Attorney
Daniel B. Hunter, sought the
continuance in order to produce
witnesses who can testify to his character and avalJabllity for tr la I.
Under mUit.ary Jaw, Holley is
entitled to a hearing to de·
termine whether he should be
conCined or released until hi s ' tri a I.
A base spokeswoman said
1 lolley would remain in custody
until the bearing resumes.
Officials sald Holley went on
the rampafe because be ap·
parently was upset at feUow
workers over Job-re l ated grievances.
Page bad claimed he Stood outsi~e the barracks room and
did not take part in the assault.
The black Marines later
testified they mistook the at.
tacked whites for members of a
Marine Ku Klux Klan den at Camp Pendleton. And a Marine
investigation subsequently re-
vealed that Klansmen did hold
meetings at the base -in a
room next door to the one where
the seven whites were assaulted.
fl
PRESIDING JUDGE
John A. Grfffln
Presiding
Judge Named
J udge J ohn A. Griffin has
been named presiding judge for
the South Orange County
Municipal Court for the follow ing year.
1 Court official8 said the Judge
previously served as presiding
Judge or the court in 1975.
He was admitted to pracllce in
California in 1952 and conducted
<i general civil trial practice
throughout the state, principally
in Los Angeles and Orangt> Counties.
Judge Gnffin was appointed to
the bar in 1973 by then Gov.
Ronald Reagan. He is currently
listed in the 1977-78 publication
of Who's Who in American Law,
Once, last February, a whale
resembling Gigi cavorted
playfully near boatmen in Scam·
mon 's Lagoon.
The incident sparked the hope
G1g1 may still be alive. A large
white spot on her back was e vi· dent in photographs.
Gilmore, who conducts
whalewatclling trips for the San
Diego Natural History Museum.
doubts it really was Gigi. But, why not?
Affairs Council
Hears NASA Chief
Dr. Robert A. Frosch, ad-
ministrator oC the National
Aeronautics and Space Ad-
ministration, is scheduled to ad.
dress the World Affairs Council
of Orange county at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday, at the Airporter Inn,
18700 MacArthur Blvd. in Irvine.
The NASA chief will speak on
"Where Do We Go From Here in
Space?" Tickets for the dinner
talk are $10.50 per person. They
will be available at the_df?O~
I
the. a11igator ...
ror~rs hi.a favorite. shirt, made. in fme all cotton witn
lend. 1:ail,e.eo1id. Colors of~ whl'te,~, lt. blue, BUAusta, -melori,~undy, yd1ow, ·
dertmout.H,and ~-
by Q.QQ
' I
. ,
' t
•
NATlON I WORLD
Shah of Iran Endorses Sadat
• ON THE BEACH: Walking
along the sands of Balboa was a
most pleasant experience SW'I·
day after au our rains. Reflec·
tions of sunshine dappled the
water. Seagulls laud in the va-
grant airs overhead, playing on
wind currents like kites cut free
from strings.
Out in the water, half dozen
hardy surfers braved chilly
ocean temperatures to cut and
zip on moderately sized waves.
Two young children were busy
making sandpies. Somebody
else had drawn a large cartoon
face tn the wet sand
Clearly, this was a scene or
peace and tranqu1hty. Balboa
beach at its best.
All of this makes 1t evC'n more
suprismg when you start read
in~ today's news dispatches of
Sunday along the shoreline
t'lsewhere.
lhg h tides and heavy :.urf
struck Sunday at Capistrano
fie a ch and were washing against
Mme homes along lthat long,
open beach strand. Streets were
<Also awash at Sun:.ct Beach.
UPCOAST AT MaUbu Colony
nnd on into Ventura, Sunday by
the seashore was even worse.
Tides ranging upward to nine
feet pushed the Pacific up into
horn es and was hed across
highways. Seawalls got knocked
out. Glass screen windbreaks on
nrean front homes were s wept
.• way. One woman was reported
to have awakened to find her
hcdroom awash <And electrical
<1pplianccs sparking and short
mg out all through the house.
Sandbagging crews were
fighting against the tidal wash
.ind what was described as "rag-
ing surf ··
ALL THIS WAS clearly a
sharp contrast from Balboa's
l1cachfront on a sunny Sunday.
It JUSt proves that what may be
<me person's tranquility can be
.1nother person's raging surf.
The old Pacific plays tricks. It
doesn't always do the same
•hings everywhere.
Consider, for example, that
<1uestton of Raging Surf.
Say you are on your sunny
beachfront patio and you look
out upon the waves churning
spray oul there at a low tide. It's
c1 beautiful sight. The old Pac1f1c
J'> putting on a grand exhibition
11( power and churning water,
111sl for your benefit,
Nothing to fret about Jul.I J
~ood <>ePan show.
Ll•t h1.i.:h tides shift th(• ocean
111 a lut dol>e r to you, however ,
.ind those same s ized waves
1 ould h1.• breakmg on your patio
or m.i\hc into the ltvmg room.
on your favorite easy chair.
ThoM· same StlC'd waves. then.
.11 e "" longer JU!:.t the s weeping
m aJc>sty of the Pacific out ther~.
Thl'Y abruptly become Ragi ng
Surf.
llig h tides. by themselves.
don 'l really cause us that much
trouble. A few wet streets along
the lowland!i, maybe.
BUT YOU COMBINE those
tides with some hefty surf and a
lot more terntory is going to get
damp .along our coastline .
Add another ingredient to high
tides and high surf -heavy rain·
fall and runoff -and we could
have a lot more landscape getting
soggy. Heavy rain runoff can
cause us some real vexations l! it
runs toward the sea and finds the
ocean trying to run the other
direction.
Let's hope we don't get visited
by that condition.
By 11le .Mloela&ed Prell
The Sbab of lrao arrived 1n Etypt today for talk& wlt.b Anwar
Sadat and Immediately declared bll •upport for the Eiyptlan presi-
dent's bold drive for peace 1n tbe Middle Eut.
"I th1n.lt EIYPt ls dolnl preclMly what we believe la rJeht," Shah
Mohammed ltua Pahlavi told report.en after his Jet landed Ln the
Upper Nile resort city of Aswan.
"'these are historic moments bargalnlnt poelUco Ln talks with
a.nd 1 hope that what President Egypt.
Sadat la trying to do wlll be
fruitful and wUl bring peace and
stability to the area."
The shah's endorsement was a
boost for Sadat from an lJlfluen·
tial non-Arab leader in the Mid·
die East. The Egyptian presi-
dent's peace drtve has drawn
sharp criticism in the Arab
~ld. Critics, including Syria,
~ {.;ibya and the Pale$t.ille Libera-
tion Organization, accuse Sadat
or selling out Arab unity and
seeking a separate peace with
Israel.
SADAT EMBRACED the Iran-
ian monarch at the airport
while Egyptian schoolchiidren
shouteo welcoming slogans. The
two m~n then drove lo a plush
hotel complex on the shores of
the Nile lo begin their talks
The shah, taking a more ac-
t 1 ve role in Middle East politics,
said he will fly lo Saudi Arabia
Tuesday for talks with King
Kha led.
The lraman monarch also has
connections with Israel and is
the chief source of oil for the
Jewish state. Israeli Foreign
Minister Moshe Dayan reported-
ly fl ew to Tehran recently to
br ief the s hah o n Is rael's
TheTr i b
IN PUBLIC exchanges
IM!tw~ Israel and Egypt this
weekend, •Prime Minister
Mena:hem Begia said Jewish set-
Uementa ln the Sinai Peninsula
111 ust remain. and Eeypt 's
forel&n mln.ister declared t.bey
must go.
.. The lsraells do not burn set·
tlementa. They build settlements
and keep them," Begin told a
meetins of rlgbt-wing sup-
porters 1n Tel Aviv Sunday, re-
ferring to Sadat's demand that
Israel dismantle the 20 settle-
men ts it estabUshed on the
nortbern and southeastern
coast§' of tbe territory captured
from Egypt in the 1967 Arab-
lsra eli war.
Earller Sunday, the Israeli
ca bi net rejected plans to
establish new communities in
Sinai but voted to expand the ex-
isting ones by putting more
acreage under cultivation and
moving in more settlers.
However, the Jewish Agency,
which helps plan the com-
munities, said a decision was
made four months ago to bwld
four new outposts in northern
Sinai, and work on them began
four weeks ago.
New Paper Born
In New York City
NEW YORK <AP> -Nearly all 250,000 copies of the maiden ed1-
l1on of The Trib were sold before 10 a.m. local lime today, tbe
publisher of the new tabloid said.
"As nearly as we can tell, every paper that was delivered was
sold." Publisher Leonard Saffir said. He said he will increase his
press run for Tuesday's editions
to 265,000 copies.
In the early morning hours.
Trib staffers and well-wishers
gathered in the Third Avenue
n ewsroom to celebrate the
launching of the firs t indepen-
dent new newspaper launched
here since 1940.
"THEY SAID IT couldn't be
done," Saffir said to nearly 2,000
celebrants, among them actress
Gloria Swanson. author Kurt
Vonnegut and singer Judy
Collins.
The first edition of The Trib,
s elling f or 25 cents on
newstands. features a photo-
~raph of Manhattan's skyline at
dawn on t L'> first page. Inside
lhNc tire a scra·s of depart·
mcnts modt·led after week
ly ne\\s magazines with
largely analytical arti<'lcs on
s uch s ubJects tis the Middle
t:ast. Conj(r{";s and New York
City's fiscal Jl<•s1110n
In an editorial, The Trib said
its chararlC'r 1s "younger than
springtime· and promised to
"fi~ht for ,1 better climate for
EMBASSY 'HIT'
GOE.5 HAYWIRE
BRUSSEUi, Belgium <AP> -
A man walking his dogs found
two 16-in ch U .S.-made
armor-piercing anti-tank
rockets aJmed at the IsraeU Em-
bassy from a wall 164 feet away
Sunday. Army experla blew
tbem up in a park.
Investigators said the rockets
were plugged to a makeshift
battery detonator and fitted to a
sland. But apparently the
detonator failed and th e
terrorists fled.
business," for fair labor policy
..without destructive strikes"
and to "publicize our matchless
assets ... W'ltil business that ned
to North Platte. Neb .. or Waco,
Texas. comes crawling back
looking just plain foolish."
"WE DID IT! And we didn't
make fools of ourselves,'' said
one celebrating city desk re-
porter early today. "[ wasn't so
sure we wouldn't."
B11t The Trib has just begun
its struggle for survival. A mud-
dle or lawsuits remains to be set-
tled. In one, IHT Corp .. suc-
cessor to the New York Herald
Tribune. is suing for alleged
trademark infringement and
Saffir has filed a countersuit.
Many among the newspaper's
staff are veterans of New York's
competitive newspapering
climate, having labored for the
lost Herald Tribune. the
Journal-American, the World
and other!.
EDITOR JORN DENSON
worked for the Herald Tribune,
the JoumaJ-American and a host
of other publications. Vito
Turso, an 11-year veteran of the
Long Island Press, wbica folded
last March, hired on In No-
vember as a reporter for The
Trlb. His confidence was shaken
at first, he said.
"When I started In November,
there were no desks, no
typewriters, no pencils -only
forms to fill out. Things are
looking better now."
Saffir said Sunday he expected
all 250,000 copies of the initial
·edition to be sold by 9 a.m. local
lime today. Once "curiosity
purchases" stop, he said, he ex·
pects a circulation of about
200,000 during the first year.
Foot of Snow Dumped
Stonn Hits Mitboost, MitL-Atlantic States
·~ Al!IMlllO
AMllofaoe Altlt¥111• ,,..,_.
laltlmor•
8ll'llll119hem ••••r<ll .....
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~-'""'" Cl-1""41
oei.Pt woru. 0..W.I'
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HOll'lllM
clOMd tore llltf' II-S;mdey 111 ... 1 entr • l••llfll ... 11141 off ,,.,. ""''"n ---llllCll.
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Coeltllt """"'"-............ Mtwat11 6t arid 61. lllleN tell\• ................................ "",,. ... ..,,.., .............
~ ... lt'e.CJaerJ
Al~ s.Nill' .... Niii'/, tM -ttllat ~ Nl4 a...,,,__., IN
•PPl'Oe(IJllll, Wltll a 40 .-rcant ~•MA ef '911t !Ille .......
a.1111e11t11 the Ntfl al '91e \,n A119tlt1 Cl1ffc ~~NKflld
e llllftl'lltry >A, tollet'• ......, WM
MWll c .... r. wllll tetn,.tatwe• ~-... S-.i9feo11,TI.._
Ice Bouse
Nudity
'Right'
Assailed
BRISBANE. Australia CAP> -
A 30-yur-old woman who went
naked It a "right to be nude"
party was ordered jailed today
for 14 days on a cbarae of
indecency.
Sanda Marie Purcell, 1
part-time nude model and
mother of a 6-year-old son, was
arrested as abe sipped
champagne and paraded naked
among topless guests at a pllrty
held on the grounds of a private
Gold-€oast hume Suoday.
POLICE AND nearly 200
spectators Uned lbe fence of the
home to watch the party, held as
a protest against a city council
ban on nude bat.blng on the Gold
Coast's famous surfing beaches.
Today, Mrs .. Purce)) pleaded
guilty when charged with
behaving in an indecent manner,
but sob'*l and served notice of
appeal against the severity of
the sentence when given 14 days
in jail without option of a fine.
Mrs. Purcell told the court she
agreed with the prosecuU0n's
account of events at tbe party
except for a claim that abe had
posed for photographers with
her legs apart.
Stalactites of ice caused firemen to use steam to free
one of their ladders after waler used to fight a fire in
1\1 inneapohs. Minn.. froze in sub-zero conditions. The
artistic beauty of the scene was lost on firemen.
"NO, I HAD them together,"
she protested.
C hi e r Magistrate J .
Rutherford told her, "You have
committed a flagarant, planned
and wlllful breach of the law."
Which investment rolls
up the larg er profit?
"
The 1936 Cord, with front wheel drive and a Lycoming VS enqme of advanced design. was destined to
become a classic from the moment or ils appearance on !he showroom lloor Price brand new· $1.995
Maintained in good cond11ton. unrestored. sub1ect to ups and downs 1n the collectors' market. It sells
forty-odd years later for $10.000 For profit. a close second to a Los Angeles Federal Savings ac-
count. where the same $1.995. over the same years. with compound interest, adds up to $10, 126
Bui h11Jh interest 1:-. only one of the advantages of becom1nq d Los Angeles Federal Saver. Thert"
Hf> ni,my :.c·rv1cc-s you rE' probably paying out cash for now 1ha1 are yours without charge when
you have a Los Angeles Fcdenl SavinQs passbook
INCOME TAX PREPARATION
This year, spare yourself the drudgery of !tiling out income tax forms. With a minimum deposit. a
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INVESTMENT CERTIFICATES
S1000 OR MORE
Current
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6 to 10 years
4 years
CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT
$1000 OR MORE
73/.%
7'h%
30 months 63/• %
12 months 61/2 %
PASSBOOK SAVINGS ACCOUNTS
ANY AMOUNT
Oay in to day out 5-Y• o/o
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Funds prematurely wlthdl"llwn from Certificate Accounts earn lnterllt
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CALIFORNIA
Storm Damage l'iewed
An employee of the Capitola Wharf points
out damage lo the docks from heavy seas
that hit the Santa Cruz County coastline
Sunday morning. The wharf was in
danger of losing an entire structure at the
end of the d<X!ks and had lost a few pil-
ings from underneath to the surgin& -surf.
Sundesert Pollution Feared
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Sundesert nuclear power planl
might produce too much air
pollution lo be built near Blythe.
the state's :.mog control chief
:,ays.
Tentative rei.earch indicate!>
the Sundesert plant would
release about 330 pounds ot
particulates per hour. says Tom
Quinn. chairman of the Air
Resources Board
That would be too much for
the Blythe area, on the Arizona
border in eastern Riverside
County, where there are few
other pollution !lources which
• could be reduced to provide
··offset," Quinn said in a letter
to Richard Maullin, chairman of
the state Energy Commission.
Quinn released copies or the
letter Saturday
• Rules permit new 1'ourccs to
l'xceed lim1L'i if nearby sources
ean be reduced.
Quinn also sud a eooal-fired
generating plant could be buill
rnstead of Sundesert without
damaging air qualtty. although
he said he wa~n ·t necessarily
recommending it
A coal plant would be better in
the El Centro area near the
M cxican border, or farther
north near Cadiz in San
Bernardino County, Quinn said.
A coal-fired plant should
employ the latest "extremely
e ff ective" anti-pollution
measures developed in Japan,
Quinnsaid. ·
"Other techniques. including
synthetic natural gas (perhaps
coal eas>. biomass. geothermal
and solar, could be preferable."
be said
Two weeks ago, Quinn :;aid an
oil-fired plant could probably
be built instead of Sundesert
without damaging the air
The EnerR)' Commission ha!. given preliminary approval for
Sundetoert, but attached more
than 40 conditions.
Sex Therapy Bit
Relationship Likened to Incest
SAN FRANCrsco (AP) -Female
patients who have sex with their
male psychotherapists arc likely to
be emotionally devastated by the
experience, according to a report
presented at the California State
Psychological Ass9ciatlon's
Convention here
fondled once'' by her therapist was
··totally blown out by it." Depression
also overcame a woman who was
made pregnant by a therapist who
then left for Europe and mailed her a
check to ~ver half the cosl of an
abortion . M s. d' Addario said.
Skiers Happy
Tahoe Enjoys
'Best Season'
TAHOE CITY CAP) -Skiers jamming the
slopes in the Lake Tahoe area over tbe weekend
left resort owners jubilant over what ls being
termed as the best skl season ln the 19705.
Last year's dry winter left more sticks and
stones sticking out on the slopes than white stUff
and resorts called 1976-77 an overall "disastrous
ski season."
BUT SEVERAL recent storms ln the Sierra
mountains have left a good snow base for the ski
areas and resort owners are beginning to be
optimistic.
About 10 to 11,000 skien crowded the slopes
Saturday at Squaw Valley, according to Manater
Bill Boardman, who s aid the ski conditions
couldn't be helter.
"CONDmONS AR E 400 percent better from
every point compared to lut year's season," be
said. "If the snowfall stays normal for the rest ol
the season, it should be the best V"¥.t-ever . ''_ __
-Bo»dtnarc said Squaw vauey. scene ot 1!\e-
1960 Wl,pter Olympics. now has 100 inches of snow
at the 8.~ Coot level compared to 36 inches at the
same time last year,
AND ACCOR DING to Mt. Rose spokesman
Aida Krause, the Reno area resort has made as
much mooey in the early weeks of this year's skl
season as was made during the entire season last
year.
Sbe said the resort, ·which accommodates
about 2,000 alders. has been full for the last 13
days.
"Last year we didn't even open until Jan. 4,"
Mrs. Krause aaid.
PROVIDED TEMPERATURG; did not climb
too high, she said Mt. Rose has enoug~ snow to last
the rest of the season.
Kirkwood Meadows, another Lake Tahoe area
resort, presently has seven reet of snow compared
to only fwo feet at the same time last year.
PUBLIC R ELATIONS Director Margy
Penniman said Kirkwood had about 3.500 skiers
Saturday.
"We're leaps and bounds ahead financially
com pated to last year's seasons,'' she said. "In fact ..
this ls thebestyearwe've ever had.''
AND ALPINE Meadows Ski Resort now bas
all 13 lifts ln Cull operation. .
•'There was no, Ume last year the resort wu ln
full operation," said Werner Schuster,
Vice-President of Marketinl and Siding.
at
A YOUI o.My POot
oanM "~· occ...-.-............... ... c-......
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A TU
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llYOICE $95
Uncontested
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aDuarY di
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.. Only99~
It's Long John Sliver's
January Bunch O' Lunch Sale:
You get a tender fish rnlet,
a crispy Chicken Peg Leg,
fryes and slaw. 104
for only 99c.
Off er good daily
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l315 w. Wbtttla BMi. In I.a ... ~
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3095 Harbor BMi. In eo.... ....
IJUl1 -.th ol lhc San Diego f......,•11. aaOM lrom Fadc.o l
The study by Linda J d'Addario, a
psyc hologist from La J olla,
considered the experiences of 75
women throughout the nation who
had sexual liaisons with their
therapists ranging from kissing to
intercourse
IN A SEMINAR at Sunday's
con\'ention, s he presented four
detailed case studies or women who
had sexual intercourse with
therapists over an extended period.
Ms. d'Addario noted all four were
young, "attractive and shapely,''
leading her to question why male
thl!rapists found no need for sexauJ
therapy with women "who weigh JOO
poundb or are 80 years old."
The findings indicated that male
therapists who became involved with
the £our case-study patients "all
were married and were facing a
personal or professional crtsls in
their lives -loss of job, demotion,
fear of aging, threat of surgery,
unsatisfactory marriage or
alienation from children. 11
MS. d'ADDARIO i.ai d the
therapists often used "the ploy or confid entiality" to prevent the women
from discussing the relationship with
others and "got very defensive" if a
worn an expressed homosexual feel-
ings.
Pomona l'irst letleral's
Lagana Bills and Irvine Ofll.ces
SHE SAJD in all cases "the sexual
relationship with the therapist
proved to be detrimental, if not
devastating." One woman became
severelr depressed, while another
made. "a serious suicide attempt "
Women not s tudied in depth
r eported similar experiences, Ms
d 'Addario said.
A WOMAN who had "one breast
She likened the therapist-patient
sexual relationship to incest because
it "resembles a father-daughter Jove
relations hip, where taboo sexual
contact is violated."
Ms . d 'Addario also drew a parallel
to rape because there may be no
witnesses, no proof. and it ls the
woman's word against that ot the
therapist . . . who can label her
delusional, paranoid or
schizophrenic, or who can deny the
whole affair. 11
Three Men Arrested
In Pomona Robbery
POMONA (AP > Police have
arrested three men in connection
with a bowling alley robbery in
which nine customers and employees
were beaten on the head with beer
bottles.
Officer Ronald Crandall said the
last of the three , Johnny Lee
Trimble, 18, was arrested early
Sunday and was bein1 held ln lieu of
$50,000 bail.
Ball was set at $10,000 for
Ch •1•nne Evant, 20, who was
arreated Saturday, Crandall said,
wblle Paul Lawrence Matheny, 20,
arrested Friday, wu beln1 held in Jl•u qlp,ooo ball.
w ... a'• Betl" Fet1ad
(..___ST._it_TE_J
Eleven city fire companies
contained Sunday's blaze at The
Record Co. after a 1 ~ hour battle.
Ta.¥ lleHef 'I••~'
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Newly cbolen
American I n dependent Part)'
gubernatorial nominee Theresa
Dietrich 1aya propertJ tu relief will
be a key illue 1n ber campalp.
"I'd like to He property tax relief
instead of a tu 1hltt," aaicl the
50-year..old print.en union secretary
from Contra Costa County.
Cop• 1'W Ntlde /tla•
CANOGA PABX (AP) -Two Los
An&eles pollce offlcen fa tally abot a
nude Cane>«• Park man Sunday an.r
he 1Ue1edly assaulted One of them
wttb two knlve1, oMclall laid.
Police 1poke1man U . Charles
Rtible tdtnU.Oed th dead man a1
J ohnny B. Gatda,: 19.
DAILY PILOT
Boan:
Irvine
lwlll l-'17 Bhowl !Ji~, Jan. llih
rrldaj, Jan. llUl
We've got aometbing special for you to see at our omceel
Ae & community interest event., we've planned• two a.nd three-day
showing of Y&rn Art pa.lntings ore&ted by Cathedral Clty
reaident Mary Field. Thta unique d.laplay fba.turee e. number or examples of Mrs. Field's bea.utttul ha.ndtwork, done 1n a. variety
o! needlework ma.ter1&le. We invite you to come see tor yourself
this a.ma.z1.ng artistry oa.ptured on canvas wt th needle e.nd ya.rnl
Pomona First Fedel'lll
SAVINGS A ND LOAN ASSOCIATION
Monda.y..rrhurSda,y 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday 9 a.m. ro 6:30 p.m.
ll'vtne
6326 U~varslty Dr. &t WabeJsan
Park:View: OBhtar
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(714) 682-6325
x.,unam11a
24881 .Al1o1a. Parkway at I-5
(Next to Von's 8.1).d Payless)
Laguna. mus, 0a.11r. 92663
(714) 681~100
• I
i
AC
Tax Panic Hitting
State Lawmakers
Wnen the state Leg11>lature reces.sca last year without
having passed a property tax relief measure, it was fajrly
apparent that Howard Jarvis, chairman of the United
Organization of Taxpayers, would have little trouble
gathering enough signatures to place his proposed
property tax limitation Jnltiative on the June. 1978 ballot.
Sure enough, about 1 million signatures wer~n hand
by the Dec. 2 deadline, more than enough have been
verified. and the Jarvis initiative is headed for the ballot.
If approved by the voters, the proposed constitutional
amcndlllent will, according to the state's legislative
analyit, cut local pro~erty tax revenues statewide by
between S7 billion and $8 billion dollars.
That prospect is enough to Hg.ht a fire under any state
administration. So it's small wonder Gov. Brown has or-
dered the lawmakers into special session to get a proper-
ty tax relJef measure onto his desk by the end of this
month.
This maneuver means that sponsors of pr~erty tax
--mea~d!'"et;wcll 'ha\i'e auru1lrat1<!"'J>n~rlty-tn cJTnmii~e-and -
floor debates until a bill is. produced. And any such
measure signed by the governor would become effective
m 90 days, instead of next January.
This is a key factor because the wording of the Jarvis
initiative would put it into effect for the tax year begin·
ning July 1.
Briefly, the initiative would limit property taxes to 1
percent of Cull cash value as established by the county as-
sessor on March I. 1975. And increases in fair market
value would be limited to 2 percent a year, unless a
property changes h<inds, in which case it would be reap-
)Jraised. .
This blmplc fol'mula certainly will be attractive
\•nough to sway plenty of voters in June. unless the
Legislature l'an come up with something equally
persuasive and unless the voters can be convinced of the
financiul traps in the initiative.
There are plenty. But the key problem would b«
replacement of the missing S7 billion-plus in revenue.
The obvious solutions would be to increase the state
income tax, or the sales tax, or both. Doubling the sales
tax to 12.25 percent would raise an estimated S7.5 billion.
A 150 percent surcharge on the present state income tax
would replace the loss. So would major increases in
business and corporation tax rates.
But all of these could have a drastic effect on the
economy, either discouraging buSiness, costing renters a
bundle, or offsetting the tax relief for property owners.
And some government agencies already are predict
tn.1! possible cuts in police, fire and other essential
"C'rv1ces currl'nlly supported by property tax revenues if
1lw .I ant.., in1t1athl' l'-approved.
Thcrl' arc other drawbacks. Unlike a homeowners ex
•·mplton. the 1111liut1vc would provide across·lhc-bourd
1 :1x n•IJl'f M) about S!'i hllhon of the first ·ycar property tux
.... :.i.vlll~!-> of $7.5 billion would go to non-homeowners.
,\nd the provision for rc·assessment on ~ale of a
property could find one property owner enjoying the 2
percent limitation on annual market value increase in-
lefi n itel~. while the owner of a newly purchased
neighboring propC'rty paid up t.o 45 percent more tax
Jn the coming months we will be hearing much more
about mequ1t1es in the Jarvis initiative as government
agencies at all levels try to head it off at the ballot box.
But the sorely hurt property taxpayer ~Y not be
easily turned away from this prospect of r rlfet. Unless
Gov. Brown and the Legislature can corne up with
-.omcthuig a lot more impressive -and soon
Doubtful llllport
The usually stuffy State Department has persuaded
the U.S. Immigration Service to bend its rules jO
American audiences can have tbe privilege of witnessing
personal appearances by Britain's Sex Pistols.
This exceptionally repulsive punk rock group has a1s-
tmguishcd itself abroad by revolting on-stage behavior
and by having its album banned on British radio stations.
It ran into U.S. visa problems because some mem-
bers of the group admit to criminal records, including
drug offenses. burglary. vandalism and assault. lmmi·
~ration law s pecifically denies visas to such applicants.
But thC' Sex Pistols are here for a 19-day tour on
which they hope to "take some dollars off the Yanks."
This is one instance in which a trade barrier would
'2cm Justified. Surely there are some among our many
unemployed native musicians who could be bad enough to
-,atisf y the punk rock fans without resorting to imports
like the Sex Pis tol!>
• Opinions expressed in the apace above are those of the Daily Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authora and
artists. Reader oomment Is Invited. Address The Daily Piiot, P.O.
Sox 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-<4321.
Boyd I Charm
ByL.M.BOYD
Young lady, if you want to
eharm your husband
thoroughly, fly into a
childlike rage and pound your
llttle fi&ts against his chest.
1'hat's the advice of a woman
"'llo teaches a course called
'1Fascinating Womanhood,"
Our Love and War man b.s
taken this counsel under· ad
visement and is expected to
Wand down his deci~lon
i1oiqeHmesoon.
A Jud&e acquitted a Boston
1per charaed with show· t.ti too much. "Redeemtn1
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
social value" is the hi1b court
key in evaluating x-rated
performances, aald he.
·'Whal tbls girl was doing bas
a redeeming social value. It
keeps her off welfare."
They just don't turn out
publishers like they used to.
Take the founder of the New
York Herald, James Gordon Bennett, for instance. Said
he: "We must have new1!
Send a man out to kill
somebody!"
Q ... II there any sclentll!c
rea1on for cbooeini ate SS u
the normal retirement
time?"
A. None. Lellalaton plcted
It arbllrarlb when they
puaed the Social Security
Acl of 1935. Private pemlon
pJan.nen copied it. lDeidental· Jy, those legislators dJ4n•t re-.
quire It ol themaelvea, please note.
,
.,, . ' . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Robert N Wffd/Publlther Thomu Keevll/Edltor
S.rt>Ma Krtiblch/l!dltorlat Paot Editor
WASHINGTON -Far from Minister Callro have done towns, apparently to dlmln.ish
heeding President Carter's nothlncsofar," onotoppresiden· lhe necatlvc Impact of irowln•
warnings against continued tial adviser told us. Accidentally casualties. That toll ls eatlmat.ed
Cuban mllltary activity in or not, the Carter adminlstra-at between 3,000 and 4,000 klUed Africa, Fidel Castro ls quickly t.ion's reluctant decision to and wounded -equal, In terms
enlarging his expeditionary force publlclie risin& Cuban and Soviet of the u .s. population, to nearly
in Ethiopia and keeping bis huge military involvement In Angola 100,000.
Angolan force at lta present level and EthioPia bas coincided wit.b J
or roughly 20,000 troops and a few an increase ln Cuban forces into NOW, the time for possible
thousand civilians. Ethiopia. concealment seems loo• since
Thus. this assessment of the f.aat. Ambitious to become max.
first bard wave of Mr. Carter's CUBAN PILO'ftJ may now be mum leaderoftberovolullonary
anti-Castro flyine combat miuloos for world.Castrolstrylngtomakea
r h e tor i c Ethiopia's revohaU011ary govern-domestic virtue of bis forei111 en·
folio.wing his ment. Cuban mUltAry advisers, tanglements.
earlier sweet orieinall.Y intended only for t.raln-ln attempting to quickly move
talk about re· lni PUl'POHI In Ethiopia, are now the U.S. from spectator to actor
establlshing ta.kine part In combat mlaalom. In th• escalating African drama.
f u 1 I dip -Cuban troOpl are essenUal to the Carter administration ls
lom a tic r e-keep in power the Marxut re-more worried than ll lets on
la lions with glme of Agostlnho Neto In about CUba's risinl involvement
Cub a = z.e ro Anaola. . , in Ethiopia. Some highly•placed
-....lJDP.Oct..... 'IhaL --· ---lto,•Ji£nifJCJlD.l1¥ ..... C'..aat!""" a... .. »per~ rn~ict-th> r a 1 s e s a n propq-ibda organs at home al"i Castro may be aimlrtg at a 'Cuban
omvious question for the second for the firtt Ume boastinc about force tn Ethiopia on t.be same
year or the Carter presidency. the mUJtary blessings the Ut.tle 1cale as the.20,000-man force far
Does the U.S. lack the mea.tis to island nat.loaofCuba bu brousht to the south in.Angola.
deal with . Castro's aggressive underdeveloped Af~ica. The COV· Jn both Angola and Ethiopia,
foreign poltcy, now based on the er or the magazine Siempre Soviet arms and equipment sup·
exporlofmllitarypower? shows a massive Soviet-built ply the war materiel in ever in·
So rar, the answer . is yes, Cu~ao tank in the jungl~, with an creasing amounts. An estimated
although top U.S. officials are A!ncan on top armed wt th a bow $800 million worth has been sent to
seeking a new policy. Clearly, it and arrow. Ethiopia alone since the So-
hns been revealed to the Presi-While Casl~o slowly escalated viets sw. Itched clients from
dent's top ~oreign policy n;ien his African adv~ntures, the ex· SomaUatoEthiopia.
thaL a warrung fr~m the Uruted tent of the commitment was co~-If Cuban escalation in Ethiopia
States no longer brings results. cc a led back home. Cuban exped1· even approaches its stake in
"Frankly, r must say that our tionary troops were recruited Angola Castro could bog down in
recent efforts to influence Prime from widely spaced village& and a war e'ven wider and less winna·
Social
Security
Unsolved
WASHINGTON -Congress
has voted billions of dolJars more
in taxes to support the Social
Security system, which might be
better named the anti-social in·
securiLY system. The best
tesUmonlal to its benefits ls t.bat
not one single federal govern·
ment worker, oot one con-
gressman, not one senator hu to
dread an old age dependent oo
Social Security checks.
No, they all enjoy the benefits
of a superior retirement pro·
gram which
the working
people, the
producing
people or the
country must
pay for but
cannot
participate m. w i l h
nothing but
the rotten pit·
tnnce of Social Securlty to look
forward to, those unlucky enough
lo have to work for a llvin1 in·
stead of worklog for the 1overn-
ment had best make provillon
for the tragedy of retirement.
But as J.M. Rubinow, a long-
time flibter for decent incomes
for tbe honorable aged, put it in
1913, •·Special savtng for old age
would Onlf be possible through a
persistent, 1ystemaUc, and ob-
stinate dleregard of l.be needs of
the workingman's family, which
would make the preacbl.og of
such special savings a decidedly
immoral force."
IN THE en.suing 65 years little
ho.a cbanaed. Only the smallest
fraction of the pophlatloo can
reaUsUcally hope to provide for
the kids and f qr t.beir old age.
Salaries and wages are too low.
Moat people b•ve to decide between having ldda and putting
enough away for a dlinified but
not opulent old age. Tiley do not·
m alte enou8h money for both.
Saving for one'J old a1e pre-
supposes that the money one sets.
Earl Water s
aside at the cost of prov1dlng
one's cbUdren wlt.b what a parent
might reasonably wish to provide
them will at least be worth
something at the depressing hour
ol retirement.
Yet the same Congress which
forces people to try to save to
supplement their lousy Social
Securlt.y checks lacks both lhe
guts and the sympathy for their
fellow countrymen to stop this
corrosive lnfiation. How do peo-
ple save for old a1e when the
value of their savlnas diminishes
at a rate which nuctuates from 5
to 10 percent per year?
Tht! government shouJd make
contributions to Social Security
payments because it is the gov·
emmenl that has made saving
for white hair and rainy days a
practical impossibility. The
ar1ument against usin1 ieneral
tax money for Social Security
pensions ls that ll wouJd en-
courage idleness and a laziness
amon1t the worklne clasaes
and/ or that God HiJ:nself ordained
Social Security to be a self·
insurance program which, in ac-
tuality, ltbasn't been slnce 1939.
MOREOVER, there seems to
be sometbin1 Bolshevistic about
the government uslne 1enera1 re·
venues for such suspect
purposes, and never mind t.bat
Winston Churchlll was advocat-
Ing just that in 1806. Most of the
industrial nations or the world
had abandoned pure self·
insurance programs without gov-
ernment payments before the
Russian Revo\ution, before t.bere
were any Bolsheviks. By the
1880s the Kaiser's Germany had
a health insurance program
more comprehensive than the
• one in the United States 1n the
1970s.
One must stand aghast at the
speed and lack of debate with
which this measure was passed
by Congress and signed in lo law.
After all, it ls estimated that it
will involve the colfection of a
quarter or a trilllon dollars in
taxes in the next several dee·
ades, possibly more thanks to
inflation.
It is hard lo imagine what
President Carter meant when he
spoke of welfare reform and t.ben
went ahead to approve this, the
largest welfare measure be will
si1n during his tenure ln the
White House. The new law car-
ries forward the most objectiona-
ble features of the old one. t.be
retro1resstve taxation, the
pena.Jhatloo of wort, the P...V·
ment of pensions to the wealthy,
the insistence on a aelf·pald·for
proaram.
ln this Jan4 in whicb subsJdiea
and bidden subsidies like
monopolies and tax breaks are
blo than he alreacb fac ' fn
Anaola.
But Carter admil)i \ratidn
omcials no lonter cheer the Pl'OI·
pect or a Fidel Cut.to "booed
down" In Ancola or EWopla.
Rather. lon1-term, c1calati.g1 Cuban lnnuence frGm ooo end ol
the conttnent to the other iii
bcatnnJDi to be viewed hero wlt.b
moro realism. The Cubans Jan-1
to the rest or the world that tbu
Soviet Union, CX1>loltln1 Cuban
fightin1 men wslnc Soviet equlp-
men t, hu tr dom or acUOA
almost anywhere It wantl in
turbulent A!ttca; the U.S. claim-
ing to be above tho battle. •P:
peals to sweet reason and issues soft complainlJI.
THE l(9pD .i.o. .Mr.. Cnt-·· ~ ·•
admlD.iatrit1oa itllait ieema "t•
be edging away from the
post-Vietnam era of soft·
complaints. Still laeklng,
however, is a workable substitute
policy, perhaps one that denies to
Havana and Moscow what they
demand from the U.S. in trade.
and other jolnt undertakings.
That Carter policymakers are
even approaching such a change
of heart tells much about their
learning process in tho first year.
Just possibly, it portends a
larger sh.are or realism ln the
second.
.. • • ••
.,
0 • ' ...
1lven to s teel companies:•
alrlines, television stations and~
oU companies, it says something-•
tt\at working people must go into;
their old age unsubsidized and•
unaided. •
.;
INSTEAD OF revamping the'
Social Security system tom ake it
work, the government has de-:
clded to grant tax breaks to pco...
pie who put money into retire.-:
ment accounts run by the banks .. \
This Is a bonanza ror tbe banks I
but, given their greed and incom· ;
petence, lt will be a bare bones•
old age for the savers. ' The complaints about how the •
new Social Security law may.:
cause joblessness because or the
added costs to employers have ..
already been well ventilated to..,
no purpo5e. Congress and lhe ~
Carter administration couldn't ·
stop to consider that either. This·;
stupendous bill had to be enacted:· .
and rushed into law. by heed.less:
men and women, many ot wbom •
only a short Ume ago told those of
us who were warning of the-
system 's forthcoming insolvency.
that we were crazy. 'I The chances for any improve-
ment.a are nil and will remain nil
until presidents, members or
Con1ress and the upper
bor.aucracy have to depend on
the Soclat Security pittance tor
theJr retirement Li vfn1.
Uniqµe Fact Book Tells All About California ~
Did you know that California
produces more than 99 percent of
all the almonds, walnut.a, dates.
figs. olives and. pomearaaates
frown 1n the Uolted States? Or
that It ii the only state •rowtnc
Ladlno elcwwT ADd.~at lt-.rowa practltally .u of Uae aitictlakes
and broceol lD t.tieQa~°l
That la a um"8 ot the
mall otlnfetmid• CODtalDed ln
the Calllotnla
County Fact
Book pub-
111tted· by t h e County
Supervl1ori1
Association of
Oatltornla,
the latest edl·
lion of which
11 1cbeduled
lo be oft th
preaaa rieht about now.
Undoubtedly the moal de·
!lnltlvo book abOut Callfoml1
ever tonnd lta way; into prtat, it ii
a ver1tnbJe rountain of
knowledge, conta.inl.ng facts not.
readily found elsewhere and cer·
tainly not collected to1et.ber in a
single volume.
Divided into 10 sections, tho
218-page book detail• the OT•
ganizaUon end at.ructure of coun-
ty aovernment. lltt1 th•
1upervl1or1 by county, and
rtJiectl the numbers and typea o£
special districts.
IT PAOVIOES data as to the at.te'• topoiraphlcal featu.ru,
land and water arfas, ownerahlp or forest.I, water preclpltatJ.on
aveta1es, number• of torma and
laqd area, and totaJ1 and typcJ or
~~· produced. Jt also gives timber, oll and 1a1 producUon. Jt
• tablet energy consumpUon and
llKI dams anct rucrvo ra and also at.ate par)Q and recreational
areas.
Th ~laUon ltCltOlt
tlUn Mdltountlt-.1, compfl)~l!:"r.
of population. households, age
and racial distributions and
voter reailtratlons and turnouts.
Employment (and unemploy-
ment) ataUstlcs are provided al1d
cover qe dlltributlott, family.
pe.rtOOal and per capita lncomes,
atM\.affirmative action figures.
A separate secUoo la devoted to
Calllomla bulld.in1 and lndustry,
Jncludln' the number or
m1nufaetunn1 tlnns and those
employed by them.
property taxes comes to the front
m the Legislaturethtsyear.
Health, education a.od weUate
is covered, reporting the num-
bers of medical participants.
welfare rcclpleMa, and the
varlou1 cat.egorleJ ol aid. Totals
of public and private schools by
county are shown • are the num-
bers of health laciJIUcs.
Jn the section on transportation 11 listed the numbcra of veblclet
re1lstetcd and the numbfrs ot
drivers. by aox. Also shown arc
road mil ·aaes, vessel regtslta·
tlons and transit sylltem charac·
leristlcs.
Anolher section gives crlmlnal
statlsUcs Jncludlne major of· rcnsea., f'eJon)' ond ml d mcanor
orrestl, cas tiled and ca11 ·
awaltln1 trh11.
NOTE: Tht' bciok markets forl $10.80 and can be ordered
throul(h the COunly Supervisors
l\t!JOclatJon or ClllJfomla. SUil•
201, J 127 JlthStreet, Sacummo.
\
AT YOUR SERVlCE J BOATING
IAlcterw u,,-1~
DEAR PAT: 11 there a federal
rtllll•Uon reatricU01 the u.se ol I.be
nuU.1 for 5\lb&cribbis to oul-of·1tat.e loUeries?
R.E., Costa Mesa
1.1>1 "P'~"'' flit•""" '" l'ul 0\111~ Pot ~•II
-W r-' i.., .,.111"'1 rAr ., ....... ,. """"''-~'"' ..,. • .; lo wilwf llVQWl•f'I ,. .,.~.,.,..,..,,,., ""' ...,...,._ Af~
~'"" qu.:a..-w f'•JJ. (loll!•. Al \'Oli• "'4·r"" •· CJro~
<'""'1 Oul/11 1'11°<4 I' 11 l<u1 l)t!I t """ \lr..i CA
f1t::ll A.t "'°-., lfllrt cu ~ .. •NI crtll l>r ""'"'<"•f'd
tit.I ~ ""'"'"'" "' frrtor• "'" '"' '"'"'"' Ill# ·~··•/!ill. eo"'' uifd•• • "'°" ...,,.,. u ,..,.,, • ,.i...~.
....... ~~ tvrllfUWr•.-d , ,, .. ,."'"'"'PP<GU<lul
lfll U•t'Jll .)jlli;'°<i~I •
alone wtU\ me. or will they be con
filcated at the Arizona border?
J.W .. Newport Beach
Aa bllpedor at the AcrtcuJwaJ
Commll8iooer'1 office says that your
plHt• wUJ be checked maJoJ1 for i.Q.
sects at tile Arizona border. If
they pass the &est, you'll be allowed to
brlag theal Into llae .ta.&e. If De&, thy
... 111 be confl.lcated. Thls appUea to the
u1.aaJ boase plants, but not to citrus
treH ol aay 1lze, 1f'Jllcb may not legal·
ly be tnn.aported out of Uae stale.
Regatta Win
OCC Captures Title
Collegiate saJlors were busy with three
regattas s wled on inside courses in Newport
Beach Saturday
Orange Coast College sailors with
skipper Kurt MiUer and crewmen Peter
Drasnin aJld Alan Vaught won the
Reinhart Freshman Regatta in Shlelds Class
sloops with a low 1core ot three points.
Second was Golden West CoUeee with six
points and third was U.C. Santa Barbara, 7.
GOLDEN WEST WITB TEllJ Clapp 8J>d
Lynn Olinger won the Women'a Dlngby
Eliminations with eight points. Secmd was
occ with Mandy Smith a.nd Teri Canon, 9;
The oflke {IOJO s. Harbor, thlrdwasUSC,lOandfourthwasUCLA,13.
Anaheim> will la.aped your pJu&a, USC won the Grant Trophy Series with
but U they sbouJd attract any last· five points; runnerup was UCl, G; \bi.rd was
minute lll8ect& before the border ln· OCC. 8; fourth was UC Santa Barbara, 11,
1pec&lon, they will be conllscated. and CiClb was Golden West, IS.
A Y8 1uggesu aa inspection lo Orange ""-------------------County followed by a pre·move bath
DAIL y P1LOT Ai
Honolulu Raee ..
Naval Academy Wins
L
Sloop Championship
HONOLULU <AP> -The U.S.
Naval Academy won the seventh
an.nual lntermedhte Sloop
Cbampl .. blp Re1atta here Sunday
for the aecond y•arin a row.
Navy, led by akipper Gerard
Coleman, woo Sundays two races
and bounded from fourth place to win
the c&am11ioJiShiP. Queen• Univenlty
of Canada fell from its flnf..-place
Saturday potition to fifth.
TUE UNIVERSITY OF Southern
California dropped from third to
rourth1 Texas remained In 1econd
and Mtcbl1an rose from sixth to tlllrd
from Saturday to Sunday.
Rhode hland was No. 6, Oreaon
seventh and Charleston elabth.
"They've been here a week, ae4
they are not convinced there are
tradewlnds ln Haw alt." said race
spokesman Ted Livingston, rete(rlng
to the usual nortb·northeut winds
that blow 10.20 mph .
WEEKEND WINDS were west &Dd
southwest, ran•Tng from 1u1ty
Saturday to Oil\)' s tnpb Sunday.
Llvio,ston satd Sunday was ~
waltln« day. The first race wa•
delayed an hour while participapts
wailed for wind velocity to Increase.
The wind shirted after the first race.
and the course was redrawn for the
aecond race:
A 1pokeaman for Ute Chief Postal
1 .. ,eea.r'• oltlee f• Waahill1t..,
l>.C., Sold A Y8 Ulat 11tle 18 of United
Slates Code J.10Z "ptobJbita IUbscrtp·
tlou to a &oUery oa&.alde ol tbe siate
bl wblcb the &ouery ls coaductecl."
ft'-law wu amended In Jt'l& l4 aJ.
low malling of lottery m•teriab ill
1tate1 wen l~e. an conducted.
Wlaen asked U loUery states are try·
... to eoa&rol Mi-of·ltate entries, the
tpokeamu said that a program bas
been lmp&emeated to delete out-of·
•tale nbeertbers by ZIP code ldeo·
WlcaUoa..
Date tor Satolce Deteetor't
DEAR PAT: My son's new home
WH built with a smoke detector in·
1tallei$ at the Ume of construction. 1
••keel hlm H be'd requested the
smoke detector, and be told me that
they are required by law. If this Is
tbe caae, l'd like to find out when this
law went into effect. Our house was
buUt In 1973 and we don't have a
amokedetector.
in a mtxwre of three tablespoons of
Ivory f1akes tboroulhJy dlaaolved ln
a iallon ol water, or a &boroagb 1pray.
Ing with a ehemlcal lnsedlclde re·
commended by your aunery. EIUter
method aboa.ld kill off anruw bugs
and allow your plant.I to pass laspec:.
llom.
Regattas Open New Year
fB.a~ld;w~.l~n~~~~\1 Pl•nos ~1 ~:;:ns 'r. ~' \:.
fKIOf'f Fll'l.,.clnf
G.R ,SantaAna
llOtlleatead Land All Gone
DEAR PAT. 1' there any
homestead land left lo California? Jf
!>o, how can J find out where?
Slate law requires smoke detectors
for all homes for which plan checks
were 1ubmlUed lo building depart·
m eat• after July 1174. The law
epedflee that all dweUlng units be
provided with "detectors of products
of combastion otber than beat"
wbtcb are &o be mounted on the wall
or ceWac of corridors Jeadlbg to
bedroomt. Where sleeplal room• are
" U apper level, the detect.ors are
&o be located at &be center of &be ceU·
lal directly above the stairway, ac·
cording to Sec. 1413 or the UnJform
BaJldi;'!I Code.
J .T., Huntington Beach
The Homestead Act of 1812, under
which citizens were permitted to
settle oa natlooal resource land, is no
longer a practJcaJ oppol't1UlJty ln
Callfomla. Under &he Bomettead J\cl, the land had to be tillable,· bave
water avallable, be fertile enoagh to
support a farm family throu1h
agriculture and eoulat ol 111 ae,..
or more. Most of &be remalalng
national ruource laad In um state ..
too d.ry, roogb or odaerwlse
uoaaltable for uJUvaU.. Tlds
classtnes Jt agalna& all lonlu ot
appropriation under apfC111&uraJ
Jud laws, accordln1 to tbe Ba.reau of
Land Management. Its •POkesman
also said &bat the BLM bas no knowledge of any state having
rem alnlng lands that meet the
requiremeats or the Homestead Act.
Beatf119 Boianlc B•t
DEAR PAT: We will be·moving to
the Midwest in a couple or months,
and I plan to make the trip by car. Is
there any way l can take my plants
Death Notices
O'llOURIC•
LA'NllEHCE F, O"llOUIUCE, rtti· .. ,., ef H-1 6Ncll, _,.. .,, • .,
J-ry 1, 1'11. S....VIV..S .., -$Oii, Eu .. M L.. 0'111-S. ti CM-del ~. > erwllldlilllr911, ·-Id. 1(-... ttt....,, CTeJo. ell of eor-dt4 M•r.
•-•I wntqs "flll Ill """' Oii Twn· ._., Jan11¥y lO, 11 AM 9t 0... Hav•n
M•"'°'l.i Parlr 0..,.1 wllll 11..,. artK• K ,,.,,,. otfklell,... •mermen•
01•11 Heven Memorial Perk, Sen ... ,_ ..... 9911 i<Mdwt'I' M«1vMY
Olta<lerL
NUllllT
.... Ill. M. HEAll$T, -76, ......
-.1 of H""'""'.,, hKll, ea. hued ..,,..y Ofl Jlnutrv 7, 1'11. MYIWO b¥.
··~l•rt MU. ~II IE_..\I and M", II-lie Ito.I•, &IJte,. MrJ.
Allltlldt ~ Mn. Vtslll Centrell, Mn. ~II K .. ly, Mn . IN! Sii .. ,$.
Mn. HeMll 1#1 and Mn. Tllelrna
, ..... lfllllllDM Ma.,111 ......... ....
......, .._.,, t r-l.llMtn Mr•
~rt-Sl""et°" Ind MIH Peoqy
ltffla, -tr .. i.9nnclM1n Merrill Evt••ll encl niece Horma Halo••·
C ... pel Mrvk • -lnlerment TUHCl•V Jant11ry IO. 1'71 al 12 .-n. Dlre<i.ct
lly WUll9ll11tter Memorlet ,..,11 ""°""',., ....,, c.t-ry
•fATUM
Mll"V LOUISIE STATUM, p.ued
•••Y Ofl J-V S. 1'71. Re•ICMnl ol
M ltslllfl vw10. ea. s.irvlwcl 11v ,,.,
perenl• "'"· & Mn. Connie M.
$1•111191, two broll1ert Clllfero o
Slat""' ef Sill Utts o.INIO, ea .. T"'Y M. Slet11191 Of Minion Vlej.p, C• •
N lerftel .. ~Allee a. Slat"""
ef OutMtft, Ner1h (¥o41na, lnilWrNI
" ...... ~MIL Lo\11 .. McH111ty ol Law/Mia .. , ca. "-ref .,,...ke1 TllH· MY Jafl,,_., tt, Ifft 9' 11:00 AM et O'C...-LlfUlll Hlllt Mortvarv
Oll,.I. I~ lteedlrf c:-tary,
111-ley, Ca. O'C.-~ Hiii$
...,.,..,.~
TUltN•a
JAICIC• MAlllll! TUlllNIElt. A rfll
WfltefC..UMeM.~-·yJan. •r.1'7t. ....iv-. b¥ I* ptreflb Mr ·
& -.k/M A.'-· 1 brottwn; o-,., Jolwl. °*""' ""· DaMll , Delft4 & 0-W .. & ftff tllll ... Kllllv. All ef C..te Mii& _.. .t TIM Clwltlltl\
.... 1 .. 111\eft. J911. ""' $:-~lo\ .. St. Jeedlltft c:..tfto41C Oluf'dl. I lllW'"9nt
TWt. JM, 109!, tl\M M INftlO' Lew" ~··· ...,.. 81111& .., ....... F-tlHofnl,CateMna,OlreclOfL
CATOU%.4 ANN CATO&ll.to, r•ldellt II S..la
,_fAMl\.T
~OU*tAL FUMllAL
NOMI
7801 Bolsa Ave
Westminster
893-3525
Death Notice•
Ana. ea. Pntecl eway on J-..ry •• Deaths
1'11. S11r vlw1d ~'t II., ftusbend
Do<nlnlc Ca._ f!I s.nta Nt41, Ca
Funa•a111rv1'"_,.,...,,.. .. 9fft1111• Els he .. e Tulltlll ~ ....... /llfl ~. 0961 • I ,.,_.m. ~.....,,
IAUJI • JOHE SALLIS, rHlcte11t Of s .. 1
ll•a<:ll. Ca. P ...... .,.,ayonJ llft ... •y I,
Hit. Survl-bl' ~ nlac• Mrt. K•n·
11•111 End!•• •I Lagun• Hiiis, Ca. F11naral .. rv1~ are~ at $4ftllll
Tullllll ~ Costa foWtl "'°'1V«Y ............
COLLOllD H.Ual. v . COLI.ORD ~ of
'-•911111 kadl, ....... _, J-ry •. ma. s.rvlcH -......,,.. ..,...... U9\IM ._ __., Ol..UWt.
01 WITTI •
LILLI.AH E. OE WITTE, rttldtllt.of
0'"461•, --.... ., J-y .. ..,.
11 lltvetty 11111rior C•1w11uc•nl
Mo1pltal, ~ttt-841~11. SllnllYH
by w clavoM• 14a!an C.r ot LA9"'M
Nl..,_I, -gr~, .._,.
Welsll ot L•f1.-tta, ca .. •lld on• o•andson. llkllatd Bond ot H--1
lload•. Gre~ 1.,..lcu T-•Y
J•nuery 10 el t.Jll AM el Pac Ill<: Vltw
Ml<T!Mltl ,..,_, ll'Klftc View ~
8Md\ Mclr1Wry Olradfrt.
OIUMOal CLA"A OILLMORI'. Ntlff!Ot of
PH-• tor"" ... , IS wan. NJsed
eway Jan ... rv 7 at HOaQ Mamorlel
AUCKLAND, New
Zealand (AP) -An
executive or the
California -ba se d
Star-Kist Foods Inc.
died ln a power boat
accident. off the Great
Barrier Island in the
Hauraki Gulf of New
Zealand. Autboritiee _.d
Nlcbolt Trotanlc of
Palo• Verdes Peninsula
was trying to reach a
Star·Kist tuna boat
Sa lurday when his
power boat capsized
rough surf.
HO•Pll•I. $unll-.cl by w cNuglllK ROYAL OAK M" b.. Mart«I• 511-• o1 H.-t 111 .. ch, Z , ic '°"'· Robaft 1. Glllmor• of Sent• """· (AP) John F. Gordon Donald H. Giiimore of ~Maclenil. 1 11 h ked ._,_ ' brot11or1, C.rl IE . .._,, Victor , W 0 WOr UQ way
Hempel, 11ot11"' P•McJane, ..... .,,. up from Jaborator7 ;~"::c111:.~~ri':'::~~-,..-:.':"'.;,~~a:; techoicJaQ to become
ruod•O_.,, 1oeu ~ 111 ~aclltc preaident of General
View Cl\llpal wtllt llev. "'""'" .... ,.of Motors d I ed Frldav IM Faltll UICNrM Owltlt, 11'1-ne • "
olllclall11t. llll•rrMflt P.clfk View nlgbl in Royal Oat•s
Mafl'lor1111 ~""· Pacllk vi-... ,..,,.,,, Beaumont Hospital after . a .. chMOtt--,Dlt\!<WL b . (111-~ lllllCM a rie J.UUC:O>S.
FLOlllHGIE A. 81 .. CM, rMMknt ol
Eaol• Roell. pnNCI ..,., J-y 1,
1'11 Sllf'VI-by -Cla\lt!llW, Jo
1Ce11nedy -4 Cost• Ml .. , -Jl$l•r Su11n Ollldtelter of D•Y1on, Oltlo, 2 ,, andcllll<frefl. 1 ..... t111' elldclll ld<911
encl ) t'••il·trtet·or..,dclllldren .
G•avUlclt t«Vl<ft Wiii '"' Mid on TUlllldt y J,,,.,._., lO lit 2:>0 '"'°'Pee Ille
Vlow M•mo<lel Park wllll lhv.
Cll•rl" Clar11 o«l<letlfl9. l'•t~• may call •I Illa ll'OrtlMty., AlonNy s to I )C) PM. Bell e..-o Menllar,
01,.t1on. lllAY~D UTHElll L. RAYMOND, ;aside,.. of
Hu11lln9to11 8••<11, PHHtl IWl'I'
Janwry t, tm. Sllnll..., 11111 -son,
0ona1d 111..,_,.i o1 ca .• > ...,.......,
Lorra l,.. Ollrr If 0.-enge, OorolllY
Klmmtrt• al WHtmlnst•r. M•rllYfl
euvl•' .t .......,.., 2 wetlltrt. ~,.
LyllC .. , Rl<lla•cl Lv11c/I, ltetlt ot
C.lllornle, a lldtn, eonni. "'""' ., Arlr•nt , MIOI• 1.110 ~ Mart"•
LOS ANGELES CAP)'
-Sally EUera, 69, a
screen star of the 1930s,
died Thursday at the
Motion Picture Hospital
of an apparent heart
attack . Her four
husbands included
cowboy star Hoot
Gibson, movie producer
Harry Joe B?'OWD, naval
aviator Howard Barney
and television director
Holllnpworth Morse.
Crl1111a, Ootll ol Or•ttft, 17 ANNECY F ' 11••11•c:111••••11 1111 1 ,, •• ,. , ranee 11r•nc1c111~ F.,,.,., wm" w111 (AP) -Alfred Paceard, .,.,...,.a11~J-vtaae ti ... h I to t dlU I
PACIRC YllW
.-.OltALP•H
c.metery MortultY
Chapel
3500 Pacific View Drive
Newport.
Clllfomla
844-2700
AM a.ti ....., • ., a.. •1111 lllflW· uo, e r a ra on n
• l9ltflt •t wlfflllnst.,. ,,..,_.,., Pm. b e 11 • tn a t t n g a n d
l'r!Mft meyull at .. ~°" d 11C0 f
MICOINfCI
MOITUAlllS
um-~
l.flQuna ...
7ea.ot31
SM Juen C..rano •f~1771
W••· u 110011 to t :IO "'"'· eeu Ver• r o a .,...._ • ., Mwtiwy e>1rec•1. technique enabllns him
ANTNONV :~':::,. ,. .. IMM 94 to matc,b the tonea of
co.t• JMM, ....-ci •• .., J•MWY 1. bells within fractlont of m•. St.Ntwe1""wHe"'"-•-a-. a • e mlton e d 1 ed ,. of ,.., ... --. Ml ... Oence of I . <;•H• "',:n;. Print• ,, .... 111• Saturday after t ufferlng :r."!':1,1 ' •• ,~.~.~~ i
00
a h~~-~ttack In Parts
...... ry OHecWt. .. • INll'7.
Nature provided Balboa Yacht Club with the
appropriate weather for the second race or Ila
Sunkist Series -plenty or sunshine but precious
little wind Saturday and Sunday.
The regatta action along lhe Southern
California coast Crom San Diego to Marina del Rey
was the first of the new year and broucht sailors
out in force from their two weeks weather in
enforced holiday.
Major event for the offshore handicap racers
was the inaugural race o( Del Rey Yacht Club's
Bereer Series which drew 88 starter• in the
Saturday race.
Other regattas included Alamitos Bay Yacht
Mran System Ended
HONOLULU CAP) -Five small ~avi&ation
stations throughout the Pacific, each operated by a
handful of U.S. Coast Guardsmen, uttered their
fmal "beep:• in the closing second ot um.
It marked U\e silencing of the Loran long
range navigation system that was secretly
developed during the closing months of World War
I I to guide the U.S. war machine across the
Pacific. Slnce the war. the Loran system has been
unclassified and maintained by the Coast Guard to
provide military and civilian planes and ships with
an accurate fix on their position.
Club's Chapped Cheek Resatta. the windup of Lot
Angeles Yacht Club's Frostbite Serles and Cab.rillo
Beach Yacht Club's Winter Series.
Sunkist Series stnndins1: PH11'1-A -Al'UrM. AIM.....,_,. ave. l. Tilfllluehf, 111111'11$1,...f.
ecvc. 3.A1-'t.lt.,,11oot1t,avc
PHRl'·B-1, Alolla II, Gltnll RIM, SSYC; l. OJlll'W, Olfl H°'*ll'lfft,
SS Ye: i. Ho rwn,e. Tom su.x-. fjHVC SAHTAfe.A.-» -I, Sflllr.t6'11. lllellJfl Wini•-. 8YC, 7 AllNJIM, Wiii Templeton. BYC, I, Breekt•, 0-Te11llt, eve. LUOl'lt~'4 -1. l ntll....,, Jiu!! ~"'"'' 8YC; l, Mlrtlnte, L II. Molllton. SSYC; J, l(lldff. 0on H,..,...,ka. NHYC
LI00-14A-I,°'" TWIGMll, llYe; I. Al,,. ..... eve. l . DOii R-rt-.
AIYC. -LI00.148 -'· llrlM ~II, e ve; 2, er11C• C.rarv. HHYC, J, ,, .. '•::;.:J~its SAIOT -'· Collne GI ........ eve, i. ,,,.,., Jaftt ... 11111. eve: 1.1.~ Kam,,_,,., eve.
SA9QT A -I, Oeut teut ... eve; 2. JM """"""· llCYe; •• JeM ParnlO, llCYC. $AllOT 8 -1,Hlc:lly kllldont. llVC; 2. TMd l'ecllt, evc;a,JeffOl'tnl,
aev~.belt c -1, 11r1an ..-. evcv; 2. .._ -.. KYC; >.Jim ,..11, ave. MllTCAl.P -1, ... ._...,,, BVC; 2. 0ret ...,..,_ IVCt I. ... ....,,,..
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Sunny S~r Slack
PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia <AP> -This year
Prague had ill least sunny summer in a century.
From May 1 to August 31 there were only 30 1unny
days and July, the peak monU\ for summer outinas,
had only four days or sunshl.ne.
' ( j, .
I ' .. ' ' . . ... '
~
• t.ESSONS • INSTRUMENTS
~Y•-~~~R , .......... nd~ -•'"' ....
. _, __
MllD A·LA~?"
~Lefll~
; Divorce
• Bankruptcy
• Criminal
• Wills·Probllte
• Incorporation
• Accident-Injury
• E \llCllOl"l
640.2507
l\ Hft. CONsULTATION-410
She's crying for help. Are you listening?,
skilled counselors help people sort out their own
lives. Here people pin new resources to handle
the problems they thought ~ too big to
handle.
If you know someone who is aporiencing an
emotional crlab, call the Problem Talk Shop .
A trained counselor will be at the other end
of the line. Ready to help. Ready to answer any
questions you may have.
Plea$e make the call that wtll ~how
somebody cares enou1h to listen.
U 10 Eat CbaPf"•D A~o. Suite 100.
Oranp, California 92eee
'
~I 'Pl4.or t..tondQ. ~ •. 1971 -MARMADUKE by Br~ Andtnon BOOMER •
MISS PEACH
co 'bJ e-Jt~
f~ol~ A&Ol,JT
Gt:f'foJG
M~IZ~1e'7 A6A1~ G'f'P~Y?
"I never should've told him that story about
the pnnces's and the pea!"
.FUNKY WINKER BEAN
60'( ! 50M€ OF -rnESE COUEGE:
COAOIE.5 RE.ALL<.> G£T 816
HEADED J
,
1 ~ lJ.lITT f\X'.> MAT'f'EK
IJJHEKE 1 GO IN ~ING
l'LJ. ALWAC.>S REMAIN SIMPLE
AND HUMBLE. !
by Tom B~tiuk
CASEY By Charles Rodrigues
1JlAr•ETE/lNAL F~ 5TlEF ~ otAY, AR. PRCclST, BUT IH
T'EN YEARS t/C»i'T ~OPL8 8E
SAVIN: .. W'40 m£ H'~ WAS
.. VICTOR BLAlJ?H
MOON MULLINS
'9101 I
HAVEN1T A SP,ARE
DotL,AR,
WILLIE
®QUI Ck! A
MAN'S FAINTED
OUTSIDE.'.'
GERIATRIX
50MEllMES 1l'E-FOA 1. NE:vE:IZ Mf:T A ~&.16S· ME. Will-I AU.. LAOOAATO~Y RAi THe1~ wAtzNtNGS A9ouT t t..o:::eo /l>N'l'NA'I !
~ACCHA~IN, XY\...QS>E,w•
A.ND ON ANO °"''"'
G
by Ferd and Tom Johnson
GORDO
AUNT FRITZ!, I
BOUGHT A CASE
OF= GRAPE SODA
... ""'"".
I .
I NlVell! MAK'E
VAL.Uk .Jt.AOGMENT7 ...
DOOLEY'S WORLD
DR.SMOCK
by Mell
by Gus Arriola
PEANUTS
UJHAT 1/00 FELL
AAPPENE.0' ON THE ICE,
MAACIE ...
THE4<' FLEW Off WHEN
t.{()JJ HIT TME ICE ... I
DON'T KNOW WHERE
1}{8/ LANDEO ..
COMICS I CROSSWORD
t.>y Charles M. Schulz
M'./ HEAD l-IJRTS .. WHERE
A~ Ml/ 6lA55ES?
by Roger Brldfield
by George Lemont
':! K~Ow , eu-r ~ .Jus-r
-rHOUGH"f' OF "THAT"' L.INe
by Templeton and Forman __ ...,.
.. 1€1 1'0 OPeN A
OIE~GKltJG AC.GOUNf Ai S~~ l.AMCG'S MNK.
TODAY'S CIDSSWGID PVZZLI
ACROSS consent
45 Hogh UNITED Feature Syndicate
1 Fly apart
60u,.tneu
aylllbol
mountains n:n:r.:T.:1r1 t:-:r.:'T%9= ,.,.T'!""'r' ...... 48 Fight
10 Radar
screen 1001
14 HtftCC>n
name
15Jeue Lee
••• Un•on
Qe!l41fll
51 Show againhiff+ir:+fl+~ Lie+'~ L~~~ on TV r:: "'
52Cllck
beetles
54 Cuddled
58 Burn1no
59 High cards ~+,!-+&
61 A toucll 16 Intertwine 62 In surolus 1 7 Aecompenyr119 113 Kind of t>•rth
18 WIS In debt 54 ~.~~~er
19 God of coroorat
wiaOOm 65 Sta bird
20 Cerlaon 66 Enolosll
roofers colltlge
22 Scullled fl7 Church
2• I e. spelled officer
out
?6 Loghl wave
amoltt1ers
27 Vo01tnt
remover
30 Have.·· at
11
JI lunch hour.
generally
32Creoo
37 Similar
PrellJC
38 Sizable tand
Dlecel 40 Eerty auto
41 Prtvat1
Ct\11. 3
words
•JGarmenl
44 • ·OI
DOWN
I Nev1sano
Franklin
2USSA rn1er
3 Polynesian
c.hestnut
4 R111k
5 So steel
Coty
6 ~
oro1ec.lion
7 ActOf ••
Ayres
8 0111 1\erb
9Reo11t11te
IOCome1nto
flower
t t 1<11ct1en
ICCISIO<Y
12 Colder 38 Former U.S
1 3 A1ma1n1 coin
undecided 39 Ot<1
21 Soall ltu i>att•ngef
23 Icelandic c1 .. 1
n1rra1we1 •2 Oroental
2'\ Ctieck 43 In the mid·
p1cker·uo· Cite °"' •8 Previous IO 27 Oruq 47 Ste1tc1llle
amount •8 Soar11n ser1
28 Pos1t>0n 49 In force
assumed 50 Hoarder
29 Base 53 Gaellc tribe
JJ Adt111 member
55 Set down
34 Cu1>1d II 58 Beheld
counteroart l•l•n
35 Trom 57 Venison
36 · ·•• uo sour t i'
Add' 60 Per1onal1lv
~
STOCKS I BUSINESS
1'1ood y~•
C losing Prices NYSE COMPOSI'fE
..... -....
I •
TRANSACTIONS
Monday, Jar\UllfY 9, 1978 1 /N
Iii
DAILY PILOT A.
JntlaeRed· .,
Bankruptcy Cost
Bits E ve;ryone
By SYLVIA PO&Ha ............
U 3 percent of those who owo money went bankTupt
tomorrow, the co.l of uaina credll would toar IO btgb Ulat no
one ever could atf ord to borrow again.
To e>q>lain, a person declare& bank:Nptcy, the c-ost of
the default Ls paued on to others. BanJcruptcy m11 •'heil''
one person of debts. but the rest pay.
IN FISCAL Jm" 1&2,110 declued bankruptcy. In fiac.t
U>78, 2U,348declarea. •
What ls Jost by declaring bankruptcy?
-Easy access to credit. Moel reputable creditors won't
lend to bankrupt.I for yeara -or ever
-M05t assets and even. Sn some cases, your home.
Laws vary fl'Om state to stutc.
-SeJ! respect. Go. inc before a judge and
declaring default can al·
feet your sense or pride
and independence as
well as personal health.
-'The friendship of
those who have co-
Money's
Worth
J.lped loam, ii any, and who most pa)' ()ff.
What do you gain? Release rrom creditors• pressurt:i
tor repayments.
WHY DO DEBTORS R ESORT TO bankruptcy court? A
s tudy by the Brookings Institution disclosed the reasons ln
thla order: 31 percent said too many debts, unwise refinan-
cing. overspending; 28 percent, family health reasons; 20
percent, layoffs. strikes. loss of overtime; 13 percent,
hounding by creditors: 10 percent. actual legal action; io·
percent. marit.111 problems, drunkenness. excessive 1am-
bling ; 7 percent "to avoid paying debb ... (The figures add up
to more lban 100 because many replies fell in two or more
categories.>
Here are two final flnanclal s~ps. •
CI ) Chapter XIII is a method of debt reoriantzaUon un·
der which debtor, creditors and a referee, supervised by a
federal judge, work out a w•y foe the debtor to repay on an
installment plan. This is known as the wage-earner plan.
because it proteets the wages and essential property of a
debtor who wants to avoid straight bankruptcy by repaying
debts from future earnings.
EITHER THE DE BTOR GETS a written extension o(
debts, with more time to pay ofr tn full; or less commonly,
arranges a "composition" in which oaly a specified percen-
tage of the amount owed each creditor Is paid. Filing of the
Chapter Xlll peUtion must be approved by ball lhe
creditors, at wh.ich time interest charges usually stop. In
addition to legal fees. the debtor must pay fillQg fees oC
about $15 and a trustee's fee o( up to S percent oC the debts.
plus expen.'les.
(2) Voluntary bankruptcy is the final step. The debt.or
compiles a list of assets and Uab1Ut1es and pays a ~filing
fee. The rest is usually routine. ·
Except for clothing, tools, some household goods and
other Items, depending on state law, all assets wUl be col-
lect.eel by the court and liquidated. Proceeds will be dis-
tributed among creditors.
The financial slate is clean. but the bankruptcy record
will stay intact for years.
Nm: Credit and IM elMrly
Interest Worries
Drive Stocks ·Down
NEW YORK CAP) --Concern over rising interest
rates drove stock prices Into another broad decline today
in the fifth day of the market's early·l978 slide.
The Dow Jones average or 30 industrials, which closed
Friday at its lowest level in more than two years fell another 8.93 points to 784. 56. '
Losers swamped earners by more than a S·l margin
among New York Stock Exchan e-Usted issues.
St~b I• 'rite
SpoiUglll
NIW·YORI( (All>I• U., 4 ._:-,ft~ =. ""v~!>I~ R:=.,:-,.::..,
~~l<~~Hy et "'°',;,:.&io.n 1~ '•
0.ft Motors ., -.,JOO S•'• •• 9udd Co......... •11,700 3>\oo • l ''> f UOll • .. .... 157,100 44~ -'• u Utll._.1.. ... 2~,lOO 70' .. -'•
G•nl>ttt ""'···· •• 213,.400 ~. -t'• .---------------~~:::::::· Fg·* ~ =:; 1"1aal St~k11 DI d ~......... 111 1 .. -. ~lill>ln( ..... • II -t "EW 'l'OllK tAll>> le 0.01.,., • lt], tM +" p, .. f -.... • 701, ~ + "° TOd o .. .. •• 201,QO(I 11 -YI MY•~ ,11 •Y °11~ ......... 1'1,!0t ,.--lilt 0.<t-UOI 17 • Oitlttie Ge...... 1n,>00 »* -• Uol<M'4'f 111 m
'"""' '"-1'0'2 1MI ·A~L-an L~den ~: ~ n~ )~
.SAl(~
NEW YORI( ll•PI .NY Sloclt ""'"' APc>•O• fin.I • , , , , 17.~.000 Pr~VIO\I\ O.V , .. • . • 2', t IO 000 'W.-•OO .. • .. ,. • • • ., .. • Cl()..0 ~111................ . ~::=:: "f:: ~ ..... :.::::::·: l0,4" JlO ~:n ~-.. ~ ·::::::::: ~:rn:::
"·' •• *I• . • ..... .. llO 411,S.O
wMA" AMt!Jt OIP
MllW YORI( U.f'>
'
' ,
'
Je DAI Y Ptl or CALJFOANIA I NATIONAL
His Switeh a 'Shear' Delight Dryers
To Carry
Waniing.
Advertisement
Use This Method
To Stop Hair Loss,
Grow More Hair
Bay Area Restaurateur Trade. 'Slavery' for Day Off
·SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -"Buta Puta!" he
cried one day. ··Enough with the apaabettl,
already!"
So Bruno Viscov1, who ran one of the beat lllUe
Italian restaurants 111 San Franciaco. decided lo
tQd his slavery and become an apprentice barber.
. FOR NINE YEARS, THE dark-balred,
italian-born man ran the 1&-table Trattoria, out
near the end of Lombard St.reel wbere lt runs Into
Ule Golden Gate Bridge approach.
The little place never made the restaurant re-mw colw:rins, nor was il named in one ol the
many books that crow about "th e best
•taurant.s" In this eaters' town. But Bruno's food
was legend to a small, dedicated band of
.trenchermen.
The king of his smaJl bill of fare was his life·
a ustalning veal parmigiana, steeped in drippy
cheese and steaming sauce It was nearly a re-
ligious expenence to some cw.tomers.
EQUALLY FASCINATING WERE some of
the mad happenings in the place, such as Bruno
dasbing through the dining room. trying to dodge
violence at the hands of one of his more volatile
Italian associates in the kitchen. Or the Sicllian
brothers who Insisted on going bat'lc home during
Bruno's busiest months, leaving the boss holding
the broccolt.
At first, Bruno did the greeting and waiUng on
tables, but in later years, be did much of the cook·
log. Bruno always went out himself and did the
ahopping. . .
Early last year, when he dedded to bang up
the ollve oil can,. shock waves spread throughout
,his clientele.·
"SAY IT ISN'T SO," one fellow pleaded, tears in his beard.
Rut It was ciao. Trattoria. allright.
"I wt•nl throu~h all lh<' agonies of an Italian
restaurunt." smd ·10-year old Bruno as he snipped
away al the head or a professional male model.
AFTER NINE YEARS, BRUNO, with a new
wife, called an end to working lS-18 hours a day,
falling exhausted on one of the tables after closing
time. using his "day off" to take inventory and
keep the books.
"When l saw the oossibility of changing my
life, to accommodate my life with my wife Rae. I
took it," he said, concluding there was no way he
could have his nights off and remain in the
restaurant business
He commenced 1,500 hours of training at a
barber college, choosing that trade "because l like
working with people."
H E PASSED lllS STATf: barber examination
and wt•nt to work for the Shear Bliss fashion
bc.irber shop a few blocks from tus old restaurant,
now spcc1aliz1ng under new ownership in
Hun ~arian cuisine
"What do you know? 1 actually get days off
now," he noted happily.
So what does the ex-restaurant man do with
bis day off?
''Well, I go shopping during the day and cook
for my wife at night," estimating he cooks 6S
hours a week at home.
WASHINGTON <AP)
-The Consum er
Product Safety Com·
mission says it will ask
an independent testing
organi.iatloo to develop
flame and overheating
warnl.n1 labels for band·
h eld hair dr)lers ~
than set a new federal
standard.
One member of the
com mission said she
would go furtherl requlr·
ing a warnin1 abel lo
consumers about pos.sl·
ble shock huards if the
dryers are immersed.
.. THE THING that
concerns me ls that
sales of this product are
going up very rapidly,
some people use them
every day, and people
tend to get careless,"
aald commhaion m e mber l\arbara
HOUSTON,
TEXAS -If you
don't suffer from
male pattern bald·
ness, you can now
stop your hair
loss . . . and grow
more hair.
Have you laced the fact
that you have a hair loss problem?
Hair loss occurs so gradually that men and women oflen Ignore It.
Until it's too late. Even
though YoU see yourself
In a mirror every day.
many of you won't admit
lO abnormal hair fall.
If you lhink, honestly.
that you mJght be in this
category, look at a pie· lure taken a year ago -three years ago. Notice a
difference? U so. now's the tlme to stop your hair ' loss. Yoo could be going
bald.
try their treatment for 32
da) 1. at their risk, and
see Cor yourself. Natural·
I> they wouldn·t offer this opJ>Ortunity unless It worked. But it's lmpoesi·
ble to help everyone.
The great majori·
ty of cases of ex-
cessive hair fall and
baldness are the
beginning and more
Cu 1l y developed
stages of male pat-
tern baldness and
cannot be helped.
But H you are not already slick bu.ld, how .. can you be sure what is actually causln~ your
hair loss? Even tf bald· ness seems lo "run In the family," It Is cerulnly not proot' or the cause or YOUR hair kl:».
. ............ "-RESTAURANT WORK TRADED FOR BARBERING FranklUJ. "People seem
Bruno V1acovr Wanted Day Off -But Now Cooka as Houra • WHk t'::~~.~ dryers near
U lt appears that you
are already losing hair,
whatever your daily hair
routine ls, lf you continue
If you have lhlnnlng hair, the Loesch treat-ment may be the answer for you. U YoU still have
any hair on top ol your head, and would like to stop hair 1069 and grow
more hair, do something
about it before lt'a too late.
----------------------------The commission de· ' to follow it, your hair wlU
probably gradually UUa
away to nothing. $48,000 in Damages nled petitions to set a
flaming and overheat·
in g s t andard for the But it doesn't have to happen. Often hair fall is Loesch Laboratory
Repair Case. Settled
dryers.
THE com-
missioners said Un·
derwriters Laboratories,
a testing center, had
made significant steps
to reduce the hazards.
But they asked UL t.o de·
velop atrooier labeling
about cortect use to pre·
vent tbe smoking, nam·
Ing and overheating
problems.
NOT normal. Consultants, Inc., will N 0 w 8 f I r m 0 r supply you with treat.
I b ment for 32 days -at a oratory consultants their risk _ it they
hos developed a lre:it· believe the treatment
meot that not only stops wJll help you. Just send
SACRAMENTO <AP) -The state
Consumer Affairs Department says
AAMCO Transmissions of
Bridgeport, Pa .. a nd two of its
franchised shops have agreed lo pay
$40,000 in seUlement of a fraudulent re-
pairs uil.
The department reported that
AAMCO agreed lo pay $20,000 and
monitor its franchisees in the future. .. ...,
THE SHOP OWNERS, without ad·
m1tting the validity of the complaint,
agreed to pay $10,000 each and abide
by an injunction against future viola·
hons. the report said. They were
identified as James Steward of
Hcd\\ood City and Sidney Margoles
of Daly City.
The suit was filed by the San Mateo
County district attorney after an un-
dercover investigation by the depart·
ment 's Bureau of Automotive
Repair.
STEWARD AND MARGOLES
were charged with;
Telling customers their
transmissions needed major repairs,
when l.n fact they could be fixed for,
litUe or nothing;
Saying that minor problems would
lead to major malfunctloos to induce
c ustomers to authorJze unneeded
work;
Falsely stating that damage to
some part& of the transml.sJlon re-
quired repair or replacement QI other
parts;
Falsely stating that parts bad been
replaced or recondiUoned.
Colwnnist Dies
Ma. Franklin said sbe
would write UL
separately, urgini them
to put stronger and
more conspicuous labels
on hair dryers dealing
with the possibltlty of
shocks. ·
hair loss, but actually them the Information
grows hair! And you listed below. AJI inquiries
don't even have to take are answered confiden-µieir word for It. You ca~ tially by mail. Adv.
NO 08UGATION COUPON
To: Loesch Laboratory Consultant&. Inc. Box llllOOl, 3311 West Main St.
Houstoo. Teus 77006
I am submlttlna the following inronnaUon with the undentanding that it will be kept strictly con·
fidentlal and that I am under no obUgat&on what.soever.
Does your forehead become oily or greasy? .........• How soon alter washing? ........................... .
Do you have dandruff? .•... Dry or oily'? ............. .
Does your scalp Itch? .... When? .............. : .... .
ORMOND 'BEACH, Fla. (AP)-•
Walter Kiernan, vs. former syndical·
ed columnist, radio commentator
and correspondent for The Associat-
ed Press and International News
Service, died here Sunday of cancer.
Kiernan wrote the syndicated col·
umn "One Man's Opinion" and COV·
ered every national political CODYeo-
tion from ~940 through 1972.
DO YOU
OFFER A SERVICE?
Let the public know with
an ad in the Dally Pilot
Service Directory. It can
eost you as UUle as $1.65
per day. For more ln·
formatioa aad complete
rat.eall 6CUBT&.
How lon1t )las your hair been thinning~ ............. . Does hair pull out easily on top of head?... . . . . . . . . What percentage of hair remains on top or head'! ... . Any thin ureas? .... Where? ......................... . Any slick bald areas? ..... Where? ................. .
Attach any other i.nlormal\on you feel may be helpCul.
NAME ..•••••••••••••••••.•••••••••••••••• SEX ••••••
ADDRESS .................................... · .••••• •
CITY • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••••• srA TE ••••• ZIP •••••
: ..... '\I r.; •• . ,,. . ~
Does it seem like every year you resolve to get in shape
and instead you gain a few roore pounds and inches in
all the wrong plares? Holiday Spa Health Oubs can
change that Our program directors will help you develop
a personalized piogram of body improvement to meet
your individual needs, including a personalized Progres-
sive Exercise Program-proven to be one of the fast.est,
Jmst effective ways to get in shape. You'll wa:k out on
some of the finest space-age exercise
equipment available. And to make
wmcing out even imre enjoyable, we
offer you additional facilities like
steam, sauna, whirlpool and heated
swimming pools at key locations. And
for women there's jazmastics-a fun group exercise done
to up-tempo music. What's m<re, Holiday Spa provides
the type of atmOsphere that is amducive to physical
improvement. Discover the radiant good health that
CXXDeS with physical fitness. And let us be the solution
to your resolution in '78.Join the Holiday Spa Health Cubs.
. ,;
# ,.,. ................. ...,.~;· ... . -.. ~ . -. _,. . . ." ........... ... 4•
I
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'
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,/' ·"
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•
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_____ .._._ .... -·-
• '
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. ·N·S·l·D·E .. :.:M_T_:_.:_:_1:.io." .............................. .,.. ......................... ~ .... ~~orts Motlday, January 9, 1978 DAILY PILOT r-
1 It Was ar::Funilile, But • • •
0 AK LAND I AP) The tie fumbled and officials missed
Oakland Raiders have been thecaU.
given some bairn for tbeir com-"There'i. no quesuon it was a
plaints about Denver Broncos fumble," supervisor Art McNal·
Rob Lytle's "non-fumble" near ly told the Oakland Tribune.
the &oal line ln their American "We admit that. TV showed it.
Football Conference title game ··coaches have told us that it
Oakland recovered Lytle's \\C can't see a play, don't make
fumble, but the officials ruled a phantom call," he said. "The
the play had been blown dead crew didn't see the fumble, and
and the baU belonged lo Denver. we know that if you don't see it,
The Broncos scored moments you don't give it. to the other
Jaterenroutetoa20·17 victory. team."
Sunday the supervisor of Na· "If anyone had seen the rum-
tional Football League officials ble, the call could have been re-
sa.ld there wq no doubt that Ly-versed. Our guys make mis-~~~~~--~~~~~...;;...~~~~~
..,..w l•c JP
...
takes, but they won't lie." blamed a misunderstanding
McNally was quoted as sayina. between the offlciab and an
The Raiden, however, aren't NFL official who w~nt to the
satisfied by the a dmission, sidelines during the game to
charging the league blundered query them.
in its initial explanation. of the "We thought he wanted to
play. • ', k n o w a b o u l t h e u n .
That explanation, distrlbut8'1 sportsmanlike conduct penalty
at the game, aaid head linesman against Oakland's Ftoyd Rice,"
Ed Marion "ruled that LyUe's McNally said. "The crew isn't
progress was stopped, blew his 1\ thinking fumble. So they tried lo
whistle, and said Lytle lost write something down."
p()Ssession of the ball as he was Raiders executive assistant Al
being knocked backward.'' LoCosale, however, accused the
McNally admitted the ex-1 NFL of a coverup on the crucial
planallon was wrong aad \ See Fumble.Page BZ
.-~-·
Roundfield
i \Recovers
I
1·Too Soon
INDIANAPOLIS CAP>·-Dan-
'n)' Roundfield's recovery came
at the right time for the Indiana
Pacers.
A bruised bone made Roundfield's availability
doubtful for Sunday's regionally
televised National Basketball
Association battle with Los
Angeles. However , Roundfield
played 27 minutes, sank six of 10
field goal attemp\.S. scored 18
points and pulled in 11 rebounds
as the Pacers edged Los
Angeles. 104-103.
"Slick <Pacers' coach Bobby
Leonard> t.old me lo lake three
days oU-¥esterday (Saturday),"
said Roundfield. ••But then I
came in and I felt pretty good so
I told him I would see what I
could do."
Round.field's heroics Included
blocking four shots. He also
scored six crucial points, ioclud·
ing two free throws with 15
seconds lo play and a stuff shot
over Kareem Abdul-J abbar in
the closing minules.
It was Indiana's first victory
in three outings against' the
Lakers. "Roundfield did a heUuva job
considering he was hurting like
he was," said Leonard, who was
also pleased with the all·round
performances of guards John
Williamson and Ric,,ky Sot>ers.
BOBBY WADKINS BLASTS OUT OF SAND TRAP FOR SECOND PLACE AT TUCSON.
Williamson led all scorers
with 24 points and grabbed a
career-high 10 rebounds. Sobers
had 20 points, six steals and
seven assists. Jo"ormer Pacer
Adrian Danlley led the Lakers
with 21 points, but was only
seven for20from the fi eld.
·Winning Doesn't Make Season
Tucson Champ Says He Didn't Quite Have It I TUCSON IAP> Despite a
round of 63 and a quick victory
already in the bag, Tom Watson
has a lot of work to do.
"I'm glad that's over," he
said Sunday after a loo·closc-
for comfort triumph in the kick-
off Pvcnt of the 1978 PGA Tour
..,eason , the Tucson Open
.. It ·s loo early In the season
for lh1s kind of thing."
lie had to manufacture a hard·
"on final round of par 72 to
"Cl ure a one-stroke victory over
challenging Bobby Wadkins.
fmally winning with a par to
Wadkms' bogey on the final hole
at the s prawling, cactus-
.,ludded, 7,305-yard Tucson Na·
lion al Golf Club course.
"I don't quite have il," he
.;aid. "I feel very fortunate to
have won it. I played one great
round. an opening, nine-under·
par 63 (that gave him lh1· lead
he never relinquished ;.ind JUSt
hung on from there ) The Tom
Watson ot a few years ago
probably wouldn't have won.
The experience factor. knowing
where not to hit the ball, was
\'cry important.
"( don't want to downgrade
winning, but one win doesn't
make a career, &nd it doesn't
make a season.
"If I don't start driving the
ball better, I'm not going lo have
the season I had last year. Even
winning the tournament, I don't
feel the Tom Watson of January.
1978 is playing as well as the
Tom Watson of January, 1977."
Mentally and physically tired,
he look 2~ months away from
the game al the end of \he year,
devoted himself to flying lessons
and came to Tucson with a
Super Bowl Week
Players Bothered
By DistraciiOns
bright. cheerful attitude and a
certain doubt about what he was
going to pull out of his golf bag.
"I was nervous during the
first round.'' he said. ''You have
to wonder to yourself, 'Kave I
lost it all'?"
He answered that question
with a 63 and finished out the
week at 276, 12 under par.'
* * *
Flt1al JtOfH tl>d ~,..y-wlnnln9• 5'HNNr I" llW
TU<~ OPf"Golf TourNmfllt.
Tom W•UOft, M0,000
llObl>Y W.._IM, UUOO
HOWMCI Tw]tly, l!,,200
LnTrevl,...11,2'1
ClllrlH ~. 11,167
Keltll Fervvt. $l,2'7
J C. S..e..:t. U,460
8111 R09•n. ~S.460
Jof\r> Scltr-. S.S.460
L°" Hlllkle, U,414
Lov GrePIMn, S.S.460
J•rrv Meo.., Sl,1'0 Miiie s11111v.,, SJ,7!0
Gary McCord, U,790
Miiie MOf'Ny, Sl,7SI
Tommy AMOl"o '3.300
Ed s..-. suao
lllll Kretlet1, 12,0
0.0.•Llll'-.UMO Ed Oou;""1r, • , ,..,
Jeo Rtt1nff, s1.-
Jlm Slm-.'1•
&ulcll 9Jfrd, 11•
Jin\ C04'*', 11.-
tlol>Oy Mldlols, •t.-0
Ool'I Pooley. 11.-
Mlllff tl...W, it.-0 urrr 11991.,., Sl.J'O
Welty Ar!Tlil""'lo Sl.l'O Peter Oot._,t, 11,390
VICIOf' " .... edO, SI-* D•ve ElchlllltrOtf', Sl,031 Cr•l9 Stedlw. St.0 llr1Ke l......._, Sl1o:ll
Frank c-. '',o:ll Doi> J-"f, .,.
Leonerd ,,,.._,Sl,o»
Franll BllMd, ti.a
CuMI\ Slr ... , ., ...
ll>lllOY Cqle. SJAll
•U.71-72-276
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67-1$-T>-,.,_.. 71-70-7>,.... 1'.n-1.,.....
"Jabbar wasn't hitting and he
hasn't in his last few games, I
hear," said Leonard. "ll's a
monster chasing him around.''
·•Jabbar sure attracts a Jot of
people, but he was having trou-
ble obt.alning his movement and
momentum during the entire
game," sald Lalters coach Jerry
West, whose team is balllini to
climb from the bottom of the
Pacific Division standings with
a 17-21 mark.
"l think (the Pacers' center)
James Edwards, who was with
us, is going t.o be a fine prospect
for their club. I sure hated to
lose him."
LOS ANGELES llOJI -Dllf'ltlty 21, Wol~ a.
Al>cl11l•Jll-It, fllhcon 11, HudlOI> 11, Stott •
"bernetlly I, ROlllKl'I 7, Foro 3. To1a11 ,. 2l-l4
IOJ. INDIAN" CIOA) -&ella;en I, tlel'ltom 10,
Edw•rds s. Soflen to, Wllllem!MWI lA, T .,..,,, ••
R°""dlleld 11, Elmore 13 Totels 31 :JO....a lOA. ~ ""°91• ?2 1' 2S JO-IOJ
11141...,. ,, 27 30 21-IOA
"""'" OU! -NfflOll, SCott Total lovlt -Lol "netlft a4. ll'dl-2'. TKht1IClll -LOI A~~
NflGll, A-16,111.
ARIWNA. ENDS
AL4.srRE.4K
TUCSON-Atbletea ln Action
had its 35·iame winnlnl atreak
against college competition
come to an end Sunday wben
Jobn Smith hit a 3Hoot Jump abot at the final buuef to pye
.bo•t Arizona an 83-82 victory
here.
AIA had run up an 18-0 record
tht1 season and h~d won 31
atrailht Jri8;es away from home since l to North Carollna in Decem'ber, tm.
._ .........
JIMMY CONNORS MAKES A RETURN SHOT.
Enjoys the Garne
Coiinors Is No. I ·
After Borg Bows
NEW YORK <API -Jimmy
Connors, whose tennis fortWleS
had waned considerably in J977.
was revelling in the joys or the
game Sunday after beatin~
Sweden's Bjorn Borg 6-4, 1·6, 6·4
in finals of the $400,000 Grand
Prix Masters tennis tournament.
Connors was cheerful and on 6ood behavior during the five-
day tournament, even after los-
ing in the third round or the
round-robin format to Argen-
tina's Guillermo Vilas, the man
who beat him al the U.S. Open.
"Even after I lost to Vilas. I
wanted to get up rieht away the
next morning and go practice,"
said the 25-year..old lefthander.
"I'm enjoying tennis. It's
something I really want lo do!'
Connors had a hard time in
1977 trying to make anybody
believe he was still No. 1 after
losing at the U.S. Open and at
Wimbledon. His victory Sunday
avenged, at least in part, his
five-set loss to Borg in the
English grass court classic.
"I started off 1978 on a win·
nlng note. Even though the
tournament might count more
for 1977, this is a good way to
start the year." he said of the
Masters, in which he was play.
ing for the first lime after shun-
ning offers to play the previous
three years.
"Any time I get to play Borg
and Vilas and all those Juys ls a
good time for me," said Con-
nors .
Connon, who more and more
often has to play much younger
players now, reflected on hls
future. "When you're 13, you're young
and you're eager. When you're
25, Jlke I am, I've done it all," he
sald. "J>ve seen it from both
end• and I like 1t better at the
t.op.''
Connors came back in the
third Ht alt.er a sickly backhand
hindered hid! tn the second.
Connors forced a sln tle
service break In the first set,
which was eve,nl11-fought
otherwise, fighting a deuce point
DENVER
BRONCOS
to win on a powerful forehand
crosscourt. •
The final set started baidly.
Connors battled through ~ive
deuces in the first game onlyi tb
give It away with a botched
backhand approach.
Connors broke back to tie at~.
wmning the last two points of~
fourth game on a perfectly ~
ecuted forehand volley -he d1f
a little dance -and then a
forehand net-court shot.
Both held service for the 11'1'.e
games, although Conl'\Ors
threatened .strongly with t1ltJ!!
break points in the eighth ga~.
Borg won lt oo a forehand v6Uay
to make It 4-4.
But in the final game, Conll'Oft>
found not only his backhand lmt
mastered a shot that had beta
plaguing him throughout ~
tournament and won the m b
on a forehand volley.
Connors, whd was seecl
eighth, eRrned $100,000.
Rules Differ ~= ....
For Montreal'
p
Rest of NHL?1
D ETROJT (AP) -Lot
Angeles coach Ron Stewati
wasn't looking for excuses, bul
he fqun<f one as he grumbl
about bis team's ~gh '5Chedu
after a 4-3 loss to the Detroit Rell
Wings in the National Hock.,
League.
Danny Maloney scored lwt>
goal.a, the second snapplna a 1·3
tie at 6:22 or the seccnid period,
to make life miserable for ~
Angeles Sunday afternoon.
With the decision, the Rtd
Wings closed lo wlthln twd
points of third place Pltllburgt(
and nine points back of second
place Los ~eles in the Norrt•
Dtvision.
Tbe National Hockey Leaaue
canceled Saturday night's gama
between Montreal and Detroit 1
that the Canadlens could pla)'
the Sovlets·Spartak hocke •
team. ~ Wings coach Bobb •
Kromm .agreed wl\h Stewar
that the schedule gave Detroit
break.
"J want someone to read
bear about bow the Nation-'
Hockey League can cancel
game wltb Montreal Jusf
because tho Canadiena on't
want. to play UJree-1ames in tour
ni•ht.a,' complained Stewart •
.. Tbey 1cbeduJe ua on a aev
same trtp with four 1amea ill
five nJghta.
11Qulte obvious\>', we have t~
aell ot "11• here -one for »Clft". trHl and one for Uie rest of Ulii
leaaue.0
'11 thlnk thoy b ave a
le1ltlmato beef," ~td Xrod>m .
"l "ouJd ••Y it was a break•~ us." •
l>ctidt JumJ)C<S in front wlU. e; patr or eoall II\ tlie firat fOUc<
ml~ of t~ flr1t perlOOI. Ma •<'Ol'ed. hi 1. ~rAGlbla Mt.i
front the .K)"''' nM •• t:~~ Dale cCoUTt look V clJtY
~om~·· p.. and ~ •»font.tr paat Roile Vachon,
•
IJ% 01.!l Y PILOT
Girl, 15,
May Be Top
U.S. Hope
PROVIDENCE, JU. (AP) -
A ninth grade schoolilrl from
Nasbvllle, Tenn., just two days
shy ot her 15th birthday, served
notice to the international
swimmini world that s he may
be No. l in the 1980 Olympics ln
Mo.cow.
Slender Tracy Caulkins. a
member of the U.S. Nal1onal
Swim Team, broke three
American records and carted
home the lion's share of
trophies over the weekend In the
first intentallonal swim meet
held exclusively for women.
'') might have s wum faster
with more compeutlon,"
Caulkins said, alluding to the
last-minute pullout b y the
powerful East German team,
which was expected to provide
fin early.season test for the
Americans.
Caulkins was the top swimmer
of 130 wom e n , breaking
American r ecord s In the
200.yard breaststroke and
Individual medleys of 200 and
400 yards.
However, after edging the
wor ld•s top -r a nk ed
breaststroker Saturday night,
Caulkins was beaten Sunday In
the 100-yard breaststroke by
Julia Bogdanova of the Soviet
Union.
Americans, meanwhile, won
12 of 14 events during the
two-day meet and American
bwimmers -mostly from the
U.S. team that includes five
former Olympians -won 31 of
36 available trophies.
I 00 ffH\IY•• -'· 1(1m 8 1•0. M IU-VlelO.
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...
._.onday. Janvary 9 19/8 MISCELLANY
PoloDynmty
Hard Work Key
To NH Success
By ERNIE CASTILLO Of ... o.ty ll'i ... IVH
Hanging like waJlpaper in the
Newport Harbor High swim-
ming office, 44 prep All-America
plaques serve aa a testimony to
the Sailors' water polo great-
ness.
No less than 40 oC those have
been earned in the 12 years Bill
Barnett has served as bead
coach. Seven more still have to
be hung up. •
·Yet despite a track record that
includes five CIF championsb.lp
teams, -four 1'ulners-up and tour
players of 'fhe year, Barnett
doesn 'l 'claim to work any
miracles.
"Talent and hard work," he
replies when asked what has
made the Sailors the most sue·
cessful prep water polo team in
Southern Callfomla the last dec-
ade.
"There are no secrets to suc-
cess,'' he ,··
says. "We're •
just i n the 1
pool year
round, either
swimming or
playing water
polo."
I t l s a
season that
seemingly
has no end. In -.u aA•M•n
addition to three hours of prac-
tice daily, most of the Sailors
compete in AAU tournaments
during the hig h school orr-
season. None compete in an out·
side sport besides s wimming.
Even rarer is a walk·on mak1ng
the squad.
But the rigorous schedule and
a program that feeds itself are
the main reasons Newport
Harbor never seems to suffer
through a rcbuHding year. When
one starter graduates. there are
five waiting to tnkc his pl ace. An
average waler polo turnout for
the Sailors is SO.
This season, Rarnelt started
out with just one returning
starter, James Bergeson. Four
underclassmen graced the start-
ing line-up. But in the CIF
finals, Newport defeated Mira
Costa High <Manhattan Beach),
a team that had captured the
National Junior Olympics 17-
and-under title last summer.
However, it wasn't just an or-
dinary young team. Three of the
Sallors -Bergeson. Jere Fults
and Mike Grier, played together
on a Newport team that cap.
tured the national 15-and-under
championship,
·'There's no substitution for
talent," Barnett says. "I'd
rathe r have a talented young
team than an experienced old
one."
Hard work, he adds. is even
more important. ''A lot or people
can work bard to overcome a
team with more talent that
docsn 't we" ;.-as hard," Barnett
'say!>. "The epitome, of course, ls
a team with lbe most talent that
works the hardest. But there's r cw of those.
"We have a saying around
here: 'Those with the most abuse
itthe mosl.' "
Barnett a lso gives a lot of •
credit t.o area youth programs
that prepare sixth, seventh and
eighth graders for freshman
com petition in hig h school.
Thus, instead of working with
r e l atively inexperienced
athletes. he starts off with
players who have already been
groomed in the fundamentals.
Russian Star Married
From there, it's a matter of
polis hing the rough edges,
teaching the finer points of the
game and spending the count-
less hours in the water that pro-
duces the final product-a well
conditioned. disciplined, talent-
ed and intelligent team.
Barnell spends even more
time involved in water polo than
his players. Besides b is
coaching duties at Newport. he's
a me mber of the AAU Eules
commit.tee, serves on the AAU
inlcrnaUonal subcommittee and
acts as the U.S. National junior
coach.
Yet he claims he never tires or
the s port. ''Why should you get
tired or something you enjoy do-
ing?" he said. "When I get tired,
that's when I'll quit.
"I guess it's easy beeause I do
it we ll. Maybe if I ever started
losing. I'd st.op enjoying it."
At the rate Newport. Harbor
High is going. that doesn't seem
like ly. With four returning
starters, the Sailors are expect-
ed to repeal as CIF champions
in 1978.
A bad year, Barnett says. is
"one In which we don 't make the
CJF finals." That has happened
just two times In the last 11
years, a s pan in which the
Sailors entered the playoffs each
time as Sunset League cham·
pions.
The days, though, or Newport
Harbor waltzing past weak op-
posltlon is a thing of the past.
Everybody, it seems, Is trying lo
catch up with the Sailors.
"Those times are coming,"
Barnell says. ''More and more
schools are building better pro·
grams, playing water polo year-
round. It's no more than three or
four years away."
FUMBLE. • •
CoaUoaed From Page Bl
call and owner Al Davls wasn't
happy with either the original
explanation or the new one.
"The coverup questions the in-
tegrity of the whole National
Football League.'· Loeo6ale said
Sunday "The cause celebre now
ls not the fumble. It's the cov-
erup, which now Is In Its third
state.••
"We're all aware lt was a
fumble," Davis said. "I original-
ly thought the first story was a
fabrication and I think the new
story ls Incredible."
McNally told the Tribune that
officials' view of the play was
blocked.
"Ed Marioo wasn•t nearest
the play, but be blew the whistle
when he saw Mike McCoy of the
Raiders take ore with the ball."
he said. "The ornclals didn't
make a mistake to the· Oakland
game. 'l"My wen screened. You .
can't caU wt.at you can't see.••
Davis said that while be "'as
unhappy with the explanation,
he w u l'Mdy to drop th• db-
pute.
1972 Olympic gymnastics gold medalist
91ga Korbut a nd Soviet pop musician
Leonid Bort.kevic b cele brate their mar-
riage in Minsk.
DHficult Battle Won .Checking
Area Prep
Banquets
Para/,yzed Gridiler Progrening
BELLEVILLE.-tll.
<AP) -His once-
powerful arms and legs
deadened by a football
injury, Fred Re nsing
has won a difficult battle
over self-pity.
Now, however, tho
21-ye ar·old f or m e r
lineman Is engaged in
an even greater struggle
while laboring d3ily to
res tore the movement in
muscles left paralyzed
by a practice field m is-
hap in 1976.
"I 'm able to do more
and more all the lime.''
says Rensing who on the
final day of spring prac-
tice at Indiana State suf.
fered ;.i dislocated
vertebra and bruised
!>ptnal cord
"I'm :iblc to move
more and more all the
tim e," he add s. ''I
thought I moved my toes
the other day, and I've
had some pain 1n my
legs. That's .~ood. Pain's
<1 good srgn.
Rensing. a former ull-
conf erence player al
Althoff High School,
played junior varsity as
Hole-in-One
Albert Tirre of Costa
Mesa scored a bole·in-
oae on the 147-yard 17th
hole at Soboda Hol
Sprtnis <Hemet.) with an
8-lron recently while
phylae in a foursome
tbat lncluded New York
Yankees third baseman
GraJ1 NetUes, pro Jack
Saens and Milte Martin.
an Indiana Stale I'd never get out or
treahman and was con-bed, thal I'd nevet" see
sldered a likely starter the world ngbtst<le up
at ofCensive right guard ~aln. tor the school's team the "I don't Wee what
n ext year. they've told m e. but
But a series of pie-· they've made me more
lures on the wall of bis determined to s how
bedroom depicts the them they were wrong."
fateful play during a Ren sing says from his
punt return drill which wheelchair. "I don't in-
exploded his dreams. tend to spend the rest of
"I hit him in the right. my life in this silly
breastplate." Rensing chair."
recalls of his tackle. "I Two benefit events, didn't feel any pain al one in Belleville las t
all. The only thing that spring and one in Terre
seemed weird at first Haute, Ind .• lo Nov-
Cll09 COUW'11Y
......... 1-.1
VAalC'n'
~t ,_...,..__. o.tdsw1n:
C.pt~lit-Mllle Sl.e.m; Most Im· ..... -...-0...;,.... lnN!lf'eiti--''"y Andtnoft. JU.toll VAaSI 'n' Molt ,....,...,,.., ,,,..._ IC-; c.p.
•••n-Henctl'lll Klrl•IJ; Mott IM·
pro ved-Colln S,..ylhe; Mo~t tnsplrellonet-8111 O•y, O•I• $"°"•"· SO~ll
M•sl V•lwbl..-Merl< ~"""; C•Pltln-Nltk ,.,.. ••• <; Most
ln•plr•tlonet-,JeM F,...,,,.., ... ,11.
Moil lnllllr•Uon .. -Tom OWllSll-
1'•111"MAM ~ V--• Jon M .... ; Cel>-
ttln-F red Wol,,.rton; Mott Im·
.... --M#tl -~; ""-' lftrplr•· tlonel~ ... ...._.
was a buzzing' in m y ember,baveralsednear-..... °".....,
head. Then I felt like I ly $50,000 for Rensing's v...., .......
was railing backward in careandhevowstomake .~~~~i'~~~=; !:= slow motion." . repayment. 11u11.ou•1N. Mo&1 ·~HM« Sll .. ldl; 911'1\ Ol .... tve Pley••: Unable t o move .. Not with m oney. ontd Roes; eu1 o•••n••v• following the impact There's only one way I P1oye" Jo"" G••non •"" Cr•lo . . d ouon. MO\I IM!ll•lllNIMI: Jltn ll\-R e nsing was carri e can repay everybody for ,,.,..; Mou ve1u••••: on1d ,
from the practice field <tll they've done ... by Oon••'-: ~:TIM ~e...s l et he rt d ttl d lk Gret Scl'lerl: JIM ._,... -rd· on as r c r suppo e «e tn g up an wa -JI,.. ,~ ..... CYMer• ,...,.,, TI"'
by a board ing,' he says. "I'll do It o'"""
A 10-monlh stay in the
hos pital followed. At one
point lhe rock-hard 2.12
pounds'hc carried on his
6·foot·2 frame withered
to 135. Now under re-
habilitation. it is back to
185.
An hour each day is
spent with a full-lime
nurse who helps him
m anipulate special
equipment. And Rensing
admits he is waging a
fi ght against medical
odds established at the
outset.
"The doctors told
my folks they dtdn't
think I'd even live
through the first night,"
he says. "Then they said
too. I don't go back on my'
promises."
Tourney Set
At El Toro
Entry blanks are
•vailable for the third
annual El Toro High
School open t e nnis
tournament t.o be played
on the school courts J an.
14-lS and 21-22 with com-
petition ln men's and
women 's B. C and D
dJvlsions in both singles
and doubles.
GOU>aNWIEST ........
Mo\I va1.-e pl-r-8111 Hot\I.
OUl\llrwli"9 •IM51Ye -M'd-JllcJa
St11r1ev: ~•-8otl Getwn .
JOM SIHn ...... ; ""'"•of tllt ,..,_
Mt<k C t \e; SPKltl ~oed!H _. -
Otve Pom~' O<eo Sum, Miii• Her-
ino.r
SAOOt..l!SAat ,...." MMI veluel>lepl--4111YY...CV:
Otud>O of Ille ~~ Hopt1.
,._. ...........
V....ity ......
Most v.--: w~ ....,....: C.0.C-of""9~: ~l-Md
Wtyne K•-r.-; c:..t-4n1 Don .-or; c.dl'•,.,,,_,.: ..., .. _.,,,
eut 0111nsln LIMMM\: OevQ 8r•d1...._.
;.,,,.,, ,,......,
C•lllf•lit: o.,,. Holl; Mist IM• .... -: 5'oft .,...,..,,.
_. ltlS AWAltOS
CttOll CIOUMTitY
........... Sdlell
VAa~TY
Area Girls to Ron
Enlr'y blanks are
available al all Sad -
dleback Valley sporting
goods stores a nd at
rec~atioo centers In the
area.
"'H I Vel ..... e-SM.-H11IMt,
Catlly JoM1; Ca,tal" -Kelly
Jll119er: Molt lmD.....,.d-AllCI•
IClr•orn. M .. I lnlDl••l .. 11•1 -Te'#nny Ferrtt
to the CIF girls cross
country championship,
and Gibbs, a 5 : 03.4
miler, will run in the
For further informa-
tion. contact either Bob
Johnson (837-7246) or Al
Jones C830.QS9).
Sharon Hulse of
Edlaon High <Hunt-
ington Beach) and Mart
Gibbs of Marina Hilb
<Huntington Beach) 1 will compete In the glrls
mile nm et the LA Indoor
invitational track meel
Saturday, Jan. 21 in the
mil e agai nst North ... .._. .. ,.
Bake rs field 's LindaM.-. .. ~
Goen, the favorite with a
4:47.8 clocking.
Los Angeles SporU Edison Jilgh will also
Arena. enter a 640 relay team in
Hulse, who led EdJson the meet. ·
JVNIOlt VAlttfTY
Mou V•lloeOl•-<yncll c.r .. 11;
C.Dlaln-Julle llerodeh4; Molt IM·
provlld-L.orf Romwn, Mosl IMPI••
llOl\tl-1(.ellV -"·
ROY HAMILTON (24) GRABS A REBOUND.
"There .,.. .e ma111 quesdons
raised by th1I new explanation
that I Wat It ~d cmJy hurt
t.he credlbill~ of \bill leaaue .S all Of ua lf W9 e.tia• to to do,"
he said. "I Just boPe that we have
agreatSuperBowl." •MW'°'"919tfntd•la•1'o-.~
~ w u..tft, I .,.e lht ._ ••••tat •
POLLMAN, Wuh, (AP) -Ra1 Town1eo4 and Roy HamUtol\ comblned ror 38 polzat. to lead UCLA'• Btulna to tbelr
Hcond P•clllc·I Conter•nce
balketball victor)' Sunday alter·
ftfO'ft\ a 70·5S trlumpb over W~ab niton St.ate.
Jn a re1ionally telolaed Pfd~t tho ~a.rs ttetd on ftiid .,,.., mrouti the f\nt half biJfGr9
t Brulna broke 1001e.
RNnllton Jtd t.be •tticlf, ·~
10 af bla 18 POlAta lo th~~
bam Lea4Jn1 22·2\, Hamlllon.
"°"""" a .......
Orange County•• ofdtlt
Llncoln-Mercury o.i.tahlp
MISCELLANY
CAA,
Cowboys
Bat de
ATLANTA CAP) -
The lawyer for ao
Oklahoma State
Uohenity footba ll
player aald SuDday she
would file "a class
actlon suit in behalf of
all athletes" lf th4)
N aUonal Col1•11ate
A,tbletlc AnocilaUon
Ukes any punitive
aetion against the school
or her client..
At the Jame time,
andther lawyer alone
with a representative or
O.)lahoma State's ~leUc lnte reat.s, utd
they felt that no action
would be takeo qainst
th81cbool. -•·t d.oa't think there
will be any penalties.
bec•uae &here are a bell ol. a Jot ol people in there
a.ad 1ome ol them have
to have some sense," •tld Tommy Frazier, a
Tulsa, Okla., lawyer
'representing sophomore
t~kle Jim Clark .
Lana Tyree, who
represents Mik e
Edwards, a J unior
defensive end from
Plant City, Fla ,
appeared before the
policy-making NCAA
Cp u ncil Sunday to
appeal allegations ,
fin4lines and punit1 ve
rec om mendaUons by the
NCAA's Committee on
Infractions acai n st
Oklahoma State.
Also appearing were
Frazier: Oklahoma
S tate president
Lawrence Bocer; Ray
Chapel. chairman or the
school 's investigations
rom mlttee, and lawyers
Cbarles Drak e of
S t i I I w a t c r a n d .
Keith McM1llin O(
Okla h o ma City,
representing the
university
Rumors that the
NCAA planned lo sock
Oklahoma Sf.ate with a
heavy penally, lncludin~
a two.year probation
with s anctions, have
been rampant for m ore
than a year. Besidea the
probation, which would
JOclude TV and bowl
bans, the pe n a lly
reportedly would
1~clude the lou of 10
foot.ball scholarships in una and five in 1979 -the
currentpemliuible limit
1s30 per year-complete
severing of lies with 13
a tbletlc backers ,
i.everlng or ties for two
years with six others and
Joss of eligibility for
Edwardi and Clark, bolh
starters.
Tyree aaid her next
step would be to "wait
and see what the rullnt
is'' -the NCAA b as
made no ofllclal
a nnouncement yet -
and said she would then
.. ioltlate whateve r
adminiatraUvo appe&ll ue availabJe.
''But," she added, "I(
we get the same monkey
trial we got today, a
clan action suit wlll
theo be rued."
At Sunday's session,
Tyree tald the NCAA
Coun·cu dented her
request for a public
bearlnc ud aJao refused
to let b•r qult the
ta.man council "u to
tbelr blu, lot.ereeta and
prejudice."
Edwarda reportedly
violated NCAA
regulations by cbarlin«i
stveral plane Uclretl to
OCC Fourth?
Cerritos Five
Picked to Win
The South Coa$t Conference buketball race.
which gea under way Wednesday night, figures to
be a wide-open scramble with u many as five
teams ln the running for the No. l spot.
• The Dally Pilot's handicap gives Cerritos a
1>ltght edge with Orange Coast rated No. •-
With no standoul team in th~ conference, Cer-
rito ... Mt. San Antonio, Santa Ana, OCC and do·
fend mg ehamp Fullerton all figure. as contendj)J"S.
The lop two confer ence teams wlll advance to
the state playoffs itt the Long Beach Arena In
March The champion automat1cally gains a berth
\\ ith a playoff involving the second through fourth
pl ace t eams to determine the No. 2 entrant
llcrc'!t bow lbt: Daily Pilot handicaps the race
l. Cerritos (ll·S> ...:... The Falcons are weak on
the boards, but bave good shooters -moct notably
sophomores David Wilburn (8-3), Brian Lumsden
C&-3) and G~eg Riphagen (6-4). Odda: 2-1.
2. !'It. Saa A.oY.olo U2·5) -The Mounties of
coach Gene \lictor have plenty of hel~ht in Sam
Maduro (6·7). John Deck C6·8), Mitch Lebron (6·5>
and Donald Robirulon '6·8) and could easily win 1t
all. Odds: 3·1. "'
3. Santa Ana (11·5> The Dom> run·and·gun
!ttyle Is lhc exception rather than the rule in the
So uth Coast circuit and S AC ali.o hu s the talent to win il all. The best are Howard Avery (S·lO).
r-:fl gar Wickcliffe C6·Sl. Mike Maxam <6..a) and
Frunk Jefferson (6·71·:?) Odd.,· J I
~.Orange C'oast <10·7) -Coach Tandy Gtllt:-.'
Pirates have lost five gamell by five potntl> or le:."
and their passing game uffrnse muy Cru.,tratt• u
few teams. Coast ha:. :-.hown 1t can be:.it any teum
on a given night and only ncL'<is coni-lstency to be ...
contender.
Pele Neumann. a 6 5 frei.hman. has been
OCC's leader both In rebounding and scorin1. J on
Holland (S-4) and Mark Oman (8-4) are good
shooters and freshman Ray Orgill (6--0) has shown
improvement. Odds: 8·1.
s. FullertA>n (9-7) -The Hornets were picked
to fini~h near lhe bottom or the standings last year,
but coach Ena Van Horn performed a minor
miracle 1n leading his club to the championship. It
won't be a miracle this season since F ullerton d~
have the t alent.
Sophomores J ay Lucas CS-J> and Mark Pe pper
1 ().6 J ure two• of the bett('r pl ayl'rs 1n the con.
rerence. Odds: R·l.
6. Grossmont (8·7) -The Griffins have a s tand
out freshman 10 guard Tony Lewis (5·10) from
New York City, but not much else. Grossmont has
dropped three in a row coming into conference
play and doesn't fi gure as a contender. Odds· 25·1.
1. San Diego Mesa (9·8) -Tbe Olympians arc
not ball, but they are not very good, either. The
best pl<1ycrs .irl' Sam Robinson (6-2), Dale Golden
(6·2), 'I'1m O'Neill (5-9), another New York City
product, and Rob('rl ~hcllon C5·9). Odda: 25·1.
Conferenc(' action Wednei,day has Oranee
Coast visiting Grossmont, Fullerton hostine Santa
Ana and San Dle~o Mesa trekking to Mt. SAC.
Pro Cage, Hockey
... 11 ................. ··-····· .. ATtOHAL HOCXIY LlfAOUI IASf£8 .. COHl'IEll&"NCE WALES COHl'llllNta AU...-tk. O'vtltOft -•Di'li• ... w l. "'' o• w L ' "' 01' "" Pllil-IDl\lo h II ••• Mont net 11 1 4 ~ "' 11 ,. ... York l1 " ·~" • LOl.11 .... 1• 11 , •• '2 121 tell luff a lo I• ,, -•0''> p I IUl>l<f9ll ll " . )) 1l2 ••t ....... II n ·* , • Oelrolt IJ " $ 31 104 '" H-J•rwy ' 1• .2'1 II W•lll"91°" ' n • n 'M us c...1 ... OIVltl ...
WW.I ..... ,, .. ..., Aea""' Otvlol.,.
e.tton 1' • • u I .. ,. S...Anl-n II .i5-l 1 luttato 21 1 • )S 1'4 10• c1 .... 1ano .. II .Sh 3'1\ r.,.,.,o 12 11 • so ,,. .. AllMtl " 11 .... 2 Sii\ Cltw1'""4 11 u • ,~ 107 07 Haw Ort..,,. ,. ,, .42t 1 CAM"9tl&..LCONl'l•aNCI HouslClft 14 ,, ... • "*"-OMll .. WllTI llN CONl'alllMC& P!lltadef pllle JS • J SS 1.i '" M..._.lOM"-' """..-nn • I 52 "' '' o.n ... , 1• u ·"" Allaftle 11 ,, It 31 110 UJ Mllw....._ n ,, ·"' • NY Ranvtn U 11 ' lS Ill Ill (Ille.., 10 " .SIJ s '-*~ Oelroll \1 'IQ .Ot 1 CN~ IJ " " 17 .. 10$ tndlM• ,. .. .AJ1 1 ICan .. •CllY IJ U .Mt 11~ \llftCe.1-II " ' 31 Ill ISO , .... ..,. ' ~ . ,. 11• Uol "•""Dht'* St. L.ull ' " s 23 • uo Port UM JI J ... t -,.,_ .... ' 1' • n 103 ... """"'" 2A 14 .6.22 • ......... s.r.. .. ..,.. 10 10 .IOO II Golden Sitt• 17 21 .M1,. ~···'--"'-'"3 L°' .... la\ " " .AO 15 '-""' "*""' eunai. i, 91Me1\J
W•tfllftQI.., ... Hftt Jeney 9' Cllfu.I. ............ ,,
~"-""''~ ........ k.l.eul•l.~1 ,. ....... o.n... Dem.•~ tot,~ 104 "1tbW1111 .... v llaf'Oa'' ·~-*· '--~ to:I ~......-. .. -....1 ~I-1:n. .... er.....100 Allaftll .. Tor.WO .. alll• tt. Got-.n SCMe ti ,.......,..0..-Mltwauto• lll, 1C-..1City 12) NY A.,.nll &o\lon ,. ....... o..-~ ...... .,I ...... $ M• .. ~K....,._.
How They Fared
and from hla home and H"" 111e Top 10 ..._ 111 • -. • ,..,,, .,.. Clflc:IM9tt n.n. Otlaboma tbrou1b a tMl•tw~c:.i•.....,....11• "· 1•1...-c.u 1e1to1111no11 •-v l ··~ d '· '"""'"",,.,..,,._., ......, iwr• • ___ , an a .. o I. ICNtucll¥ (!HJ .... v~ 17. ClllC-..., IN> ... , to O«!rQIA tar ace~ a rtde wt th ,,.,., ... , ,,-1e1r.,....,. T•11 ,..s.:-.. ~ t02•>11o11to
I •--t Jt f t. N•r1h C.t•lll\• (12·11 -.at Lwil¥11 .. »71. •n ••• '"'"" coac rom c1e""" .,,.n, on _. v1rellil• 11. v1ra1n1e ~n Miit Wiik• ~ hl• hOQ)e to ....... by JMI. 't ... , ...... Nat111c-wllne7Ht. = to meet with an I. ArbftMt UNI llMt twttra t._ 1(-(11..JI ... , Ml&1011<I ... ,. ............... ....,. ,. ... ,.
Oii\& Stale athleUc •. MatQUtt .. ft.II llMI WIClllW IJ. MM"f!eM IWI 1~1 to Duh
... •;'-•• 1WW '1..J6; beat ~llf'Y ,,.,.. •1': , .... Welte "9rwt M.7S.
-.,. &ua• J.No4NOoofNf7,2)el<1Mtp4ay, 16. Hel'tCfW' 1 .. 1) bHl Fordham dward1, however, ._ 1M11-MN 1io.o1 •ts 11--..s; .... 1Afinv11-1 .. clalm1 the travel a1ency ""°'' ..,,.: .,.., ww Tu•• st. t7. Pro•ldt1'Ce 110.11 ..... e.-
of, ailab) to a)( 7H3· .. Sl; _. c.rtiiklt.._72. .er WU av e 7. UCLA Cll·ll llNt Wetlllt'ftOft II. Ml<lllOM sc .. ~ (10.1) llfat Min-• tu den t s, not ju at ""'°· 11ea1w.t11""°"sc ... )O..u. "''°tt 11-«> • .,... w11G-i.. 1.., football~ .. -. I. Syrec-Cti-11 ..... Nortll THU \t. S.n Fr...ctico C10 JI 10\t lit -· --~ ......,.•-n•.-•st ~
Tb• C art caae ..!.:::.':?t:V.::"..!= 11:·o-..t-. o.c. iio-u = ... & partJ throtm IC-.... .... CM1111N c.elllr• t07·)11 bJ'"U Oklaboma St.le ~ ~ ,.n ._. ...... ~~·~v.>w1
·~to annowice~~--..... .;...~-!""~..-..:..;..;~-..~~~~~~,.;;,,;;;;.;,.j
!!,..,...., •lPiDI a
ot IDUJnt to attend
wai. tdlloot. ~· Hl4 that lf •Ida s. pWllsbed, •n bave no ... to 10 to co.rt to
--bll tntertlll ~d me• ••t ...-.t CAA Ua•t wl1J ... ~~· ~_._..,..u
.. tbll iO otber
.. m'!Le .. the AJDe .... ry tr..-ent.. ••
Alamitos
Racing
Entries
SICONO •ACE ·-400 yerd\. J v .. r Old me•.,_,, Cltlml119, P\HM
u 100 Ct•1m1nopr1<ess.ooo
Ou•<I VV.r CANUi
Lad<IJ Elie BM IC••Oot•
~ .... 1(•1 O<•rl I NOllla Mltlt (V~~'
llpyat S.1rroco 10..te t
River 111• (fr-•I
CrHpl119 CNr1~ (Qoll)
Tidy Teet OC1''9t11I ""'"'t H "-CAlll-.l w..ow , .... l(rueietl
TMlllO RACt -a yard>, J voar
otds a. • c1..,,.1~ Pww u 100. c"' !Nntl ..... "·'°° cllM '°"''w 1-.-1 111 Sulltel l\llu IH.,tl 111
l ull llo 1..,..1 '" Lw<toy 7•1V....,_.I lit
Ti..I 11 .. n INl<~7 Ut
SwHI Cllv (Ad.irl "' Tt .. I< l!ncl fl<llitNI 112
Ml 8..odla CAlll"°"I 17)
11,,~ v Jov "'eulfrw / tit l OP l CCtrwtll 122
'OU•T .. RA.Cl -400 yard• , vur old m-. Cl•tmln;. Pur .. u 1oa c••'"",. prta u,aoo
Ro<•• llu1ywt11ow fPaullne)
Mr. llold &au IA""O"l
SMn Prlnu • IW•I-·
lh• Hoop 01-ICr"a-rl F"~I• PaloQUdle IHarO
v' o..n9 Co.int""' CC..11 I l!llOOy lltoO•t f.llJlkonl
O•f\man C8->k1I
Hall. Moon ICMOC>I.,
I( opt~ Voo Ooe l&r-t..idJ
SlllTH RACt -~.,.,di. ~ .,. .. ,
old m••d..,, Cl•""'""' Pu~ U,100
(l .. IM H'Q Pf''<• U,000
Tiny ClllO"" (TreMUf•>
T m y Sip <W•tcU
Hound 10 PIH\4' fMltchelll
V•nay tc"° OCtaUy)
T"UO ''" tAGl\1n
Jell (°"'"*"' (H~ut)
Ousters 8-<e.n•o
Nela> ... Jon (8a(dl
hold l itmb lCl•rt\"'°•
V1••"0' Gat (P.VhMI
llONTH ltAC• --yards. 3
... , olds & 111'-Fllllft 6 m•tft.
Ct•tm l,,., ~-M,*. Cl....Unct JJ"<•t4.to0 Crtma Roe-IP.Ullnel
s...,al Aa1.-a1 CTrM\ural
llor" Oar>e.,. (ICl\l9ft0
PeOOI" l(llN'I (Hartl
Mo VIII• IMylesl
~lltlon lAllf-1
"aver Napplf!O ICMOOu)
CMr,ln Fr..,· IUllNml
Dupe • P .. .,. cougar")
NINTH llACa -150 Y.,.dt. ) )'ear
old• & w. Ctlril!'ll.,.. p,,,~ n.soo.
Clalrnl"9 prtq U.lOO
Mr Moo" ... <V 6\191W! J
Llllla Tiny Go CP.ull"">
l'an. e ICtpty Too I~>
e.u1el\•10.."99 ICiarbWI
II •O y V •rwtof IW.MMll I Good ldf'a IACWrl e.w l!ltUfl Rklc)e fl!lrook!letCll
S~e<lr s.-1a.n"1 M• T Cllarver ICM'OOJA)
S/>lfly oo 1Tr-...1
Calendar
Monday, January •• \971 DAILY PILOT 83
.. t--~--~~~----~-~-t-~-------------------"'l·~--~~~~-~---1-~~-~--~-~~.....;' PVllUC NOTICE PV1WC NOTICE PV8UC NOTICE PlJBUC NOTICE
..
.., DAIL V PILOT Mond.y. Janu.ry t , 1971 Teleftsion TONlGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS
\U"IJ.\Y
EVENING
eGO I em NEWS • N!WI
QlllBIQINC'( ONIJ
MOVW
··~ .. ..__ .... _. And ...... c 11158) Robert
WllQIW', Terry Moor• Wet ...,._.young Southern-
., to tucioe Ille fellow men
--. c:lwltebl)'. (2 twe I
GI THl IMOY IUHCM
TM boyl Ind glrll ""'*t
combine their trading
lt*'!pt>oolca to gel one
good Item before the com-
P91'Y po91 out of~
• ftfe M>OKIE8
Mllt•~f-tol
wttll a dlaturbed OrMn
e.ret who ~ him for
being~ end Ml'll 10
aPOWoamp.
• E.l.lCTNC OOMPAHV Cl!D F0008 FOR THE
~FAMILY
~ea11ng s.n.lblf' 9 AllCNEWI ~-MOV1( ••>A "Second Cllence'' Big Game
....... QtlP .. ,.._ v.,,.,,.h ""
(I) 110Q.000 NAt.W tHAT
TUNE 9 WILD, WIJ) WON..D •
OPAMML.I a:oo. (I) VAlfrfY "11
"1'le v-In Entert .. n· __. .. Telly....,_,Niltl
Klllf.Nt~V.,._
I• p.,rln• and S ada
~._. ......
cW ,...., Of Ille ~ cent•• .......... ~
of 1977, -..., In the
~ of Vartety, "8turlng
"'al« .... Gunu~ON
THI~
-n. Nwle'" Lan. *'°" dellly,....... .... In IOw9
wfth '* old pal end tallow fllll«'mM, ~ .....
..,.,.. to lhed her ._
Doy ll'Mge to imcn-Nm. .MOVll
··~ "8-lyOft" (11171) AoMrt~.~
Conw. A 1t30't prtvate
... up to .. elbowe In
murder 8IWf Niida. (2 In.)
•9 LUCAN .. How C•n You Run
( 1972) ll1aD ~UI. EJlu.
beth Aahl9y. A 1t0Clkbrolt·
er acQUlr• e g/IOlt town
e.nd -" with -1ed talent .., ... need ol another
brM«.(1llr.,30 min) m tKY THRl!I! 60N8
David Janssen and Donna Mills star in
"Superdome," a TV movie drama about
football and murder, tonight at 9 op
ABC. Channel 7.
Forw.t'I" &..uoan'e reunion
with a couple (Dian.
~. Morlte MaRtwft)
daln*1o '° .. ,... !oat ,,.,. .,,.. ~--..... nw.d J11.1M11r1 appear to
wtttt1no1c1--.
To end 1q11abblea over
wt\at program 10 Wlleh.
Unde CMney dect-no
leletAalon IOf' a weelC In the
Oouglaahome fll) OVER EASY
Shelley Berman. 1111101>.
tedet• ptOQtam• lo a11Jtt
eldwly.
Qt!) FAMILY PORTMll
"o..fll 01 A Mate
(I) C88NEWS
I
f
9 MEIN OAlfflM
~IE ~ Ma-go!ll,
Jolln and .,._...., Dean,
Rona Barrell. George
Pllmplon.
7 00 G H8C MEW• 8 UAAICLUB 0 A.ICNeWS m ILOVELUCY
'The SuophofMI" Cit AOM/.-12
Chan...t Lbf ing•
t> KNXT (CBS) Lor. Ang11l1"; 1J KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles 1J KTLA !Ind) Los Angolo~ 0 KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angell'S
(() KFMB (CBS) San Diego
C!) KHJ. lV (Ind) Los Angeles
9 KCST (ABC) San 01ego CD KTTV (Ind) Los Angele!>
Q) KCOP·TV (In d ) Los Anqoles al KCET· TV tpBS) Los Anqolf's
'11> KOCE-TV(P8S) Huntington Beach
A Carload of Cops
Stc.irs of ABC's police shows. past and pre-
..,ent, gather for a special on the network's
..,tlver anniversary. From left are George
Stanford Brown. The Rookies; Hal
Linden, Barney Miller; Steve Forrest,
p~ pojlce wor1c Inter•
"'P" Whal "*"' out \0 be
1 romentlo ewnlrlg tor
Otllcet Maloy •t the llOme
of Offlcar Reed wMf\ •
t.-aoed nelglltlOf turn•
~high on nlltOOtlol. f.IJ MACNlll / l.EHAl!R
REPQRT CID YOGAwmt
NAOBJN£
I TO TELL THE TRUTH
7:30 CONSUMIEI' BUYUHI NEWLVWWO GA* 0 TMAT8 HOU.'VWOOD
"BoyMeelaOlrt'' G> THE 8AAOY 8UHOf
Alloa'• coueln .. In whllil
AJloe II on ,,,_Uon.
CD N>AM-11
Offtcen Malloy and Reed
WOl'lt ... ~ """ tMt
lnc;tude9 the llr'W °' •
• drunker> pilot wtlO ~
crUhee 1111 plane.
ti!) L.A.~
~popcorn"
• JOtCIR'9 WllD ·CNQ.~ Queal:~ D9llll Jr.
• MOVll • • • • "Emf Of Ed«!"
(11155) JamM o.n. Julie
HerrlL Fruellattd IOwe er.
••• oonlllott .,.._ two
boyl ..... lllelr talher (2 ,. ... ,
• NATIONAL
GEOGMl'HtC IPECW.
"Tiie iegacy or L.8.B.
LMM(' The ut. ol llCleft.
tilt Louil 1.8. Leakey.
c:elled tri. Darwh• o I
llulnln ptelltltOIY, II totd In
hie own woroa through
ftltnl medt ttwoughout NI ,_....._.
• QUE PMA, U.a.A.1
uo I COMC8ftRATJOH tt21.000 QUl!STIOH
OYIRUSV
~ a.nn.t; Wllon:
federal progren11 to Mlilt
..-iy.
, 1tGO 8 N8C MOVIE
•
SWAT. Abe Vigoda, Fish ; Paul Burke.
Naked City; Dennis Cole, Felony Squad;
Michael Cole, P eggy Lipton and Clarence
Williams III, Mod Squad, and Howard
Duff, Felony Squad.
TUBE TOPPERS
CBS EJ 8:00 -The Year in Enter-
. tainment. "This special" reviews slgnifi·
cant entertainment events of 1977 with
guests Telly Savalas, Alan King and
Valerie Perrine. ,
KC.ET 9 8:00 -"National Geo-
graphic Special.'' The lite of scien·
lists/anthropologist L.S.B. Leakey is ex-
amined.
KCET O 10:00 -"Scenes From a
Marriage." Liv Ullmann and Erland
Josephson star in the first of a six-part
series running through Saturday th•t
follows a marriage over a 10-year
period.·
••• Heer w..n" (19711
Fllctlanl Pryor. Geotve
Certln. Recio oont•t.a.
NlglOn end~ mill
with poll1lct. putodownt
lind ~ In the day
to .,, rouar. "' • deluxe
Los~ cer WMh. • 111 MIO MOYie
'°6llpel'dolM" (Premier•)
O.Yld Jeneeen, Donna· M.._ Terror ..,._ the
generlt mal'MI09" of •
8Upet &ooM-bound loolball
tMITI ""*' ... i..m. .,..
.. _. ....... op
lit ~ to keep the
team lfom wlrwllflo.
• lf'ONll)E
• ...VOM'Nf ~ SuNn Margofj1,
Jotwl lind tt.4.,,_, Deen.
Rone 8errett. George
Plill'lpton.
• HENRY FORO'I
AMENCA
A C#IClld OOCUmenlery Ofl
the "*' end the 9m91,.
tPW hat bec:onMt • oomer·
1tone ol 20th Century
Amer1cen lffe. G MW> 8Ul8l<IHO
"Whltee ..... Not AclPIY:
The Agllt 0-........
~H •.ao 8 Cl) IETIY Wtaft
The a.t al IN "Undlrocw-
., WomM" etMIW pw1k:e
--~ ... the Mt· • wortc .. planning to oencel
the .......
10:00 • (I) 8WITCH
Pete end Mee are
ewptleed to dfaooww thet
the cool! at N ~
ber II a l'ilgtM• .. 1\1 ...,._
tier of.~ long. ·~ wtWI "-1pfl .... Ed Oft •
bullnell trtp, .. ~
ly *°"* 'tile b«>lher'I
lc!tPt".
• ICENa PMIM A .............
"llWIOotnot Artd P9tllo" Jonan (EilaNI Joeephton)
and Marianne (Liv
Ullmann) -being Inter·
vlewtd by. -·a mao-
ulne about the '°""'* few "'* ten YMf'8 Of -'dad
tllll9. =11=111 NEwt LOW, AMEAICAH
ITV~ G t.tOVIE ..... ..~ Heeven
And Helt" (teM) Robwt wiener. Terry Moor .. War
IMdlte a yourig 8outhern-
., to )lldge hie f'llOw "*'
,,_. c:Nrttably. (2 hrl.) m THI 000 COtJPU!
Felbt ~. --
-ol lneomnla. I LET8 MAKI A DEAL
OICKCAVETT CD WACNB. t l.&CMA
Al!J'OKT
11:30 8 (I) CU LAT! MOYIE
**'-'"Pam.I In Crtme"
(11173) Lee Orent. Harry
Guerdlno. A women JlldQe
la hlted by an anviealac 10
llnd t7t0,000 lie hid
r~·(,_,
~ hGat: Oeoliae Oerln.
~ ~ MontelCtl,
Dick Shawn, l•nnl•
Frlnkln. •Low."~ . l'T'tlE • 9 "°'-eol 8TOll'Y
"Uttle -lMI" 0.0-
.,_ unoowr • ""*'" llolM Md cHd ~ .... ~,. ... ..,,.,.. .. "'. ~
otd cNd. Jelen llondell.
~ '°"* oi-t .... i :=91awtr
Mt.lt Ind AQtnt " tty 10 atoe> KAOi' O,,.,.t!M
8ttrdl ..... ~ ... OUl
ttle potcto Qt'CIO •
• CW'l'IONID QC
NIWI
MORNING
,~·=ZOHe
'81ftll000
Oelll(• -In tM oo6dl .... Md Wanda dlal*-t"* let.-plM for ~
wood.
• MOVll.
......... RMr"' ( 1tl4)
y~ 0. c.to, ....
MOCr-. A COl .... aae
~ trtaa to IMlle a
rnunldont oalll with .....
cen ~ "9f the end
of the CM! Ww. (1 llr., 30
mlrl.)
12:111 • --AA/ftlt(
......... 111~··
12:11·~ ''The Command" AobM
Steck, Robert Walker.
When an Amrt oaQtllln
"""' ....,,. bet*1d • ,_
guerd of twent~ men
doonl8d lO ~ .....
torn ~ 1111 -~ 8lld hie duty.
12:40 al IAOH8IOI!
An•-con·1~of.
..... -b«lc:Md by • group of .... ., .... bent
on~elep6o...-.
1:00 D TOMOMOW ou.t: .._. ~
director of "Clo••
Encount«9 Of the Third
Kind."
fJ llPV 1:ao•• NlWI
.... _
,,.,
Drumming Up Showhi!
'\. ~11
NBC Snecial Examines Promotion Me.thods .. 1~·~ k ~ I••;
By TOM JORY it's my feeli.pg peopl e are Kind" and "The Deep." · <'l
NEW YORK fAP) --" ... So manipulated ln ways we don't re-Columbia Pictures' promi
that's why we've come to you." aijze. We have very few free de-of "Close Encounters of
Rob Cohen, producer of "The cislonsinwhatwebuy." Third Kind" is partlcur
Wl'z." a movie Musical, is seen Miss Lerner, who reported fer graphic.
telling New York public relations magazihes before joining NBC
m an Bobby Zarem, "because I News"Ul 1972, says ber aim was to
think you can manipulate the show how, with exaggerated
media sufficientJy well." m ark et in g techniques ,
·• .•. The most important thing Americans can be sold almost. that we can do," Zarem advi&es anything.
Cohen, "ls establish right up "In a sense, we're saying the
front how important and how In· 'Horatio Algu• myth ls dead,
telUgent and how wonderful thJs that s uccess can be created
·movie is." rather than earned." the pro. It's a brief but telling scene ducer says. "And I personally
from an hour· long look by NBC at thlnk it's a shame."
the big busines3 or promoting
books, movies and rock groups,
to be telecast Tuesday at 10 p.m.
on Channel 4.
''I TIUNK IT'S scary," says
Karen Lerne1', who produced
"NBC Reports : Land of ~
and Glory." "I'd been thinking
about It for three years or so and
EDWIN NEWMAN narrates
the special which, though it does
not consider hype and the TV ad-
ve rtiser, demonstrates clearly
the medJum'spromoUng power.
~,. .
country to the Americana
"'COLUMBIA FLEW bun~ or journalists from around
in New York," Newman aaya.l
them brea.kf ast and presen
eaeb with a "very unusual ~
kit; ltlsabriefcase." ,;
From the briefcase, Newmao
pulls .. what might be caUeclr•
normal folder, photograph5 and
lnformaUon about the fil~
along with a tape recorder .AH
package or blank tape caas~ equipment from the producer (gr
each reporter .. so that they C4J
do Interviews ... "
TV Producer 'Finds' Nashvil"le
."The tricky thing in pointing
the finger is we can't be too
judgmental," Miss Lerner says
of TV, "though I did want to show
how the media are used by pro-
moters."
Newman -a carnival in the
background -asks at the outset,
"Why will a consumer buy one
product and not another? Well,
one reason may be hype.
"There are many diffel'etlt
ways we are manipulated,".,,...
Miss Lerner ln summing up Jbe
production, "and this is a loolt at
the P.rocess of creating a •~ctqfb
showing that we even enjoy b)'Pf:
and don't question it ·vert
much." ·~·~· i TotieName~
By JAY SHARBUTT
LOS ANGELES CAP}
Producer Joe Cales began his TV
career in New York in 1947 with a
show called "When You Wish
Upon a Star." He was born in
New York, still lives there and
ieys he likes the place. f But such Is the nature of TV to·
day he rarely does a show in what
used to be the navel or network
production. He tends to s(>i!nd
considerable time in Nashville,
Tenn .. these days.
HE PRODUCED JOHNNY
~ash's CBS Christmas special
there . .He and his brother, GU, re-
een tly co-produced another
Nashville ~how. another tribute
to the late Elvis sley that
NBC will air Sund
And this week, he r eturned to
Nashville's new Opryland com-
plex to tape yet. another down-
home musicale for NBC, "50
Years or Country' Music," a
three·hour extravaganza airing
Jan. 22.
Next spring, it's NasbvlJle
again for another Cash speelaL
Cates, s:Jtitspecialist in specials,
was 41s"d H he suspects
Nashvllle has become a pretty
b)J center of production for
network TV.
"I WOULDN'T SAY pretty
bit." heeaid by phone frotn New York. "Lot Angelos stfll clearly
,J.s. the leader, followed by New
York only because news, sports.
soap operas and a few odsiball
thin« a me out ot there.
"But the onl)' other city In the
U.S. that ts doing national
television retularly ls Nashville.
not the old radio centers like
Chicago or Detroit." He offered a
few theories whY.
"Obviously, there's a concen·
tratlon of country music stars
living there:• he sait1. ''And
country music baa become na-tional.
uso MANY OF these people are crossover'' -not limited to
country music fans ~ appeal -
"and are oC national interest.
"A third reason ts that they
very wisely built a major studio
facility there. The one they have
out at Opryland ls as line as
anytbinc' you have in Loa
Aneeles, maybe even finer."
Orphanage Aided
OSTEND, Belaiutn <A.P>-Sinter Ella F1Ugerald bas donated
*2,000 to tbe "lbia" orphanaae to help Bel1lan children, directors of the orphanage announced.
Mils Flb1eraJd sang at a tlla here lut July to Mdse funds for
the orpbanace. Abobt $5,000 wu raised then.
"Well, what is hype?" the cor-
respoqdent continues. "Hype's a
shot in the arm. It comes from
the word hypodermic. Tbe
camlval barker hypes his pro.
duct."
HYPE, HE GOES on to s ay, "is
.original, some is imaginative
and some is deceptive and out-
rageous."
The program focuses on three
examples of hype -the Cim·
micks and strategy used to pro-
mote the rock group Kls.5, drum·
beatiqg by Simon & Schuster to
niake Dorthy Uhnak's aovel,
''The lnvesUtation, n a be1t-
seller mootbs before publication,
and the courting· of news people
by producers ot two hit films.
•'Close Dlcounters of the Third
IVtJ[ 'En . ,,~ tertamer .,.,
LAS VEGAS (AP) -TQUI)
Fields, the comedieane ""ho
made a nightclub and tbeat«
comeback aft« a leg am~ lion and a string of otb
medical maladies, ha•
named .. Entertainer of
Year .. by the American Guild~ Variety Artiste. ~ -
The 8,000-member guU4.
which bu been presenUni en·
tertainment awards for ellbt
years, aleo selected Miu FieJds..
u female comedy 1tar ol de
year. ·~
The awards ceremony, ......
by comedian Jackie Gleason at
Ceasars Palaee here, will be
broadcast by CBS-TV on J-. tj.
?~~
.MUSte I ENTERTAINMENT •
Shaw. an Author Also
... ~t II a.rt a.a ... tbe ac&or, a1le llobert
ia1ttlae aatlNrf -L. Wymbc, N.Y.
A : Yes and be'• qulte proflc1ent and proUnc at
lb professions. Movie1oers know Shaw as the
crUJty old fisherman ill "Jaws"
as well as from his roles tn
"The Sting," "Robin and
Marion," "A Man for All
Seasons" (for which h~ won an
Oscar nominaHon), .. From
Russia With Love," "Black
Sunday" and "'fhe Deep.'' As
playwright-novelist, his credits
include five novels an~ three
plays, one being the con-
SttAw lrover sial "The Mao in the
Booth," which ran on Broadway and was a e into a film with Maiumillan Schell. He is
urrenUy working on his ~il'lh novel about the
plder and neglected generation.
• b QUOTE OF THE YEAR 1971 : Actor Roger
i e appears to be more the Saint than James
a~ording to what he said in Us magazine
re leaving for South Africa to shoot "The Wild
se" with Richard Burton and Richard Harns.
#ter confessing he bad a few miagivings about bis
macho image, be sa1d : "I'm a coward. I don't eho like gelling hit -even in films. It takes
,'4\.iceup' a loog time lo put me right because I cry
1aod IDY mascara nµis. J'd probably be useless in a
1"1 fight. I'm trained to miss, and I'm not ag-
gressive."
; Q: Have Henry Winkler and bis girl, Stacey
:WQtzman, married yet? -C.L., Asheboro, N.C.
" A : They're not Mr. and Mrs. Fonzie yet -at
fleut not al lhis writing. Though rumored to tie the
!mot before the holidays, Henry -as he told
.l'tl:arllyn al an OMNI (Miami) luncheon -isn't in .aHy hurry to give up his bac~elorhood. "The only f thing l want to take responsibility for in my life
rlglll now," he's repealed, "is my career. Mar·
.riefe is definitely out!"
t
·01 Q: Cao you ask Joey Adams If comedians like ~. Bob Hope a.ad blmsdf who got to know lJ .S.
, M~deae. quJ&e weU ever aay whlcb one bad &Jle
best aeaae of bwnor, Roosevelt, Kemaedy, Nlxoa or
J61lnna? -Harriet B., San Mateo, Calli.
A : "I believe," comedian-columnist Adams dld. "President Johnson had the driest and most
s14rp~ sense of humor. Here's an example.
'.l\Qer he r et ired, LBJ gave a barbe~ for
tnetgbbors al his Texas ranch. In the midst of !he
, .~-'Glad You Asked That'
by MarUp ..t Hy Gar-..
jollily the ex-president bragged that he bad 2,000
head of catUe. One oC bis fellow ranchers said,
'What's so wonderful about that. Mr. President?
f Many of ~ here have even more cattle.' 'In the
refrigerator?' LBJ retorted."
, Q : Whatever happened to that reported
romance several years ago between Polly Bergen
•~d Jacqueline Susann's coll•borator and
wlao-.er, 1"1.al Muafleld? -.J. Henderson,
lt.ltlmore.
A : "Thal report was very nattering but also
very fragile," said the would-be swain. "We dated
! once -and it really wasn't a date. We ha~
ed, by colncideoce, to be sitting next to each
er on a flight Crom Hollywood t.o New York.
ter we both went to the same party -aaaln a
~incidence. Funny thing though," Irving COD·
thrued, "when Polly's ex, Freddie Fields, saw tbia
item be sent me a wire: 'Dear Irving (atop) Rud
Where you and Polly are going s teady (stop)
,lease, please, please, marry her'."
' Q: Yoo reuotly m eoUooed Uaat Beary
'Wlnkler's mother wears a T-&blrt ldeadfytaa ber ~i °Fomle's Mother." Isn't l.bls llkeJ, to .start a
~ Cad -other mothers or stua, prwcl to Oaat
fltefr son's or daughter's succeu! -lln. a.
Delray, Youngstown, Ohio
A: Could be. If they're a.! extroverted as Mra.
Winkler or Jacquellne Stallooe. Jackie's alre*
tr\odeliog a robe emblazoned with the wotd.8
••llocky's Mom" across her ctMlst.
" Q . la ll true &bat Geor1e (8ta'fl'Oll) Sa.alas
oaee dlo9e a cab In Hollywood? U ao. ·~ dJd aae ~T-AGreek Faa,Oaklancl.
A: After surviving action as a U.S. Na'f)' air
gunner, Kojak's brother found bactiDI even more
dangerous. Especially after a fellow badde wu
mf(dered by a mueger cone9Jed lD tbe rear of bJa
cM»1 He decided he'd rather return to b1I rtrat
love, acting. Which he enjoyed dome lD crammar
sc~l. later at a naval tr~ station and 1Wl
later attending drama classes.
Q: Wlul& was t.be title of Elvts Preslv'• ftnt
. ...,_rd -I.be Sa L•belT -MaWda ... Memplala. Stf--A: "Thal's All Right, Mama."
1'' Q: ~looked Hd aoanded so mada allke, J i bader, weren't Lou Costello aad lla1er •G•ardl• related? -Marie CutaJllCd. S&a&c!rl ~fud,N.Y. lo A: No. Though both were of Italian extraction,
'JAMES BOND' REALLY A COWARD
Roger Moore With B•rbara Baoh
were look·and·sound·alikes and even cl06e friends.
When LaGuardla first ran for mayor, Costello
volunteered lo mount the ~ap box and electioneer
for him. "I appreciate it, Lou," fiery Fiorello said,
"but I don't lhillk it's good for an actor to 1et into
politics. It's such a rough and filthy business. And
besides, the only chance l 1et to relax is watching
you. So I'd appreciate it if you didn't campaign for
me!''
Q: Is Tom Ewell so friendly wttlt Fred, the
Cockatoo oo "BareUa," be even takes the blrd
home with him on 'Weekends? -Robin Smith, In·
dlaoapoll.s.
A: Definitely not! ''Tom hates that bird,"
Robert Blake says. "When we use a stand-in for
Fred ca nice, duU bird) Tom wiJJ Jet him sit on his
shoulder. But If lt's Fred, he just says, 'Let.
somebody else do this trick'." Countered Ewell:
"Fred's a mean bird. He bit the bell out of Robert.
so he's always trying to foist him off on me.'"
c Footnote: Before Tom Ewell co-starred with
Marilyn Monroe in "The Seven Year Itch," the ac-
tor was nicknamed "Jinx" because he'd appeared
in 28 successive flops before bJttinc the j ackpot.)
Q : Who was It who wro&e: .. A attic Is a
newspaperman whose sweetheart ran away wltll
an actor?" -PauJa Glason, Milwaukee.
A : T he late J oe Laurie Jr.. a vaudeville
headliner, w1t-a bout·town and columnis t for 1 Variety.
Send UoUf' que1tionl to HI/ Gardn#, "Glad You
Aaked That," caN of &Ma ne~. P.O. ~ JJ70,
Chica.go, IU. 60611. Marlllf'l C1'1d Hy Gartltwr toUl ~
as many que1twns as they ccn m thrir column, but tM
voLum• of maU maJca pcraonal npbe1 impouible.
'
MATINEES SATURDAY Ii SUNDAY
OF THE THIRD KIND" (PG) ,~;.·,
.''.$/.TUR DAY NIGHT FEVER" CR>
"LOOKING FOR
MR. GOOOBAR" CR)
.. 190()" (R)
"WORLD'S GREATEST LOYER"
"BOBBY DEERAB.O" (PG)
•ALJCE OOESNI LIVE HERE ANYMON:
WA4T DtlHFrll
"PETE'S ORAGONS~
"FANTASY ON SKIS"
"THE HEROES" "°
"AIRPORT 77"
.,...E.GAUNTLEl ... (R)
~EEBEE & THE BEAN"
AU..DtUW.ttnONJ!t 6:.19P.M. ... HTLY
C1MN u-.. u .... ""... • Kiddle .... ,..,. .. ".
Mondey. Januaty I>. t978 OAIL Y PILOT 8lJ
By The Assocle&ed Press ·
The following are BUlboard'a bot record hill
for the week ending January 14 u tbty appear ln
next week's issue or Billboard maaadnt.
HOT SINGLES
J. BABY COME BACK -PlQer (RS0)
2. HOW DEEP IS YOUR LOVE -Bee Gees (RSO) .
3. HERE YOU COME AGAIN -Dolly Parton (RCA) •
4. YOU'RE IN MY HEART -Rod Stewart
-
Kra~r Jumps ,
Off 'Titanic'
LOS ANGELES CAP> -Producer-director
Stanley Kramer, clllnl crutive dlfferencet, bu
withdrawn rrom the movie "Ralaethe Tltanic."
"Mr. Kramer's decision to witbdraw arose out
of creative dUferences wlth respect to the picture
atid was agreed to by ITC in the interests of all
concerned," said a joint announcement from
Kramer and uecuUve producer Martin Star1er.
Production la due to becln this year.
(Warner Bros.> ---=-~;9.;P.;P.ii~ii;j~~~ji~ii;!iil:: ~.BACK IN LOVE AGAlli -LTD (A&M)
8. SLIP SLlDlN' AWAY -Paul Simon
(Columbia>
7. HEY DEANIE -Sbado Caaldy (Waroer·
Curb>
8. SENTIMENTAL LADY -Bob Welch (Capitol>
9. COME SAIL AWA.Y -Styx <A&M>
10. WE ARE THE CHAMPIONS -Queen (Elektra)
TOPLPs
1. FLEETWOOD MAC -Rumors <Warner
Bros.)
2. ROD STEWART -Foot tooee & Fancy
Free (Warner Bree.)
3. EARTH, WIND & FIRE -AU 'N' All
(Colombie) •
4. ~mxc IJGHT ORCHESTRA -Out Of
The Blue <Jet)
5. LINDA RONSTADT -Stmple Dreams
(Asylum)
EASY USTENING
1. rusr THE WAY YOO ARE -Billy Joel
(Columbia)
2. HOW OAN I LEAVE YOU AGAIN -John
Denver (RCA)
3. DESIREE -Nell Diamond (Columbia)
4. HERE YOU COME AGAIN -Dolly Parton (RCA)
5. HOW DEEP IS YOUR LOVE -Bee Gees CRSO)
SOUL SINGLES
L FUN-Coo Funk Shun (Mtrelll')')
2. OUR LOVE -Natalie Cole (C.p&l>
3. OH BOY -Rose Royce (Whltfteld)
4. REACH FOR IT-Georpl>uke (Epic)
5. GALAXY -War (MCA)
COUNTRY SINGEltS
1. TAKE TH1S JOB AND SHOVE IT-Johnny
Paycheck (Epic)
2. WHAT A DIFFERENCE YOU MADE IN
MY LIFE -Ronnie Milsap <RCA>
3. MY WAY -Elvis Presley (RCA)
4. MIDDLE AGE CRAZY -Jfll:fY Lee Lewis
(Mercury)
5. OUT OF MY HEAD AND BACK IN MY
BE~::: Loretta Lynn CMCA)
._. ....... .,... .....
OH OODflNt flUlt
OUMH&I UUY "'°'
lllNrY .....,....W4, '*" HllOU{Nl ""' TNI lrlNl(Nll
News from aH over C1lffomla
11 rounded up
eachd•y
lntlte DAILY PILOT
...
Jl8 DAILY PILOT Monday January 9. '978 NATIONAL
$10,000 to Buy Space Trip? State Tax
Withheld
TllE f Al\tf LY CIRCU • 8y Bil Keane
SARATOGA IAP1 Any spectator
could buy a trip into i.pace ror $10,000, 1f
a retired space engineer's private
rocket project becomes a reaUty
This word came Sunday rrom Robert
Truax, 60, who was techrucal manager
of Evcl Knievel's unsuccessful 1974
rock('l motorcycle attempt across the
Snake River
TRUAX IS SEEJ(JNG backeri. for an
$800.000 project to launch 25-foot rockets
to the altitude or so miles, With a
pa!->senger squatted tn the nose cone.
"Once we have a couple of successful
launchei., the cost per launch would be
less than $10,000 If anyone wanted to be
an astronaut and could dig up $10,000,
I 'd !>ell him a ticket,' Truax said tn an
intl'rv1ew
"It would be likt• climbing !\fount
Everest one of tho.,,c things y ou'd
v. ant to do before you die Once we
!>how it's reru.onably safe, l th&nk there
are quite a few people who would do It."
THE PROJECT WOULD aleo attract
attention for advertisers, he said: "I'm
looking tor someone who's selling chew-
ing gum. cigars, beer bottles or
whatever."
Truax is building a "boiler-plate
model" or "hard ruockup'' of I.he vehi-
cle. It would be powered by four surplus
space nuss1le rocket guidance engines
fueled with kerosene, high pressure
helium and Uqwd oxygen.
After tumbling i.lowly In space, the
capsule would parachute gently into the
ocean.
TRUAX SAID A HEIGHT 9f 50 miles
qualifies as "space" under an agree-
ment reached by the Air Fo~ce and the
Natfonal Aeronautics and Space Ad
mlnistratloo.
He calls the effort ··Project Pn vate
EnterpMse," with ''Enterprise" In
italics to mean the U.S. s~ce shuttle.
He said his capsule could at the En·
terprise in being the firs re-usable
space shuttle.
It would take about $150,000 to build
two rockets. the first to be tested
without passenger. he s aid. The rest or
the $800,000 would be spent on a test
site, the testing itself, and trackint and
recovery -radar, boats and aircraft.
TRUAX SEEMS TO have coovincine
credentials. A Naval Academy
graduate. he said he organized the U.S.
Naval Rocket project before and du.rtna
World War II. •
~ .. said be was the fint direct.Qt or I.he
Air Forcespac.e program lD 1.956.
WASHINGTON (APJ
The Defense Depart
ment has announced 1t
will begin withholding
state income taxes Feb.
1 from the pay of
military personnel who
are legal residents of
California.
California will become
tbe 28th state, along
with th e District of
Columbia. lo receive
these payments through
the Defense Depart·
ment.
A 1976 law removed
the ban on such
withholdings of st.11te In·
come taxes and states
gradually have been
wor-kffig out 1lgtte·
men ts.
.. .i "-~l ,;;,..
---;_-.,,,; -..,...::-. -
LOW COST HOME REPAIRS
Plumbing, Electrical, Carpentry,
Appliance Repair etc.
MOST AT 'I ()00
Per Hour or Less
• 01te H-1Mtrgit11ey s..-,,Ju
• So111e Doy 5.,.,,fce Alwoy1
l<>w clyb ,.,.. l'Ve.tatJlt to ~' ew1t~ OtMit ""'""*''"Ct b•n•flt1 1nck.lde AU WV'tCAt ChMOU• c:>••O fOf Dv ~'ll'HO
'••· trN ftlimlle •ree CMC•uo Md d•'1 ... flf"'Y .on "' ttol~
Ne l)l'O•-.oei AN'f home Mf'VIQft ii t~ OfJ!tR Dh ..
ou11tty tfhullt FrH loa,,.. AOO'fel\C" ut'hl ,~ or
·~tc.o
,-... ------------"" I
: NAME I r-----------.... ---J I I ADDRESS I t--------------i t PHONE I (NCLO~lO I Hl 130 I P(fl VEAR , ______ ---------l
For"'°" htfonMtlOll P'llotie 67J·501l w write AHA, tlO L 17tti Stw Wte Dw C..lo
M••• 92627 or !Mii .,,11cetfoe wltfl ~ fM 914 ~ • ..,...,_ '-edl.t.ty.
. . .,._., .. "' .. , ......
l
.'io•e• In 1'\'t>W•
Bt•aut~· ~xpcrt Mark
Traynor cites as
most memorablt·
nosC's of 1977 are
thO!-t<' nf. abov<.', left
to right. First Lach
R o s a I y n n C a rt e ,: .
Lila M1nnclli and
England's Prinnss
Anne. and. ut left.
far left. entertainer
Telly Savalu~ and
Egyptian Pre::;idcnt
i\nwar Sadat.
''Vantage is c~ging
a lot of my feelings ··
about smoking!'
'Get the-Birds'
' . Pigeo1is Drop Problem on Gale1ia
G/\t.l';,....,A, Ill IA l'1 l11sloric
Gall'na hi.ls 1.000 1•1·0111<.· !)(JO onr1
touni-.ls a } car, and homl·s that once
hou!->cd l 'lyi-.Sl'" S Grant ancl <"lghl
other C1vll Wnr ~ent•rub It abo ha:-.
a prohlcm 2.000 p1gL'ons.
And it has u fight on II !-> hand!> over
Mayor f'~rank E1n!-.\\'C'il1·r ., wm to
wipe them out by fN·chng them corn
poisoned with strychnine•
SOME PEOPLE llAVE written lo
say the H.lcu l!-o erud One. in !>ym-
pathy for the birds, even sugge!>tcd
that lat•ing lhl' corn \I.1th booze would
be kmdl'r Thnt wa.v the btrds would
Just gt'l too t'oekcycd to fly.
But Einsweiler. 72. l!i unmoved
"l want tho:-.c b1 rds to foll down de·
ad, not dead drunk,'' he says
"TllF. PIGF.ONS ARE disease car·
r1ers. and \\1! don't want to take
chance.!> of their dried droppines be·
ing scattered around town in the
wind, let alone the mess their wet
droppings make on our fine old build·
lngs and the heads of our people and
tourists.
"Do you know they are roosting on
he scarfoldinf' or lhe 121-year-old
oatsworth Building that we hope to
restore? Do you know that Grant
nly worked there in his father's
leather shop?"
The pigeons are the talk of a town
where history is king. Its artists, an-
tique sellers, quaint shops and the
llKe tesUfy to that.
GALENA, THEY OAN tell you,
ns a major port or call between St.
Louis and St. Paul duril\g Lhc Civil
War
Ship ... would arrive on the Galena
H1\·c·r. \l,htch joins the Mississippi a
f1:w n11lcs awuy, to load up with farm
IJIClUUl'C, whiskey, and lead ror Union
Army bullets.
Galena is an lndi~n word for lead,
and It was lead that was .Jargely
responsible for the town's place in
history. Up to 1870, it produced i.>
percent of the nation's supply,
although water later filled the mining
shafts and made production too
cos ti~
THERE IS ONLY one mine now,
but Galena has a long memory.
It al&o remembers that Grant's na-
tional presidential cetnpaign head·
quarters were h1 the 270·room DeSoto
Hotel. and when the hotel was the bla·
gest between New York and San
Franc~ico. lt isn't now, but the DeSoto
is still Galena's focal point.
Ten inches of anow covers the
ground In Galena, so the poisonina
isn't ex pee~ for another montb. But
Einsweiler Is determlnec:t to get the
pigeons by March, when the "good•'
birds -blue m artini, roblha,
car'dinals, bluejays -return.
Mondale Swing
WASHINGTON (A1>) -Vice PresJ.
dent. Walter F. Mondale 1s embark·
ing on a five-day f ence-mendlng trip
to the West, where the Carter ad·
ministration's ~a&~ has beets
dam aged by White House policies on
water projects, enerty and fanning.
"I like to smoke,
and what I like is a
cigarette that isn't
timid on taste. But rm not living in
some ivory towet I
hear the things being
said against high .. tat
smoking as well as the
next guy.
"And so I started
looking. For a low-tar
smoke that had some
honest-tcrgcxxlness
cigarette taste.
"I ' Th t wasn t easy. e
low .. tar cigarettes I
tried tasted 1ike chalk.
And high .. tar cigarettes
were starting to taste
rougher as I went along.
':.Then I tried a pack of
Vcm~e. It was smooth yet
>
\,
it had taste.
And a lot less ·
tar than what
I'd been
smoking.
11As far as
I'm concerned,
when I switched t
to Vantage, l changed J
to a cigarette I could . ,, en JOY.
li.L-~
Rick Lawrence
Mmirie. l.ouislana
I I
"
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' INSIDE:
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•Ann Landers
•Horoscope
•Lifestyle
•Classified
Mondlly, January e. 1978 DAILY PILOT Featufing_. _ •• ___ Cl
Most area businessmen say there is a reason for the expense-account lunch.
~arving a Niche
What began as a way to wile away the hours has led to a
new life for woodcarver Garner Brandt.
By DENNIS McLELLAN
OUhe O•llf PlloU .. H
About a year and a half ago Garner Brandt
was out of work for five months with an injured
foot. So he spent a lot of time on his patio with his
foot propped up on a stool.
To wile away the hours he decided to take up
woodcarving, something he had wanted to do for
yea rs but never bad the time.
Today he's an award-winning woodcarver
whose life-like figures are nearly as aw~
inspiring as the biblical stories they portray.
His Balboa Island living room is filled with
figures acting out scenes from the Old Testa-
ment. Like a still photographer, the carver seem
jngly has caught them in mid-action, their arms
and legs bent and their muscles straining.
There's Noah and his three sons hard at work
building the ark. There's Joshua figbtint. the
Amorite, David hurling his sling, Daniel sur·
rounded by lions and an angry Moses clutchin~
the commandments. 1
Why the biblical emphasis?
"I taught Sunday school for 22 years so ii ?
seemed a natural l.hlng to do," said tall, wbU9-~
haired Brandt with a smile as he and bis wife.
Joy, gave a tour of their living room.
"ISN'T IT BEAUTIFUL," noted Mrs.
Brandt, polnting out the straining muscles on one
figure. Her husband laughed: "She's my press
agent."
From left,
Moses with
the 10
Commandments,·
Joshua fighting
the Amorita;
and Abraham
and Isaac.
Brandt, 63, worked in the planning and pro-
cess engineering departments at Douglas
Aircarfl for 38 years But he enjoyed not working
so much during the months he was laid up lbal be
decided to retire early a year ago.
Although he's only been carving for a UtUe
more than a year, sevet'81 of b1a biblical figures
won top awards al the Orange County Fair and al
Knoll's Berry Farm
Wh.ile he's given away numerous c8"lngs to
relatives, his living room, hallway and workshop
are still loaded with figures
"Can you imagine what our house is going to
be like in a year?" said Mrs. Brandt. seated next
to a seven-foot tall oak cabinet her husband
made '' U they could only eat we could take them
off on our income tax."
WHAT'S THE LURE of woodcarving?
''It has a warmth and a reel to It,'' Brandt ex-
plains. "It's solid and when you're through, it
stands up."
He can lake a four by eight-inch block of
wood and tum 1t ~to a life-like figure in four
days. That's if be works eight hours a daY. which
be often does.
"It's very engrossing," be sald ... J want to
make them come to life. I Just keep carving
away. lcan'tbelievethat Urnegoes bysofasl.
(See CARVER. Pace CZ)
Irish Women
'In Ireland, the attitude that a woman's place is in the
home is embedded deep in the national consciousness.'
87 ED BLANCHE
DUBLIN (AP) -hi.ab women trying to
1peed up their c:ampaip for equal ripts, have
been aet back by the economy.
There'• a 9.5 percent unetnployment rate in
the lrisb Republic, hipest in the £~an Com·
mop MarMt. and lt'• sparked a ~ckluh cam-
paip to aencs work1ni mamecl womeo back to
bearth andbome.
One Catholic prleat Hid ln a radio phone-In
proaram on tbe atat.nm RTB network: '-rbe
workln• wlfe 11 the areateat curse d tb1I coa· tr)' ...
But Sea. Gemma HUNey. CN "tbe ~ ot womee In tile bi4b parllammt and• dlemploa
• ol worklal wom•, ,_,, then'• mon to tt than uoemploYJMDt. ·
.. In Ireland, the atUtude tllat a woman••
plac:e ll in the bome 11 embedded. deep 1n the na-
• tlonal CC1Melousne11, formed by the Catbollc ~ Cbureb. M.a very mucb resent women's chant·
I ln• role,'' Iba la)'t, Tbe ROmlD Cat.bollc Church la Ireland bu ~adi~ malntalned Jta Influence lllr'oqb
.WOID~tbill llDdlpln of~ f~. But, aakl OHi• 1. 1pok.,man for tbe Dublin
cUoetM: • II I dellnl~ UwallUtlOa pro>
etll wltbla &be Cburdl &hat iD ~-·ii ...
radical than tbe pollUclans." Sen. Mary Robinson, a IOl\ltime 8'itator for
a new deal for Irish women, wowd be hard
pressed to disagree.
Mrs. Robin.son, a 33-year-old lawyer and pro-
fessor oC constitutlonal and criminal Jaw at
Dublin'• prestJeioua Trt.nJtY Colleee, .,1d ID an
intttvler. ''TheH bu been a drutlc chance ill aoc.lal morte tn ~ent yean, but the law has not
1etcaucbt'G>wfthit." •
Indeed. Ireland'• 1.5 m1Woo wom• face •
formidable batterJ of laws tba~ draco-nian comp&Ncl With the ~.... 'I liberal !emiAllt ltliJJaUon ln Europe:
Sale of contraceptives lt banned under tbe
Republic's .0-year-<>ld conaUtutton. althoulb the
h11b court ruled four years aao, t.n a landmark
decltlon, that they mu be llQPOl14d bJ tn-
dlvlduals for their own uae.
Abortion lt Uleaal under tbe C<lllltltutloa and
bitterly opi>qeed by the church, bUt thousands of
Irish wotnen ro to Enaland every year lo
t.rm liia~ unwanted presn111cla. ,
DIYOl'Ce Is ~blted by the con.tltutloa and:
only a national referendum can tbaa,. that; Tbe
-· church hu 1tooewalled moYet to le&allM.
' (IM DUB, ra.. Q)
OverL-ch
Business lunches are no~ three-
mprtini routine, say area businessmen.
By JUDITH OLSON
Of .. Oeltr l'lletllllft
(
It's o~en said that million dollar de-
als are made on napkins and
placemats in restaurants. The busi·
ness lunch is as familiar to Americans
as Motherhood and Apple Pie.
But the business lunch is no lo(tger a
three-martini routine where ex-
ecutives with expense a«ount.s pad
them for an the food and drink t.bey're
worth -at Jeast not according to a
poll of <>ranpeoast businessmeD..
With Pnisideot Carter auggestlnt
that allowable buslnesa lunch deduc-
tions be cut in hall, more attention is
being paid to who eats what.and why
they eat and drink undu gui8e"bu.si·
neas.
No one seems overly concerned,
however, about the President'• pro-
posal. Most businessmen indicated
that they would continue their
lunches, full deduction or no\, and
most restaurant managers said the
change is "loo far away to worry
about."
The business lunch· accounts for
anywhere from 2S to 80 percent of the
avera,e restaurant's lunchtime dim·
tele, accordln,c to a survey ol eating
places it) Huntington Beach, South
Orange County and Newport Beach. '
THE AVlo,~AGE C~~~CK is $S at
these eslablish11u ... \.S, and the prevail·
iog drink is wine.
Drinks don't seem to be the major
interest at the average business
lunch, the restaurant managers said.
"Some drink, some don't," explaine<I
a spokesman ror El Adobe, San Juan
Capl!trano. • Ha added that the "three-martini
!~nch" which Praidenl Carter ls wor-
ried about exists only in the joke
books. "U there ls one around here
I'm not ln it," he kidded.
The spokesman conceded that a
Uaree-martlnl lunch is not an im·
posslbWty II the meeting will be a
long one. "ll depends on bow long
they're going to be here," be said. "Ir
they plan to have a long session they
sit and drink up a storm."
A spe>kesman for Francois, Hunt-
ington Beach, said his customers
generally have one or two drinks
before lunch, sacb as a Vodka tonic,
<See LUNCH, Pa1e 0)
Gamer Brandt with one of his bib/cal. woodcsrvings.
I i
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D~lY Pll01 M"nd.tr January 9 1971 ANN LANDERS /HOROSCOPE
How to Deal With Widowhood ( Horoscope
TUESDAY, JAN. It
Bv SYDNEY OMA.ll
)
By JOY STILLEY
NEW YORK <AP> Rae Llnd!,ay had
always thought of widow!:. ~ gray-haired
women who had lived their llle and were
left with money, the mortgage paid and
grown children to help them -until she·
became a widow before the age of 40, with
three children under age 10.
It was then1 three years ago, that she
learned that wiaows are also young women
-one out of four is under 45 and one out of
every six women over 21 is a widow -with'
very lilUe money, and young c hildren to
raise.
"There are six milhon of us under 52 in
the United States , and we have not only the
emotional trauma to d eal with, but often
the real problem or putting food on the ta·
ble when we're not equipped to work,"
Mrs. Lindsay said in an interview.
"I realized 1 was not in s uch a unique
position; there were a lot of us out there,"
added the vivacious free-lance writer, who
set out under two grants to team how her
counterparts over the country were copqig.
"I interviewed nearly a hundted
women, and found that all have emerged
as stronger women than they were
before," she says, "but it's terrible that
their new identity and strength had to
come through s uch tragedy.''
In the best position, of course, were the
ones with jobs nnd no children, reports
Mrs. Linds ay, who has written a book deal·
ing wllh he r findings and her own ex·
perienccs. ''Alone and Surviving: A Guide
for Today's Widow." ''In the worst situa·
lion ~~re women with young children who
had never worked at all."
Widows go through three stages, Mrs.
Lindsay points out:
"Impact, or a state of shocJC in which
. you have not come to grips-with your loss.
"Recoif. when you realize you're
alone, with all the problems at~dant on
••• Irish
<From P1ge Cl)
divorce but has been in recent years iranted hun·
dreds of annulments as the divorce rate soared.
Couples can aet civil divorces outside Ireland,
but under the Republic's civil law they are still
legally married and can be char1ed with bl1amy
if they remarry.
A husband can bring criminal char1es
against his wile's lover for "deprivation of
services" because in the eyes of the law she ls lb.fl
husband's property. But the wife or an unfaithful
husband cannot bring char1es a1ainst hia lover.
Husbands charged with wl!e-beatin1 can get
legal aid, but wives filln1 the charaes bave to pay
for legal representation.
A man can collect unemployment checks
even if he's never worked a day in his life. A
woman hu to work a full year before she's ell&i·
ble.
"Ad this ls naked dJscriminaUon," says Mrs.
Hussey, who won her senate seat last September
with a whopping majority. "Things are begin·
nln& to change, but we're rar behind the times
here. The laws where women are concerned are
medieval. Where family affairs are concerned,
especially divorce, we've got a lousy, rotten
legal system."
Women also ra ce inequality in the pro·
ressions. Barry O'Donnell, president or the Irish
Medical Association, recently urged a cutback in
the number or women in medical schools beeause
he said they tend to marry and quit t.be pro-
fe ssion. In industry. official statistics show
that women's pay averages onJy 60 percent of
men's.
"It was only in 1973 that women in the Civtl
Service could stay on at their jobs after they sot
married," says Sen. Hwisey. "But there'• still no
legislation ensuring that women workln1 ln
private industry can gel malem.lty leave ind still
have jobs to come b1ck to."
Widows also are young
women -one out of every
four is under 45 and one
out of every six women
over 21 is a widow.
that new s tatus, inc luding settling the
·estate.' as it's grandly called.
"You not only have to work through
your own grief but also have to help each
of the kids deal with theirs. ·
"Recovery, when you're no longer just
living on a day.to-da y basis, no longer
thinking of yourself as half a couple, but as
an individual with a future, a new concept
different. !rp.rn_iust being somebody's
wire." ,
Many younger women today, she
notes, not only will have bad working ex·
perience but also think of themselves as in·
dividual beings, so in that sense they are
better equipped to face widowhood.
'Watch out for the
"first year crazies."
Don't make any rash or
drastic decisions.'
'
Howevel", women are makin& some &alns.
They ata&ed several atrlkea demandlne equal
pay and opportunity and were rewarded ln the
dyin1 da,ys of the coaUUon government ou.eted
last June when Labor Minister Michael O'Leary
pushed the Employment Equality Act throulh
parliament. The act.Jot lost in the pol.lUcal
turmoil of the aener election, but the lrilh
Times called lt "a revolutionary act. .. which
could have far·reachlnl hnpUcations for huh
society and whlch could well prove to be the moat
import.ant piece of le1i1laUoa ever alfectiq
women ln Ireland."
The election also put 12 women in parlia-
ment, and when Prime Ml.Dlster Jack Lyncb took
ortice he named Marie Geogbegan·Qulnn as his
parliamentary secretary in the Induatry Depart·
ment, the first woman with government portfolio
slnce 1919.
Mn. Hussey believes the Republic'• mem·
bershlp in the Common Market, where women
are accorded social equality with men, bu
. forced a change in attitude towards women in
Ireland and spawned a pleLhora or women's or·
ganlzaUons ..
But the campaigners for change concede
that the traditions of "stay at home and produce
chUdren" are still deeply rooted in Ireland,
particularly in rural areas where the con·
servative church's influence ls strongest.
"Tbere are thousands or women in the coun·
tryalde who're horrified at the very mention of
contraception,'' one militant said.
"They've been brainwashed by centuries or
narrow-minded church propqanda and the will·
inl acquiescence of Jrlah men lnto believing the
only tlifti'g they're good for la producinl huge
famllle1 to keep the nan ln beer money in bl.I old
a1e.
"It's time they moved into the 20th century."
••• OverLuneh
(From P11eCl)
then perhaps a glass of wine with the meal.
"We haven't seen al\)' three-martini lunches
here," be added.
M08T LARGE corporatiom ln the Oran1e Coast area have generally the same policy about ·
i>u11neaa hmcbeona. They are not ancouraced
. aad th91 are closely monitored.
"All ex~nse account& have to be approved
b1 a J"noD • superiors and then approved by the
finance department," aald Martin Brower, '
pubUc relatloos apo.kesman for the Irvine Com·
pany.
"The IRS will disallow anytb.ln1•ibat i. 'not
well documen~." • .r
Brower eald hla rule of thwnb'lla .approx·
tmatelY te per person on th• lunch tab and that •'no-d.rlnk" hmch• often are tblrule for Irvine
• Comf.aDYeucutiYel. -, • one drink '"me tO do It for mc.t people. 1 ener alk wbetber)-anyone wanta a third. Tbe
1rvin• ComPU1 I.a not a drlnJdnc ccmPID)'. And I don't lmow tbat tbf.111 a 4rlDkiD1 area.••
• Tbe eompaQ)' problblta ~wonen, taJd.Da t1ch otbwlo:apen.M-aceount lundMI, Brower
add~ .. ':" bt Hid tbat ml.llJ aecath'tl eat at -tbelr .
•'WHEN BAY WATSON,,. PNlldat lit
d ao to the athletic club and nm ud tbtA tat
"-rul't Wltb a spoon, ft I
A IPOk•m• for a larp Newport S..cb ~=r=i.·~~f:S::.;~c= &;;, ~DOt•courai9d. ='11*9 are no drlnkl UD.1111 we an .tUi a
,...., ~Ilk• to IOcllll• ... bt lald ... ADd
.. driM .. m'llllJ pltnly. 0 we an.ab•" a~ luneb an tbe oftlff • ---~are broqM& We dOnot •· ._......,.atJaebtlme.''
~ ,•.:.I 19eff. IOt'Qff'bAt dlft .. t .... Of ....... Tbey ate IC:Wuled "lf ll 11
........... 1' MMC lllaQ' for lll'Ot'Uriu Oft"
...._., .. a.,..•maf«~u.rt9bdkufct
' I
But the expen.aes, while Nolmburled, ul-
Umat.ely are deducted from the Income of the
host executive. "Banking ls not typical,
however," the spokesman added. "There's a lot
more to lt than a band.abate." ·
1r namENT cAana•s Pl'OPOlal 1oee
tbroutb. J\tltlD Baldwin, of Union Bank'• bull·
neu development divillon, 1a1d he doeln't Wnt
b1I bank'• 1eoeral phllOIOl>bY toward bualn••
lunch• wW C!banae any.
"We would probab!y uk tht bank to relm-
bune oo u exempt bul1, •• be •aid. Tbe bank, he
added, dOll not now reimburse for coe.ktaill.
Bob McDclllald, • aaleanan for Coldwell
Banker u1d be th1nU the Prealdent11 propo1al la
••a bll m.lltakt._ !t penalbes tbe entrepreneurs.
thote 1tbo m..Se me ~try wbat lt'• worth."
He condded that iome people may abuse the
privUei• but "• abule a1f the other IOda1 Pl"C>-arama." ~ • .. . · ·
McDonald bM a *1Jl_, lUDCb CJI' clbuMr CID
the ........ ot one. a Wffk IDd ta14tMre11 DO Um.it oa the food or ditoka-lt'a, .. 'wbatft'tt tbe
cllent wuta. • . . 11111 wbQ1e 1ncome 11 c11etateeu>y tbeM ret•·
tfouhlpi," ht added.. "I lboul4 be able to Udact
ltfroni U).1tu.''.
Tbe ~ hmch lm't feet ..,ll'JCM tD, the
bualn-world, howft•. ·
TOQ)' Kopp, a Ntnrpelli Baell pubUo Nia·
UODI eamultant, •ald ... dedcled • year and a
haU •10 tbat tbe bujan.. Juneb Wtl .. one ot the
btll .. t Wutel ot thDe tMN 11. "I Mlc1om '°to Juneb, ·•be Mk!, "for two,..
uOG1. Onell iftljht ecmtrol and the otbtl' 11 that
tbt luncb bocU" !...Y!' me an Cll)DClirtunitJ to 1.t a lot morwdanl. I m llOt botbertCfb'j JboD•. · ,
.. W'bllt Prlltdm Carter·doel to tbe.luncb
dOlla't ..._.me a blt. 'l'bwe.,. Jmwtable,....
: .... flDr l&. I Udall. aDd Jed llMlald be U.. to._
4aeUt." I
KC)pp,al4 bO eatl a~ bteakfut DOW
-.. ftiidl tllat aklpp&af 1..-.... ,. blm hep oil~· U poundl be lolt lut 1UI'. •
Since three out of four married women
will eventually become widows, Mn.
Lindsay urges that they, first of all, should
make sure their hus band has a will. Sev"1
out of 10 husbands do not, she says, addin&
"When a man dies intestate it can be very
hairy. My husband had no will. He was on·
ly 48 and we just never thought about it.
"Women over 35 11hould give up the
idea that it's cute not to be able to )>alance
a checlcbook or know anything about
flriances," she adds.
.. Watch out for the 'first year crazies.'
Don't make any rash or drastic decia.ions ;
don't sell your home, or quit your job, and
for heaven's sake don't get marrled
again," she warns.
Mrs. Lindsay s uggests that if the going
gets rough in the early stages, it's wise to
seek out a "rap group," and she em·
phasizes the importance of a job, which
provides a good framework for activity
from 9 to 5, and is also "socially reward· ing.•• -
Though widows and divorcees come
from different directions, after a point they
share many of the same problems. Their
situations dltfer, thoueb. Mrs. Lindsay
says, because the divorcee bas someone to
be angry at -"a cleansing type of feel·
ing." But even lf the dead husband had not
been the best of men, his widow "for gets
about the warts and turns him into• a
saint."
"You can't just lop off a part of your
life; it's healthy to Lalk with the children
about their father. Look at photos; re-
member birthdays; never let them feel
ashamed of the fact that their father's
dead," s ays Mrs. Linds ay, whose children
are now 13, 10 and 6.
"The older two would like for me to re·
marry for m y own sake," s he reports.
"The little one would like me to get mar·
ried to ftive him a father."
A&IF.s (March 2l·AprU 19): Friend.I leod to
1r1uo, stake claims &lid attempt to draw you in·
to mlddle ol d.lapule. Use your common aeme -
and tact. Streaa ort1ln1Uty.
TAURUS (April 20-Miy 20): Follow throutb
on flnt lmPHUtona, hunch. Te1cbtr ta in plc·
ture. Dl1eaUve problem could be ruult or
tension over recent f amll,y cllaaveemeot, dla· pule.
GElllNI <May 21·Juno 30): Streu venatlU·
ty -be noxible, optlmlatic and gtve full reln to
aenae ol humor. Perceive potenUu. Don't 1et
boned down In lnter.olflce squabbles.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Money restrlc
tlona Indicated -p1Uence. beln1 famWar with
"homework" aids lo brealdni throu&h lofjam
Aquarius, Taurus and Leo could play 1J.an1Jtcaot roles.
LEO (July 23-Aua. 22): You may be danc
inc to tune of others. Rlde with Ude. Judement.
lntulUon, may be "sllgbUy olf." Don't prcaa 1.s
au·es. Check contncta, le11l dalmt, ri1hta and
permlutooa.
VIRGO (Au1. 23·Sept. 22): Study Leo
meaaa1e. Pace younelf. Ftn1sh tuk that you
bad been aldestepplns. Fam.lly member coo·
fldea work procram, problem. Be sympathetic.
butdon'taetinextrlcablyinvolved. .
.LllSllA (SepL 23-0ct. 22): Action la awlft.
Don•t mlltake mere movement for profrell.
Piacea, Virlo ftsure prominently. Defino terms.
Be sure )'OU an beln1 accurately quoted.
~&PIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You 11t in·
volved, Included. Love la ln picture. U you're
playing 1ames, atakes are blcb. Accent oo
·creativit,y, lmprlnting penionallty, style, accept·
inl more responsibility.
SAGITl'ARIU8 (Nov . 22·Dec. 21): Break
with past occurs. Your usual met.bod or com··
munication doesn't work. Pace is faster. Get
point acros.s in ''lead par.graph." State case
directly.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Speculative
venture is "interesting," but is not being pre·
sented to you in its full dimensional form.
AQVAJUUS (Jan. 20-Feb. ll): Cycle hlah-
take in1Uative. Your lmpresslon.s, bunches are
on target. What recently seemed a setback will ·
now boomerang in your favor.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Be versaWe
enough to chance patterna, adapt to new
signals-. Gemini, Saslttarlua could play koy
roles.
Teenagers Write Back
DEAR READERS: A
16-year·old girl wrote to
s ay she was "slck or this
house, sick or this town,
sick of beina under my
parents' thumb, sick of
being treated like a
baby. Sick of being lone-
ly even though I have
lots of trlends, sick or
this lump ln my throat,
sick or almost ruruiing
away but losine couraae
at the last minute, sick
of the authorltles who
don't know the wonders
of pot but keep scream·
ing about how harmful lt
is. Sick of not bein& able
to cry. Sick of need.lng to
be somebody and know·
Ing I never will. Sick of
wanting reven1e against
people who have hurt
me. Sick of wondering If
I am really lnsane."
I told her she was sick
all right and suggested
thatshegetsomehelp.
My response un·
leashed an unexpected
tor rent of J ett~ra.
Almost no adults wrote
-only teen.a. The thing
that amazed me was the
very •ll"onl feelings ex·
preaaed on both sides.
Here 11 wbat my week
bubeenllke:
Aaa
Lallden
pbln that you have no
idea of how rou1h it is to be a teen-ager t.Oday. The
gid who wrote sounds
ver:r normal to me. I
know.-l'mthere .
Prom Sammlt, N.Y.:
When I read the letter
from that 18-year·old
girl it wu just as if I
bad written it. In fact, I
HAVE written it mental·
ly, many times. And
don't tell me I need
professional help. I am
perfectly normal. You
must have been born 40
years of age -Boo To
Yoo
From Tennessee:
Your answer to "16"
was cruel and complete·
ly lacking in UD•
derstanding. The emo-
tions she is experlenctn1
are not a sign or mental
illness. They are just the
l'rom Vermont : e veryday, ordinary
Recently a 16·year-old symptoms of 1rowing
&lrl ~ and toJd you up. Teen.-agers !requ~nl·
some of tblni• she is ly quesuon thesr saruty.
sick or You told her "Haven't YOU ever won-
.... SHE ta \•lck. Well -I dered if you are nuts?'
tblnk YOU are sick. J'm Or are rou perfect? -
18 and everytbln1 1he ls Disappointed
tick of I am sick of -and 10 are mott of my From Boatoa: Your
friends. Either you don't answers are usually
remember your teenage pretty good but that one
yeara or you bad it real to the 16-year-oldlirl wu
easy. -Just J. terrible. U sbe Ts sick,
then three-fourths of the
From Dea Molnel: It's teen·agers in this country
•••• Carver
<""""Pa1ecu
"It's a.' feeling of creatJon. I think, that
makes itfasclnatlng." ·
Wood carvtn1 isn't aU be doel, bonwer. Re
aoa rowtil& for two hours before lnatlut. coes , for walb and sails. ''Tbere•1 Just so mucb to do
down 11er,;· S.Jya Brandt, a .reaid.at for 12
yiart. • '
A LD'ELONO Wll:EDND pmter, b8 also
• takee ~DI &Dd 1eulpture c:Jau at On.nae
·Coast ~·· Brandt said b.ll aim 1D woocleantnc I.I to
creite the feellns that the ftl\ll'el are Na1b'
stnJDlq .nd ualDa tllelr 1DU1cf e1, 10meWD1 be
le•mectto do in d.rawt.oa.
"In my drawi.al l'v• alWQI uted to 1et n·
oUc po111 wbtre the11traln thelr muael•~·· laid
Brandt. wbo u a 1mlll boy used to draw ctu.res ot tr aw on tbe backl of ptalrn boMI 1D c urcb.
He obvtoualy succeeds, But Brandt ll moclelt
about h1I )'W'·old woodcarvtni talat. "l was
kiad Qf ~they cam-. out tbt ft1 UM1 did,"
h1taldotbllf1ntettort1,acowboyanclulnd.Jan.
Ht'• not sure Wb.at ne'I aolDI to do wttb the
blblcal 1cee1, tiutbi~ • chufthcan uaetbem
aomed11. "l'audi'totleavhllltlDOod'1buc:li,"
J1H&i4. Said bll wilt: urm curl-to ... where the,
do ad llP• U. did it to ... ,. l50 ll m t bav. a
1"ll'POM tot.bl~• thlDc. ••
are, too. -14 And Ri&ht
With Her
From PlttabariJl; So
she l• slck, ls abe? Well
-so am I. I am sick of
hearing about poord
abused teen--.ers. l h•
a dru.nk.en father who
used to beat my mother
and bit us kids five
nights out of seveo. We
never had enou1b food
ln the bouae. All th•
money waa spent on
booze. My life was hell
but I made it. I'm 20
now and bave no pa·
tlence with complainers.
-L.C.J.
Frem Mandleld: That
16-year-old has an "I" .
Interest ln messlng up
my head. I know I'm a
little blt crazy at times
because everybody ls.
This ls a sure sign that
I'm normal. -Al.ao 16
So -tbere you bave it .
folks. Whether you were
for me or agaJnat me it
was a healthy sign that
you felt strongly enough
aboul that 1lrl'1 letter to •
write.
START LOSING
WEIGHT TODAY
The "-dell Plft tf ,... welgllC IS ............ ~.a
tlmJ ... "",.. ....... !bl --·--is .. U1 lllin9 WllGlll """ ""' ..., ~ lll'f llllltt v .. ,, .......... loo' llld -Lii ""° .,.,,..,1111 .. gy 111$1U1 .. "'" "9111 • rtu ..... Pl111.
Clllically ~ tll«tM. .. ...
~ Wlc:lng PIM ....... Jtu
IO lo• pu!Os llld lndles will!Out
oefltnO nervouror ~ ~ You
u n 51111 loS1n9 ~I today will! new
IWUI ~ and • lht cldtefencie In
y«K rNrror. You o'll 11 to y11111sdl.
JHRIFTY ''"' ......
• \11,1111 ~I ''"tH ~
Dtoblem. I counted 20 ;========::; 111'1" ID ber letter. No
wonder she's sick. -
Groaaecl Out In Ohio "
Prom Tamp•; That teen-a,1e Jirl who ls sick
of everything has some
1c:rew1 loose In her
bead. I love my home,
my town, my family,
my friends, and I never
wanted to run away. 1
can cry, I want to be
somebody aomeday and WESfOJff PLAZA IWllOA I) Newpvt a..oct. NI ~ A.,. I WILL be. I don't. SCS-4121 67>1904
smoke pot and ~b;a~ve;;n;o~:;;=:;;;;:~===~
Betsy Slelght'a
Special of the Month
FREE WIG REPAIR
with a wig atyfe COlllt Good tllru ..lllnuMy)
210.D E. I 7ttt St. Coat• MeM
-S... Ott.-00 61ort
f4'·J44•
Hourr MOI\. T-. weo. a'"· M JO'""-•1 Sal
t-4)1)
FABRIC
20 to 50 'l.
SAVlnG/ I
·'
t l
t •
•••••••••••••••••••••••
UDOSA..HDS
flop, :;lup or Jump to
ocean. llkt! n e w , :1 bdr~ • 4! bMba, lllltd
bnck lrplc., new kitchen
& all appl11t o cei..
carpets, drape11. Onlv Sl..t.S.000! .
latboa lcry P,.op.
Redtora * 675-7060,,.
ASSUMntOHS
Over 57 assumable ni'A
or VA IOllJ\, on homes 1n
HunUn~on Beach, Foun-
lJJJJ Valley area. Take
Qver payments with no
new loan C06ts. No qualJ
fy1ng. No 1nl ere~t
<'hange.
s:n .~
()pen .. :ven1ng~
lllt1 RE Hetworlt
ri!
AEDCAAPET'
WE'VE GOT YOUR
aean 3 hc.'droom, 2 bath
~tart.er home! $67,!lOo
4 Bedroom ''Vull•nl'la .. m 1-:J Toro! $82,250
3 Bedroom. cornl'r (1,t VI\
lcr~ ! sn.soo
:i Bedroom + IJm11v 1n
Irv In c'~ Gr~ l' n t r·t· e'
S9'1,000
Brand m•w t:.1.,t:.11lt• :1
ht'droom +-(arepl;irl"
$79,500
-------BY OWNER
-
WATCRTRONT
HOMES
REAL ESTATE
631-1400
CLOSE TO OCEAN -CdM ~ I lorrws I rom Bi~ Corona Bt>ach.
~un s<'ts & boats ~xccplionaJly C'harm1n~. ont> of <J kinn. :J bdrms .
NC'w En~l;rnd ~l ) If' home. with
t·ath<•dral c.·t•11. & formal dining rm
11 ' Yl•<trs nf'w. ~9.5CKI
759-081 I
Fiut .,_,
6'W Wuuu Br.49.
'RHl1GIOUS 14CK IA Y -lol'i of room
to live in anti to lrve 1t up, 5 Bedrm,,
3 1,~ baths. c·o7.y dl'n, formaJ dminf! +
huj;!c BONUS H00!\1 , sundet'k <inn
paved rear yard for lots of HV'::-. ,\
must see! Sl95,000. 546-4141
GOLD ON SILVYWOOO -Wt• offer .1
gold s tar value on Silverw00<I. lr\ int•
This 2 bedrm, den home will makt• a
s pecial ~ift for someone l--pcdal tor
only S84.000. Call 552-6161
Serving Cosra M esa-Irvine
Huntington Beach·N ewport Beach
1002 GeMnlJ 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
. 4!>() NEWPOPT CENH.11 OHIVE 7!>9 081 I ~
~ ... _ ..... ~?!!~ ~ .......... !~~ ~
\Vl·:SLJ.:Y N
TAYLOR CO.
REALLY UHl9UE IN H. Y. HIUS
.. und also clecin ;ind nice. Three
bedrooms and a den. and open living
c.i r ea that ineludc.·s li ving, dining,
<'ntertaining-and kitchen areas all
surrounding a fireplace. You should
:.t•c 1t ! Done in Country French. You
should M1C lhc \\ ood fl'ixmng, harbor
;.incl o<·t•an '1cw ;rnd pool s11.e lot. A
l '111q11c flonw at Just ~180,000
I JNl()Uf: fi()Ml:S
AEAL TOAS ... 675-6000
:?443 East Coilst Highway, Corona del Mar
<11'.>0 on Mc~ Ve1dc. <H 546-5990
H.EI\ I.TOH.. !->i IH't~ HMH
IEAUTIFUL CAMEO SHOftES
Glorious view of the ocean from this 3
bdrm 4 bath home. Ol'n w wet bar,
formal dining rm & largl! livmg rm.
Huge patio surrounds inviting pool.
3·Car gar af!e. Located on one of better
streets. Pvte beach. S310.000.
WESLEY H. TAYLOR CO., REALTORS
211 t San Joaqt.iln Hills Rood
NEWPORT CEt4TER, M.8. 644-4910
LIDO ISLI N~wly remodeled 4 bdrm .. den • .t
baths, llvmg rm. w cathedral ceiling
L~c. master bdrm. suite. $224.950
llG CAMYOH
l BH, furn rm , J buths. Reaullfully
clt•coratl'd nroadmoor Plan 3. on <'Xlra
large lot. $325.000
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Bny!>•dr· Drow N B 67S-6161
I 002 GeMt"Ctl 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
MANAGER-REAL ESTATE
NEWPORT BEACH
A prime opportunity with an outstand-
1ng real c::.tate organization + high
earnings! Experience. is a must.
PreStiJ!ious location. All applications
held in strictest confidence. Please
reply to Ad 1'68, Dally Pilot, P .O. Box
1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 .
G.eMr0t I 002 G ... e,.ol I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
8'lJ« f0t this w um &i tharmint, re<?e11Uy re·
dooo duplex Ui old CdM. Net• 't&Cftt as In besl lite• cl Newport Beach. t15f-'OO YAUIY 640-t900
~~~ .... ,J<--:', ~:!l.A-~ I . . .. .:.>'" .. ~-
EMCHAMTIHG RETR!A T
-SpKtocular four bedroom home with ,
ocean and nlCJM UC)ht •fews. Gated entry to
far9e. trofHcat 9ardrn cowtyard. Tndy
custom ~ fecrhrfncJ C)OUf"'rMt kJtchn,
formal dlninCJ phu family room with •
COMplete bar .... SJ49,500.
l.M:t ~.\
NIGl"fl.
4%-1720
499.4551
(I\!\ \
l'<>I ;-.; r
4!rl '317
CorOIMI cW M• I 022 Cotta MHG I 02 ..
····•••·•••••·•·••••·•• ······················1
SIJ,450DOWM
CO«ONA DEL MAR MSUME
&SAVE
'
2 UR. 1 BA home on R 2
lot. Live 1n front unal
while buildtn& 2nd unit
on rear or Jot. Out.stand
ing investment. Only
S134,SOO
CALL 955-0350
Qwct tree-hned street!>•
enhan('e beautiful 41
Bdrm Ranch Style horn~ w pool. ~o Many up•
i.;rades to mention.
Situated on oversized lot
Pnre for 1mmed sale.
~.900. Call now.
i1t l /\'i (JU t (J'Yll.O.•"-Y
IH Ul rt)t1•, lJt \I& L(Jlll ll•a
J.C. Hall Rffffon
540-5101
~ . ~ • ,,
RANCH RE.ALTY
551 -2000
cae: ..
110181 ILllRS CD.
OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVJCE
HOM& & IEHTAL UNIT .
Charming Home On Old Corona
Del Mar Duplex Lot With Rentol
Unit In Rear. Hard To Find 3
Bedroom, 2 Bath Owners' Unit
W l Je'lreplace And Large Kitchen.
Well D<?coroled. Nicely Landscaped '
With 2 Sunny Patios. Convenient To •
Tennis Courts And Shopping ..
Priced At Sl.54,000.
. • . • ... . ..
-t
,.
•
ca °""-Y Ptl.OT • Mon~. Jeir4MltY •• tt78 I =.~.~ ....... ~:!.~.~ ······· ~~~~~!~ ...... ~~~~!~~ ...... =.~~ ... . ~.~~ ....... =.~.~ ....... =·~~ ....... =.~.~ ....... ~.:~!':.~~ ... !!!! ~.~~ ..... !!.~~ !:::::.~~!U!! ~.'!:!.~: ...... ~?!! ~~ ...... ?!.~~ ~~ ........ !!.~ ~.~.!!'..!!.~.!~! ~-~ ..... !~ ~.~ ..... !!~! £~~~~-~~°" Dw'T.;':.~,;!U:!;~.x~P~. eo..:.::.'.L~fa1-eo,.. • i:,s,•,:~,!~
SQ. rr "' 1rarloo1 * •LOOK •T THIS'. IQI bom• with Jar1e Uv. on .2 BR. a BA. 1sro aq, ft. •hake r~r. nr. all ops. miulon Preparation.a&: >' u d • • >' r •. o Id •
ll\.in1 " Br J Ba. "" 1111 rm, formal dlnln1 homelitadt.tllcommt.aal· YEAGER REALTY Submission.a. Ex -'525/monlb. CALL 01
UOor> rplc :., •Ulla. -4 Br · i Ba · B £ "C II rm. Ubrary, ram rm 3 ty. Cat.UdraJ t•llln11. 6.'i6-6171. ~~Mt am 7ll-31Jl.
r.t'RBQrm w weL bar & '" W \LK TOWNffOUS F: Br, 4000 1q ft. Rat mirrored wardrobH. -IPUX. C...,. EMERALD BAY, l1e1 lol UR~.._ VHDE Nr Hubor ....... OY• Z2100 SF. 1pac1oui. l •-500 '" -,......,_
.. i..-... • ,,.......,. hvtni New cpta thruout, 11or1eou1 OtUll v ew. Sdll111pnco..,,, Great Eut11de. loc ln praU&Jou11 pvt tom •BR, 2 BA. fenced yard,
Lantern. Open D•llr Cl Ill.I' w/auto, uunit.'>, t • PM. 4&13 Perham Dr. AMCH014GI (
2
)
2
br. tb'a, pa'u,,.., e'nycl'. 714"'98-9723
15251
m
001
b c ALL & -.......... aa. ~1 Blu dbl Pool" jac. Shown dally 1~· newer 3br tba lrplc d. rnunlly Plua av all new pa.lnt Ir carpeU•1. l_SPM, 1214,000. 496..f723 t.bcrapy &;: & 6 Sa~llrte 846-7414 Bkr. or 645-2348 INVISTMlNTS -~ ~• .. v•., 1014 ~~~111t-v~!:~ i.1h:~k bkfOl'LoulseBaker. '714149 .. 7711 '.fo·:~~tr.942-1603 ~-.o....-., · !pSELECT · •••••••••••••••••••••• Ping $121 .000 Du ve *HcrborVl.w Homt --R....t 2400
IJIDICOIATI Baron, Tobon Reali> UHOISTRUCTED OCEAN VIEWS 2 Bdrm. & den <or 3 Tusttn 1090 ••••••••••••~•••••••••• PROPERTIES I SAVI $$ W.1371 --of coo1tlln• ond CotollRa '""aeh. Bdrm.) and 2 bath homo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2R~~511 Lof..0 00
C
0
M RETIRE en the Colorado 3 BR, 2 Ba, frplc, bltas, Sobmt oCler .. aa Is" C t ct. I Ith ..eted be-. Italian tile 1n enlry & WOWI ONLYSS0,900 .__ • River . Mull Sell •Senate SL $42S mo.
P11nt fr tecarpet, that Is SUr-c•cm~~ ::!' 0; wOO:. 9IMf tU., 2 kitchen. $136,SOO. Oy For lhudoveJy 2 bdrm., 2 Owner said "SELL IT". be•utlful deluxe 24 x 80' Jat"laat + 1ec. aa.~ alJ it needs. V~ry deslra-l5ft .....,.. owner. Principals only. ha condo! Reul frplc., 2 s Pac1ou1 3 Bdrm Mbbiht home. Uved ln 7 ---------ble 4 bdrm, 21-\ bath 3 Bedr0om, 2 bath with bedroelfM. I ¥• baffts. , • .SIJS,000. Call640 1440. wall air·tondlt1oner, Jge. hOU1es. Frplu, beamed mos. Are a• a most NEW 3 br, 2 ba, tam rm'2
townhouse. End unit, 22Jt22' bonus room . 497.3331 iarden-patlo, reil'gs & MORE! beautiful park. Call l\y, quiet. nr. scbl1,
PllTklike 11urroundin11. Fe.turing wet bar, new SOUTll LACUNA DANA Of't.M HOUSE $99,SOO·Submitoffer. (714)9za·74S8, Blythe, CA microwave, $31S., days Po01s&rec11rca.Central paint 11 nd c arpe t s. GU NIGUEt POJNT CaUtorDetaJla ~.evetm~
wr. VA terms available. wallpaper thru-out. Lob ~9~.455~A 495.17;io' ~93.gg12 HARBOR VlEWHOM& ~;!1.':.abtate , LOVELY
""·ll11. of """ __,,"'"' on thU 3 Bt. 2Ba with m•oy IRIGHT HO\ISI 3 ~:.-.:· ~\!i.:'L
one• l.1sted at only appts. P1'1is to •ad 2 (ltGM.SaZS i.othemotlEXCLUSlVE lncld No pet.a ?$1·9"2 ~.900. ~6 Sl:l80 more bdrtn$. Moet de· SUMMUFIELD local.Ion ln FABULOUS for Info • lrviM 1044 L..aiJ-eNJCJIMf 1052 s1reable area. Only 1~ ... UTY HAMILTAIR Ett.U. on ---·------~HERITAGE -r---
• • REALTORS 3 bdrm condo, dbl rar.
paUo, nu carpel, paint. &~~~~~~~~~j drape1. Vacant Rd---
owner $SS,9SO. 963·002'J V .AC~NT
MIMIFAlfM
Beaut1ful big 4br item on
huge cul-de-aac lot Fan
tastic fam rm w / fireplace. 963-6301 Bkr
l .... incJon a.ac:h I 040 •••••••••••••••••••••••
I BR, rrpk, very c-lrnn
S7J,7'JS Approx 1550.,q ft
Owner out of \hill'
960 4141
$54,000
F.mtuMlt• opp to o~n IJ? :!
llr ('Ondo wll'1•ntrul ;11r
t1lln ilJlJllrnnccs. 11wlt11f
1111: d\hw:-.hr ('h1htrc·n
Wl•lroml' Short walk 11
• lubhou~c. pnul. anrl
... 1wp1>1ng Seller to flit)
l11r I vr home war r.1n11
~$1,000 cpt & drp al
luwance.
754-7800 •*'1
* 8 UNITS
l:Aght months old Ju::.t lt5tcd! Call for Info.
541·0425
World Real E.st:ilt>
PACIFIC SANOS
l..argest 3 Br model, 13~
b;i, PV Stone Frplc wall,
'• mt to be ach. ll} rtWner.
Condos -Sale or Rent
$50,000-$79.000
I. 4br, 21.~ba, form din
rm, <! car gar, PoOI. 21.
3br. l 'aba, park like
grounds, form din rm,
pool 3 Ru~tic lbr end
urut w ~ t'ilf' gJ r, pool
Call June Blair, bkn, agt
714·968-3229
RANCH REAL TY
551 -.2000
A PETERS
BUILT HOME
SOUTH IRVINE
•••••••••• ••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••• ••• • $139,SOO. 15A tbe Jake-MAR VELO US 3 Br, 2 Ba, fam rm, pOol WOULD You HUGE C@Q) 3 BR. 2 BA. fot111al din· VIEW. Sttp out.aJde to table, dbl 1ar. beaut DOUD tna room, family room. lhe 1arden "a few 1tapa yard. S42S. 6'2·S466 or BELIEVE Master SUl•te Ira. lot in T\11Un l>lime. to private dock ror boat· 64S-M83
•• Careful l>ilytrs dream at 1111 & water 1kl1n1. ---------• 2 bdrm., 2 ba. 1n Irvine Large ' · C ' ' PI an ANnon, Eat. 1"1 $88.~. MAllVELOUS deslrn by E/Stde sharp 3 Br 2 Ba,
for under $60,000' We townhome. Thls totally (r'f4)~ 540·3666. H"~•& 1..,.C
0
....,
1
noted woman architect, Din Rm, fplc, paUo 4' have a lovely D·Modi1'1n Immaculate 3 ~room -" '"' you have 4 bdrm•. 3 yard. Rtfrig, stv, $485. Walnut Square that haa home has upgrades loo Bluffs 3 bdrm., 2~ ba. Larre 2 bednn duplex balha, playroom, dlD.ln& &&S-S089
been tastefully decorat-numerous to mention. condo on lush creenbelt. with overslud garage. area, enormous livlng•---Br------
td. Thu 1s a must ace Low ma Int. ya rd C..10be to schools & shop-Qwet & private, near room & lireplace-all New 3 2 Ba, dbl t:•r before buylng anytluna w/firepil & fountain; ping. Well prl ced at maj°' shopping. Perfect
1
u r r
0
u n d e d b y 1ar. oanyon • par~1al el~e' short walk to pool. Just $135,000 with land In. W......_stw I 098 starter or retirement PLEASANT LARGE ocean view. New Nanna
red hill ~·
552-7500
$95,000(34) duded! ••••••••••••••••••••••• bome.QillMO·llSl. DECKS. Complelely Hl1blanda area. $49S
C. F. COLESWORTHY HERE'S YOUR CHANCE tarnlsbed, 24 hour secuti-mo., WU' pd, 6'HllO or
REALTORS 640·0020 Beaut 3 DR home, $2SOO ty 1uard to e1ve you _oo_._m_6 _____ _
I I l< : 1 ' , l •
CH • ,Qf'-J
FfXER UPPIR dn .. Call now, 24 hr peace of ~Ind. Flnanc-2 BR duplex, at.ove •ref.
l llOUSE FROM SANO serv1ce84&-6879 act. In& for quahrled people-S27S. l9JS Wallace, CM
nexJble. $375,000 firm. 645·514!667$-8074
$98,SOO Es 1----------i For more Info call re·---------4.fRAME UASE °"*"Red tat• · 8 UNITS 'altor, Donette Mellanu Duplex-2.Br. 1 ~ ba. Sgl $650/rno. -::::.1·1.••:.,•0•mt•••1••••••••• J 2l3/9'l5-9S45, 8ti6-7920. gar & patio. $260. No PegBromsRltr645·1531 ,_ " Eight months old. ust pets.644·72l1Dave Per Sale I I 00 listed! Call for Into.
NEW TOWNHOUSE 3Br. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ml-042S Out of Couftty llAUTIFUL
2\'i ba, FR, $81,900. Park, Trailer :;pate t1x36' adult World Real F.atate Property 2550 MESA VEaDE
pool. 557·1046 or 675·0745 noo~k. ~~~~~~~~~!••••••••••••••••••••••• ,,.... -Spacious 3 Br 2 Ba, Fam 54s.s11J TRIPLIX Weekend Rm. tplc, bllns, nu cpt.
CONE YEAR OLDI attached gar, fncd yard.
Attractive Eaat Costa Fcrmer No pets. USO mo.
Mesa ; 2 BR units, I ~ or 2 s Bia Ac1 es close to __ M9·1438or63l·l26«
baths, <Un. area. Priv. freeway. 2 Bdrm home, 2 Brand new, 3 br, fam
p11t1os, 5 sep. slnfle car gar, animal pena. rm .. 2...., bat, frplc, MW
garages. Ea. apt. w/frpl. Only $37.SOO. Call Mr. oven. $525/mo. s:u.1ns
$lM.OOO. Frey at 542-3456 after 8
AGENTSS2.o434 BENHINKLER E. 1---------
Eaat.slde Condo. 2 bdrm 2
ba. 2 car auto gar .. Nr
new. saas. M6-83:W att 4.
3 bdrm 2 ba dbl ear. encl -paUo, cpt.a, drps, blt·lns,
pool, kida OK, DO pets. *385. 644-44118
...... Uafw•allitd ......_ U9fw .. .._ ..... U•fwwlrbd ~ta ,_.aa..d A,. fa14•t1 Utlfww. Af a lww•h u.fwoa. Moftdly, JMuaty I. 1118 OAlt. Y l'ILOT f!& , •··••••••············•· ...................... . ............................................. ······••••····••······· ······················· .
f ••v.. UJ4 ht.. U44 .._..,.,..._. U'9 .,_,.... 372' C.-. .. M .. ll22 c..t.M... llH ., ...... """"-~atwat1u.tw.. .... ato5h9-e 4)00t4 •.••..•..... ~ ........ ·~···················· .............................................. ••····•••···••······••• ·•····••··•······•····· .................................................................... .
fll'tbme 4 B 2 n.. bllN Un&\'tlnllY f'arli; Turn~ l300 z u u · view Luxury tbr w/mln.t octan POURS£ASONSAPTS llul ...... oah-.. 3140 ._...,.., leodt ll" Ywaa career sirl, •oa.·•1
0 W, v.o'.ocs :Ur • I k. lwnh"'4t. 3Br. :.?ba. frplc:. QuanMC (root
2
atty •• + A 250!ll 1.: Cn·~~. ow nu & Jetty view•. only 1tepa St>aclou. J br lwnh.e. H~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1mkr wanted to shar~. :::. •;r· WI :·=F'{f..i. :.:~.,. ... SI.. ~~r· :f"· ::f~ ... ~!,". ·-~.~:..";;';"~.~.,,mo. ~i.'';;"'K 'N! .:t~~'.;' IUMll NIW '!: 1':."'i:' .. ":,.~!!i!'l:o :!' .. ':" ~ »~~~'.'::
· OX1tM.,i.io F ---:u.3'nl9-8781 L.J-o .. ach 3741 73SJoann64~ 3 Br apVCOQdo., coove S87Smo.CaJllorappU·S. Wedeve.m.es Beaut J Br Wntmoot Woodbndge New 3Br, dtn --B 2 ba Condo ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br, redecor'd, pool. nlt!nlloc. Suultsevl _a..n __ n _______ -----""2::-----refna. w1o. ow incw: rm. fam rm. atrium. l..~.fo!, rHoip 1-'P I.ACUNA BEACH MTR. cloae to bch. Adlt11, no Spac. newly t:t'd 2 Br. I up.9$M 507.S4(H751 •Olarm.lni
1
Br new de· •·emaJe\Osbare2Br. 2Ba
..., .., ,.., ~.,. ..., ..,.. Ph"'"'"'.,"" ;,.-.hr.'••<I 2 ,;.,. ,.; INN. S&S/wk. .,,., mo ...._ """619 ::':· :~'icf :~ •·.~•~w:~:: N,;" ...... tw..,. apu I '''" "'· retrii, ,.,., 1 l;"., •;:~· nloety turn• Lov~ty 3 tidrm 2 Ba DttrlleldTownhme,28r, (ell'C l,$395.6458294 ~a•d derv ct1lo~1"f~i CostaM"o 31J4 646-5.251. 3br Zba fplc bltna W lldll.$2SOyrly.873-0M3 ;.J~. ~~~\",!: :~f. ~~ ~·.;::~·~ !',\"~.; ::'. llgta are• 2 Ur + dbl '"'· ..":~~. ~,:'.° N. Co•ot ••••••"••••••••••••••• ""• .. ido t BR. ,.,. mo. =" ~U~~ ~\1 •Doi"'' a Br a a., l>llU, ~::\:::.w~lt !Ii'; , Nor I 1400, mo av a i i now. grdnr, 5450 mo. Avl 1/18. lf~y. AduJt 2 Bedroom, bUPl!t all utJt pd Vucant, tm. D/W, Ire, lar, nr Lkto m. 64~
" ,,., ..... "' "-"..,. 67~3063••.,cw•""' ..., 2lwfrm nm bmh 1 o<> ti• n. no p •ti. med. °""P'•<Y. C•ll N•w dlx • Plox. 38<. '"-be M',.· 00
1
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tts'h&d•h h3~4o --Bluffscondo·3BR 2ba I .. ,45 0 k St $~25/mooth 568 W. Leslie.546·5880 Frplc, blt.ns. w/d hkp, pet.s.$475 yrly. ~ Fem r oommate. Nier _. ..,. ac
4
Ntw l·level 2 BR, beaut. ' ' • nquare a · WUson, inq. apt E. yard, gar $39.5 S.6-3804, B d ho us., c Io a c to ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• loc.$42.SMo. llkeo~w !$~Mo. 49'l-6848 E11sl~1de of Newport. 962-4.218 Brandnew2 rll en,2"' Frw s/Wstmnatr rnaJI.
l Bedroom condo. pool, Agent 644-1\33 Agent 644-ll33 L 0 NICJINf 3752 Costa Mesa~2140 Tburtn Townhouae 2 Br. J' a bu, Ba In lf'c:~oua Bls Ca· ft#tn( necot. J brt avall ~:t6 ~f7~r location, Woodbndge, New 4 br Big Canyon 2br condo, ·~••••••••••••••••• rr~;,:~~~l~:~i!~~I~~ rA· ::~it~rplc, vacant. Adult.q..i~ ~~pool°:: aec~",·ar~=: Must ~ neat & reap: ---------1 3ba, fam rm., A/C, n View. Pool. Jacuui & Scenic views, luxury spacious townhome type et ~:.2p~o~':/t':~:~,; 1111 latest •tuenlt n. No _a_es_rt_s _____ _ ---------•I park & pool $SSO/mo l~5640·lo.t4
adult apt.s, furn & unf. with family roomi.. Nowport Hats. new 3 & 2 sboppina, $3l0 mo. chJldren. no peta. tns ...... , HAPPY &aO·l044 Duplex, Zbr, lba, new cpt, ~ear Region~ Shopping $350/month. Quail Place Br, 2 Ba, all elec. Bllna, ~1279 m o. Fo r a p p t • ,.,...... 4310
drps, pnt, ws br/dryr, Centesi. Heated poo.1, Properties. Inc. 1714) J>kng, cbJldren OK. Walk 213-tm-l.M4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MEW YEAR •SHARP 4 br. den, FR. ~tv, refng. Mature adlti., Jacuui. Nr corner Alicia 7si.1920, at.k for Mike to 17th St. 642·2164 or 2 Bl' u.nturn apu, Start.Ina Sl.NCLE GARAGE
c:...-.o l'rfl 1 b d DR, 2 FP, 3 ba, 3 gar . no -ta. ~Imo. Sl7~ Pkwy& Pa~eode Valen· 9.Jlhvan 673-0782 al U4S. Children 2 BedTm Apt, ~/3 car Car t«••e ·~ .. • n a ran $625.552-1696833·1653 ,,., c1a. welcome no peh tara1e. utU PaJd. LH ori -• new beach home . --.--. Bolsa. Nwpt Hgts ALICIAPLAZA :?BR,lBaduplex.Cpts,Bacb, loft, re(rif, atv, IN6.-o7&~l · avail.unCUm.SU.lJ:M, m/mo gc.3533 Spooou•. upgraded U.ru· pre " d ' n t b o m ' • '48·"'4l & VILLAGE d"" r<lrif stv. end pool, adltl, no..... MU571 Offk:o -4400
out. !rplc .. dbl garage, gorgeous 4 BR & fam.. PRIME RENTALS 58I fil5l 581-61.30 gar.' No petS sz70 mo $250 648·2901 LG~ 2 Br 2 Ba, fpJc, D/W, Dl ff • B • na ••••••••••••••••••••••• pvt yard. Children & w 'lt'W. $8SO n. Ca 2 BR d So ""l 646.1246 gar $300 mo 211U x nr oaa " r • -·
peh w ~lrome . Only Shernuan Assoc .,,g nyon, " en try, no,..~ 5 · 2Br. 2ba, Tefrtg., pool, BroOkhurat. $$7.(519 fplc. Fam Rm, beem1, OFACIS,AC!
SS?Stmo See ~aily M . ---S900 Hewport leach 37 69 od1and 1.
11
pallo, adJta, no pets. quiet adlta. '42·12'78 1-8 ROOMS 55< Sq n 51.3 171.h St. Ait. 960 6161 Hen~~e Pk :.~~h~~:._2 e_ The cove. 2 BR. S850 •••••••••••••• ••• •••••. WO I 12oe '360. acs.m1 IUCHWOOD APTS c-Cl -"'-. ~·· ~ or 846 1311
2
"-w ' RMrr---• ll-\'..11il1£ 3 Be. lam.Uy · ~ -Br Z Ba~~ ll{r 1 Ba -_....,_ ~ ~ --
· dbl gar, yard. $400 mo. den:immac.$900 &lSPaulanno 2Brtownh.6e.Alsol &2br • • • ••••••••••••••••'•••••• (.0. ------~l 0085 H.V. Hills3 Br, fam. $800 • Beautiful, new, adu~t apts w/pool & Jacuzzi. SU5. adults. 962·1800 2.Br, 2ba rondo. Lae llv. ~
Sharp 13 bedrm. 2 bJ, ShermanAssoc:.640-6$00 B apts. Great 1.oc:aUon. 2 ~98 z Bdrm CSZ80> avail tm· rro .. dil'\Jnl rm .. Gar, ~-~ ii'1 ~ts·~ri:5'hc~~~~n~ar:0 ~,::'~~~~;:;~~~·a~~~ SHARP 3 bdrm. block t l~e ~~!{!~i:nZ:U~1ately 2 Br. l lr\ Ba Lownbouae, ~~·D~Jrd=~;v~: $32S.(7l063U720 JI'~.,.,..-·
f · ' now. tenn1:1, pool, $3 beach, all exltaa. $600. garaae, patio, pool, · 'H • H b Twtlft 3190 11\•'
ee. mo.675-9229 mo.64.s-6680 Bachel«#2S·S24S jacui~. Adult• only. ~c.iir:. 0u:t pert:: H•••••••••••H•••••••••----''-------~...r
Nfce
2
BrC'ondo tVJNew2Br 2-,,baCondo3BrA.framebeach BIG' lBdrmS2ss.s275 646-20l (213)431·8828, $240.UTILIMC&.D ISOIWnlclffDr.·
baths, 'T'cc W{
0
;J>ati:, Upgrad~!> Earlhlones: house. $600. mo. 642· 2 8drm$295·S325 2 Br, bltna. gar, laundry (213)598·7661 ext 288. Water, IU. .red.rlctty. Newport FinaoclalCtr ~::5~':;0: pt 9~3.J/i7: $395.Ph :7S2·6688Agt. or64»79CMsJarvia RetltalOtfice facll. 200 9 Mapl e . H<~~L_840·•721. 1Ht2 Unique 1 & 2 Br • ..._'-JOfflceSpoce
• Ope D ·i ~-618S.S350mo. adult.s ...,....,.., Complete •recrutlonal can SI M 642.0000 14'\KE SIDE J BR avatl Olarming paneled ocean· n 8.1 y9-6 . facilities. Adults only' on te ana1er Spacious 4 Ldrm, ramil.v now!$295.CallGeorge, · frnt home. 2 Ur. l ba, ,J:REATRECREATION. 7TS547,!!13nag54e2m1~~ I!_. TS DE FehlGnFrplc.. Sorry,nopeu. m4>642·3llleitt2-W,
hotne w/pool. Lse or mu 552·6161 carpeted, s huttered, Swimming, saunus, 2 -vua or · """ lliOAS I Bo comfy cozy beside a c•ton.l•Aph becutlwe aow bK
to mo. $475. n1111 Myers New z BR.. 2 a,, b a . frplc, gar. (714) 784-0869. heallh clubs, b11l1ards. HUGE newer l br, bll:s, flre In spacious, dJx •pt. 14932 Newport Ave. Ofc apace in Newport·
Agt.,539-0550_ or<t94S420 townhome 1n Her·1tag 3Br2Ba,2cargarbeach n lght·lighted tenn il> WES11AYTRIPLEXES cpt.s, drpa, lge wal In All unit.a w/prlv encld TutUll.Calltoday: Alrl)OrtArea.Receptlon,
courts. Pro & pro ~hop, cl06et. wshr/dryr, sar gar., balcony or patJo. 832•8122 1 Su""r JBr. i i.he, frpf<o, .Park. Highly upgraded! house.+ ~ls&tennls. "olld t COSTAMESA Nopets.$2SO.S49·H38or Lndry facll avail . ---------1 phone serv., con erencc; lilt~. Plllio. nr school'! Creenbelt l.oc. $400. S5SO, 6. mos or yrly. • nving range, par Y BRAND NEW 'Pl l266 Ollldren OK. Leadensblp Ape lw.tt ,.,.,..._.. rm, ldtcf\, secy aen, die· I~ Pt1llran $425/mo __ AGENf833·9293 645-0423,646·3666 ~~~·ACTIVITIES ~BB~~~~!~: New2Br2Ba,"pts,drps, Real btate 842-4468 or .................. 3900 ~~~op(rl4)~~~:~~' • ,714)53
" 8754 or ··• nh ~ "" Slf>.,311.l ••••••••••••••••••••••• "· 'The Terrace" 2 Rdrm. Blwfs tow ome end unit. f\illt1me director, free-3 Br, 2 Ba From$J95. bltns, adults, no pets. ---------1
<213)43112018 Ba. on grnblt. Dbl gar. 4Br. 3ba. lge country kit.. Sunday brunch, BBQ'~. 5330 mo. 6•6·7993 or •• .. u.•o ... irw 137•2 Newl aod Str eet THE EFFICIENT ti h h I ~ .._ <Garden Grove). Executi ve home near $4(J() SS9·41U9 pa o. nr s opt>. sc oo trips, parties. s port Beautiful new 3 unit ~ 11$$ l,2,3 Brunlt., FIP. BeautJful 2 bedroom apt.s ALTBMATIVE
ocean 4 Br, 2 H.i, fam ~al•ach 324 pool.$S50/mo.5S9-34« tournamcnls&more! ~~~!~;.' £~:~t1~jauz~" New28r ,2bacondo.frplc. bltns,1ar.FromSZ70. in e ic c el I e n t Mo. to mo. rent Incl
rm, din rm wet bar· •••••••••••••••••••••• yrJy 3br, 2ba. steps t BEAUTIFUL APTS. Children welcome. No bltns. C.1\1. $425/ mo 96Z·T787 ask for Mac ne11bborhood. Private Re c e pt. a er v .•
f1renng. outdoor BB~ & 2 Br l''.I Ba. (pie, view, n beach. te nnis & pool Singles, 1&2 bedroom" pets. Rental olttce open Dan 646·4868, nlte patio view Crom lovely personalized phone cov-
pool. $750 mo. Con~1der 10 bch & shops. No pets 5625/mo 673·3493 1'\trn. & unfurn. Modeb daily l0-5. 840 Baker St, 1 ~ DfullELUXba~L APTS
18
r. +2Bdr:..
11
2 kitchens : encloud erace. coaf. rm. mail
IM"/opt M8·0707 d 1 $4 0 494 3223 open daily 10 to 7. Room -.. ~. "' • gar a 1 ea ; po o I ; serv., underatound prlcg -A ut.s.
1
mo. · JBr, 2ba new, $S2S/mo mate service ava.U. N blkW.ofBrist.ol. Sharp 2 Br. 2 ba. bJtn.s. rrplc, enclosed 1arag~. clubbouae.$3U/mo. Call &rnoretnNewport.
II! THE ht! ., .& bdrm 2 ba 2 frpls. Winter. I blk looc~an. lea!>e required. Sorry, 557..szis frpl, lndry. l Yr. old. S37 lndry facU, ao peb, all CArmen <Mgr. Apt.•) at THE EXECUTIVE Jrg. brand new duplex. • Emerald Bay Terrace 673·2493 Kulla only, no pet.a. Mo. Agt. 752-7710 :.elt'~l!,!!t locaUOJl. 884-0685 or Make SUlUvan SUITE. ~S.70
BR -2 BA, frpk, gar. Ocean view $S50 LACASAILANC4 --~-al 752·1920 or S4&-IM3. ,
facing p.irk. l child OK 6211628 • 4 Br 3 Ba. brand new 2 at Oakwood 1 Bdrm, patio, rerna. J.D. Quall Place Prop, lnc. Eucutlv. 1u1tes. You No peu.. $3751 mo. 1nt:1d.., execuuve hme. LR, FR, Garden Apartments loch. I ar..AYI How cld.1225. mo. 2Br, chlld.req Weicome, no need an olCi~! We need
water. Cloi.e to frwyf., Dipe Cod Charmer 4 BR DR. 2 Cpclc 's, atrium. Htwpert IMcll/~ All utils pd .. c~tl, drps, 979-4410 pet&, starttJi.l at sat5 mo. nfE EXCITING a t.enanL Your offer to
H bls & 11hop .... Call nr park, $650 mo. Ph: outstand1ngv1ewor111a ES80lrvine <atl7lh1 pool,lndry,faca.Adulu ~ PALMMIS.A'1S. ua;Crom$225permo.We
962-7787orS36 O'J07 494-tl733eves/wknds Lights & ocean. Guarded oo.osso over 35 .no fets or East.side 2Br, 2ba, upper. MlNUTESTONPT Olfet" lo you: luxurto;u6
----pvt comm. w/tenn1 .,._,_..._lt/5-"' c hild re~. Ca I Sue· O/W, New, no children/· 3 Bl', 2 ba •pie~. FTplc. BCH. olOce, execuU ve secy, WATERFltUNT with 3 Rr. 2 ba. atrium, frplc. pool,&Jacuzil. Byowne l700t6thSr 556 7701 or Henry · peta.$320. Ph5S2·SZ32 Encl ear. fencd paUo, Bacb,l•-"'BR. per•o"al phone cov-Bo SI L h d
& c I • I od WaJ ""'" . . C/D, bltJris, D/W. Walk -D .. at ip. JV1~ cror omp c,e Y rt!m . $975 mo. "°"·6623 ( Dovtt at 16th) 542.9137 l Br A pl. Lae patio. lo park, eehla. sho"". from $220. & up. eraae. recepUonist, con· furnishing!>. Tennis, JJC' to bch & town. $650/ mo. 642 8170 I ... r
thcwork:i'&I0·-1721 t111Junc.640·7020 NewportCrestCondo,2or · Refrig, bUna. Adlta. '375.847·1'93&968-4967 Adult.s.NoPet.s erence room, xerox,
----3 Br, +den, lenrus, pool 2 Br, 2 ba. all bltns. frplc, $250. Ph 646-0483 1 _
0
•--'-
3148
1561 Meu Dr. notary. Near So. Coast :1 Br. 2 ha, 2 s tory •--aNllll.aef 3.ZS2 fac, cl06e to bch, Aaenl. n"I oar balcony ....,... ._ (5Blk1EaaloCNewporl Plaia. easy freeway •c·
--r-• ..,-" eLau"ndry· "rm·.· ... .,.,. · 38r, 2ba, den. <'Pl/d""', ••••••••••••••••••••••.• Blvd.) ........ Tell ... your o---"-. townhome. hltn~. ll(l· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 645-0295 OCEANfROHT _., .,,.. ---... ~.
graded lTJ.lt!>, dr\ls, lrµk. 1..mdy 30r, 2ba. fncd yd, BR b I S · TSLMgmt 642·1603 gar, wshr/dryr hook-up. 2br, 2ba duplex, spht 546-9860 we wiU lupply It. call p\1 patws. 11110 f:\tl'J ~pnnkk·r~. 1>:ar op<'rwr. Sub:lease, no . depol>it re 3 • 2 a. yr Y· s95 Potlo. no pets, 2 .. kids. level. Frplc, wet bar, . 979-216l
d<'an ' Xlnt Im:. s.ns1rno oodogs$425,mo 497.3146 11uired, avail. Im med STEPS TO lliCH 2 Br, l h ba townhouse $375/mo. 181 "Ji Del deck, ocean vu. Be~m5 & 12621 Flower Street•--.._--"'-... -
0
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1
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fi6t.J.l.IS 675-4~12 Bkr. 2 Dr. houae un{. $375 w/patio. 610 Joann St. Mar 645 ~155 X-lr1 Uv rm. W..alk to <Garden Grove). Larae l l5ltT "'" " -Beautiful S<>a Terrace c_,.1 3276 38R,2ba,unf.$475 SmaJlpets.5"·7838 bch.Dblgar.S625mo.Yr bedroom ap~;J cloae lo 19717
4 Br, 2 ha. tam rm. fncd home 3 Rdrm, 3 ba, fam. ----"*• 3 BR, 2 ba, unf. yrly S450 Newport Hgts. 2 Br 1 Ba, lse. Adi ta. Avail 211/71. ah of pi ng. w ll l ta lte Consider this beauUfully yd Clo!i~ to '!chi~ rm,frmld1n1ng&living. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2DR,tba.unf.yrly.$440 V1noV11toApt1 nopets.LndryfacU.S28S. Call497·2993 all6PM chi dreo: laundry lnckc~nenparkln ~hope $450 mo. 96(1.:wll7. Pvt commuruty w /pool, En.lertainment condo on Bach. uni, yrly. $2.JS 2078 Tburin Good loc:. &44·04S2 C1cilllles. $195·'2(15/mo. the dynamic N. a Airport
--------Jacurn, tennis & beach hill by pool. B~low Brand new. large 2 br. E/Slde, U1ht, airy 3 Br. 2 J BR, ocean \'I"', blk lo Utilities pal.d . Cal I 8ui lne11 area. Space I IR, I IA $725/mo. Poss. Jae/opt. ma r k el al S 3 9 5 . 1~ ba tow~e wtfam Ba, blt.na In triplex. '330. beach, stove, rerrig, 63,i-7343. Quail Place avail: l'65 aq.fl. or pur~-F'reshly decorated 1n 7S2·9223or499-46ll C..Uledral clas .. 3 Br, 2 room. XJntarea.~. S52-4.20lor5SH.24l adlts, no pets. $275. Prop,lnc. olc at «>c~; 4200lq.tt:"'
If 8. Vacant. $265/rno Ba, walk-lns. Xlnt cood. TSLM.cmt 642·1603 4.SC-3280&499-3900 "--
4000
ole/warcble. Clll Prop.~ AskforMack962·7788 lmaame hYUJI ln a new 6-9molse.968-8623 l Br, 1 ba. AvaU. Jan. N-.. ., __ odeJed
1 8
r.1-JudyClark133-1&a'
'92,000pauobomeforoo-NEW28EDROOM 15th. $215/mo. Nr. ~~/=:z,vt.w Bl.kt! .. ••••••••• .. •••••••••• ;.-"
1
top by Commen: .. LOVELY 3 BR. 2 Bn Jy $422 mo! near ocean. Olarminl. 2 Br+ den+ 2 Bt. garage, A/C. $31S. acbools&cabops.998..()559 b b $
2901
• Pb Room•/trltcbeQette Park.•lOOBlrcbSL · • w/frpl. OW. crpt, k\d/pe 2Br, Fam Rm, pool, frp~c. Nice yard. W/W . , mo.64S-46$5 eac . mo. SSOWeeklr'IJ).
OK. $415. 963-4547 Agent clbhse, other irtras. l8 or cpt·g. $325. Pb 494-1561 Seek straight prof l or NEW BREEDAPTS 49'-4212 «494·1287 SQ.91SS
No fee. over. 988-8623 Sandra Harkness, Ait bus. man to shr equally EASTSIDE sunny 2 br, &chelors & I brs avail. OC•&....-
0
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w/2 or his peers a sharp. patio. garaee. bltns. StarUna $215 to $260. No -""' "' 3Br, bonus rm .• cpts. Niguel Shores, lovely 5-taAaa lJIO ly furn. ocnvu hm w/lg<> $27S.16021.1tSt. MB-2127 children or pets. DEUIXI
drps.frplc.$450/mo garden hme, 3 Br 2 Ba, ••••••••••••••••••••••• pool, $285 incld utll, 645-4411 ...a.., t Mo.ftrH
968-7146 h>I<-, rur.tom drps &c cpt.s, &!per value, a br, 2 ba, mwd, grdnr. 644-048.a MES• PINES
2
Brlnc uUI. ~ ~urround In patios & fple, OW, carpets. Kids & New studio apt $230. l Br L41e 2 Br, 1% Ba, 2 1ty, ---------
1 3 Br Gl<>n Mar Home grdns, walk to beach, pet OK. $415. 963-45e7 Nwpt He1ght1 studio apt S28S. 2 BR $3SO Av1111. pool, kids ok. No pei.. ~NICJIMI 3112
Crpts, drps, <encc-d yd, comm PoOI sauna & ten-Aient, no lee. furn. Garage, ut1llt1cs Jan. 1st. Pool, jacuzzi & Nr. schla, $28S & up. 2310 ••••••••••••••••••••••• walk tn. l'hopp1nR Lse nls. Guard gate. $600 mo. c_...._ L 3Jl6 Single! employed person laundry rm. Adult.a, no Santa Ana Ave, CM. Nice 2 BR, saoo 6 $325.
$395. 536
237
5 493 1675 _,. aguna only. No pets. S22Stmo. r;:t.s. O-nen dally. 2650 &lS-5088;213·3'71-4032 .,.__, •· r--.._, q··'et
---• . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6(5..4464 R r 'd r rUUI --......... ... J Br. I~ ha. pool Walk t --l IR 2 l"'TH rLUSH · es. req · aria Ave, C.M. <Mesa area. 831-77&8 beach & achooh1. 911· • "' Ocearuront 2 BR 1 ba -==~::..:..:.::. _____ , .... ________ , _____ _..;. ___ _ Mahalo. 642·3595 or Large landscaped yard, BLUELAGOON ' • "HarborBlvdl.549-2447. (213)433·5905 children welcome. Oon vu, 3Br, 3ba, pvt · winter. $350/Mo.
$440. MO. bch, 2 pools, tennis crts, 1 brcondo. carport. crpts. &l5-8789;eves557·3273 ~S:SO mo. No pet.s. Hewport .. odl l.26' ---------1 ...................... . 2br, 2ba, aar. ¥1 ml to be ~
3br, Cam rm. d, maste
hdrm. pool, $47S
4br, pool, 'A ml lo ocean
$625
714-846-~. &b Graf
3 bdrm P• ba. Irpl, sun
3242 •••••••••••••••••••••••
HUNTINGTON
HARBOUR Se• Gate end
uoJt twnb1e. 4 Br on
lqOOQ, 30' slip, 1 yr lae, no pets. M0-10'2
.,.. 1244 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Univ Pk lll, 3 Br 2~ Ba, + bonue rm, Oxford,
$525. 5'7-7°'4: 1133·3215
UMTALS
2 BR, 2 ba ••••••..•.. $S2S
3 BR, I Ba •••••• ,f47S/S35 3 BR,l~ba. ••••..•• '495
4 BR, 2~ ba •••• SS00/625
4 BR, a Ba .••.••• $a00/750
5BR.88-.••.••••••• $195
3 BJUMI balMJme '650
FtHEAHOME
BIO CANYON. Abeolut•
ly 1masblo1 Au1u1t1
PARK MIWPOltT ... •••••••••••••••••••• ea c be Io r 1 , 1 or 2 Tahoe Condo. Slps 8, clr 4 DIUIXI OFC'S Bedrooma "Townhouses 'IV, (ull,y furn 'd. n.r re·
From$274.50 sorts. Resv. S36·277• Cont. rm., aeat ZS. all
Spectacular apa, t otal peneled, sm. whae In re-
tecreatl on proeram, Ba.ocbo 1-*' Palma• tu· ar. l or 2 yr. leue. Late
IOClalprocram.7poola,I In& reaervaUona for 2 Forest area. Kool
tenma courts At Fashion brm +den, luxurfoua re. Hartins.
bland, Jamboree Ir San fumilhed. Crnr fairway 71"581·9393
Joaquin Hllla Road. unit. 2 wk min. 831-2212 Appras.. 400 • • ft. C·2,
17141,44-1900 MiableM/F&c>tbarebtfl A/C. tt 130 ~-11lb St.
lNDUSTRJAL SPACE •--------_., --------·•---------• For rent In Cotta llleu
•
1IOO sq.ft., suitable. for
•uehou1e or mf1. ~Gr~eTI,
COSTAMISA
.... Zot9
BuUd to ltdl. 10,000 Sq.
Pt. PJaonUa A.,.. 1--------1 N.N.N.IMte WESLEY N. TAYLOK4 co. SM«G .,
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Add 1t ••• Bu1ld 1t .• Oiar;>t:r it ... Hamm r it • C rpet
rt Cement 1t. .• W1rc 1t ... Hoe it...Clean 1t •• Move
1t. Press 11 Pdinl 1t •. Na111t ••. P1aster 1t .•. Flx It ... SERVICE DIRECTORY lumb 1t. •• ate: ... 1pe 1 emo e 1 .. .
Roof lt ... Landscape it ... Tito it... Tr im It... Sew It .. .
Haul It ... Add it ... Plant It ... Alter it ... Learn it ...
~---I--'· r-S..ice C••• .-tor G-d Senkn Mc 11d--"'9 Mmoftry !~~~.... P~P•lrilMJ a.otl.cJ .,.,.-me• ..,...-_,,,_. ,,.... •••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• e<!~J NAI P l ••••••••••••••••• .......... ••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••• , 8r1 k k S ll b rROto'~ 0 ~ atn 'Independe nt Paper n.nA
B& J A....i·ancc St-r\ Wt• ~:art C.:.rvet C:1tun~ri. I{ J Huffrruan & Son, (1C'n HANDYMAN: C•rJH!hlty, MIKES c wor ma JO 1 Inf!. lntcr/l!:xter Re111. Uanier T he fl nut nvvFS ID laJlt'd rattory
TRtPciAHGt-.110 Stclllm dt'llll o,..bampoo C-Ontr Cu1tom AIUr Add. t!l~tncal, plumbln1 & ~ Complete Clcaolna Newport. Costa Men & 'WVtkauarM!.0388 crafllmanablp av all. dJrect; estab 3$ )Tll, Call
2025S M1Un, !) A \li.o uphl>l11h•ry All work i> i.11I>5. cab In" t 11 . noors. 841·2'787. ~7~5<M ~nv1ce . WI ndo~r. A _!:Imo. $1~ 317hwes. lt\Lerlw ex.t.euor u.in Llc/lns"1 . .Rda •free est Harold Gunn 549-2961 ~u;i.r Truc:k mount unit formlca New con11t Htt11 -SP e (' 1 u.I t Y • M 1 n ° ~ Bl()('kwall~. 1lumpstone, I 0 • • s u r : m 873""6S8 Roofs For Less. All ty~. ~a422 1157 01
· Fr ,.~t . r1•0 ratn & comm'I. 645·4644 or fh·it,repaJr,remodel,I Repairs 8~11_i .~c-ssell brick , c:oncrete WOf":manahJ PC.II Jae . Llc/bood'd. lnaur. hee
r--..1 S_...ice ll4~ !1716 ~-4S41 l..ic & bondl'<1 yrs carpentry & roam Homes-Rental!i Nobody drlveWcl)'S patio:. tile ""°7""'"' p. Prof paint I & paperban.g e1Umate 89• 0'21 ·or -,..... · e'X" .... Ph 49G 6822 Doe~ ft 1kttc1 · 1-'rce Est. ' • ' ....,.. '""" In .. Clean '1.Qrk dUar. • • •••••••••••••••••••••• ,,.. -c er um' r 4 u arr y . -. c:n, "... • • ~-4133 M 111 712yn.t•:u·pet clenn1ngOr C.petlft' r__._ 541-0831 R pam. ufall types 0 r0oo tdroptbeoau.Gela Free est 957·0941 ---------·~~1n!nw~e::1~~r~ C\.> Nuw S du)' 25'r dis ••••••;•••••••••••••••• :;:;::::? ••••••••••••••• Wo.nt a REALLY C.:LEA!lc m~nry Quuhty work job wilb a low:~t Dal:r ~ T.-..Strrice
d earung too' GuJr work l'WOl to introduce truck c u a. l 0 m Fram 1 n It •voploader. Dump lrut:k. HOUSE'? Call Citnt(ham 11 t w 111 t c r Prices· ~~~-~fled A F\nt class exUint paint• •••••••••••••••••••••••
oil bigl!cr ... 1nn~i. t-'re1• m<JUntl'd fottory to-~our· Comm Kt>S Room ud<h llaulantL tree work, Girl. Freeest645·Sl23 L1cl•nsed & bonded ----ans. Paperbaoginr. Bemoval1, lrlmmln,g,
..st, 645-3646 dooi J t·ntt.'r ) our ome OK <Drywall I 5514821) R r II dang• demo t.' l t: ---l -. 9ti:Vini or 673-0164 PamUnR. Extr/lntr. Ex· Cabi.nets refiniabed etc. pruoma. Free est. U c d. wtlh unly w 1ind & hose _ idt 1257 MlYAKO Hou sec caruog ----pr'd, honest, ~at. reai. 25 J79...52.94 lnsrd. 968-9295, a.2·%1624 Shampoo & :ite11m dean 'J'hrcc tun~ better dean· 8 Cit • Servlct1. Windows, Walls, Moving Uc'd 964·1045 Dave yn exp. -
Color bn11htt>nl'rs, wht inR la'ltt•r drying. N .ctric H..UllCJ Crystl:l.I, Sterling Silver. ••••••••••••••••••••••• " .... /l---'-Tree trimmln1 service.
,.pt.S 10 rrun blt•.ich Clean me~~ Burton C11ri>el •:••••••••••:•••••·.·: ••••••••••••••••••••••• 10 Yrs. exper Houses, "Two Men Wall Move Paint Your Castl• ......... :!'::':•••••-•• Yard cleanupa. Depen-
h, din rm hall $1 5 A\'R tlt'aner">. l'M ti42·~75 El.ECTRJCAL SE,!< Vil f, OCC STUUBNT Bii; '• Rentals, Yacbts. 648·5719 You"' We handle btg Average Ext.r l Stry $395 VERY NEAT PATCH dable + r easonable .
rm$750 t"O\.M:hSlO chr CAU..SS15hr,&SMALL ton truck Trash tnm crleavemel;sage&pb move1 -off 1c e & 2StorySStS,lntr$45rm JOBS&TEXTURE 541-&318
S5 Guu' elJm Pt'l ~or. C....ftt/Concrete JOBS842-82::!3 etc Handy642·S7ol , nun1berforreturncall. household. Distance & Prlcesinclm11trl/laboc Fr est. 193-H39 W --.,-__...-.... ------Cpt repair is >n> expr ••••••••••••••••••••••• u...1..L--t 1£.t_.....__,c loco I. als.o pack1ne Guar/lnsr·Fre(! est. ee •
Do work m~:.t'lf Hers CEMl::N'r WORK ,All ~.,.....-rn Houteelean11MJ Xlnt houseclearune done Lowest legal rate. Uc320881,Ted636-708S PATCHPLASTERlNG •••-••••••••••••••••••
SJl-0101. kinds lll·a~unubl~. free Lie 32'7136 645 6974 ••••••••••••••••••••••• by lady w/exp. Dependa· Llclln1rd. Cal T 111·9". . A 11 t y p es • Free pl n e & So ti d 0 a It
esu. Call 750 6625 SUMSHIHE GIRLS ble, own trans. 847·3637 • MICHAELS PAINTING. . Call S.0-6825 waterbeda Complete line Steam Clenn Holiday -· --t:LEL'TRICIAN·Pncl!d PhS47-72'7B ----ext. houses & comm. estimates. & acc. Rea1onable. s"""'_ial Cpl & Uphol. Q!mcntwt>l'k. Drlv_eway:., r_lght-free es~1 mbate on lloo~ecleaning & office Housecleanang with a p..&-at-i•~-bld&'s.S7S.Sl4l~ft.Spm. ~ Terrv'a Nwpt·Bay ... --d I k & Jarae or mall Jo s specilllists. We welcome person Ill touch Ref's. ._., .. ":II...-........,. •··"ll -... # l..1c/1nsrd1.:uar 3 rm, no 111 ewa ?», patios. " :. . n E u~counb . SpeeialJi· 5-l&z.l20 S36-6728 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1'1nepaintingatstaybusy ••••••••••••••••••••••• 643-0lJl
-..t hnut $25.95, halt-. & blockwall fence. Call l.Jcens~ ti73 0359 Apts & Condo:.. Duy. ---PE'TERSPAJNTING Try I e$l. at HOMESAVERS. Plumb··li========= ~athrm free L·l·F·l': ..:!_c<is ~i8 1298 GcrdeNacj week or month Bonded, lmdsc:cipMg Expr'd. Reu Rate1. kl~=~-~~r l.na & lleatina. Free est.
:s ystems 631 5350 , Controc:tor ••••••••••••••••••••••• tac 'd . ansrd . tttfs ••••••••••••••••••••••• Free E1t. Call Gene CUSTOM PAINTING. SlOhr.Honest&rdlable ~i. ~ ~ ' • .-...... ,.. ......... .-. W\-.~-CL~~ ~~ -, LANOSCAPlNG. -~ e••.Jor. Speclalfst. 1 Kl'Vice. BorA, M/C OK. _
For CJUIJ.lled Ad
ACTION -t . CARPET REPAIRS Gc11t.'rul C:ontr;u:tmgAdda Wt.'d<lyMat!ntenance --• • , -Reuonableprices. 1 al ef' Li /bo 7S1-3.150orM7-0383
lloru., HcrnodellngBwld· f'roocst 642·9907 HOUSECLEANING 15 our 547·5846 YOUNG MAN. 5 yn exp ~~11':srd~ ~ar ~ork: Plumbing 557-6103 ini.: lOO'lo Financins: -·-business Hel1ublc ---1 11 rl g Fr W , be U
--Calla
Daily Pilot
AO.VISOR
6'2-S678
....
F11;d what "OU w~l in i\\'1;1la1Jle. Don Massey <.1ass1fiod Ads 642·~78 :.ervice. J anice's Ra&· S~ Idle Items wrt.b a n wa cove .. .?.... ff d~eebldes.!!·108100 t un· Free es mates.
., ClAQ A'l•o nedy Ann's at 645-1800. Daily Pilot Cluslfled Ad est.I. 645-857ilUJl.ly ~ ..._.. 964-1303 1.>ai..ly Pilot Clusif1eds. <7'00"""" •
.......... ·,1 ... nt/ &lr.~-..1 5lOOH oH~Wmted 7100Ma&..W..ted 7LOO ......... w..... 7100HetpW..ted 1100HelpW..tecl 7100 w..t.d 7100 ....,. .... ~ Lost .--u elf> W.+ed 710 ...,. ._,.. . .-_.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••-••• .. ••••••••• FincltC• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••••••• ".. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••
............... • •.. .... •BABYSITTER* c:.to. Upltol1t• • DONtTl' Sbop.l. nleht shift
Business Lost lri: blk & tan rruilt: AccounffncJ Cleric AUTOMOTIVE Mature worn.an over 40, Expr'd only. Top wqes 9pm-Sam. ·da~u thru appo. twtity 5005 Seller max. Bolsa Chica Sharp accurate person W.AaRAMTY CLERK my bomc, ll mo. old boy. Career Opportunity &benefits. S48.o2:S9 Moo. Wl.ncbell a DoGut
•••••••••••• •• •• ••. ••.. & £tlm~cr 846·8925.:.._ Exper In uccts pay able & C M a re a M on . Fr i Shop, 2!N7 Harbor. CM
C y payroll. Non·smoker . Must type. Excellent 751·9630aft5PM Immediate open.Ing ttvailable In I person offkt.> CUSTOMER Service. -... -~ ~mL lllAVELAGEH Found Gray Tabby c:.il Xlnt benefits. Cost a working condition., and , of business services firm. Qualified applicant Mature Exp. ne e. __. .. ~
Let us show yQU how to male, Costa Mesa Ave & Mesa MO ~1 benefits. Ask ror Jerry BAK.ER Exp d or appreo· must have a minimum 3 yrs business Female. Ute typing, pro-Elr.paod.lng firm d en.-
start an aRcncy Travel Fulh•rton 548·3938 & -' --Perkins. tlce. Call btwn. 8AM " experience. preferably In a Business Service ncaenty w/rigures, 10 vironmeatal enctneen &
exp. not necessary. Total de.en be. Mri> Miller noon. 496-1410 t•nvironment. Tlu.s includes telephone and cbent key add by touch as phone pl annera near O. c.
:.tart up & oµl·rat1ng ----CONNELL BAR GIRL Neighborbd contact, capabllity to resolve tK.mlness problems exp. lnformal otc. Costa Airport b .. pennaoent
ca.pillllttqulred SJ0.000 Lost last mo In Lag Bch. ll'SEMBLER Ba Cull & art t and function effectively with limited Mesa. $3.50 hr. Call: positions open ror peopl~
(7141838!1242 White Male Samoyed M CHEVROLET r. P ime, supervi.8100. General dutlea in~lude: accurate Millieaft9AM6'5-S800 w/civil engineering ---" It blu eyes. l-684-6392 G4&-SS44 typing <SS-OOl. dlctaphone & letter composition drafting exper. In grad-
Dating-E.Scort·Sbare ren· --TRAIN[[l' 2828 Harbor Blvd. BEAUTY OPERATOR Good benefits program in modern oCflcc DelJ·clerks needed. 11_. l'"'!.:Fmim ementplan' tals & employ. U"ency. Nb100 Cot:kuteel, w/or .> COSTA MESA . h bo M """'' 11 7 S t "'·· .... " k •· I t k t N--'ed lm-edlat .. ly F/ti'me w/cllenteleonJv facility. Salary commensurate wit a ve on-... '• · a -.-n. & ma-. Apply. Scl.lorpartnt.'T.646·0.t20 t:het' 5 "' Y 0 op no · ~ .... "" 546-1200 ' · h I $27 hr .,_1"22 ..------Vic Wilson. 548·3096 Loo& & short term a!> CaJllor appt MS-3446 l'Xl>'!rtence. Please send resume wtl sa ary . 5 . .,.,,. "" Jack o. Raub Co. Attn:
INTER I 0 It DEC 0 . -s1gnments. Hoh day & AUTOMOTIVE r('(luaremerats to. Deli /M Personnel. PO Box 5019,
RAT IN G . ., a m p I e. Found Pale Orange Long v 3 c 3 t 1 0 n p 3 y *AUTO LO TM EN BKICPR/ A1sJ1tant PETERSON. HOWEll, & HEATHER IMC. nry ~job 125 Baker St. Costa Mesa
ca .. ·1ogstod10:..20r L't.v hlilredC\T H tal' ton plan P/Tlme .. Machine ac· U16&?ft1acArthurBlvd,lrV1ne Ca.92715 Permanentpart· me 9'21626.(TI4)751·2Sl0 ....., 05 P1 1 z a 1 , ""·IJ or part·ltme. ' -arn M .. dellv .... ng ear"v m~•-i1..;.;;...;:.:......;._;__; ___ _ Io c a I 1 on :. . T r a i n , 5-\6 i308 availab1e. Start today. l.beru auto busin""'S '""'rrom count.mg system. 10 key Equal Opportunity Employer .,. ""'• '" ~ "'"' d $8 800 T ----_ .. der & typan". Expr LA Times to homes in Drt. .... 'H.a..-l(W ance. · t:r1Jl$. Personals 5350 l.be ground up assl.ating ou • Irvine/NB areas. Must 'I ~ •
714·770 1755 Mr lhll _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• the Servine M"r. Op· pref. Wall train. M2·1.912 bereUable &baveder:n· CI a ss 1 C. D . L .
.. "
1"·-to2pm HOUSEHOLD GOODS, o c EA N FR ON Drinking problem? port.unity for advance· wen• • HttpW.ted 7100 HttpW~ 7100 dable transportat on. Experience only apply.
:-.tARKl':T Mui.l sell! Call Alcohol Jlelpline "'-' mcnt. See Mr. Belanger, ••••••••••••·--•••••• ·-••••-·-••••••••••• Salary$32Smo.546-023S. Mon thru ~I. 9 AM to 4 New $35,000 yr. Agent. 41-1 hrs a day 83S-J8JO 3141 CClnlptS """• HOWARD Chevrolet, Boat Builder p y . 2 3 1 2 a y l a
6424758 546-4741 Dove & Quall Sts .• {)pening!Forexper'd IUSIOYS Cert DemoAss'f'gc>~~~nl Fabrlcante. lll11lon PREGNANT! (Ac.To55From Newport Beach Rbev'=sMoldft"s Personable &: w e ll rART-TlME a career n u z. Viejo Caring confidential Orange Co. Airport) .,._ groomed. Dinner house GfFTWARI Din. in& all your ROA 5k.Ula?1-...;.:. ______ _ IALIOA
Bayfront fast food. Ne
SJ0,000 . yr income.
Seashore Re.ii !-:State.
675-SMO.
Inv ntmeftt
Opportunity 50 t •••••.••.••........•..
If you re not .:Nuni; 13 8';
1 rturn on )·our rnvtst
mcnt. call S.mcly Roso,,
\j~~-~ 837 ·3111
MoMytoLoan 5025 .....•••..••..........
I st, 2nd & 3rd T.D. 's
LOANS AVAILABLE
Cred1t'not important.
lrokef'. 493.3102
Money Ava11ab!e, many
5ources. all proJec\s
S50K min. 752·60S2
MoMyWmted ••••••••••••••••••••••
rounsclang & r eferral F.qu.alOpporEmployer Atrtomotive ~ exper. pref'd. Apply, Personable. e nergetic ..:.660-0~.:..121::.:.. _____ -(Dnvens.earaxtralneome
Abortton, adoption & New Detail Shop need& Stodl ROOM Ir Victor Hugo Jon, 361 CliCC person needed w/arl.JSUc Dental Secretary Recept, earlf All's 3-f. $400/mo keepin~ help. <t.'-1-Clerk Dr, Laguna Beach. Moo· ... lit t h nd' & i E APC:Alt t-: 547.2.56.i Top wages prud. ~!line ..... ..,....., Frl belwnJ.Spm. au• Y o mere a ase exper. ne<:essary. Salary ma. cooomy car a ----ASSEMBLERS Steamers, eng painters, Xl nt pay & fri nge, ____ ......;; ____ display gtnware In our open.837·711.2 must. Laguna Beach.
*MICHELLE'S* buffers & pohshen. up· benelita. Newport Beach store. 30 Call bet. u & 2, 4!M"'°'55
Outcnll Massaj!C c~ ,,-ow with us! holstery shampooers . IWOA YACIHTC s IUSINHS IS ~v~.a Pl~~~o c~h~~o~! Den~~l~rs:~anl DRIVER Clearing house
10.\:'11 21\M 731·146:! check out. pick up & de 2972Century p. M IOOMING manaaer for intervw 837·TI12 Ln Costa Mesa, drh~ We have immed1all' Livery Apply at 5$-3120, E.O.E Weneedgoodhelp appl. ---------1 w/Cu.11 1tzed auto to do Spirilual R~oder
1815 So El Camino Real
S;.m Cll'mente. 1-ully lie
F11r appt 492· 7296 _ _
HELAXJNG MASSAGE
Bob J ames-Llc Masseur
OutC'all !1·9, 494-5111
openlngs for all levelll of 2059 Harbor Bl. C:M * Alsemblen THE GUILD DRUG Dental Assistant, ex per. pickups In So. CalJl. Mu.st
ft-•emble-whohaverc 645-1030 E~s • ft""""''•rv.SaJ•...,open. be fa-·"arw/ar•• --t ....,.., "" ---IOAT IUILDER M ..., *Auto Medu•c It> IO San MIC)Mt Dr ,.,..........,_' -i ...... -. ,.._ cent ef penence prep Aut.omotJve CARPEKTERS •TruckDriv.,.. 1714)644•7330 837·7ll2 be bondable. Some abip.
ping e t>ctronic eompo. F.xper. mcchan1t· Gd ELECTIUCIANS •Offic•Staff c-..... aJOp E I DentaJ Alisist. Trained or ping & receJvln& duties. ncnls. leading prlnted working <·ond. 1'ooli. ..,..u por. mp oyer exp'd. X·ray Ile. F. V. $3.50 hr + 14• ml. Call c1rcwt boards, soldering furn. Salary OIX?n. Applv HARDWARE Exper'd&Tra1nees M1Uleatl45-5800aft9AM or general factory skills. an person 6AM to •PM INST ALLERS MacGregor Yachts Codctail Woltrns _ia. __ 1648 ______ _
MASSAGE Avoad the traffic going to llOO. 3131 Harbor & Oat..-G Victor Hugo Inn. 361 Cliff days week, must live' lo Exper'd driver Deeded.
RGURE MODELS }~= ~~ 00;r~~~ _Pt_. C_._M_.______ We w
1a~~Ue~ p er· d Cafetwfa H..,_. ~ ~!':.0ts:Cr:.cb Mon· =D Viejo area. ~~ ~~vt;~;ec=&
See Mana.l(er Shell Sta· FflEttGLASS 1631 Placentia. CM Exper. pref'd. Apply, DENTAL HYGIENIST 2 Drivtr/D••.Y ,
llon facllilles an Orang workmen I ooki ng for P /time work. Min 3 hrs > benefits. Apply ln penoo ESCORTS Qiu.oly. AVON perm. employment W/a Must have car. Costa COCKTAIL Dental Aut. " l'eUP· or call lot appt. Alfred
OUTCAU.OHLY / growing co. We want Mesa, Newport & CdM WAITRESS llonist w/expft'lence. M. Gordon Deeips, 2SO
63 I ·1811 We olf~ oor emploYees , 1', workers Wbo want to pro-areas. Apply. Newport· Learn In 40 hrs the most Expan•led duties, 3&4 Fischer Ave, CM 640-2860 --------t ex('ellenl wages and a Eaml g ress In the It jobs Mesa Unified School Dis· exciting, glamorous, day w, ik., Very persona·
•SHERI LEE• full benefits proRram ' ......_ ;!~ ~· w/mgmt pos11blllties . lrict, t~ood Service highly paid proftw. Day ble ec., .ta Mesa ottJce. DELIVERY .
t:crt1fil'd Masseuse We are now acl:epUng ....... '-""'. Xlntco. benefit.. Dept., 1857 Placentia or eve sessions. Place· 645-7S8l Good drtvln1 r ecord
HouseCnlls·ByAppl. applications and in ForAVOH Paclflcly Ave,CM.SS&-3273. menlassisl.Goodjobop· -D-ENT--ALl--
0
-R-T_H_O ____ , Moo thru FrL 9:30 to J r•>-1°d fi nt1 al properl y O'>O ........ terviewing Monda)' .. .,_r;.,ENTATIYES IO y-L.L. nnr ·~~~ ... PM -"" to ... 75 hr ('~ll J"erry llarr1s, days -__ ...... _........., ____ , fhday,8am -Spm. ee7~e to establish 928~th5rCM CANVASSERS WANTED Cd1714f 751·9194 tionisL Nwpt. Benefits, Meie:b'Orsca~n&Cali i~l"!'~·nilt>s,586-J420 *SANDY'S* rustomen. Interested., -----~----1 ~~~~~dJ.9.lnvolvlog So. Call . Cocktail ~tal~:i.~ Ortbo Rick557.Q32
Mortgoqn. Trvsl OutcaJI Massage AMERICAN Call S40·7GU or· Zenith IOOKIUl;ll;I'~ Waitresses, Inc. 17922 ..;:...:......;:.....;._· _____ ~--------
Offds 503 973-0329 TWCOM, IHC 11359 F/Cbg. PoetinC multiple CARPENTER wanted Sky Park Bl, Ste C, Dental Cbairslde Assis· ELECTRO..,.IC
•••••••••••••••••••••• 3190 Miraloma Avenue sets of bookl. Conatruc· with cabinet bldg expr. Irvine, Ca 92714 tant? Do you relate well n
UMDA & VICKI • tion background helpful. 962-8314 . w/people. F\.IU moolh re· TECHNICI "NS Anaheim, CA 92806 BABYSIITER, :l girls Sex Perm pos w I es t ab 'I Companion/ babysitter construction practice " LOWEST
lntenst Rat"
I st T.O. 's. also
2Rd T.D. Lo.ts.
F.a.iresl Terms sl.nce 1949
Sattler MhJ. Co.
642-2171 545-061 I
Outcall Massog. Equal Opp Emplyr M/F ti. Tue-Fri, ll :45 U1 6PM. Orange Co. land cie· CAR WASH HELP &fon-Frt for middle aged needs exiJer 'd team ... __ .,. .... _ =tz'i•"M! FortlwFuRoflt! Sat 9-6PM. SSS weekly. 543-8596al'l5pm ----., ReC.. Call all &·JOPM veloper . New of cs In Over 18, F\Jll·Thne woman. member. tease phone
Serving ~~f:'~ge Co. ASSEMBLER· ~5165 Irvine. ('TU) 751-4482 ask METRO CAR WASH COOKS MUTTO to arran.ie coo· We manufacture tbe
ELECTRO MECH'L for Marilyn. 2950 Harbor, C.M. Breakfaat, Lunch, din· fldemial Interview. most advanced state.()(.
DANCE OF FUN Min. 2 yn exper, as· Babysitter. Reliable1 IOOIO<HPER CASHIERS J'M!I', El(per'd. Appl.1 la DIMTAL the4rtawitchJngdevtces
BtO nude girls dance & aembtJ ck drill press r perm.anent far 1 yr ola Ya Barker'• availabJe~lbemarket · rap session . lOAM to q'd Co. paid bealtb ~Ure boy, 4 dys wk. CM. Su· Eq>er .. well organized, & HOSTESSES c•on. 212 E l 7lh Pleannt lf'OUP In N.B. the next eeneratioo ot
3AM Mon-Sat, 12PM to ins.EOE.&e2..tl080 dy,MS-1432ar833-8312 to work wltb R. E . Now \&king appllcatf tauraat. • needa 2 employee1. telecommunications
8PM Sun. 625 N. Euclid, Development C. nr O.C. Apply In Person St. C.l4. Front ore. Recept. " e q a i pm e 0 t. our Retired couple has money Anah. """' ...,50 ASSEMILlR BABYSITI'ER, my home Airpot't. Xlnt salary, Rustyr.Uc• ,._ ... needed tor conv. Baft Otc Cbalralde. ~'-ca•...,. ~uipment lo lend. llll & 2nd T .D.'s ~· bl.. Will · f 4 Id •-· ~~ea '--.Jl .,_ ... ---umeto ......,._ J ud alt • S t __.... ~ FREESESSJONW/AD Day 1 n . train or mo. 0 • u v,... · ua..:&•lS. ~ •= 273SW.CoastHwy,NB ho1pilal, AM & PM nc es erna.e a will be a tbal enge tD
Agent,837·3144 -----Goodco.beaefils. Tue-Thur. 8:1$ to 2 :30. Box Cl.95ZS, lrvine. CA Moo·Friday3.5pm. shifts. F/ttme. Exper'd AMs. Exper'd onl7. even the most technical
Sold my home'" La.tuna Male Under 21 W1nted Co..,. Ute Corp. Ml-1421 92713 only. Apply In person, _MG-__ 11_22.. ________
1
ly oriented minds as you
Beach. Will sell my Friendatup + Possible 111 W.17tbSlreet 88 b 1 1 i t t er 1 Lite IOOIOCIEPIJt CASHIEtt 8"erly Manor, 340 Vic will test. faulll.solate and
S29,SSO 2nd T.O for Share Bch Jim John BldgF-12 CostaMesn bousewrlc Mon-Fri, nr ,.,u. .. ulSSIOHS f\tll/p/t.Reapperson toria.CM DENTAi.ASSiSTANT maintain our complex S23.000 ush ('all Ken, 536-2282 C.omer 17th St & Pomona 1 n d 1 a ,; a P 0 11 8 & ~ ovr 20. will lrn. gd pay digital communications
673-4MS P--al S-lcn 5360 Call645-1501 Ma.,.....' a. own lrall5. or Npt Bcb lnve1t Finn. METRO CAR WASH U you are britht I& en· systems utilizing stored
... -... • U -; ....... 96.1-(1281 ft &PM F/charce comrnan'1 bk· 2950 Harbor C.M. COOKS thusiastic about a dental procram microprocessor ~..,.ntt 5100 •••••••••••••••••••••• • ASSr MANAGER needed ve· n. 8 kp'r. Req exp lD peg brd ' heal lb career le want to or telecommunicatioru.
••••••••••••••••••••••• Weddlop, social events le for local car wash. Apply Babyaltt.er: Need mature, 11ys, k.nowled1e ln read· CilLD CARE. reUable, fwl Ir ft/th•• really conlrlbute to a wouJd be adellnileptus.
HousesitUng wlule you'r prutles, makeup Marque In person. 411. E . 17th SL reliable Jovinc lilt.error ing computer report.a. active woman to bel AllSbllts proeresslve Fountain
away. No Chg, eklerly will help design your own Coat.a MeH. our 4 yr old glrl. Your ~. care for energetic Valley practice In ex· Don't fldlt the tral6c &<>-
C'pl. Refs M11·3289 pe.nooalized makeup for Wa.atAd Relulta 642-Sf71 bome. M afternoons pt dler alJo do lite bakJ>J. •TOP PAY panded duties. we need Inc to lrvine.. Come to
-you . Call for appt. wk. 3·7PM. HB area. BF~c~:.!: E0 : fc, ~r\'ai u~::_'f Reta ~llMIFITS )'OU. Salary open. Call our J'OWIJ and rapidly SCRAM 1£JS 673-1798 HelpW.-hd 7100 142-Z. L-•-~-. Ila""•"" ....... req a...J;_u.....;a.....;ne_882_· __ 3&33-----11rowla1 company! "\. ~~ ............ -.. -.... b;':ptaDlbu n:;t;,•--=---C-IV-IL-----t ..... ._.._. where we rtC'Olld.le aDO
ANSWERS ~ qualified. dyaam.ic lo.· EMtal..atNG .,,., II,.,.... Exper endodoot!c chair nwad JUUi' talents, and ....................... ASSISTANT TO dlvl&&al that poeseeses DUIGHEl •• 11· o's L Ole .. needed rrr ,_ where there ls pleat1 of ,::.~-~ -~~~ ..... ?~!.~ ~~ :!on}'-~J um.f.f,1:, t~ !!xper'd ln 1ub dJ ., i.;dc._~f!r'l=~==._oppoc_N_pt_:c'_i_°"_s;:-_thl_-1 ~ml ad-1 BITa TJplq very reu. LeaaJ YER/MANAGER d abUlt[ ct work AJ>plylnpenon. Rest.rant moter I cro .. N a moaqult aec. ~ .. P.U. IJ cfel. BU .J::! ~::: ... ::.':lib Yr.
0
Fueotea, Rokrt. AFamUyRestaurant :::=;.DCllM .Call PlemieMndntamewith
wltb a Pl'a>'lnl mantis Raisins 5 teen ili'la. •• tbe flrll'I . Contact Beln. W1lllam Frost DedlcatedToQaality. Alarr requiremeats «'
and Cot u lftMd th1t f46..em 1 ' .,, Barbtn. D.10• Mattne, Aaoc..HOJ.QuallSt.,NB -------lm!91 eall (714) ac>-1121 for an
• .,,. srace before he tWpW..t.d 7100 ·' Gal's Department ..:•=a64~U~----1::-:--:-------i Z7IOH ...... llvcl DIETARY ~ ~
BJTESyou. ••••••••••••••••••••••• BOOKKE.£PZR. perm&• aertcal CodeMesa MERI M
l.Olt&'-d 5300 ~~~ neat pan titn~ Newpo:rt OfcM.....-$900 EOE ... M/F New 300-bed acute can A · CA
-••••••••••••••••••••• Bela. La• Of~ce. $5.00 New branch ole of irrow·I~~~~~~~~~ ho&pttal bu Immediate TBICOM. LHC
$100re•antrorlofo.orre-per hr. Mrs. Thomaa, ing co. needs mature, Counterbelp.Smalh.111ack opeolnpCrorO:OIC 3UIOlll.taJomaAveaue
1 turn of fe m Blk/tao 833-1778 tactful person .•Isom bar with be« ft wine on· Allabejm. CA 92806 "'
Dob6e.. lost N.B. 12/2". typlna & orcaruzaUonal l.y. P/tl.meaite.flwkads E •perience r eqalted. EqualOpp&mplyl'lil/F f
NS-l&SLMS-utT IOYS·GntU abl.lity t.o keep track o obly ~· 1s maw,..; Batatinalhift.FuU·tlme. ~
12•11 yeart "•••· £..,._ salesmen • run dftce. need • · can between A. bl I 101 w~rlr. Oblain ... Much publlc c:oiitact. 1 ... ;:....;.. Aama 'COOK lectrontc uem Y 11\.1.blcrtpticaafstltel>ai· Truly exctt1n1 oppor.1..;;..:.;..;..0#..;;...-;..;..;..;__ ___ ~ .......... 'J:nlnee.E.O.E.H.B..
ly PllCI& W«IMI with an W/poCeltW • IDOlt out· er.......... ~ai:u~e.:~J:! C&llM-0960 •
adult. aupenllOr. Earn atlndlDI co. bins. Call <*J d IntM la........ ~llnl.t1111Teda
GO to .. I*' -.el or s.u,. 5'MOSS. eo.tal l:JecceptlqQSIU~ tbnani. E i paD lDI ehll ~ call <m> 88.QZll PwlOllDll1 ""9e7. for u. polUioo d O..· ect•'Wllal • plaanln#
HOD to 5pm. (UU BlrW',CM ·~ Oaard• to b tlp ometballm.md.opmng ~11. .,...,_. c.1.1 -_._..._. !,!.~D!!!! .. !!' .. tooat•l for • tecllelelao to
-. --~ --_...., perform d.U ...,_.. Dllti• la•ol" tnlDI bu\IUJ tranle4 la· 1q · caleulatlom. earth BOY8 WANTED, p/ corre1p. • flnaaelal ttrjectloai. Croulo1 a,......Offtce "°" crunW-. turYe1· f/tlme, apJ>t01' 1 ... 11. ata&.emeota. mall di•· OWirdl _..needed rrom IOI oarc. ca.&caJationl •
Ll•bt factor7 wotk. tribud~ OllU lie. ae-'1:80A.ll uW •:JOPM'., ~AMA-TUSTIN cost ea\imaUn1. CaU
eG.21QZ • d'ldel •du..,.. w/Umea "~ at fo. COMMUMrrt lack o. R•b Co. Attn:
llAlt bt able to t1Pe 55 dlWlml loc.U... '100 HOSmAL Paaoo:nel, m Baker St.,
wpm t. \IH JO hJ boarw/......., equtp. lOOlN.~AYtmJ' C.ll.112621J(114)751·2.510
calculatAlf. ma&~ b7tbeCI-Saal.&Aaa CA. Mutcn&pliCialU..Q. b'allrrine. l'arlalanu· &qualOpptJimpll/F . QaalfJod ads ••II blf ~=~~ doe COfl~~~ Car·~~~~~~~~!I ~==~l~l:~.~~
I I .
~.~~ ..... !~~ ~!!'~ ..... ?!~! ~~.~~~.~ ..... ?!~! ~.~~-:! ..... !!~! ~~r.~~·~:! ..... !!.~. MOne1'ty Januolry9. 1g79 O~LY PILOT C7
EKE EPEi\ LJV& u:~·y M•I II ,..... MUISIS AIDIS Relt.aurant belr. for Jack· S~LES PtUme Vabrlc ~.~~~ ..... ?!.. ~~~·~ .... .?!!° ~.!!~ ..... !!!~
IN. •ld•ll•ned t.o U t Non•mkr only. ln-nt.Box, mmedlate Shop, C.M. lo c:;J•••al lllom SmaJl
1
fr1.adl1 a-11rl Ellpet'd only. Elderly ooenln001ulhh1tlaatl Ca.U~.Llnda Sec')'/ moderate Truclt Drl\·crs e-11 •IK aae cbUdreo. H B orc.M1·1400 man '" eoov. hoep. CostaM•ut.ara Pleue ~c&J•vp~•ap. re· pt't''d. ~pay. Appl) .,.__ Sal/Sun latm·lpm. s··-....... ,L SECRETARIES "" ... ....·WT I ::-:.:: ~ Ott, 631-1 LIGAL SICUTAIY S.l/Sun nJtbl18\)1t1·8&m •PDl.Yin penoct: ,......,..5,,.. q_wred. Lonl PA fmn v. ns. 1000 rvln~ ---C I I l l l 213 l 385 t:. 17th Sl, ()(flee 1upplles .. sla Npt 7l4.m:l·9881 Ave, NB 642-1.W
Na. ana. Oen. prac. u 111 co 11c JJ05Bakw5l. t1ontry Full I. p/hm~ I TYPISTS ----__ .;...._ ______ ltowckM119' for eiduly per t?~l4l 27~ ~Harbor Blvd. Polllioni. avail. Phone • SEC'V/RECEPT V!L TRAIN El::. Wtt Fed woman fs aon Mu1l bav ror appl M7 ·U3l2 Hit fol' Ue particular & tel lhe f« tm•ll attbltectural will toln Good \)'pin•
'" ml oryH.., Catfrlive-out.&4HW uve--1nhou•t'kff&Wt Lov MURSISA.IDH RISTAUUMT Mr. Wnt. Ntwl)Otl Sll beio\. Work temp0nry t\rm In Nwpt Bch. Ult r.q'd Non •maker N<>
wtem.11 co1etku\1 fac·•iiiiiii.__.iiiiiiiliiiii1 t1l8,rcli1blematuretor2 7.1.30 Exper pref'd 11. ... u .... .A.A.auR....., u 1 as~1a11m"nts with tht! bookkeerln1 "typlna travel ••P nec Full tor,wuitus.~ children ~ worklpg Country Club Conv. ~•..,..""' ooen nc. 1oi~cy that works for "*l cat Chri• 0.811un travel bencfth. Call
mother. R • B. food Home, 549.3091 Fut arowinl ,..taurant you ror appt at 759 9141 640-41 U 9 5 Mon· P'r1
f'Jblralau H.S. Ga.ADS 1lllary. +-uH ot car. chain now taJdna appl. SALES .. 0 HIS
"osttcLmda .. •• a.c ..... •--tTUltUD ~~lldlnve. 4M~ or ~~~1~1,•ldde b&l_.!o,me !~aln*!!!_•tvmarsu" m,ar SLAP A SMILE Call Today! Sec'y with 1encral otrlco 1'"ou.n\aln y1u locall.on. ~ ·-·· ,_..p 8 Of' LS a .,... em. "" vw.. aca on. n· ~8~ office • akllh1. Accurate typist.
VICTOll
TIMPOlAlY
SHVICIS
How ........
v Exp ptef'd but not rt· ccntJvo protram, mod. c-11 p r i •· I ~Rapl1~Yof•~yt,ntf~n! No expur. neceo. No LOT MAH quit'd. Uve in or out. bttnellts lnd'd. Apply In ON YOUR FACE overload .~.S:U: n .. rv •w
fi rod 1 stnlte. or layoffs. Pl.nty lam·U. 5 day1, 11 yre or PIT. 898·2233 per 1 o n • t Co\ on y cludlns~~
11
:~~e;!: ol work. Call 539·1183, ovr.Call752·7100. Kitchen, 3211 Harbor & A BULGE 557..0061 S.rvtce Sta. Attendant. h
1
ed 9am·2Pm Office Attend.+ Blvd, CM lntervlewa 3723 Blrchst, NB tiCper'd, f'111 °" p/tlme.
0: F~~Y ~:/~~~~·,~~ 7.3 Med~~t~n1 . 11-7 ~,~:.~\i:!fi. :~~1p0~'. Jan. iotrom 9•5• IN YOUR WALLET ~~~:=.c~,.r.auon, 1'th
Needod ImmedlaldY
Gt ..... OfftH
Typf •h ,...,.cawtt•
Gtt.1 LaiMw /FedO/f'Y
OsyOrSwing
TOP PAY-NOP'EES
Register l Tlme OnlY
ClllllH.allO
2082 s. p;, 8r11tol
t.lpet'd lamlnatorL ~~~~~~~~~I 1_ Olarge Nune. Good tal 12:30um. $ll .50 hr. TIME/WP'E
We offer an alnt lltltl'tinit kpr/llte cook live ln for It frinae bena. Meu Bayview Manor. 3SO W. RETAIL UBRARIES ~al " m6lny frlnar mat. cpl. Aft 11 call Verde Conv. HOlp, 681 BaySt.CM6'2·~S. Has bothf\lll&p1lrt
benetlt1 to Include tm-2382 Cent.erSl, CM 6'8·5585 CL£RllS UmePo11lllOf\I av1ul medical/dental. ure in· OPPORTUNITY I\ 4 Fun lovlne arllculatc
sur., paid holidays & H.skpr, neat lady for neat MAIDS U you are not makml Sb ind1v1duals who are
vaci +prontiharin.. home. 4 ors bn, 1 or 2 Full & P/llme. Good perhO\lr, call u1. FUll or UTOTiM nger t.o lurn how Apply In Peraon days wk Or consider benehu. Hohda;y Inn, pW'l umc wnrk avau11• CoM'enl...ce Mn.ts to make top SS$$$$$$
WCO IMDUSTlllS ~eruor (·1t1zen hve·in for Laguna Hiiia, Contact ble. Mu1t have depend1&-Help Wanted WI OFflR
3255
E. MlruJoma hte dulll!S No smoke. N. Persont1el 586·5000. ble trans Ph: i"uller lsl, 2nd " Srd Shlfta Howfy Salary
Anaheun 7 l4/9i3·12ZO lkh. &U·Mll Mall Department ..!.rush Co. 754•8471___ No ex per. req "d. W c lrllin GucrR CotNnllMOftl
Equal Opp Empl)'T mtr Immediate operun&s full TaAIHll! PASI'EUP Arust wanted thole hi.red. Applicant.a lnc..tlu loMt .. ,
or p/Ul'I•· No exper. nee. Wlllinf to trlUn ~oRSclen· Exp pref'd or will train. IJ)Ply al Ut.ot.em St.ore. CALL US TODAY Ages 1T lhru 28. S40-#48. llou.s ndJv. on various F/Ume ~· Co. benem1. located at: Jl\lll or part·tltn"· day Maline Gory.. mai)lnc....machlnu. Some ~ply~ P,cn.nyuv~r. 16e0 W Del Mar Ave, C.M.
hoUn M°·F or weekends. ---lilting req~cJ. $3 Per hr fo 'Pf"'"acentia Ave. CM 1-.N. p...U(J.c.(~Hw;y ANO START Perfeel }ob ror everuna ood be r. Latuna Beach aludent. retirtd or th05c lNpe<tlon start + 1 co. nc,its We are aft equal who wish to supplement R!CllVl .. G Apply, NaUonal Systems NllSOMMIL CLERIC • opportunity employer SMIUN
family income. Apply at IHSPtCTtO.. Corp., 4381 Birch St, N.B. Mull be able t.o type 60 ~~~~~~~~~ McDonaJdl, 100W. Coa.al Sm a I I s re c I t.ion <NrOCAirport) EOE. wprn. OutiH Involve, ;... 833 ao95 H NB h' •-Id d t;ypln1 reports & cor· Retail "O wy, mac 1ne • mo e MANAGEMENT • rHp., maintenance on TIMl/Ufl --------•I parts ror electro-PEOPLE PERSON pcraonnelfiles. as~lsllng CA.SHIU UIRA.R,H,IHC. mechanical devices. Exec. needs p/Ume U· In employ m e nt In · P/Ume.MustworkSats
GENERAL Workln1 knowledge or soc. In whol•ale 1upply. tervlews, wage & salary Must have salea e11pcr. & Equal Opp Emplyr m/C
Yl4.5 true posltionlnri & Fully capltallud. odrnlnlstraUon & other good penonallty.
LABORERS proficient use or pre· 642-1634. functions. · SA.US~IRLS SA.LIS
c\31on measuring 1nstru M"'~"'GER E-IR MutersSpeclalliesCo F/tlme. Exper'd only S2S,OOO·S•O,OOO
Needed Immediately mcntsreq'd. Day& only. ~"'':' • ,.,. • 1640 Monrovia, CM need apply. • Umg & short term u STACOSWITCHIMC Women s clothing 1tore, EqualOpporEmploycr Salar;y +Comm1111on Wlthln5yra lnyour
*Secntcrf ... G. Ofc Service 5tatlon Atten·
TooMafl;rToLlet!!! dant, expcr'd. Da;y &t
E Evea. F\all "p/tlme. AP· mployera Pay All Pees ply. Shell Station. 17th ,. Ui Reinders Ag~ncy 4020 Birch, Sle UM lrvlne.N __ e_. ---
Newport Beach 833-81110 call tor Appt/Eltab ·es Service Sta. Nl11ht Auend 1-~~~~~~~~I 2 Or 5 rutea a wk. Apply, I Shell. 17th " Irvine. NB
Sle 10 Newport Beach , _________ ,
Secretsy/lkkpr Service Su . Attcnrl Wtltfl!f/Wrtlttrett
ConatrucUon. Exper'd ln P/Ume. Exper 'd. Noat Lunch 1blh only. Dinner
escrow documents. real appear. " handwr1llna. hoWM exper. pref'd. APP·
est. property, recordlna Apply, 2:5811 Newport Bl. lY Vlct.or Huao Inn, 381
or loans & 2nd TD'i. CM -CUff Dr. Laauna Beach 'lbor'Dl~ mow'\ pl • ., Moa·Frl betwn 3.spm.
k l •. 11 :5Er¥. Sta ..... Mllte; -------.-. pna eory .. app Cl• med. F\all or p/l. Apply, W&IT'llSM5 --~:di~ .. ~~::: Fee 990 E. cat Hwy, Nwpt Exptr'd food fl coc:ktalls Och. Day or niaht. Apply an
.. IGUIL
, .......... geecy
27601 Forbe• Rd. Ste 49
(3 F1ags Center )
131·1477
Laguna Niguel
S!:WERS, ex <>Cf arm P • r • o n • M r . G • ~
and •trala~r'. aewln1. ReeU.urant. 3100 lrv1nt . 4~-4279 _N_B __ ~~-~~
Warehouae
TRAIMI&
~·~nmenta. Hoh day &. 1139 Baker Costa Men rull limo. Interview• held -Contempor ar;y net1&il own lnaurance Bua.
' a c a t I o n p u y 549.3041 Mon·Wed·1''rl Crom 2·4 or Printer ror 1250 Multi. Shop •Part-li me to start
1lospllal1 z.allon pl an Equal Oppor Employer 7·9 Refs. a mu1l. Krazle good workin11 cond. 40 hr, APROPOS •Full commluiorut SICRITARY
SHIPPIMG/llC
Openin& for person ex·
per'd ln amall ofc pro·
cedurN. Shipping & re·
celvlng or m en '• &
women's clothlna. Lite
typln& & f1lln1 . Call
betwn lOam & !ipm ror In·
terview 844-6500.
THIL009'
Good drlvlnf record re
q'd. Forklift exper
helpful. Some hoavy lift·
Ing. Start at S3 Per hr.
Good co. benefits. Worl.
location Santa Ann. App
ly, National Sy1lemi.
Corp., 4361 Birch St. N.8.
tNrOCAlrport> EOE.
Iv Ila~ ;i~!~ll Kal& Fashion• 9931 4 ·duy work week . 29 Fashlonliland,NB •Freetralnlngpro&rum L C
:
L Hamlltori Ave .• 11.8 . AP· Benefilll. 979·7860 -<>ran1e County o(flces .. ·or Onblruction Co. T • 1 · E A c 11 N Near Brookhursl & ~
1 1
I.nsuraRLs CLIRK PY'° person. PnnUng Collater, p/llme SAW f~ "''" G~ Adama, H.B. Call btwn 9 Shoe Salee, opply for IX• Women to abow & ta.kc or
I d I
Mnnagemenl Now accepting apphca· ,,,.~ l .. /C JOE CONNERS AM & 5 PM. 962-6683 per 114/P'. Good hn\ no den fOC' Queen'• Way lo
mme · open na re· SUCClSSFUL lions ror Mon " Tuea ;;;occeurc ........ Sun. Xlnt. benef t.1. Fa1hlon Clothln1. No in 31485~-..6 7
1
1
Dri•• quires riling aptitude. , .. so~ night shirts Apply 9 If you are an exper'd IAaunaNlauel 831-181 Secretary/Recept Attrac· aalary + comm. Top veal. car & phone nN' .,6-47" previous lnaurance ex· """' " • m p · 1a .. ~ salesperson in direct Central OC 870-7740 tJve, 18-23Vra old. IJle fVr ad e foot w •a r, Interview 963·3866 Ar ~-'-'"e helpful. Expandlna bu1. req'1 •P · ennysaver, """ • d i c " (Across From .,...,.,,.... Pl l Cost u s a I e 5 s e e k I n 1 ., __ ... h Sh aec Y ul es. u1tomer -tcllff Sboel. ur. CUr· ,..... •1-YV9tST .. .r51£.ulLll success orlent.ed ""'rlOn accn ia a mesa. .,.,,uw1c op • el U ..., "' '"""" -OrangeCo.AlrPorl) 1 ,,... ~ ...-. ,.v C H ALLEN 0 E , GENERALHELP r a ons. C.M. IKS-8951 ren.548.at,NB ---------
Equal OpPor Employer Jmmed. opening In typ· wanUna 2nd Income bus. s T A B J L I T y ~ P IT M 1 Call 9·5:30Wkdays Women for Houseclean Ing department. Re-ol own. Call for apptlin· PRODUCTION BENEFITS, let'• talk! • on-Fr · Cal ~---------;..;.;.;.~:..;._--1--------.,1 Ina. Part Ume or full qwres typln& SO wpm terv.w, Crown En· NewdivisionolnatJonal belwnl-3,8.13-8919 SICl!TA.RY STOCICLllK lime. Top salary
CHMEIAL OFFICE Previous Insurance ex· terpnses, 838·3441. corp. needs saleapeople --------.i x.lnl secretartal • Int.er· FWIMcl ....St &&2-7201 or64e-.aT1
80+ wpm. 10 key, good pertencerequlred. MAHA.G!ll TYPIST & m-.na1er1. Xlnt fringe SICRETARY pert00aJ •kill• req'd to Perf~Nn 1lmpl1 .. aa·
pay, non :.moker New COMMERCIAL for maternity boutique packaae. Call Mr. Rou. RECEf'TIO .. IST uailt exec. in N:B. ac· sombly work Ir maintain YACHT SAUS
AUant1s Manne an Ran· UtolES RA.nR Must be exper 'd Sal IBM 540-la.7. n eal est ate orfice, countint firm . Some f1nl1hed 1ooda Inventory. E1q>menced yacht aale:.
dolph,CM ---•Commerclalrat.erwlth2 +comm.MT·S734. SELECTRIC II~~~~~~~~~ Monarch Bay Plue, ~~~i:~ceall~~~j~ri:t:1c:~. Esper. pref'd. Day• rr:nwi~n~ed:~/J~1~
Grneral Office, rclioble, yr~ expenence In proper· Salee Laauna Nli:uel. Prerer Sal open. Send resuroe in onl)t. YAMAHA Dealer. Call •
fast learner, l(ood ly or c11ualty raung. Managcm~t Develop· Experienced accurate FULL/P/TIMli real ntote 11crnaee, but rull confld en ce'-to : STA.COSWITCH IMC SOUTHWISTIRM
mcmOf'y, phones, lyp1nit. This Position Is In our menl Tr~lh". Lead ins: Ty IJ 11 t needed 1 m no ecllina duties. Contoct c.133elfled •d no. 111, cto 1139 Baker Coeta Mou rt•cord keeping. Com · multlllneraUn&dept.We lnternaUonal Co. need!'I mediately . 70 wpm E:.irn Good$ & lluve Clar ie Johnsori a l OallyPllOl,POBox1560. 149-3041 YACHTSA.LfS
vuny rclocat1n11 M1t111ion will croes tra.ln the selcc· ambitious person or un· (musll. Fun! 644·9060 _Co5ta Mesa, ea 112.626 Equal Oppor Employer '71'1/6
73
·9211
Viujo In Feb. Good tlvecandidaletobecome questionable charucter VACATION RELIEF Noexper.necess.Jobin --beneflls. 540·3236 a mulll·hne rater. for Ill Hies man111ement MUST 8£ ABL~ TO volves Interviewing & Secretary M91-c1Mndlff trainln1 proaram. Above WORK DAV OR NIGHT complclina credit aps in EXEC SECY TEACHERS, Christian •••••••••••••••••••••••
GENERAL HELP
Salary Mmmensurate average enrnin~~ If SlllFTS major retail stores near EqualopPor. employer • School. apply: 16835 ......... 1006 With experience. Xlnl quallfied. College eduea-Exccllenl Work Ina: home. Flex. hrs. National educ atlonal Brookhunt.. rv. • ..................... .
benefit•. Contact Mn. tlon preferred. Teachlnl(. Conditions A.D.S. 213/945·3961 firm 1.1 se41klna an ex-1-;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;1--~=:~:':=:9-
NEW
Conutoc:k <7l•)5S6·1TOO. salea, or management Apply In Person 714/523-5185 ext S30 Secretary-Purchasing per'd professional secy I• MUSIC IOXES
for lntarvlew appoint· backaround helpful. For o••MGICO"'•T Sal for prominent Orange to\torkfortheSr. V.P.ot TelephoneSales CLO,,,.vS ""' -es wanted, e1t""r. nee. Coas• n Id fl fl d · ' -menl. interview call Jane D"'ILY,ILOT Over 18. Who A~;ThoH I l• du1 '~rl: trm nance/a m1ni1trallon. LOOK AJ SOC. Machlnu, Nicke.lo -
OPENINGS
TR.AHSA.MUICA McEl valne 657·1041 A ocat • in ua in. Applicant must be nt·
I
E.O.E. L-109 330W. Bay St. GUY•? N.B. 67!>-8410 call Previou• con1trucllon tractive. well groomed & THIS!!!! deons. pbonoaraphs. HSURAMCI Costa Mesa forappt. cxper. required. Type have slulls of typlna 70, World's lar&Ht selec· -
, •Large Corpora lion ex· GROUP l\t AT U RE W 0 M AN Alk For Paul Ward S 1 1 d 60wpm · no 11horthand. ab 80. Know'! of account· nme-Ufe Ubrat1ea has l l
0 0
· Al•
0
g If t
8
•
·, ~~~ng c u s tomer p/llme to welcome EqualOpportunil)' ~.T~ma~kYGi?ta~~~~: _Con __ 1a_ct_P_el::.;l;..;;Y_835_·_300_1_ inahelpCul. Pleueapply openin&a fot' part & full ~~~~~eint!rno~~~ea~.
· l""'uran~e newcomers • contact Employer H.B. P /llme to alart. ·--------•I tn penon t>.twn S.U or time telephone ••le• '"' " mettbants. F\e11ible hrs Som 1-3.30 1802 Kettering; Irvine
• SEEKS 5 1nd1v1dual1, no COMMIRCtAL Ne.t car, lite typing. e eves. M0.1557 s.cntcrflll/Cl9ric.. Mati-lll s-.t-· repreHntatlves. Good 1$4-tm. Open W.t .• Sal.
exper. nee. but muat be CASUALTY 547-3005. PURCHASING CURI( s "'L!S• .. DY The Irvine Co. is current· -· r----work in& atmoephere. t & bl "' -k CorporatiOl'I Make aood money. Hrly
nca am 11ous. UMOUWRJTB MUJt be able to type 55 for maternity boutl~ue ly He mg full & p/Ume A361BI hS NB wa1e + bo1tu1e1 4'1•--------
R I I d
Mechonlc wnm OuU--1nvolv• typ u d clerlcal help wtvarylng .. re t, · · equ res expet ence Exl)er. mechanic Gd -,.. · ... "' · .. Jutt be exper' . Sa + 8 It 11 1 e d 1cve 11 . NearOCAlrport &\laranteed comm. while WHOLESALE comme~lal ca1ualty un· working "ond Tool• Ing purchu1ng orders. comm. M7·5734. Equal 0p ....... Employer world:f nealble 1blft1. T0111E TRADE drrwr\ter ror our " . n maintenanceofpurchae· ---------Secretaries rttlme. 1·3 ""' w m eltr a. oflt $600
Per Month
Startin!( ulary upon
quallhcatlon1
Southern California furn.Salaryo~n.Apply I m & d Sal yrsexper.Typin&65wpm e un.pr •· NOW OPEN
I
In person 6AM to 4PM. ~'!... es •ome ven or •....... & dlctapbone. Clerk SECRETA.IY ble for you. tr ycu can
Branoh n Costa Mesa. See mann1:cr Shell Sta· .,. ....... contact•. _..•,'" HOftftt 1, Typlna & shorthand req. aelJ or have the deairo to COMMllCIAL lion. 3t3l Harbor & Dale M1a;..t.er
0
M1onrSpe0c~a11.u. Ce~p> If you weren'tlooklnf for Typists ull & f,'llme, for small ofc. Secretarial loarn. call u1 at tbla TO PUBLIC raorYTY P1 c M .,.. ,., a new career . you type 50Wpm, lite kkpng pQ111Uon In So. La1una. number . . F,quru Oppor Employer wouldn't be readin& thl• & n11n1. Rcceptionl1t on· Ple•ant worklna cond. IJJ .. Otl OPEN 'I DAYS
UHD8WllfTH MECHAN IC' CLASS A ad. and If we weren't call, 1 yr e1tpcr. Typln& &opJ>Ortunlty ror ~van· YOUWON'TBE AWEEKM
ltcqulrea experienced for lune u0p & s m~a REALESTATE lookingtouomeonetodo 45 wpm. &ood a p · cement.409-4576 OISAPPOTNTED! Suftdown ....... "Ltd
commercl1lpropertyun-certification. UnHorms **$50,000** ajob.thlsadwouldn'tbe pearancc. TIMloUN 15292WMChica
derwrltcr fo r 0 '!r furnished, commission REAL KSTATE here.Hyouarea career PleaseCallS44·3389 Secret.ary,ambllioua,at· H.l .C7141193·7109 ~~~~~~rn C11ll Corn1a +onpart.s.646·25-03 SALESPEOP LE: Join mlndedadult&wanlthl! 9am 'Ulnoon tractive young person UIRAIUl$,IMC.
Call rodnlomu• "•• MEDI CAL Semtuy I "' & •• cn~zv w /loo ;r.:•.~:::;• .::U;, •: ::~~!:::~~g; 71!~f,"!i ·~-::r.~••J P& Equol Opp Empty• m/f •lh'1 """•"
963
-094
4
s~:~ry cojmen1uxr~t~ Reception Is t . ~~ ~11."n~·E7~1~T~ week. call toll free, NewportBeachCa92663 portunity for advance· TelephoneSalet JanClearanceSalc
---------• w !!Xper ence. n EXPERIENCED. for NETWORK Th Sal 1·800·327·9696 anytime Equal Oppor Employer ment Call 752-9541 Mon Ad ,_. f 1J l""'-to "'~ off II r---.. Mai--"-_,• benefits. Contact Mr. busy G.P.'1 office. Musl Mak 957 '••"" e es (forrecordedmea111e> S . • vert .. .rt1, u or part v-,., 20-,., on a
Salar)I advances rupidly
&. unlimited. All com·
pany bendlls.
.._.. '"""'_.._ Niles (714)556-l'IOOfor ln· know terminology. in· ers. ·O'IVU· • at time. sa.oo + comm. merchandise. W.t lhru
Stlp.,frttlfMMnt terncwappolnlment. IW'&ne• knowledge and ~al Ea tate Salea People SALES MANAGER· Secretary,/tinw Mu1l be enlhu1la1Uc. Sun 12 to s. 504~ So. ~ Exper·d m golf courae TRANSAMERICA like people. Slartlnit at wanted. Up to 90 /10% uper'd, full-tlme for $ /Sal D l 4-6 Hr1 a day. Selhtarter WUI train. 835·N9a or Bayfronl. Next to the i malnl. 9 hole, 3 par 1...acu• ...... CE S7~. mo. 646·1631 Mon comm. split. Nwpt Bch specially shop. 831-9936 ICY as ep w/pleuantpenonallt;y" _m. __ T.198 ______ -j Ferry. Balboa Jal and
1( course. F /time. Salary "~ """'"" Fri. g..5 631-0900 or 759·9951 Excltf na po1ltlon with phone manner. Xlnl typ··---------1 8'TS«3J open. Ideal for retired GROU• fMt growing co. Must en· · 1• ----------•on. Call 536·8871 ror ..-MIDIC"'L'/T SALESPEOPLE j mg. nice appear. Call TELEPHONE Jcart Prtnl. beautifully ~· "' W .. ..,.,.ED ay worklna w/people & 752.:imz ask for Barbara. framed 1l1ned make
appt. Int Lndsc Malnt. Person Typ1n1, dilly charge en· RICEPTIOMIST "1,. have several years Cl<· ol rnn' 3 12 I ne«tcd lo care for live tries. Call betWHD 10 AM G aJ f t To sell advertlllng. Good per. Auertlve ""taonah SECRET A.RY SALES r . .,...
67
-6$ • ~n olflce girl, PIT, ro plants In commercial &ZPM.1144..elll.3 ener ronl o c exper. producers 525.000 to ty & a 1ood ";ath ap one m•n ln11 urancc setting Eitper le trans hte typln~. F/t1me posl· $35,000 a year. Car al Utude with a liltrong em Challeqlna pot. for a Work Part·Umelnoneof AHTIQU!SHOW
broker's nHlce. Secy ~ec. Call :,,.,kdays Medical Ofc •exper. Xlnt ron.~arltn:sa1$~20wk· lowance. base. Taking phasis on PR needed ~whollkeavanety our circulation u lu o. ... JOD ... en
.. k1llsncc. 833·149SA.M. 8.30-4:40557~50 oppor. SF. co. nccdi. ~son~ll~. ion~aJj!:. Interviews now. call Xlnl co. paid fri nge " lns:~:i~~n ~~':"d!~ rooms " 1tlll have UNDER ONE ROOF
GENERAL OFFICE, n loc:alsalesreptocallon l7Ul833.ao95betwn 9am· <n4)492·4* . bencfila. Work In Sanlu sired. Sh 80, lYPlnl 80. pleasure lime f o r TWODAYSONLY
typing, varied duties t KIYf'UMCH doctors. St OM + exp 4 : 30p m , Time/Life Ana olc. Call San Diego Irvine Indu.t'I Complex. yOQr'leU. You can work J• 21. I 0-.9,....
be learned one at a time Data Entry Opr. Day ~-~~r J;,1·c~~1l~: Ubrarlet, Inc. · Collect (1) 292-022, Mrs. can far appt. 540-7839. near home & 11.Jll punue J• 29, I OMI ,,....
Muat be very lood
8
1blfl. ln-HouH Com· 2131~3807. ~~~~~~~~~!You don't need a gun to Bry1n for more lnforma· E.O.E. ouulde actlv1tlea. We To be held Indoors at
rsgures, pleuant In· putcn.Req'sspeedfrac· RIC~O I"-"draw rut" when you lion. ---------paywq•+comm.PM ESTANCIA HIGH
rormal working cond. curacy. Key to dllc ex· MIM--WOMIH .-.. M .T place an ad in th• Dally~~~~~~~~~! SECTY/BKKPR~ mu1t & AM hra avaU. Call for SOIOOL , Cotta MeH
Non s moker, 10·5PM, pert. behe!~ul•l; ~atworopetn"~· W a n t e d a o o d Good sec'y skills for Pilot WanlAdll Call now SELL idle Items with a have exper. Ill .E. & details ncketuold atdoortt.50
Men
""'I "ITily by l•t Xln """ ..... • ld1 •tab'l l•nd devel-at _ ..... .,_..,,.,8. 00,1Y o.IOl Claa•l(led Ad construction. Salary Loll Antelea Times
ter: HUBB B 3184 H. """" " ~who enJoy work· new ofc In Jrvlne. Sal · open. Box 561, CdM, Ce. 540-4301 Oak HOOller, xlnt cood .... · " " · ---"•· Apply, .,aUona penonallll••· 1everal -..... _c,,.,, ... .-. .,
Airway Ave., CoJt 8t•tema Corp.N081 lngwldthen.StartS4hr. commensuratew/exper . ....,wmfH 7100Hett»W ..... 4 7100 9282S I~~~~~~~~~ Newlyrefinilbed.
M••· 92826. No phone rch St, NB < r OC Pteuant workJnc condl. JWaume PO Box 7a50, • .. ••••••••••-•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •SICUllTY OlfCllS• Tool/Cutter 1rlnder &
842
"
7347
calla pJease Alrport)EOE. Meal1 lncl\aded. Pension Newport Beac)l, Ca tAtab'l security tlrm shop trainee. ll/F. Well Appl.eel 1010 & health tn1ur. Paid m663. R"taurant needs r eliable mtl\ " eslablltht;d Co. ·factory •••••••••••••••••••••••
holidQt.·Call 6'4·5404. IECll'TIOMIST Cooks Hoste women for unlforined branch, f.31·2680 FR G HT l) AM AGED G94!1AL FACTOlY
WORUR LAI TICH
Sportlnt Goods company llo.MIDICAL 1:30 AM to 4:00 P.M. _:wo-e_1_•2 ____ _.. a.INHRIM~
Glqbam Olrl bousectna
service nd1 woroen PIT,
top$, car ntc. MS-51..ZS
. Gl~H-•
Sandwlctt · clellvery.
d.,a •kt 4 hn daJ. Own
tTcsp. Bua wr •uo
hr. Call U'1·lpm,
MO-a31.
Needed by Chiropractor. • · 8$8$ security poaltlon11 ln TOP EAIMIMGS HOTPOINT SAL~
Personable &ood typlat Hosts Waltresse Colla Meaa. Full OC' p/t w. Warner nr Harbor, M0-5558. ' • • S schedules avail. Retirees Fantastic 09portunity If Sant.a.Ana. 979·2921
...........
Katur• <Ptnou. Adult realden\ e1re eentef. Good btMftta, Gl4IS5
W el • Ph 11 ct you enjoy meetlnl peo-~ Bus Help w corne. one co e • pie & WOl'kinl bard In • CASH PAID CllLVI ~· ~~c. ror appt. (ZL3) challen1ln1 profeaelon. For Wsh.r/Dryrs/Relria.
Dishwashers · Successful flrm aeek1 workinlornot9S'7-IU3
There's a new Oenn'('s 1n Costa Mesa and
that meant new lamllv eatina fun and new
full tJme and ~rt-time Jobs!
• lntenlewln1 now
• 1.-~ " lfte1peri9"ce4
• T~ pay
• f1" IMttflftC• • ,.., vac.adoft• • "°'" .........
Oay, evenlna and nl1ht thlfU.,. ope". You'll enJov the attractive "at home" atmQtPhere
and th• pleasant wotklna cond~lon• In our ~ltr famll., r.-Uur1nt. Appllc1nt1 must
be 11 .,,d above. Apply in ptrte>n Monday
thru WedMtdav, Januuy 9 t.hn1th•11th.
10J I. 17dt St. Coeta M ...
(1.l. cOf. of f1t1' al New,ort ltvd.I
•YOU LU(! '*°Pu,
YOU'U.LOY!
SICtot/UCPT trainee for comm~lol real estate. Ucente re· Relril z..dr. upper-low« . Well or1anlsed. self QUired. Private orflce, coppertone, A·l' cond
at.arttr t.o work with R.E. draw" beneftta. S300. w . Main. 562-7500
DeveJQPment Oo. nr O.C. REALONOIOCS
AJrporL. Xlot ulary, ........ P. e?•--oo beneflta. Seftd reaum• to wn -•
Box CJ.95Z5. lrvlne, CA tWpW..e-4 7100
9Z71.3 .................... ~ ••
SAi.ES
THE LOOK ~uropeaJt Fath.Iona For Gtzyt & OaJ• llat
em,loJitHmt QPtftlnl• hi Mana••JMnl " Sal., to our Women'• DcpL ln .i•ubloo
lll.an,d.
MAMA.Gii. Maturt pmoa npcrteneed ln hl1h ra•hlon womtn'• 1port.awe.r. Able to ta1'• mu chart• ol very active abop.
SAUS. Sharp 1•lt or._e'!mced In aal• oC ' hltb fuhlon women a 1port1wear wtth
· advanttmenl Jnto man•1•m•t. .... , ................... .
O.U llon. Usru SU. 1t a.m. to Ip. m.
fcrln&&ninr
•
WntlDahoua• wasbet"
$95. Fr1siclalre portabl~
dlshwsbr $50. WhlrlPOOI washer $7S. GuU'ant.cd
~
..,.. 1020 •••••••••••••••••••••••
US!:DBIKES 1'tcond. BU1, Hl)1 trade
CycJ. fs CO. 2481 Aewpoel
Blvd. C.M.142-1910
... ,. ....... 11.1025 • •••••••••••••••••••••• F<lr Sale: Approx zoo sq tl
Plberal••• tn1ulaUon.
Jobq1-Manvlll• ~u. •loo'°" '52·0282
OAJ\AOE SALE adJ Sn
the Dall)' PUot brina hap-,, ....W&a. To plece your
dr•*'"• card, pbont IG-5'11 i.od., .
I
( •
A111M fw Ide AlllM We.hd tlto Allhtt. hlJlported A..tot. l...,orted ~UM.I ......_ UMCI .......................................................................................................................................... OAA.Y OT ~. Janua1y t . une
Doc)I I040 ... 11•• U•a IOIO INh&Mtli .. e Alllt'l'n/ WEPAYTOPDoLLA.R Datml t120 ftcwtdM t750 .. cl& 9tl0 Cert.... HlZ
•••••••••••••••••••••• ... •••••••••••••••••••• .. ,....... aiiaalet 9120 FOR TOP USED CARS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
DOC TRAINlSG W ._ a..rrED ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1'"0R£10cr:·.J?;OS1MCSEST1C 74.... 2160Z sold/blk l t lt7' POaSCHE 73 Dilate Sta Wan. stereo, "7S Corv~c. allnr/ red, \'our P1aceor Mane A" I .,.... Power 9040 ~ ~v~. U.lalr w/renter or wno:J .... • ~ 914 2.0 upe. all pwr eqpt $1800 T·top, n.ooo ml, loaded, John \la.run ~ TOP CASll DOLL>\ R ••••••••••••••••••••••• pu&t Vtty shurp. szooo tr your car ls extra clean Ext.remd)' well ma Int d 6'$-5089 $14$0 , orrcr. nz.1s21
SPRINGtK Spanie l,
AAC, Bt W, ~payed fem
IS ml)·,, aentle tamlly
du&. $200 61J 0960
PAID POR YOUR 642-4TIO aeeusftnt. Or is owor. Recent 5 speed, appearance wlr.da)'I
JEWELRY WATCHES SEA RAY'S IAUllt IUICK lhocka & tires. Rear 1un fP'OUP, AM/FM 1ter'-"O le '61 Bulrk Oraod SPorl c-------ART O.WE<.."TS, co1...0: ha"NHOll~ 292$HarborBlvd shade, air, AM /FM. llkcNEW! <00738>. PIS, P /8 , auto, A/C, DodcJe '935
Sl L VER SE R V lC r::, .Al 1971 Modela V.wd.s 9530 CCela Mesa 9'19 2500 714~1191 eva. Sde rric9d-$7440 radJo •'air cund 6'4·200'7 •••••••••••••••••••••••
FINE J!'UKN ~ AN ••••••••••••••••••••••• I MIUCU ,,. "12Charierst:, newu~. TIQU~ &lS2200 I 8'-30' c:onvt 4 seat street legal Aldot. .. 041.d '7S Datsun B210, 4·dr, u .......... ,.11t ...... U Coclloc 5 'POCial paint, alr-eood, Male Scotrb Terri er d b $800 call ••••••••••••••••••••••• auto. XJnt cond, 25,000 ....,,,,._...., llinA LT ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~ sz 000 6'4-0318 AKC. Shou. a.uaoo or WGG•GET•'-S HARRISON'S ~uuy. · Atf•R-.o 970 rnl.sm5.54H<>t4 2l50 HarborBL.C.M. ~ · · · 9940 t;U..:1108 ~ .. ,,,_., 511: .... •y ••••••••••••••••••••••• 64S.5700 it ..-v ------~ from your bu11ne:51 cant ~ ~ Heav)' steel Go·Cart Alfa Romeo •g7 GluUa uno 1000 Roadster. Must ••••••••••••••••••••••• Female Dalmatlon, 1 )'r Smd one card for each 2321 So Malo, S.A. frame. $50. or bsl olr. No ~per. runs great. loon sell fast. Beat offer. '73 Porsche 914 l.'1 ~-7~~w1lh children t.airetu~uao PO:erm'P~:·ar.~ 540·6,SSSN B accu1. Call Rich aft great. $17SO. Call Jan MC>-6099 Appear &rd.Ip, AM/FM
...,. ~ 1 3101 Coastt wy, . • 3pm, 6'5·78S7, Costa 494-8057 • ra o. sealed attractive tag 631 11547 M 71 240Z. Super abl&rp ! $4700. Ph 64S-7473 St. Beroard·Shepberd atrap, meeting airlin ... eH. ~ 9707 Burnt orange, • spd,
pupples. SlS ea. Free f.D. requiremeQU. Pre· 2S It. UoHllte SPortlUher. 4 Wh..t DrtYet 9550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ma1s, air, l owner. Rois Roye• 9756
parents. 536..0782 vent. ION & t.hdfl! For a l owner, lo mint col\dl-••••••••••••••••••••••• 1973 AUDI $369S. PP673·2S2l •••••••••••••••••••••••
otd English s,...h_ee_p-do-a-.1 penonallieci tag enclos uon&luaded t C.'\.111tom In· COST• MES• IOOLS 4 DO 197-s 0 ... TSU... "l DEALER IN U.S.A. " wallpaper, fabrtc o tenor, pilot, A.D.f>', ~ A OR ~ ~ " ~~.1:4~ AKC. Pnce "Day Glo" pa~r & w v .H F .. 11unlog. outrlg· AMC• JEEP New engine, automatic 2401 ~ ROY
wilt baclt & tnm you ~ers. AC/ DC natural gm; TOO trans.. air con d ., Automatic, air cond., CARVER
ITHtoYc. 8045 tais. Or try two cards re!ngeral.lon & rookmit. MAMY AM/FM stereo & s un· mag wheels, AM /l-'M ROltS·ROYCl
••••••••••••••••••••••• bark to bark b1mm1 top w/enclo:.urc. JEEPS root. Pri. ply. $3,300. Call stereo & very sborp ! 1woJ~mwtt
Shepherd/Collie, 6 mo . PRICES· new Chrysh:r momfolds. 494-oGltleverungs (396.JOBl. ,...,_,a..<11
male, blk w/lao, had S2 eaor 3 SS nsen; & t'lbowi. plus ell MUSTSE1,L90 -Salerrtced-$4090 .......,.. 4/Sla~s SI 60 ea lra fuel. Call l>alc al J EEPS llY '76 Fox. auto, air cond. MIUCll ClOSEO SUNOAYS !ihots,SSl-0988 6/9t $1 50 J1\NUARY31 t sler .. sunrooC.Warranly
•
Or91)1Comty'1 s...•c .....
•
197' CADILLAC
SIVIW
All leather. 11t~r~ tape.
cruise control & oil the
deluxe extras. C90~PCV).
$9588
(4) '77 & '76Sev11les
ToCh006e From
'-"• ,.,... , ... ...,. ~ ...... , ......... _.(...., ,...._.
Female cat, spayed, to
good home. Very affec-
uooate. 95S--0638 Eves.
aics · ea 498·270'J ' 5 Xlnt cood. $4900. 968-0872 MA'ZDA/aEHAULT '66 R.R. Silver Shadow, 1oac moreSl 40 ea. -----Please Call x 1 n t c 0 n d. w h t
'76 Gran Torino. Blue w/wht v1n.yl top. Stereo,
8 tr. AMJFM. $3500/bst
731-4433 SalesTax lncluded GREATF1SHJNGBOAT! 549 eo2~ IMW 9712 2"°Harbor81.,C.M. Nabe NO CA RD., 2tl ft., flybridge, b.ut -v ~ 64S.S700 Sl8,000/best ofr. 631-0S4S rs
Draw your owo ~send tank, galley, bead. 2S2AHARBORBLVD. --~------1 Robin "16 Granada 4 dr, xlnt
2sm1remmixeddog1,1 name, address, phone & Sleeps 4. Engine com CostaMesa 19721600 P .U. w/shell yoyota 9765 Cad•tJ cond, alr, Ali/FM
pup, other spayed. Xlot we'll make one card per pletely rebll. Electronic '77 International Scout. Oean eng., good cond. ••••••••••••••••••••••• I ac stereo, brwn w/lan lot.
w/ldda. 54CM646, 54.z.§53 tag. Add 25< each. gear includes depth Creal deal. Must aee. ~ CaJI evee art 7. IEfOU YOU 2600 ll,1rl\l)f' 8lv1l, $3315. '1S2·5131 day •
.. ~ 105 Send check or money or-finder & brand new. Un· Must idl. Tftade small SIU YOUL Co~•.i M~~·· s•IMHOO ~eve.
••••••••••••••h•••••• deTt.o: ~ 2-way FM radio & truck or car plus cash F9Tart••••••••••••••••••'••7•2•3• TOYO.,.,., ~~~~~~~~~·n Wason, PIS, P JB. sroREWlOESALE PILOTPRIHTIMG RvF. $7500 Call eves & considered. 837·9710 · ,,,,_ ~ AM/FM radio, Gd cond.
N •. us-' f 1• P.O. Boit1S60 wltnds 645-9376 8J0.6686afl5PM. 1978 BMW's •73 Dino Cpe. lmmac. See us tor a top dollar "12 El Do. Blue w/wht $UOOG40-1°'4 ew .,. ""' urn, app s, Costa Mesa. Ca 92626 HE U t ' rrusc. Wllson's Bargain __ · 46" Converte~ Coast l!117 Cherokee Chief jeep, RE NOW! New pnt. lthr, 32,000 ml. es ma e. vlnyl top, all xtru. Xln
Nook. 545 & 814 W. 19th, Investors hand signed Guard Boal. Twin diesel, all extras P /S, P/ B, $18,000. Cao asm lse. MARqUIS TOYOTA cond. $2,995. 673-4743 64 Ford Country Sq Wp, CM. 64.2-7930&548·3262 lithograph_s: Chagall,
37
tr! c;c:b10, Pb : I 714 > /\IC. 552.7349 COMP'....., 833·1656644-0668 alt6pm. MlSSIONVIEJO ___ :....._ ____ ~ oew llres, xlnt cond. 1
M D I C Id & .,......,., ....;_....;__....;_____ .,..,.. 13121104t5 1210 'ID Cad. 4 Or, au power, ownr.$500.675-269'1 5'~ ft long custom padded iro, a t, a t!r --IODY SHOP Hoftda 9727 • • good conc:htton, gd ures.
portabl e bar with others. Low prices ·oo Formula 19'· IO, di!CP $1000 OFF HOW OPEN ••••••••••••••••••••••• '77 Corolla. Standard int, $1000/bstofr.552·7430 lt6lFOaD
muluplex tune1', 8 track _752 SOOCJ V. 200 HP. xlnt cond AU NEW Br-...1... •77 de! t M k f UMCHWAGON • WJU ..,..--uxe ex . a e o r or •71 Coupe de Ville, 8 real ~turntable-all are bwlt Court rePorter's nu steno-$3500. 675-993.1____ •CHEIOKEE EXCELLEHT HOllo...ID ._ C t.o.p. 546-5744 aft 6 beauty, loaded. Pr! v . Hurst floor shift, small
ins-plus two cus tom graph machine, case & :w Skipjack flybridgc •PICXUPS SELECTION OF" 1"1111 A C.-5 Triumph 9767 Ply. $179S. 847-6668 or V8 economy Ir in excep· ~r~~ar stools st.md + books. 536-941 twin 110 Vol~os. 110 hrs: •WAGONEERS IMWRESALES MAHY ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• _63_1·_Z333 _______ 1 ~.:':S~o'>.ood condlUon. arp · · aft5:30. VJJ"", sumlog, nometcr, Oft-GoodThrul 13 78 T ,....._ ___ ,.. __ , ,,_ ...--· · We may have your next o___. unu 1975 Triumph Spitfire. '74 CAD Deville, lo mi's. Nown..h.$6t5 **I BUY** 5 0 Ga I A q u a r i u m bbait s.ys, 5Sgl7v .... i~]{' twin HURRY car in our inventory. CaJI u11o...11vERSITY Mechanically excellent. lmmac. shape. All xtru. ...~II Mfrs w/wrought Iron stand atteries. 30Toa.oo..Ft-om ustodayl """ stereo tape & super $5400/bslolr.&U-12SZ 'r-"
Good used Furniture & access $SS 2A''Comm' • · COPELAHDMTRS 831-2040495-4949 Olck111Dblle shari>loterior&exterior. 1.!llBHarbor,CostaMen
Appliances-OR l wlJI lawn~owe~ Sl.~. Llt 28F1 Tbr'odJan VJSp1opf~he~ 2001EtstSASS8-8000 HOMle c ... • GMC Pri.pty.$3,49S.Cal1Doo l.976CoupeDeV111e.blue, '4Z..07tS tid.larSELLforYou. I g ef 'g 847 """" Y " ge, •. ep ---------1 MF t ~.,, """" li'-1"000 ml _,., MASTERS AUCTION new r r n . -vov1. finder. very fast. in xlnt '73 K-5 Bluer, AM/FM Trt1eb . a .....,.._,.,; even· ..-e new, .... '.,..,.,.
646-1616&833·9625 Pool table, 5x9, custom rond . ln slip . ll. tape.Tru·tracs,rollbar, 2850HarborBlvd. Inga after 6 pm, call $7,000.540-4423
---------• w/all access. $600 or b5 Harbour . .,Sell or trade 42,000 m1, etc. $4950. ColtalileH 54(). S48-6163.. 1972 Calais 2D. Brown.
LIASIA 1971
FOIDNSTA
$96.SO pa-D)O. + tu. 4
speed, stereo tape &
oranae with plaid In·
terlor. 3S mo. OEL;
OAC; Cap.·$4094.00;
Residual·S1700.00; Total
pymts.•$3682.40; To start
lease: Dep., Uc. & Pmt.
Wrought Iron, custom olr. 642 -744.5 aft 5:30 for car or · 738·l884 646-4512 &'St • .. OA~'t 'Tl Red Honda 7 600 ml l.!116 TRIUMPH TR7-0nly Uke new. All records.
made bar kart. Lake ,64 Cbri 36· Beaut & ---------sum. AMA $3,650. Call · ' · 12,000 mil.es. ~armloe $2900. 833·2547
NEW! $75. High back Rec llne.r $70, Brow loadesd Nu t~ln '77 GMC Jimmy High . 835·3171 6'4-5'41or540-2372. w/saddle lntenor, sun· CaMro 9tl7
casual chair (needs re 'weed 5 sofa $75, GI engincs(llShrs I Gen & Sierra, A Ml F'M, auto, n« UUlMATI!OlllMttG ...e"'"' root. 8ll' cood., AM/FM covering ) ·$35. Cal I end table ~s. l~mp $20, t llOL RDF vitF air, foll pwr, sunroof, ... USED BMW's... JJll)!Mr t730 ca.'lsette, mags & much ••••••••••••••••••••••• "A"-Ol38 • all perf. 12 x 13 gold cp au 0 P • • 1000 tires. 12.000 mi's. .. ,.. • 1 1 1 o 1975 CHEvv
-'""---·--$30. Girl 's sml Schwinn DmRhY $J4,500 Owner $7500 or bes t offer. "742002Auto. 598LPO '72····XJ··:··Lo····1·1········ ~95mmaPricu atte. Canll. c•u•ao" I CASH PAID b1ke$40, 968-8263 (213)798-6118 556 7723 aft 6pm. '752002 4 spd S/R (4962) v. m eaie, sun Y ~ . . Py. Al'OIA
F d ed I ,75 2002ASe ......,6 root, stereo. Bought new 640-1176orS37-S6.'ii9. Automatic, pwr. steer-equlls $279 29. Corl Fox
Ing. air cood., AM /FM Leasing. Call or g us urn, anti· --loah., Sail 9060 r ""' J M t II $8 00 Ph ques&clrTV's 957-11133 3 Pc Rattan: Sofa, cbr. TNCks 9560 '7620CYHspdS/R401PDP a(, us se ' 1 . 1976TRIUMP'H '-------"---1 corner tbl (gd cond). ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• '76 530IAS/R 712PQM ll40-820l pp TR7 Mediterranean furn : ta-Beaut sheer pale green WAHT RESULTS? ·oo Jnt.emallonal. 1~ tons 'TT .,_ .......... 1 9735
bl h I 320iA S/R 177RSK _._-a Uke NEW Wl.th AM/FM e w/6 c rs, 1 ea dra-w/plcated valan-Sellyourboatthru Blue & wht van Nr nu .,., __ ...... ,.._ir... _ _. .... ~ -"",_lllU-1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• stereo cassette •· low $275/ofr; bookcaae/shel ce/rods. 3 mos old . SOUTHWESTERN tires. Nds tune-up SSOO/ -r ..
w/2 drs on bottoro $50, Several sizes. 499-llOS y ... CHT s ... w list olr by 119/78. 559-3486 ,_A lrJr-E cou...-v"S '7.J GHIA rolles. (HHSTR7). b 1 t f A ~ ~ "' ' Laal ol It.a ltlnd I Sd• rriced-$4990 ~~eotsto~agee $130/~r~ OVATION GUITAR FUJl/HEWPORT d~493-07S6 eves and O&LDEST Excellentabape! MIRACLE
also dresser, 2 drawera, 673·3756 DEALERS _w________ *2300 6'4·2223 MA%DA/RIMAULT
w/beveled mirror Sl (714) 673·9211 '77 Ford F2SO. Xlot run· ~~as~ak). Aft Spm, ~~'!m~e~~'W:e~~ b lander 38 • Brtatol & ~::,~ c~n~a1~/~~~~!:. . ~ ............ !?!.~ 21!0~4tg:~·OC.M.
stereo & ver)' clean! 64S.3661
t501NDY). ---------
Sale rric.d·$40tt W.cwy ttSO
MIRAClE •••••••••••••••••••••••
MAZDA/UMAULT ORANGECOUNTY'S
21.SOHarbor Bl., C.M. LINCO~.:JCURY
___ 6_4_S._S_7_oo __ .1 Dealenhlp ta DOW OPEN
Q.noolet tt20 RAY FLADEIOI
••••••••••••••••••••••• UNOOLN,.MERCURY
. olfer. 644·5128 loaded! Asking '41,900. Must sell $S200. 642-9254 Sales-Seniee-Leulnt
New Soundesslgn stereo, Privale'J>arty. 6734220 ~,.-.__ antq. chr, antq. end lbl, Lrg Commercial pwr . '80 Ford PU, V8, auto, ~ ..... ,....._
anlq. sewing mach., mower $50. IBM exec Satellite 16 w/trlr. Nds good condition. s875_ Rolls ee BMW
16-lSAat.oCenterDr • •••• !~~•••••••!?!.~ ~.~-:-~=~~':"!""~ SDFwy·tr~~ait
be 8 u t . P 1 ct u r e . typewriter, xlnt c~od work. $200 or best. Must 6TS-993J ll40Jamboree
IWGE SELECTION
NEW & USED CARS bookshelf Reas 586.9177 $300. adding machine sell 751-0396 ---------Newport Beach 640-6444 · · $10, call 642-1334, 642-6578 For sale 1!116 Ford FlOO, Top cft·h-for your VW 74 BMW 2002, wht air. ..... -· Twin Mediterranean 8' dm~hy, Mzmarwdwk loots. SH / itood shape, call art 6:30. Blaup. ster, maint rec. Paid for or not. Call ~~. both for SSS, lg dbl hull $250. Bkshlvs ,,. __ ,__ ps 9070 963-0470 S 5 !l 9 S 6 7 5 4Z1 7 Keith oderry. Mediterranean cockt:ul 7'xl2' $150 Dr's seal ~ · · ; Mlrc.desleta 9740 BOBWITilAMVW table, $40. s.52·81178 alt $7 S n . f : e ••••••••••••••••••••••• 19'74 FlOO n ('()L'>lde PIS, 213-968-8311 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 7600Westminster Ave.
6PM 673 3Goo ar r e rig $60. Wanted Sailboat berth. P/B, AM radio, disc in 1!110 BMW 1600, asking ercedes Deni, '73 280 893-7S.Slor638-7880 . · Newport prcferrl'<i. fmt. 8' bed. ~s than ---------tExcluslve Tennis Mem· 642·7712 47,000mi $3500.552-b297 $3000. Reblt e ng and SEL, mlnt, lo m 1, '68 Westphalia Camper.
5PC PLAY PEN bershap, at prestigious trans. &40-0295 ask for SS6--097S Nu fact. eng. Xtra cln.
(2)8'SOFAS, Newport area Tennis Boat Dock for r ent. y_. 9570 Paul '76 MB 300D, clean. lo 6SM.S1995/bst.494-2UO
(1) LOVESEAT Cub Pn ed t.o ell D Newport Island, 26' max 1""0 BMW "Cl I " 2800 ·1 Uk $1 .. 100
2n......OMANS · c ~ · ys, boat leogtb. 9S7·1101 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ;>• ass c rm ee, e new. '• · '76 VW Camper, 41uDtT
SvA•C •RIFICE 831-3570, evs S81 708S 1714) 1!117 Qievy Van ~ too. CS Coupe-t speed, aun-Priv. Ply Eva. 7a.8502 clean, lo.ted. S600cJ.
Xlnt ond 5'400 root, factory alr cond., ed 549"2040ev•
O.._.LY $488 Mnlca1 WANTED T R c . · AM /FM stereo, electric 1!189Merc ea230,lcyl,41 ________ _
1"1111 • ltutwa•ftts 8083 Shore be:rthofo/~~: Ca.11714-830-4034 wmdows,pwr.steertng& apd on column. &per ''6 VW Deluxe window
3PC ROOMGROUP ••••••••••••••••••••••• c N area. 71 Dodie van. vs, PS, brakes, llaht allo)' clean,~~eolrer;.... bu•. aunroor. cberrr
• • H0.7000 I: • 76 Mooarcb Gbia, 2 dr'
• : sunroof, loaded, lllte
,. • new. $48:i0. Wlmda " an
it • 6PM, 8»27'73
• • MlltecJ 9952 . .. ...................... .
• 'GS 289 Classic. PS/PB,
it • fact air. Best offer.
ROGER MIUEA·SAYS, ,_IM0-«J80 ______ _
"SHOP IY PM0Mr "12 MUSTANG GRANDE. 4t4-l IJI 546-ft'7 Clean. By owner. $mt. Calls:n-8981
'ftt HUSUlftl, deu bod1.
a u tom• tic. • &0tO. S48-32l9 SPC BEDROOM LES PAUL CUSTOM atamaran. 8 auto, $3800 or best ofr. wheels & only 63,00-0 Alie for~sanoe-·7711 cond. Receipts, •llN.
7PC lJVlNO RM SUNBURST. $450. M4-'88Sor6'4·l<Mf 6.11·5197 or 875-646S alt miles. MINT condltJonl or&G-1189 494-2130 "'16 Mllllafta Madi l, apd.
SPC DINETIE Call 640·2043 Eddie Private doclt av all. in IPM $11,500/beat offer. Prl. 19'75 MBZ 4SO SLC 13 0001-.-VW-Q-asai--XI---moon rd, every optloa. $588 Huntington Harbour. '10' pty. Call &U-0138. total mi. Orig ~w~er. ::ust seU. ~/=~: 14K mi, mint cond.
4 DRAWER CHEST $18. OHie• fvrnffw• & space. Also space for ..,....._ w~ 9590 '76 BMW 5301. Metallic "111)' equipped Incl. sun· uo.""""c --------..i 642"'800, 588-1744
it-.& 111 80IS smaller boat. 898·1611, __. wnwu f & l c lli-"""--"""""'-------Walnut finish ...,...,... 846-8244 ••••••••••••••••••••••• blue/bl intr. Stereo cass, roo cauet e. a ---------t'6S C.onvt. 7S,OOO oria. ml.
Curtis Fvmlhr• ••••••••••••••••••••••• WE WILL IUY sunroof, 4 spd, 30,000 ml. 759·U66ror appt. '75 ~Bl'.1', good co11d. '7S Malibu, 2 dr bdtp. clea11. S2700/olfer.
1865 Hc:wt.or IL CM YEAR END YOUR DATSUN Xlot cond. $11,200. Ph 19111 2805 441'. Wht ext. 24,000 ml s. Take over auto, PS, PB, below Blue 631-2080 6'2·5290
64M 151 SALE TransporfaHOll PAID FOR OR NOT 5Sl·5S'12 blue Int. Stick shift. Gd payments. 543·S89l Bk. $289S. 5Bl·9454 Olck11Dblle tt55
Metal & wood desks $2S ••••••••••••••••••••••• TOP DOLLAR 74 Bavaria: auto, air, Mich. Urea. Becker '6S VW new engine, so 75 Monza 2+2 Htchbk, 1 •••••••••••••••••••••••
to Sl2S. Assorted plan Motorind libs 9140 FOR TO• C ... RS AM J FM, whee Is Radlo.$5000. 67S·1S30 roor, xlnt trans. car. ownr, lo ml, AM /FM, "12 Olds 88. 2 do«, Al. Unique L·sbaped sofa, files oak & metal, legal••••••••••••••••••••••• r "' t 11· 463 R $700 642 3708 $2750/be SS:?-4.20 C. b dlac: crushed velvet" walnut. mes. letter 2 & 4 drawer. Motobecane 40, Mobylette :~s.:k. I~ Belinda el: 77 300D Mercedes, $16,500. . • L 1 =lOOterms. • •
Perf cond. 96ll-3S80 laUeraJ, IBM card files, 1800 ml, good cond. 1t33, Anaheim or take over leue. lt70 YW IUG 62 Nova. xlnl cond except ---------
.Bantoota <3> Royal blu c.beck rues. Exec. chain, Cathy, S 5 7 • 3 8 6 8 ; 6@.8987 '"SUNROOF.. nds eq. Blue. S150/ ofr . ..,._... 99'0
naug 32 .. , Ute new SlOO. secretary chain, recep· 644-Q.SOwk 19'73 IMW 2002 .65 230 SL 2 tops xln 4 speed trans. Very clean 642-849'or64S-0081 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Call ,.._ •• .,._.. "'-"'d lion room furn , heavy WE BUY Uke NEW with 4 speed cond. S9s0o ('12EYT lcl'UDI ..... at! (700GOF). C 1974 Ply. Satellite Sta. _.,,,..... ... .,."' Y'l!I dty work tables $40, ~~1 I t •-I 17 801 .. -* '77 HEVY W 9 P/S P /D r_ans . .,. on Y • 1·849-t7N or 1-&'1·0 HUaaY·W•'t Lest! ai. jass., • .... ~~ ...... ~!!5 ~~~:'h1~'!':.u1:i::r .. 9150 a::."~::s miles~~~~~EE!!l evs. • MlliCU 2 Doo~HJ~t~~~. • ~:~1:r: ~~~e~b!:'ca:;;
Inc red I b I e Aft e unusual Items. 631·2570 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MIRACLE Lale 1973, 450SL, aUver, MAZDAjaEMAULT speed, radJo. whitewall.I, trailer hitch, CB Radio
Chrtatmaa ule. You or 631-2777. 2044 Placen-1974 2SO Yamaha MX· MA'ZDA/REHAULT tops, auto, PS, PW, PB 21.50HarborBl.,C.M. etc. No.2906. Ind. Good Cond. $1,900.
name ll, we've got ttl An-Ua Ave, CM Terry kit front fork, Bog CONNELL AMIFM, very lJtUe uae 645-5700 How o.ty S2ttl S3t--Ot!99
t1ques, refrla, tbls. shocks, etc. ssoo. Call 21.50HarborBl.,C.M. Very lo ml'a, 1 ownr HOWARDCIM'frol.t ---·------~n0. ~misc. Oki In Pl..ot&°"J-1090 962-9898a1\er7p.m. CHEVROLET 645-5700 Like new. Must sell '68 VW B u g. SBSO POlltloc 9t65
d la n r u I a . A Is ••••••••••••••••••••••• •74 Honda Trials blke. ,.__,, 9715 7Sl·l017or546-6013 <VSM878) Call 640·2043 ~~~~k~'CH •••••••••••••••••••••••
eookbooka clothing Pi Xl d B d 2828HarborBlvd. ._..... Eddie 13.,,-0555133-0116 "'16 Pontiac Catallna. alnt • . • NewBrandName anos nt con ran new. COSTAMESA ••••••••••••••••••••••• '13 450SE. Sunr oof ~ cood.Only7,000mllee. shoes, kJtcben utensils, 10% over cosL $600. 646-8149 all& '71 caprl 1600cc eng. 4 loaded. $9500. 752·83 l!NS VW, AM -FM casa, 497-34SO
boo!<s, pottery, ski stuff, BeacbMuslcc.enter 546•1200 spd, ,.......,... cond. AM/FM dva,~5SS4eva/wknds xlot cond. $1400/bal ofr. eo..t 99211---------macrame Items & more Be b Bl d H 8 '77 Hooda CJ360T. Lo ml. """" iv Fri·Mon 10-3 only. Next 1740t ac v ' . . Must sell. Make olr. TOP cass. $1100 or best. 1970 250 .. d 4 pd A. 673-6463 ~··•••••••••••••••••••• Hard t.o find, 77 Flreblrd 847-8536 673·2241 • .. r, -e , 11' 77 Comet, 4-dr, 8 cyl Qprit, ydung exec car, d~lfrainlng.506SlanaJ 8J3.2S7Saft7PM DOLLAR xlntcondlUon. 76VW,12,000ml.AM/FM n .ooomi,auto,air,AM· lo ml, ster eo can, ~ff~~rt(~~8;nJM\ 1!:i':~~~t~~an. HondaTrall70,loml,xlnt PAID ~ t720 $4500 661-1 casset.t.e,sunroof,silver, Fr.I, Mint cond. Owor cuat.omlnL Ralleywhls,
6'5-2'74S condiUon. $375/ Best olr. •••••• .. ••••••••• .. ••• • MG t7 4 $.1500 nrm. 675-2978 lv'a. $3780. 960-3786 pciced t.o sell. Must see t.o MOVING-67~ FUR CLEAN * DRIVI A * •••• .. •••••••••••••••• Vol'fo 9772 ~prec. Dys, 131-1570;
Sora" loveHa\., chain Baldwin Plano, Walnul umHond S50 l'UDSlood * unLE... * '72MGMJd1et . Xlntcond .••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ anything with a Vl,561·7085
cJasa top & wood coif ' Comtempo deatan. xlot all atts·~ • • Must MU. Aaklna $17 llFORI YOU ~)'Pilot Classified Ad v9 tt74
thl. Game aet. Wall unit. cood. 675-1933 c 9si-CM70 SAVE A LOT arbltofr.84.!·1083 SB.I. YOUI "a simple matter ••• •••••••••• .. • .. ••••••••
Sora table. Klog or qn 511 llu;Gooch IOt4 SHOPllCOMPARE MGI VOLVO Jmtcall&e~. W74 Vet• Hkbbck. Air.
mattresses Ant3 atyl •*••••••••••••••••••••• 64 T ........ 100 •••••••••••••••••••••• See 115 till' a ~ dollar ......_New tlOO auto. bl S1000 lakes. PP.
t!Urlo, aewiDfC tab e, but Trallmaater 200'• wltb Loolta cherry, n eeda 71 MOB. Yellow, 270 estimate! ••••••••••••••••••• .. ••1=j8'15-36iiiuliiiiiiiiiiii-
f et, " Psych coucb. Salamon bindings II aom• work. Saertrice. IMPOn CARS mne1~b,.Ralley Pack. MAlOutS VOLVO •
MW540 poles. t7S. Call 581·7446. $300, arbstolr. 5'W1'T ALL MODELS MBOO!J:9t offer. Arte MISSION Vl&JO
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SILV8R SERVICE, • COSTA MESA_ ~ Al~ 75Q-2011
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* *
lOL. 71, NO. 9, 3 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA 1 MONDAY, JANUARY'9, 1978 TEN CENTS
Shifting Seas Save
MALIBU (AP) Surf
pounded to the doorsteps or the
exclusive Malibu colony at high
tide today, but a shift in the seas
apparently averted damage to
homes.
Waves up to five feet high
washed up to the sandbags and
board barriers erected by
r~laen~ "'after six-fool ~=~-
washed into some homes
Sunday, smashing fences and
~tairways.
The tide was smaller today
than expected, both in Malibu
and further north in Oxnard.
authorities reported.
.. This is like a Sunday picnic
compared to yesterday," said
county fireman Tom Baker, who
w2r:..OU duty l>ut-s1A¥ed behind
to help if needed.
Officials said about 50 county
Fire Department camp crews,
who helped residents place
SANDB"-GS IN Sunday's seas,
remained behind but were not
needed.
Most ol the affected properties
were oceanfront homes on
Malibu Canyon Road just north ot the colony which is heavily
populated by• entertainment
* * *
HO Ines • m Malibu
celebrities.
The homes were situated on
bluffs or stilts and so were not
hit by the tide.
Aided by about so county
firefighters, lifeguards and
volunt.ers, residents frantically
dug ditches and put up sandbags
to try to avoid more of the
damage suffered Sunday, when
several expensive homes were
* * *
nooc:ted by waves.
Authorities said waves reached slx feet In this beach
community and nin~ feet in
Ventura on Sunday. •
Forecasters blamed a severe
storm in the Gulf of Alaska for
turning usually calm swells into
dangerous breakers. They said
as long as the low pressure area
exists off Alaska, homeowners
* * *
will need to worry about each
new high tide.
One ot the most severely
damaeed residences ln the
Malibu Colony was a rental unit
occupied by Selena Lee, a writer
who awol<e Sunday to an
unpleasant surprise. &fs. Lee,
who moved ln Just a week ago,
stepped out of bed and into
water.
* * * ' .
Sunset Beach FloodS
•
Sandbags Protect Homes at Capo Beach
...............
SUNSET BEACtt GETS SOME TIDAL FLQODING
This Was Parke Avenue and Coaat HIQhW.,1'h Morning
Weekend's Sunshine·
Gives Way to Rain
By MICHAEi. Pl\SKEVICH
Ol t .. Dall, Piiot Staff
Sparkling weekend weather
~ave way to new showers along
the Orange Coast today and
weather forecasters say more
rain is on the way tonight and
Tuesday.
Coastal flooding remains a
possibility near west facing
beaches If hi gh tides link with
waves whipped up by a new
storm pushing into the area
from the Gulf of Alaska.
Salt water made its way
across streets in Seal Beach and
Sunset Beach early today. but
authorities said the roadways
were still passable to drivers.
And high water from Newport
Bay overflowed onto Balboa
Bouelvard this mornmg, forcing
the closure of one lane near 44lb
Street.
breakers as high as 10 reel late
today and Tuesday morning.
The latest storm front moved
into the area after dropping
substantial amounts of rain in
the northwest and in lbe San
Francisco Bay Area.
Forecasters are calling for
continued showers tonight and
Tuesday and possibly
Wednesday.
Skies are expected to remain
cloudy with hlgb temperatures
near 60 degrees and ovemtcht
lows near 50,
Sm all craft advisories were
issued today.
Today's hi&h tide, up to seven
reel, occWTed at 9 a .m . The tide
will be nearly as blgh Tuesday
mornlnf at about 9:30 ..
'Do Sometlalnfl'
I
By Sl'EVE MITCHELL Ol IM Deify ...... , ... ,
High tides and heavy surf
brougJtt troubles to several
areas of the Orange Coast Sun·
day and today, including a
stretch of homes alone
Capistrano Beac;h where waves
d am aged a breakwater and
several windows lo a beachfront
home
About a dozen volunteers were
sandbagging homes along Beach
Road in Capistrano Beach t.b.la
morning, following Sunday's
high tides and surf which broke
several large windows in a home
owned by John Reynard, 36787
Beach Road.
"We've got the windows in
front barricaded now." Reynard
said this morning. He said fami·
ly members and neighbors
shored up the front of the home
after six and seven foot waves
broke. the two windows Sunday
morning.
"The last time it was this bad
was seven years ago," Reynard
said. "But we built a seawall
after that ipcident and lb•
ruunaee is really moderate thll
\Jme ln eomparbon~ uwe•ve probably 1ot probl•m• for a couple more days,'' he
said. Most of the damage &m·
day was restricted to the south
end of Beach Road, near Poche
Beach.
Reynard said the seven·vear·
old rock breakwater is protect·
ing about five Beach Road
houses, but added that Sunday's
high tides and surf damaged a
wooden seawall adjacent to his
home.
He estimated damage to his
home ataboutSl,000. •
Further south, San Clemente
lifeguards were right on top or
the high tide s ituation, with
lifeguard Sheridan Byerly re·
porting surf eating away at the
lifeguard tower.
"It's not 2oin~ to do any .
damage," he said today, "but
it's taking sand away from un·
derneath me right now."
He said a potted. palm tree in
, front of the lifeguard station
"isn't going to make it through
the morning."
Newport Beach Lif eiuard
Capt. Logan Lockabey said bis
·beaches are experiencing no Ude
or surf problems today.
Minor nooding alODI portJons <See TIDES, Pare AJ>
However, surf that pounded
the beaches of San Diego and
Malibu Sunday was not evident
along the Orange Coast.
. Forecasters are still
predicting the possibility of BB' s Gibbs Blasts
Coast
Weather
Cloudy through tonight.
Chance of showers in·
creasing to 90 percent
tonight and decreasing to
50 percent Tuesday. Lows
toniaht ~ to 56. Highs
Tueaday 60 to 66.
INSIDE TODAY
Area~cr.,.,thal
budntu luflohu .ore o •
thrt•marffnl f'OldiM. 'tMt/
ore o ~ port of tM br4siMu accu~ thffl aau. Sft
Ftohumg, Page Cl.
••• Jt
~
City Mental Care
• • Deify ............ .., •Idle,, It~
WAVE CATCHES PAIR CHECKING SEAWALL TH'S MORNING IN CAPISTRANO BEACH
High Tld•• Cauaed Window Breakage; fbtaidenta Sandbagged Agalnat Surging Sea
Clam Diggers
Find Grenades
lnHBOuting
Two startled clammers turned up • ppir of band erenadea while d1gelng through sand and mud at
the Santa Ana River mouth at
Hunt.tneton State Beach Sunday
afternoon, police reported.
HunUngton Beach police bomb
squad officers disposed of the
grenades shortty atier 4 p.m.
State Ranger BOl Miller said
only one of the 1renades was
live. The other was the type used
tor tralning and was apparently
deactivated, be aaJd.
The Uve grenade was aotu.ally
a smoke bomb with l.ta pla 1Wl
Intact. Miiier said lt 11 not
known where the exploai ve d
vices came from.
... AU IOfta c)I tbin1• wash dQn
the rtver,0 be •aid.
Military Bases
Deadly Chemicals
To Leave County.
By GARY GB.ANVILLE Of• Otl•t 1'1114 lc.ff Spokesmen at both military
bases cmphaslied there Is no
nerve gas or any or its
sophisticated derivatives in·
volved in the shipments.
They also saJd there are no
biological or 1erm warfare
materials lnvolved in what will
be the sending of obsolete
chemictl warfare weaponry to
its ultimate ~cUon.
Joe Harkins, the public in-
formation officer at the Seal
Beach weapoa.a station, said the
shipment from there will be five
pallets or material wei1hlng
3,000 pounds.
Among 1ate1uards taken to
see tbe deadly vapors do not in
some way escape to the at-
mosphere ls packailna of the
cbemicals ln vapor prOot t>aes,
H1rkl.ns11Jd,
He aleo Hid tho ahJpment. '!rill
be ICCO~pa.nled by a trained
Army escort Wlit equipped with
devices tbltt can detect any leak~e.
Fit1t ltep tn the hop of the 9'
tell kita wm be by hellc<>pter
(rom tbe weapons ~on to the 1A>i Alamlt.ai·Naval Air StaUcm.
lrhere, tlM clMnillcab WW be
loaded abioUd 1 .,._,port car-
rier and tM!rit • to 8tapl«on Air
Pield ...., .Dilrrir. •
Haridm iaid JIB call for the
chemlcall to be deltnyed bf U1•
( Dn.~AJ) l
J
I
p e
tJ
a
b
\\
t
J
f
J
,.
2 OAll Y PILOT H F
Presley
O utdraws
I' is to ls
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP> -
Rock music symbolized by
:.1deburns and safety pins met in
Memphis when Elvia Presley
fans eathered to observe his
birthday the same weekend the
Sel< Pistolis introduced the city to punk rock
Some complained about con-
sumer ripoffs, but in the end the
dead king of rock 'n' roll drew
more or a crowd than the living
breathing British rockers. no~ on a U.S. tour
Security orf1clals at
Graceland, the ·mansion where
Presley lived. died and 1s
buried. said 9,600 funs showed
up during the weekend lo com-
m l!m orate what would have
bf'l'n Elvh' 43rd btrthd&y.
l'rl'!>lev du~d Aug 16 of a heart :i1lment
The Sel< Pistols whose fans
'>ometimes adorn them~elves
n 1th i.alety pins :ituck through
tht•1r <'ars or cheeks drew an
<JUd1cence of 650 and had a tough
llml' holding on to thal. Many in
the audience walked out minutes
<.tflt·r lhc s how began Friday night
"This ii, ~ro:-.s." :-.aid Missy
Uvnum, 23, of M~mph1 s,
watching lead !.1nger Johnny
Rotten blow his nose' without
bc•nertt or bandkerchicr.
:The Elvis faithful attended re-
v iv a 1-like gatherines to re-
member the king. Two separate
t>vcnts were .staged -"Remem-
qe nng Elvts" at the fairgrounds
C4nd "A Tribute to Elvis" at the C.ook Convention Center.
At the fairg rounds event
which cost $4 to ente r. Presley·~
first customized Cadillac and
one of his beds were on display.
The convention center exhibf-
lton, brought lo Memphis by pro.
moter Ed Say of Columbus,
Ohio. offered fans copies of a
horn e m ovie of the Pres ley
funeral for $33, and candid
photographs of Presley concerts
in several cities. Admission was
S?.50.
Hollinden
To Lead OC
Commission .
Fountain Valley City Coun-
cilman Al Hollinden today was
reappointed chairman or the
y ear-old Orange County
TransPOrtation Commission.
Commissioners also unan-
imously reappointed county
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich as
cQmmission vice chairman.
This month marks the com·
mission's first anniversary. It
was created by state legislation
last year and given broad re·
view power over local road·
building and traruit operations. •
Diedrich waa absent from
today's meeting and did not take
part in the commission 4 to o
vote.
The commlaslon includes two
county supervisors, Diedrich
and Ralph Clark; two city coun-
cilmen, Holllnden and David
Brandt, Santa Ana and one
member chosen from the public,
Zika Djokovich, Santa Ana. ·
Clark and Holllnden allo serve
as directors or the Orange Coun·
ty Transit District.
Golden West Sets
Biofeedback Class
u .........
CANCEROUS TUMOR
Justice Wltllam Brennan
High Court's
Senior Judge
'Hru Cancer'
WASHINGTON CAP) -U.S.
Supreme Court JuNtice Willium
.I Brennan Jr.. the senior
member or the nation's highest
court, has a cancerous tumor on
a vo<.•al cord, a court .spokes man
!'iard todav.
Brennan. 71, was not on the
bench when the court met today
after a four.week recess.
Barrett McGurn, the court's
spokesman, said Brennan is not
el<pected to participate in those
cases the court will hear or
consider for the next 10 days.
"A biopsy of a Dec. 14
Jaryngoscopy revealed a small
squamous cell carcinoma -a
malignant tumor -or the left
vocal cord," McGurn said in a
written statem ent. "Cobalt
radiation treatment beagn Dec.
22 and is continuing."
McGurn said that Brennan has
not been hospitalized but is
traveling from his Washington
home to a nearby hospital for treatment.
McGurn quoted Brennan's
doctors as saying the Justice is
doing well and "that full
recovery with cure ts expected."
Brennan and Justice Thurgood
Marshall compose the court's liberal bloc.
Brennan has been a member
of the . court since 1957. He
served as a New Jersey
Supreme Court justice before
beini nominated to bJ1 present
post by President Eisenhower.
Fro.a P age A I
T IDES .••
of Pacific Coast Highway in cen-
tral Sunset Beach. primarily at
Park Avenue and also Admiral·
ty Way slowed mid-morning
commuters as it lapped Into
traf(ic lanes.
The day's high Ude caused
waters of Bolaa Chica marsh
and the inland bay in Sunset
Beach to occasionally spill over
their bflSins.
Flodding also occurred on
Paclftc Coast Highway near the
westerly blul!a of Huntinlton
Beach, where high Udes aent
water sloshing over the beach
crest and into the road.
Sections of the new parking
Jots at Bolsa Chica Stat~ Beach
were also rinsed by the pounding
surf as it crested the beach, but
the runoU was contained easily.
"We're watchina the surf pret-
ty closely," said • police
spokesman in Seal Beach, where
in past years high tides and
storm surf have s wamped sec-
tions of the downtown ocean-Biofeedback training, the use
of body-reading machines to
signal when a person ts anxious,
tense. or distressed, will be
tuught fn workshops at Golden
West College starting Tuesday.
. front district.
The workshops will be held in
· the community center~ 7-10 p.m.
AdmlaalOtl ls $45 which Includes
cassette tapes for home ex·
ercllea and printed materials.
Reservations can be made by
calling the actlvttlea offtce,
892·7711, extension 561.
DAILY PILOT
F,..,,.PageAl
GIBBS •••
<'are facilities are set up by at.tte
law.
He said they are to serve In a
transition stage to get patients
back into society.
Slaven said a Jawault 11 pend-
ing against the clty beeauae ot
put rejections.
City offitlala say that Mn.
Odum bad never applied for a
permit to operate .the home.
She clafma, on tbe otbel' hand,
that her check was misplaced
and lbat abe has met a rreat
deal of reailtance from city
ofliclala.
After reJectlnl Mn. Odum'• bid, t.M dty councll voted to
meet tilth ortlclal1 of th•
·Department ol Socl•I Senlcea to 1tud1 the needl tor 1ucta bolMI.
By Tbe AHoclat.ed Presa
H arsh weather tod2'Y brought
snow to the East. as Midwest
and Mid·AUantic atatu were un-
der aa much a. a foot of snow.
ff Ith winds wh.tpped through
mucJi or the Northeast -top.
piing trees and power lines.
Poor weather s tretched as far
south as Florida, where
tornados were blamed for at
least two deaths and nine in-
JUr1es.
One apparent victim of the
windstorm was a bridgekeeper
blwon into the Manatee River at
Bradenton, Fla. Search parties
were still scouring the area today.
Snow stretched from West
Virginia through sectioni of New
York state; from Minne11ota
south to North Carolina.
. Travel advisories were posted
1n many areas; some roads were
impassable.
Temperatures In Minnesota
fell to 50 below with the wind
chill factor.
Greater Cincinnati Airport re-
ceived thr<:e inches of s now and
closed for a short time Sunday
night after a taxiing jet slid off
the runway and ·became stuck.
Nearly six inches of snow fell
on Cleveland's Hopkins lnterna.
t1onal Airport, and two planes
were stuck on different
runways. The aJrport remained
open, but those two runways
were closed for a time.
Charges Faced
By HBMan~ 2.
Juveniles
A 22-year·old Huntington
Beach man and his two juvenile
companions were arrested by
Costa Mesa police Sunday after
they allegedly tried to place old
receipts on new merchandlse at
a South Coast Plaza store, police
said.
Taken into custody on a
charge or suspicion ot com-
m er c I al burglary was
Christopher Scott Sunbury, or
8452 Valencia St., Huntington
Beach. The two male jl.lveniles.
both aged 15, were •M'ested on a
s lmll,ar charge and later re-
leased to their parents.
Police claim Sunbury
purchued a tool set from a
Sear's store at South Coast
Plaza, theo returned and placed
the receipt on other merchan-
dise. He then left the store with
the goods before returning to try
the scam e second time, police
said.
He la being held today in lieu ot $5,000 bail.
Man Injured
In Escape
A ttempt Dies
The man who last weet tried
to hitch a ride to freedom from
Orange County JaU by clinging
to the undercarrtaee of a bus
carrying prisoners from court
died late Saturday from injuries
suffered during bis lll-faled
escape attempt
Richard Gonzalez Arellanes,
40, ol Los Anlelea, wu fatally
injured Wednesday wben-
knocked from the undercarriage
and the bua rear wheels passed
over the lower portion of bis
body. He fell when the bus was
just outside tbe county
courthouse In Santa Ana.
ArelJanes underwent surgery
at UCI Medical Center before
dying in the prlaon ward there
Saturda.y niabL
He had been arrested Jan. 2
by Santa Ana police and wu
charged wttb attempted rob-
bery, asaault wltb a deadly
weapon and .kJdnappiD1.
P ,...Page.41
KITS •••
Charter
Rearing
Slated
Hl.lntlngton Beach City Council
m em be rs will hold a public
hearlns tonight on proposed
changes in the city charter.
The bearing, which wm be
held at 7 p.m . in citr council
chambers, is contloued from a meeting of Dec. 21.
Since the initial hearing, lbe ci-
ty council has voted to place the
c harter issues on the June
primary ballot instead of the
April city elections as originally
intended.
The majority of the council in-
dicated it dld.n't have sufficient
time to consider recommenda·
lions "and make changes before
the deadline for the April vote.
Proposed charter c hanges generally won approval from the
citizens who testified in
December .
............. ...; Oiiri•lllllt•..., Cllkaee Tn-
ANN NELSON •ND HER ATTORNEY, KARL WINKLER
Ponce Say Divorce Action May Have Been Trtgger
However, City Treasurer War.
ren HalJ threatened to lead op.
poslllon lo the changes at that
llme if the entire packa1e is to
be determined by a single yes or
no vote by city voters.
Hall contended that many is-
sues are crucial and should be
decided lndependenUy. I
Threat of Divorce The concept of a single vote
has been endorsed by the mem-
bers of the charter revision com-m i\tee:
'L ink' to Murders Hall's 'ob as treasurer would
be eliminated if charter changes
are approved by the people.
ROCKFORD, Ill. (AP) -
Simon Peter Nelson reportedly
learned that his wife planned to
divorce him only hours before
his alx children were found
bludgeoned and stabbed to death
in their beds.
]'lelson. 46. was to be ar· ra1~ned today in the killings,
whlch Winnebago County
Coroner John Seward said oc-
curred late Friday or early
Saturday.
Police said the children were
found in several rooms of the
Nelson home on a quiet, middle·
class street. The bodies or
Roseann, 5, and her sister, Jen-
nifer, 12, were round In their
bedroom, beaten and stabbed re-
peatedly.
Their four brothers, Matt.hew.
7; Andrew, 9; Simon Peter Jr.
10: and David, 3, were s1m11ar1y
slain, said police Capt. Richard
Ander)loo. The family's pet
dactiatlwld wu foWld with its
throat slashed.
lnvesUgators said the children
had ·been killed, apparently as
they slept, with a rubber mallet
and a hunting knife.
Michael Weldon, Nelson's
employer and friend, said he re·
turned from a vacation to the of·
flee ol Management RecruJters
Inc. lut week to find Nelson
completely changed ln his at·
litude toward his troubled 1'·
year marriage.
"He sald the whole thlng start-
ed to come to a head over the
weekend befor~. '' said Weldon,
"and that Ann had set down
rules. There were certain things
he was doing that had to stop -
drinking, overweight and facial
hair."
Ann Nelson, 38, had gone to
her attorney about a divorce but
had been advised to get away
and think things over for a cou·
pie of days, according to the
Rockford Morning Star.
With her husband's
knowledge, she checked into a
Miiwaukee motel Thursday
morning, But the next day, she
called the law~er and told him
to proceed with'tbe divorce, the
Star reported.
Weldon s111d Nelson left the of-
fice abruptly Friday.
Olber controversial issues in-
clude a recommendation for the
continued election of a city at-
torney, removal of department
beads from the city personnel
system, the elimination Of tbe
library board and other boards
and commissions from the
charter and a limit or two con-
aecuUve four-year terms for city
council members.
EVELFACES
ESCAPER.4.P
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
lnstud of being chauffeured to
work from JaJI, stuntman Evel
Knievel remained ln his jail cell
today awaJUng a court beartnc
on a charge of escape. .
Knievel's work-furlough
prlvlle1e. whJcb allowed hlm to
conduct his business durtns the
daytime while serving a
six-month sentence for assault,
was also tn jeopardy following
his tardy return to the Hall of
Justice on Saturday.
Here are the tacts. Savers who have certificate
accounts at MutuJI savings can borrow up to 90% of
their savings account balance Without Incurring
the usual substantial Interest penalty required by
federal regulations for early withdrawal.
EXAMPLE: You have a certificate w ith us earning
at the annual rate o f 7%% <S 1.000 minimum.
6 year term>. A need arises-vacation.
e new car. emergency. what-
ever-tor you to have some
cash. You can borrow up
to 90% from us at only awx,
Annual Percentage Rate.
n
hi. it is.
while the account continues to
earn at 77'%. A difference
of only 1%. Similar arrange-
ments can be made on any
of our term savings certificates
1 he advantage ts obVious.
You can aff Ord to put your
c;Jvlngs In a certificate
that pays considerably nigher
Interest than a passbooK
account without navlng to
concern yourself abOut
How ·1 works.
• J •
me required penalty should
you need tunds from the
account before It matures.
Naturally. Mutual 5avlngs
accounts are Insured to
$40.000 by an agency of the Where you get 1t. federal government. '
Compare where you presently
save. All savings Institutions
are not me same. You wlll find It easy to open an
account at Mutual savtngs since we can arrange to
transfer your funds from wherever they are now
rocat<!d, cau or visit any ot our 16 SOuthern ca11tom1a
offices tor further dctalls.
~ ~~A MUTUAL
SAVINGS ill nu: Bili M
• 10 ....... -
AH£OU•Lt400~NOlENO."
AN IQUA&. O"'°"TUNITY Ul~On"
,.
'
J, -
p
e'
tJ
a
b
7
Irvine
VOL. 71, NO. 9, ~SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY 9, 1978 TEN CENTS
Shifting Seas Save Honies in .·Malihu
MALIBU (AP> Surf
pounded to the doorsteps or the
exclusive Malibu colony at high
ttde today, but a shift in the seas
apparently averted damage to
homes.
Waves up to five reel high
washed up to ).he sandbags and
board barriers erected by
residents after six·foot seas,
washed into some homes
Sunday. s mashing fences and
stairways
The tide was smaller today
* * *
than expected, both In Malibu
and further north in Oxnard,
authorities reported.
"This is like a Sunday picnic
compared lo yesterday," said
county fireman Tom Baker, who
was off duty but stayed behind
to help if needed.
Officials said about 50 county
Fire Department camp crews,
who helped residents place
SANDBAGS IN Sunday's seas,
remained behind bul were not
need«>tt
* * *
M·ost of the affected properties
were oceanfront homes on
Malibu CaJ1¥on Road just north
or the coaooy which is heavily
populated by entertainment
celebrities.
The home. were situated on
bluffs or stilts and so were not·
hit by the tide.
A lded by abo"t 50 county
rirefiahters, Ufeguards and
voluntfff'S, residents frantically
dug ditches and put up sandbags
to try to avoid more of the
* * *
damage suffered Sunday, when
several expensive homes were
flooded by waves that came
craahlng through windows,
Authorities said waves
reached slx feet in tbls beach
community and nine feet in
Ventura on Sunday.
Foreculers blamed a severe
storm in the Gull of Alaska for '
turning usually calm swells into
dangerous breakers. They sald
as Iona as the low pressure area
exists off Alaska, homeownets
will need to worry about each
new high tide.
One ot the most severely
damaged residences In the
Malibu Colony was a rental unit
occupied by Selena Lee, a writer
who awoke Sunday to an
unpleasant surprise. Ms. Lee,
who moved in just a week a10,
sl~pped out of bed and into
water.
A seawall had broken two
homes away and the ocean
swept in silently during' the
night. Ms. Lee said she begllll
getting electrical shocks as soon
as she stepped Into the water, so
she fled when she noticed
electrical fixtures sparking and
smoking. Eventually, the water
rose to walst~ee1> around her
home and she went to the home
of a friend.
"My clothes, my typewriter,
my stel'eo, dishes •.. " ~e
sicbed and threw her bands In
the air. "l don't know what I'm
going to do." .
Sandbags Go Up
At Capo Beach~
I
By STEVE MIT<;HELL
Ol IM o.ltr l'tlM SI.off
ll igh t1dt•s and h eavy surf
bro ug ht troubles to several
areas of the Orange Coast Sun-
day and today, including a
stre t ch or h omes a long
Capistrano Beach where waves
dam aged a breakwater and
* * * ·More Floods?
several windows in a beachfront
home.
About a dozen volunteers were
sandbagging hom.s along Beach
Road in Capistrano Beach this
morning, following Sunday's
high tides and surf which broke
several large window' in a home
owned by John Reynard, 36787
Beach Road.
* * *
Weekend's Sunshine
Gives Way to Rain
By MICllAF.L PASKEVICll
OI 1• O.llr ,. • ._. Sl•ll
Sparkling weekend weather
gave way to new showers aloni
the Oranie Coast today and 1 weather forecasters say more
1 rain is on the way toni&ht and
Tuesday.
Coastal flooding remains a
poss1b1hty near west facing
beaches 1r h1~h tides lank with
waves \\happed up by a new
storm pushing into the area
from the Gulr or Alaska.
Salt water made its way
across streets in Seal Beach and
Sunset Beach early today, but
! authorities said the roadways
were still passable to drivers.
And high water from Newport
I Bay overflowed onto Balboa
81"uelvard this morning, forcing
the closure or one Jane near 44th
Street. However. s urf that pounded
* * *
the beaches of San Diego and
Malibu Sunday was not evident
alon1 tbe Oran1e Coaat.
Forecuter• are s tlll
predlet.lnl t.be pc»siblllty of
breakers as high as 10 feet late
today and Tuesday morning.
The latest storm front moved
into the area after dropping
substantial amounts of rain in
the northwest and in the San
Francisco Bay Area.
Forecasters are calling ror
continued showers tonight and
Tuesday and possibly
Wednesday.
Skies are expected to remain
cloudy with high temperatures
near 60 degrees and overnight
lows near 50.
Small craft advisories were
issued today. Today's high tide, up to seven
feet, occurred at 9 a.m. The tide
will be nearly as high Tuesday
mornlhg al about 9:30.
* * * N~t Even a Bicycle
Can Travel Culver
By PtnUP ROSMARIN
OI llM Oaltr ,.li.t SI.off
It will be al least a week before
traffic of any kind, even a
bicycle, wilt be able lo travel on
Culver Drive in Irvine, between
Main Street and Barranca Road,
Public Works director Brent
Muchow said today.
Coast
Weather
Cloudy throusb toniiht.
Chance of showers in-
creasing to 90 percent
tonl1ht and decreulna to
50 percent Tuesday. Lows
tonl1bt 50 to 56. Highs
Tuesday GO to SS.
INSIDE TODAY
ANO ~-II that h•'"'" holchu .ore o tlaru-mortftd mitiM. TMJI . ar•, o i.uutmat. port o/ Chf
INdft"' ICfnf, tMI/ JOV. lff Ftolurlng,~OQeCl,
Last week's rainstorm, which
dumped 2.82 inches of water on
the city, orten wlth torrential
force, washed out a bridge on
Culver over a flood control chan·
nel.
"Theft's ablolutely 110 way,"
Muchow aald, "that a vehicle,
not even a bicycle, can 1et
across that," Muchow said.
At its height, the storm had
closed nearly a score of Irvine
streets, causlna residents and
commuter workers to Inch alon&
alternate routes, taking houn
rather than minutes to aet home
or to work.
Today only Culver Drlve ,...
m alned ·closed to traffic,
between Main Street and Bar.
ranca Rbad. M ucbow said damage to roads
and pubU~ project.-under con·
strucUon Will amount to several
t.houtandt of dollan.
An accountmi wu beln1 pre-
(8"~VEJl, Pace Al)
Nixon's Birthday
Plam UnCU.CIO&ed
"We've got the windows in
front barricaded now," Reynard .
satd this morning. He said Cami·
ly m e mbers and neighbors
shored up the front of the home
after six and seven foot waves
broke the two windows Sunday
morning.
"The last time it was this bad
was seven years ago," Reynard
said. "But we built a seawall
after that incident and the
damage is really moderate this
time in comparison.
"We've probably got problems
for a couple more days,'' he
said. Most of the damage Sun-
day was restricted to the south
end of Beach Road, near Poche
Deach.
Reynard said the seven·vear-
old rock breakwater is protect-
ing about five Beach Road
houses, but added that Sunday's
bi&h tides and surf damaged a
wooden seawall adjacent to his
home.
He estimated damage to his
home atabout$l,OOO. •
Further aouth, San Clemente
llfeguards were right on top of
the high tide situation, with
lifeg uard Sheridan Byerly re·
porting surf eating away at the
lifeguard tower
"It's not ~oin~ to do any
damage," he said today. "but
it's taking !.and away from un·
dcrneath me ri ght now "
lie stud a polled palm tree in
front of the lifeguard station,
"isn 't going to make it through
the morning."
(See TJDES, Page A2)
Dallf ............ .., .IC ...... l(NMer
WAVE CATCHES PAIR CHECKING SEAWALL THIS MOANING IN CAPISTRANO BEACH
High TldH Cauaed Window Breekege; RHldent1 Sandbagged Agelntt Surging See
Kits to Be Destroyed College Plan
For Building
To Get Review Chemica/,s Stored in County to Be;Removed
By GARY GRANVILLE
Ol IM Dell• "''" lt•lf Deadly World War I vintage
war gasae. stored at two Orange
County mllitary bases will be
s hipped to Denver later this
month ln a trial program aimed
ulli m ately at the chemicals'
"environmentally safe" destruc·
tlon.
A spokesm an at the U.S.
Naval Weapons Station in Seal
Beach said the shipment date
for 94 chemical warfare test klt.5
kept there hos tentatively been
aet for Jan. 25.
No firm date has been set for
the shipment of six similar kits
stored at EJ Toro Marine Corps
Air Station, according lto Capt.
John Shotwell.
He said the chemical warfare
Recluse Hu/,
32 Years
BELGRADE.
Yu1oslavia (AP) -A man
who hid for half his life
fearln1 punishment for
pro-Nul wU1.Jme activity
aaya be used to cry wben
be beard bappy voices out-
1lde, and dared not show.
himself even at hlt mother's filrieral.
Jantz Jtus was a 32·
year·old shoemaker when he went lnto bldlna at his
1l1ter11 farmhowle in June
1945, be told the Bet1rade
newspaper PoUUkL
Now N, Rua w11 dlt· .
cov•Nd latt week after ..
hll 1l1ter bouOt a tar•• I auppty of bread ln the:
nearby vtna•• of Zama, In
the ~ SloVenla • •
HllOD, met • •QQidOUI • re1lclent 11.n.d poUee.;
agents were declared obsolete in
1970.
··We've been wailing for in·
structions on how to dispose or
them ever since," Shotwell said.
Included among the chemicals
in the kits 1s Phosgene, a World
War I gas that Shotwell said was
responsible for 80 percent or the
gas-caused fatalllles during lhe
Great War.
Also·tncluded in the shipments
to be made from the two bases
is Cyanogen Chloride, Lewlsite
an~ those chemical agents that
make up what was known In
World War I as mustard gas.
Spokesmen at both military
bases emphasized there is no
netve gas or any of its
sophisticated derl v ali ves in·
volved in the shipments.
They also said there are no
bloloaical . or 1erm ..., arfare
mater°ials involved in what will
be the sending of obsolete
chemical warfare weaponry to
its ultimate destruction.
Joe Harkins, the public in·
form atioo officer at the Seal
Beach weapons station, said the
shipment from there will be five
pallets of material weighing
3,000 pounds.
Among safeguards taken to
sec the deadly vapors do not in
some way escape to the al·
mosphere is packaging of the
chemicals in \lapor proof bags,
Harkins said.
Ile also said the shipment will
be accompanied by a trained
Army escort unit equipped with
devices that can detect any
leakage.
First step in lbe hop of the 9'
test kits will be by hellcopter
<See KITS, Page AZ)
Skateboard Course
Pact ,Approved
• city costs to over $20,000. Thet
include buffer tand.Jcapln1 ud a
chain link fence encloslnl the
course where ll is not walled.
The all'OOment was approved
unanlrnou•lt by tbe council,
with CouncJlman John Bunon
absent. . ~ 1 'l'h• dlsPute occupied comK?ll
rattent.Wn lor the whole of Jm,
alnce the openio1 of lite
1kateti0ard park.
Homeowners whole property
abuu the courH ealJid lt a
nulaance and objected to tbe
nolH tMf" l&ld WU lflt«ited
lrOm aketeboard ·~ lbou&-1~ cbiklteD, and the aer11nilD1 :woWpCS.-wtiooec11&oii1ll1 fell.
Saddleback Com munity
College District trustees toni1ht
will a1ain discuss their five-year
plan for building on the existing
Mission Viejo campus and new
northern site in Irvine.
For the past several weeks,
trustees have been discussing
building priorities to be included
in the report which will be s ub-
mitted to the California Com·
munity College's Chancellor's
Office this month.,
The dJstrlct's building needs
are estimated to cost $75 million
in today's dollars but could ac-
tually cost as much or more
than $122 million over the next
10 years.
District oCliciall have predict·
ed that they can complete the
bulldinl proaram, needed to
provide for projected atudent
growth, if the current tax rate
remains mcbanaed.
Jn other acUon, trustees will
be asked to ratify 11 contracts,
totatU,,1 '734,203, for construe·
don of the exterior "shells" of
buildings oo the new northern
·campus.
Under the dL!trtct's conatruc·
tJon manaaement program, the
contract.a have alroady ·beea
1l1ned and work h11 begun.
11la Dr. F.dward Hart, aasistaJ)t
aupertrittndcnt tor feneral plan-
nln1.
He satd contracts ror work on
the lntcrton of the four bul1d·
lngt 11hould be awarded ill
·February. The campus 11
acbedultd to be completed and
open to atudenu by the tall
HmHttr wblch b11lna in
Au1uat.
D•irile UM recent raint, Hart
aald, "we ltUl bave a..abot" at
completinl tt.. cam1191 Oil time. But he· itddtd, ••we caaa't bave
toO m-dllatl.''
~·.
;\ DAILY PILOT
• •
partd Q fOf • lQ the
City Coundl T\M5day nl&bl
Muchow said 1l would asseu
noi only street damaae that re
sµhed from the s torm , but
d•mage to ut1bues, cos b of de
lays to public and private con
struction proJect.s, and co:1ta for
overtime labor.
Last Wednesday and Thurs·
day, pub!Jc works crews worked
around the clock ahorln& up
weakened road• and clearln1
debris.
Muchow said sp<>t repairs stl\I
were being done today on road
s houlders and culverts un-
dermined by water; obstructed
drains. cloagcd by debris, were
being cleared.
Traffic policemen worked to-
day during peak travel hours.
diverting dravcri. uway from the
Culver Drive mess.
Muchow said plans were being
made to erect special tramc
routing !llgns d1recllng motorists
along alternate routes on Jam·
boree and Barranca roads, and
Main StrCl'I
Tht: F.dhon (.'o reported
I n inc fac1 1ttacs damage:. of
SS.500 , m ostly in blown
transformers.
!-'red Keller, vice president for
the Irvine C ompany 's
aj{rtcullural diyision, said that
a lthough there was some erosion
of rields, "the rain certainly was
l>eneficial overall.''
"The benefits overshadowed
any damage," Keller s1.11d.
One to two days were lost in a
broccoli harvest, but the delay
wa s not s erious enough to
ttfrcaten the crop, he said.
* * * Front Page A I
TIDES ...
Newport Beach Lifeguard
Capt. Logan Lockabey said his
beaches are experiencing no tide
or surf problems today.
Minor flooding along portions
of Pacific Coast Highway in cen·
tral Sunset Beach, Primarily at
Park Avenue and also Admiral-
ty Way slowed mid-morning
commuters as it lapped into
traffic lanes.
The day's high tide caused
waters of Bolsa Chica marsh
and the inland bay in Sunset
Reach to occasionally spill over
th~ir basins.
Flooding also occurred on
Pacific Coast Highway near the
westerly blurrs of Huntington
Beach. where high tides sent
water sloshing over the beach
cres t :ind into the road.
Sections of the new parking
lots at Bolsa Chica State Beach
were also rinsed by the pounding
1;urf as it crested tho beach, but
the runoff was contained easily.
"We're watching the surf pret·
t y closely ." s aid a police
spo'ltesman in Seal Beach, where
1n past years high tides and
:.lorm surf have swamped sec-
tions of the downtown ocean-
front district.
Workshop Planned
On Water Quality
The public is invited to a
\\Orkshop at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
on local efforts to improve water
c1uality in the Orange County
area.
The meeting will be held in the
Saddleback Hiah School , 2802 S.
Flower St , Santa Ana, forum
meeting room, and will be con-
ducted by the Newport Irvine
Waste Management Plannimg
Agency.
Agency officials will discuss
current water quality projects
designed to improve and main·
t nln water quality in the Orange
County area.
Local members of the Sierra
Club will serve as host for the
meeting
Debris Sighted
HONOLULU CAP) -Search
'planes have sighted debris
believed to be from an Indian
freighter that reported it was
!nking on waler 1,000 miles
northwest of here four days ago,
but there was no sign of the 70
people believed aboard the ship.
O"ANOICOMT
DAILY PILOT
VISITORS PAY RESPECTS AT GRAVE OF ENTERTAINER PRESLEY
Mourners Remember EM• on OccHlon of HI• Birthday
Elvis · Shades Pistols
1
Fans Horwr Presley Birth, Skip Punk Rock
MEMPHIS, Tenn. CAP) -
Roc k mus ic symbolized b y
side burns and safety pins met in
Memphis when El vis Preo;le"
fans gathered to observe his
birthday the same weekend the
Sex Pistols introduced the city to
punk rock.
Som e complained about con·
sumer ripoHs, but in the end the
dead king or rock 'n' roll drew
more or a crowd than the living,
br('athing British rockers, no\•,
on a U.S. tour
Sec urity offi c ial s al
Graceland, the mansion where
2 City Workers
Get Pay Raises
Two top-level Irvine city ad-
mlnjs trators have been given
pay increases by the City Coun-
cil.
City Clerk Raye Kingsbury,
who was salaried at $18,000 a
year, earned a $600 per year in-
crea~c. plus a $160 per month
car allowance, in the year-end
evaluation or job performance.
James Harrington, director of
administrative services. won a
Sl,125 pe r year increment.
bringing his salary to an annual
$30,000.
The pay raises were retroac-
tive to Dec. 10. Miss Kingsbury's
salary is to be reviewed again in
July.
Salaries of city clerk~ in other
south Orange County cities in·
elude those of Newport Beach
($21,500 per year), Fountain
Valley ($22,476), Huntington
B eac h ($25 ,020), San
Clemente, where the clerk dual-
ly serves as administrative as·
s 1stnnt Cs:!'t,504 ), Laguna Beach
($15,660), and Cos ta Mesa
($24, 132).
Ha rrington's job classification
is unique to Irvine, so doesn't
compare easily lo other cities.
M 1ss Kingsbury has held her
job s ince lust March, Har-
rington, for four years.
Front Page A I
Presley lived, died and is
buried, said 9,600 fans showed
up during the weekend lo com-
m e m orate what would have
been Elvis' 43rd birthday
Presley died Aug. 16 of a heart
uilment.
The Sex Pai.tols whose fans
sometimes adorn themselves
with safety pins stuck through
their ~ars or cheeks -drew an
audicence or 650 and had a tough
time holding on to that. Many in
the a udience walked out minutes
afte r the show began Friday
ni_ght
"This i11 ~ross," s aid Ml11sy
By num, 23, or Memphis,
watchin~ lead singer Johnny
-Rotten blow his nose without
benefit of handkerchief
The Elvis faithful attended re·
v ival·like gatherings to re·
m ember the king. Two separate
events were staged -"Remem·
hering Elvis" at the fairgrounds
and "A Tribute to Elvis" at the
Cook Convention Center.
At the fairgrounds event.
which cq,'*t $4 to elllcr, Presley's
first cu~tomlzed Cadillac and
one or his bods were on display.
First a Suece••
U.S. Testing·
Cruise Missile
WASIUNGTON CAP) -The
new Tomahawk cruise missile is
being tested to find out whether
It would be vulnerable to de-
fensive missile sys tems, tbo
Pentagon said today.
Officials said the first test was
he ld Saturday at Nellis Air
Force Base, Nev., and was a
success. Hut they declined ~o
describe the basis for their JudK-
ment. The announcement gave
few details.
D~ring the test, the cruise
missile was fired from a Navy
plane. Radar described as part
or "a representative air defense
sys tem" then tried to detect and
track the missile.
There was no attempt to knock
down t~ crwi.e missile with a
defensive weapon, the Pentagon
said Such an attempt with live
defensive missiles is expected
later.
Some critics have challenged
the cruise mlsslle concept, con-
tending it could be neutralized
bv sophisticated Soviet air de-
FVOfficial
To Remain
Chairman
Fountain Valley City Coun-
cilman Al Hollinden today was
reappointed chairman of the
y ear-old Orange County
Transportaoon Commission. Commissioners als o unan-
1 m ously reappointed county
Supe rvisor Ralph Diedrich as
commission vice chairman.
This month marks the com-
mission's first anniversary. It
was created by st~te legislation
lust ycnr and given broad re-
v icw power over local road
building and transit operations.
Diedrich was absent from
today's meeting and did not take
\)art in the commission 4 to o
vote.
The commission includes two
county s upervisors, Diedrich
and Ralph Clark; l\o city coun-
cilmen, Hollinden and David
Brandt, Santa Ana and one
member chosen from the public.
Zlka Ojokovi ch, Santa Ana.
Clark and Hollinden also SeT'Ve
as director-a of the Orange Coun-
ty Transit DistricL
fen¥s In the 1980s and beyond.
Tho cru.\H mlssllu ls a small
pllotleaa jet bomber, about 1'
fee\ Jong and very narrow. It ls
destined to hue the contours of
the .earth while Oyln1 towiu-d Its
target after being launched from
U.S. bombers, submarines or
s urface ships outside Soviet ter-
ritory.
Its backers say the cruise mis·
s 1le's s mall radar profile plus
its low altitude nJght, would ena-
ble it to penetrate air defenses
especially lf launched In cloudS
or possibly several hundred
weapons. au heading for taraets
inside the Soviet Union.
In preliminary studies last
year, derense officials have said,
U.S. scientists round that a
system similar to the American
Army's Hawk air defense mis·
aile complex might be able to
counter a cruise missile attack.
The Hawk system would have to
be equipped with aome im-
proved transmitters, computers
and other comPonents:
Should the Russians be able to
develop such a system, orrtcials
have said, they would be able to
give the American cruise mis -
sile a bad Ume If the derenatve
sy•lem was deployed in large
numbers. perhaps as many as
.500 to 1,000 sites.
These officials emphasized
that the Soviet Union does not
have that kind of system,
a lthough R~saia bas an ex-
tensive defensive network de-
s igned to counter attacking
bombers.
These officials said it would
take the Russians many years to
develop and deploy the klnd or
system they were talkins about
which was used as a model in
last year's study involving a
modification of a Hawk system.
As for the present set of tests,
the Pentaaon hu said that data
on the Tomahawk's survivabili-
ty will be used to Improve the
missile.
Bomb Stand Hit
MOSCOW CAP> -Pravda
claimed Sunday that President
Carter 's position on the neutron
bomb contradicts his ad-
ministration's espoused interest
in furthering detente and arms
limitation. The commentary ap-
parently was aimed at Carter's
statement" ln Warsaw, Poland. -
t hat the neutron bomb would
have less effect on the East-
West arms balance than the new
Soviet SS-20 mobile missile.
Here are the f <lctS. Savers who have certificate
accounts at Mutual savings cu n bOrrow up to 90% or
t11clr <:icJvings uccount balance without Incurring
the usuul substantial Interest penalty r equired by
1cderal regulat ions for early wlthdruwol.
' IXAMPLE.: Yo u have a certificate with us earning
at the annual ra te ot 7%% <S 1.000 minimum.
6 year term>. A need arises-vacation.
new car. emergency. what-
ever -tor you to hi.lve some
cash. You can bOrrow up
Uf'lf'IMlta
CANCEROUS TUMOR
Justice William Brennan
KITS ...
from the weapons station to the
Los Alamitos Naval Air Station. • • to 90% trom us at only 8%%
Annual Percentage Rate.
while the account continues to
earn at 7 ~%. A difference
High Court's
Senior Judge
'Has Cancer'
WASffiNGTON CAP) -U.S.
Supreme Court Justice Wllllam
J. Brennan Jr., the senior
member of the nation's highest
court. has a cancerous tumor on
a vocal cord, a court spokes man
said today.
Brennan, 71, was not on the
bench when the court met today
after a four-week recess.
Barrett McGum, the court's
spokesman, said Brennan is not
expected to participate in those
cases the court will hear or
consider for the next 10 days.
"A biopsy of a Dec. 14
laryngoseopy revealed a small
squamous cell Cllrcinoma -a
malignant tumor -of the left
vocal cord," McGum said ln a
wrtu.en statement. "Cobalt ·
radiation treatment bea1n Dec
22 and la conllnuln1."
McGum said that Brennan bu
not been hospitall1e<J but is
travtlln1 from hls Wu hlnaton
bome lo a nearby hbapltal for
treatment.
McQ.Wll quoted Brennan'•
doctora as 1aytn1 the Ju1Uce 11
do"11 well and "that full '
recovery wttb cure 11 expected."
Branan and JuaUc• Thureood Marwblll comPC>M th• cO\U'\'1
Uberal bloc. Brennan h .. bteil a member . ot the courr--1tnce 1t5T. ff• '· terved u a New Jersey
. . ·Supreme CoUri JuaUce Wen
belnt nominated to hll preaent
poat by Preiltdent Eisenhower. -.
There, the chemicals will be
loaded aboard a transport ear-
ner and sent on to Stapleton Air
Field near Denver. -
Harkins said plans call for the
chemicals to be destroyed by in-
cineration. ·
Tne two shipments from
Orange County are part of a
trial program Involving simllar
s hipments from 12 other
military bases throughout the
country, Harkins said.
Involved in the trial program
are 1,500 of the estimated 21,000
chemical warfare test kits scat-
tered among the H military
bases.
·The training kits were de-
signed to provide field trainin1
for troops to enable them to
identify the odors and other in-
dications or the presence of rour
toxic aassea, all of them
described either as cbokln1 or
blistering agents ..
Hell's Angel
Fatally Shot
LOS ANGELES CAP) -A re-
puted member of the Hell's
Anaela motorcycle club was
found dead ln hJ1 suburban Sun
Valley home, when 1herlfr1
deputies arrived to search for a
purported weapona cache.
Ora ilay Glort, 20, waa found , fa tally a bot In 1 rear bedroom wben Loa An••••• County
•htrlff'• department in·
v .. u,atora entered ht• boJll• Saturday. .
Tht lnve1ll11tor1 aald they were folJowtna up arr .. tt mid•
Friday IQ connecllon with
WtaPoftl aDd up&oilva fc>Und ln
• Burbank 1ar11e. J .• •
Vin
oan
ha ·1 is.
or only 1%. Similar arrange-
ments c.:in be made on any
o f our term savings certificates
The advantage Is obvious.
You ca n attord to put your
savings In a certificate
mm pays considerably higher
interest than a passbOok
arcount witriout having to
conccr n yourself abOut
thC' rc·qulred penalty shoufd
you nPcd funds from the
cJccount t>cfore It matures.
N.:Jtur.111y. Mutual Saving~ or e account;, arc Insured to • DU get I
S40.000 by an agency of the
feder.:il government.
c ompare where you presently
save. /\II savings Institutions
are not .the same. You will tind it easy to open an
account at Mutual Savings since we ca n arrange to
transfer your funds from w herever they are now
located. Gall or visit any of our 16 southern calltomta
offices for further d etails
~ .. :r ..
I 11<£ BIG M
MUTUAL
SAVINGS _ .. "" .. ~
AN EQUAL HOUllNO Lt:Npl"
AN aOUM. Oltl'O"TVNiTl' IMft\.OYift
c.p11trano-5a; c .. mem.-~
~"70 <.!llmJl'\O oe atre11~14g3.sG'l I
COt'ONI del Mar; 2007 Cast C0.1st l-tlQhway/875·5010
Fount.in Vattey<t: 17.DOC>Megnolla Strat"t/96J·8396
DoWneown s.nta AN: 631 North M.t1n/~7·g741
l'I' i\llifl1~V\ l<J A M tit 2 l'M •
l
7
Lag11na/South Coast Afternoon
N.Y. Stoeks
JOL. 71, NO. 9, J SECTIONS, 2' PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA M ON DAY, JANUARY 9, 1978 TEN CENTS
Shifting S~as Save
MALIBU (AP) Surf
pounded to the doorsteps or lhe
exclusive Malibu colony at high
tide today, but a shift 1n the seas
apparently averted damage to
homes.
Waves up to five feet high
wasbed up to lhe sandbags and
boa rd barriers . erected by
residents after six foot seas.
washed into i.ome homes
Sunday, smashing fences and
stairways.
The tide was 11mallcr today
* * *
than expected, both in Malibu
and further north in Ox.nard,
authorities reported.
"This is like a Sunday picnic
com pared to yesterday," said
county fireman Tom Baker, who
was off duty but stayed behind
to help if needed.
OCCtc1als said about 50 county
Fire Department camp crews,
who helped residents place
SANDBACS IN Sunday's seas,
remained behind but were not
ncedl'rl
* * *
Most of the a.(fected properties
were oceanfront homes on
Mall bu Canyon Road just north
or the colony which is heavily
populated by entertainment
celebrities.
The homes were situated on
bluffs or stiJts and so were not :
hit by the tide.
Aided by about 50 ccumty
firefighters, lifeguards and
volunt.ers, residents frantically
dug ditches and put up sandbags
to try to avoid more of the
* * *
Sandbags Up
At Capo Beach.
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of Ille O.lly Pll.t Sl•ll
High tides and heavy surf
brought troubles to several
areas of the Orange Coast Sun-
day and today, including a
stretch of homes along
Capistrano Beach where waves
damaged a breakwater and
* * * More Floods?
several windows in a beachfront
home.
About a dozen volunteers were
sandbagging homes along Beach
Road in Capistrano Beach this
morning, following Sunday's
high tides and surf which broke
several large windows in a home
owned by John Reynard, 36787
Beach Road.
* * *
.t Weekend's Sunshine
Gives Way to Rain
' By MICHAEL PASKEVJCR
OI t• Dally Pl ... SUM
Spark.ling weekend weather gave way to new showers along
qte Orange . Coast today and
VCI Student
Winner of
Marathon
A UC Irvine student took first
place Sunday in' lhe C1rst annual
Dana Point marathon race, with
a Laguna Beach housewife plac-
lng first among women.
Three members of a Santa
Ana family took first place in
their Individual age category.
Charles Christensen, 19, came
in first in the 6.2-mile race, run-
ning the distance in· 31.48
minutes. Lagunan Sue Petersen
was the fastest woman runner,
taking 37.23 minutes.
Frank Duarte, a Santa Ana re·
altor, and his children, Mike. 10.
and Cathy, 12, took first place in
. their own age categories.
Sunday's was the first of what
sponsors hope wall become an
annual event, like the famous
Boston marathon. The race
originated in downtown Dana
Point and looped through the
marina. IL was sponsored by a
Dllna Point athletic club and
sporting goods store.
College Plan
weather forecaaten say more
nin 'is on the way tonieht and
Tuetdq. •, .• ·
Coastal Oood.hlc remains a
posslbllity near west facing
beaches lf high tides link with
waves whipped up by a new
storm pusblng Into the area
from the Gulf of Ala.ska.
Salt water made its way
across sµ-ects in Seal Beach and
Sunset -'Beach early today, but
authorities said the roadways
were sUll passable to drivers.
And high water Crom Newport
Bay overflowed onto Balboa
Bouelvard this morning, forcing
the closure or one lane near 44th
Street. However, surf that pounded
the beaches of San Dlego and
Malibu Sunday was not evident
along the Orange Coast.
Forecasters are still
predlctine the possibility of
breakers as high as 10 feet late
today and Tuesday morning.
The latest st.orm front moved into the area after dropping
substantial amounts of rain ln
the northwest and in the San
Francisco Bay Area.
Forecasters are catune for
continued showers tonight and
Tuesday and possibly
Wednesday. Skies are expected to remain
cloudy with high temperatures
near 60 degrees and overnight
lows near 50.
Sm all craft -advisories were
Issued today.
Today'• blgh Ude. up to seven
feel, occu.rted at t a .m. The tlde
will be nearly aa hllh Tuesday
mornln1 at about 9:30.
For.Building Driver Hit
To Get Review A.gent, Sought
Saddleback Comm unity
College District trustees tonight B . SC D z • will again discuss their five-year Y CO lCe
plan for buildini on the existing
Ml.ssion Viejo campus and new
northern lite in lnine.
For the pa.st aeveral weeks,
truatees have been dlscuuinc
bulldlni prioriUes to be included
ln tbe report which wUl be •ub-
mttled t.o the CallfornJa Com·
munltY Colle11'1 Chancellor'•
Ortlce this month.
The diatrlct'• buUdln1 needs
are eatlmated to cost sn mlWon
In toda7'1 dollan but could ~
tually toSL as much or more•
than •122 million over tho n~
10 yean.
Di1trict officials have predlct.·
ed that t.bey can complete tho
butldlnl pro1ram, needed to
provide for projected 1tudett .
arowtb. Lr t.be current. tu rate
nmalnl llDCban1ed.
lft Other acUoo, trust.ea will ,
be uk.ct to ratlfy 11 coatnetl,
totallln1 $7M,IOI. for cOnltruc· • tion or the uterlor '•ataelli" ol
(lee aaJSW, raao AJ>
"We've got the windows in
front barricaded now," Reynard
said this morning. He said fami-
ly members and neishbors
shored up the front or the home
after six and seven foot waves
broke the two windows Sunday
morning.
"The last time lt was this bad
was seven years ago," Reynard
said. "But we built a seawall
after that incident and the
damage is really moderate this
lime in comparison.
"We've probably got problems
Cor a couple more days," he
said. Most of the damage Sun-
day was restricted to the south
end of Beach Road, near Poche
Beach.
Reynard said the seven·vear-
old rock breakwater Is prote<:t-
i n g about five Beach Road
houses, but added that Sunday's
hieh tides and surf dama1ed a
wooden seawall adJacent to bis
home, ~ •tlmated c!amaae to his home at •bout$1,000. •
Further soutb, San Clemente
... lifeguards were ri1ht on top of the high' tide situation, with
liCeguard Sheridan Byerly re-
porting surf eating away at the
lifeguard tower.
"It's not 11toinJ? to do any
damage," he said today, "but
it's taking sand away from un·
derneath me right now."
He said a potted palm tree in
front of the lifeguard station,
"isn't going to make it through
the morning."
(See TIDES, Page A?)
Deadly Kits
Of Chemicals
To Be Moved
By GARY GRANVILLE
OI.,. Oflly l'li.t ltltft
Deadly World War I vlntace
war gasses stored at two Orange
County military base. will be
$hipped to Denver later this
month in a trial program aimed
ultimately at the chemicals'
"environmentally safe" destruc·
Uon.
A spokesman at the U.S.
Naval Weapons Station in Seal
Beach sald the shipment date
for 14 chemical warfare lest kits
kept there has tentatively been
set for Jan. 25.
No firm date h as been set for
the shipment of six simllar kits
stored at El Toro Marine Corps
Air Station, accord.inti to Capt.
John Shotwell.
He said the chemical warfare
acents \Oere declared obsolete in
1970.
"We've been walling for in·
structioo.s on bow to dispose of
them ever slnce," Shotwell a aid.
Included amon1 the chemicals
in the kits is Pbos•ene. a World
War 11u that Shotwell aaid was .
responsible for 80 percent or the
au-caused fatalities durln« the
(See KITS, P11e AZ>
Nixon'& Birthday
Plana Undisclosed
Boni es Malibu • m
damage suffered Sunday, when
several expensive homes were
flooded by waves that came
crashing through windows.
Authorities said waves
reached six feet in this beach
community and nine feet in
Ventura on Sunday.
Forecasters blamed a severe
storm in lhe Gulf of Alaska for
turning usually calm swells into
dangerous breakers., They s~d
as long as the low pressure area
exlsts off Alaska, homeowners
will need to worry about each
new high tide. ·
One or the most severely
dam aged residences in the
Malibu Colony was a rental unit
occupied by Selena Lee, a writer
who awoke Sunday to an
unpleasant surprise, Ms. Lee,
who moved in just a week ago,
stepped out or bed and into
water
A seawall had broJcen two
homes away and the ocean
swept in silently durin& the
night. Ms. Lee said she beean
gelling electrical shocks as soon
as she stepped into the water, ao
she fled when she noticed
electrical fixtures sparklne and
smoking. Eventually, the water
rose to waist-deep around her
home and she. wenC to the home
ofatriend.
"My clothi?S, my typewriter,
my stereo. dishes . . • " she
sighed and threw her hands tn
the alr. "I don't know what I'm
goine to do.''
Delly .......... ..,·~ .........
WAVE CATCHES PAIR CHECKING SEAWALL THIS MORNING IN ~APISTRANO BEACH
High Tidea Cauaed Window Breekage; RHldenta Sandbegged At•lnat Surging Sea
$3.7 Million S.Ut Eyed
Settlement Studied on Sycamore Hills
By STEVE MITCHELL
OI tfle o.lly Pll.t It-*'
Representali ves of Laguna
Beach and the Rancho Palos
Verd~s Corp. met Friday to dlS·
cuss the possibilities of settling
more than $37 million in
lawsuits filed against the city by
the land company.
City Attorney George Logan
said the preliminary meeting
was the first of what may be
many meetings exploring setUe-
ment or Ute half dozen lawsuits
concern.i,Qg the Sycamore Hills
Woman Saved
FromSurf at
Laguna Beach
development along Laguna Can-
yon Road.
The 522-acre parcel, owned by
Rancho Palos Verdes, Is the sub-
ject or lawsuits stemming from a
zoning decision by the Clty
Council last year that would
limit construction to 156 homes
on the land and other uses.
The firm ls seeking $37 million
damages from the city, claimine
inverse condemnation due to the
city action.
Logan said the two parties
came tosether Friday, "out of a
desire to explore settlement and
avoid UUgaUon if possible, and
not out of any feelin1 of weak·
ness on their respective posi·
lions."
He said the two parties will
meet again Jan. 2S and that in
the interim, Laguna Beach of·
Ciclals will meet with represen·
tatives of Supervisor Tom
Riley's olfice, "cobcemlng t.tie
interest of the county ln acquil'·
in& a portion of Sycamore Hilll
tor parkland purposes."
He eaid the c.qunty bu lndlcat·
ed it jnteoda to schedule a urtes
of meetln" wtth all affected
\
LB Sets Fll'8• ·
property owners in the area, in·
eluding the Irvine Company.
Rancho Palos Verdes and the Ci-
ty of Irvine.
He sald other considerations
in meeUngs with Oranee County
officials wUI include the align-
ment ot the proposed San Joa-
quin HJlls transportation cor·
ridor.
Attendlnt Friday's meeting
were four city representatives,
includinl{ council members Carl
(See SUIT, Pa1e AZ)
Coat
Cloudy through tonight.
Chance of abowers in·
creaatne to 90 percent
tonlal'lt and decreaain1 to
50 percent TUdday. Lowa
tonight 50 to 56. Hl1bs
Tuesday 60 to 66.
INSIDE TOD" Y ..
Are~ ~dfftW fhot
badriut hn1chu .or• a
tlaree-mortild routmc. Thq
, CN , 4 ltgitfm.ate part 0/ U..
hftneu ecerw. Chq 141/. Se• Ftoturlng. Page Cl. '
•
-
•
li\2 DAIL 'f PILOl L SC
Presley
Outdraws
Pistols
MEMPHIS, Tenn. CAP) -
R ock music by mboliied by
s1deburru. and safely pins met 10
Memph1l> when Elvis Presley
fans gathered to observe his
birthday the same weekend the
Sex Pistol! introduced the city to
punk rock.
Some complained about con-
sumer ripoffs, but in the end the
dead king of rock 'n' roll drew
more of a crowd than the living,
breathlng British rockers, now
on a U S. tour.
Security off icials at
Graceland, the mansion where
Pres l ey lived, died and is
buried, l>aJd 9,600 Cans showed
up during the weekend to com-
m em orate what would have
been Elvi.s' 43rd birthday.
Presley died Aug. 16 of a heart
mlmcnt
The St-x Pistols -whose fans
l>Omet1mes adorn themselves
with safety pins stuck through
their ears or cheeks -drew an
aud1cence of 650 and had a tough
time holdmg on lo that. Many in
the audJencc walked out minutes
after the show began Friday
mght.
"This is gross." s:uct Missy
Rynum, 23, of Memphis,
watching lead singer. Johnny
Rotten blow his nose without
benefit of handkerchief.
The Elvis faithful attended re-...;1 v a I-like gatherings to re-
me mber the king. Two separate
events were staged -"Remem-
bering Elvis" at the fairgrounds
and "A Tribute to Elvis" at the
Cook Convention Center.
At the fairgrounds event,
which cost S4 to enter, Presley's
first customized Cadillac and
one or tus beds were on display.
The convention center exrubi·
tion, brought lo Memphis by pro-
moter Ed Say of Columbus,
Ohio, offered fans copies or a
home movie or the Presley
funeral for $33, and candid
photographs of Presley concerts
m several cibes. Admission was
$2.50.
Marine, Wife
Hurt as Cycle
J umpsCurhing
A Camp Pendleton Marine and
his 17-year-old wife were injured
Sunday when the motorcycle
they were riding jumped a curb
near the San Clemente
municipal pier and hit a fire
.hydrant.
Timothy Hynes, 21, was driv-
ing the bike when the accident
occurred at 7:30 p.m., police
said. He was transported by
firemen in a city ambulance to
.San Clemente General Hospital
and subsequently transferred to
the Camp Pendleton hospital.
His wtfe, Nancy Schmidt, or
213 Ave. Granada, was also
transported to the San Clemente
hospital, but transferred to the
UCI Irvine Medical Center. She
was treated for facial cuts and a
broken right leg and was report-
ed m fair condition today.
No information was available
on Hynes' condition today.
Firemen said he appeared to
have a possible broken left leg,
broken right ankle and facial
cuts.
.EJ/EL FACES
ESCAPER4P
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Tnstead of bemg chauffeured to
work from jail, stuntman Evel
Knievel remained In his jail cell
today awaiting a court heari.ng
on a charge of escape.
Knievel's work·furlough
privilege, which allowed him to
conduct his business during the
daytime while serving a
six-month sentence for assault,
was also in jeopardy followtne
his tardy return to the Hall of
Justice on Saturday.
DAILY PILOT
\
Tour POsters
Irk Candidate
By STEVE MrrCllELL
Oft•hllJPli.t....,
THE CAMPAIGN is less than a week old and already
charges or dJrty politics have been leveled in Laguna
Beach.
Council candidate John Gabrlels claims partisan
posters are being displayed in City Hall -including one
hanging on the door or the city clerk's office.
The posters invite Lagunans to tour six local charm
homes Jan. 22. including Belly Davis'
old house, a cottage on Thalia Street
*
and other architectural oddities In the
Art Colony.
~-
The catch. Gabriels asaerta, ia a SS
donation by Villa1e La1una, spoosors ol
the outing. While Villa1e Laruna
participates in many civic activities,
the one that Irks Gabriels is the group's
habit or backing candidates in City
M•TCMlu Council elections. •
In 1976, for instance, the group backed candidates
Sally Bellerue and Arnold Hano.
"I find these posters in a public building to be in ex·
tremely poor taste if not outright illegal," Gabriell Hid.
"What makes it doubly bad ls that one of these poeters
is in tbe city clerk's office, a plac~ where many cltiiens
come to register to vote, conduct c1ty business and where
candidaws file their papers."
And what really fries Gabriels is the fact that Vice
Mayor Sally Bellerue is the one who passed out the posters
around city hall.
CITY CLERK VERNA ROLLINGER admits Mrs.
Bellerue asked her if she could pln up the poster. But the
city official thinks the poster Is more or a public informa·
lion notice than a partisan piece.
"I've never refused to put up public informaUon on my
bulletin board," she shrugged. She said public notices, of-
ficial documents and even Christmas cards go up on the
board.
But candidate Gabriels is not taking the situation so
lightly.
"I do hope the city takes appropriate steps to remove
these posters forthwith and to institute an investigation
pursuant to filing criminal charges against those connect-
ed with placing partisan posters on public property," he
said.
"It looks as though the city is endorsing candidates,"
Gabriels said, adding that the next illogical step in the se-
quence would be to place them on police cars.
***
CITY COUNCIL CANDIDATES last week almost got
caught up in the bureaucracy they seek lo be a part or.
Laguna Beach department heads have been
beleageured with_quesUons from potential candidates in the
past few weeks, and current councilmen were asked if
there might be some way of organizing the questions for
all candidates. A brochure, perhaps. But, as one coun·
cilman observed, a brochure with information about the ci-
ty might just prompt more questions for city officials to
fjeld and answer-.
ExitPJanA-enterPlanB
How about candidaies handine their questions -in
writing -to the city manaier, with a TeSponse due the
next day?
CANDIDATE WAYNE BAGUN objeeted. "I'd like to
feel I don't have to get caught up in the same bureaucracy
I race at work," he said.
He al.so objected to sharing answers to his queaUons
with other candidates, sayine the object of poJltJcs is to
have one bit of information up on your opponent, "so you
can embarrass him at candidate's nights," he quipped.
It was councilwoman Phyllis Sweeney, who ls herself
seeking a third term on the panel, who had the solution.
"Don't structure this," she said. "Let the candidates
think of their own questions and get their own answers.
"Nobody ever briefed me a?lead or time," she re-
marked.
Threat of Divorce
4~
'Link' to Murders
ROCKFORD, 111. <AP) -
Simon Peter Nelson reportedly
leamM that his wife planned to
divorce him only hours before
his six children were found
bludgeoned and stabbed to death
in their beds.
Nelson. 46, was lo be ar-ral~ned today In the killings,
which Winnebago County
Coroner John Seward said OC·
curred late Friday or early
Saturday.
Police said the children were
found tn several rooms of the
Nelson home on a quiet, middle·
class street. The bodies of
Roseann, 5, and her slater, Jen·
nifel'. 12, were found ln their
bedroom, beaten and stabbed re·
peatedly.
Their.four brothers~ Matthew,
7; Andrew. 9; Simon Peter Jr.
10: and David, 3, were 1lm1larly
slain, said police Capt. J\tcbard
Anderson. The family's pet
• dacbab\M was found with ita
throat slashed.
Jnv.U,ators uJd the children
had beeD killed, apparently as
they 1lept, wttb a rubber mallet
and a buntlnl lmife.
Michael Weldon, Nel1on•a
employer ancl friend, Hid he,.
turned from a vacatiOa to the of·
flee of NADJCtmtllt Recruit.era
Inc. Jut "* to find NellOn com.Pleteb' fbanlecl in hll at.
tltud• towll'd hi.a trolbled ,... year .m81'11qe.
.. He Mid tho wbQle Wna etart.-
ed to cocne to a b•d over the
weelCUd bet~ ... 11td w~ .. .., Uiat Ann bad ae\ don ru.l ... ,,... ftN Celta1D thloo
he .... 4ofnl •:,11," to •top Ii.. ·~. ov-. t.aftd faclal utr.''
MD •JWiQia, .. hal IGM to
Mr l~'about • dJYOtte bUt
.had .,._ lldnled tO 'IM ••'1 and tbll* Ullnp over fW a cou·
pl• ot dm. acCordlna to the
Rockford Morning Star.
With her husband's
knowledge, she checked into a
Milwaukee motel Thursday
morning. But. the next day, she
called the lawyer and told him
to proceed with the divorce, the
Star reported.
Weldon said Nelson left the of-
fice abruptly Friday. ·
Nelson later arrived at the
motel, and around 6 a.m. a desk
clerk telephoned POllce saying
there was trouble ln Mrs.
Nelson's room.
Police said they found Nelson
beating bit wife I n the
bathroom, and they arrested
him.
On Mrs. Nelson's advice
Milwaukee police called
authorities in Rockford and told
th~m to break into the Nelson
home, where theJ found the children's bodles.
LB Thief Takes
'Jewelry, Camera
A t.acma Beach womua ,. ~orttd tbe 1011 of _.,000 In
ewe1J7 and a camena from ber omt an. ftndina tbe bact-.. torctd oPlft.
Cberle Palmer, n. a fltl*I lilt~, tokl poltef IOIBeont
entered blr bome at M Putr Ave. Prlday nl1bt. taklnf • necklaoH, earl'IQfl aad a • catnua.
Grnt War.
All.Q lnch~tn ~ eblpraenta to H lhMe frocrl the two bues la CyJDOte:n 'Chloride, Ltw\llte
,.nd thole clmnical a1enls that
m•ke up what was known m
World War J as mustard gas.
Spokesmen at both military
bases empbasiied there is no
nerve gas or any or it~
sophisticated derivatives in-
volved ln the shipments.
They also s4lid there are no
biological or eerm warJare
materials Involved in what will
be the sending or obsolet\l
chemical warfare weaponry to
its ultimate destruction.
Joe Harkins. ttie public in-
formation officer at the Seal
Beach weapons staUoo, said the
shipment from there will be five
pallets of material weighing
3,000 pounds.
Among safeguards taken to
see the deadly vapors do not in
some way esc:tpe to the at-
mosphere Is packaging of the
chemicals in vapor proof baas,
Harkins said.
He also said the shipment will
be accompanied by a trained
Army escort unit equipped with
devices that can detect any
leakage.
First step lo the hop or the 94
test kits will be by helicopter
from the weapons station to the
Los Alamitos Naval Air Station.
There, the chemicals will be
loaded aboard a transport car-
rier and sent on to Stapleton Air
Field near Denver.
Frona Page A I
REVIEW. • •
buildings on the new northern campus.
Under the district's construc-
tion manaeement program, the
contracts have already been
signed and work has begun,
said Dr. Edward Hart, assistant
superintendent for general plan-
ning.
He said contracts for work on
the interiors of the four build-
ings should be awarded in
February. The campus is
scheduled to be completed and
open to students by the fall
semester which begins in
August.
Despite the recent rains, Hart
said, "we still have a shot" at
completing the campus on time.
But he added, "We can't have
too many delays."
The trustees' meeting will
begin at 7 p.m. in the college
library with a report on the
Com prebehsi-.e E~ucaHon
Training Act <C.E.T.A.) Pro-
gram. The business portion or·
the meeµng ia expected to begin
at 7:30p.m.
u,.1,_.
CANCEROUS TUMOR
Justice Wllllam Brennan
High Court's
Senior Judge
'Has Cancer'
WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S.
Supreme Court Justice William
J . Brennan Jr.. the senior
member of the nation's highest
court, has a cancerous tumor on
a vocal cord, a court spokesman
said today.
Brennan, 71, was not on the
bench when the court met today
alter a four-week recess.
Barrett McGurn, the court's
spokesman, said Brennan is not
expected to participate in those
cases the court will hear or
consider for the next 10 days.
"A biopsy of a Dec. 14
laryngoscopy revealed a small
squamo(ls cell carcinoma -a
malignant tumor -of the left
vocal cord." McGum said in a
written statement. "Cobalt
radiation treatment beagn Dec
22 and is continuing."
McGurn said that Brennan has
not been hospitalized but is
traveling from his Washington
home to a nearby hospital for
treatment.
McGum quoted Brennan's
doctors as saying the justice is
doing well and "that full
recovery with cure is expected."
Brennan and Justice Thurgood
Mars hall compose the court's
liberal bloc.
Brennan has been a member
of the court since 1957. He
served as a New Jersey
Supreme Court justice ·before
being nominated to his present
post by President Eisenhower.
Fro.a Page A I
TIDES ...
Newport Bta~b Lllt4uard Capt. Logan Lockabey said his
beaches are experiencing no tide or surf problems today.
M 1nor noodJng along portions
or Pacific Coast Highway 1n cen.
tral • W't.Sel Beach. primarily at
Patk Avenue and also Admlral-
ly Woy slowed mid-morning
commuters as it lapped inlo
trafttc lanes.
The day's high Ude caUMd waters of Bolu Chica marsh
and the lnland a.ay. in Sunset
Beach to occasionally ~pill over
their basins.
Flooding also occurred on
Pacific Coast Highway near the
westerly bluffs of Huntlneton
Beach, where high tides sent
water sloshing over the beach
crest and into the road
·OCWoman
Faces Drunk
Drive Charge
Laguna Beach police arrested
a Fullerton motorist Sunday
night, following a head-on col-
lision on Broadway.
Police s aid Lorraine J.
Holloman, 30, of Fullerton pulled
out of a service station onto
Broadway at about 6 p.m. Swi-
day, colliding head·on with a
vehicle driven by Craig L.
Smith, 22, of 710 Summit Way,
Laauna Beach.
Smith, his passenger Lisa
Hall, 18, and Ms. Holloman were
injured in the collision and
transported to South Coast Com-
munity Hospital.
All three were treated for
their inJuries and released, with
Ms. Holloman being booked into
Laguna Beach Jail on charges ol
felony drunken driving. She was
later released on her own re·
cognizance.
Frowt Page A 1·
SUIT ...
Johnson-and Phyllis Sweeney,
City Attorney Logan and Plan-
ning Director DougSchmlti.
Rancho Palos Verdes
representatives included vice
presidents O. L. Marlett and M.
Steponovich, and attorneys John
Pollock and John Harris.
Both sides agreed Friday that,
pending conclusion of dis-
cussions at conferences, no
public statements will be made
concerning progress in the talks. -
Logan said, however, that
press releases will be made on a
·regular basis concerning the dis-•
cussions
Here are the facts. Savers who have certificate
accounts at Mutual Savings CcJ n l?orrow up to 900..6 of
their savings account balance without Incurring
the usual substanti~I Interest penalty required by
federal regulations for earry withdrawal.
EXAMPLE: You have a certificate with us earning
at the annual rate of 7%% <S 1.000 minimum.
6 year term>. A need arises-vacation.
e
R
• IS.
new car. emergency. what-
ever -tor you to have some
cash. You can barrow up
to 90% from us at only 8%%
AnnucJI Percentage Rate.
while the account continues to
earn at 7%%. A difference
of only 1 .'o <.>lmllar CJrrange-
ments can be made on any
ot <:'t Jr term '::>avinas certificates
1 hP ddvantaqc 1s obvious.
You can Jfford to put your
savlngs in a crrtiflcate
thilt DilYS considerably higher
lntere5t than a passbook
account without hc:iving to
concern yourself about
the required penalty should
you need funds from the
account before It matures.
Naturally. Mutual Savings
accounts ilrc Insured to
S40.000 by an agency of the
federal government.
Compare where you presently
xivc. All SClvings Institutions
are not the same. You w111 find It easy to open an
accoµnt at Mutual Savlnos since we can arrange to
tr(lnsf er your funds from wherever they are now
rocated.Call orv1s1t any or our 16 SOutnern Callfornla
ot11cesfor fUrther details.
MUTUAL
·SAVINGS
•
'
.~
Orange Coast
EDITION
Today's Clo log
N.Y. Stoeks
, I
VOL. 71, NO. 9, 3 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY 9, 1978 N TEN CENTS
Grant Weighed
Newport Sets Housing Hearing
Newport Beach c ity coun·
cilmen tonight will hold the
second hearing on a proPosal
that they apply for a $536,000
grant Crom the federal Deparl·
menl of Hous ing and Urban
Development <HUD).
The hearing. slated as the
second item 1n the 7. 30 p. m.
meeting, 1s being held to decide 1f
the city should apply for the
grant, and if so, what s hould be
done with the money.
The city just completed a
,
similar three·year HUD erant.
using the money to acquire the
senior citizen center in Corona
de! Mar.
Jn the initial hearing last
month, sentiment was just about
evenly dwided between those in
ravor or applying and those op-
posed
The major point of contention
seems t o center on the
guidelines for use or the grant
money
The funds are handed out un·
Tax Upheld
Couples' Appeal fails
WASln'.'\GTON <AP> The US. Supreme Court
refused today to hear an appeal challenging the m-
t•c1mc t~1x rates the feder;,il government imposes on
married persons filing joint returns.
The JU:>lices turned down without comment the
appeal of two Indiana married couples who con-tended
that the tax rates are unconstitutional because when
both husba nd and wife have s ignif ·
ica nt income they must pay more taxes than single
persons with identical incomes.
In urging the court to reject the appeal, govern-
ment lawyers said disparities in tax liability are "in·
evitable."
"A marriage.neutral income lax is impossible,"
the Justice Drpartmenl s aid, adding that while the
gcl\·ernment's method of taxing income is n ot
perfect. 1l 1s cons titutional
William .ind Wanda Barter and Ralph and
Pauline Blair of New Haven. Ind .. sued the govern-
ment over their taxes for 1971, the first year the Tax
Hdorm Act of 1969 became effective.
Military Bases
Deadly Chemicals
To Leave County
By GARY GRANVILLE
Ol IM D•llY Pllet St•ll
Deadly World War I vintage
ar gasses stored at two Oran~e
ounty military bases will be
hipped to Denver l ater this
;month in a trial program ~ime<!
lullimatelv at the che micals
''environmentally safe" destruc·
ti on.
A spokesman at the U.S.
Nual Weapons Station in Seal
Be.ich said the shipment date
for 94 chemical warfare test kits
kept there has tentatively been
set for Jan. 25.
No firm dale has been set for
the shipment of six similar kiLc;
stored al El Toro Marine Corps
Air Station, according to Capt.
J ohn Shotwell.
lie said the chemical "'arfare
agents were declared obsolete in
1970.
"We've been wailing for in·
slructions on how to dispose of
them ever since.'' Shotwell said.
Jncluded among the chemicals
in the kits is Phosgene, a World
War I gas that Shotwell said was
responsible for 80 percent or the
gas·caused fatalities during the
Great War.
Also included in the shipments
Coast
Weather
Cloudy through tonight.
Chance of showers in-
creasing to 90 percent
tonight and decreasing to so percent Tuesday. Lows
tonight 50 to 56. Hlgha
Tuesday 80 to 66.
INSIDE TODAY
Arco~ dlfttl that
bu1i1'UI lunchu .ore .o
lhr"•marlfni routlM. Th•JI . cm a~· part oJ lu kriMa «CM, ,,..,, q . Se•
F•ohlrilttl, Page Cl.
to be made from the two bases
is Cyanogen Chloride, Lewlsite
and those chemical agents that
make up what was known in
World War I as mustard gas.
Spokesmen at both military
bases emphasized there is no
n erve gas o r any of i ts
sophisticated derl v ati ves in·
volved In the shipments.
They also sald there are no
biological or germ warfare
materials involved in what will
be the sending of obsolete
chemical warfare weaponry to
its ultimate destruction.
Joe Harkins, the public in·
formation officer at the Seal
Beach weapons station, sald the
(Sff KITS, Page AZ)
NB Council
·To Comider
Curb Color
A large crowd of post oCfice
customers is expected to turn
out tonight when Newport Beach
city cotDlcUmen conduct a bear-
ing on what color to paint the
curb in front of the Riverside
Avenue post office.
Led by Newport Beach reai-
d en t John Mlller, p1ostal
customers have been lobbying
. for gr~. PresenUy the curb is
painled red.
Ci y officials an4 citizen ad·
vlsory committees have recom·
mended against a change to
green beca~o there ls a bicycle
lane that borders the curb in
front of the post office.
Allowing cars to park there,
even for a few minutes, they say.
would cnly cause conllictt With
the blcyclista using the Jane.
City offlctal• bave recom-
mended that curb9 on nearby
Avon Street be painted 1reen
and more of the post office
parktn1 lot be opened up to the ~bllc . Miller,.,. thoM.,. all line
ldeu, but be aUll WllliU th• curb
~alnted ~ Re DCltel tbat
tb ,.. II anoCliet blqcle IMO on
the other llde of_ R1Hralde
Aveitue aDcl b• questlcma the Mid tor t'tlO w.e.:.
HI• •"ll•don li to rtmove tbe tane'iD hODt. OI the pOlt ol·
flee, ao can tOUld pm at the
curb wttbOut tDCS-.erbl• Mo· el• ndera. The ~ ojtiU ......... at 'l:m
p.m.~dtl~~ben.
der the Housing and Community
Development Act which requires
generally that the dollars be put
to use to aid a disadvantaged
segment or a given city.
Some city staff proPosals for
the new grant include projects
such as park development and
purchase of bus benches.
However, officials of the
Southern California Association
of Governme nts. which ad·
ministers the ~rants for the
(SeeGRANT, Page At)
East Hali
Of Nation
Punished
By The Associated Press
Snow squalls in the Great
Lakes, sub-freezing weather in
the South and coastal floods with·
plum meting temperatures and
hurricane-force winds In the
Northeast -not a nice day in
the nation's eastern half today.
Hurricane·force winds swept
across Cape Cod al Chatham,
hurricane tide gates were closed
across harbor channels to shut
out the battering surf al New
Bedford, Mass., Providence,
R .l., and Stamford. Conn.
Also in Connecticut. two Am·
trak trains were delayed for
hours by a stuck drawbridge and
a third was hailed by windblown
debris on the tracks. Waterbury
police said the wind triggered
burglar alarms, and in Hartford,
firemen said the wind and rain
apparently set orr the city's air
raid alarms, awakening resi·
dents around midnight.
Heavy rains in Massachusetts
took atleastone life.
The Great Lakes east to New
York state area bore the brunt
or the snow -seven inches fell in parts or Ohio -and the Na·
tional Weather Service said
snow squalls that reduced vis·
ibility to i.ero at some lakeshore
points would continue through
the night.
As much as· seven inches or
snow had fallen in Southwest
Virginia by mid-morning.
From the mid·Atlantic states
to Maine, wind s toppled
transmission towers. blew out
windows along the coast and
drove tides to more than 6 feet
above normal levels.
In Minnesota, where the wind·
chill factor drove temperatures
to 64 below at Rochester near
the Twin Cities, residents dealt
with burst water pipes and had
trouble starting cars.
Temperatures in Georgia fell
Crom the 60s to the teens during
the night, icinf( road-; and caus·
ing numerous power outages.
Nixon's Birthday
Plans Undisclosed
.. Happy Birthday, President
Nlxon" the billboard read today
at the San Clemente Inn on the
occasion of the former presi·
dent's 65th birthday.
A family spokesman could not
be reached today in regard to
the Nixon family's birthday
plans. ln former years, family
mem hers and close friends have
gathered for a quiet birthday
celebration at the Nixons'
Becluded seaside estate In San
Cleme.nte.
DellY ...... ""*.., .kiwi .. k..-.W
WAVE CATCHES PAIR CHECKING SEAWALL THIS MORNING IN CAPISTRANO BEACH
High Tides Caused Wlndow Break•ge; Re1ldent1 S•ndb•gged Agalnat Surging Sea
Tides Batter Shoreline
Sandbags at Capo Beach t,o ·prot,ect f!o~
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of U. o.llr ~llel Si.ff
High tides and heavy surf
.brought troubles to several
areas of the Orange Coast Sun·
day and today, including a
* * * More Floods?
s tretch of homes along
Capistrano Beach where waves
damaged a breakw~ter and
several windows in a beacbfroot
home.
About a dozen volunteers were
* * *
Weekend's Sumhine
Gives · Way to Rain
By MICHAEL PABKEVICK
Of lllt Deitr ~ Staff
Sparkling weekend weather
gave way to new showers along
the Orange Coast today 'and
weather forecasters say more
rain is on the way tonight and
Tue:1day.
Coastal flooding remains a
possibility near west facing
beaches if high tides link with .
waves whipped up by a new
storm pushing into the area
from the Gulf of Alaska.
Salt water made its way
across streets in Seal Beach and
Sunset Beach early today, but
authorities said the roadways
were still passable to drivers.
And high water Crom Newport
Bay overflowed onto Balboa
Bouelvard thls momina, forcing
the closure of one lane near 44th
Street.
However, surf that pounded
the beaches o( San Diego and
Malibu Sunday was not evident
along the Orange Coast.
Forecasters are still
predicting the possibillty or
breakers as high as 10 feel late
today and Tuesday momin1.
The latest storm front moved
into the area after dropping
s ubstantial amounts or rain in
the northwest and in the San
Fr ancisco Bay Area. •
Forecasters are callln1 for
continued showers tonight and
Tuesday and possibly
Wednesday. -:
Skies are expected to remain
cloudy with high temReratures
near 60 degrees and overnight
lows near SO.
Sm all craft advisories were
Issued today.
Today's high Ude, up to seven
feet, occurred at 9 a.m. The tide
will be nearly as high Tuesday
morning ~t about 9:30 ..
sandbaggJ°ng homes along Beach
Road in Capistrano Beach this
morning, following Sunday's
high tides and surf which broke
several large windows in a home
owned by John Reynard, 36787'
Beach Road.
•'We've got the windows In
front barricaded now," Reynard
·said this morning. He said fami-
ly members a nd neighbors
shored up the front of the home
after six and seven foot waves
broke the two windows Sunday
morning.
"The last time it was this bad
was seven years ago, 11 Reynard
said. "But we bullt a seawall
after that Incident and the
damage is really moderate this
time in comparison.
"We've probably got problems
for a couple more days," he •
said. Most or the damage Sun-
day was restricted to the south •
end or Beach Road, near Poche
Beach.
Reynard said the seven-vear-
old rock breakwater is protect·
ing about five Beach Road
houses, but added that Sunday's
high tides and surf damaged a
. wooden seawall adjacent to his
home.
<SeeTJDES, Page A2)
Murder Eyed;
Body Found
Off Newport
r
Elvis Shades PistOis
An autopsy was scheduled to-'
day on the body of a North Long
Beach a1an found noattng about
four mlles off Newport Beach
Sunday afternoon.
Police, who say they do not
know how Ernie Gene Rettin1er,
20, died, say they have tentatJve-
ly listed his death as a homicide. · Fans Honor Presley Birt"' Skip Pwlk Rock
MEMPHlS, Tenn. (AP) -
Rock music 1ymbolized by
aldebums and 1a!ety plna met in
Meml>hl• when Elvis Presley'
fan1 cathered to obiserve bis
birthday the 1ame weekend the
Sex Platols Introduced the city to
punk rock. •
Some cocnplained about con-
1um er rijloff1, but ln the end the
dead klnC ol rock 'n' roll dre.w
more ol a crowd than lhe Uvlng,
breatbin1 British rockers, now
00 a u .s. t()W'.
Security otrlclah at
Graceland, the manaion where ~retley llved, died arid ta:
tnlriet, sud t,800 faoa 1ho'nd
up durt.na the weekend to com· memonte wbat would ba'• b••a l:IYt1• Urd birthday.
Preale, died Aua. le of a hem
Capt. Richard Hamilton of the
Newport &ac.b PoUce Depart. •
me.nt said the autopsy was or-
dered to aid lnvesUgators In Pin·
nlng down the cause of death.
He noted that RetUnger wu
found with an indentation above
the right eye and that the entlro
ri1ht eye area wu bruised.
The body wa1 spotted from 11
com merdal fishlnl boat, the An·
na Marta.
The crew of a Cont Guard
cutter recovered th• body at
about 2 p.m. and brought \l to
tbt Orange County Harbor
Department beadqu.rttra ln
Newport lkrtiOr.
:All exarnhiaUoa ol tho body by
... lnv..U,ator crorn th• cor·
Ofter'• oence lndlc.ied ..Rettiqer
bad beeiJ In the •ater·for elpt
to 10 dan. ~c• MIL
,
j 2 DAILY PILOT N
Falls Over Cliff
Newport Beach paramedics and helpful
citizens aid 38-year-old Robert Sanders of
Newport Beach Sunday afternoon after he
:.lipped and tumbled down a beach cliff
nc·ar Heliotrope Avenue. Sanders, of 4234
• 1171
Hilaria Way, suffered bruises and a lower
back injury but declined treatment after
being transported to Hoag Memorial
Hos pital, a fire department spokesman
said.
• Ill Malibu .
KAL1BU CAP) Surf
pounded to tb• doorsteps of the
txeluaivo Malibu colony at hl1h
tide today, but a shift in lhe seas
apparently averted damage to
homes.
Waves up to five feet high
washed up to lhe i.undbags and
board barriers erected by
residents after six-root seas,
w'shed into some homes
Sunday, smashing fences and
stairways.
The Ude was smaller today
than expected, both ln 14.allbu
and further north in Ollftard,
authorities reported. •
"Thls ls like a Sunday picnic
compared to yesterday," said
county fireman Tom Baker, who
was off duty but stayed behlnd
to help if needed.
Offlcials said about 50 county
Fire Department camp crews,
who helped residents place
SANDBAGS IN Sunday's seas.
remained behind but were not
neederl.
* * *'
Most ot the affected properties
were oceanfront homes on
Malibu Canyon Road JWIL north
of the colony which is heavily
populated by entertainment
celebrities.
The bomes were situated on
bluffs or stilts and so were not
hit by the ijde.
Aided by about 50 county
firefighters, lifeguards and
volunteers, residents frantically
dug ditches and put up sandbags
to try to avoid more of the
damage suffered Sunday, when
several expensive homes were
flooded by waves that came
craahlng through windows.
Authorities 'said waves
reached six feet in this beach
community and nine feet in
Ventura on Sunday.
Forecasters blamed a severe
i.torm in the Gulf of Alaska for
turning usually calm swells into
dangerous breakers. They said
as long as the low pressure area
* * *
Troops Help Fight
lleachfront Erosion
By The Associated PreH
Gale-whipped seas threatened
a 12-mile length of Northern
California beachfront property
today as another Pacific storm
unleashed heavy rains
throughout the already-soaked
region.
About 100 soicHers from Fort
Ord were ordered into Santa
Cruz County with sandbags to
help protect the beachfront
· against a second day of furious
tides. (Related photo, AS>
exists off Alaska, homeowners
will need to worry about each
new h11h t.tde. ·
One oC the most severely
damaged residences m the
Malibu Colony was a rental unit.
occupied by Selena Lee, a writer
who awoke Sunday to •
unpleasant surprise. Ms. Lee,
who moved in just a week a.10.
stepped out of bed and into
water.
A seawall had broken two
homes away and the ocean
swept in stlenlly during the
night. Ms. Lee said she began
gettlne eleetrlcal s hocks as soon
as she stepped into the water, so
she fled wben she noticed
electrical fixtures sparking and
smoking. Eventually, the water
rose to waist-deep around her
home and she went to the home of a friend.
Frottt Page A I
TIDES ...
He estimated dAmage to his
home at about $1 ,000. •
Further south, San Clemente
lifeguards were right on top of
the high tide situation, with
lifeguard Sheridan Byerly re-
porting surf eating away at. the
llfeauard tower.
"It's not ioini to do any
damage," he said today, ''but
it's taking sand away from un.
derneath me right now."
He said a potted palm tree in
front of the llfeguard station,
''Isn't going to make it through
the morrung."
U.S. ·Tests First Cruise Missile
The front covered most of the
western United States and was
the second in a 1·2 combination
of storms. The first hit last
week, drenching California and
covering the Sierra with snow.
Newport Beach Lifeguard
Capt. Logan Lockabey said his
beaches are experiencing no tide
or surf problems today.
Minor flooding along portions
of Pacific Coast Highway in cen·
tral Sunset Beach. primarily at
Park Avenue and also Admiral-
ty Way slowed mid-morning •
commuters as it lapped into
traffic lanes.
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
11e\\ Tomahawk cruise missile is
IJl!ing tested to find out whether
•l would be vulnerable to de-
fl'ns1 ve missile systems. the
l'cntagon said today.
Officials said the first test was
held Saturday at Nellis Air
Force Base, Nev., and was a ... ucccss. Hut they declined to
dcl>cnbc the basis for their judg-
11H·nt The <.innouncement gave
1 .. w dt'tails.
Du ring the test. the cruise
rn1s:-.ilc was fired from a Navy
planl· Radar described as part
of ··a rrpresentative air defense
.,,·stem" then tried to detect and
lrark the missile.
There wai. no attempt to knock
High Coun's
Senior Judge
'Has Cancer' ~
WASHJNGTON CAP) -U.S.
~upreme Court Justice William
.J Brennan Jr , the senfor
m<'m ber of the nation's hiRhesl
'ourl. has a cancerous tumor on
" vocal cord, a cou rt spokesman
~aid today.
Brennan, 71. was not on the
h<'nch when the court met today
<ifter a four-week recess.
Barrell McGurn, the court's
~pok«\:'lman, said Drennan is not
(•xpected to participate in those
<'ases the court will hear or
consider for the next 10 days.
"A biopsy of a Dec. 14
'l.iryngoscopy revealed a small
:-.quamous cell carcinoma -a
malignant tumor -of the left
vocal cord." McGurn said in a
written statement. "Cobalt
radiation treatment beagn Dec.
22 and 1s continuing "
McGum said that Brennan has
not been hospitalized but 1s
traveling from his Washington
home to a nearby hospital for
treatment.
McGum quoted Brennan's
doctors as saying the justice Is
doing well and "that full
recovery with cure is expected.•·
Drennan and Justice Thurgood
Marshall compose the court's
liberal bloc.
Brennan has been a member
of the court since 1957. He
served as n New Jersey
Supreme Court justice before
being nominated to his present
post by President Eisenhower.
OttANO•COAIT H
DAILY PILOT
............. ......_. __ ,_
, ..... ~ Yk•"""._. ........ ........
T--. ..... .. ..,
~-=-OWM•·'-......... .... Mall! ........... ....
down the cruise missile with a
defensive weapon, the Pentagon
said. Such an attempt witb live
defensive missiles is expected
later .
Some critics have challenged
the cruise missile concept, yon-
tending it could be neutralized
by sophisticated Soviet air de-
fenses in the 1980s and beyond.
The cruise missile is a small
pilotless jet bomber, about 14
feel long and very narrow. It ls
designed to hug the contours of
the earth while flying toward its
target after being launched from
U.S. bombers, submarines or
surface shipi. outside Soviet tcr-
ntory.
Its backers say the cruise mis
Ul'I l"Mle
CANCEROUS TUMOR
Justice Wiiliam Brennan
Frmtt Page Al
KITS .•.
shipment from there will be five
pallets of material weighing
3,000 pounds.
Among safeguards taken J.o
see the deadly vapors do not in
some way escape to the at·
mosphere is packaging of the
chemicals in vapor proof bags,
Harkins said.
He also said the shipment will
be accompanied by a trjllned
Arm y escort unit equipped with
devices that can detect any
leakage.
First st~p in the bop of the 94
test klts will be by helicopter
from the weapon1 staUon to the
Los Alamitos Naval Air StaUon.
There, the chemicals will be
loaded aboard a transport car·
rier and aent on to Stapleton Air
Field near Denver.
Harkins said plans caU lor the
chemicals to be destroyed by tn-
. cineraUon.
·1·ne ·iwo S.bipmenta from
Oran1e Count1 are part ot a
trial proaram tnv0Ivtn1 almllar •htpmenta from 12 other
mllltary buu throuibout the country. Rartlna said. .
Involved In the trial pro1Dm
are 1..500 ot Ule eaUm•ttd 21,000 ebemloal warfare teat Jetta teat.
tered amona tbe 1' mUJtary buea. · • •
The tralnlnf ltlll wor• de· lillied to provfd• fte.td lta1Abaj
fo7-trioopt to enabl• them to
tdenutj tbe odon lDd otber lft. d&e.U. of the DnMDC• ot tour toxtc cuae1, alt of tb•m dacdbed eltlMr u ChoklDc er
blltterinl .......
sale's small radar profile, plus
its low altitude flight, would ena-
ble It to penetrate air defenses,
especially if launched in clouds
or possibly several hundred
weapons. all heading for targets
inside the Soviet Union.
In preliminary studies last
year, defense officials have said, u. s. scientists round that a
system similar to the American
Army's Hawk air derense mis·
sile complex might be able to
counter a cruise missile attack.
The llawk system would have lo
be equipped with some im-
proved trans mitters, computers
und other components.
Should thc,Russ1ans be able to
Divorce Plan
Triggered Six
Kids' Slayings?
ROCKFORD. 111. (AP) -
Simon Peter Nelson reportedly
learned that his wire planned to
divorce him only hours before
his six children were found
bludgeoned and i>tabbed to death
an their beds.
Nelson. 46, his burly frame
c lad in a blue-gray jail
1 um ps uit. appeared before
Judge David Smith of Circuit
Court today to hear the charges
placed against him and to re·
ceive a court-appoint ed at·
torney.
Nelson stood lethargically, his
hands clasped behind his back.
as he listened to court proceed·
mgs. He entered no plea, but
Judge Smith set Jan. 13 for
another hearing
Winnebago County Coroner
John Seward said the slayings
occurred late Friday or early
Saturday.
Politce said the children were
found ln several rooms of the
Nelson home on a quiet, middle-
c 1 ass street. The bodies of
Roseann, 5, and her sister, Jen·
niter, 12, were found in their
bedroom, beaten end slabbed re·
peatedly.
Their four brothers: Matthew,
7; Andrew, 9; Simon Peter Jr.
10; ond David, 3, were slm11ar1y
slain, said police Capt. Richard
Anderson. The family's pet
dachshund was found wlth ita
throat slashed.
lnvesUgators said the cblldren
had been killed, apparently as
they slept, with a rubber mallet
a.nd a hunting knife.
Fro•PageAI
GRANT.-••
federal government, have said
they want tlle new 1rant money
to be used exclusively for pro-
vltlon of houalna for low and moderate-income f amWes.
A COl.tDtll•appolnted advisory
committee has recommended
that th• clty UH the $538,000 to
bu1 land to turn over to a d•·
veloper for auch houalng .
Docton Stay OD
NAPA CAP) -Napa Stat• Hotpltal doctora, w~ bad vow.d
to realp t.Od4Q' unl .. condidona
improved and ataff w11 ln·
er••~ •17 the)' will atq .on tJi• Job '10 IOOd faltb" 1*auae
Of Coult lldroft lallt ... , --Napa Su,.rlor Coon .1ud1• Robert~ C'dlrecl a bNmc
tor Aprl~ 10.
develop such a system, officials
have said, they would be able to
give the American cruise mis·
site a bad time if the defensive
system was deployed in large
numbers, perhaps as many as
500 lo 1,000 sales.
These officials emphasized
that the Soviet Union does not
have that kind of system.
although Russia has an ex
tensive defensive network de-
signed to counter attacking
bombers.
These officials said it would
take the Russians many years to
develop and d~ploy the kind of
system they were talking about
which was used as a model in
last year's study involving a
modification of a Hawk system.
As fqr\lhe present set o! t.esLs,
the Pentagon has said that data
on the Tomahawk's survivablli·
ty will be used to improve the
missile.
The current storm moved in
early Sunday, bringing rain
from the coastline into the hleh mountains.
San Rafael was thumped by
more than an inch of rain during
a 24·hour period ending early
today. Most· other points
received between a third lo a
full inch of rainfall, the National
Weather Service said.
County officials said the Army
agreed to send the men after the
rerleral Disaster Assistance
Adm inistrat1on refused a
request to have a 12-mile stretch or beach near the community of
Las Olas declared a disaster
area.
Sunday evening the county
Board of Supervisors declared a
s tate of emergency "beyond
which local government can
cope." Earlier in the day, the
hig h tides and rough seas
d a 01 aged beach front property
and rooted Capitola Pier from
its plhngs
The day's high tide caused
waters of Bolsa Chica marsh
and the inland bay in Sunset
Beach to occasionally spill over
their basins.
Flooding also occurred on
Pacific Coast Highway near the
westerly bluffs of Huntington
Beach, where high tides sent
waler sloshlng over the beach
crest and into the road.
Sections of the new parking
lots at Bolsa Chica State Beach
were slso rinsed by the pounding
surf as it crested the beach, but
the runorc was cont.alned easily.
"We're watching the surf pret-
ty closely," said a police
spokesman in Seal Beach, where •
m past years hi1h tides and
storm surf have swamped aee-
llons of the downtown ocean·
front distri£l.
Here are the tacts. Saver<:> who have certificate
.:iccounts at Mutual savings can barrow up to 900.-b of
their savings account balance without Incurring
the usual substantial interest penalty required by
federal regulations for early wlthc!raw.JI.
r XAMPLE· You have a certificate with us earning
at the annual rate of 7:X% cs1.ooo minimum.
6 year term>. A need arises-vacation.
new car. emergency. what-
ever-for you to have some
cash. You ccin barrow up
• e to 90~o t rom us al only 8~%
Annual PPrcentage Rate.
while the cJccount continues to
earn at /~~o. A d11ference IR
oan
hr~..Jlo":';I If iS.
of only 1 ). Similar arrange-
ments can be made on any
or our term savings certificates
1 he advantage 1s obvious.
You can afford to put your
'~,wings In a certificate
thc1t p<1vs conc,idcrably higher
interest than a pac;soook
<iccount without l1clVlng to
concern yourself aoout
ow1 works.
the required penalty should
you need funds from the
account before It matures.
Naturally. Mutual savings
accounts are Insured to
$40.000 by an agency of the
feder al government. whe e • OU g f If. compJre where you presently
save. All savings Institutions
cir e not the same. You w111 find 1t easy to open an
account at Mutuat savings since we can arrange to
transfer your funds trom wnerever tney are now
located. Call or vrs1t any of our 16 soutnern ca11tomfa
omces for 1urtherdetalls.
MlJT:UAL
SAVINGS . ... -............
AN rouac.. HOUlltfO LENDUt
.
\
' .
-
Saddlebaek
--
:Afternoon
N •• Stoek
VOL. 71', NO. 9, 3 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA M ONDAY, JANUARY 9, 1978 TEN CENTS
Shifting Seas Save Boni es • m Malibu
MALIBU (AP) Surf
pounded to the doorsteps of the
exclusive Malibu colony at high
tide today, but a shaft in the seas
apparently averted damage to
homes.
Waves up to fi ve feet high
washed up to the i.andbags and
board barriers creeled by
rei.1dcnt.s after sax foot seas.
washed into i.omc homes
Sunda¥, smashing fences and
stairways.
The tide was smaller today
* * *
than expected, both in Malibu
and further north in Oxnard,
authorities reported.
"This is like a Sunday picnic compared to yesterday," said
county fireman Tom Baker, who
was off duty but stayed behind
to help if needed.
OCficials said about SO county
Fire Department camp crews,
who helped residents place
SANDBAGS IN Sunday's seas,
remained behind but were not
needPrf
* * *
Mosl of the affected properties
were oceanfront homes on
Malibu Canyon Road just nQrth
of the colony which is heavily
populated by entertainment
celebrities.
The homes were situated on
i>lu!fa or aUlts and so were not
hit by the tide.
Aided by about 50 county
firefi1hters, lifeguards and
voluntffrs, residents rl'antically
du1 ditches and put up sandbaes
lo try to avoid more or the
* * *
damage suffered Sunday, when
several expensive homes were
flooded by waves that came
crashing through windows.
AuthorlUes a aid waves reached six feet in this beach
commwtity and ni.ne feet ln
Ventura on Sunday.
Forecasters blamed a severe
storm in the Gulf or Alaska for
turning u,,ually caJm swells into
danierous breakers. They sald
as long as the low pressure area
exists off Alaska, homeowners
will need to worry about each
new high Ude. ·
One of the most severely
damaged residences in· the
Malibu Colony was a rental unit
occupied by Selena Lee, a writer
wtlo awoke Sunday to an
unpleasant surprise. Ms. Lee,
who moved in just a week ago,
. stepped out of bed and into
water.
A seawall bad broken two
homes away and the ocean
swept in silently during the
night. Ms. Lee said she began
getting electrical shocks a.s soon
as she stepped Into t.be water, so
she fled when she notieed
electrical fixtures sparkin& and
smoking. Eventually, the water
rose to waist-deep around her
home and she went to the borne
ota frlend.
''\'Y ~lothes, my typewriter, my stereb, dishes •.• " sbe
sighed and threw her hands in
the air. "I don't know what l'cn
goin& to do."
Sandbags .Go Up
At Capo Beach~
By SfEVE MITCHELL
Of l"9 O•llJ P'llfl Sl•ll
J11gh t1d rs and heavy surf
brought troubles to several
areas of the Orange Coast Sun-
d ay und today, 1nclud1ng a
s tr etc h of h o m es a long
Capistrano Reach where waves
dam aged a breakwater and
* * * More Floods?
several windows in a beachfront
home.
About a d02en volunteers were
sandbagging homes along Beach
Road in Capistrano Beach this
morning, following Sunday's
high tides and surf which broke
several large windows in a home
owned by John Reynard, 36787
Beach Road.
* * *
"We 've got the windows in
Iron t barricaded now." Reynard
said this moming. He said fami-
1 y members and neighbors
shored up the front of the home
after six and seven root waves
broke the lwo windows Sunday
morning.
"The last time it was this bad
was seven years ago," Reynard
said. ''But we built a seawall
after that incident a nd the
damaae is reaJly moderate this
tim e m comparison.
"We've probably got problems
Weekend's Sunshine fbr a couple more days.'' he
satd. Most of the damage Sun·
day was restricted to the south
end of Beach Road, near Poche
Beach. 1
Gives Way to Rain Reynard said the seven-vear..l
old rock breakwater is protect-'
1 ing about· five Beach Road
houses, but added that Sunday's
high tides and surf damaged a
By MICHAEL PASKEVICH
Of Ille D•tlJ P'llet St•ll
Sparkling weekend weather
gave way to new showers along
the Orange Coast today and
; weather forecasters say more
1 rain 1s on the way tonight and
·Tuesday l Coa<,laJ Ooodmg remains a
poss1b1bty near wcl>t facing
College Plan
For Building
To Get Review
S addleba c k Commu nity
College District trustees tonight
will again discuss thctr five·year
plan for building on the existing
Mi ssion Viejo campus and new
northern site an Irvine.
For the past several weeks,
trustees have been discussing
building priorities to be included
in the report which will be sub-
mitted to the California Com-
munity CollcRe's Chancellor's
Office this month.
The district's building needs
are estimated to cost $75 mtlhon
in today's dollars but could ac-
tually cost as much or more
than $122 million over the next
10 years.
District officials have predict·
ed that they can complete the
building program. needed to
provide for projected student
(See R EVIEW, Page A%)
Coast
Weather
Cloudy through tonight.
Chance or s howers in·
creasing to 90 percent
tonight and decreasing l o
50 percent Tuesday. Lows
toni1ht so to 56. Hiahs
Tuesday 60 to 66.
INSmt:TODAY
A rta bwfnamum cfn1I lhat ,,.,.,,..,. lunchu .ort a
three·rnorifftf rowm1. Thfll
• c,. • a legitift)(lte part o/ t.M
bulfneu JCCM, 'Mr laJI. ~
F1oturlnQ.~Cl.
a
(2 ... ... •• 9'..J ., .. u M ...
beaches if high tides link with ·. wooden seawaJl adjacent to his
waves whipped up by a new 'borne.
storm pushing into the area He estimated damaiie to hia
from the Gull ol Aluka. · • · bom~ataboutSl .000. •
Salt water made its way Further south, San Clement.e
across streets in Seal Beach and lifeguards were right on top of
Sunset Beach earlf today, bul the high tide situation, with
authorities said the roadways lifeguard Sheridan Byerly re.
were still passable to drivers. porting surf eating away at the
And high water from Newport lifeguard tower.
Bay overflowed onto Balboa "ll 's net going to do any
Bouelvard this morning, forcing damage," he said today, "but
the closure of one lane near «th it's taking sand away from un-
Street. derneath me right now."
However, surf that pounded He said a potted palm tree in
the beaches of San Diego and front of the lifeguard station,
Malibu Sunday was not evident "isn't going to make it through
along the Orange Coast. the morning." Delly ............. ., .lc.M ... «....... I WAVE CATCHES PMR CHECKING SEAWAlt THIS MOANING IN CAPISTRANO BEACH
High Tides Caused Window Breakage; RHidenta S.ndbagged Against Surging Sea Forecasters are still <See TIDES, Page A2)
predicting the possibility or
breakers as high as 10 feet lat~
today and Tuesday morning.
The latest storm fronl moved ·
into the area after dropping·
substantial amounts of rain ln
the northwest and ln the San
Francisco Bay Area.
Forecasters are caJlinc for
continued showers tonlght and
Tuesday and pogslbly
Wednesday.
Skies are expected to remain
cloudy with high temperatures
near 60 degrees and ovenliaht
lows near SO.
Small craft advisories were
issued today.
Today'• high tide, up to seven
feet, occurred at 9 a.m. The tide
will be nearly as high Tuesday
·morning at about 9:30. •.
* * * Rain Causes
Po~rOutage
About 2,000 Laguna Hilla San
Diego Gas and Electric
customers were without power
for up to five hours Sunday when
rain-related proble~ arose ill
the company's equJpment.
A company spokesman said
rain water had collected in transformers and cables in the
Laguna Hills area and shorted
out the equJpmenL
Moat customers• power wu
r estored within one hour but
sever a l amalJ areas were
without power for u Joni u live
hours, the apotesman Hld.
• "The crews we Hilt out bid to
replace a lot of cable.'' t.he
sPoketman said. ••Jt'll take a
wblle to ncure out the coat. but iL won't be cheap • .,
The J)OWW' failure~ at
about 1 p.m. Sunda1.
Doyen Chidetl
• LUSAKA, z.mttta (AP)~
aovemment »••paper c
Zamblau for "b«ibutns like
cblldren.. lJ1 • waft ot ;.me
buyln1 that eriiPtld •rt. U..
sovemment annaun&d1t ~
end aul*df• • a Wide l'alllt Of 1taple foods.
Divorce Plan
Triggered Six
~ids' Slayings?
Kits t9 Be Destroyed
Chemicals Stored in Cormty to Be Removed
By GARV GRANVILLE RO<::KFORD, Ill. (AP) -0t•0111ty"11"uw11
Simon Peter Nelson reportedly di t Jearn4)d that bia wlfe planned to Dea y World War I v ntage
divorce him only hours belore "8r gasses stored at two Orange (tlunty m.illtary bases will be his six children were found shipped to Denver la ter thls
blud1eoned and •tabbed to death month in a trial program aimed
1n their beds. ultioiately at the chemicals'
Nelson. •6. was to be ar• : ••en\lirorunenta\fy sflfe" destruc-ralped today In the killings. 1 ~ ,
which Winnebago C<!u!'ty t:' 0~~spokesmaan at the U.S.
Coroner J ohn Seward said .eci ~i' ~Wea ns• !lion in Seal curred late Friday or earlY. "B c~sa~ieJ 5 ipmentldate
Saturday. . . !fe 94 be cal/W are te~ kits
Pollce said the children we~ " t ere asfte atively•been
found in several rooms o_f tlfe '>I ae for Jal). 25. · •
Nelson home on a quiet, middle-No firm date has been set for .
class street . The . bodies o~ the shipment or six similar kits
RoseaM, 5, and her sister, Jen· stored at El Toro Marine Corps
nlrer, 12,r •. e fou~d in their Alr Station, according lo Capt. bedreom, befilen and stabbed re-John Shotwell. ..
peatedly·. $ ' H "d lb h J I art ThetrjcNrftirot.\fers~ Matthew,• e sai e c em ca w arc
agents were declared obsolete ill
1970.
''We've been waiting for in·
structions on how to dispose of
them ever since." Shotwell said.
Included among the chemicals
in the kits is Phosgene, a World
War I gas that Shotwell said was
responsible for al pettent of the
~as-caused fatalities during the
Great War.
Also included in the shipments
to be made Crom the two bases
is Cyanogen Chloride, Lewisite
and those chemical agents that
make up what was known in
World War I as mustard gas.
Spokesmen at both military
bases emphasized there is no
nerve gas or any of its
sophisticated derivatives in·
volved in the shipments.
1; Andrew, 9; Simon Peter Jr.
JO: and.David, 3, were a1muar11
sialn, aald police Capt. Richard
Anderson. The famlly's pet •
dacbabimd wu found with its
throat slashed.
Investigators sald the chH'dren
had been killed, apparently as
they alept, with a rubber mallet
and a bun~ knife.
Presley's Memo:1~ial
Outdraws Pistols
<Bee KILLINGS, Pa1e A2)
Nixon's Birthday
Plans Undisclosed
••Happy Blrtb4a)' Pre.tldent
Nixon" U.. blllbo;td read today
at t.he San Clemente ln.n on the
occaatoo ot the f o1'mer preal·
dent'• ssth birthday.
A family •POkesman eould not
be reached loday In res.rd ·to
tho Nixon family' 1 birthday
plana. la fot'IQw yean. f amlly .members a CJoM friadl Ila••
1atll1Nd tar a quJlt bh1MaJ
ttlebratloo at tbe Ntaona•
a«laded MNick eetlte iD S. • Clem~ • •
They also said there are no
biological or germ warfare
materials involved in what will
be the sending of obsolete
chemical warfare weaponry to
its ultimate destruction.
Joe Harkins, the public ln-
form ation officer at the Seal
Beach weapons station, said the
shipment from there will be five
pallets of material weighing
3,000 pounds.
Among safeguards taken to
see the deadly vapors do not in
some way escape to the at-
mosphere ls packaging of the
chem icals in vapor proof bags.
Harkin~sald.
He also said the shipment will
b e accompanied by a trained
(See KITS, Page AZ)
Recluse HUI.·
32 Years
BELGRADE,
Yugoslavia (AP) -A matt
who hid tor halt bis Ure
!earing punlahment for
pro-Nan warUme actlvlty
says he used to cry when
he beard bapPy voices out.
aide, aod dared not show
him self even at h is
molher•1 funeral
Janes Rua was a 32·
year-old aboemaker when be went into bJdln1 at his
1l1\er11 f armhouae tn June
19'5, he told the Belfrado
newspaper .Politilta.
Now 84, Rut WU dis·
'covered last week alter
hls alster bou1ht a lar1e
•·' aupply of bread In Uio
nHrby villap ot Zalna. ln
the oortb-.tenl Sloveola
t'e.1100, and a IUIDiclotd ' reaJdent alertAkl pollce.
•:
SB
Dowfall
To Cover
Co mi try
By The As~iated Presa
Harsh weathl'r te><tay brought
snow to the East, as Midwest
and M1d·AUantic states were un·
der as much as a foot of snow.
Hi&h winds whipped through
much ot the Northeast lop·
piing trees and power Imes
Poor weather s tretched as far
south as Florida, where
tornados were blamed for at
least two deaths and nine in-
juries.
One apparent "1ctim or the
windstorm was a bndgekeeper
blown into the Manatee River at
Bradenton. Fla. Search parties
were s tall scourrn~ the area today
Snow strt'tCht'd from West
\'irgsn1a through scrllons or New
Y <>rk state: from M 1nnesota
!'>outh to North C'<1rollna.
Tra vcl ad' 1.,1ir1l''.'> were poMe<J
in manv arc.-., .,omc roads were
impas::ablc.
Temperatures in Minnesd1.a
fell to 50 below with the wind
chill factor
Greater Cincinnall Airport r e-
c:e1ved thrt'c inches or snow and
dosed for a short time Sunday
night after u taxiing jet slid off
the runway and became stuck.
Nearly six inches of snow fell
on Cleveland's Hopkins Jnterna-
t1onal Airport, a nd two planes v.· .e r e s tu c k o n d i {( e re n t
l'unways. The airport remained
open. but those two runways
wert! closed for a time.
1''1oodsng was r eported in
many areas. Roads were
washed out and flash flood
watches were in effect in parts
of New York stt.tte.
Coordinating
Panel to Pick
New Officers
Saddlcback Area Coordinating
Coun('ll's executive board is
~l'hl•dulcd to elect new officers
durinl! its meeting al 7:30
tonil{hl at 23011 Moulton
l'arkway. A·3, Laguna Hills.
A new President, two vice pres-
idents, a treasurer and a
:-ccrctary are to be selected, a
:-pokesman said.
five newly elected executive
board members are to join five
<:ontinuing members in the new
board's first session of the year.
New members include Mary
C"ornelius of Laguna Hills, Gary
Streed of South Laguna Hills,
II arry Springer of Laguna
J'\1guel, Howard Benn ell of
Laguna Hills and Mildred
Hudgins of Lake Forest.
From Page AJ
TIDES ...
N ewporl Beach Lifeguard
Capl Logan Lockabey said his
beaches are experiencing no tide
or !ourf problems today.
Minor Oooding nlong portions
of Pacific Coast Highway in cen-
tral Sunset Beach, primarily at
Park Avenue and also Admiral·
1y Way slowed mid-morning
commuters as il lapped into
traffic lanef.
The day's high tide caused
·waters or Bolsa Chica marsh
and the inland bay in Sunset
Beach to occasionally spill over
their basms.
Flooding also occurred on
Pacific Coast Highway near the
westerly bluffs of Huntington
Beach, where high tides sent
waler sloshing over the beach
crest and into the road.
Debris Sighted
HONOLULU (AP) -Search
• planes have sighted debris
believed to be from an lnd1an
:freighter that reported it was
~aking tm water 1,000 miles
northwest or here four days ago,
but there was no stsn of the 70
people believed aboard th~ ship.
ORANGICOAIT aa
DAILY PILOT
I
First a Sucee••
U.S. Testing_
Cruise Missile
WASHINGTON · (AP) -The
new Tomahawk cruise missile Is.
being t~ted to find out whether
it would be vulnerat>le to de-
r ensl ve missile systems. the
Pentagon said today.
Officials said th~ first test was
held Saturday at Nellis Air
Force Base. Nev., and was a
s uccess. llut they decUneil to
surface sh~ps outside Soviet ter-
ritory.
IlJ backers say the crulse mis-
sile's small radar profile, plus
Its low altitude Olght, would ena-
ble it lo oenetrnte air defenses
especially if launched in cloud~
or possibly several hundred
weapons, all heading for tareets
inside the Soviet Union.
describe the basis for their juda:·
ment. The announcement gave In preliminary studies last
rew details. year, defense officials have said,
During the test, the cruise U.S. scientists found that a
missile was fired from a Navy system similar to the American
plane. Radar described as part Army's Hawk air defense mis-
of "a representaUve air defense site complex might be able to
system" then tried to detect and counter a cruise missile attack.
track the missile. The Hawk system would have to
There was no attempt to knoclt • be equipped with some im-
down the cruise missile with a proved transmitters, computers
defensiye weapon, the Pent.agon and other comPonent~.
said. Such an attempt with live
defensive missiles is expected
later.
VISITORS PAY RESPECTS AT GRAVE OF ENTERTAINER PRESLEY
Mourners Remember Elvla on Occaalon of Hla Birthday
Some critics have challenged
the cruise missile concept, con-
tending it could be neutrallted
by sophisticated Soviet air de-
fenses in the 1980s and beyond.
The cruise missile is a small
pilotless jet bomber, about 14
feet long and very narrow. It is
Sbould the Russians be able to
develop such a system, officials
have saJd. they would be able to
give the Americar. cruise mis-
sile a bad time If the defensive
system was deployed in large
numbers, perhaps as many as
500 to l ,000 sites.
Hollinden Remaim
As Tramport Chief
Fountain Valley City Coun-
cilman Al Hollinden today was
reappointed chairman of the
year-old Orange County
Transp0rtation Commission. Com missioners also unan-
From Page A I
REVIEW ...
growth, if the current tax rate
remains unchanged.
ln other action, trustees will
be asked lo ratify 11 contracts
totalling $734,203. for constr ue'.
tion of the exterior ''shells" of
buildings on the new northern
campus.
Under the district's construe·
tion management program, the
contracts have already been
signed and work has begun,
said Dr. Edward Hart, usistanl
superintendent for general plan-
ning.
He said contracts for work on
the interiors of the four build·
ings s hould be awarded in
February. The campus is
scheduled to be completed and
open to students by the fall
sem ester which begins in
August.
Despite the recent rains, Hart
said, "we still have a shot" at
completing the campus on time.
But he added, "We can't have
too many delays."
T h e trustees' m eeting will
begin at 7 p.m. in the college
library with a report on the
Comprehensive Education
Training Act (C.E.T.A.} Pro-
gram. The bus iness portion of
the meeting is expected to begin at 7:30 p.m.
Hoop Shot Contest
Set in Saddleback
The Saddleback Valley
Uniried School District Recrea·
lion Department's annual
Basketball Hoop Shoot contest
will begin at 2:30 p.m. Saturday.
Jan. 14, at El Toro High School.
Six contestants in each of
three aee categories -8 and 9,
10 and 11, 12 and 13 -will be
sent to the contest from each of
the distri ct's elementary
schools. These competitors will
be determin ed during pre-
liminary contests held during
the aCtemoon playground pro-
grams.
Further information may be
obtained by calling the Recrea-
tion Office at 586-1234, extension
293.
imously reappointed county
Supervu1or Ralph Diedrich as
commission vice chairman.
This month marks the com-
mission's first anniversary. It
was created by state legislation
la::.l year and given broad re-
view power over local r oad
building and transit operations.
Diedrich was absent from
today's meeting and did not take
part in the commission 4 to 0
vote.
The commission includes two
county supervisor s. Diedrich
and Ralph Clark: lwo city•coun-
c1 l m cn, Hollinden and David
Brandt, Santa Ana and one
member chosen from the public,
Zika Djokovich, Santa Ana.
Clark and Hollinden also serve
as directors of the Orange Coun-
ty Transit District.
Frmtt Page Al
KILLINGS. •
Michael Weldon, Nelson's
employer and friend, said be re·
turned Crom a vacation to the of·
fice of Management Recruiters
Inc. last week to find Nelson
completely changed in his at·
titude toward his troubled 14·
year marriage.
"He said the whole thing start·
ed lo come to a head over the
weekend before," said Weldon,
"and that Ann had set down.
rules. There were certain things
he was doing that had to s top -
drinking, overweight and facial
hair."
Ann Nelson, 38, had gone to
her attorney about a divor ce but•
had been advised to get away ··
and think things over for a cou-
ple of days, according to the
Rockford Morning Star.
With her husband's
knowledge, she checked into a
Milwaukee motel Thursday
morning. But lhe next day, she
called the lawyer and told him
to proceed with the divorce, the
Star reported.
Weldon said Nelson lert the of· fice abruptly Friday.
Nelson later arrived at the
motel, and around 6 a.m. a desk
clerk telephoned police· saying
there was trouble in Mrs.
Nelson's room.
Police said they found Nelson·
beating his wife in the
bathroom, and they arrested
him.
Tax Upheld
Couples' Appeal F ai/,s
W ASIDNGTON (AP) -The U.S. Supreme Court
refused today to hear an appeal challenging the in·
come tax rates the federal government imposes on
married persons filing joint returns.
The justices turned down without comment the •
appeal of two Indiana married couples who con·tended
that the tax rates are unconstituUonal because wben
both husband ahd wlfe have stgnlf. ·
leant income they must pay more taxes than single persons with identical incomes. In urging the court to reject the appeal, aovem-
ment lawyers said disparities in tax llablllty are "in·
evltable."
· "A marrt.-1e-neutral Income tax is tmP<>salble,"
the JusUce Department sat d, addlng that whlle the
•overnment:s method 0£ taxing income' la JlOt Perfect; ills constitutional. William and Wanda Barter and Ralph and·
PaUllne Blair Of New Haven, iJnd., eued the 1ovem.-
ment over their tiin for 197!J the flrat year tho Tu
Reform Aet Oft• became mecUve.
From Page A I
PRESLEY ...
bering Elvis·· at the fairgrounds
and "A Tribute to Elvis" at the
Cook Convention Center.
At t h e fairgrounds event,
which cost $4 to enter, Presley's
first cu11tomlied Cadillac and
one of his beds were on display.
The convention center exhibi-
tion, brought to Memphis by pro-
mote r Ed Say of Columbus,
Ohio, offered fans copies or a
home movie of the Pre~ley
funeral for $33, and candid
photographs of Presley concerts
in several cities. Admission was
$2.SO.
A number or complaints about
the quality and nature of the ex-
hibits were reported, and Dick
Grob, chief of security at the
Presley mansion, said he was
sorry that "the people feel
they're getting ripped orr ...
"Everything Elvis did was
first-class.': Grob said. "I've
seen him stop in the middle of a
song that wasn't right, apologize
to the audience and start it
aea~ Wbtt's being done in his
name isn'f first class. I ddh't
even think it's fourth-class.''
designed to hug the contours of
the earth while flying toward its
target after being launched Crom
U.S. bombers, submarines or
Flynt Seeks
JFK Killer
COLUMBUS. Ohio <AP>
-Publisher Larry Flynt
ran ads in seven ma.ior
newspapers offerrng a $1
million reward for in·
formation leading to the
arrest and conv1ctlon of
persons r esponsible for
the 1963 assassination of
President Kennedy.
Flynt, owner or the
weekly Los Angeles Free
Press and Plains, Ga.,
Monitor and f orm e r
publisher of Hus tl er
magazine, said in the ad
the public hes the right to
know who really was.
·behind the Kennedy as-
sassination in Dallas.
It asked that anyone
with information contact
Americans for a Free
Press. 40 W. Gay St.,
Columbus, Ohio, 43215 .
F,.._PageAI
KITS ...
Army escort .unit equipped with
devices that can detect any
leakage
First step in the hop of the 94
test kit.5 will be by helicopter
from the weapons station to the
Los Alamitos Naval Air Station.
There, the chemicals will be
loaded aboard a transport car·
rier a nd sent on to Stapleto~Air
Field near Denver.
Harkins said plans call for the
chemicals to be destroyed by in-
cineration.
T h e two shipments from
Orange County are part of a
trial progr;im involving similar
s hipments from 12 other
mllltary bases throughout the
country, Harkins said.
Involved in the trial program
arc 1,500 of the estimated 21,000
chem ical warfare test kits scat-
tered among the 14 military
bases.
The training kits were de-
signed to provide field training
for troops to enable them to
identify the odors and other in· -
dicalions or the presence of lour
toxic easses, a ll or Utem
described either as choking or
blistering a~ents.
Herc arc the facts. savers who have ccrtlf icatc
accounts at Mutual Savinqs ccm borrow up to 90% or
their sJvlngs account balance without Incurring
the usual substantial interest pcnJlty required by
rcderal regulations for early withdrawal
CXAMPLE: You have a ccrtlticatc wrth us earning
at the annual rate of 7~% ($ 1 .000 minimum.
6 year term>. A need Clrlscs-vacatlon.
new car. emergency. what-
ever-for you to have some
cash. You can borrow up
• e to 90% from us at only 8]4%
Annual Percentage Rate.
while the Jccount continues to
earn at 731.''~, A difference
of only 1 ?'u. Slmllar arrangc-
mC'nts can be made on any n Of our term r,avings certificates
The advantage ls obvious.
You can afford to put your
savings In a certificate oan
Wha it is.
ow·tworks.
that pays considerably higher
intcrc::.t thim a passoook
account wlt11out having to ...
concern yourself aoout
the required penalty should
you need funds from the
account before It matures.
Naturally. Mutual Savings
accounts arc Insured to
$40.000 by an agency or the
feder.JI government. Where you get it. compare where you presentty
save. All savings Institutions
are not the same. You will find rt easy to open an
aocount ar Mutual savings since we can arrange to
transfer your funds from wherever they are now
located. Call or visit any of our 16 Southern Gallfomta
offices for further details.
MU1UAL
SAVINGS -leMI•--..
AH l!OUAL HOUSINQ LE~OE"
AN l!OUAL Off<>fllTUMITY f!Ml"LOYEf•,
Capistrano-SM Clementra
670Cornlnocte Estreflal4'93•56St •
eorona det M•: 2001 East coast HIQhwoy/675-5010
~n v~: 17~ MaQnolla street/963·8JQ8
.DowntoWn &.MU ANI; 831 North Maln/547•9741 I
•OOl:!n ::;HWl'U.lyt 10 I\ ).4 at I 41 l'M
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1\londay'a. NYSE
. 2 p.m. (EDT) Priees COMPOSITE
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Monday. January 9, 1978 s DAILY PILOT A•
In the Red
Bankruptcy Cost
Hits Ever}rone
By SYLVIA PORTER .. _ .........
If 3 percent of tho:.e who owe money went bankrupt
tomorrow, the cost of uslne credit would soar ao hleb that no
one ever could afford lo borrow a.gain. •
To explain, a person declares bankruptcy, the cost or
the default is passed on to others. Bankruptcy may "h'ee1'
one person or debts, but lhe rest pay.
IN FISCAL lt77, 182,%10 declared bankrup~y. In f11cat
1976, 211,348 declared.
What i.s lost by declarinr bankruptcy?
-Easy access to credit. Most reputable creditors won't
lend to bankrupts for years -or ever.
-Most assets and even, in some cases, your home.
Laws vary from state to state.
-SeH reapect. Go·
1ng before a jitdge and
declaring default can af-
fect your sense of pride
and Independence as
well as personal health.
-The friendship or
those who have co·
atgned Joans, if any. and who must pay otr.
Money's
Worth
Whal do you gain? Release from creditors' pressures
for repayments.
WHY DO DEBTORS RESORT TO bankruptcy court? A
study by the Brookings Institution disclosed the reasons in
this order: 31 percent said too many debts, unwise refinan·
cing, overspending: 28 percent, family health reasons; 20
percent, layoffs, strikes, loss of overtime; 13 percent,
hounding by creditors; 10 percent. actual legal action; 10
percent, marital problems, drunkenness, excessive gam.
bling: 7 percent "to avoid paying debts ... (The fl au.res add up
to more than 100 because many replies fell in two or more
categories.)
Here are two fin al financial steps.
(1) Chapter XJU is a method of debt reor1anlnUon un-
der which debtor, creditors and a referee, supervised by a
federal judge, work out a way for t.he debtor to repay on an
installment plan. This is known as the wage-earner plan,
because it protects the wages and essential property of a
debtor who wants to avoid straight bankruptcy by ri!paying
debts from future earnings.
EITHER THE DEBTOR GETS a written extension of
debts, wilh more time to pay off in full ; or less commonly,
arranges a "composition" in which only a specified percen·
tage of the amount owed each creditor is paid. Filing of the
Chapter Xlll petition must be approved by half the
creditors. at which time interest charges usually slop. In
addition to legal fees, the debt.or must pay filing lees of
about $15 and a trustee's fee of up lo 5 percent of the debts,
plus expenses.
(2) Voluntary bankruptcy Is the final step. The debtor
compiles a list of assets and liabilities and pays a~ UUng
fee. Ttte rest is ~ually routine.
E'.'cept for clothing, tools, some household goods and
other items, depending on stale law, all a11sel.s will be col·
lecled by the court and liquidated. Proceeds will be dis·
lributed among creditors.
The financial slate Is clean. but the bankruptcy record
will stay intact for years.
Nert · Credit and tM elderly
Usury Decision
Awaited Uneasily
By STEPHEN FOX
Al' llltl""J Wr11"'
California's maJor banks are waiting uneasily for a
precedent-setting legal decision that will throw out the
state's Depresslen-era usury laws.
Superior Court Judge Le.ster E . Olson has issued
notice that he intends to declare unconstitutional a 1934
amendment to the state coosUtution passed during a time
of loan sharking. mortgage foreclosures and widespread economic hardship.
HIS DECISION, WHICH HE SAID will be appealed by
the banks, could have a major impact on business bor·
rowing in California as well as settin& guidelines for
"'similar rulings i.n other states. '
The ruling, which Olson said will be issued in final
form late this month, arises Crom a complex lawsuit
brought by a group called the Committee Against Unfair ln·
terest Rate Limitations.
Among the plaintiffs were such giant insurance firms
as Prudential Life Insurance Co: o! America and Occiden
tal Life Insurance of California.
SINCE THE SUIT INVOLVED A challenge to CaUfornia
law, Lhe de!endant was tho slate. However, most or the
state's large banks. lncludlne Bank of Amerlca and Securi·
ty Pacific National Bank, Joined the case as intervenors and asked that the usury lows be uph eld.
The laws, authorlr:ed by the 1934 amendment, place a
10 percent ceiling oo the annual interest rat~ that can be
charged for loans but apecifically exemr banks. savings
and loans, finance companies and thri( and loan firms.
· Ol son's ruling will end
this special status and
(
B"~lNESS J allow such non-exempt lJ~. lenders as Insurance
co mp a n ies and UW mortgage banlc;ers to
------------charge rates above 10 percent.
OlJon held that the 1t1te'1 usury laws are unconsUlu·
t!onal on tho sroundJ tbat they violate lhc interstate com·
meree claUH and tile equal protect.Jon clause of the 14th
amendmeot. He said the usury Ian were meant to protect
small borrow rs and Ulat theJr provisions were never in-
tended to apply to business and commerd&l Joans.
SMALL CONSUMER LOANS ARE retulated under
other laws that a llow rates much higher than 10 percent as
Jon1t u the amount borrowed Is under $10,000. Olaon's rul-.
lnl wW not affect thll typo of borrowint.
"I didn't touch the laws ot Callfomla that. reta~ to the
ordin•"1 con.sumer," Olson t1a1d. •
The problems cauaed by the .ff.year-old USUl'7 laws ..weren't felt unW late 1973.1 wheo interest rates l'OI abarp-•
t1. But "#hen rat toppeo 10 percent, Calllornta COl'J>Ofl·
UOU were lltllt off from aome lenden, ~cord.inc lo Kdl1 Stevens. aeo1or vico pretident for lnvestmae.tl at OC!citden-
tal Llf e.
"A µpg COMPANY WAS~ exempt ind If we want-
ed to lmd. moo~y to Safe"~ or N~ or UlYbodY
dolnlcUed here, we Just felt there was DO way we could do
an)tbiDI abiwe 10 per~t." Steven.a tald. "Jt Just tAX* bt1
1-.len ·lllc• ua out ol the market,."
At tbe um tJme, aay• Stevens. Callfnla barikl had
"• beautitW Mtup. They are not 1ub.Jeet to~ IO they were able to male loau that othe:r la>dera woW@•t be able to."
Baat ol Americ• d clln comm t. oo OllOG'1 nallq o&M:r &haD &o-U.1-Cbt lbe bank '"!Q&Crieni!d Oil ....._.,._.
t.bat t.M currenL conattt.uUooll provialoo i. v&Ucl U4 ~
be uphe!d."
,
Ji •• DA.IL Y PILO T
ms Switeh a 'Shear' DeHgllt J)eyers
To Carry
Warni~
Bay Area Reataurateur Tradea 'Slavery' for Day Off;
SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -"Buta Puta!" be
cried one day. "Eoouab with the •P•&beUl,
already!"
So Bruno Viscovl, who ran one of the best UtUe
Jtahan restaurants in Sao Franclaco, decided to
end bis slavery and become an apprentice barber.
FOR NINE YEAllS, THE dark-balred,
Jtallan·bom man ran the 19-table Trattoria, out
near lhe end of Lombard Street where it runa into
the Golden Gate Brid&e approach.
The little place never made the restaurant re-
.. view columns, nor was it named in one of the
many books that crow about "the best
res taurants" in this eaters' town. But Bruno's food
was legend to a small, dedicated band of
trenchermen.
The king of his small blll of fare was hJa ute-
~ustaining veal parmigiana, steePecl In drippy
cheese and steaming sauce. It wu nearly a re-
ligious experience to some customers.
WASHINGTON (AP)
-The Consumer
Product Safety Com-
mlaslon says it will ask
an independent testing
or1anization to develop
name and overheating
warning lflbela for hand-
held hair dryers rather
than set a new federal
standard.
One member of the com mission uid abe
would 10 further, requlr-
ln1 a warn.ln1 label to
conaumera about possi-
ble •hock huards if lhe
dryers are immersed.
EQUALLY FASCINATING WERE some of "THE THING that
the mad happenings In the place, such as Bruno concerns me ls that
dashing through the dining room. trying to dodge sales of Ulla product are
violence at the hands of one of his rQore volatile aotn1 up very rapidly.
ltaltan associates in the kitchen. Or the Sicilian some ~e use them
brothers who Insisted on goine back home during every day, and people
Bruno's busiest months, Jeavin1 the boss holding tend to 1et careless:•
the broccoli. a a l d com miss lo n
Al first, Bruno did the greelini and wailing on u-...... member Barb a r a
tables, but ln later years, he did much of the cook-RESTAURANT WORK TRADED FOR BARBERING Franklin. .. People seem
ing. Bruno always went out himself and did lhe Bruno ur9e0y~ Wanted D•'I Off_ But Now C ......... 65 Hour• • WHk to store hair dryera near shopping. • ,,., """9 the tub." Early last year, when he d~ided to hang up .~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The co~miasion de-
the olive oil can •. shock waves spread throughout a AIA,...u. 1•0 DamadeS nled petitions to set a
. his cllentele.' q...v vvv e flamin1 and overheat-
ln1 standard for the "SAY IT ISN'T SO," one fellow pleaded, tears dryer1.
inhis beard. 1 R • c s ttl d Bulltwasciao,Trattorla,nllright. epa .. r ase e e T H E c o m • "l went through all the agonies of an Italian &-· missioners said Un-
reslauranl," said 40·year·old Bruno as he snlpped derwrlt.era Laboratories,
awayatlhcheadofaprofessionalmalemodel. SACRAMENTO CAP> -The stale Telling customers tbelr a teatlnt center, had
Consumer Affairs Department says trans missions needed major repaJn, made slgnlficant steps AFTER NINE YEARS, BRUNO, with a new A A M C 0 Trans mi 8 8 i 0 n s 0 f when in fact they could be fixed tor, to reduce the hazards.
wife , called an end to working 15-18 hours a day, Bridgeport, Pa., and two of its littleornothing; But they aaked UL to de-
falling exhausted on one or the tables after closing franchised shops have agreed to pay Saying that minor problems would velop stronger labelint
lime, using has "day off" to take inventory and $40,000 mseUlementof a fraudulenlre· lead to major malfunctfoo.a to Induce about correct use to pre-
keep the books. pair suit. customers to authorize unneeded vent lhe smoking, Dam-" When I saw the possibility of changing my The department r e ported that work; ing and overheating
life, to accommodate my life with my wife Rae. I AAMCO agreed to pay $20,000 and Falsely stating that damage to problems.
took 1t," he said, concluding there was no way he monitoritsfranchiseeslnthefuture. some parts of the transmission re-Ma. Franklin said she
could have his nights off and remain in the J .. , quired repair or replacement of other would w r 1 t e U L
restaurant business THE SHOP OWNERS, without ad· parts; aeparauly, uritng them
lie commenced I .500 hours of training at a matting the validity or the complaint, • Falsely stating that parts bad been to put stroneer and
barber colleie. choosing that trade "because I like agreed to pay $lO,OOO each and abide replaced or reconditioned. more conspicuous labels
working with people " by an injunction against future viola· on hair dryers dealing
HE P~ED ms STATE barber examination lions, the report said. They were with the poaslbillty of
and went to work for the Shear Bliss fashion identified as James Steward of Columnist Dies shocks. ·
barber s hop a rew block!! from his old restaurant, Redwood City and Sidney Margolcs
now specializing under new ownership in of Daly City.
Hungarian cuisine. The suit was fil ed by the San Mateo
"What do you know? J actually get days off County district attorney after an un-
now,'' he noted happily. dercover investigation by the depart·
So what does the ex-restaurant man do with men l 's Bureau of Automotive
his day off? Repair.
"Well, I go shopping during the day and cook
for my wife al night," estimating he cooks 65 STEWARD AND MARGOLES
hours a week at home. were charged with:
ORMOND BEACH, Fla. (AP)-•
Walter Kiernan.~75, former syndicat-
ed columnist, radio commentator
and correspondent for The Associat-
ed Press and International News
Service, died here Sunday of cancer.
Kiernan wrote the syndicated col·
umn "One Man's Opinion,. and cov-
ered every national .political conven-
tion from ~through 1972.
DO YOU
OFFER A SERVICE?
Let the public know with
an ad ln the Daily Pilot
Service Directory. It can
cost you u little as $1.65
Pet' day. For more ln-
fonnation Hd complete
rat.es call 842-56'18.
CALIFORNIA I NATIONAL
Advertlsemmt
Use This Method
To Stop Hair Loss,
Grow More Hair
HOUSTON,
TEXAS -If you
don't suffer from
male pattern bald-
n ess, you can now
s top your hair
loss . . . and grow
more hair.
Have you faced the fact
that you have a hair loss
problem?
Hair loss occura 10 gradually that men and
women often lcnore It. Until It's too late. Even though you see your11elt
ln a mlrror ev~ry day.
try their treatment for 3%
days, al their risk, and see for younelf. Natural-
ly they wouldn't offer
this opportunity unless It
worked. But It's imPoUl·
ble lo help everyone.
The great majori-
t y of cases of ex-
cessive hair fall and
baldness are the
beginrung and more
fully developed
stages of male pat-
tern baldness and
cannot be helped.
many of you won't admit But If you are not to abnormal hair fall. already stick baldl bow.,.
If you think, honestly, can you be sure wnat it that you mitbt be In lbls actually causln1_ your category, look al a pie-hair loss? Even ll bakl·
turo taken n year :Ao 1\ess aeema to "run In the .... -family," it la C4 ... alnly three years aeo. N ce a "'' dilfeMnce? If ao. now's not_prool of the cause of
the Ume to st.op your hair YOUR ltalr lcu.
loss. You could be coln1 If you have thlnnln& bald. hair, the Loesch treat-
Ir it appears that you ment may be the answer
are already loslnc haJr, for you. If you sUJl have whatever your dally halr any hair on top ol your routine 18, lf you contlnuo head, and would like to · to follow it, your hair wlll slop hair loss and &row more hair, do aomethJng probably aradually thin about. It before lt'a too away to nolhlng. late .
But It doesn't have to Loesch Laboratory happen. Often hair fall la Consultants, Inc., will NOT normal. N 0 w a f I r m 0 r supply you with treat· ment for 32 days ...-at Jaboratory consultants their risk -if they
has developed a treat· believe the treatment
ment that not only atopg wlll help you. Just send
hair loes, but actually them th' Information grows hair I And you lilted below. All Inquiries
don't even have to take are answered confiden·
their word tor it. You can tlally by mail. Adv.
NO 08UOATION COUPON
To: Loesch Laboratory Consultants, Inc. Box 66001, 3311 West Main St.
Houston, Texas 77006
I am submitting the followlni fnformaUon with the widenlandang that It wUI be kept slricUy con.
fldential and lhal 1 am under no obhaallon whatsoever.
Does your fordlead become oily or 1reaay? • . • . . . • • • • • How soon after washing? ................•....•.....• Do you have dandruff? ..... Dry or oily? ............. . Does your scalp It.ch? .... When? .............. : , ... . How long has your hair been thinning? ............. . Does hair puU out easily on top of head? ..........•••• What percentage or hair remains on top of head? ...•
Any thln areas? .... Where? ......................... . Any sllck bald areas? ..... Where? ................. . AllacH any other lnlormallon you !eel may be helpful.
NAME ...•••••.••••••••••••••••••••••••••• SEX .•••••
ADDRESS ••••••••••••••••••••••..••••.•••••..•••••• CITY • .. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••••• 5rATE ••••• ZIP •••••
Does it seem like every year you resolve to get in shape
and instead you gain a few nne pounds and inches in
all the wrong places? Holiday Spa Health Cubs can
change that Our program directors will help you develop
a personalized program of body improvement to meet
your individual needs, including a personaliz.ed Progres-
sive Exercise Program-proven to be one of the fastest,
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. roost effective ways to get in shape. You'll w<rk out on
some of the finest space-age exercise
equipment available. And to make
working out even nxre enjoyable, we
offer you additional facilities like
steam, sauna, whirlpool and heated
swinnniug pools at key 1ocatioos. And
fer women then's jaznw;tics-a fun group exercise done
to up-tempo music. Whafs nue, Holiday Spa provides
the type c:l atmosphere that is oonducive to physical
iqJrovement. Discover the radiant good health that
comes with phylical fitness. And let us be the eolution
toyourresolutionin '78.Join the Holiday Spa Health Cubs.
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