HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-01-10 - Orange Coast Pilot1)~---·-·_·· ________________ mmia.m~~-~~"~'~~'''" ...
17
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Raging Storm Local DenSe Fog
Claims I Life, To Replace Rain
--swe11S-uamages
DAILY PILOT Two Buss Cosmonauts
· * * * 1oc * * * Head for ·ftende%1'ous
. TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 10, 1978
VOL. 11, HO. 10, J seCTIOHS, J6 l'A0•5
..
SAN DIEGO FREEWAY NEAR ORANGE COU,HN AIRPORT AT 4·P.~:-'MONOAY.,.10-
Commuters Can Expect More Driving Weather Uke This, W~ath-erman Says
~wity Murder
Suspect Hrmted
After Escape
A handcuffed murder suspect
was the tareet of a night·long
search in Fullerton after be bolt·
ed from the North Orange Coun-
ty Municipal Courthouse shortly
before 7 p.m. Monday.
T he suspect identified as
Gregory J . Teron, 24, was still at
large early today, according to a
sheriff's spokesman.
He said Teroo was extradited
from Michigan recently to face a
'double murder char~ related to
· an Anaheim crime lbat occurred
two years ago.
. The suspect was ln court for
~rraignment Monday and made
his break for freedom as a ll"OUP
or prisoners was being taken
from fXlUJt to a bus waitinC to
return them lo 0r8Jlle County
Jan.
Officers from Fullerton,
Anaheim, the Marshal's Office
and sberttrs deputies combed
the area durtng the nl1ht
without flndlng a trace of the
escapee, the sheriff's
spokesman 1ald.
U.S. Dollar .
Rate Mixed
LONDON (AP) -Openlnr ra~• for ·the U.S. dollar were
.mixed tOday on W•teni Europe'• 'aa,Jor money markets. 'Jbere
were modat tredloaal calnl ID toildon iDd P..U and Jona ln Frantf~ ZWich and Milan ..
Tb ... were the openbig rates-
"' compilNd Wu.ta ·~·· te quotatiohi: · •
• Loncklll-tul•fortMBrtt1•
pound, CCJiaNnd to Sl.91115;
Peril -•.tl'fl l'NDCb lrua, up
from •.ma. .
••
Abplanalp FHes In
Nixon Celebrates
His 65tb Birthday
By Associated Press
Former President Richard
Nixon celebrated bis 65th birth·
day at his favorite Mexican
restaurant after old friend
Robert Abplanalp •·new in from
the east to surprise h1m, .. a
Court Rules
On Adoption
WASIDNGTON CAP) -Tho father of a child bom out of
wedlock does not necessarily
have the riaht to cballenae the
child's adoptlon1 the U.S.
Supreme Court rulea unanimous·
lytoday.
The Justices, ln an opinion by
Justice Thurgood Marshall, upe
held the conslilutionallty ot a
Geor(la Jaw that provides that Oil·
Jy the mother'• conaent la re-
qwred. 1
MOSCOW CAP> -Tbe SO.Set Union rodt«ed two coamoaauta
into apace today to rendenous
.ttb two COile.,_ wbo h9ft apent a Dxlth abOard the Salywt.t
1pace1tat1on, Tau reported.
SuceteltUl doeldn• of t.M cot· monauta Would mark th• ft.nt ume roar .... me beeia pJllCid
aboa~d a 8oYiet apace
JaboratOl7 at tbe aame time.'
TM 8ovtet 1llWS ..-el MW
eotm .... Vladlailr JliaUN*cw
U4 O,._ MllUrcW blast.cl dt
spokesman said today.
J ack Brennan, an aide to the
former president, said besides
Abplanalp, Nlxoo went to dinn~
Monday night with his wife, Pal,
daughter Julie and son-in·law
David Eisenhower. Abplanalp is
a millionaire businessman and
prominent onetime backer or the
former President.
The historic El Adobe
restaurant adjacent to the 200-
ye a r ·old ?tflaslon San Juan
Capistrano la about 10 miles
from the Nixon estate in San
Clemente. The .restaurant was a
f avorlte of Nixon's when he was
president, and be sometimes
wenttberefordinnerduringSa.n
Clemente visits.
"He had a birthday cake with
65 candles aod aftel'Wards peo.
ple crowded around to abate bl5
hand• and wllh bJm a happy
birthday," Brennan aald.
Earlier, Brennan said, Nixon
••spent a normal day worklnc
on theeadolbJ.I memoln."
hi Soyus-tr at 1:28 p.m. MaleOW
time (5:31 a.m. PST). Alre.l1
tbOai"d ~ I are ru1bt com;; 'blanaer Yurt .ac>manento, II,
and tllcbt en1tneer Georty
Grech.to, 48, Who were ftnd blto
orbit In the Soyui 2e •Mffri'aft
Dec. 10 and ll.Dked wltll'Sal)'Ul.8
UM foDowlDI da}. ;
Gndllro '°'* a:'ftlt·in i1*e Jll'et .. •1o _..die apace lab'• w=:;parta •~them ind tM w:o,~:'ritrt f~
Dense Fog Forecast
Rain Subsides But New Storm Due
By JACKIE HYMAN
Of u. o.tly ...... Melt
Tired or the rain? You may
get a respite tonight, but you're
likely to see more of the wet
stuff on and o(f through next
weekend.
· "We have a lot of fast·moving
fronts. 11\ey're going to be hard
to time," said J ohn Henderson,
a National Weather Service
meteorologist.
He said tonight's forecast is
for partly cloudy with local
dense fog and a 10 percent
chance or rain, rising to 30 per·
cent Wednesday as a new storm
·moves in from the northwest.
A small craft advisory is still
in effect as seas remain choppy,
Henderson said.
Monday night's heavy rainfall
ranged from .65 of an Inch re·
ported by the Orange County
Harbor Department in Newport
Beach to 2.3 inches at Santiago
Peak on Saddleback Mountain.
John Gietzen or the Orange
County Flood Control District
explained that the peak, at 5,680
feet the highest point in the
county, generally recei~es the
most local rainfall because or
the tendency of air to cool and
release water as it rises.
He said the season's rainfall
on the peak has been 22.6 inches
compared to 14.4 inches last
year at this time. He said the
mountain's 26·year average
rainfall total for this date is 10.2
inches, with an average of 26.4
inches by June 30.
· In Newport Beach, the .6S
inches recorded for the past 24
hours brought the season total te>
6.33 inches, up from 5.89 inches Jut year at this time.
Cbarlet Lewis at Orange
CAPO MAGAZINE
SURFER 'BIBLE'
Publllbed ln Caplstrano Beach,
Surfer Maculne ts prob·
ably the bible ol the sport. See
Featurtnc, PqeCl. .
Coast College in Costa Mesa re-
ported 1.10 inches since Monday,
for a season tot.aJ of 8.58 inches.
Last year at this time the season
total in Costa Mesa was 5.95
inches.
..
Rainwatcher J. Sherman Den·
ny re.aprted •downpour or 1.47
inches oventlght in Huntington
Beach for a season total or 8.40.
just a shade below last year's
(See RAIN, Page AZ)
* * * High Surf, Rain * * *
1 Death, Flooding,
Mudslides Tallied
By The Associated Press
Thundering surf and torrential
rains have claimed at least one
life as they inundated Southern
California coastal communities,
brought traffic to a crawl along
miles of flooded highways and
touched off numerous rock and
mudslides.
Authorities said Derrek W.
Price, 57, died when a soaked
BATTERED NORTH BRACES
FOR THIRD BIG STORM-AS
hillside began oozing downward
and toppled a retaining wall on
him at his home in La Jolla, an
exclusive suburb of San Diego.
Price had gone into his yard
when he heard rocks cascading
down the hill, poUce said.
Meanwhile, heavy surf from
the Alaskan storm that has bat·
tered Southern California for
two days left water up to 3 feet
deep along more than 15 miles of
highway north of San Diego,
bringing traffic to 8' stand.sWl in
many places and slowing 1t to a
crawl in others. Many can were
reported stalled in the middle of
intersections.
By 6:30 a.m. today. 1.15 inches
of rain from this storm bad been
recorded ln downtown Los
Angeles, bringing the season
total to 10.34inches. Drenching rain wu reported
in many parts of Southern
men ts.
The agency said Soyus rra
1y1tem1 were fu.nctlonln1
normally and the two new COi·
monauts were feeJJ.ng .•elL
The Jut Umo the Sovl«t Unlon
had lour mm tn space wu In
October Het wheo they new 1n
three different 1pace1blp1,
Soyuz e. 7, ilnd " md ~arrled OUl..-jolnl mmeuvera, lilclUdlnt dock·
lDI of two tJI the spacecraft.
Four spaceman "fff aboard
(8ee8PACJI, Pa&eAJ)
C a 1 if or n ·i a to d a y , with
forecasters predicting rain
throu"h toni"ht, with a chance or showers beginning agaln
Wednesday afternoon.
The National Weathel' Service
said surf that has pounded the
California coast since Sunday
would continue at Jeast until
Wednesday.
Just west of Los Angeles, ex·
elusive Malibu Colony -one of
the nation's most expensive
communities and the home of
such stars as actor Steve
McQueen and singer Linda
Ronstadt -was sandbagged for
the second day Monday against
a Pacific Ocean assault on its
doorsteps.
But Monday's tides were less
severe than expected and
(See FLOODING, Page A2)
Or~n:a -~~""I
\~'cntlH•r
Ten percent chance of'
showers. tonjght with 40
percent chance Wednes·
day. Continued cool. Lows
tonight 45 to 53. Highs
Wednes,ctay 58 to64.
INSIDE TODAY
Coo. Edmaold Brown Jr. tat•
. odlcd .a m:ord IJ7.f bUUori nat• lpfnding J>rWTOm totfGJI
OJat •ncla.tda 14% eta. for 7.9
mUUon homeoaoncra, SH
nort.•,~C!· .
-. . .. . . .. . .
f •
\3 DAILY PILO T s
Col~ Winds Batter East
At Least 14 Deatm, Power Drain ·Reported
By The Associated Prei.i.
Snow and s ub zero tern
peratures brought threats "f
po~er shortage:-. to the nation's
-~sect_..1 today, as howling
winds and towering seas ham
mered the East coast for thl•
second straight day
At least 14 weather related
deaths were reported in seven
states
Sea Victiin
Traced to
Seal Beach
Investigation into the death of
a young man whose body was
found floating four miles orr
Newport Beach has shifted to
Seal Beach today where detec
lives say the dead man disap-
peared from a beach party on
New Year's Eve.
The fully clolht•d body of
Ernie Gene Rettinger, 20, of
North Long Beach, was dis·
covered Sunday afkrnoon by a
fishing vessel und n·covered by
a Coast Guard VC'>'>t'I
Newport Beu<.'h police handled
the initial inve:-.l1J(atmn because
the body was brought into
Newport Harbor
The invt•sllgal1on, hov.ever.
was transfcrrl'CJ to the Seal
nca('h departmt.·nt v. hl•n 1t v. as
discovered that Hctt1nger'!-I
brother had filed a miss ing
person rcpart there la'>t Wcdnes
day
Seal Bl·.ich Detective M K
Duckworth s<11d the brother told
police the '1d1m had been al
lending a Nt·W Year·.., Eve party
on the bcat'h nnd was last set•n
wandNing low<inl thl' '>Urf ltm·
alone
lie told off1t·n~ th;it a -.c•arc·h
was madl' for th1· mi..,..,1ng
parlygoer. hut 1t v. as not
presst•d ht·caust.• Ht•t tingcr lwd
wandcr<.'d <iwu y from beach
parties tx·forc· 'fhc r<.'port v. as
filed aftl·r he failt·d lo show up <.1l
hi-. hom1•
:\ n au tops\ t'ondurt cd \1ondJ'
by coronl·rs 1nH">t11~ator~ ri•
µnrk11ly fail<.'d to turn up an}
l'\'ICh.•ntr of a skull fracturt.• that
1nvc..,t1gators thouJ:hl might
ha\'<.' been present because of an
indentation and bruise O\ er lhl'
dead man's rt~ht C}<'
Del<.'<.'lt\·es ::.aid the c<iusc of
dt•;ith v.111 have lo be dt•tcrmin1·d
;iftt.•r lengthy loxocoloi:1t·al lt.•sb
ha\ l' b<.'<.'n t.•onductcd '"rind out 1f
any forci~n suhstam·t·.., wt.·n· prP
sent in tht.' young m.in ~ blood or
body 1 .... ~uc
From Pag~ ,, I
SPACE ...
one ship in the Joint U S Sov1rt
do<.'king> of .July 1975 hut again
this \\<as not the same type of
operation a~ the docking or two
s pnceships with a space lalJ as in
the planned Salyut 6 rendezvous.
Thrc·t• L. S astronauts spent 28
days aboard skylah in May 1973
a nd later \\Cf<' JOtncd by a lhr<.'C·
man relier crew in a m1ss1on
that lasted nearly two months.
The gov<'rnment has not an-
nounced how long they are to
!itay up. The Soviet record for
. manned space flight is 63 days.
set in the s ummer or 1975.
Americans hold the world rec·
ord of 84 days, set in 1973-74.
Prejudice Denied
LOS ANGELES CAP) -
~uperior Court Judge Paul Egly
pn Monday denied that he had
5hown "bias and prejudice" in
t1verseelng inl egration of the
rity's 600-square·mile school dlli·
vict. Egly mlide his comments ln a brief fil ed m response to
rnot•on to disqualify him.
O"ANOI COAIT
DAILY PILOT
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T-tA.M~ Illa-I .. t4flor
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Offlctt Ot\IAI Wta1 SJO:'&M .. Ylt....i ~=z."'.r:~~ \~11':.:r."o!::.4:! •• ... 19*• Vtl .. ~ tlltl LAI l'•t 11-tl .... D._ rt_,
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''*"*"ft°'-~'~''" Mf.UlO
Ft>dcral power off1nals said lhl'
l'uld ('aused ht:avy drains on
power systems from M1ch1gan in
to thC' Carolin as
In Ohio, temJ>('ralt.lrei. near or
below zero prompted utility com
pant es to cut electrical output and
l'all for powe r rationing Tolt'do
Edison Co and Dayton Power &
Light Co. both ordered 5 percent
r utbacks m clectnctly
In Cleveland, 150 National
Guardsmen were called in after
(;ov James Rhodes declared a
!'>now emergency.
With the temperature at 1 below
zero at mid·moming. more than
100 stalled cars were reported
along a ftve·mile stretch or ln·
t<.'r::.tate90 along the shore of Lake
Enc on the east side.
Clcvdand's Hopkins Intema-
Bat-k to Broadway
Eth el :\h'rm;in ( ng ht l ns1h :'II a rv M artm lwd<.!>lage al a
'\:C\\ York tl1t•all'I' tulltl\\ 1ng :\l 1s~ Marlin's opening
pt·rform.tnC'l' in· Do Y11u Turn Somersaults?" It was Miss
\I.1rttn"-. lir...,t Brciad\\ t\ appPat .incc tn a decade
Carnival Rigging
Trial Scheduled
/\ µaradC Of rnorl' than 50 Wit
fll'"'l'" inrluding plu..,h :-.luffed
pml-. elephant .... purplt.· puSs)cals
.1 n d g r 1nn1 n g g 1 r ;1 (fl'., 1 s
Si ht.•dult·fl Thursda) when JUT\
!rt.ii hegins for four carnival
v. orker~ accusl'd of r1 ggini;!
gam1•s al rounta1n Valle) 's 1!177
llallowccn Festival.
A f11'th deft'nclant -v. ho gavt•
his home address as lht• V<ll«.IOt
Int whrrc the midway \\.as brH'f
ly wl up 1s appan·ntly still in
'o Iv ed in l11s own gamt• of
chance al lhis paint in th1• h:-gJI
proct•edings
Spokesmen al W<'sl Orange
County Judicial District Court
s:i 1d Mondav that the
whereabouts or ~l1chael /\dam
Wmdcckcr, 30, 1~ currently un·
known
/\ bench warrant for his re
arrest for f::11lure to appear wa!.
1::.~ued \\hen Wtndeckcr m1ss<'d
his Nov. 16 arraignment date.
but it has since been recalled hv
the court. ·
Spokesmen said Windecker
has reportedly posted the $500
bail involved but court clerks
say the)L have not yet received
the money Crom the bondsman.
The other f®r defendants ar-
rested the night of Friday, Oct.
28, have pleaded innocent to
multiple counts of operating a
fraudulent carnival game and
are free on $250 bail each.
They include Jerry Lee
Shatley, 24, of Modesto; John
Cargile. 18, of Eagle Point,
Ore.: Leo Turner, 26, or Mt. Hol· 1Y, N .J.; and concession
manager Leo Hubert. 42, of Fon-
tana.
Maximum penalties of six
months in Orange County Jail
and $500 fines could be imposed
1f tht• panl'I of 12 jurymen select·
1•d finds the carny workers guil-
t\. of bilking un unsuspectiug
puhlll'
Fountain Valley police led by
P<itrol Sgt Norman Satterfield
to kt.·<.'p a sharp eye on the four-
day frst1v1ty became suspicious
whl'n patrons kept losing at the
games for 312 hours.
The plainclothespersons in-
C'l ud 1ng officers Bob Mosley,
Tony Marley and Kathy Jones
then stepped up, plunked down
I he1 r' own quarters and began
hurling softballs and shooting
pinballs. but lo no avail.
They didn't win any stuffed
animals either.
They carted away every
animal in the suspect con·
<'<.'~s1ons set up at Brookhurst
Street and Heil Aven u e,
however, after further investiga-
tion led to discovery of alleged
electronic devices.
Dctecltves claim these items
were used to rig t he games so
nobody but the house won.
Evidence to be Introduced at
the trial Includes more than 50 of
the huge stuffed toys displayed
as premium prizes for games
police contend nobody could win
on their skill alone.
Spokesmen for S. J.M. Fiesta
Shows and Band B. Concessions.
headquartered in Fontana, have
d~nied any knowledge of, or in-
volvement in the a lleged fraud.
Lions Club offi cials wbo
sponsored the carnival confirm
they did get one complaint about
alleged game·rigging before
police arrested the five defen·
dant.a.
Lyte is Right
Lite '(Jut,' as Trademark
WASlllNGTON CAP) -In the beginnina, there
was only LITE beer. Then came LIGHT and LYTE. And next came a lawsuit. .
The suit was filed by Miller Brewing Co. to pro·
tect its trademark on LITE ns a name for reduced·
calorie beer. The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday let stand a
tower court decision that LITE is simply a misspell•
ing of a generic term and cannot be a trademark.
Miller sought to overturn the appeals court rul·
ing that gave G. Heileman Brcwma Co. the rlJht to
sell LIGHT beer. The 5uit against Heileman la one Of 10 Hlea bf M1ller against other brewers, whlcb use the names
·LYTE or LIGHT. The other lrademark-Wiin1emenl
suits named &blitz, Genesee, Peter Hand. A.Abeu.Hr· Busch, Plttlbur h Brewing, Erie Brewm.., Olympl1,
Rh el 1old and Rainier.
tional Airport. which closed
because of blowing snow Monday
stranding more than 1,200
travelers, reopened today, but
most commercial flights were not
expected to resume until Uie af.
ternoon. ,
Cleveland's 113,000-student
public school system was closed
for the second straight day.
The worst of the storms thal
battered mostorthe country Mon·
day hit New England with winds
clocked at 69 mph on Cape Cod -
just 2 mph below hurricane force
A radio tower, a c.lturch steeple
and other debris crashed to the
ground in Mainc, Massachusetts
and Rhode Island.
High seas drove a~round the
700·footoil tanker Ach1llcs, carry·
ing 12 million galloni; of heating
oil. east or Bristol, R.1. The tanker
was refloated this m orning by
tugs, but workers were trying to
free a heating oil barge aground
off Long Island. forced ashore by
the savage surf
In Provincetown. Mass .. "The
sea came five feet over the top of
the bulkheads. You can say,
literally, there were w.aJ ls of
water," said town official Ann
Phelps.
Other officials said state and
federal aid will be needed to clean
up after Monday's flood.
Property damage was hleh in
Maine where the winds sent a rag.
ing surf crashing Into piers and as
high as the second·story of
waterfront homes.
Scven persons died in Ohio as a
result of the weather and four
deaths were reported in
Alabama. Other deaths were re-
port ed in Wi sco nsin,
Massachusetts, CaUCorn1a and II·
linois.
worsened in the Northeast by
tern peratures that dropped 50 and
60 degrees within the afternoon in
:-.ome places, icing rouch. for rush·
hour traffic.
In New York City, roads were so
hazardous that a norm<il one hour
drive from Manhattan to the
Forest Hills !'>Cclion of the
borough of Queens became a five·
hour ordeal.
The mercury fell Crom a s pnng.
like 58 at dawn in Central Park to
the teens by late evening. Fifteen·
foot ocean waves swept away 25
percent or Rockaway Beach in
Queens.
On eastern Long Island. four
oceanfront homes aollapsed from
the winds and tides. Thousands
th.ere lost electricity for several
hours.
Park Pact Inked
SEOUL. South Korea <AP) -
The United States and South
Korea signed an agreement to-
day spelling out terms and con-
ditions Cor the questioning by
U.S. officials of Tongsun Park,
indicted ln a Washington in-
fluence buying scandal.
:•
Fro• Pagf' :1 J
FLOODING
Slte'H~dre
Opera sta.r ,Beverly Sills has
announced that she'll retire
l rom singing in the fall of
1980.
Hanna Wins
Conspiracy
Trial Delay
Former Orange County con
gressman Richard Hanna has
won a delay until March 20 or his
trial on charges of cons piring
with South Korean offic1ab to
buy influence in Congress
Chief L'S. District Judge
W1l11am Bryant set the new date
Monday in Washington. D C.
but refused to send Hanna's
lawyer, Charles McNelis. to
Korea. where U.S. prosecutors
are questioning rice dealer
Tongsun Park.
· 'Tongsun Park·~ either going
to exonerate my client or bury
him." McNelis told the judge
"I'd like to find out which it is."
Bryant did not act on motion~
hy McNelis to dismis::. the case
or reduce the charges. Hanna,
who is now living in Arkansas.
did not attend Monday's hear-
ing.
Hanna is charged with accept-
ing more than $75,000 in bnbes
from Park to help in an illegal
lobbying operation in Congress.
Hanna. the firs t Democratic
congressman ever elected in
Orange County. served in the
House for 12 years until his re·
t1remenl in 1974.
He was indicted Oct. 14 bv a
federal grand jury on 40 felony
counts, including conspiracy,
bribery, mail fraud, accepting
an illegal gratuity and failing to
register as a foreign agent.
Judge Bryant took under ad·
visement a motion to dismiss the
bribery charges.
t•au::.l'd no 1mnH.'<hately apparent
dumage, s1Ud Loi. Angeles Coun-
ly l"lre Capt. Harry Williams.
Ocean cond1t.tons forced the Cull
thrust of the hjgh I 1de on rocks
and bluffi. 1u::.t north or the ex·
clui.1vc colony
On Sunday, waves demolished
Ccnces and stairways of ocean-
front homes.
In Ventura County, the seven-
root Ude rtooded at least two
homes in the Faria Beach area
and caused some $10,000
damage to each Several homes
tn t h e Seacllrr area in the
northern part of the county also
were flooded.
Hieb waves rorced authorities
to shut the 1,200-foot Ventura
Pier. The lOS-year-old pier was
dosed when pier pilings and
cross bracings came loose.
Up to 10.foot waves swept the
Rincon area between Ventura
and 'he Santa Barbara County
line. U.S. 101 near Emma Wood
State Beach was closed off and
on, and the beach itself was
closed.
Jn San Diego. a police
l'>pokesman said many Jow-'Jying
areas and suburbs were flooded
and some roads were closed to
traffic al the height or the
dclu~c .
ln Escondido, police got scat-
t<.'rcd reports or noodiog in city
streets, lawns and some seepage
into homes between 7 p.m . and 9
p m when the rainfall was
hcav1e~l.
Tide!\, which normally run
b<.'tween three and four reel, were ·
expected to crest about 7.3 feet
~llong San Diego shores. accord-
1 n g to thc National Weather
Service at Lmdbergh Field
* * * Frona Page A I
RAIN .••
8.52 inches at this date
The Moulton Niguel Treat-
ment Plant in Laguna Niguel
measured l 2 inches overnight,
for a 7.55 season total. almost
doublt• la~t) l'ar's 3.98 inches.
Ra1nrall in S:inta Ana, \he
flood control district's Gietzen
said, was 1.07 inches overnight,
bringing the season totol to 8.07
inches compared lo 6.43 inches
last year
lightning
Strikes KFI
A Los Anaeles radio sta-
tion was put off the air to·
day when lightning struck
a power tran.'iform er.
A K F I spokesper son
s aid there was no i n -
dication how long it would
take to repair the
transformer
The llghtmng hit at 8:44
a .m .
•
Orange Coast Today's Closing
.Y. toeks
VOL. 71, NO. 10, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A TUESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1978 TEN-· CENTS
.Bitter Cold Forces----Power <:athaeks-
1Sy Th AQoclated Press
The winter's worst cold spell lorced widespread cutbacks in
electric power from Michigan to
tbe Carolinas today. with lem·
peratures below zero In many
areas and plunging to the teens ...as far. south as Alabama. The
&'cold was blamed for at least 16
IHealhs. (Related photos, 11\3, A4l
• The Northeast cold spell
.-trained so much power that
""'
Dog Rescued
Co mm onwealth Edison
engineers in Chicago reported
that the nation's electric clocks
ran an average of 27.7 seconds
slow durin& the night and this morning.
"It was a nationwide problem
because of heavy demands,··
said Bill Harrah, a spokesman
for Commonwealth Edison. It was so cold ID western Penn·
sylvania that residents ventur·
ing out ol doors were wamed
that eQ>OSed flesh could freeze
in less than a mJnute.
''The problem of electric
power ls pretty common
throuahout the middle section of
the country," said William
Webb, a spokesman for the
Federal Energy Regulatory
Com mission. "There is not
enough capacity to go around
r ittht now and l~ts appear.. to be
7 •
Ramiro Galarza administers oxygen to his
female Iris h !-.t>tl('r with the aid of
Newport lkach f1r<.'mcn after the dog was
tra ppt•d in Galarza 's burning house Mon-
day night. Galar.w tried to res cue his pet.
but was dri vcn back by flames that
caused an estimated $15,000 damage to his
home at 416 N. Newport Blvd. Firemen
found the dog after dousing names and re-
port ~he responded to treatment and ts ex·
peeled to recover.
Dense Fog,
More Rain
Due on Coast
By JACKIE HYMAN
Of Ille Di iiy l'l'-1 $1,Atf
Tired of the rain? You may
get a respite tonight, but you're
likely to :.E'e more of the wet
lituff on and off through next
weekend.
"'We huvc a lot of fast-moving
fronts They're going to be hard
to time,'' said John Henderson,
a National Weather Service
mcteorolog1sl
He said tonight'• forecast ls
ror partly cloudy with local
dens e ro~ and a 10 percent
chance of rain, riJin1 to 30 per-
cent Wednelfday as a new storm
moves in fro"m the northwest.
A small craft advisory is still
in effect as seas remain choppy,
' Henderson said. I Monday night'• heavy rainfall
ranged from .65 of an inch re-
ported by the Orange County
l liarbor Department In Newport
Beach to 2.3 inches at SanUaeo
Peak on Saddleback Mountain.
John Gietzen · of the Orange
County Flood Control District
explained that the peak, at 5,•
feet the hletlest J>Qint in the
county. geMrally receives the
most local raJnfa.U becaus~ or
the tendency or air to cool and
release water as ll rises.
He said the ua.son'a raWalJ1
on the peak bu been 22.1 lncbes.
com pared to 14 4 Inches lut
year at lhUI tfme. lte 1ald the
mountain'• 26-]'ear averafe
ralnf•ll total for Utis date la 10.2
inches, with an avera1e of 36.4
inches by iae 30.
Jn Newport Buch, tbe $$
inches record~ for the ~t at
hours brou~t the a.eaon total too
6.33 inches. 'UD rom 5.88 tncbel:
lut year at tbli lime.
Charle. LH•la at Oru1e (See~.P ... .U)
Tidal Action Effect
Due to Topography
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of ... Dally l'llet Staff
Why is it that high tides and
waves batter homes in Malibu
and Oxnard, and break windows
in Capistrano Beach, but leave
Police Probe
Long Beach
Man'slDeath
other seaside communities like
El Morro Trailer Park relatively
unscathed?
It's the way the sea bottom
looks, combined with high tides
and high surf, as:;.cording to a
graduate student al "Scripps
Institute of Oceanography in La
Jolla.
"The errects of tidal action are
due to local topography," ex·
plained David Skelly. a graduate
student of oceanography at the
seaside institute.
He said the makeup of the sea
bottom can af(ect where the
wave energy goes.
The problems f aced by
homeowners in Malibu and
Capistrano Beach are a result of
a combinaUOfl of high tides and
larger than normal surf.
That wet alliance actually
raises the mean water level,
hence the problems that face
oceanside property owners, he
said. .
"Think of tides as actually
waves," he said. "It is a wave in a sense, in that it has a period
and a wave length."
These s!\_allow water waves,
combined with deep water
waves, (thole that break on the
shore) create the condition that
damages bomes on the beach.
"But It's the topography
(makeup ol the sea bottom> that
makes the difference," Skelly
said.
He Hid hJgb waves do the
damace whtn they are superim-~ed on low frequency waves
<tides) but added that the im-
pact depends on whether the sea
bottOO" la comptlsed of a
CS.. flDES, Pa1e A%)
fairly general In a broad area
from Mi c hi&an to the
Carolinas."
Power system s in Penn-
sylvania called for rationing
and cut back electricity supplies
hecause of excepUonally heavy
demands.
In Ohio, where seven deaths
·were blamed on the cold, tem·
peratures near or below zero
also prompted uUlity companies
to cut back electrical output and
call for power rationine.
Cleveland Mayor Dennis J.
Kuclnich, saying the problem
was beyond the city's capacity
to deal with, requested emergen·
cy assistance Monday night.
Gov. J ames A. Rhodes declared
a snow emergency and ordered
out National Guard units in t.he
C leveland area to assist
authorities.
IA.Power Out
The National Weather Service
sald 8.6 inches or snow fell in
Cleveland since Sunday, and
heavy winds created drifts and
reduced visibility.
Cleveland's JU.OOO·student
public school system was closed
for the SttOnd straieht day.
In Alabama, residents
shivered with temperatures in
the teens, and winds whipped
<See COLD, Page AZ)
Fa1Jing Wall Kills
.
One in State Storm
By Tbe Auodated Press
At least 11,000 residents were
left without power briefly today
in Los Angeles County, and one
person died in La Jolla as a
Jightning·punctuated rainstorm
began to wane with another
front just one day behind.
Derrick W. Price, 57, was
crushed to death when a soaked
retaining wall behind his home
in the San Diego community or
La Jolla collapsed on him.
Southern ~alifornia Edison
Co . officials sai d 10 ,000
customers in various parts of
Los Angeles Cou nty were
blacked out at various times
throuchout the morning in Long
Beach, West Covina and La
Puente.
In Arleta and Sherman Oaks,
BA TIERED NORTH BRACES
FOR THIRD BIG STORM-AS
\>otti UAi\;~ l"~ando Vallfy,
scatteted llthtnlqf storms
beginnin1 as early as l a.m.
knocked over trees on power
lines. blacking out as many as
1.000 homes and busin~ses in
the area, said Elizabeth Wlm-
m er. spokes woman for the
Department of Water and
Power.
Lightning also affected 250
residents in the Silverlake area,
Mrs. Wimmer said.
"We've had some problems,"
she said, adding that water
damage to underground cables
in the Los Aneeles Civic Center
ca used some power outages
between 6 and 7:30 a.m.
•
The storm that dropped 1.38
inches of rain in Southern
California since Monday was ex·
peeled to move completely out
of the area by tonight.
But the National Weather
Service said another storm is
moving in from the Pacific and
will come p ou nding into
Southern California.
Ferguson. Relates
Senate Candidacy
SEEKS GOP NOMINATION
Senate Hopeful Ferguson
Orange County public rela-
tions man Gilbert W. Ferguson
announced today he will seek the
state senate seat being vacated
by Dennis Carpenter, R -
Newport Beach.
Ferguson said he will seek the
Republican nomination in the
June primary for the 36tb
Senatorial District, which
stretcMs from Seal Beach south •
to Oceanside.
Ferguson 54 Je a reUred
M arlne colonei and former
lrftlte Qnapn victt..,,..sident.
He now beads his owh advertis· . Ing and public relations firm ln
Newport Beach.
He also serves as executive
director of Californians for En-(
vironment. Employment,
Economy and Development,
(CEEED>. a coalition of busi-
ness and labor interests.
NB Council Rejects
Federal Fund Plan
Ferguson has served in posts
with the county Cosl of Housing
Committee, the county Open
Space and Conservation Com-
mittee, the Greater Irvine Jn.
dustrial League and Califo.rnia
Coordinating Council.
He has also served on fund
raising committees of the YMCA
'lnd Unltec;t Way In Orange and
San Diego counti~.
U.S. Dollar
Rate Mixed
By JOANNE llEYNOLDS
Of .. Del" ,..... Matt
Newport Beach city coun·
cilmen have .unanimously re-
jected plans to apply for a
SS36,000 erant from the federal
Department of Housing and
Urban X>evelopment (HUD).
Monday's vote came al the
concl1o1ston d an hour·long public
hearln1 111 which the majority of
speakers told councilmen they
opposed. use of federal funds,
especially to provide houslng for
low and moderate income
Camllles.
Councilwoman Lucille Kuehn,
CAPO MAGAZINE
SVRFER 'BIBLE'
Published in Capt.iraao Beach,
Surfer Maeazlne i1 prob-
ably U\e bible of the sport. See
Fealurin1, Pa1eCl.
long a backer or the HUD
grants, joined with her col-
leaiues in the vote. n0Un1 bit·
terly that the "ignorance" about
the grants that emerged Jn
testimony showed that city of.
flcials had failed in their ettorts
lo inform Newport residents
what the money was to be used
for.
Councilwoman Trudi Rogers
was one of those singled out by
Mrs. Kuehn as an example. Mrs.
Roiers had said earlJer that "I
don't feel we're responsible for
providing housing for the
greater Southern California
area.·•
The crant ln question was of.
fered under an extensJon of the
three·year grant that the city
bad used to finance its aenior
clt.Uen ceoter.
While 10 of the 12 speaken to
address the council decried the
use of the HUD tuods, one, Con-
nie Mumford, thanked coun·
cllmen tor ta.kine the oriliaal
three-year itanL
She detailed the erowtb ~ lbe
center whlcb opened Au,. 71
wlth 400 members and one clw
and now otters 1S classes and a
variety of special procram• to
1,100 m~bera.
"Well aomebody bad to HY
1ornethlQC aboUt t.he peopte lt'a
helpln1, •••ht e«>mmented later.
Clty offlcials aald tbe)'
bell \'eel acceptance or the aunt
would force the cJlv '.lo:..1&4t U.e money oa pr0J ell dtNCU>'
retate4 to b0Ulln1 I« low la· co•• famlll-. City Maiaqer RotiUt. W'111"
•aid .. taDm Witb federal ol· fldals ltd ldm to MIMve that. then ,_ beill a eM11141 In em·
LONDON <AP> -Opening
rates for the U.S. dollar were
mixed today on Western Europe's
major money markets. There
were modest fractional gains in
London and Paris and losses in
Frankfurt, Zurich and Milan.
These were the opening rates,
compared with Monday's late
quotations:
Lond()n -$1.9185 for the British
pound, compared to $1.91875;
Paris -4. 7375 French francs, up
from 4. 73125.
Coast
Weather
Ten percent chance of
showers tonighl with 40
percent chance Wednu-
day. Continued cool. Lowa
tonight 45 to 53. Highs
Wednelday 58to64.
INSl•E TODA. 'Y
Gov. Edmund Br°'°" Jr. un·
Vdi.d 41 ~ '11.4 bUlfon I
•lat• apnding program todot1
that •~,... taz cut• for 7.t millfo" J,om•own•rt. Sfl ''°"''· ~/;3. •••ex
pbaall lll ~srant]lll'qll'atD. ,._ ·,~---------~~
J
I
Cosmonaut Re~zvous Pla'iuwii
MOSCOW !AP> The Soviet
Umon rocketed two cosmonauts
into 1pace tod1ty to rendezvow.
with two colleal(ues who have
spent a month 11board the S11lyut 6
space staUon. Tass reported.
Successful docktng or lhe CO~·
monauts would mark the first
time four men have been placed
al> o a r d a -S o v le t s p a cc -
laboratory al the same lime
i.lnd OJeg Makaro\' blasted off
in Soyuz Z7 at 3 26 p m M~cow
time <5.26 a.m . PST). Already
aboctrd Salyut Ii art.· flight com·
mander Yun Romanenko, 3.1.
and flight englfll'cr Gl'orgy
Grechko, ·tG, who were fired into
orbit in lhe So} uz 26 spacecraft
Dec. 10 and hoked with Salyut 6
the fOTldwtng day
Grechko took a walk in spat'e
Dec. 20 to check the !!pace lab's
ducking ports and .. reportcd them
111 ~ood working order
The Soviet news agency said
cosmonauts Vladimir Janibekov
and Ole" Markarov blasted off
'Abu sed Offiee'
J. Edgar Hoover
Termed 'Corrupt'
WASHINGTON CA P > 1ht-
late FBI Director J Edgar
Hoover was accused by the
Justice Department today of ac.
cc>pting s pecial favors and
services from FBl cmployct·s
and taking part with other
former FBI officials 1n a pattern
of long·standing ;ind "'1cksprcad
abuses
lloovt'r, who dit•d in 1972 at the
Jge of 77, wus saul to have ac
cepted favors that ranged from
additions to h11, home, including
a front portico. a fishpond.
she Ives. tl'lcphonc stands and an
Oriental fruit bowl, to st'rv1rin~
or his lawnmower. snow blower
and replacement of lawn sod
twice a year
"Plots \\ere rrset, metal
polished wallpaper rctouch1:d.
hrc\\o<><l pro .. 11.kd :met furn1turl'
rearranged." the 40 page report
'aid "Employees were on call
night and day for this work "
On othrr Ot'l';J'>ions, the report
-.~11cl lloovcr got fn•t• t;.ix i.1dv1cc
from ,1 bureau accountant and
nH·m hl'f\ of the FR l's Exhibits
SN·twn '>'<'re r<tllerl upon to build
,t.!Jfts euch yt·..ir for IJoovcr on
Chrislm<ts, his s<•rvicc an
n1vcrsary with the agency and
other srx•cwl occasions.
T he report det:iilcd s1mtlnr
and related charges against a
number of other former FBI
high ranking officials.
Hanna Wins
Conspiracy
Trial Delay
Former Orange County con
gressman Richard Hanna ha-.
won a c1elay until March 20 of his
tri:il on charges or consp1nng
with South Korean oHicials to
IJUy 1nnuence an Congrc:ss. Chief tJ S. Distract J UOjle
William nryant S('t the new dale
Monday in Washington, D.C ..
but r erused to send Hanna's
lawyer. Ch arle!i McNelis, to
KoreH. whcr<' U.S. prosecutors
ar c questioning rice dealer
Tongsun Park.
''Ton~sun Park's either Roi ng
to exonerate my client or bury
him." McNelis told the judge.
"I'd like to rind out which It is."
Bryant did not act on motions
h:t McN~hs to dismiss the case
or rl'ducc• the charges Hanna.
\\ho ,.. now livtng in Arkansas.
cltd not attend Monday's hear
Ill~
llanna 1s charged walh accept.
1n~ mor<' than $75,000 in bribes
from Park to help 1n an illegal
lobbying operation m Congress.
Hanna, the first Democratic
congressman ever elected in
Orange County, served in the
House for 12 years until his re-
tirem ent in 1974.
Ile was indicted Oct. L4 by a federal grnnd jury on 40 felony
counts, including con11p iracy,
bribery, mall fraud, accepting
an illegal gratuity and railing to
register as a foreign agent.
Judge Bryant Look under ad·
visem ent a motion to dismiss the
bribery charges.
I
OltANQI! COAST c
DAILY PILOT
._ .. _
"' ...... " ..... ~ . .....,.
ltc'lt-'C•"""-..1•MO.ftlof.-Mot~# .,.... ........ .... ., , .......... ~ -.. ,,. ... , ..
~.rl.~Ma .. ..::=.: ......
Colt•.". Ofl'lc.-~111 ... ::;::~· rJ~,.. .... tt
But 1t said no t1v1l action was
contemplated a~a111't any of
these pt>rl>ons, partly because
the • l>tatute of lim1tat1ons may
have run out and because "the
actual amounts involved are
small compared to the expense
of litigallon "
The dc·fendant said he had
'' rittc·n his daui;:htcrs tellinl(
them ··never t.11• ushamed, mv
only guilt he.is been working for~
hv1ng and for m y fellow man."
As famtly member~ broke into
sohs, Dunlap said, "You'll nev<'r
hl' able to take my free sp1r1t It
1s 1nnocc·nt
The report said that the gifts
for Hoover included tables, dis·
play cases. cabinets, a bar and
valets. It said assistant di rectors
chipped in to pay for matenals
but the workers who built the
presents were never com.
pensated.
.. FBI employees called upon
to perform lhese services did not
think them proper but felt com
pelled to follow orders for fear of
losing their jobs, or of ar bitrary
transfers or promotion delays.''
the report said.
In a statement accompanying
the report, Attorney General
Griffin B. Bell said the more
than 2·year-old investigation had
"cast a shadow over a g reat in·
stitulion." He SClid the a llega.
Lion s also raised suspicionl>
about officials who did nothing
wrone.
"This report will confirm that
very few individuals engaged in
improper conduct," Bell said.
He issued a warning to all FBJ
offi cials that h e would not
"tolerate the kind of misuse of
office or abuse or a uthority
described in this report "
The report mentions the pre·
vious ly disclosed inciden~ in
volving current FBI Director
Clarence M. Kelley, who accept·
cd two sets or window valances
made and installed by FBI
employees. Kelley has re1m·
bursed the agency for the cost of
the valances and has returned
two television sets that were
purchased by the FBl's radio
enginee ring section for hts
Washington apartment.
The report notes that Kelley,
who is retiring next month, was
not involved in any other mat·
ters detailed in tbe report.
Mi.ssion Viejo
Firm to Buy
22,000 Acres
M 1ssion Viejo Company of·
ficials announced this morning
that they have entered into an
agreement designed to lead to
the acquisition of 22.000 acres
south of Denver.
The purchase of this land. the
Highlands Ranch In Douglac;
County, will make It the com·
pany's largest holding.
Mission Viejo is only 10.000
acres and just about half or it
has been developed so far. The
company's other Orange County
holdin~. Aliso Viejo in Laguna
Hills, is 6,700 a cre5. Develop..
mcnt of this Jand still is in the in-
itial planning stages.
The company also has been
developing another community
called Mission Viejo east or
Denver tn Aurora. Thia 640-acre
project ls half devclobft_cf U R it In a press release, Poi p e -
ly, company president, said.
"Wlth the valuable experience
gained in Aurora, the Mission
Viejo Company had been seek-
Lna addlUonal land to contlnue
lt.a long·terrn involvement in the
Denver area. '1
The terma of the -.reemont.
were not released. A company
spokesman said they had been
neaot.latinC for the purchase of
the property "tor awhile.'' The
acqul1lUon aareement was
1t1ne d with a 1roup of al~
Colorado bu..Jnutmen Monday.
hesald.
rn the release. .Remy 1ald
col\lP&nY ofUclala wm be
evaluallni an a.-pecta of lon1· t.ttra , ..rancod communtty de-
•elopmt:nt Ol the rancb wl\h
DouslH Countr oflleJalt,
cltl&ent' srou119 and all •P· propnate state •l'tlfttt• durtaa
tht ntJlt yur.
Jf the Goyuz 27 flight follows
previous patterns and the dock·
1ng maneuver Is successful.
J anabekov and Makarov should
Join tht other two late Wednes·
day Janlbekov. an air force
lieutenant colonel and com·
mand<'r of the sl)aceship. is
m aklng his first space flight,
whtte Mnnrov,-rcrvmall an<I
flight engineer, flew before on
Soyuz 12 10 1973
Tal>S said aft~r the docking the
four cosmonauts would carry
out joint research and experi·
m~nts.
The agency said Soyuz 'Z'l's
systems were functioning
normally and the two new COS·
monauts were feeling well.
The la~t tame the Soviet Union
had rour men l.n space was July
1975 when Soyuz 18 a nd 19 were
up During that period another
So) u1 craft with two cosmonauts
aboard linked up with a U.S.
Apollo s pacecraft.
The last time the Soviet Union
h11d four m en 1n space was in
<ktober 1969 when they flew In
three differe nt s paces h i ps.
Soyui 6, 7, and 8, and carried out
joint maneuvers. including dock·
ing of two of the spae.ecraft.
!"our spacem en were aboard
one ship an the joint U.S .. Soviet
dcwking of July 1975 but again
this wa!> not the same type of
operation as the docking or two
sp<1ceships with a space lab as in
the planned Salyut 6 rendezvous.
Three U S astronauts spent 28
day-. aboard Skylab tn May 1973,
left and later were replaced by a
('rcw that :.pent two months
ahoard The s pace record is 84
days aboard Skylab in 1974.
The government has not an·
nounccd how Ion~ they are to
stay up The Soviet record for
manned space flight is 63 days,
set in the summer of 1975
Americans hold the world rec·
ordof84days,selln 1973·74.
Front Page 11 l
RAIN ...
Coast College in Costa Mesa re·
ported 1.10 inches since Monday,
for a season total of 8.58 inches.
Lust year at this time the season
total in Costa Mesa was 5.95
inches.
Rain watcher J . Sherman Den·
ny reported a downpour of 1.47
anches ovem1flht in Hunhn"ton
Bt•ach for a season total of 8.40,
Just u shade below last year's
8 52 inche~ at this dale.
The Moulton Niguel Treat·
ment Plant 1n Laguna Niguel
measured l 2 inches overnight.
for a 7 55 sea...,on total, almost
douhle last ye:ir's 3.98 inches.
Rainfall 1n Santa Ana, the
flood control district's Gietzen
su1d, was 1 07 inches overnight.
hrm~ing th<' season totol to 8.07
inches compared to 6.43 inches
last year.
* * * From Page ,\ l
TIDES ...
canyon, headlands, a point or a
gradual sandy incline.
"The bottom determine!!
where the wave <'nergy goes."
he said.
A beach which front& onlo a
deep canyon may not catch the
brunt or the high tides because
the waves cannot push past the
deep water with as much effect.
The bottom can refract, or
turn aside the impact or the
wave on the shor e.
But it appears the triad oi
surf. tides and topography go
out of their way to create
problems for homeowners in
Capo Beach and MaJibu.
And leave other coastal areas
intact.
* * * From Page A l
COLD ••.
the cold down to the equivaJent
of 10 below zero in Hunt&ville.
In northern New England,
bll:r;zard warnings and a threat
of river floods followed a savaae
storm that caused mtillona of
dollars ln damage across the re· &Ion.
Caribou. Maine, with a tem·
perature of s above and winds of
35 'mph, recorded a wlnd·cbill
factor of 40 below.
The National Weather Service
warned of floods along the Ken·
nebec and Androscoggin rivers
Jn Maine, where Monday's
heavy rains and melting s nows
released fee jams.
A s the swells sur1ed
downriver, lbe Kennebec waa
expected to crest in AqUlta at
Seven feel above nood alage.
Meanwhile, ofClclala said damaa• reportl were 1UU com·
lng tn att.r the aavac, at.orm
that b•ttered tho AtJanuc Cqut
trom New En1land to Vlr1lnla.
A 75-year·old tlaherman at
Orr'• llland, Maine, aald he bad
never HID. tuch furious winds
end wavea -evea durhtl bur·
rlcana -and Mew York of.
fldalt •~ tbi .~diU surf
•••Pl •••1 IS""perolnt of
Roc:lra•ll1 Beee Jn Hew :YOtt City.
Reporter Slain
K _ille:rs·to Get
Gas Chamber
She'll Retire
Opera star Beverly Sills has
announced thul -,he'll retirt'
from singing in the fall of
1980
PHOENIX. Ariz. CAP1 Two
men convicted or lirllt·degree
murder in the June 1976 car·
bomb slaying of newspape r re·
porte r Don Bolles were sen· -t~e.d -to-deat-h0 -bt the fair
cbamb(V'!"'i~.
Ma x Dunlap. a 48·year-old
Phoenix contractor, and James
Robison, 55, a plumber from
suburban Chandler, were found
auilty Nov. 6 of murder and con·
spir acy in the bombing
Prosecutors asked that lbey be
sentenced to death.
The death of Bolles. whose re·
porting specialty for the Arizona
Republic was crime. brouaht a
team of broadcast and
newspaper reporters and editors
to Arizona lo investigate or·
JuJge Removed
From Diedrich Case
By GARY GRANVILLE
oi 1"' o.ur Pli.t Sl•tt
Oranae County Superior Court
Judge Philip Schwab was re·
moved Monday from the case in·
volvfng bribery charges lodged
by the county Grand Jury
against S upervisor Ralph
Diedrich and architect LeRoy
Rose.
It wu Judge Schwab who
ruled ln November that the Dis-
trict Attorney's Office shouldn't
handle the prosecution of
Diedrich, Supervisor Philip An-
thony and three other defen-
dants in a political conspiracy
case.
It was against that back· ~round that the DA 's office Clled
an affidavit of prejudice aga111St
the judge.
Private Eye
Seeking Gun
A private invcsti~ator who
claims he must carry a con·
cealed weapon for his own self
protection filed suit Monday in
Orange County Superior Court
~eeking a court order calling for
either Sheriff Brad Gates or
Santa Ana Police Chief Ray
Davis to issue the perm 1t
Preston GUJllory ullegcs in his
suit that he and other private
eyes are being discriminated
against by the sheriff and pohcc
chief who have re1ected his ap
pli cation for u gun permit.
Guillory is a form er Los
Angeles County Sheriff's deputy
who specializes sn investigation
for defense attorneys.
He quickly resPO"ded to the affidavit by removtnc hlmsel!
rrom the bribery case , an
alternative to havin& another
judge decide ii be is prejudiced.
In his rulin1 la&t November,
Judge Schwab sald he could find
no ~rue..prejudice. or bias on the
part of the d1strict attorney.
The judge ruled, however, a
possible appearance of prej·
udice because of opposUe posi-,
lions sometimes taken by the
Board o( Supervisors and Dis·
trict Attorney Cecil Hicks miaht
undermine public confidence in
the courts ii Hicks prosecutes
the case.
That case was put on the back
burner Mon.day whe re a ten.
talive triaJ date or July 31 was
set, meaning the defendants in
the political campaign con.
splracy c1tse won't stand trial
until 13 months after their
indictment.
One real>on for that 1s the state
Supreme Cour t's pending de·
cision on whether 11 should re·
view the removal of Hicks and
his staff from the case.
But the bribery case moved
a long f as t er arter it was
s witched from Judge Schwab·s
courtroom to that of Judge John Flynn.
rlynn agreed to hear a motion
calhng for the DA's remov11l
from lhe bribery case April 27.
And. he set April 17 as the ten
tat1ve trial dale
In the bribe ry indi ctment
h:inded down Dec. 15. Diedrich
IS charged with two bribery of·
f<'nses as well as a ssngle charge
of conspiring to com mil bribery
gun1zcd crime
T heir report waa issued ill! Moy.
Robison was convicted of del·
onating the bomb which ex-
plOded under the p.ews.mm's car
as he was le.a.vine a midtown
hotel parking lot. Dunlap wu
convicted or arranaing for the
murder. They were both seti-
tenced to not lesg than 2t years
or more than 30 years on the •
conspiracy charge. •
John Adamson. 34, pleaded :
guilty to Stt<>nd·degree murder •
charges in January 1978 and im-I
plicated Dunlap and Robison. 1 Adamson races a prison term ot
20 years.
Jn a statement to the j udce
before the sentence was Im-:
posed. Dunlap broke into tears '
as be aald, 'Tm innocent... I
"And to my lovely wfte, Bab
(Barbara), I love you very
dearly."
Robison, speakinl ln a deep, I
clear voice, told tbe Judie: I
"They <the proeecutJon) were 1
successtul In gettlng" a Jury to '
agree to their theory. Jt remai.nt I
a theory -nothlna more." I
Robison also char1ed that '
"the attorney general and '
PhoenilC Police Department will !
use thls as an excuse to never
confront the ones wbo com-
mitted this crime with John
Harvey Adamson. I'm !nDO·
cent."
Thompson said he examined
the records of both m en and 1
found ·•no mitl1allng
circumstances calHng for le-
niency."
\ tae•• ca\end•' ---TO NJ Giff
NEWPORT-MESA SCHOOL
BOA RD Regular meeting.
Costa Mcsn city council ebam- '
bers. 7:30 p.m.
''BEHIND THE
HEADLINES" -Dr. Giles T.
Brown lecturer. OCC Forum, 1
7 .30 pm
"A DOLL·s HOUSE" -South
Co a s t Repertory Theater,
Tuesduy.Sunday through Feb. '
19. 8 pm
WEDNESDAY, JAN. JI
CO AST CO MM UN ITY
COLLEGE BOARD -Regular
meelin&. 1370 Adams. 8 p.m . 1
OCC LECTURE -.. American
Folk Art." Fine Arts 119, 7:30
p.m
j
I
-
luelday. Janua'Y 10, 1978 DAILY PILOT . .J;I
S~venth Grade Roughest ·for Youths
WASlUNGTON CAPI
Wamln1: aevenLb 1rade can be
hazardous to YQW' health
likely to be auacked and to be
the attackers of all junior and
senior high students. Tbe rederal aovvnment isn't
colna to nqWre that admoni-
tl on on every classroom
blackboard, but it.a health and
education experts agree the
ltventh grade can be rough
physically and emotionally for
Ute four million youngsters who
pan through it each year. .
Health planners plnpolnt the
seventh grade as a crucial time
for youngsters in deciding
whether lo smoke. A new
federal anti-smoking campai&n
berng unveiled Wednesday is
expected to aim at discouraglng
these youngsters from picking
up the habit.
tA federal. atudy found that
H llool violence and vandalism
.J>e•k in the seventh grade. The
11 and 13-year-olds are the most
And 62 percent of all seventh
graders, according to one
s tudy, have at least tried
alcohol. In a 1975 survey, more
.
.. ~., ........
'PATION' HELPS BOOST SALES OF MILK
In Seattle , Military Toast Does the Trick
i Milk· March
t
: 'Patton' Pushes Dairy Drink
t SEATTLE <AP) -He !>naps out orders. Behind him is a
\huge Amcric:m fl ag "Ten-hutt'" snaps a sergeant offstage as
"Gen Gl'orgl' S. Pattnn." riding crop in hand, strides forward.
. lll'ra1i.c~h1s hand ln1t agla!>sofm1Jk .
'I'd llkt• to r:.i1:0.<' my glas~ to all of you who have helped
make milk the ull·Amcn c<Jn rlnnk," he tells his audience, a few
dozen dairy cnwi..
"YOU ALL KNOW MILK puts the coffee jitters at ease,"
i-ays the general to the cows, "and that a glass of milk is more
nutritious than a gallon of some sugary drink ... So, thank you
ladie'>. andJilllt keep up the good work. That's all!"
The character or General Patton is really Chuck Blore, a
llollywood adverthlng executive. and the commercial Is one of
10 i.a lvos in the marketing gun of the Washington Dairy
ProducL'i Commission.
Comm1Mo.1on manager Bob Hallberg said the one-year Pat·
ton campaign, begun last February, produced a six percent in·
rrt•a:.C' m ~talc milk sales in 19'n, compared with the nat10nal
grov. lh rJt<.• of four.tenth!> of one percent.
TllE C.UIP1\IG~ RELIES HEAVILY on images created by
.Jt tor GPor~t' C' Scott 1n the movie, "Patton."
Jn om·. HlorC' rasps that businessmen with coffee jitters
rm~h t ht• m 1..,takt'n for cowards. In another, he urges men to
drrnk milk i.il cvC'ry meal and adds: "H you won't do it for
your!>e lf. do It for your sainted mother."
ll all b<·r~ l>:.11d the ads cost about $50,000 to produce and
ahoul $250,000 to air. He says the saJes iain is worth about
S900,000 to dairymen, who under state Jaw are assessed to sup-
port the commil>sion
PRIOR TO 1977, THE commission, a market arm for
W ai.~mgton 's 1.800 daiT).'mm, opted for more dignified, public
serv1 rc-i.tyle spots.
Not everyone is pleased. Hallberg said some listeners,
mostly women, objected to lhe authoritarian Patton tone. He
said i:.omc listeners didn't recognize lbe Patton character and
were angry or pu.zded.
8 Killings
l Deputies Probing
I 'Trash Bag' Deaths
LOS ANGELSS .(A P > -
herlff's deputies say they are
vestigating 18 ldllln~a Co wbieb
onfessed .. trash bag ' murdenir
atrick Wayne Kearney may be
ked.
Investigator Al Sett aald Mon·
ay that the 18 killints are ln ad-
ilion to three Rtveraide County
Uuse You,
Red Baron
than 11 percent said they were
heavy or moderately heavy
drinkcn.
Why Is the seventh grade
~uch a troublesome time?
"It's the worst period of a
kid's life. He doesn't have his
hfe figured out," said Roy
Nehrt, an olflclal of the Na·
tional Center for Education
StaUsUcs and a former junior
hhth school teacher ln St. Lo\US.
"Re's under aU kinds of pres-
surelJ from all sides, and he
can't cope, with them."
The National Institute on.
OC Panel
Holds Off
On Airport
Members of the Orange Coun-
ty Transportation Commisslon
agreed Monday to wait for two
more weeks before responding
to a request for support from the
Inter-County Airport Authority.
But that didn't keep the four·
city airport group's request
from turning into a minor de-
bate before commissioners.
Opposed to the request was
th e chairman of the com·
mission 's Citizens Advisory
Co mmittee, Morton Fink, who
~aid he was speaking for himsell
and not the committee,
Fink said 1t has become ob·
vious the group, composed of the
cities of Santa Ana, Garden
Grove, Stanton and Chino, are
foc using efforts on building a
ne w airport tn the Chino Hills.
The Ctuno Htlls airport raised
eontroversy m the past and drew
opposition from northern county
c1t1es. Fink also said that airport
site wouldn't offer a satisfactory
solution to county airport
problems.
Fink'~ comments drew a quick
retort from Commissioner
David Brandl, who as a Santa
Ana city councilman sits on the
airport authority.
"l frankly resent that you say
we have pre· picked a site,"
Brandt said. "The only people
who have pre-picked a site are
thos e who oppo~c a particular
s ite "
Brandt contended the airport
authority 1s reorganized from
the days when it was promoting
a Chino Hills airport and that
location is now only one of 11 or
12 s ites being studied.
But Fink said he based his op-
position on the authority's past
b1atory.
Commjssioner Zika Djokovich
chastised Fink for taking what
he called a "biased" stand
before members of the advisory
committee have reviewed the
request.
Youth Guilty
In ~idnapping ·
Education, which conducted the
$2.4 million study on school
violence, found that ~e rate o(
violent Incidents declined
s teadily from the s eventh
through the 12th grades. It said
some evidence suegests that
segreeating students from the
most volatile age group into
junior hish schools contributes
to the problems.
David Boesel, author of the
study, said the ri11ks were
higher' for seventh and ninth
graders in junior hlth &chools
than for those ln the same
t
Baby, It's Cold
grades m schools that combine
grades aeven Uu'ou&h 12.
For youths ln tho midst or
puberty. discovering that they
arc no longer cb.ildren but not
yet adults, the transition from
the safe environment of an
elementary school to the un-
familiar confines of junior high
can be di.UiculL
• "It's a real bad hme. They
are encountertng more things
than they ever encountered
before. They may be thrown in·
to some sort of violence and be
Henrietta Cervantes and Ed Staniec wait for a bus in
d~wntown Detroit, hiding their faces from the bite of the
wind and cold temperatures that moved into Michigan on
the heels of a snows torm.
'Battered' Slayer
Sentenced to Jail
robbed or &ha.ken down for the
fl rat tlme," s aid Beverly
Schwarh of Ne w York, a
former teacher who coot'dtnates
a ~aUonal youth anU-smoldnl prOJCCt.
Like their elders, tho YOUDC
teens may tum to cl1arettes u
a crutch, "lryin1 to look cool
and sophUUcated and older,"
. she S<\id.
"The kids need a shield. They
need something to make them
feel they belong in this world
they've been thrown into."
~urt·Eyes
Trial for
HBDOctor
WASHING TON (AP) -Much.
and yet very little, bu ~ed
for JeUrey MacDonald since the·
morninC almost eight years qo
when bis preenant wlfe and two
young d au1hters were dis-
covered stabbed and bludgeoned
. to death in his quarters at Fort
Brau,N.C. .
The 26-year-old Huntington
Beach resident, then a medical
captain, was asslened to the
''Green Berets." Today, the
34-year-old doctor works as
director of emereency medicine
at a hospital in Loog Beach.
But the events that drove Mac·
Donald west Crom the army base
in North Carolina brought him
east to the Supreme Court on Mondays, as government at·
torneys argued that an appeals
court erred when it dismissed
murder charges against him last
year.
When 1t voided the charges,
the lower court said MacDonald
had bffn denied his consUtu·
tional right to a speedy trial. If
the Supreme Court agrees with
the government, MacDonald
· most likely would be put on trial
for murder. •
"The weight is getting
heavier," he said after-Mon·
day's hearing, also attended by
his wife's father.
MacDonald was quoted Mon·
day by government attorneys as
c l aiming in 1970 that t h e
murders were committed by a
group of me n and a woman.
BREMERTON, Wash. <AP) vived the Nazi invas ion of ''hippies under the influence of
Claudia Thacker, a Port Ftance only to spend much of drugs."Hestillmaintainshisin·
Orchard housewife convicted of her more than 20 years of mar· nocence.
murdering her husband, bas re-riace living in dread of her More than aeven years ago
ceived the mandatory five· husband. -in October. 1970 -military •
to-20 year jail sentence but re· authorities determioed there
mains free without bond. Durjng her1.rial, she testified was not ~lb tviddnce to try
M Th k d that Thacker kicked" ancf beat u D-·'d. p tcbo N rs. ac er. 41, a11ure her' b lackened her eyes, .... ac ._.. a a 1ue.. .Y .•
Kitsap County Superior Court laughed while he pointed 8 native. Th'y ~bseiqqently
Judge James Maddock on Mon-pistol at her, and molested their granted him a hardship dis-
day that she would remaln In b'ld cL. 'd charge. . the area pending appeal of her c i ren. ""1e sai she felt he However, in the summer of
.Nov. 17 second-dearee murder was about to harm one of their 1974, a federal arandJury was · ,; . th h . th three teen-age daughters when ed i F J N convic .... on m es oohng dea she finally shot him in th ... back. ·conven n ayettev e, .C .. of Kenneth Thacker. " and five months later the grand
In pronouncing the man-"We don't condone women jury returned murder lndict·
datory sentence, Maddock rec· shooting their husbands but ments agalnst MacDonald.
om mended that stale correc· this ts the ultimate tra'gedy His attorney. Bernard L.
tion official~ be lenient in when help is not available or Segal, contenda there UI no way
establishing a release date. women don't know to seek it .. MacDonald, or any other defen-
Mrs. Thacker's supporters said Marge Ziegler. Kits~p dant, can be protected once de-
have maintained that she is the County chapter president of the nied a speedy trial. "There ls
SAN DIEGO (AP> -"I have ultimate example of the bat· National Organization for nothing further that a trial can
nothin g against h1m," the judge tered wife, a woman who sur· Women. add," Segal told the justices. said. "He may be ~real to play -----'-----------;..;_..:..;.:.. ___________ _:__...::._ ___ _:_:.:..:::.:..::..:__
cards with, but he's sure a
danger on thestr~L"
And with that comment .Mon·
day, Superior Court Judge Earl
H. Mau Jr. ordered IS-year.old
Robert A. Wright to undergo a
90-day California Youth Authori-
ty diagnostic study in connection
with bis g\.lJlty plea to charge of
kidna pplng for the purpose of rob·
bery.
The youngster pleaded guilty
Dec. 12 to kidnapping a National
City woman. He originally bad
been charged with kidnapping,
rape, cart.heft and burglary.
Teen Auto
Thieves Held
OCEANSIDE (AP) -An 11·
year-old boy and a 17-year-old
a tole •1¥ trucka and sedans from a
uaed-.car lot before they were
caucht, pollceaald.
The older boy wu captured
after chargin1 a truck up a hill
and rammine it into a culvert
Monday.
£ar ller, poUce omcer Donald
Stokes chased a t ruck being
driven atbllh apeedtrom the VlS·
ta Motors lot and forced the 11·
yeu-okldrivert.oaatop.
"Property Tax
Plan&umed
Our jeans will drive you
right up the wall •••
But please use the ladders in finding
that special pair from which there
are. many styles to choose. J2.00 to 32.00
\
•
' ..
t
f OAIL Y PILOT
4'•st ~
Coating ,~J .-. ~
w Uh
T olJI ~pbine
• 1 GLANCING BACKWARD:
• · With the weather as dull and
·drab as it's been lately, it's nice
to get some happy surprise in
· • the mall. I got one yesterday. It
was a paint chip
" When you are in the
newspaper dodge, it's always
1 flattering to gel a communka·
" tion from a man of the pro-~· fcss1ons In this case. the note
" came dromoneAlan R. Gerard.
LATE OF LAGUNA
1 Beach, Mr Gerard now holds
forth in Seattle. Wash .• home of
' ' that football team or certain re-
cent fame. Mr. Gerard as one oJ 1' the distinguished arch1tecturaf 1· ' and rntcr1or designers of our
''' tam(l, having Jen hi~ mark of
"' creat1v1ty upon vast shopping
'· ' complexes, department s tores
'''' and homes of the amuent all
across the nulton .
.; Mr. Gerard thus can be fairly
• · C'haractcrlzcd as u :-.uccei-.s in his
~ chosen profession. a man who
I has made has mark. So you are II dearly pleased wh<'n hie.; tasteful
• :-.tationery, with the (•nvelopc•
II tarrying has "AC;" logo 1mpnnt-•1 cd upon the corner. crosses your
Ct desk. I opened It
The Seattlt• dt-s1gncr had ob· a v1ously been makin~ t1ome color
Ja selection:-for one or his lmpor-
jl tant clients an n·<·enl times. He
~ had stupl<.•d a P<t1nt chap sample
• to the ll•tter \ :-hort mei;i.age
• followed
JI "Dear Tom Hemember I MergJtroyd Maroon? Ju:-t ran I 11cro.,s this sumph: remanded
lP me of a ('t•rtam :-.even ·minutc
• paint Job Alan "
• I exam1nc·d thl• !'.tapled-on
~ p;11nt chap a bat rloser. It was m
·• d<'cd a ~ha'>tly shack of maroon.
• dark , muddy, with a trace of
• metalht' in it. ...
MEMORY DI D INDEED flood
hack. It was that hot summer
long ago when Alan Gerard had
JUSt escaped from his tour as a
U.S. Navy aviator. lie had re·
turned to Laguna and opened an
auto body shop Ln the old El
Arco ga~age ifl a n effort to elude
m<.•anangful labor
I managed lo hang around Al's
place qwte a bit that summer,
also to escape the rigors or real
• employment. We would maybe
bang out a wrinkled fender or
two some days and then , ex·
hausted by such manual labor.
retreat to the beach to scrutinize
the surf or other eye-pleasing ut·
tractions thereupon.
That summer I happened to be
dnvmg a 1932 Ford which was
adorned with the ugliest pamt
;ob ever applied by man.
One day as we reposed in
Gerard'!. body shop, exhaust.eel,
he lodlred up at my heap and
declared, "Morphine, that's the
ugliest paint job ever applied by
man. Let's re-paiM-iF' •
"I'll have to.ii~· SJ&nding it.''
I protested.
"NAW." GER-AP .um ...
s tarting to slosh left()ver painLI
or vaned colors m~ ltllf s~r•}'
gun. "Just wipe offUfedjrt:
I started wiping. ~ follo~ed
right behind the wlplng rag,
spraying great billow• or left·
over paint. Seven miputes later.
my old tub was brtth~ and stuny
an that ghastly hue we named
M <'rgalroyd Marooq.
It 1s a somewhat metanQl\011
note to recall that tl)f sumrder of
Mergatroyd Maroon was afore.
than three decades ago.
But you have learned a se~et
of one of lhe great deslJners of
our time. .
lie never forgets •~Mil color',
by golly.
I Albef!Y
Am•rllfo . ""'"°'"' A\Mvllle
I AlllHll•
••ltimDf• al""lnthem l 11 smera. ....... .......
' llutfelo • °*'""" • CM<ltlll WV Olk ... I cinclllMll r c.-11M l 0.1-f't.Wlll
'°'""" • ()e11M!Ml
I Dlltelt • Diii.
• ,.lrlNnh ' ....,, ...
I
·t
"' L.O M 11
~ ' n tt ,, ) ,. " S1 11
JS " .. .,, ., " JI 1$ :n 4 " , . 21 ·I
1 .. 10 ...
14 •
#1 IS ,, '°
I •to • 11 .• -1 _,,
,. 4 ,. "
...
lut1td111v Januwv 10. 1978
3 Settle1nents () K' d
Work Begins on Next Peace Talks
JERUSALEM (AP> -lsr•el
approved today the build1na or
three new and potentially con·
trovers1al settlements on the cot·
fup1ed Wesl Bank of the Jordan
River as Israeli and Egyptian
negotiators prepared to open
their next round of peac(' talks.
An advance team of 20 Egyp·
t1an off1cial~arrivcd m Israel to-
day and a group of 28 lsraelis went
to C a1ro to prepare for the talks.
A. KEY COMM ITTEE of
Israel's Knesset, or parliament,
approved a plan to set up the new
settlements ofer the next three
months.
The dec1s1on is hkely to stir
Arab and poi-.::.1bly American pro-
tests.
Israel contends its settlements
in occupied areas must femain
under a peace M.•tllement, Egypt
say::. they must be withdrawn and
Washington has called such out-
posts a hindrance to peace.
PRIME MINISTER
Menahem Begin's government
tentatively approved the new out·
posts at last Sunday's cabinet
meeting here, but a dissentiftg
faction in the ruUnc_ coaUUoo ap-
pealed the deelsloo lothi; Kn~sset
Foreign Affairs and S~curity
Committee.
By a vote or 14·9, the panel en·
dorsed the plan to bt,dld three new
outposts and ret.roactively ap-
proved a fourth settlement that
went upln recent weeks.
There ar~ about 90 Israeli set-
tlements in t lbe occupied ter-
ritories including some 45 in the
West Banlt, 25 In the Syrian qo1an
'Heights and 21 ln the Sinai and
Gaza Strip. ...
THE EGYP'IJANS wbo arrived
in Jerusalem today will do lbe ad-
vance work for the meeting or·
foreign minist~rs Jan: 16, wbUe
the Israelis lay the groundwork
for a defense rhinislers' meeting
m CairobeginningW$esday.
The Egyptians will be greeted
with far less fanfare than the
group th~t preceded President
Anwar Sadat's historic trip to
Jeru$alem,.in November.
No flags deck the streets, and
Iuaelis who were atunned by the
sight or Esyptlans In their capital
two months ago are taking the
new conference in stride.
THE J ERUSALEM meeting
will be held in th~ Hilton Hotel and
could go ot1 for months. The Unit·
ed States and the United Nations
wtll participate.
Secretary of Slate Cyrus R
Vance arrives Sunday. Officials
said he probably will leave lhree
days later but may stay longer 1f
his mediationi" .. ....,..ed.
Vance is expected to urge Israel
not to establish new settlements
in Sin ai, and spokesman Hodding
Carter said in Washin gton:
"Quite frankly. we think this issue
can be resolved In the dis·
cussions."
Fat, Salt Regulated?
That May Be_ N~xt Stop, USDA Official Says
WASIUNGTON <AP) The
federal government may con·
sider regulating how much Cat or
salt some of the foods eaten by
Aml'rtcans should h(• allowed to
contain. an Agriculture Depart·
ment ofhctal sJvs
C;.irol Tucker Foreman. a~.,1s
tant st.'t'rc.-tarv for consumt.'r
sen I Cl'~ and fcXxl . st11d Mondav
that s uch regulation may be con·
.,1dercd after the depart menl de·
c1de:-. on rules on nitrates, wh1cb
arc \\ 1d<'ly ust•d as prt'sc:rvat1vc·s
1n meal!> but have heen linked to
l'anc<•r
Health Report
AFTER THE nitrite issue is
settled, the government "may
have to examine many products
that have too much fat or salt."
Ms. Foreman said in a speech to
the Women 's National
Democratic Club.
Nutritionists have said that
Americans damage their health
by eating too much rat and salt.
Overconsumption of rat in
general and saturated fat an
particular has been linked to
heart disease. the leading cause
of death in the United States
Eatm.c loo much sail, an ingre·
dit.•nt UM.>d in many of the proc.
Elderly 'Survive~
Nursiiig Home.Care
WASHlNGrlsN <AP> Ttlc .n\Vf1ber o ru.&rs ing home residents
discharged flive IS' more than dou~te the number who dae in homes.
the govem~t·says, de~p1te the Image o( nursing homes as places
where peopl@ spend their last dtlys.
esscd foods ?n grocery shelves,
can lead to high blood pressure
T HE SENATE Nutrition Com·
mitlee, as part of a report on na-
tional dietary goals, urged
Americans la::.l year to cut down
on these two foods.
Ms. Foreman, in an example
or the possible government ac·
t1on to come, said, "Hot dogs
that a rc 30 percent fat may be
closely studied m the coming
years.''
Ms. Foreman urged strong
government action on food quali·
ty as a leader of the Consumer
Federation of America befQre
joining the government. Since
then s he has helped formulate a
tougher Agriculture Department
stand on nitrites.
N ITRITES, USED in bacon and other m cats to prevent
deadly botulism poisoning, have.
been identified as possible
causes of cancer when combined
with a substance already in the
stomach
The department has decided
to gather laboratory evidence
about nitrites an fe>ods and has
left the door open to possible
regulation of use of ntlrttes by
food producers
NATION I WORLD
Get Me Outa Here
It's too C?ld even for Frosty, the giant snowmun, m Glen· d~lc, Wis . ~le wants a southbound motorist along
Milwaukee R1ver Parkway Lo give him a lift. but luck
hasn't been with him. The chilly hitchhiker is the creation
of Bob Rasmussen.
14th State Nears
Laetrile Approval
TRENTON. N.J. <AP> .... Go'IJ. Brendan Byrne has andicated he
will sign into law a ball to legalize Laetrile for cancer treatment in
New Jcr::.ey, which has one or the nation's highest cancer death
rates.
The state Assembly gave final legislaltve approval to the bill Mon-
day by voting 47·6 to concur on a
Senate amendment.
With the governor's signature.
New Jersey would become the
14th slate in the nation to allow
doctors to prescribe Laetrile and
pharmaceutical fi r m s to
manufacture the substance.
which is extracted from apricot
pits and other fruits .
N F.W J ERSEY OAS one of the
highest number or cancer deaths
per capita. The Nata9nal Cancer
Institute singled out. Gloucester
County In an October 1!Y77 report
for its high incidence or cancer
deaths.
Union, Essex and Middlesex
counties which, like G loucester1 have a high concentration of oil
refineries, also have high cancer ,
rates.
Advocates claim Laetrile is an
eCfective cancer treatment, but
the U .S Food and Dr ug Ad-
ministration and the American
medical establii-.hment have srud
there is no proof at is of any
value
A FEDER AL judge in
Oklahoma ordered the FDA on
Dec 5 to enforce its ban against
interstate shipment of Laetnle.
A new report by the. NaUonal Center for Health Statistics also
found the rate al whlcl'I nursing
home patients get out alive has
Increased steadily m Ute last 15
years.
YSE COMPOSITE T RANSACTIONS
The center's figures contrast
sharply with a 1.974 report of t~e
Senate Special Commitl~c on
Aging whidh S-Uid, "Mo$t pa.
tienls <'nleting a nursing home
will die there."
T H AT R E llOl\T, entitled
"N ursing Home Care in the
United States: A Failµre in
Public Polley.'' cit~ &ludies in·
dicating that up to~ J>ercent of
patients died in n\ff'Slng homes.
"The more; c011sq.rv~Uve
figures indicate that 50 percent
or nursing home patients die In
our~ing homes, 21 percent are
re.turned to hospitals, 18 perceot
are sent home or to relatives'
homes and 10 percent are placed
in other accommod'auon.s," the
Senate report.Gld ·
No comparable breakdown on
discharges w~s available In the
health statistics 9enter's aurvey,
which was based on data coiject·
ed fr9m August 19'1.:t to Apdl
l974, the most recent d&tlt
available.
BUT IT FOUND that 70 per·
cent of the one million people
discharged from nursing homes
an 1973 were still alive, com-
pared .with only 59 pf!rcent a
decade earlier.
Officials at the center which
js part of the Depart~ent of H~allh , Education and WelfJre,
said the trend appears to be con-
li nu ing, although the latest
statistics have not yet been
analyzed.
The report on nursing home
use said the overwhelming ma·
jority of nursing home residents
was admitted for physical
reasons, while one in 10 eas ad·
,milted for disrupt.we behavior or
mental deterioration and one in 20
for "social reasons," s uch as lack
of a family member willing to pro.
V}decarc.
T HE SURVEY FOUND that 72
percent of the nation's 15,700
nursing homes had waiting lists
of people asking to be admitted,
an d once adroitted, most pa-
tients stated more than a year.
I
.,
11
I •
CALIFORNIA
uper~lsor
Gay Member
Takes Oath
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -It could have been
an awkward moment. It was time for San Fran·
ciaco'a newly inaugurated supervisors to introduce
their families to the a~dience in a packed City Hall
chamber.
Harvey Milk, a 47-year-old businessman. had'
Just taken his oath or office as one of 11
superVUJOl"S. He looked around a bit nervously, 1
stood up and said :
.. IT'S WELL KNOWN that I'm a gay person. 1
have a loved one, but he was too nervous to stay
here and left."
Milk, the first avowed homosexual elected to
lhe powerful board, shares his home with Jack
Lira, 24, whom he described as "my lover, my
partner in life.··
THEY WALKED arm-in-arm from Milk's
camera store on heavily gay Castro Stree.~ to City
Hall, a couple of miles away, on Monday as Milk
was sworn in on the front steps. Scores or sup-
..
Tu.day. Januaty 10. 1978 DAIL y PILOT A :s
'North Hard Hit
By T'llfl Auoclated Presa
A r ew scattered showers coot.lnued ·
today ID the wake of a storm that bat·
tered Northern California Monday,
whipped Pacific t.ides to a frenzy and
dumped heavy snows in the Sierra.
The National Weather Service said
skies would clear by Tuesday after·
noon but another !'acme storm wu
expected to move over the northern
half oft.be state by Wednesday night.
AN ARMY infantry company from
Fort Ord 1andbagged the foundations
of beacbfront homes near Santa
Cruz, where wind-fanned tldes
thrashed tlle coast.
The waves damaged foundations of
eight homes alone Las Ola.s Drive at
Seacliff State Beach, and county of·
ficials estimated the pricetag of the
two-day storm al $250,000, most of it
for cleaning up debris.
and waves washed Miramar roa4 a
mlle south of Princeton.
THE sroa M also took its toll ln
Marin County, where a 100.foot sec·
lion of sea~all which 1uarda the
$300,000 Boliaaa bome of novelilt
Earl Thompson was torn out.
He estimated that damage to the
home and grounds, once owned by
the J effenon Airplane roct CJ'OUP, at
$100,000.
FLOODING WAS reported io
Marin City. Corte Madera,
Tam alpais Valley, Invern e11.
Martinez, Albany and Alameda.
ln eastern California, avalanche
warnings were posted by the U.S.
Forest.. Service for the east slope of
the C4Pltral Sierra from Tloea Pua
aoulh to Bi.shop.
THE SNOW UNE was expected tO
drop to 4,000 feet by early today wttl\
another anowstorm expected on the
way, the weather service reported. • porters followed them.
Mayor George Moseone, a onetime friend who
lately has been feuding with Milk, greeted him on
the steps and watched his swearing in.
For the Birds·
H E AVY SUR F at Monterery
caromed off coastal rocks into the
Tla Maria Restaurant on Cannery
Row. Managers estimated damaie at
$10,000 to $U,000.
The Pacific storm expected,
Wednesday night would be the third
for Northern Callfornla thia year. Tbe. Shore birds that normally feed on the mud flats of Humboldt Bay On the San Mateo County coast,
near Eureka are forced to seek refuge on an oJd pjling after a io..foot~high swells crashed over the .. Tms DAY HAS been one of the most joyous high tide in the bay exceeded eight feet. The tide, highest of the breakwater at Pillar Point, casting
of my lire." Milk said at a reception at a gay bar year, cau.'>ed minor flooding in the bay community of King several small boats adrift. A secUon
· first two boosted rainfall' totals 'to
norm al levels for most points and
dropped as nuch as nlne feet ol anow
on the Sierra. in his district tater that night. Salmon but did little other damage . of roof was blown away ln Pacifica
He noted the significance of his walk and that ----------------":..;._ ____________ _....,-1-,.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-....::.li-• .;...~..;;•;.;;.•~,;,,:•:.;•-.-.-.-.-.~-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-..-, ...
his picture with Lira was on the front paee or the
afternoon newspaper. 1us1•··1-ss "The city survived the walk," he said. The de· M T • k t Pl d cision to have his companion with him was "just Ore IC e S anne ,,
~~,.·::~~h::::~y ·~.::~.::::::,::,:,h::~, For King T. ut Exhibit @J .lftlUrGftCe ... -~.
dozen opponents. including a couple of other ~
homosexuals, to win his seat on the board. TWO ADDITIONAL YEARS
A native of Long Island, he was dishonorably LOS ANGELES (AP) Friday evening. ficjals say the exhibit, OF GU A 11 A .._.TEED
discharged from the Navy (or being a homosexual. -The 661.000 advance "We were delighted s c bed u 1 e d t 0 run AftAn
Considered a liberal, he put together a political tickets to see the with the public's en-through June 15, is ex· .. .._.O l.._.CD~A 'SE
base of gays and organized labor. T r e a s u r e s o f thusiastlc r espo11se to peeled to attract 1.3 1"'1111 " ~
Tutankhamun at the purchasing tickets in ad-million viewers. IN PREMIUMS"
County Museum of Art vance." Golden s aid. The exhlbit. a collec· Business Packages. Commercial Fire. State Site have been sold out. But The tickets were sold by tion of 55 objects on loan
museum officials say the stores as a public from the Cairo museum . Condominiums and Apartment Packages ·
Sony Center Planned
TOKYO CAP> -Sony Corporation, one ot
Japan's leading electronic!> makers. ls putting up
a video techniques center .. very soon" in Santa
Clara County, U.S. Sen. S. I. Hayakawa said to·.
day.
"I am rather delighted that Sony's Akio
Morita told me this," Hayakawa told a news con-
ference. ''It is very important at this time and I'm
glad he decided on Santa Clara County" although
California still has unitary tax problems.
T etU!Mr SWJ~11ded
EMERYVILLE (AP) An Emeryville school
teacher has been suspended from his teaching job
for claiminC sick leave for time he spent undergo·
mg a sex change operation.
The state Com-
( )
'mission on Professional
Competence Monday ST.-ITE ruled that Steve Dain
..__ ______ __.. ·"engaged in deception"
when he claimed s ick
· leave for Dec. 8, 1975 through June 30, 1976 -time
he spent for various stages of an operation that
culminated m woman physical education teacher
Doris Richards becoming Steve Dain.
Proto~ol Prote•ted
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The protocol arrange·
ments for First Lady Rosalynn Carter during
President Carter 's state visit last week to Saudi
Arabia have drawn a protest from the Los Angeles
chapter of the National Organization for Women.
Gloria AJlred , NOW coordinator. sald in a let·
ter Monday to the U.S. State Department that the
"First Lady need not visit any couatry which
forces her, or other women, to sacrlflce their
dignity or their human tights."
Teien RJng Broken
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Police here report
they broke up a male prostitution ring involving at
least IO teen-age boys and an organizer who ar-
ranged for them to meet clients al downtown
hotels.
Robert Paradis, 40, of San Francisco, was ar·
rested in his apartment Monday and charged with
JO felony counts, including six for pimping and
pandering, officers said. He is being held in lieu of
$50 .000 baH .
ticketless Tut-maniacs service at no cost to the is the largest select.Jon .. -----------------------··---... • may still get a chance to museum, he added. from the tomb of the
see the exhibit. Pharaoh Tutankhamun
Morton Golden, depu· HE SAID it was not ever sent abroad. It ls BOB PALEY
& ASSOC, INC.
NORTH OC • 546-3205 ·
SOUTH OC • 642·6500 ty director of the yetknownhowmanyad· visiting Los Angeles as
museum. said additional d1ttonal lickel'i might be part of a seven-city U.S.
tickets may go on sale sold or when they would tour and will travel next
on a daily basis after the be offered. Museum of to San Francisco. museumhasa chanceto ~~-~-~~--~_;__.;...~;,_:,_:~.:.:.:;..:::.-~-~~------~~----_;_:....:...=--=::::::::::::::::::::::::::==========:::..
"study the gallery
capacity and estimate
the number of no-
sbows" when the exhlb1t
opens Feb. 15.
GOLDEN SAID the
advance IJckets -which
cost $2 for general ad·
mission and SI for senior
citizens, students and
children under 12 -
went on sale Jan. 3 at 84
department store outlets
and were sold out b)
'Secret'
Sessions
Defe ated
SACRAMENTO (AP>
-Legislation to allow
local government b()djef
to meet secretly to ap·
point or fi re advisory
commission members
has been killed by the
California Assembly.
The vote was 25·40
Monday on the bill by As·
sem blyman Paul Ban·
nai, R-Gardena.
It would hav e
amended the 1975 open
meetings law, w!\ith
permits secret sesaions
of local governing bodies
only for personnel mat-
ters involving salaried
employees.
ii ' '""• I • .1• '1,11 , a
at ·
Pomona lint lederal's
Laguna Bills and IrvlD.e Olllces
Laguna Hills
lllCial :S-claJ' SJacnrl -.OJUI.,, Ja. h1I.
lalldaJ, fJan. 10'1l ••••• ,,Jan.11th
,, 1111
1 (11 I
..
Diamonds
are no
mystery
to· us
Wt>'Ve Cot somet.hlllg speoia.l tbr you to aee a.t. ouft omoeat
AB & oommun.tty interest 8"1\'°1 we've planned & two &n4 t.bree-da.y
aho'W'i.nC or Yarn Art peJnUnga o1'Mted by Cat.lleO,ral OUy
'realdent. ¥&z!Y 11'1.eld. Tb.18 unique d1Bplay reatures a number of
exa.mplea Of"Mr'I. 1'1el4'8 bM.ut.ttul band.lwork., done 1n & variety
or needlework m&tert&la. We tnnte you t.o come see for youreel!
, t.his amvJng arttstry oaj)tured on oa.nvu Wlth need.la and yarnl
nanm ... 1..r1.,.'1ml
. CJaUlnla""" IUlel
Thia ha.nd¥, l\ltd.e Usta all .orte or
interesting I_~ and pl&cM in Soutl:l.ern
C&lltorn.la, a.lid ts O'ef,t to use ~ pJ&nnlD.C
weekend out1ntal It~ youra A'ee, &tour
om.a., wh1lewpp1rtuta1
11
..
I
\ .. ....
Or nooCoastD••lvP•IOI Editorial P~e ....................................................................
Robert N. Weed'/Publls.her Thomu Ket>vll /Edltor
Tueedey. JAl'uary 10. 1111 Barbara Kr~lblch/Edlt0tl•I Peoe Editor
:r outh Authority
Sets Standards ,. .
·Orange County officials should consider the humane
aspect along with the financial element or proposed
California Youth Authority standards for juvenile halls.
• · Depending upon how rigidly the proposals are ap·
plied, the cowity's cost could range from a mere $200 a
year in extra admini~trative expenses to an investment
topping $1.5 million.
I . . The latter figure includE!s installation of an air·
c:.etiditionlng system at Juvenile Hall estimated tp cost $1 I million, along wiU1 $250,000 in other remodeling and
$250,000 a year in added personnel expense.
County ofCicaaJs don't yet know how :>trictly state of-
ficials would enforce the standards. But Youth Authority
officials have said they would work county.by-county to
determine how the standards should apply.
At the crux of their determmatwn would be whether
filruclural conditions at Juvenile Hall "are so unsuitable
as to cause a danger lo ufe. health and \\elf are."
County supervisors should do their best to hold down
unnecessary taxpayer costs. But even more important is
the welfare of youngsters detained 1n Juvenile Hall. If ex·
. tensive remodeling is needed lo protect their well-being.
county government should be prepared to foot the bill.
·s ·chool Laws Overdone
California's schools arc reeling under a barrage of
new le~islallon and 1t 's lime to call a halt, says As·
· semblyman Dennis Mangers.
The Huntington Beach Democrat has called for a two-
year moratorium on legislation affecting education, to
~ive school boards a nd administrators a chance to catch
up with the requirements already imposed by the
1,egislature.
The idea of a Jong moratorium may be something of a
pipe dream, hut Mangeri, is on the right track. He de
~ervcs the support of school districts and his fellow
tcgis lators in coolin g the outbreak of laws.
. Mcasun's t·n.1cted recently. he notes, cover such
diverse area..., a!'> collective bargaining for teachers, com·
petency standards for graduation, early childhood educa·
tion, instructioo in a :>tudenl's primary language, school
financing and special education.
. While fi ghting their way through this maze of laws,
says the assemblyman, the schools also are expected to
prevent venereal disease. fight drug and alcohol abuse,
treat emotional dbturbances, encourage conservation
and promote bicycle and auto safety, among other things.
. He has a:-.kcd fell ow legis lators to join him in a period
of ''self-imposed restra int" by neither introducing nor
voting for new bills that would add to the curriculum, ust'
the SC'hools as a vehicle for social change or otherwise
"improve" them ut le ast in the eyes of bill spon:,ors
As a forml·r tl'athL·r ;.md school principal, und a
mC'mber of the Assembly Education Committee, Man~er:,
j -; in a good positaon to evaluate the impact or nttW laws
on school distract:-..
.. And the schools, he aptly notes, should not be used as
"a dumping ground for every well-intentioned problem
... olver's aspiration." His proposal for restraint is very
much in order.
Gls Deserve Better
The World War II picture of the over-paid , over·
·indulged American GI s waggering through Europe
al<J'ngside his under-paid and often under-fed Allied com-
p anions must seem like a bad joke to today's American
enlisted men stationed in Germany.
Their shrinking dollars now are worth less when ex-
changed for healthy German marks than the pay handed
out. lo the British Tommies in pounds.
And for the 16,000 married Gis -among the 250,000
Americans in Germany -who are obli~ed by archaic
Anny rules to live on the German economy without
special dependents• allowances, the costs of food and .
housing make the situation even more miser able.
By comparison. alm ost all th~ British troops in
Germany are able to live in housln'g provided by their
goftrnment. ,
The rule that forbids low.ranking servicemen to take
their wives and children abroad makes"sense In tim e of
wa!t But in peacetime, and with the Army fuljx_depen-
de~. upon volunteers, it becomes a needless hardship.
·,E specially when pay scales and privileges for
American officers still put them at the head of the
.eco.omic list among the Allies.
he Pentagon say! it would cost about $100 million a
ye"1" to extend dependents' beiiefits to the lower ranks of
enlfit.ed men. This is a mere drop in the bucket of our de ..
fen19e costs.
.Even if the weak dollar were not exacerbating the
protlem, the rules should be changed to give the Gis and
theiP f amllies a more equitable standard of living_ • •
Ot views expressed on this page are those of their authors ·~ ~I expressed In the epace·above are those of the Oalfy Pilot.
art Reeder comment 11 Invited. Addreu The Dally Pilot. P.O.
, Costa Meea. CA.92!28. Phone(71•) 642-'321.
· Bojtd/Twins
• I ByL. M. BOYD
· Ti. odor of ldenUcaJ twins
ts t.lcal , already men·
tio tbat. Bot possibly
ore remarkable is th•
tendency of twins to
actly. equal In lo-
Dear
Gloomy ·
Gos
telllgtmte. Take Joe and BUI
Her kenbam, for instance.
Wbea cradu ated from.
Albany. N.Y., High School In.
1976, they each came out
wltb a 91.15 grade point. aver ace.
How many kinds of fathers
are there. BftYWay? A Texas
A & M mother·and·father
•peclall•t conteudai
-·Father• un uuelly be dea~rlt>ed as expra11lve ltadera, p a trlarcba or
autocrata.•• Jt )'9Ur dad doei
not fit one ot ·the cha.rac·
teriullCIDI, bow •o not. f
J ack And erson
Co:mrlloditY Swindlers Flourish
W ASlllNGTON -The stock.
market has operated under the
stern eye of the federal
watchdogs ever since the 1929
crash ruined mi1Uon1 ot asnall in·
veslors. But today the commodi·
ty market 1s in ereater need of
watching.
For a new breed of swindler
has grown up around tho com·
modily ex·
c hang e.
These modern
Sa muel
lnsulls are
known in lbe
trade as
"bucket shop
operators,··
end they are
making a kill·
ing in com·
modlty options -at the expense.
of course, of the unwary in·
vest.ors.
A commodity option allows the
Investor to buy a commodity
such as sugar or silver at a set
prlce. He &ambles that the price
will go up. Then he can make a
fortune by unloading his com·
modlty at the higher. future
price. The catch-22 is that he can
also lose hls enUre Investment tr
the price should drop.
Many invest.ors, trusting the
federal r egulators to protect
them from being fleeced.
purchase their options from
sleazy firms which not only
charge too much but never com-
plete the transactions. The firms
i.1mply pocket the customers'
money and toss the options into a
trash bucket. That's why these
outfits are called •·bucket
shops."
TH E BUCKET system pays off
because eight out of 10 buyers
Jose money on their options. For
the rare customers who hit it
lucky, the bucket shops make
good out or their fabulous profits.
In other words, the odds are
heavily stacked against the
customers.
The Commodities Futures
Trading Co mmission, which is
supposed to police the market.
concedes in a devastatingly
frank internal memo that the
problem is too much to handle. ·
' House investigators, meanwhile •
have turned op these illustra-
tions:
-A bucket shop underwriUen
by a $2,000 loan from a disbarred
broker la now doing a $50 million-
a·year.buslneu. Their telephone
·Paul Harvey
bill alone T\l.DI $150,000 a month.
-A diabetic mother In DaUaa
wilb tour thildren sold her home
and Invested her life aavlngs in
the commoditiea option market.
She bas taken a beating.
-A Florida pensioner tried to
ease the financial pinch by plung.
ing bls life savings ot $12,550 in
options. He wound up witb next t.o
nothing.
-One firm !iel up a "boiler
room" operation manned by 250
high-binder salesmen spieling 10
hours a day over toJl.free. long-
distance lines.
There are dark unproved sus-
picions, according lo our own
sources, that. the Mafia ls moving
In on the commodity market.
SO FAR, the options tradin1
accounts for only 2.2 percent of
the $1.1 trillion in commodity
transactions each year. The total
take from the sale of opt.ions is
estimated to be between $200
million and $1 billion. But the
commodities option market is
1rowing by leaps and bounds.
In an attempt lo keep up with
the frenetic market, the Com·
modlty Futures Trading Com·
mission bas stumbled badly. A
House Appropriations subcom·
miltee has concluded tentat.ively,
according t.o a draft report, that
the commission "bas not been
able to deal wilb the fraud-ridden
commodity options industry."
Indeed, the agen cy has
acknowledged~ own failinisJn
an internal memo" which we
have obtained. According t.o the
memo, a staff of four assigned to
get repayments for cheated
customers has been "over·
whelmed."
'' H6ve we re4ched es-Cl1pe velo<ity?"
The commlasion b.s managed
to register between 8,000 and
9,000 salesmen. Yet "there are
8tlll firms and salesmen who are
defying the commission and are
selllng while nol registered," the
memo charges.
T HIS CANDID document, dat·
ed . Dec. 22. claims "virtually
every section or the CFTC Is
clogged because of the options
problems." This has forced the
agency lo shunt experts from
other fields into the options area.
Of the 445--member staff, only
50 are trained ln enforcement
and investigation. Last year, the
1talf put in more a.hen 25,000
hours of unpaid overtime in a
desperate aUempt to keep up
with the policing. They were also
hindered by political cronylsm at
the top.
A still-secret General Account·
Ing Oflice report, we've learned,
will lay much or the blame on
Chairman William Bagley, an af-
fabt~ Republican holdover from
California. "Bill is no manaeer;·
his friends say ol him.
Perhaps because of bis own
Republican credentials, Bagley
sought to please the incoming
Democrats by naming a White
House choice. Elmer Cooper. to
be his executive director .
Presidential aide DeJongh
Franklin personally prevailed on
Bagley lo appoint Cooper,
despite serious problems.
A CALIFORNIA grand jury
sharply eluded Cooper for spend·
ang excessively as p~esident of
. San Francisco's Bay Area Rapid
Transit oreanization, citing his
failure to account for $3,000 in ex-
pense account claims.
Cooper was dropped from the
commission slot after we re-
vealed the grand jury action, but
he was kept on· as a $182·a-day
consultant. Now he ls being pro-
moted by Bagley to head the con-
sumer division stuff. In this
capacity, he would deal directly
with the options scandal.
Footnote: The House Ap ..
propriations subcommittee and
the General Accounting Office
refused to discuss their secret re-
ports on the scandalous situation.
But we expect a public airing of
th e scandal sometime in
February or March. Meanwhile,
the commlssloo is under pres-
sure t.o use its powers to ban all
tr a dine in commodity options.
Civil Service Loafers En joy Security
Loaf en on the federal govern-
ment pafrolJ are really dug ln.
They almost "can't be fired.··
Chairman Alan Campbell of
tho Civil Service Commission
says that i f
you try to fire a f oldbrlck·
tn1 fe deral
wo rker he's
likely to take you to court
c h a r ging
"dlscrlmina· Uon."
What I am
. about to re·
, late would be painful for hard-
work Ing, wage.earning, dues•
payioe Americans in and out or
governinent, except for the fact
that excessos -all kinds -ul-
tlmatelyaretbetrownundC1lnc-
The newt meclia now ~re tum-lnc their attentlon from errant
sovernment leaders and begin-
nlna to t urn the llghts on in
Charles McCabe
places where lower echelon·
bureaucrats have been pl ~I
you for a sucker.
Within a month, both U.S.
News & World Report and the.
Wall Street Journal spoUigbted
this scandal.
AN ECONO.IST ln t be
Department of Health, Educa•
tion and Welfare was discovered
wllb bis feel on bis desk and was
called on the carpet.
The economist blandly act-
mitted that he was doing notblat
for the laxJM1yers who are payl..og
him. He spend~ h1s tlme writial
articles foe magazines on a tree.
lance basis for which he collects
additional money -beyond the
S25,000 a year which you are pay-
ing him.
But he dares anybody to try to
fire hlm.
Arrogantly he told one orticlal,
"'J 've 01;1t1asted a lot.of you guya;
I'IJ still be here when you are
gone; you'll see."
P RESIDENT Carter wants to
do somelblng about it..
He bas proposed a wholesale
8hifting ol the 2.8 million federal ·
workers to elim.1(1ate duplication
and to make the best use of their
talents.
&ut tangled avn Service reg-
olationa make it almost im·
possible t.o reassign any worker
according to bis talent.
Civil Service regulations now llll 21 volumes, eome of them five
feet thick! Promotions and merit
pay raises have become almost
automatic, whether deserved or
not.
The result is a Frankenstelo
monster beyond anyone's control
-including the Pres id en\ 'a.
Jule Sugerman, who writes
Civil Service regulations, con·
cedes that ·'the system must be
~iJnplified. ••
But underlylng those regula-
tions are 400 laws enacted by
Congress plus an unknown
number. of executive orders -
perhaps 600 -and federal
worken unions are easily able to
intimidate the Congress.
SOME experienced govern·
menl managers are able t.o get
rid of morale·ahattering
goldbricks by shunting them off
to tho ••turkey farm." That
means to some out-of·tbe·way
·assignment where incompetents
are out or sl&bt and can do
minimal damue.
Yet wherever -they continue
t o collect their more·lban-
comfortable pay avcraatng more
thnn $15.000liyur.
The White House and Civil
Service Commission are con·
sideriog ways or overnauuna lhe
system, but It is going t() take an.
an1ry elect.orate to get Congress
t.o cooperate,
. .
The Sexual Revolution Rapes Human Dignity
Lust St not lhe smallest part o£
love, but It's a pretty small part.
GetUng t.o know the person you
love \s really what love is all
about. and it can be a life-long
and richly rewarding learning.
I
ORANGE COUNTY OBITUARIES
QUEENIE
I ID
·~::r.•i.r.::r .. 1 ., I •l··C..~·:I, f,)
; 1;-· ·~ /• '. "'':. ~
ly Phil lnterlondi
-~·~·-~-· · Dea tluJ Elsewoore ...
NEW YORK CAP) -
Robert D. Murphy, 83, a
D ea t h No tice•
01~11
ClAAA C.ILl..MOllE. t~ldent ol
"•\.Otn•, C. ror Ille IHI H v .. ,.,
p.ued ""'IY on JAn ... ry I, "71 •I
,'1049 HO•l'llAI. !>urvl¥O<I by her
dl UQl\ltr ~rjorl• SllWr• OI N•wPOrl
Bt •< h, C•. two >On$, Robert r.
Glllmo•t ol S...I• Ant. Ce ...,d Don••d
H ClllmMe of p..,_n•, C• •IYI \ut·
vi ved by II ciun0<nU0t tn And I 11'~•1
Qr•ndd•uOMtf fuMr•I \.erv•<~" wttrt
lleld Tutwi.v J6n.,.ry 10. 1918 •• 1 oo
PM t i PAClllr Vi•w c ... ,,.1 with R••
.. rmln Hf'Ue ol Ille F •lll\ lut""r•n
Church, P • .-.... c. •. OlllCl•lt"Q In
terme nt w lll IHI •I P"lllc Vl•w
Mt?mortal Par-P.c!U< V•ew Newe>ut I
8t•<h MorlWtYdlff'(IOH
OllTIZ
MIC.NON THERESA OAllL '"'
dtnt of 0•,.. Point p.A\\41-0 •••Y \.un
O•'f morning J~u.rv I. 1•11 ~"''"'tv~d
by P\f r nu\~ Y\1dro of O•n• Pomt
mother No,,-en W•lf«f'. ~ O•uqn1.,.;
K•rtn CordOv•ol 0...., Po1nl, Cthll"I
Ort11 of S..n Ju.n C...tt:>t\trM\O, Vic totfe
01111 of S,..., Ju.tn C•P's.trM'IO No""" •"" R•<"•' °'11r. botn ol D•n• Point, 1 SOM. D•••d ol o...,. Pooni -Jamo
of PornonA • brot"•" Mt<h•"' A"""'''ono of F'trncJ•I•# C• ano 1
Qr•n•SCl'IUdrtn Ro\.ary W1dnt \dar
PYtn1n9 J•nu.tr'/ 11, 7·JO PM Stwtter
L•oun• Bt•ch Mo"u•rv Chapel
Funtr•f \itrlflCf"'\ ThUt\4AY J•nuary
U 11 AM. •IV> •n trw Chttpel Inter
mpnt ••It fouow ttl El loro C.mt.•ltry
-,,,,,.,.,., lttQuntt 8••<h M ortu•rv
OlrtCIOf'\
COL.LOllO
HAZCl V (OLI OJ.10, 'f'\llt~nt ,,,
l •9un.i o • .,(h, C)d\\rid ..... .,. .,, h•'
i\omtt Sund•Y morn1no J•n\Mry e. 11.118
Stir 1\ \Urv1..,.(J b't' 1 +.On\. f. '-'"'t'ltl"
Jo"n, Httppy C •mp ( • P•ul I
C.otlord Of Ar< Mt••. 1 ddUQht""· ~hH l•
Oun•au ot L.-oun.. flftH h Anni,. om .. ,..
ot (O\ltt Mf'\.A • orolt\ttr r , •n-. r f-ry of Van ,..U'I\, Ntd • \f\I,., Ann ...
C.roudy of !.•n Ct•bfltl fun•'•'
'\t'tYl(fi. Wiit be h,I,, W,.d"•\dd't
J•nu.,y It •I 7 f'M LI•~ D••
Cemtttry CMQet MonfO'\f+tt, C• wtlh
qt<h•rd Rl't!'\1'9' otf1<:1•llno ln1Hm1nt l••• o., C.elTW!rty, Sheller u911,..
6Utl\ Morh-y Dirt•( tor\
Flll!EHlll
MAAIE F fRE(NI:.", ,.\l<lrnt Of
Mr.Y, Ar11on... o.t\W"d •••Y J•nu.•ry
8. 1'11 She I\ wrvtW>d by 1 d•uont~\.
M•rle M •rt1n 01 M .. , •• Arl101V •nd
A•lty WU\.Of'I of Mi\~l(Jf\ Vlefo. •Ad l
Qr•ndc fttldr_.n t'tr1~.t1,. tAm1fy
~-fVl(f\ w"" '"IO ftl ''"II Hro.i •• .,
MOrlu•ry lnltrm~r1t ffu\hv1tlf' '"
al•n• 9,11 8ro.ctw•Y M· rtuc;ry Olrf"C
Ion
CATOllA
AN~4 M ARV (A 10/lA ,,.,,Mnl of
-;,o1nt• AnA r A ,.,.. ,,.d ,.,..,, 0 ''
J•t1v•ry 9 1'71 •t tn.-"O" or ~· Ritla~f'd ""'"" '>I Oo011n1 c •IOU•
motl'l .. r Of R1t' PWrd Mir "41• I ( •1011• ur
.,_.unt1nqton fW•rt't C • 11no Don•td w ... ,,,. (•t'>rt• of \..tnt .. An• C•
Af t•1•tlon of '""" Ro.,., f wlll ~ M k1 WtO~W•Y J•nu.try 11 t•1't .1t I JO
P M dt ~' ~,,,, .. (Mht>ltr (PWrch In ~>1tnt• An.-. C• M1,\\ uf ("rt\tl•n
Ourl.tt w•ll br tu•to Ot'I lhur\d4t'
JAt1uor1 17. 1'78 •I 9 00 " M M\O ·"
St Anne C:•thO•ic (hurt rt I"'"'"''"' wm bf' •t A\<rn\lon (rm .. ,,..,., In EI
l oto, CA !><Tinn luthlll l•mb ~nl•
An• MortlHtrydllf'lt'IOt\ )4/ 41tJt
Ol!WtTTE
41 -y ear vet e ran
diplomat who rose to the
rank o f U .S . am -
bassador to Belgium in
1949 <1nd became the
ambassador to Japan in
1952, died Monday. He
al s o s erved a s a
mt>mbe r of the Presi-
d e nt 's fo'oreign ln -t elli~t.'nte Board under
five a dminis trations
arter leaving the Slate
Depa rtment.
SACRAMENTO IAP J
Funeral ::.ervice::. are
~chc d ulcd Friday in
l';ilo Alto for former Los
Angeles Mun1C1pal Court
Judge Irvin Taplin, 81,
who died Monday in
Saratoga. Among sur-
vivors is his son. Irvin
Taplin Jr. of Newport
He a ch
NEW YORK <AP) -
T he Rev. Dr. Roy G.
Ross. 79, a principal
arrh1krt of lhe N ational
( 'ounl'll 11( Churchf's and
:i it'atll•r in the produc-
tion of the Revised Stan-
dard Vl'r:.1on of the Bi·
hie. d tl'd Sunday.
SAN DIEGO <A P)
Rear Adm William H.
Hall, 85, whose work
with tetanus immuniza-
tJOn in 1934 led lo routine
immunization of Naval
Ac ademy m idshipmen
in 1938, <lied Friday at
h1~ homl'
lllllAN E OEWIT'T[ rO\l!ltnl 011..--------C,lenO•lf', C• P•''"'° t1\1119•'f nn J•nuary
•. 1'1111 llewt11 M.tnor (.nnv••tH"'11
MO\PH•I (41p1\trano Ufl'tt<", (•
Survlv•d by tw'r <MUQ,.,tH Hf'lltn C•rr
Of l •9une1 ._.IQV .. I (• nM Qr.tf\O
d•UOP\ftr, B•rtwr• Wt IV. ot l..•f•yette.
C• •nd ono .,_ R1ch••t1 Bono o1
Nf'woorl 8••<.n C• Grave\ldt ~,~•<•~ .,.,, ,,.,d 1 u.~v J•"u.ry
10. lt71 •I t JO A.M 4! Pit< 111< Vltw
~ort•I P•r~ P-lfl( Vitlt/lllf NttWPort
Be-•<ft M 0th.••Y dHf"(tOt\
SALlLIS
ION E SALL.I~ """•"' of \ut Bt•<h. C• P~\4fld •••v on J•n"•rv 1
lt71 •• , .... -"' ... !ov-.1 .. 0 by .... n•.ce Mr\ kef'WWlh £ndter °' l •qvtt•
H•lh. C• Gf'AW\tot w-r ... ,(f\ c Of'Ktut t
t d Tl\ur..,.y J.,,,..,, !) ,.,, •' I 00
P M .i Wnlmlntl•r _,,,,,,,,.I Pu-
WotmlMI ... C• Ynlll\ Tu1n111 L.•mb
Coit• M es• Mortu1try dtr•< tor\
6A6 ....
PIH f AMll Y
COL0'41Al fUMHAl
HOME
7801 Bolsa Ave
Wesrminsrer
893-3525
rACIAC VltW
MIWOllAL '4H
Cemetery Mortuary Chapel
3500 Pacific View Drive ·Newport.
Calllorn1a
644-2700
McCOllMICW
MOITUAllH
Laguna Beach
494-9415
Laguna Hlllt
788-0933
San Juan C8pislrano
495-1778
· IALTIMl6UOM
..,....LHOMI Ccwona def Mar 873-94!50 · Cotta Meaa 64&-2424
, l&LllO•DW•Y
MOITV•H 110 Broadway
Cotta Mesa
642--9150
tMITM TVnM.L LAMI
COIT• MllA CHAPIL
427 e. 17th St. ~a Mesa • 64M8es sante Ana Chapef
518 N. Bt'Otdway
Santa Ana • 1Mf._.t31
..
..
Tuesday. January 10, 1978 ,//!~· OAJL Y PILOT (y.JIJ
•
Party Setting Upstages Candidate?:
By 0. C. HUm:NG8
•• Of-o.ilyl" .........
Orange Cout Republlc1111 are beinl invited
(at S75 per couple) to a Jan. 22 soiree for GOP As·
sem bly candJdale Marian Ber1eson.
But the site of the ' to 7 p.m. cocktail party
may be more of an attracUon than the candidate.
The gathering will be held at the spectacular
Irvine Cove residence of Dr. and Mrs. Robert F,
Montgomery. Their house, clearly visible to
motorists on Coast Highway, la tb'at big one banc-
ing oCC the cliffs above El Morro Beach.
Invitees who might otberwiee miss the
sienificance o! the 1atberln1 are treated t.o a pk·
lure of the house on the trout of the invitation.
Mrs. Bergeson, by the way, ii seeldn1 the
Republican nomination ln the Oranie Coast's '14th
Assembly District.
~ .. .. .
REP. JERRY Patterson, 0-Santa Ana, plans to
meet with constituents Wednesday at another of his
commwlityforums.
This one will~ !1.. 'Z :30 p.m. iA Room A of the
{;arden Grove Community Center, 11300 Stanford
Ave., Garden Grove
Patt.enon says 300 persons attended hi.a Nov-
ember forum in Westminaler.
•••
MRS. BERGESON will be the speaker Jan. 17
when the Irvine Coast Republican Women's Club
conducts its annual membership tea at the Santa Ana Country Club.
For information and reservations, call Mrs. L.
J. Haight, !552-7841, or Mrs. David McNelly, 551-5040.
•••
R E P. CHARLES Wifegins, R·Fullerton will speak on "The Panama Canal Treaty -Wbat It
Really Means:" when the Republican Associates
of Orange County conduct their annual mem-
bership luncheol) and JnstallaUon or officers Thurs-day.
The event gets under way at 11:30 a .m. at
Anaheim's Grand Hotel.
• • •
THE Lf;AGUE OF Women Voters of Orange
Varied Topics Studied
Water quaJity, diabetes in children and a
minority youth program will be discussed at three
separate Orange County meetings this week.
Orange County Forum of Town Hall of California.
Allred Hollingsworth, creator or the youth pro-
gram and state commissioner of economic de·
velopment, will speak on ''Tbe Chariot Has Ar-rived." Mlnoritt1 'l'oeula Progra•
A program to encourage minority youths in
the areas of sales. marketing and management
will be discussed Thursday at a meeting of the
OCC to Open
Regi,stration
The noon lUftcheon will be held in the Magnolia
Room B oC the Disneyland Hotel in Anaheim.
Reservations may be made by calling Debbie
SkeHington at 547·0954 or Jan Dockstader at 752-9100.
Water Qaaui,, E.ra9dnflf
The Oranite County chapter of the Sierra Olub ~ill sponsor a public meeting today on water quality
m the Upper Newport Bay.
The meeting will feature representatives of
Registration begins Thursday for more than
2.500 spring ~emester classes to be offered at
Ora nge C'oast CoUege In Costa Mesa.
the Newport-Irvine
[ J Waste-Management BRIEFS Planning Agency, a con-
sortium of governmental
----------' agencies that is using a
federal grant to study . and plan for the Upper Bay's water quality. In addition to the traditional day and evening
classes, OCC also has its Weekend College, with
classes on Friday evenings and Saturday morn-
ings. and it!-. Afternoon College, with classes from
2·6 p m . Monday through Friday.
The meeting will be held at '1 :30 p.m. in the
forum at Saddleback High School in Santa Ana.
For further information, contact Larry Buxton at 752-9082.
SPRING CLASS SCHEDULES HAVE been
m ailed to all homes in the Coast Community
College Dis trict und ;ire also available free of
charge in the OCC Admissions Office.
Dfabetn H'orlalaop
Sign-ups for day and evening classes will con-
tinue by appointment through Jan 31. Appoint-
ments can be obtained at the Admissions Office.
Diabetes in children will be the subject of a
workshop Saturday ut Childrens Hospital of Orange County.
d through UC Irvine for Credit will be offere
the workshop, which wi
4:30 p.m. II run from 8:30 a.m. t.o
. OPEN REGISTRATION ON A drop-in basis
will be held Feb. 1·8. Spring classes begin on Feb.
6
Sessions will be in th
1109 W. La Veta. Orange
clinical dietltlon and a so
Registration is availa
e hospital's audltoriqm at
. Speakers wUl include. a
occ·, admissions office is open Monday
lhrough Thursday from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. and on
1-'riday from 8 a.m to 5 pm. t~or more information
t· .i 11 !i.'l6·:>7:l5
Mut11al's
bringing in
H&R BLOC~
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
Now you can have your tax return•
prepared free of charge by
the nation's largest tax 1ervlce.
We'll arrange for H & R Block to prepare
your Federal and California Income tax returns
FREE If you open a certificate account for
$5,000 OR If you are a Mutual saver with an
account of $5,000 and have never used the tax
service OR If you have previously used the
tax service and your savings balance has
Increased by $2,500 since last Aprll 15, 19n.
Tax preparation Is also available for a modest
fee If you open or maintain an account In
the amount of $3,odo.
And the service includes the apeclal
schedules for Itemized deduction•, penalon
income. sale of property, lnter"t and dividend
income, income averaging and much more.
All backed by H&R Block's famous guarantee.
For more Information, call your nearHt
Mutual Savings office.
Tax Servtce from H&A Block. It's juat one
of the many reasons why your aavlnga ahould
be at Mutual Savings and Loa,, Association •
Otnc. located In:
C1ot•ec1JOoS... a.rneme•:
670 Cemlno de Estrella/ 493-5e51
Corooa .. Mar:
2887 East Coast Hlghway/675•6010
Fountlln Vllley*: 17900 Magnotra St./963·8398 •
Downtown S1nta Ane: 631 Nortt) Maln/64N~741
•Q)en 8aturdays 10 AM to 2 PM
cial worker.
ble by calling 833-5414.
County will ask "What Price Clean Air?" at a.
workshop scheduled for 9: 15 a.m . Jan. ~ tn lhtt
recreation room of the Santa Ana Memor..i
Center, 2100 S. Flower St., Santa Ana. 1
Pan ells ts wlU discuss the Lewis Air QuaU\Y
Management Act, how It will effett land use de4
clsions in Orange County and what role ordinaty
citizens wtll play In the process. ·•
)
Ins tallation ~et
Banker Lea.dB.· . ri ....
Co~t P'anel ·l ,
Robert Mccurdy, a Newport Beach banker, will '
be installed as president of the Orance County
-Coast Association Friday at the Bahia Corinthim 1
Yacht Club, Corona del Mar.
Others taking office al the 64tb annual installa·
hon of officers banquet --------....... ....,,,.
are Robert Clifford, pre-
sident of Air California,
vice president; William
Ficker, Newport
architect, vice pres i·
dent; Ken Fowler, Costa
Mesa banker, treasurer;
and RaJph Kiser. Hunt·
ington Beach Chamber
of Commerce executive. secretary.
SP EAKING AT lbe
event will be Rep. Mark
Hannaford , D -
Lakewood . who
Stanley Krause, Larryoi
Leaman, John Macna.b.,1
Randy Mccardle, Do">
Mcinnes, R.I. .. Cuba"
Morris, Jack Mul~lan ..
H .L. Remmers, O.
"Dick" Richard, '
Rogers. Fred Sorsabal,
Don Walter, Ray ~
Watson, Robert Weetd,1t
Robert Wynn, Fick~i;,1 and Kiser. .
Reservations may be
made by telephonin~:
962·6661. • .,
re presents wes tern C J }
Orange County and 0 Olle
parts of Los Angeles .;
County. p l d ,, Newly elected coast rOmO e ·,
association directors are ' Brad Atwood Ted Clint.ooM.Glenny,son
Bartlett, Bud a'elsito, of Mr. and Mrs. CllntDn ,,
Wil 11 am Com pt on H. Glenny of 2400•4
WWiam Coulter, Forest Mariposa W., Laguna1;
Dickason, Jack Feehan, Hills, has been promot-~•
Selim s. Franklin, Jack ed to colon~! In the Unlt-
H a'm m e t t .. Norma edStates A1rForce. ,,,..
Hertzog Art Holme::. Colonel Glenny, chi~(
· · of the Defense Analysis"'
Division, is assigned '' • 1 Offutt AFB, Neb., with a •.
unit of the Strategic Air
Maritime
Exams Set
a 1 orn1a
Exams have been set
for Feb. 4 and April l for
admiss ion to the
C l'f . M a r1 l1m e,
Academy in Vallejo.
· No prcreg1stratlon Is
required. Jnformatlon ls
av a i I able rrom the
academy, P.O. Box 1392, ~allejo, Callf. 94590,
('107) 644·5601.
Command. ·~
The colonel received a-····
D.A. degree in 1956 from."i
Loyola University at~. •
Angeles.
A nOR.NEY AT LAW ; ....
BANKRUPTCY $95 '
•
'•
DIVORCE $95 " Uncontested • r.
640-250'7'
..
rr
7
.1\• DAILY PILOT TuH<Sav. January 10. 1978
Reporter Shorts Out
~atire Goes Over Too Many People's Heads.
EDITOR'S NOTE -David Rosen-
'.hcl, %7, u a short, ra1hc long·
baired AP reporter m New Or~
.,ho ta often mutQken for being a
alJprt, ra1her lona·haired h1oh 1chool
atudent. Here u his look down at a
popular song about persona o}
aimllar nature. '--
By DAVID N. ROSENTHAL ·
NEW ORLEANS CAP) -And I used to like Randy Newman.
tlltervlewed him once and in
between mumbles, he seemed.
~ea nice fellow.
But my appreciation is begin-
ning to pall. His latest single,
"Short People," may be satire,
but most of the world doesn't re-
alize it. And I am getting a little
6ick of tall folks humming 1l
wben I walk into the room.
JT'S TOUGH TO laugh at lines
like ''short people got no reai.on
to live" when you are S-foot·4,
standing on what Mr. Newman
so eloquently describes as ''little
baby legs."
For those who missed the
catchy tune and the furor that
bas accompanied. il, the !)Ong is
a litany of short people's
shortcomings -their little
tiands and little eyes, little noses
and little teeth, the platform
shoes on their nasty little feet.
Not to mention their little cars
going beep, beep, beep and their
little voicei. going peep, peep,
peep.
IT'S REALLY RATH ER fun
ny, and I know he's only JO~hmg
when he says you have to pick
me up jusl lo say hello. Bul I
don't think anyone else 1s fooling
-not the guy who started sing·
ing it at a bar when 1 was trying
to whisper sweet nothings into a
_&irl's ear, nor the bai.ketball
Majestic Lake Tahoe is a year
'round playground Ilka none
other in the wortd. Here you
can ski challenging &lopes.
step Into nights fllled with gllt-
terlng entertainment ... or
simply bfeolhe the mountain
air and watch the seasons
change. It's oil within easy
reoch when you toke off for
roho9 on AJt Colltornla.
player who broke into it when he
!opted me.
Even my own mother, half of
what made me the size l am .
often comments on how short
someone is.
"But, mom," I say. "he's
three inches taller than I am."
"WELL," SAYS SHE, "I just
don't think of you as being that
short ." She may not, but everyone
else does. In my short h.fe, I
must have heard every short
joke known to man. Usually I
crack them first in splf.dcfense.
Heightism. if one will allow a
bit or literary license, is one or
the unspoken dbcriminalions or
this age.
PROBABLY WASN'T so bad
in Napoleon's day. lie didn't re-
ally have a Napoleonic complex
then because people didn't get
very tall.
But he'd have one now for
sure.
He'd only have to be a short
kid and have someone ask his
mother "How old IS he?" when
'LUCKY' SQUID
FOOLS FISHERS
KYOTO. Japan CAP)-Fish·
ermen thought it was a lucky
sign when they netted a 16 5·
foot. 110-pound squid. said to be
the largest seen here in 30 years
But buyers figured the meat
"ould be tough, and paid only
$10.40 for it. The average squid is about a
foot long, weighs around nine
ounces and sells for about $2.10.
traveling and more time
enjoying the spectac-
ular recreation and c~
ual ll(estyle that's so
much o port ot this scenic
Inland sea In the Sierras.
Money-sovlng discounts
ovo11oble for groups of
t&n °'more. fanllieS and mllltoiy per$0nnel. Sun-
jet Tours. too. Don't YoU
want to go? Ws easy •••
on Air Collfomlo.
he's just told them. Or be a short
adult and have to buy shoes at
Buster Brown's. Or flash an
American Express card and
have a saleswoman ask, "Is this
your credit card or your dad·
dy's?" Actually, being sllort does
have some advantage~. I wear
designer suits at half the price
because I can still fit in the
largest boys' .size. I've never hit
my head on a low doorframe.
And I'm all the kiddies' pal.
NOT THAT I HAVEN'T want-
ed to be taJler. It's taken a great
deal of restraint not lo blow $8.95
on one of those back-of-the-
m agaz111e ads which guarantee
to add inches in weeks. But I
keep having this image of a huge
medieval rack
llo" ever, 1f I thought that
would work, I'd probably do it
because it 1s a fact of lire that
society has all sorts of ways to
make a short person feel small.
How many women's image of
Mr. Right is "Short, Dark and
Handsome?"
HOW MUCH MONEY do short
basketball players make?
How tall IS he?
I'm not sure what can be done
about the attitude toward short
people. Except to say that
because of it. we of the short
per!)uas1on often end up with
lousy self-images, feeling we
Just don't match up with our
taller brethren.
And that's not true. I'm as
good as anyone -sitting down.
,. •
NATIONAL I CONSUMER
Sales Price
Safeway Told
To Honor Ads
WASHINGTON CAP) -Safeway Stores Inc. ls
required to sell advertised items al or below the
prices advertised under a consent order an·
noWlced by the Federal Trade Commission.
Safeway. the largest supermarket chain in the
country in terms ol sales, operates some 2,400
supermarkets in 30 states. Its headquarters are in
Oakland. •
THE FrC HAD ALLEGED IN a complaint
that in a number of Safeway stores a substantial
number of advertised items were placed on sale at
prices higher than those advertised
Under the consent order, Safeway also must
correctly pnce advertised Items and post in its
stores copies or the advertisements and notices to
customers suggesting they check prices of the ad·
vertised items.
THE CONSENT AGREEMENT DOES not
constitute an adm1~s1on by Safeway thal il bas
violated the law.
The FTC invites comments Crom the public on
the consent agreement until March 9.
A.fJWI..._..
ROSENTHAL STRETCHES FOR INTERVIEW -====:==:=::::;:--:::=======::;: HOME OWNERS LSU't Jufle GroH, Maree Jack1on-aoth 6·2 MEED ALA~?·
Pl.UM al NG
NIA.TINO A.Ill COftO. . !.I Lit 117•SI
a.1dw'"IT • b=.1' Pianos !E:'.2 ?~Ii
and 'r' ~ ~~f1 Organs • \ € • ·
a...&..,1111 ..
• Dl1'0rce * Bankruptcy * Criminal
Se••ot• lime ~.ort~•t Your Door IC.II ~IOI• ~•rnl Your ArHI
Feclory Flnenc/ng
LESSONS· INSTRUMENTS
RABBITT INS.
Slltca 1'57
• Wiiis-Probate * Incorporation * Accident~njury .• Eviction ~STA Mt:SA642-1753
UH"--' 81ft. l914H.Uloa ILVD.
MISSION v11J049S-0401 Yllll ~~:i~R
f•thlon l1land M~t020
llON & •ttt t•t
COSTAMISA 640.2507
548-5554 2"22 UmiM ~ .. ,_ 'h HR. CONSULTATION-$10 I~ o._ l'rwy M a.-ry ,...,y I
•
The great
1978 take-off!
(Fly Air California to San Francisco, and take
$19.78 olf your room at the SL Francis.)
Why wait any longer? Air California offers plenty
of convenient non-stop flights to get you to the San
Francisco Bay Area. And the St. Francis is waiting
once you arrive.
Come for a weekend, a week, or as long as you
like. From now until February 28th, 197 8, the
St. Francis will take $19.78 off any individual stay of
two nights or more.
You get superb accommodations on Union
$quare in the heart of San Francisco's theater district
for as little as $39 a nigh~ 24--hour room service.
The cable car stopping at your front door. And all
the traditional amenities that make the St. Francis
uniquely the St. Francis.
And Air California makes it all even easier to take
with special discount fares, advanced computerized
reserYations and ticketing. and an exclusive family
plan that can save you up to 30% any day of the week.
Just show your Air California ticket when you're
ready to check out, and the great 1978 take-off is on. -.
For package reservations call Air California 800-
432-7040. (In Orange CountY call 752-7700). For
St. Francis reservations only call 8()()..228-3000 toll
free or your travel agent.
-single OCQJp&ncy. per nf ght. Subject to all eppllc:able taxes.
St. Franets .
Sttn Ftmielsco
1,
~
1
•
INSIDE : •Comics •StockS
•Television •Movies
TIJelday January 10. 1978 DAILY PILOT •l
Super Bowl Mftdlless Is Building Merger
Denver'
·Salvatioii
NEW ORL E ANS CAP)
Supe r Bowl madness has of·
ficially infected this bayou town.
Not because of the arrival of
the two combatants, the Dallas
Cowboys and Denver Broncos.
on Monday, but because of the
first of what will be hundreds -
perhaps thousands of street·
corner con!rontauons.
On the corner or South
Claiborne Avenue and Poydras
Street, m the shadow of the
Louisiana Superdome. the scene
of Sunday's Super Bowl XII,
stood two fans. one 1n a silver
Dallas shirt, the other in an'
Oran"e Denver shirt. ··on the Chinese calendar, it's
the Year or the Horse, II ex·
claimed the Denur fan,>
neophyte in the area or Super
Bowl rooting.
''Cowboys r ide horses,"
Dallas' supporter said coolly,
dis playing the aplomb or a ran
who has seen it all before. which
he perhaps has, Dallas having
been in three other National
Football League championships
"Yeah? Well Broncos throw
Cowboys!" Denver-'s fan retort·
Rams Shakeup?
Haden Predicts Changes
By DA VF. CUNNINGHAM O! Ille D•llY flllol Sl•ll
Quartt•rbuck Pul lladen
prt•dlcts some big changes
for lhe Los Ange les Rams
bd ween now and next season
ns o wn er Carroll
Rosenbloom lrici. desperate·
ly to push the club into its
fir't Super Bowl berth
Just what those t•h.ingei. in
\Ohl' Haden wouldn't suy.
but he did h int that th£'
moves could alter the Hams'
roster al the !'>kalled i>0s1tions.
lie feels his own future as the
Rams' QB IS safe, however
Tlw 2~ yt•ar olct Rhode.,
..,c holar talkt·d with the Dally
Pilot Friday \'1..1 tt•IC'phone
from his Newport Beach res-
idence
"I lhink we're ~u1ng lo
opt•n up our offen!'ic a little
more m•xt Sl•ason." II a den
savs "Coach Kn ox and I
ha.vt• aln:aclv lalkl•d about it
., o rn t' Wt'; II b c passing
more
Th.it v.nuld appear to make
.,cnsc. lladcn was the Na
tional Football League's
..,l'cn ncl rankL•d passer this
s<•ason. trailing only RogC'r
S t a u b a t' h o f I h t• I> a 11 a ..,
l'ov. bo\.,
I rnmt•all> 11 v. as a I laden
pass that ... unk the Rams
Supt•r Bowl bid this ..,t•ason
I le ''as mtcrn•plt•d on a final
dnH lhal could ha\.l~ lwd lht•
Min nt•..,ota V1k1ng.,, I \ I\
ln.,l<•,1d. the Hams lo!it 11 7
ll \\ J'> a bad pa ss and bacl
JUd~mPnt on mv part.
ll adPn "·"" I tnNl 111 thrnv.
the ball -.nnwplat•t• '' ht•rt•
n obod\ \\111rlrl 1 .. 11<'11 1t
bccau.,t; tht• n•t•c•i\ 1 1 \\<'rt'
cov<'rC'll. hut 11 chdn t happl·n
thal wa~ ..
ll adl'n w•1s u1>kt•d for his
opinion nn why the Hams.
with us much t ult•nl as they
have. can't win lht• bi g ones
"There arc a numbC'r or
re a sons Hut basically, it
seems like we always make a
critical mistake at a critical
time. Last year it was the
special teams. this year my in· ·
terceptaon," Haden says.
"\'ou need a lot or things to
get to the Super Bowl, ~nclud
ing luck. and we, particular·
ly myself, didn't play well
against Minn esota," he says.
Haden also thinks there ex
PAT HADEN
isls an inordinate amount or
pr essure among the Los
AngC'les sporting world.
· People demand a lot here,
.md it puts a lot of pressure
on vou." Haden says. "We ~l'l . pressure from the rans
and we get pressure from the
media.
"We pla)ed some £'xc1tang
football and had a good
!.ea son," Hade n ins ists
··we·re a good team. and r
have a lot of hope for next
YC'ar
· One player v.ho might not
be around next season 1s Joe
:'\am alb, who s tarted the
season as the Rams' No. l
quarterback but gave way to
I laden after four games .
Namath has speculated
that 1977 may have been his
last season in the NFL, but
II ad en believes the veteran
can still make a contrJbulion.
.. If he went to the right
team at the right lime, I'm
su re h e could help
somebody," Haden says.
"Maybe he could even help
the Rams, although I don't
know if he'll be with us next
season ..
"Namath has a very sharp
football mind. He and I
would sit and taJk for hours
about plays and game situa-
tions," Baden says. "I'm a
See Baden, Paie B·Z
ed, poking his flnge.r lt hi!' ad-
versary's chest.
'"Broncos eventually get bust·
ed," was the next response.
It's coing lo be that kind or
week.
The week reallY. gets un-
der way tod&J' when the~atlonal
Cotlference-champloo Cowboys,
23 ·6 winners over Minnesota,
and the American Conferenc.e-
cham plon Broncos, 20-17 vktorl
over Oak.land, meet the first
wave of an ever-increasing tor-
rent of sports writers flooding
the scene.
USC Five
Acting I ,ike·
Wntender
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Can a
college basketball team in a ma·
jor conference go from last to
first place in one year. Southern
Cal coach Bob Boy4 Isn't sure,
but his Trojans are acting like a
contender in the Pacific·8 Con·
ference.
While the league season is on-
ly two games old, Southern Cal
has already equaled its Pac-8
victory total of the past two
seasons and Boyd believes his
young team is only going to get
better.
"l know we're much stronger
and we could be a contender,"
said Boyd Monday. "Two road
games in the victory column
have to make us think that
way."
The Trojans surprised many,
but not their coach, by ·opening
conference play with a 68-65 vie·
tory at Wa.'lhlngton State last
Thursday night and an 81-73
triumph at Washington two days
later.
use. 8-6 over all, has already
surpassed its victory total of last
season when the Trojans were
6·20. Two years ago the team
was 0-14 in Pac-8 play and last '
winter the record was 2·12.
Boyd, in his 12th season as
USC's head coach. was thought
by many to be on his way out
after last year. Boyd admits he
knew he wouldn't be around
much longer if things didn't turn
around soon.
"I gave them every r_eason to
fire me in terms of my record
the last couple or years." said
the 47-year·old Boyd, whose
1970·71 team had a 24-2 record,
the best in school history. "But
nobody ever told me I had to win
so many games or else. And I
don't think l 've offended too
many people within the uni·
versity.
"But IC we hadn 't done
something soon I would have
told athletic director Dick Perry
to fire me," added Boyd. "And if
I would have been fired, I'd have
joined the Trojan Club and root-
ed for the team."
Three new players ..-
freshmen Cliff Robinson and
Punis Miller and junior college
transfer Steve Smith have been
key factors in the Trojans'
turnaround.
Sports Clipped Short
Distractions, almost every
Super Bowl coach says at one
lime or another, are his team's
biggest problems. Dealing with
the overwhelming attention and
the carnival atmosphere of a
Super Bowl city that can destroy
his players' concentration pre-
sents an almost Insurmountable
task, thecoachescontend.
"You have to learn how to live
with Super Bowl week," Don
Shula, whose Miami Dolphrns
llved with three of them, once
observed. "It's never easy,
especially the rirst time ·'
Now it's Denver's turn to ra~e
the first-time pressure. Only
three Broncos have fac~ this
special insanity -le!i of~ive
tackle Andy Maurer, when be
wa s with Minnesota :
placekicker Jim Turner, with
the New York Jets in Super
Bowl m, and, or course.. Craig
Morton, with Dallas in Siaper
Bowl V against tlaltimo1:e 8Jld a
year later against Mlamt.
At least one of the Cowboys
will be facing that first·time
pressure, too. Tony Dorsett, the
offensive rookie or the year.
Hitting the Boards
Montreal's Larry Robinson (left> is airborhe against the
wall to avoid a stiff check from Philadelphia's Bobby
Clark Monday night. The two teams fo'ught to a 3·3
standoff in National Hockey League action.ill Montreal.
Irish, USF Clash
Sellout Crowd in Oakland
OAKLAND CAP) -The
University of San Francisco
Dons have an Internal problem
Involving big men Bill
Cartwright and J ames Hardy,
and they'd love to solve it
tonight.
The nationally ranked Fight·
Ott Tl' Tottlgllt
Cltannel 5 at 8
Hardy. Not.re Dame has plenty
of size with sJcb performers as
6·11 Bill Lalmbeer, 6-9 Dave
Batton, 6-8 Bruce Flowers and
others.
At point guar:d for the Irish is
sophomore Rich Branning, a
product of Marlna (Huntington
Beach) lilgh School.
"I thia.k their talent is even
better this year than last year."
said USF coach Bob GaWard,
whose team was unbeaten and
·-
NEW ORLEANS CAP> -1 teams suffered more in the
bidding war between Ole n
ling American Football Lea
and the established NaUoJt)t
Football League than tbe
Denver Broncos. ,. •
In their first 10 seasons,!
Broncos managed to sign
one of their first-cound dt •
choices -Floyd Uttle In 1967. '",
Other. quality draf~ees wi(t)
were signed, s.uch as Curl
Culp, were subsequently tra
away In lll-advtsed deals. ·~ Denver's play during tho
years was as inept as its syst
of acquiring players.
Then came the merger in idfd1
and the Broncos' fortu1 soared. Suddenly, the team
not only signing its high d
picks, but selecting future •
Pros as well. ..
The 1m Denver team whf! meets Dallas in the Super Bo
Sunday was put together larg.-
in the past seven years by~
series of exceptional drafts
some shrewd training. Much 1
the credit for that turnaroUd(t
has to go to John Ralston, wbqs&
fiv e-year tenure as head coat:h.
and general manager ended I~
January when he resigned in tbl!
race of the bitter player revolt!"
Four straight No. 1 picks Ill;
tight end Riley Odoms, runn!
back Otis Armstrong, llneba t
Randy Gradlshar an,d co ·
nerback Louis Wright -becadfl
either All-Pros or Pro-Bowlqg-
or both.
So did defensive end Lyle
Alzado, a fourth-round pick iA
1971 from tiny Yankton Coll~ in South Dakota, and lineback
Tom Jackson, a fourlh-roun
choice In 1973 from Louisville~
Rick Upchurch, the stando
kick returner and wide recelve'l
was still another fourth-rount
selection, in 1975. a
Trades-produced several kel
performers as well. The ac~uisiJ:
tlon of Craig Morton 1n t
straight-player swap with ~h New York Giants was a st
Morton was the AFC's seco
leadlne passer thls year in gu.i ni the Broncos to a 12·2 regu.l se$so~recoro and into the Su~t
Ramsey. who wenf
o ts in the deal, is sell
tn late in Dallas. ~ oses, the smooth wid rec:.~)\'~ who combined wit6_
Mo,rtt>n "'t1} star in last week'
20-17 pl'AyoH victory ov
Oakland. was another Bron
obta1ned via trade.
Stability in the offensive Un
a nd secondary in 1977 c:am
from three other trades -tacld
Andy Maurer. center Mik
Montier and safety Bernar
JacksOh.
Three Cree agents also ~
starters. Wide receiver Jaq
Dolbin tried out In 1975 after
s tandout season with Ui
Chicago Fire, a World Footb
League franchise which fold
that year. 1
The other two free agents
members of Denver's StuJlmll!ll
linebacker corps -
Swenson tnd Joe Rizzo.
Cage Rankings
ing Irish of Not.re Dame will No. 1 nationally before it went to r ... r~T.....,y1Hm1 11tTtwA..oc:t•1e•
meet the ""'-· before the San South Bend and lost 93-82 last coo-oe ba.,..fi.tt 11ou, w1111 t1nt1»1~ Uvu.-> .. ,.,.,..._ Ud _.,.. reconk 1"""'41 Francisco area's biggest college March. ,. .... ,:
? basketball crowd In 18 years, an Hardy opened the season as 1.KM1t11tky(.t(il 11.0 "° 11.Ntnde 1Lv1u.1 C II C · h R expected 15ellout of 13,000 at the USF's starting center while ~_:~·.: !::;: ~;::'.;'= ~~ Orye to Oac ams OaklandCollseumArena. Cartwright recovered from a .c.Mtr...i .. io-1Jt4 1vrov1._.11.l .._. H th te • '·'"1,.0-M m 1s.ll1rt1"1• • \ · · e awA0t5t0bmeirebeionte'-ttbwe
0
uonpusnhcahveuann· broken arm. e was e ams 4.lnc!IMl45* tM• ~Hc.rSt. ,..e leading scorer-. averagillf over 1.otu. 11-1 ..i "·°"'"*"' 'I
certain - a losing streak will be.
broken.
The eame will be televised at
6 : 30 on Channel 9 (tape de·
Jayed).
The Laken, playtn1 the ftfth
contest ol a seyeo-eame road
trip, have lost thl'ff fn a row.
The Bunt, meanwhile, are losers
of five &tralabt.
C411f19 ~la Out
KENT, Obio -Rex Hushes Jr., •bo compiled a 27.Q WOil·
Joas record p basketball coach
at Kent State University in the
p .. t a~ years, wu relleved of
hi• duties ettectlve Mon.day,
athletic ~ Don Dulek an-
nowced.
bo A. ith 20 i ls and hin ht-O( l.Syrec11M 1M M2 11.llldl-derneath the back aru. w po n reac g a •" t.Loul•vlll• .... m tt,ClnclnneU players who won Monday ... ! the 7-root Cartwrtaht a)lc1 8·8 34 against California. 10.1t ... 1ei ,,~ 1'7 20.0tl'eu1 11-1 ln the opening round of t e _______ .:__..:_ ____ ...:.:_ _______ .,,..,..__.. _________ --:---1'"
BlrmlnSbam InternaU9uat in-
door tennis tournament
Dlbbl defeat.ed~Scanlon •• '7-S, 4-6,8-4.
. Diet Stockton dro Adriaoa
P-,patta, W, M We Nastase
oustedl(fltbRlch~f-1,M.
r.r..i. Drat•• Uh
NEW YORK -The toronto
Blue .Jays made Mllte Lebo, a
alu11lng catcher from .Mid·
dletA>n, Pa., the flnt pict of the
Utb annual winter draft of
· amateur baseball talent today.
Lebo, 19, rated the top pl~er
avaUable by the major leqoes'
1coat"'-comblDe, atandl M Ud wet.Illa m pc;wada.
l '
82 DAILY PILOT Tv.ll<l.ty Januery 10 191U
•
Brown Was Once King
'Of ·Jc Grid Waches
B)' HOWARD L. RANDY
CM 1119 Oelly '"" Stolff ' ,It was an unfamiliar perch for
tU man Who directed the wtn-
l)lng team in the flrat annual
Jwtior Rose Bowl game in 1946
but he wu enjoylna the day at
lbe renewal of th6 Junior coUeie
contest recenUy from the upper
level or°"' press box.
Raymond "Tay" Brown. Ions·
time coach at Compton College
where he look four t.eama to the
JRB conteat and othen to bowl
. Pme. out or the state, did a lit·
Ue remW.cina about his days at Compton.
"I alwaya thought the Junlor
Rose Bowl Game was the best
thing that ever hafpened to
junior college footbal . I think it
will give them a lit.tie apiril once
again, aomething to play for and
fight over,'' Brown said.
The former Tartar headman
was inches away from being
selected a11 head coach at hi11
alma mater, USC, at the height ot his coaching career. There
are those who say he would have
been a legend in the mold of
Kllute Rockne, Howard Jones
and others ot a bygone era ..
· Aa thlnas stand, he ls among
the top former coaches on the
. junior colleee Jevel and his
hame must be mentioned prom-
inently when football at that level
ii discussed.
· Perhaps he was ahead of his
ttme.
•'I never wore a phone and we
never had a man up high to
direct the moves of the players
on the field," he said. "I did all
of the coaching myself as far as
· offense was concerned.
"Ken Carpenter would watch
. the line and make adjustments
and Chuck Williams would sit In
the stands and watch the de·
tense for awhile and we'd go
from there.
"I was the luckiest play caller
that ever lived," he says with a
smile. ''Our quarterback always
knew the general area of attack
before the game because we dis·
cussed It. Today. they call It a
game plan but we Just felt we
should know what to do in certain
situations.
"( never called the plays from
th e s I d e II n es . I I e t th e
quarterback do that except
TAY BROWN
when I would send In a special
play. Whenever I did send one
In. It seemed to go for a lot of
yardage or a touchdown. That's
what I mean by beln.c lucky."
He may feel he was lucky but
Brown always had the knack or
fitting his offense to the ablllty
of Ms players to get the most out
of them.
He recalls playing in Tyler.
Texas in 1949 and brtngin1 the
first Negro athletes to the
gridiron in that state to play
~gainst white players.
"Some of those Texas high
school and college coaches ac·
tually wrote to me after those
games we played down there
and asked for our pass pat·
terns," the innovative Brown
says. ''And Texas is known for its
wldt open rootbalJ."
Would Brown pick an all-time
team from the time he coached
at Compton (1936-1966)?
"I have tried to do t)\at
several times but there are so
many of them I would hurt
somebody's feelings I( I left
them out. I don't want lo do that
and I don't pick such teams.'' he
says In all sincerity.
Was the 1948 Compton team
his best with Hugh McElhenny,
Jack Glbllisco. Bob Moore. Bill
Fell and all the other playen he
bad?
•'There is no quesUon about It.
That had to be the areatest
junior college team of all Um~ ..
he says. "And we almost had
Joe Perry wilh us that year, loo."
Where would Perry have
played?
"I iuess at fullback," Brown
11ays.
Perry signed a professional
contract with the San Francisco
49ers Instead. McElhenny
played fullback at Wasbingion
Gibilisco was a sta.rter ai
Oregon and Moore a starter at ·
UCLA. Perry would have been a
fourth man at the same fullback
position for the Tartars ln 19'8 U
he had returned to school. .
The 1948 Compton team
slaughtered Duluth, Minn. in the
Junior Rose Bowl, 48·14, and the
score could have baen much higher .
Brown wasn't known for con-
servative football. The game be
was watching found the traJUnc
team near mid field wllti a
fourth down and one-toot to 10.
. Brown would have gone for the
yardage and the Orat down even
thou1h It was near halftime .
Another time. ln the tbtrd
quarter, It was fourth and three ,
at the opponents' 41.
'·Do you know what J would
have done?" he asked. "l would
have run !tom PWlt formation.
Look at the left aide of the de·
fensive team. The punter could
have run a long ways with thal
one."
His blggeat disappointment as
a coach came ln the 1956 JRB
contest when Compton lost for
the only time to Arlington, Tex.,
20·13. .
"When that little Calvin Lee
ran that interception back 82
yards for a touchdown, we had a
man wjde open In the eod zone
with nobody within 30 yards of
hlm but our quarterback threw
to the wroog man.
"I think that was the worst
game any team of mine ever
played."
The list of players Brown sent
on to major universities and to
the professional ranks Is long
and would make an outstanding
team.
•' I ....
BASKETBALL I MISCELLANY
Charles
·Scoring
'Leader
Capistrano Valley
High se nior Bob
• Charles, a transfer lrom
El Toro Hiah where h~
was twice chOt'len that
school's athlete of the
year, tops the Orange
Coast area prep buket-
ball scoring derby with a
spark Ung 2S.5 average.
Charles has seared the .
nets for 357 points in 14
sames. a fliure which
includes 103 free throws .
The· 5·9 euard, ap-
parently completely re·
covered from knee sur·
gery last summer. bas
scored 33 points three
limes in helping bis
Cougars to a 9-5 free-
lance record.
His lowest scoring out·
put thls sea.son has been
18 poinL'>.
Second to Charles in
averaee and total scor-
ing ls Fountain Valley
H1gh's Roger Holmes.
the versatile 6-4 Barons
standout who was a
first-team All-Sunset
League choice as a
Junior.
Holmes has led Foun·
taln Valley to a 9-4 non-
league record against 4 tough opposition with a
25.3 average and can do
lt from the outside or in·
s ide off toueb board ·
play.
Holmes' high point
aame or the season was
a 36-point outburst
against Garden Grove's
Bolsa Grande High.
The only time he's
been held to less than 22
points was against
Carpinteria High in
tournament play when
he was credited with 14 .
points as the Barons
used all of their person-
nel in romping to a 82·48
decision. .
In games against.
Compton, Verbum Dei
(Los Angeles) and
o.uy .,,._. s1.,.. ~· K a tell a CA n ah elm ) •
DANA HILLS DUELS MISSION VIEJO TONIGHT. Holmes scored 31, 23
and 25 points. Heeding DH ~II Be Tom Thornton (55), Chrta Goller (33).
Or~CNttMM
T .. ltktriftt
Pot Pl•.,..., 'KllOol O to ••O
.College Basketball
Kentucky, Hogs
Remain Unbeaten
In addition to McElhenny
(Perry played at Compton dur·
1ng World War ll for Joe
for bes), such standouts as
Charlie Ane. Gerald Perry, Bev
Wallace, Bob Boyd, Ben Agaja.
nian and dozens or others played
DH Tests Diablos;
Mesa at Corona
Katella
Tops Prep
Rankings
I Cll•r•u, '-Y•ltiy 14 'U1 )),) 1 ~of.....,\, Fl"° V•lltY 1J ;rn 1U
J "'"'·Ct Toro " UJ 11.1 4 lft;<t. Ma'1M U 2JI 11,0
) Polrfff. u ...... r\lt'f tJ ~ "·• 4 Sltlnlleus H8 U 7Sf 11.0
7 M<C..Yr1 EdlMn 1J 223 11., I Carten, SC 11 200 IU
• Mccr ... MattrO.I n 1t0 1u 10 i.1H1y, 1,...1,..Hltfl U lb ll.O
AUBURN, Ala. -Forward
Jack Givens scored 25 polnllt
and Truman Claytor and Rick
Robey C<Jmbined tor 31 more to
lead undefeated Kentucky to ils
· 11th alralihl college basketball
victory, a 101 ·77 rout of
Southeastern Conference rival
Auburn Monday ni1ht.
Aubum, whlch trailed all the
way, pulled to withln 10 when
Stan Pietklezwlcz hit a lon1 out·
side ahot to make tt 77·87 with
7: « left ln the game.
But the No. Hanked Wlldcata
snapped back wltb 10 con-
secutive points behind Robey's
four free throws and a Up-in to
make it rl-67 with 5:17 to play.
Boylan, who hit 11 of his 15
first-half shot.a for 23 points, then
quickly shot Missouri out of Its
zone.
Utah, 80·70
SALT LAKE CITY -Buster
Matheney and Earl Williams
com blned for 38 points to lift
Utah to an 80·70 nonc:onference
collese basketball victory over
Nevada <Reno) Monday ni&ht.
Matheney, a senior center,
scored 20 point.I and Williams, a
guard. equalled his career-high
with 18.
San Diego St., 78-89
FLAGSTAFF, Artz. -San
Diego State completed a 1weep
of ill two.game Aritona road
trip Monday night. coming from
behind to de(eat Northern
Arlaona University's Lumber·
jacks 7M9 ln a nonconference
colleae basketball game.
The Aztecs defeated Arizona
State 77·74 SAlurday nlaht.
Kim Glotz led the A1tec1 (7·5) with 24 polnta.
BADEN. • •
in the pro ranks. ·
With except.ion of a stint in the
Navy during World War II and a
two-year absence tor military
duty during the Korean conflict,
Rrown was coach at Compton
for 30 years.
Few junior colleae mentors
will ever match hls record or the
success of his teams over that
i.pan of years.
"During our blnest days, all
of the .good players were on
about eight loams ln CaUfomia.
Thlnas have leveled otf today
but I feel the Junior coll.eae foot·
ball programs are u entertain·
inl as enr," Brown added.
Raymond "Tay" Brown was
an out.standing football coach on
any level. It ii unfortunate that
be didn't have the opportunJt.y to
use bl• foralgbtedneu and in·
novatlons at USC before bis re-
tirement.
His greatest succeH came
from his ability to flt bis system to the material at hand aud not
try to fit the material to his own
syatem.
Thero are few who wW re-
member th' name of tht 1948
Compton quarterb~ck, lkti
Iacono but all who follow foot-
ball knpw of the exploit• of McElhenny.
And another of his disciples ls
now commlssloner of £he Na·
tlonal Football Le1aue-Pete
Jt01eUe. Rozelle •aa ~tabDctty
IDU and a atudent at l::olnptco
ln .19Ce whlll the Tartan dtl•t· • ed KUION, Tuu. 19-0, 1D the
first JRB 1amt.
MD at Servite;
three games with an
ankle injury.
Terry Haught scored
22 and Randy Smith 16
in Laguna Beach's last
outing. and it's this duo
that threatens San
Clemente. which boast.t;
6·6 guard John Carson
08.1) and 6-5 Mark
Klein (13.1}.
El Toro, another team
without rebounding
strength, relies on Rick
Reid 08.1) and Ron
Holmes Cl5.4). The
Chargers of El Toro are
confronted by an up-
and-down University
quintet, which loat to
Laauna Beach Friday
(62·60) without the
services of 6-4 Roger
Poirier.
Poirier. who sports a
19.5 average and is a
three-year Atarter, is ex-
pected back tonight.
Katella. (Anaheim)
High's Knights.
roughshod winners over
two of their three closest
rivals. captured all of
the first place votes in
the offlc1ul Orange
County prep basketball
Top 10 poll as selected
by the Dally Pilot.
Four Orange Coast
area teams made the
list with Fountain Valley
capturing the fourth
spot.
Oran1e County Top 10
L Katella (12·11 60
2. Los Amigos (11·2) 5"
3. Servile (13·2> 46
•· Fntn Valley <M> 40
5 Marina (11·3> 27
6. Valencia (9-21 25
7. Canyon (10·2) 21
8. Mater Del (12 3) 20
9. El MOdena (5 4 l 12
M<Cour1
Ot"1ty
llltlOfl Devit
Bowtri
Allen
ltan.maru
F,,uoen.,,,r9 OrHr
Polttltlt
Cull•
Zlmmtrmen
~et-IMI .. " ... 100 21 m
SI JO Ul •s 20 110
as 10 ·'° 21 17 1l ,. s 17
It " " 14 ,. •2
' " 14 7 • 0 " 1 1 •
I 0 ?
"-'MnVe119'f"°41
tjotrnea Helo.
Atlll Meo
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Grant Goes ;;1;io.9'E•di;;so;-n 1c9~-4~) p;;;;;ii10;;;;;-;~===
To Kings
LOS ANGELES-The'
Los Angele& Ktpgi,,
seeking some scorli.g1 punch from the left wi.ne1 posltion, bave acquired
Danny Grant from the
Detroit Red W>.naa lb ex-
change tor a thJrd·round
draft choice and other
con1lderatlons.
The Kings did not re-
veal the conatderations
due Detroit as pa.rt of
Monday's deal.
Grant. 31, ls • former Detroit teammate o(
J.tarcel Dionne, the t tar
p_.erHer now wtth the
Kl.n1s. Grant scored SO
1oat. and had 37 assbts
fti that 1974-75seuoa.
1
BASKETBALL I HORSE RACING I MISCELLANY
Alanntos CAGE ST ATS.
Racing
Entries
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Fitnny Cars Race
At OCIR Saturday
C1 ... Y1IM90W'tllft IMJ
8•ff•Y 2CW, ~-12', Llvlngii-
1', S.ldlver SI, -... Nel>Oft M. ,.., B-•" l:I,. Mt'Ptl'S "· 11_,.,.i 10, eowerl 4
c .ollege
Basketball
Alamitos
Racing
Results
taC:OMO a a.c:a -400 ••ft. 3 .,._, Mob. CIMn\lftO. For "'~·
l'W•tl.IOO Dt+-UQEli. ....
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DOfr"t Ww IPMlN) 2.<19
Tlme-21"2 : Ser•~ -Mltl Mal Tai, Gell Met
PUBUC NOTICE
T~w ~~~~--~~~~~~~
014-o.NMM PUBUC NOTICE
Tueecsay, January 10, 1978
PUBLIC NOJ'ICE ...... ~
llcmc:a '° attl9'JOU IVNIHOll ClO'laT M TM a
I U T• 0# CAU"°"•tA flOtt TM8 C:OUMTY O~ CHIMI08 .... ....,..
&•wle ef MCLl(N f'. ~Mea, H.e HILIH ,aASl!llt lt<>EMl!a, •lie
Hll,.l!N ~··· Ot<..-MOTlta IS HE1tl9Y GIVUf .. lllO
,,_._. ol l ....... M ..... dt< ..... I
tNlt 111 ,._ Mvl,. ctelmt .. ..,..,
lllO pid -.-. .,. ........ '" .. ti .. tlltflt, .. , ...... M< .. _, _......, In
llW 9fflC4 fll _.,. <ltn Cl4 -•bOve -llllN _., "' to P"t....t "-'• wlltl
the ~~rv -lie", lo Ille un. ~""' .t lllot otfke of EltNUT J, SCHAG, Jlt., .. f'roleolon•I Ltw
C¥pof•llol\ 4'10 lllrdl St,.. .. l"otl
Ofllce Bo• II .. , h•....,rt lluch,
c.11,.,.,..l• ~ wflldl I~ IN Pltce of
""'""' ., .......... IOf!Od In ......... Wt ,.na1n1,. •• -....... tel4 ..
(...,,1, •'""" ,_ _ ....... .., ltte lint fK/bliulfan of uw~ notice. Oete4 ~a.ttn
EOWAllO P. ROEMl!R E.c:ulw fl IM Wiil
H NH;' r.=.ri:::--... .............. "'"'~ ..... _,,. 91rctl A.. P,O. ... I* .,.,.,_..._.,CA..,
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Oec:. 27, ft11 Jal\. J, IO, ti, me m.,,
PUBU C NOTICE
OAJL Y PILOT 83
PlJBUC NOTICE
-
•
91
90
89 ,,,
88
,.
81
86
85
IWL.YPtLOT TUMday, .,.,._,,, 10. 1tra.
Dollar's .. Year-long Slump ,..,.11111111
"'11t'1 ut.t IS ~ ..
q11u1 1 °'111tlet Wtt"
ti II tlMf u,et "'flKln
1971 J F M A M A s 0 II D
But at•t•st Wut ttf .. t lhfli · •01111 doH 9 1• .. •• I ru1
atJ•UI l111use ye• do1t11 dHn 11 • •. 1n I •r11
S1u1cr hd1111 ltsffn 1111~ ,.
Dramatic Drop
. . . t •
To Run Car.,. Better Cut Back
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Cqnsumers will shop more aelecUvely thll year as they a pend
more nod more of their earnings
on fuel, the federal eovernment
predicts. _
The rising costs or home beat-
ing and running a car may cul
into sales of new clothes and
autos first, the Comnierce
Department's ann\ial industrial
outlook lodlcates.
"HIGH ENERGY COSTS that
. absorb an ever-growing share ot
disposable income have already
bad a sobering effect on many
Americans,'' the department
said.
"Recent small annual sales
gains for apparel stores and
more conservative clotblng
purctuase patterns may rnean
similar restraints later in other
sales areas," the report said.
Shoppers increased thei~ clothing budgets an average of
only 5 percent last year. For
1978, the report predicted
clothing expenses wm rise an
average 6 percent. The rise in
retail sales in general Is expect·
ed to match this year's 10 per-
cent increase.
purchases than automobiles," it
said.
While other lndustrles are ex-
pected to show bigger produc-
tion gains. the auto industry
11bould irow only about 2 percent
after lnftation each year through
1982, the report sajd.
This year, auto and truck
sales should 4ecline to 14 .5
million vehicles from 1977's
record 15 mllllob, ltsatd.
THE STUDY NOTED that
more car owners are perfonntng
tbelr own simple repain and
driven bought about 80 percent
of their gasoline last year al
self·servfce alatioos, double the
previous year's amount.
ln its section oo retail trade,
the report said rlsing gasoline
costs ml9' mean Americans will
be less mcllned fo drive from
shopping center to shopping
center in search of a bargain.
"The typical customer is a
more practJcal shopper who no
Joneer reeards shopplng as an
enjoyable experJence," wrote
Malvin Margullies, a consumer
goods specialist.
"'THE LONGER term outlook
Commer~e Departmem Expects
Hikes to 'Sober' Consumers
strigent examination than ever
before," he said.
Clothing merchants s urrered
last year "wltb blue jeans pnce
wars, import restrictions, -Tm,.
treated sleepwear, adverse
weather, an often c as ually
dres se<t president and s low·
moving merchandi&e."
The report also said that many
buyers have become skepllcal
that clothes are designed to
become obsolete.
The study forecast :
-INNOVATION IN the cos-
metics industry wlll tnclmde
better skin moisturizers, bett~r
anti-perspirants, better hair col·
orlng products, more effective
wrinkle masking and improved
ethnic products.
. -THE ECONOMY should
grow e nough to reduce un -
employ ment from about 7 per-
cent to 612 percent next year.
Advocates of the Carter ad·
ministration':. energy packace
:.ay the president's proposed
legislature WOUid CUt ener&y
growth from 4.5 lo 2 percent an-
nually
The g radual slump in the value of the dollar compared with
a ''market basket'' average of 10 major foreign currencies
in the first 11 months of 1977 gave way to a sudden drop in
'December. as demonstrated by figures · from the U.S.
'·Federal Reserve Board. Figures at bottom show the
·dollar's relationship with West German and Japanese cur·
rencies.
••HIGHER ENEaGY. costs ellvisions a quality-conscious
and continuing inllatioo are ex· consumer. with greater flnan-
pected to cause conaumen to al-, cial demands made oo pereona.J
locate larger portiom of their In· income and m.tor buyin.r de-
comea to less discretionuy cialooa aubjecled lo more
-The tobacco industry should
grow 7 percent. "Though the
public has been made aware or
possible risks to human heaJth,
there is no indication that con·
sumer demand has lessened or
will lessen," the report said.
-New home construction
should continue to be strong. As
a result.' people will buy more
applicanes and furniture for new
horn es.
Wholesale lndeX BowS Out as Indicator
WASHl.NGTON (AP> -The
gov.ernment's Wholes ale Pnce
Index. m use since 1913 as an
economic barometer. is being
phased out in fav or of what the
Labor Department claims is a
more reli able measure of infla-
tion before it hits the consumer.
December report on prices in
the producer (wholesale)
markets, a new yardstick will be
used. Jt wlll be called the
Prod ui:er Price Index.
Julius Shlskin. commissioner
of labor stati&tics, said double·
counting of price increases was
a problem in the Wholesale
Price Indeli all-commodities in·
dex.
semilinl.sbed goods as steel, and
such lini s bed gooda as
automobiles.
Because producers alone the
production p1pehne _pass on
price increases, a price change
for a raw material or
semi(inlsbed good may be
reflected again later in a
finished product, and the price
rise is thereby exaggerated.
Wholesale prices generally
foreshadow changes al the retail
level, but most economists have
long argued that the Wholesale
Price Index doesn't do a very
acaurate job.
''The finished goods index is a
superior index," h told a news
briefing Mooday. He also said it
is a more accurate presentation
of the inflation process and less misleading than the Wholesale
TBE NEW wholesale-price
measure will focus attention oo
finished goods, which Shtatin
said will give a better indlcaUon
or the eventual. price chan1es at
SO ON THURSDAY when the
L abor Department issues its
Price Jndex aJl-commOdilies in·
dex.
the retail level. .
S&L to Present
·caricature Art
IN COMPUTING THE new in·
dex, government economists will
look at the same materials as in
the current Wholesale Price
Index. Only the materials will
be organiied differently to avoid
s ome of the duplication in prices.
Finished goods are those com·
modities that are ready for sale
to the ultimate user, either an
individual or a business.
Producer finished gooda include
such commodities as machine ·
tools; trucks and farm equip-
ment. Consumer fmlshed goods
include both foods and other
it.ems purchased by retailers.
State Mutual Savings and
Lt>an Association, Newport
ll.each. will have a caricature
artist at its office from 10 a.rn.
to 3 p.m. Friday.
The artist, "King Saul," a
former aniplalor for Walt Dis·
n ey Stud19s, will do free
~ketches for visitors to the of-
fice.
The monthly Wholesale Price
Index takes prices on goods at
various stages in the production
pipeline, including. s uch raw
mate rials a s iron ore, such
Consumer foods include such
unprocessed foods as eegs and
fresh vetgetables, as well as
such processed foods as meats
and bakery products that are
Pi 0 pager
WIDE AREA
COVERAGE ORANGE CO.-L.A.
•1f.10 ;;r~
NO DEPOSIT ON
APPROVED CREDIT
Onlfl Price I• Dbeounte~
DEAR PAT: A friend told me she'd
heard that. when you buy a product
that has a manufacturer's warranty
at a dlscount store, the warranty is
not good because you're not paying
the product's full price. ls this the
case?
L. W., JrvJne
No. The discount relates only to &be
price and does not affed aay at.bet'
parl of the aale.
--~~~~~~~~~-
RJng Around dae Call.er
CAPITOLIZE-
WITH -· CAPITOL
C,6J>IT(llZATIOO MEANS 10·
C<IMRT CAPIT(l TO CASH
DE AR PAT: Last summer I
bought a gold-plated ring from a
Fashion Mart lntematJonal salesman
who visited our office. J toJd bim at
the tlme that J am usually allerlic to
metal, but he asaured me thaf tb.l.s
ring w11 heavily fold·platecl and l
ou.ld '*'1Wen...&.9'Att•Pb' fO&" refund
ll I had anJ pl"ObleDH. I ended U1>
purchuiq two rtnaa for friends IDcl
one tor m)'lel!. One •eek lat.er the
riQ6' caused my finger to bnak out in
· a rash. t aent It back to the company
with the warranty Qnd request.eel •
rtCW\d. t 1ater r~el\'ed a credit slip.
for pur~haH of aoUd gold jewelry.
but 1 had been promlsed a refund. I
contacted the f\tm and was told I
would hear from the manaaer. but I
never did. A later Jett.er ol complaint
broufht no response.
J . A., San Juan Capiatrano
Followlq CGDtaet by AYS, a fall
reCa•d w111 malle4 &o JOU by Fuldilla
............ 11.
"Got o prob/mt? Tltn wnte lo Pal 0v~,,. Pol 10W
n t rtd lapt. ~llrtg IM-• O*f Gd-llO" llttd
lO IOlu. Nqlllflc• lot oowntfMftl CIJld lll&nvu. MaJJ
llf1U' qWlflolv to Pal°"""· Al Your Snvtce. ~ Cocul Oail,11 PUof. P.O. Bor 1.5'0, <Mto Mua. CA
lmM. Aa moi.v 11ttm 41 ~ lllf1l tit """""ed,
but plloMd tnq111rit1 or Utfcrn not lnc!Udillg the r~rr·• (uJl1aOnu.addr•11 Giid ~11 llovn" plloflc """'bn~tltcpnndned. TIAlcollilM~ada> 111 ·~ SaltudoJll •••
maa•fada.ren contacted won'& aay
that either of these bome treatm•ta
real.I)' btcreatet the wearablllty of
nyloD1. Hotrever, these eo111paales
are la balws to sell nyloaa, • to presene daem.
Mlulng Ret•rti• Notleed
DEAR PAT: What would happen to
me iC 1 didn't file a tax return this
year?
J . J.,,Fountaln Valley
Tbe odd.I are neellent that the IRS
wollld ._ you ap fut, e1pedall1 If
you laa4 paid tax• In U.e put aad
suddenly failed ao me·. ntuna. u,...
dOD't Ille ........ ,., ta••°""·
)'OU wUJ reeetve a Mrlet ol DOUcel.
UaaaU, wttlda ...._ ••tllll die ftDal
BOtlce wW Cell ,... ao P•J •Im· aae4laW, • raa.-yeu ...-• property &Iba. lmmedtaWr ..... 1tcra11.'fte.,..appnae:.1a.._._
tlftt UM a taQayer fall.I• 197 ...
Uut. II U.. ta a P'"l ...... of fad•N C. ~ or late pa1...t. aP
J>Ntaie"' poll&ene.e ............
tlae taKp9Yer neet•ea oalJ .o •ee . to pay• Jtdafa or f1ce .. ,.. ....
meat 4!" O. lod of other propertr.
•
ready for sale on supermarket
shelves. Consumer finished goods
include such durables u autos.
furniture and jewelry, and such
nondurables as clothing and
gasoUne.
2.700 commodities. includ10g
food products , fu e ls a nd
manurac~ured goods
The basic data and method of
gathering the information will
be the same for the new index.
but Shtsk:in said the government
will gradually expand its base of
information to cover 500 In-
dus tries , twice the current
number.
.Joi•• Board
Dr. ~Villiam S. Ba nowsky,
JH estdent o f Pe pperdine
University, hots been elected
t o the board of National
Medical. Enterprises, Inc.,
Los Angeles. The company
owns or manages 34 general
hsopit<tls and ll convales·
c·mt facilities.
THE CURRENT Wholesale
Price Index is based on mail
questionnaires to about 9,000
businesses. Prices are taken on
Over 1'he Counter
NASO UstiftcJ$
NEW YORK (AP) ~·-Id " "¥. Jlf~l"d ~"· PIOflHl8 IP,, , ..... TIME DC , ... & ..
i; ~ ... ~~'1::"\~~ rouco ~311'> Jo> ynM l•'h IW• ..... , ... ,, . )\. Teto8•11 10'•1H111 5u11rF•d I l'lo. l<•liSll pf Ill-. 1fV• Po00Pd ,,"" 11\11 T•tnP•• lJ :w lon•I S«Utlllti an:t,M 111'\ llV, Kai or '" ,.,, Pou It I ,, T•<llPuo 7'J JO• ~··r.:.~:r"'"a::~ O•I• Lii ..v. s•11 IOmanA 27 21\o ProtrP '"' I'· T9<11mP .,. )I o.i. 100 "' •v• Kamp.Am 7' I • PbSvNC 10'• n•. Tenn1n1 ,. 1 JI') In-enc• .. rnc11n;1. O•flM•I " 2S K•ltGr• .... I Pur111.,, IS IS i, r1111 nv f?-1" 131. •• jlO<k\. i>.Corln ,.~ , .. KO~m ~ 7~ PlllOCap .. ,. &' ... Tlp,.ry 11 , I) AEL. llld •'141 ..... g:t~".~ 17'<. 11 .. Ku r11yT ..... OuallnM i~ 311 T~oCP . ·~ AFAProt s.. .-. , .. "1,, ,,,, ~:::r.~r . "' =:r.r.Pr !.>-. '"' Trn•O<O I) J)\,, •10111< 17 lf\11 O.tCa11T u " 11 .. l•V. .. ~. 70~· Tr1c0Pd ..... ~ AVM Cp 2v. 1~ O.ltn18 :ti~ 7)-IOy~lb ,~, ..... Ra1cr"'' " " Jrll!IOG ~I I • Adcll"'W 1~ "' O.w•rEI I-K•y •F ..... ,. Raymno 20 JI Ty\Oftftl ,. . '" Ad'tAou ,.,, l '\ OlllC•Y' l~ l6V1 Ke~lflt ,. .. ,"9 Rec,Eqo '"' ,.~ UnM<<;tl I' t •·, Alberti. "~' 171~ Ol•t>Cr" u ""' Kl1>9lnt S\I) • Ro.OE• ,,~. JO ~~~~a 111. I)•; ... , ........ 4''11 ~ ~llltl 11'\ 3111 l(n•PfV ,, " Rollt>My 11 11 IJ' • 'l Allcolnc IS'~ I~ lrGn 10. 1111. L.•ftCtln 2)\1, 2A'll AOMltn 2') J ' .. UV•8ton " . :~r~ 1)11> If Oollldlll n "" L.alldlll•S ,,, lh Routt '"' 1~ UPPt'IP .... ,.,
AF11mf1 l)V. lµ/o DorchG> llV. 11' ~ i...rwco ,.,,. 17YI RWtSIOY u·-. ,...,. VtlyGbr. ''• 1 2'11 "" Ooylt08 I~ 2011. ltllSllW' n 23v. ~lier 1\'o l l.t va~Ou•A AOrttt II~ 12 O\HllllnO ~ '"' Llnllcu 111141 17\'t nOat AMkro. T1 11\'J t~\'.ne 11v. m. l~trn ~ "" IS.16 I J.16 v ... c~Sn s·' • ATVCom •1 a ~,r.;: MNIGE '""' 17 tr:~~ lll'> 3S'IJ Vtlcro ....... AWtldf\9 """ ,,..,. tOfl ao M•/"""' ''"'' '"" ,.,.. ..... VtN8>h '°'• 21•1a Amlt<re 2'ilo t~ E1Pa1EI 11'/t 11! Ma l•n ,. lO t.~n~r 1•11> HV. WtOIPb ,.'-JO ...-11. 51/r Eldtftll• • 6" Mtt.116111 Mi '" " ,. =~~: I\_.. ,~_.. . "'"'""'. ...... " l!ltN11<I ~ 4\1> l'Mvll' 1J'4 ,.~. =nfl ,. ,.~ 1)l4 141, ... ,...c,. 6V. 7 EIModul •¥o S-111 ~~ '~'"' SIS • s W!Jf\IW• ""' " Ard May 1 .. '"' E"rOtv ~ 17Vt ·~'''"' f.•1Wlt 14 l~ Wtlcltrn 1 .... "'11WG1 17'\li 17 E11twll1I 2 , ... MarOlnv 1'4 2"-•G•Cp I~ II :~,:~cr.o , . , ... Atdeol• » IN E~f ,, ... ,"" MkluW 21¥. J2>o, SwEISv ,,,~ ,, • • ... AUGasU !Siio I " r"' 16-\1. 1'V, MdldCap ,. 2lll ~twndrn 11'"' 27" :!~~·b 1 ]\\ llalrdAt ~~ ~t.~:u ''"' 1'111 MldlA•l •·16 "' ldR~i 71¥. ,,..., 4j) 40-"4 e."9 .. e 1$14 I 11\lt 23') MldlllkS nlo'> 2'111 Sl'"H I) 16 WOOdlot n·. 2• eumllt lt,, 'E ... 1~ ~ri~ UV. 1' M"'ISI ,,~ ~ wwe..w ~ ...... IHS1<,ll9 .~ lfl ~3.1~· ·~':I' Str•wCI ,..,, ll Wri~I 11 It ,,,. an .. ttl" pt " T5 U'4 MonlCO Su11trEI I , .. Zion I• ,. ,,
8ar11Mk :r: • ~:~,f~ 1l4i no Moor•S ""' Tl'4 e .. 11 .. 1\la 314 ,.,,, Moo.-.Pd ·~·s-. lltl•L.•b 2'la JD ""~\' Tl """ ::r.~H 2 2'4 81bO(o ,,.""',;tt ~It tU -14 1141 12'4 ,,..,. BlrdSoft Of'ff\0 "'" 't: ~CllM !0'4 IJ\(, 81rtdlr I'.\ IA "~"'~ I~ Mo1C1.-, ... ·--81HlllP :DV. u "'"" '"' . ~ ...... , '~ 'rv: =r• ~-"~r: ,.~ ··~ Nar~~ ,...., , "" r \ • '"" ~ ~:, Tl lift Neto ·~ 1~14 Brook ~~ ' .-~.rJ 8f'WToon ellll 1.0 lM Sito ~ arwt1ll'l9 "",,,., NI '°"° I H11WldtlllE . ' NASDAq Su11u11ary euct'* ~~ q, 1' IW. NJNG.s '"' ""' auc '" ~ 1114 Ml IJ IM Nlelln A i•~ 22 ~ ' yACIY ,fl. r~ Nl•ltn 8 '"' 21ft NliW VOA!( tAPI -~I ecttw o,..,. atVt ii ~'"'· N:itrG1 11\li 11~ llMt-<Ol.lflftr .i~i WSf.l1ed b'I' NASO. gmp&Cll '"'. a:TE Zfll >~ No 01 llft 4214 43 Name v ...,. d .Mlt•d ~ rwadtt i-m ltv. p~ N~Gs '°" HM O.ylln • • 31:9100 ~ '"' s; C.Sw(., ,, 3 1'> N'* PS ,. .. lit II~ .. ~ ~ ,.__141 ~:;t~r "' 2VI
,...p IM Ill Noxell ~~l&,., Odttr • 201 ev, ,.. -1·1• ~.-=~ , ... l'h ~vyM C:ltdoG• I ·= ~ 4~ + 141 ~ s ' ""' '"' erro ""'JOl4 N•lllPll • 111. r~ 1•, -i. 14Vt Ul JWl1lt1 '4t I i.T~ ..... "' Pal>stll •• 126.'!IO lJ\41 2l~\ -IV. Le• 1~1f a!fr?! J7 ~ , .... ,, •h '"" ~"°(; ·~.iOO 2 ,_,, 21'4 --1·16 ~VII 10\lt I Iii ~ ... ~A Int ,, ... ""' I C0m ,AGO J a.1, a 11• -~ ... ~ "" II flt '" ~ ,_,. 2J\lo2"' r'r.-.Lf tS.100 ~ 29'0 -1' ~·uv~ == Hrnl ' ·~ l"e<~ll '°"" 21 US t:nr •• ,,..., Tl1-Ill~ -~ li'm. lr.;tc"' lYt ) ~,:xr ~ ... 2.1 111lrcif,., 41 .uy, ,lie ..._.,.fl<td ······· ... . ~ 1-CP ~. . ' ::r:•11t 1~ fl:11M4 ................... OIUV~t lnterlftk
'" 5" WHH ·~•Iii fl~ •••••••••••• 1,~ e,•M i; .. t lllfmtOI m.o." ~rf'~ Jl\6 32\lt Silr 1•"'1 !!~~"' ~r n 1• T .. OI lsMlff •• . . • ... • . • • . • • . • ?,117 ..... high\ •••..•.••...•.•• • It Tel lO )1"'1 Plt<IA'lt .:-.~ New •-• .... ..... . .. JJ ConnGe<\ .. .,_ ,,. Wt 5"' ,..._<eSS Total u1a • •••••• ... . •••• e,sa,500 CenPao JCMJlll' .., 12 ~ Ptn•r111 ~2' ....
MUTUAL FUNDS
'
IJp• and Doemu
NEW VOAI( IAPI -n.e , .. _."9 h•t ·-· Ille O..r IN . c-1w
\IO(k\ •Fl<! .. .,,.," u .......... 00"" \IP ,,,. tno•t and -1r-. mo•t .,.>ed on i:;runl ol <NnOe .--ro•.s• of v0111..,.
or Moncier. NO t f'<ltrll ~· lrec:ll~ IM-'2 an ln<I·
-· Ntt --<ton -<l\an99~ ••• t ... dllltr•nc• bel-'"" prev9-cio.1119 bl<I P<•O -l..S.y"t lat 1114 "'k <'.
UPS N•,,.,. LA•I . ~. P<t •
1 Comt rto ,., Up ''·' ' BIQO•m IJ -+ lV• Up ».> J Cornet~ I + I Up 1S.O
4 Bk Comp 11') + ,., Up ,, 0 s RSA Co l'· + \I) Up IU • Comte• ,, .... ) ... "' Up , .. , , Oaylln 1" +S-16 Up U.2 • Preu AI 11 ~ + , ..... Up IS.0 • MOroll6 1 + .. Up U.J 10 t"l!.1~~ ll ... ,,,. UP 12 0
II ,.~ + '~ Up 17 s
It ,.,._,u,. , . . '• Up 12 ~ 13 M•r~ IV ,..., + '· Up 11.I ,. ~ri~;t: )' .. + .,, Up 10 • .S IS ~" •' v, Up 10.0 •• MavPet ••• + ·~ uo 7.1
11 CoHISlt ~ 1 + "" Up )0 •• l(lndCre ,,. J + ~ Up •• " Ct~ll ..... + I~ Up St 10 Fu Sy\ . ., + '• Up S.t 11 Ulll1/ncl • . •• UCI 5• n Amlc0< ,~ + .. Up u n a~ro~~ .. ,, ... "' Up H
24 ~ • ... Up ,,
u T•letom _,._ + \') Up H
DOWNI N•-t..tl -~ P<t.
' ~=o& JO Oii 20.t 2 2 1·14 -7·1• Off 17.S
3 ~~i. 2'4 -,, Off IS' ' 1•. -~ Oii 14.l s M•ntor ..... -~ Ott u.a
' COlll""" '° -3 8:' IU
1 EllK Prot :iv. -.... f 12.S • SI Hanoi J') ~ °'' 'P • ••trdOll 11._ -'"' Oii , .1
10 · Moduli" Jh -~ Oii p.s 11 ACeloOt 10 = 1~. g:: 11 a ~~i';!, . 1 11.1 J -~ Off 11.1
1' Su•YTl'C ' -.... Off l).1
IJtOl41110.t nv. _ ,,,, Off IQ.' 16 Cron11t , .. -.. Off TO•
" 0.<•••n ,., -... Oii 10 s
11 liara-1·~· -v. Oft 100 1e Whl!Otrn 9 -1 Oii 10.0
20 C.tn~ 2·~ -~·· Oii " 11 L.-S•I• ,. . -,..., Off .j fJ Tru•J04l 1•·· -'"' °" u %n11nlS s -111 Off ', 2• •"•El s -·~ °'' ••• lS OtalCO ~ -,. Off " Z6 Sold.Ar 10 -I Off e I
. .
Tue ay~
Cloei~ Price NYSE
' . ---
......
•
.. '. '•
• • • •,
'• "•
.. '•
'.
Tuetday. January 10 1978 N OAJLY PILOT
Planning Helps 0
Elderly Make It
87 SYLVIA POaTBa .............
Last week, when the first of lhe Chrt.atmu bUls piled up
by Mary, 71, and bell buabaod, 73, came In, Mary took a
credlt card they once used only occasionally and applied '4_
the back (Ol' a cuh advance.
Without It.. they could not even have paid their January r~nt. Although wbea Gears• reUred et1ht years aao. they
manaaed tullY on their ac-ewnulated 1avln1s. Social
Security and bl.a modMt pension, they're now over the\~
beads ln debL
WOBSE. 'IREY'LL NEVER BE able to repay their
debt.a: they face duckln• their creditors until the day thfY'I dle.
Even thole who create a ntllrement income totalinf
about the sam•aa aCWal tatnln'9 now will have at reUre-
ment about half what other Americana ~ then earnlna.
Infiatloa wtlJ force them down the Uvlnl ~ard.s acale.
The retlrement
dream is in reallly an
economic ni"ghtmare.
Millions of elderly are
forced to depend solely·
on inadequate Social
--
Money's
Worth -• -
Security benefit checks. -... ' -----Pri vale pensions are
oflen either equally modest or actually a mlraae.
As a result, one in four lives in poverty, and poverty is
increasing among those over65 and at a far more rapid rate
than !or tho,,e under 65.
There is lltUe escape for those already in this position.
They should seek advice from financial counaelora. But as
victims of lack of planning for retirement, their opnons are
exceedingly limlled.
THEY SHOULD SEEK AS MANY WAYS as they can
find to raise their income without forfeitinc benefits. Possi-
ble jobs range from baby sitting to house sitUng t.o beat ·
care for those less physically able.
They should band tofetber with thole in similar posf~
tions to save by buying foods in bulk. by sbarin& costs or
transportation, by exchangin& services, elc.
But the real solutions are for those who begin to plan ror
retirement in their 30s, 40s and, al the latest, early 505. Here
are guidelines:
-SOME EXPENSES WILL B'E higher: for instance.
costs for medicine will averqe 2~ ball times higher thu •
for younger adults.
-Some major budgel items will either cost less or•
cease to be important. The mortc11e prob1bJy wJll hav~·
been pa.id off. Education bills wUl be finished. Food cosu
may be lower because the elderly oflen eat less. MedJcare·
will be crucial.
-Retirement offers prime money.saving lax breaks: ·
extra exemptions, home seWnt tax breaJcs. other special
deductions.
Planners must be coldly realisUc tn estimating nffds.
An emergency savings fund, extra health Insurance, and ad
"inflation cushion" are good ideas.
Nert: Credit Ct>ll~elmg. , ... :
Losers 2, Gainers 1
As Market Stumbles
NEWYORK (AP>-BluechipstocksstudJedtQday, but
the rest of lhe market was unable to ball ita early· 19781Ude.
The Dow Jones average of 30 lndustriala, which bad
fallen more than 46 points in the tint five tr1din1 days of the
new year, fell another3.03polnUtodayto781..S3.
And looe.rs outnumbered gainers by more U'lan a 2-1
margin in the broad tally of New York Stock Exchan,.·liated
issues.
Analysts said the depreased prices of many blue ebJp
stocks attracted some buyln1 and coverina of previ011S short '
sales with the Dow at lta lowest level in more Lhao two years. ,
But they also noted that the market was sUll faced with 1
concern over rlsinc interest rates.
...
Stories In The
Spotlight
NEW VORK CAPl· s.IK. 4 p "I swlct ...,. ,,., ~ ol n. II.,..,, ,...., .e11,..
Do111Jenn~ rJer~•': 1 ,;J:J.ir•CA,., ,...,.. ~---1
.... \'-Stodl l!•<Mflte 1-'· ~-=~~.tr .. ~~.=" liVi ~ Vi
'""TT .. .. . .. . 371, 10D ,.,_ -111 Bllllld Co......... W,900 I!~ .+ 1~ Ge" Motors .. .. 1'7,IOO ?'t -119 G-tt Ge... .. m.-14 -l"-a1..:• Oe<ll. tff.lllD ••~ • ... I eM • .. :tJs.J00 tl1 -1 h arlt Pet.. ••• . • tll,100 IS-1• EaaCHI .. . • 209.tao O'-i -I'• Clll<WO .. .. .. .,,. tHlo • ~
Dlt{1411Eq •• • • 1t1,• 4'1\'t • 14 Se«sltb • . •••• 17UOO i.~. WHIP El.... . • ..,,_ 17 -V. Allltr<llfl . • MO.AIO 4'111 -~ NortOI> Sh" .. • ISJAOO 1t 't
NEW YOftlC (Af'I· Se!H, 4 11.m. _,1u •lld ,,., (....... ot .,,. ,... ,,,., e<tl ... A-l<lfl Slack Ert...... ...._., l~-41"9 ~._ .. , •• _..,,,.,. ''· l"lyOle Oii. . • 111,100 2'14 .. • H!HIOllM • • • ICW,600 Jt.,_ -l'I Glem Yell , • 61,300 1w. -" TeulP11 NA. .. .. U,llllO t0 _. W•ll'O< on.. 49,ICIO ,.~ • \/)
OtaH P9t....... ,.,tOO ,.1=-~ POI t....... .... •.JOO ' -.,.,,... PW!.. . ·1 • .. ~ Ulflfld wt........ 1', 2119 • • .. • Oo44fMlll ~..... . *'· t -...
°"9lt HICll> ~ Clow CllO JO ,,.. 1M.G "°·" m .ss 111.n->.OJ 10 Tr" 2CIU1 •• IJ *-1110 .14-0.t7 IS VII 101.JI -.:zs •JJ 147.0.-OM '5 Stk 112.11114.N 1111.JI Vl:1-1.10 ,...,.,. ... ....... ......... '·'"·* r,.,. . . .. . . .. . .. . . ~s,ooo ~"U. .... :::.:: ·:::: ·:.: ·::.: ·: .... ;:
H'Jaat St~lul Did
HE'# YOttlt (AP)6
SALH
N«W YOltlr IAPI ·NY ftec:• llJft ............................... ,,,I! ~IMv•... ... .. "· =· .................. 11, • v .. :11.:zo. : ..... :. .. .-;.,.· ·: lt:ioo:i:I hwo Yf•rt -.. .. .. .. • • .. • .. S.~;on Jtll I le ....-........ • .... •• 1-'0•.A* ,.,, ...................... '~~~ nt1 ta Clele ,. , ....... , ... , • .. IM,tSl/NI
•aT AMI)( 1110
.... 'f'Qtll( (Aft)
=n:r Unc:ll•'""" T ... l ltiun New lllt"ll " . ..,. ....
AMl•IALft
Due to Jate trensml5Sfon today's lf1tfng wlll not
a ar In the Dall Pf~.
Geld q ... ,., .... ,
I
J
·---Tele1'ision ~ •
DAILT PILOt TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS l~d•'f. Januaty 10, 19711
fl l.Sl>AY
EVENING
•:OO I CM NfiW9 • • HIWS
•
fM~OHll
LYNN
~
• THE INW>'f lkJNCH
~ lllCI CerOI p4an a
eeirnplng tf19 few !he WhOl9
IM!ly.
• TH~~IU
Wiien I blHQIM i. -llO
and IUbMquanlly dlM. hll
polloa-hatlng aon le
belf11nded l>y 8-gMllt
dl~RIC COMPANY m A.a a.tAH BEHAVES
"Cr-'iv!ty" 0 A9CHEWS . uof) MOVIE
••• ".Ill• ... (1nt)
Peul MYftl, 8Mte D1w1L A
hlatom.I _..,. of the
IMder ~ MIMded tot
""' , ...... Of MelcJco from Prlnae MU\rnlll1111'1 ~
CIOmlnellon II ~ •
l!_hra I
• HOUYWOOO
TE.L.EVl8K>H ™EATM
''The "-Of Mt. Fuji"
Jo•eph Campanella,
AndfM M~. Avery
Schrelt>w and Jeeneltl
~ .,. fMtured In 1111•
cont1mpor1ry Ru11l1n
C>l•Y wNoh oentw1 wound t,,. 2~ reunion of lour
WOtld W11 II --In lhe 90Ul"-tern l'eglon of
ti.. US 6 R
C:!) ~NOTA.
WOMAN?
•:30119 l.A~·
SHl..UV
"TM MorticllM" U-
lalla I« 1 men who ctnv.
• big «Meck llmcluel,,. bul
needl Snlttly'1 hlllp In
Ofdw to get I daM with
hint.
*•*"" 'A Oalhetlng 0 1
Elglel" (Pan 1) 11943)
Roc:k Hud.on, Ro<! Tey!Or.
S/l()Ct(ld by '* hual>lnd'• -ing~lohi.
man, 1n Air Force
c:omm&l>der"• ~fl ..._
t1tm.11 ht., al> min I
Cl MeA IASKETBAU
Chicago Bult. v1. loa
Mgeleef.U«•
Some Kisser m~vma ~ OVEl'l!ASY
8) MY THAU SOHS
Uncle Chatley bu)'I • VICll·
tlon lot, ooty 10 tlnd lhat
he'1 '-t hooOwlnlll<I. fJll OVEAEASY
A member nf the l'OC'k group ·K1:-.s 11
Ju :-.trate'i !':BC News c:orrespondt'Cll
Ed\\ 111 NL·wman's rc•port on the prom11
t mnal hu..,inc~s on The L und of I ly111·
;ind Clnry tonight al 10 on Channel 4.
JMft Merllfl; aedll card•; ..... .,.,, •• hoipltll ellglbl~
t:OO fJ CJ) M"A"S"H
The unit'• -~ Invent
I VUC:UIM QllMp to 1top
1rt1rl1I blffdlng, and
reeo-Hot Lipe' wedding
ring. JMn Mer.ti, aedll c:..da,
.... ,.,.,. • hoeOltaJ ellg1blli-
ly. •
W MACNEIL 11.EHAEA
REPORT
ED L.A INTERCHANGE
·1n9ide Stralgnt''
(BM~ECK
u a THREFs
eot.fPAHY Cl) GROWING YEARS
"Cfllldren In Famllln ·
(J) CBS~EWS
~ EARTH, SEA ANO
SKY ({) TH£ GOHO SHOW
®) HOUYWOOO
SQUARES
"The Rlval1" J1c:k
blcom4ll entangled In a
reud batw .. n his 1wo
roommat" Whan Jan.I .cc:u-Chr111y of ltNllng
• hMd-yotlOg tlX~
llva lrom,_
®J MERV OAIFFIN
G~la; Gian Camp~ll
Mort Sahl, P.,ry Kong
' Lunlf Gflolooy"
(J) TO TELL THE TRUTH
7 00 Q N8C NEWS D UARSCt.UB
OA8C~
7 30 0 CANOIO CAMEAA U NEWLYWEOGAM£ 0 SOAOAITY '112
a·oo O CJJ THE
FITZPATRJCKS
Tiie premature amval ot
Mago11'1 b•by tek.. rhe
F1ttpetoc1<1 by eurpriM.
Q MAHFAOM
ATI..AHTIS
G) I LOVE LUCY
"VtcaOon from Merri.age"
Cl) AOAM-12
Cl) THE BRADY BUNCH
Cerol hu • mtrlOf acc:IClaftt
In 11'9 paritlng lol arid 11
t\lfflll Into a l>lg court CUI. «D AOAM-12 Tr.e lut aorvtvtng c:ntz.en ot
Allantte 15 comml•~
to icx:.te a m1...ino M1bma-
r1ne end re1urn thl bodies
OI Ill Cf-to 11\0rl , en
as.1gnment which lead•
hom to en ultr•·tecret
oparetior\ headed bye I~·
mer Oil geo!OQl•t IAI
U IAONSIOE
''CNdlme'la And Mwdtt"'
8) MMV OAlff1N au.ts: Glen ~
Mort 8Alll, Parry King.
PeteHamlll, O!flceta Malloy 8"0 Reed
get an uneJC~led ua111
from an ex-c:onvoct w'*1 a o•ng ol hoodlum• •11ac:U
lllam.
T tie oltloe<t ~II In Flre11m
and E•~lvea ellpertl
when • t1r1119e box i• ·
touf'ld In •n electronk:e
factory.
«i) MASTERPIECE'
THEATRE
"Hiii 'lt'ho?'" Caliguta'I
~t _,trleltlel
ana lu<1lcrou1 mllltary
~ 1tlr dla-*on
In ll'leeout1 Channf"I Lbting•
I) KNXT 1CBS) Los Angele<, D COLLEGE
8A8KET8AU
1:30 fJ CJ) 0H£ DAY AT A
TIME 0 KNBC INBC1 l o,, Angel(•<, U I( rLA (Ind) Lo'> A11gcfes 0 KABC· lV (ABC} Lo:. Angeh•.,
61 1'.FMB (COS) San D1eqo 0 KHJ·TV(lnd J L os Anqclt"'•
1111 KCST (A BCI San D1eQO
0) "TTV \Ina ) lo<; Ang1;lc
Noire Dime va Unlv1<a11y
of San Francleco 0 ®) HAPPY DAYS
"Po1111 G••• Plnl'Mld" POI·
$141 par>ics when lie lac.a
Ille tralern•I)' ln111111on '°'
beor>Q pinneo 10 e aoror1ty
gtrl
"Thi Race Ot'lvar" Ann'1
plane IOf romlrlee baclttlre
wnan lier re11tlonlhlp wlttl
an exclllog ,_ driver
1&11 .. a moat IUdden and
um1eull tum (Pal'I 2 of 2) 0 9 SOAP Q) KCOP TV c Ina t los Angf'll'c.
W t<.CE T TV 1PBSI l o:. Ang .. 11 ' a!> KOC( TV 1PBS) Huntington 13-0.icn
Cl) CAROL BURNETT
ANOFRJEp.jDS
Q) MOVIE
tEC>llOde SlxtMn) C«nna
angttly orO«a .i-ica and
Cl><Nter from her Jeit oell
W1>1n lngfld, Illa myaterl-
Tony Bennett
Sees "Rock'
Tre11d Fading
l./\S VEG \S, Nev. <AP >
111ny Benm·tt ~ho says he's ,1
"tunesmtlh ," not a p rog
nosticator believes that the
"rock" trend may be weakening
and popular music may be re
t11rntng to more traditionul
forms.
"I don't care how long it's
t rock> been gom~ on. I can't
lll'lp but thmk it's still a big fad
that will kind of fade awav
hl'l'aUse tl's not really based On
IC'rrtf1c mus1C'," Rennett ex·
da1ms .
OVER TH£ PAST 25 years,
f:J('nnett. in his early 50s, hab
f•stabhshed himself as one of the
1?reat smgers, r anking in the
<'lass of the late Bing Crosby, the
1<1te Nat "K.lllg'' Cole and Frank
Sinatra.
The four, along with a handful
of others. have mastered the art
of "intimate singing." There U! a
~ertain caring for the audience.
;in understated Rraciousness and
.!.lyle which can't be learned.
"TllF. ~IUSJC NEVER Ovl'r·
comes .. it's m at ure music, it's
trafty," Bennett said in an in·
lervlew between shows at the
Hotel Sahara hl·re "It's nice
and gentle, and it's a performing
~md ofthing "
But while good music lovers
bemoan the fact that veats are
dying and getting older, Bennett
1s confident that there's nolhin&
to worry about because he sees
young musicians coming out ot
colleges and universiUea who
will fill the footsteps. •
"( TIDNK THE !Jew tenera·
tion ·of young adults coming up
right now is tremendous," said
Benbett. "I'm starting to (ind
out that their pace is tn\JC'fr dJt·
rerent tban the generation
before the late 1950s and 19608
crowd. Their elders were vie·
. tims of the whole fJOs scene
"hlch gO( pretty beurotic. I'm
very encouraged by the ne• kids
J see coming out or college."'
It's not that Bennett dtsUkeR
the ••roclc~' mualc, bo just feels ·
the generation of th mid· '70s la
ndl&coverin1 the "big band3," Jm an.d th clasalca.
• --roe· NEW KIDS realbt like iood Jazs," Bennett ei:ptalnod.
•'Tbt •cnerallon. before It was
1ttrlctly rock and they wouldn't
~here to an)'thtns e. •• .
Brothertt
Jan-l\hl'lwd \ 11\t'l'lll, l<·ll.
and 1'rb Krr s tolt'L'r s on
portra y l>rolhl•r -. 111
"Vi~ilanle ForC'C'." to <.11r on
CBS Wednl'sday at !J p m .
'Gypsy' Film
Will Remain
In New York
NEW YORK (AP) -A tno\ie
with a $6 million budget that
almost left New York to be
filmed in Chicago because of a
labor dispute probably will re·
main here after all.
Producer Dino De Laurentiis
had threatened to move the film·
mg of ''King of the Gypsies·•
when Local 644 of the lnlerna-
tlonal PhotogTaph<'rs of the Mo·
lion Picture Industry blocked
.Swedis h ca m eraman Sven
Nykvisl from working on the
film.
BUT AFTER a meeting with
union officials, F'red Sidewater,
executive vice president of De
Laurentiis Producltons, said. "If
there's no change from our dis4
cussions, the Cilm will remain in
New York."
He said Nyqu\st would be the
cameraman. Unlon officials
would not confirm that Nykvlst,
a member of the union's Los
Angeles local, will be allowed to
act as cameraman for the pro.
duction.
LARRY RACIES, president ot
the local, said he believed the
film would be made in New
York. although he said the
af(reement between the pro-
ducers and cameramen would
have lo be endorsed by• vote or
bis m embership.
Racies said be did not believe
the mm makers ever ~d any in·
te.nUon ot mo~g production to
Chicaao.
"We think lt was just a rod
horrin.,'' he uJd. ''They'd have
to mov• Nlntb Avenue to
Cblca10 to make the movie
there."
SIDEWATEll S~JD De
LaurenUia, who h1td t ald tho dls·
putt wu ••stupid,'' had made no
•ll'Mment to blr '4 !llew York
clnematotras)her a a backup
for NykV11t. but Ind cated that
ucb a mov wu llke\j.
Linda Blair
Victim of
Her Fame?
WESTPORT. Conn tAPl
\c·lrei.s Ltnda Ula1r, arrested
Lt ~t month on drug charges,
say-; she is not involved with a
natronwide drug ring operating
out of Florida as police ullege.
I 11 a copyright story in The
Bridgeport T elegram, Miss
Bl~11r said her arrest on drug
1•har1tes has been blown out or
proportion. She said she is a vie·
llm of her fame.
Miss Blair, 18, is best known
for her role in "The Exorcist."
She was arrested Dec. 20 at her
home in Willom on a Jack.soo4
\tile, Fla. warrant charting her
with conspiracy to buy or sell co-
(•arne. She also was charged by
Jocal authonties with possession
of a s ubstance found in her
purse later identified as an am·
phetamine. She was released. on
$2.500 bond.
"[ am a person who is known
throughout the world so they
would Jove to get someone lilce
mf' on a drug rap. Jt makes for
~ood ink," she said. "The fact is
I didn't do anything wrong. I had
nothing to do with this drug bit,"
she said.
"Some people tney not un-
clerstand, but l really don't like
them. When any of .my friends
get involved with drugs I get UP·
set."
TUBE TOPPERS ·
KCOP ti) 8:00 -"Juarez." Belle
Davis and Paul Muni star in this 193!f
hl~torical movie drama about the Mex·
ican revolution .
KCET 3 S·OO -"The Ascent of Mt.
)''uji." Joseph Campanella, Avery
Schreiber and J eanette Nolan a r e
fcalllred in this contemporary Russian
play on Hollywood Television Theater.
KTLA 0 8:00 -Notre Dame plays
San Francisco in coJlege basketball
game al Oakland.
KHJ f) 11:00 -"'Sus picion." Cary
Grant and Joan Fontaine head the cast
of this 1941 movie drama.
11118 Vllltar ln>!'n ~.
~ Mr lderrttty.
(N«wonl adYlle. ....,
dteoredOn.)
10:00 II (J) LOU GMHT
Lou lnoUr9 pubtlo outrage o..., IM Trlbuna'I --
IOI Of e local ooflt09 fOOI·
I) .. cheltJng IOllldll.
Q NIC AEPOR'f'8
"'--' Of Hype And Glofy'"
Thi rnutU-mlnlon dollar
bu*-of bOoll. ma'lfe
and rock mutlc promoUon
.. eumlned by oorr.
fPQfMlent Edwin ......_,.,
Among the celebrHIM
~-~ 81..C. Shirley Macl.11n41,
KISS, Donna 8vrntMr and
Art Buc:hwlid. DD HEWS fl <II FAMILY
"Thi P'ftnoeN In Thi
T_.' Kata, euttlf1ng
from h~ ~
leliea oft by hm'lalt and
wind• up loCllc9d In • MOCMt
conclomlrilurn wltll • >'°"1'111 woman (l<lm ~about
IO gj"9 blnh.
g) HOMEYMOONEM
Ralph and Ed ~ Of\ •
·~ al'41W "' -ch of eMy money. 8D 8CENES fftOM A
MAIWAOE
'"Thi Art Of SWMP'og
Under TM Aug" M11ttenne
.. --of Ill un6eflnable ~.Shltaett~
thing le l#rong .._her
andJot111n. m NATIONAL
GEOGRAPHIC IPEQAl
"The LIQ*:Y ot L.S 8
l .. ke(' The kl• °' acten-
11'1 Louie S .8. llalcey,
c:alled th• Darwin ol
humlll prahlltory, II told In
hll OWTI WOl'dl thrOUQfl
tum. made Uwoughowt Ille
,._..,..~ .. =11=9NEWS LOVI. AMPICAH
8TVLa G MOVIE '* • * 14 "8u1plolon'' (1N1) Cary Qrai\1, Jl)an
fontMna. A young woman
~· hlf charming t'tUlbMd ol pllllnWlg •
""'""'. (2 hrt.)
• THE 000 COUPU
Fellx, hoping to get
booked en a ,_ le6llllelon
--· ~hi& Old colleg9band.
I Lira MAKI! A DEAt.
DICK CAVETT
MACNEIL I l.StAER
Al!P09'f
11:ao • Cl) c:ea U.Tf MOVI£
**14 "Clitlow" (1971) VIII
~. Aldwd Crenna.
AT-mant119 la a.it to .,.,... a tonns w-tlml
trt.nd, • Gattie rustler ~
le llftar a ~ "' Mild-
can gold bulttol'I. (R) Q TOHIGHT
Hoat: Johnny C eraon.
~ Jofln Byner.
8 LOYE, AMENCAN
STYL! 8 9 MCMOVIE • *'* "Nlghlwatcll"'
( 197 I I E1tUb1t11 Taylor,
l 1urenc;1 Harvey. An
et1ractlve woman blllev.e
the haa -a murder In Iha ~ hOUM ICt'OU
Iha eoutlyllld, bu1 II Otlfy
hurnOred by Mr Olebell9v·
ing '-bend IN! a clOM
Irland.
·~ An old bw\lt robber want.I
to 8'l"WIOt the -.cepe ot
two tomw cronllt
• OAl'TIONID AtlC
Niwa
MOANING
1~·=ZDN FUHWOOO
hrwt r1lll6ail for a MW
l'erll'lllOOd c;auN, .lettrt
taltee. IOlefnn -· G) MOVIE
•• ''f'fonlllr o.r· ( 1945) """°""' oa Cerio, Rod Cameron. A IMlioon own.
!Ind. co.boy'• rocilty ,,..,_
riege II doomed 10 fllilwL
(' hr., 30 min.)
1HO. MOW • *°" "The ln1tlllbte
W°'"an" (1140) John
a.nymo. •• ~Brue..
Gangat.s ett~ IO et ...
• ICllWlll•t'a Mel'el of In.,.._
tllblllly. (1hr.,26 min.) • .MCMa * * "Horror Hou11"
( 1170) Frenlcje Awilon, Jiii
~AgrOUQot~
paoclle, bof'9d wttll Ill•,
Oedde IO eqilore I haunt·
.., ~. (1-~30 inlrl.)
1:00 G TOMOMOW
TWo )outnalls11 wno wr1t•
••.otton lln•" oolumn1
report on mw Merctl tw
, an1wer• 10 problem•
polld by people M\O Wl'lt•
tottiem G IPY
'"TNll Guy &m.lh ..
1:11 Cl) KO.WC
"oa.d On H .. Feel" A ler-
mlnally NI detlctl.,. (H8"'y
Guardino) beoomH
o~ wtth finding tl'le
munl•• ot hie late pe.rt.
rw. (R)
1:Mg) MOVIE **°" "Johnny Stool Plgeofl" (1$49) Howard
Outt, &llileV Wlnten. A
tr.aeury agent Mt& a
~ ., ... lloplng hi
will lead him to hi•
~Id CXlf'IMOtJone.
(1tw .. 30 min.) 1:408 NEWS 1:5' HEWS
~1: *** "Night Club
Scandal" (1937} John
Bwryinore, Lynne 0-·
men. After he murders 1111
wlfl, • dOC1Cl' tramaa lhl
women' 1 lover tor 1 hi
crime. ( 1 hf., 25 min.)
GMOW * • 1r * "01ne1tl1ve"
{1953) John areoaon. Ken-'*" Mote. Two Engtllh
couplM lf'ICll' a CION•
c:ounuy r-""'" entlqua Old. (2 hra.)
. ..,..,.
..... "Horror Of Slade·
'llood Callle" f 1NI) After
MYeral ~ llMllngl ••
8i.c:lnooo<I C..ltl, 8oot-
tlllld Yltd II Gellld In to
ttw.tlge\ .. (2 hrL) a:'°I HEW9 2'M MOVIE ...... _And~ ......
(1"5} Aidt~. Ktittln
NlllOn.. A hlQf\ edlool
grldlla.., on Ille _.., to
ooti.o-. gMt """'*' Md dllrupll hll entlt9 ~
hold. ( 1 "'~ 35 n\lnJ 1:001 NeWS ·a:21 ~
liO MOV1U ** "T-" Of DMtll ..
( 11159) Wllll1m t.ucu,
OeVld &lmmer. A robbery
catriacl out by uw.. """
· enct. 1n tr~. (t nr .. 30
min.) • * .. Slowe Cl\1 Sue ..
(194e) a-Autty. l.)'M
Roberta. A COWbcr1 With
~ 9bllty ·~by a talent IOOlll, ( I IV ) •:ooG MOVll * • • ~ "Odd MM Out'" (1941) "-Muon, Rob-
_, Hewlon. A wounded
u nderground IHder
~ tnl ob)ect Of •
~ !Nltlhllnt. (2 In.) m MOVIE • *** ''C.Ughl'" (11M9}
J-"'-· a.tMlt• Bel ~ A yollllQ _.,,
.. ,_ .. lrldl.n wtlen Ille
,...._...,MW~
lsl~t11(2hr•)
M'edne•dag'•
Daytint~ Macie•
MORNING
9#> U "At G1111C>01111'" <drat 'd -
F•t<I MtK.IWltrrf, Oorot,,,,
"Al Oufll)Olnc" !dt• I •o -
Fr&d MIKMAvr•v. Ootatht
~• lorw, W•t 1'f 8t•l'INn.
10:00 D .... "lll W• Ma.It
Ageln'' ( 1140) Mefl•
Oberon, Oaoro-lnnt. M
_, YOyl9I brlngl hep-
~ to• tarmlnally Ill olff
wtlen Illa !Illa In low wflti
• c:on'k1ed rnurderar. (2 ,,,.,)
AFTERNOON
12:00 ID ••• "The Bachelof
And Thi Bobby SOx.,-.
(1..-7) Ctty Grant, Myma
Loy. A ac:lloOI girl, haVlng a
Cf\Mll on &11 lflglble bedle-
10t. puf--him (2 hrs • 21>
min.)
Newman Inspects Hype
'Massive Publicity Makes.Millionaires'
By JAY SHARBVTT
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Hype
i!. when certain parties seeking
millions or dollars wangle free,
massive national publicity in a
short span of lime for a new
movie, book, rock group or
worse.
It causes Babblenews, where
the hypers babble about their
wares, do it often and strike
everywhere -magazine covers.
newspapers, TV. ,
FORTUNATELY, NBC'S
. scholarly Edwin Newman bas
pondered the ris e of such
flatulence. And tonight, be bas a
one·hour study of It in a show
called "Land of Hype and
Glory." (Channel 4, 10 p. m : >' ·
After wryly noting the pr~
gram iB "'cmprecesiented, com-
pelling and superlative, .. he
dwells at length on how publicity
helped make mllllonaires out of
four distinguished rockers called
Kiss. .
They are distinrrulshed
because they wear face paint, .
occasionally destroy auitars,.
breath fire, vomit fake blood
and even sing via a sound rig
11porting only 40 ampliCiers and
150 speakers.
·IN INSPECTING . this gonzo
group and their guru. Blll Au-
.coin, Newman deftly establishes
that suckers are still born every
(TV REVIEW J
minute, and thanks to hype,
many of them are Kiss fans.
The show drags a bit in perus·
ing what Newman caJls .. hype,
literary division.'' the promotion
of a book, why one ls pushed and
another not. and the frantic big-
bucks hustling by agents and
publishers alike. •
But all is redeemed in his
s hort discourse on "'blurb
words" used to push the goods -
like "tantalizing, mesmerizing,
terrorific, tumultuous, stunning,
• dazzling" and so on.
HE ALSO NOTES that for
some books, blurb words are
brought together for "blurb
phrases" such as "a voluptuous
novel of perilous pleasure," but
that blurb phrases really belong •
to the movies .
Which leads to a study or mov-
ie -h y pl n g. partic ularly a
mesmerizing !>ection on a new
$27 million sci-fl movie,
something about close encoun-
ters, and how rt was publicized
in New York. • " .
Lo, there 's a daultng
ballroom of tumultuous scribes .
Each gets a press kit complete
with a tape recorder for record-
ing such t.antalinng words as
these, from a stunning actress in
the terrorific movie:
"l thought it was wonderful."
LATER. NEWMAN snows a
producer or a different movie
telling a New York publicity
whiz he hired: " ... that's why
we've come to you, because 1
think you can manipulate the
media sufficiently well."
I wish Ne wman had in·
tervlewed a few New York mov~
ie critics on the use of blurb
words in reviews and if .they
ever blurble just to get equal
bllling with the movie jn
newspaper ads.
GEE, IF I GOT a dollar every
time they declared a flick "pro-
foundly moving" I'd be in a cas.
tie in Ireland and not .sitting
here declaring N ewman's hour
•·en t e rla ining ... pcrcep·
h Vl' .•. badly needed
Singe.r Survives .Eras
'Conimand Pe~ormance' Stars ·Peggy Lee
BJ JAY SRAltBVTr
LOS ANGELES CAP> -~'The
Jaaa has • great na.Lr for phras-
ing ... that she gets a fine beat.
that she &inp in tune, and that
she's awfully cood-Jooting are
self-evident," critic Georee
Simon wrote in 1941 .
The object. of his cheeTS:
Peigy Lee, 21, a new nneer in
Benny Goodman'• band. Tblrt.y-
six years later\ tile word.a sull
ho1d true. The bJonde-balred laas
Is a grandm«h•r now, but •till
&oinl stronc.
•olced MJss Lee, a native or
Fario, N.D.
"I DIDN'T THINK Benny
liked me," the singer s aid.
"When she brought him In, be
looked at me in a rather preoc-
c upled way -which l later
learned was just his way or
listening, of being absorbed in
music."
He was absorbed enough t.o
hire her. While with bis band.
she co-wrote and recorded her
first hit, a bluesy lament, 4'Wby
Don't You Do Rlgbtt". Times
and lutes cban1e. but 1bt'1 still
on top.
So ho. does a slDge:r IUl'VIYO musical eras that 10 f.r(>m bli
bands to rniddle-ol-the-road to roct 'n • roll to acid rock to all of
these? She took a deep breath
and tried to sum lt up.
"WEU..." SffE MO>, "l \b1nk
ll'• ~an, eenutnely Interested Jn
what'• cotn1 oo. ln tbe mooda of
tlt• public, _cboo&!n• th best ot wbat I can~ whllt contl·
nutn1 wjtb tbO standards.••
B11ti1Drl.:rdl. •• memt tun bl a.Colo Porter, Otorc• Gmlli• • .J~ Mercer. 'J'he • -.er Waftl J.Ddud• ~en bi
such as Blood, Sweat & Tears
and off.the-wall works by Randy
Newman.
As a talent considered. in a
class with FTank Sinatra and
Tony Bennett. Miss Lee was
asked for a few observations on
youneer music stars and other
assorted matters in popular
music
-PAUL SIMON: "I LOVE
him. l sing anything of his that a.
woman could sing. Re .shows
such deep feelings ln .so many
diverse dlrectlons.''
-Disco ruusic: .. Rapp}' and
Cua, but it cau set a little
monotcmous after a -blle. I'm ·au for lt., but not u a aeriows
klnd or mus\c.'' .
-ac>ael' "Kini of the Road'"
MUlor: "l love bla atu.lf. His
butnor la bcautlful."
-Carty Simon: "I'm a bCI ran. And of her tn~and (Jamea
Taylor)."
-MAIOR INPL\1.ENCJ;S:
"Hard to answer. I leame4 ft-om
• lot of musldana bt ll1trilq to ~nyone who had aometblnf tbiit
sou.odid 1ood to m•. l Jmattne t wu aubconacloualy atucJytnc
teetnik(u81, Pbruln1, tlllilp Uke
tbat. l 1Wl am Jearnlo1 •• .'' -·
COMICS I CROSSWORD
MARMADUKE by Br~ Andtnon BOOMER
MISS PEACH
"Go away! I don't need you"To coach me!"
.. · '---.-
·F.UNKYWINKERBEAN by Tom BatJuk
F.ditarial Comment:
Whywe student.8 Jove
our principal
J
CASEY . 8y Chat1ee Rodrfgun
MOON MULLINS
GORDO
JUDGE PARKER
aENNIS THE MENACE
by Wm. F. Brown and Mel tasson
DR.SMOCK
SAY, PO YOU
GAt...S OSS ~OSI!!
FOR SWE!E!!l='IN<3 OR RIPIN~?°
MOTLEY'S CREW
.bY Mell
• 1-40
by Gus Arriola
by Harold Le Doux.
iu.dly, JIN.lart 10, 1971
PEANUTS
by Roger Bractflt'4 ·
by Templeton and Forman
~ ~
TODAY'S CIDSSIDBD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Wound
memento
5No····:Not Polllblt
9 Vesltqll
111 Ear part
15 AQ~lle
plant
UNITED Feature Syndicate · llurc1
117 PrHIOt ll 1111 rOHI Mor>01y'1Pun118olvtd:
119W11ne ~UrrM~SP:'!T II,. II --~
638ulldlno ~AT a IFIN II ~
51Gln
69 8eQUHI" ,,.,.,..~l-f*!~fhr < '
=:~11:2 ~.~ ~ I ~ ~
69Klndotbean u ":1 ~ 1e 111~und• 61 Aoltilld ~ ~'""6&.l.....,rT .-. ~ 1
17 ~re!llOOf\ lllll I .D e '\ 18 Olmlnutlve , 92 8w"ten1 T n l r C • IM DOI V S T ~ 19 lrtlHa 93 Produced 1 ~ c 11 11 IN
hurrying eoo• 20 01aarranoe1 911 Outer• It • N E S T l
22 WtndlOflte. Pr11111' Ii s 11 IA A
nelQhbOr 65 p I' IG I{ G 10 IA N 24 Light circles u~lto the t IE l 10 Ill 1E LID
26 OIYHtld of 96 r1111. So. ti.ice 1>1r 40 UMs 1 '27 Rapid 97 Cllln1f1 god 12 Being: phone
descent Sp1n11h •20uallty
29Slleeo DOWN t3ClalrYoYlnt •3 ···tee:Per-
30 Testing 21 F1brt0 feet ground: 1 Curlall 23 Uptoars 45 Touch·
Abbt. 1harl)fy 26 Soak oenW
33 Contenders 2 Terra-·-28 Montreal'a 47 Have
37 Cod or 3 Come to -., ••• ••••• wronoful
Canao Mari. dtllfl
38 Flu value .c Re·OTHtt 30 T ardf .ca Hebfew for 50ccuDle(Sa ~t Tanen'a PfoPhet
39 Part ol "to c111lr friends 50 Large tarm be" 6 Strong 32 Garden 151 Hackneyed
40 WH overly tmtlNng j>lol.I 52 SvtOlctl
sot1etto111 7 Ftmllllnt 33 CO.at thrNd
• 1 ·-· df. name Ou1rd aat 53 01 zero cur•
camp 8 Pi.Ht• 34 Pllf'IO. 0tum-nture
1121na<1eqvacy tandtofo: 3 and 11•. e.g. 54 Pl'lon1ttc1lty
"Lobettf'• woro• •35Coney11. amoo1n
... l'lltlt 9 011 the . 11 .. 1 • Ga Ctft&I
45 Ion "" , wllarf 38 NOtab1t •Ot 151 AtltaM c1-.~~nlvttl1H. OTJtn!Jb 37 MU.._,.· IOMootter
48lb'Md -·' 1 t Great num· compect fallutlat
7
OT
Protest Fails
Sister Rebt•cc u of the Order of Evangelical
Sis terhood of Marv and two other nuns
picketed the Palm·s Theater in Phoenix.
Ariz . Sunday, try ing to convince people not
to Sl'l' tht• movi<! "Oh. God " Theater
man ag<.·mcnl !\aid th e~· approached about 70
pcopk but all allt•ndcd lhc mo' ic
. . . . . . .. . . .. ~ ...
. . ENTERTAINMENT I MUSIC I THEATER
New Names Share· Grammy Lineup !
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Longtime pop mualc Steely Dan. one of pop:s most important groups,
g.iants Lmda Ronstadt, Fleetwood Mac and the came back with their flrbt record in two ye~ in
Eagles shate the spotlight with newcomers Andy 1977, "Aja," which was promptly nominated for
Gibb and Debby Boone ln nominations for the 20UJ Album of the Year Annual Grammy Award• Jn the bes t pop group cate1ory, Steely Dan
The Orammys, considered the most pre· was vying against another ,iant rock group absent
stig.lous awards given the the music industry, will be in recent years Crosby St.Jlls and Nash Also
presented by the National Ac ademy of Recording nominated we re' the Eagles, the Bee G~ •nd
Arts and Sciences Feb. 23. Fleetwood Mac.
Andy Gibb, the Bee Gees' younger brother,
came into pop music In a big way with his "I Just
Want Lo Be Your Everything," which-was No. 1
during most or the s ummer. Gibb was nominated
for best male pop singer, al<>ni with Leo Sayer
"When I Need You,'' James TaylOl' "Handy Man,"
Stephen Bishop "Oo and On" and Engelbert Hun·
Ml~ BOONE, DAUGHTER OF entertainer
Pal Boone, exploded onto the pop music scene last
year with "You Light Up My Lile," a love ballad
that was the No. 1 record from October through
the end of the year.
She was nominated Monday for the best record
single of the year, best new artist of the year and
best female vocalist of the year.
"You Light. Up My Lile," Miss Boone's suc·
cess written by Joe
Brooks for the movie of ---------
the s ame title , wai. 6~Tops in Popst;."'
nominated for song or the ., -,___ z
ye ar and best original
score far a m otion p1c·
ture. both songwriters' categon es
LINDA R ONSTADT, LAST YEAR'S besl
fem ale singer in pop, was again nominated in lhal
category and also for best record for her rendition
of the Roy Orbison tune, "Blue Bayou.''
The group Fleetwood Mac, whose "Rumours"
was far and away the biggest selling album of the
year. won a nomination for best pop group.
··Rumours·• was nominated as best albym and
best engineered recording.
Competing with Ronstadt and Boone for re·
cord of the year were the Eagles, for their "Hotel
California," Barbra Streisand, for her "Love
Theme From A Star Is Born <Evergreen)" and
Cr ystal Gayle, who w11.s a country-pop crossover
i.uccess with her ''Don't it Make My Brown Eyes
Blue." .
COMPETING WITH FLEETWOOD Mac for
Album of the Yea r were the Eagles "Hotel
Cahfornia," J a mes Taylor ''JT," and Ip, the Lon·
don Symphony Orchestra, for lts intergalactic jive
piece so loved by halftime bands, "Star Wars."
perdlnck "AftertheLoving.''
ALONG WITH RONSTADT AND Boone,
nominees for female pop sin&er of the year were
Oarly Simon, for her "Nobody Does it Better,"
country-pop queen Dolly Parton for her "Her~ You
Come Again" and Barbra Streisand for
··Evergreen."
Miss Striesand's .. Evergreen," co-written by
Paul Williams. was nominated for song of the
year, along with "You Light up My Life," "Don't
It Make My Brown Eyes Blue." written by
Richard Lee, "Hotel California," ''Nobody Does it
Belter," written by Marvin Hamllsch and Carole
Sager and "SouUJem Nights," by Allen Toussaint.
Miss Boone and Andy Gibb, both of whom set
pop mus ic standards in their first year, led the list
of nominees for best new artist of the year. Also
nominated were teenybopper idol Shaun Cassidy,
Stephen Boone and the group Foreigner.
IN THE COUNTRY F IELD, Crystal Gayle's
"Don't It Make My Brown Eyes Blue" earned her
a best female vocalist nomination, along with
Barbara Mandell "After.S.he Lovin'," E)nmy!ou
Harris ''Makin' Believe,'' Janie Frick .. What're
You Doin' Tonight?" and Dolly Parton ••Higher
and Higher."
RoQl'lle Milsap, last year's best male country
singe r, was nominated again, along with Larry
Gatlin, Kenny Rogers, Waylon Jeiinings and Jerry
Jeff Walker. ~ _ '.·
"Don't It Make My Brown Eyes Blue" won a
bes t coWltry song nomination.to go along with its ..
bid In the POP cateaory. AliO nominated for best
country ~ong were Glenn Frey and Don Henley's
"Des perado,>' ''It Was Almost Like a Song," by
Archie Jordan and Hal David, "Lucille," by Roaer
Bowling and Hal Bynum and ''Lucbeback, Tuu, ..
by Bobby Emmons and Chips Moman.
RB'YTllM AND BLUES STANDARD Aretha
Franklin led the list of R&B female sin1ers for the
"Break It To Me Gently.'' Also in the runnin& were \
Thelma Houston "Don'\ Leave me This Way ··~
Dorothy Moore "I BeU~ve You.'' Natalie C~e
·''I've Got Love on My Mind'' and Diana Rois
"Your Love ls So Good For Me."
Nominated for best male singer ln the R&B
category were Joe Tex "Ain't Gonna Bump No •
More,'' Marvin Gaye "Got to Give lt Up," B.B
King "It's Just a Matter of Time," Johnny Watson.,.
"A Real Mother For Ya" and Lou Rawls "Un-..
mistakably You."
Comedy, Two Dramas Open Season_
WOOOY MUii
ANNll HAll(NI A coml•dy tonight and two dramas opening
1-'ricJa y Mart off the new year in the dinner theater,
<·om m uni t~ pla) house and colJege drama depart·
ml!nt ranks
Tht'.' llarlC'quin Dinner Playhouse calls on Neil
Simon once ag:.11n as "Last of the Red Hot Lovers"
goe:. on the boards tonight for a five-week engage-
me nt. Opening Friday are "The Lion in Winter" at
the Wci.tminsler Community Theater and a re·
v1val of lhe vintage drama "Rain" at Gold• n West
CnllC'~t'.
/\I C ht•(·co . f e atured in South Coas t
Hcpertory's "A Midsummer Night's Dream" two
sea:.ons ago, plays the central role in "Lovers" at
the Harlequin Among the three actresses in the ~ast 1s Ruth Johnson, Mrs. America of 1977. J en·
nifer Ad ams and Delle Ford complete the cast .
"LAjT OF T HE Red Hot Lovers" will be
:-ta ged Tuesdays through Saturdays at 8:15 p.m.
following a buffet dinner at the Harlt!Quin, 3503 S.
Harbor Bl • 111 , north of the Costa
~t es acl ts. ali~9·5511.
Rort ~berts ~J.-n l(oba play the leading
roles ,'IO:l1g ,.,and his captive wife in
WcstmiOAer's ·•Wl id' Winter•· under the direc·
tion of Oud: St earl. Also east in the historical
drama .,e,'Mark Sbfl~, John Autry and Michael
J ohns on •• the kin g's three sons. Saundra
fla rrett ¥. the French princess and Kirk Preble
as the ki.Dg~t France.
· Pcrfor~anc~R will be given Fridays and
Sa turd~a at 8 :30 for five we ekends at the
Wcstmi0$ler theater, 7272 Maple St. Reservations
893·8626:
AT GOLDEN WEST College, Bob Soares is
directing the South Seas saga "Rain." Christine
·Lough plays the easy-living Sadie Thompson, Bill
Levine is the staunch Reve rend Davld$on. and Ken
Braden is cast as the Marine sergeant O'Hara.
"Rain" will be presented in the Actors
Playbox Friday~ and Saturdays for two weekends
al 8 :30 w1lh matinees on Sundays, Jan. 15 and 22.
at 5:30 p.m. Reservations 892-7711.
Continuing their engagements on the pro·
fess lonal st.age are "A Doll's House" at South
Coast Repertory and the musical "Guys and
Dolls" at Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse.
DAVID EMMES IS directing "Doll's House"
and Anru Long and Charles Lanyer heading the
cast at the SCR theater. 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa
Mes a . Curtain is 8 o'clock Tuesday through Sun·
day with matinees al 3 Saturday and Sunday.
Reservations 646-1363. .
"Guys and Dolls" has been held over through
Feb. 19 al Sebastian's, 140 Avenida Pico, .San
Clemente Curtain is 8 :40 Tuesdays throug~
A moving story. A romantic story.
A story of envy, hatred, friendship, triumph, and love.
Thurs days, 9 : 15 Fridays and Saturdays, and 1:40
on Sundays Reservations 492-9950. •
CALLBOARD Auditions have been an·
nounced by the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse for
"lnvitalion to a March" .... playhous e director
Pali Tambellini will hold readings for a cast of
three men, four women and one boy in the 10 to 12
age range Sunday and Monday at 8 p.m. in the
Community Recreation Center auditorium on the
Orange County Fairgrounds .... further in·
formation is available at 556·5459 .... .
The Saddleback Valley Community Theater
has scheduled aud1l1ons for four remaining roles in ··T~ Fatal Weakness'' Sunday at 7:30 p.m . at
P eoples F ederal S avings and Loan in El
Toro .... two men's and two women's roles are
open , according to director Ben Jutzi, who's dis·
pensing furthe r inlormat1on at 83'7·9680 .....
MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY
"CLOSE N N
OF THE THIRD KIND" (PG)
114&· !l().!11~0$-10 0
"SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER" (Rl
"LOOKING FOR
MR. GOODBAR" CR)
··1900" (A)
'WORLD'S GREATEST LOVER ..
··eoeev DEERFIELD" (PG)
"ALICE DOESN 'T LIVE HERE ANYMORE ...
WALT Dl~EY'S
"PETE'S DRAGONS"
"FANTASY ON SKIS"
"THE HEROES""°
·'AIRPORT '77"
"OH GOD" (PG) ,
"GUM BALL RAU Y" .
Intermission
Tom Titus
"COUSIN COUSINE" 1111 "LE GR~.HDE
BOURGEOISE" -w.:m~
S . COAST PLAZA
J.lltl111111Sl~lll11Mlr•MC
"SEMI TOUGH .. tat
DMLY ~ 6:.oo-t:ff.I~ ··~1.-..-.:»1 ......
""' Ml 'AHTMll lflllCIS AGAIN IMI ONN.t1•MWl'.9UYI ..... -.~·-,·
OH OOOl lMI ""' OUMIAU Ull Y ll'OI
.,...
7
INSIDE : •AnnLand rs
•Erma Bombeck
•Lifestyle
•Horoscope
Tu.d y. Januaty 10. 1978 DAILY PILOT
.~'./
K.arrie Lyn Pfister, above, and Rachel Snapp study 'the news.'
Super Scooper
How do you make a newspaper? Ask the students in
Susan Morgan's class at Taft Hearing Impaired School.
'First, you practice writing on a ditto,' says one would-be
newspaper woman.
By JUDITH OLSON
Ol lhe Dally Pllol St<tff
Newspaper editors of the world. take notice.
There arc some up·and·coming young writers
and cartoonists \\ ho will be ready for a job soon
the pnnting plant at the Los Angeles Times in
Costa Mesa.
, Otll, PHet ...._ .. tlcNl"ll ll..,_. The youths have had some slight set·backs
in their lives but by the time they are career
age, they undoubtably wi ll have overcome them
with energy to spare.
Since the 1'1m<'s has one <>f the large!>t pnnt·
me oresses in the world. 1l would be expected
that the 9· to 11 year-olds would be impressed
Y.1th the monster press but their fascination was
else\\ here.
When asked what her favori te part of the
visit was. one student'" eyes grew wi de. "The
fountain" outside the building, she said, "sign-
Christine Williams. left. and Nikki Schmitz, work on the ditto machine.
The young journalists in que!>tion are hear-
ing.impaired. with problems ranging frQm pro-
found loos to very serious deficiency.
Wh ile their hearing is impaired, their
curiosity Is not. They arc bright, eager to learn,
interested in the world and ready to go.
Check them out by reading the latest issue
of the "Taft Tiger Super Scooper," the
newspaper published by Susan Morgan's cla:.s
at Taft Hearing Impaired School, Santa Ana.
Mrs. Morgan's class last year published the
fi rst issue and the group this year voted to con-
tinue. Their first effort culminated with the Oc-
tober-November issue. which was released in
early December.
It's a thick newspaper. "pnnted" on blue
paper and full of 1nten iews. movie reviews.
feature stone..,, cartoon~ and puzzles .
One of the fil ms reviewed m the last issue
was "Helen Keller:' the story of the famous
blind and deaf woman who became an author.
"It was a funny movie. All the children
were laughing. llclen was a smart girl. The
movie was good," :.aid Raoul Lotos in his re-
view.
Raoul, the chief movie critic of the "Super
Scooper ," also presented a list of upcoming
show ings of captioned films for the deaf.
Three of the nine <'hi ldren in the class. in-
d udinj? Raoul. have decided the.v want lo work · for newspapers when they finish school. Raoul
would like to draw cartoons, J ason Maurer Is in-
ter ested in the production end and Rachel
Snapp is a budding feature writer and artist.
All of the childr<'n have participated. ac-
cord Ing to Mrs. Morgan, a graduate of
California State Univer~ity. Northridge. She has
used the newspaper as a giant English lesson,
art class and psychology lecture.
As. part of the experience the class visited
(See SUPER, Page CZ).
Marilyn Peterman, an aide, Teft, and
Karyn Ayala and Stephanie Louder, put
together the paper. Staffers, from Teft. Raoul Loyos, Susan Morgan, Jason Maurer.
The Surfer
Surfer Magazine, which many refer to as the bible of surfing, was
perhaps the most instrumental element in the creation and com-
munication of the surfing mystique.
By DENNIS MCLELLAN Ofltlt Dell~ f'lltt Si.If
Jn 1960 John Severson, a Laguna Beach high
sctiool art teacher, began taking 16 mm films of
his friends surfing, a sport he had learned in
Ha wail while in the service.
The technically crude films were instant
hits with the then relatively small band of
Southern · Calllornia surfing enthusiasts who
n ocked to see their sport and lifestyle im·
mort.allied on lbe screen.
Spurred by their enthusiasm. Severson de·
clded to put together a 30·some-«td page collc'C·
Uon of big wave photographs from bl5 films.
He distributed them to surf shops •nd at
surf film showings up and down the coast. The
first run ol 10_,000 sold out immediately. That.
was followed oy another priDUnt and another
Hll out. at which polnt:-
"Ile realized he bad a mUuitie on bis
hands," a.ya Stevo Ptzman, publiihtr of what
baa become UM tounµ-y•s lara•t and oldest
•urf maaulne.
..
ERMA BOMBECK I ANN LANDER'S
UAlL. Y PILOT
••• Super ThankS to 'Nice Folks' [ )
<F,.• Pase cu
ing" H lhe replied
How do you make ~ newspaper! The
children bad the t.lepi. down to a adence. "Finl
you practice wrauoi on u d1llo." volunteered
Karrllyn Pfister.
DEAR ANN
LANDERS: 1 hope you
"Then you organ1~e th~ front P•&e and
wrtte it," said Rachel Stephanie Lowder ndded, "Then you make
won't think I'm craiy
but I want to thank a lot ot people and I don 'l
koow their names. Since
everyone reads hvour cQl· umn maybe t ey will
recognizt t.bemael ves.
A••
Loaders
a list of what will go in 1t " • Then, the clni.s packs people to Interview.
makes a li st of who will do the Interviews and
then put It all together for "pnnling" on the dit·
I want to thank all
those nice folks who
opened doors for me or thanks to all the good wh-en my arms were full people in the world who
ol groceries or packages go out or their way to do
or babies. something helpful and to machine. 1 . The class made 80 copies of the a.st issue
for teachers at Taft, the principal. their parents
and friends . . Like all other Journalists, there 1s a bit ~f
.. ham" in the "Super Scooper" staff. Stephanie
admitted she likes the paper becau.se "your
name is in 1t " She also said <,he likes to write stories and
draw "very good pictures " .
Rachel sui:ecsted that the newspaper 1s tun
because "it teaches you words " .. The clru.s also 1s an lhe proce.,s of writing a
book but the "Super Scooper" hasn't been
forgotten. Planning already 1s onder ~·ay for the
next issue. , Y .. What will be its lecJd ~tory·. " ou,
chorused the class, grinning at the reporter.
Twe paper's own photographer. was busy
snapping pictures during the interview and thus
1t was that the tables were turned. The "Super Scooper" turned its own fame
into the scoop of the month
••• S11rfer
(From Page CU
he bad been writing about for years."
During lhe early 1960s when surfing was at
1ls faddish hi gh -peroxided hair, Pendleton
~hirts and tennies were de rigueur -Severson
and three other south county men became
known, jokingly, as the Dana Point Mafi~.
They made their fortunes packaging and
selltng surfing to a young and eager pubhc:
Gordon Clark (surfboard foam), Hobie Alter
<s urfboards>. Bruce Brown (films} and
Severson (the magazine).
But Surfer magazine, which many refer to
as the bible of surfing, was perhaps the most in· ~trumental clement ln the creation and com·
munical1on of the i.urfing mystique.
IT \REATF.D lTS 1mn !>li.lrs out of unknown
\\J\"l' rukrs (l\11ke Ooylc, Husty Miller, Ricky
(;rigg, K1mn llollL•ngL'f l, 1\ made household
namci. ouL of exotic locales l Waimea, Haleiwa,
Mak aha, Banzai Pipeline).
And it helped coin and disseminate the
terminology (gremmie, hodad, woodie, wlpeout.
goofy.footer) and advertise the much·ln·
demand products (baggies, boards, wetsuits, T·
:;hirts, posters, pictures and decals).
The magazine still has basically the same
ingredients, now served up in a m or e
'iOphisticated manner and with more color
photographs of surfers in action, which always
has been its primary selling point "Surfing ltsel! was such an intensive thing
to experience Ulat they (readers) could get a
vicarious' experfence looking at the photo·
graphs.'' says Pczman, seated in hi s small surf·
lng picture-rilled office in Capistrano Beach.
THE BUILDING JS Mme of Surfer P ubhca
tions, w)\lch not only publishes Surfer ~ thl·
magazine was sold in 1969 to For Better L1v1ng
lnc. of L8gunlt Niguel -but Skateboarder and
Powder a skiing magazine.
Although there is a buslness·llkc i.11
moephere to the offices. employees have nor
forsaken their roots: They dress casually and
it's not uncommon for someone to v.ork
barefooted. Pezman himself, a former surf bum, weur!>
blue sneakers, jeans. and ~weaters, and durini.:
the summer he'll succumb to the lure or the
waves three or four times a week.
"The people at Sutfer are all surfers and we
love the sport." he says, adding all three magazines are put. out by enthusiasts for other
enthusiasts.
. In the early '60s surfing basically was a
Southern California youth culture phenomenon
that even received attention in national publica·
lions like Life and Time.
BUT WlULE SURFING as a teenage fad
lost much of its luster, it grew as a sport. Today
there are an estimated one-and·a·hatr to two
million ~urfers in the country, with about a half
million of those residing between Santa Cruz
.md San Diego
I want to thank the kind ror s trangers,
strangers on the street with ou l ex pee ting
who smile at me and anything m return. This
say, "Good mornine." may sound ndiculous.
when I am too sl\)' to but I want to say I love
smile and speak first you. -A CANADIA N
I want to thank the READER
lady who came up to me DE AR RE ADER:
when the seat of iriy car Ridiculous? Not at all.
was jammed too fa r Beautiful! Warm··
back and asked me 1f hearted! Lovely! You've
she coula help. J wa!> in expressed the true spirit
such a foul mood and the of generosity and carlllg.
car seat was stuck and it -The world needs moTe of
was JUSl one thing too it. Thank you for remind·
many that day. That ingusall.
lady was so nice, my D E A R A N N
bad mood vanished and LANDERS: This is a
the rest of lhe day was p 1 e a t o l e a c h •
wonderful. ers everywhere. Please
So let lh.is letter be one . prlntit:
He laughs when asked 1f surfing keeps him
young. "I don't know if it keeps me young," he says,
"but J suppose I cling to the values I origlnally
was attracted to in surfing."
One or those values, he says, is learning
that things are cyclical and rhythmic. "You
learn to now with things ...
He adds that surfers have always felt an
identification with bull fighters because surfers
operate "with control and grace in the most
critical, dangerous portion of the waves."
A COLLEGE DROP out, Pezman devoted
most of his time to surfing for about five years.
He had a stint with the merchant marines and
wa'> a Jun·ntll' probaltl)n officer for Los Angeles
Countv. lk l'vcntually became a s urfboard ~hapc;. and in thl• mirl 'f>(Js started what he
bellcvt·s v.as th1• fir!>l hcnlth food sandwich bar
anywhere, the Good Earth Health Bar In Hunt-
ington Beach. . . . . And while his only claim to wr1tmg ab1hty
was that he was always good al answering es·
say questions in school, he began contributing
articles to the now d efunct Peterson's Surf
magazine. He wound up as editor but within fi ve
months "it died under my feet."
lie came lo Surfer magazine hoping to con·
tribute. but instead got a job as associate editor.
Then Seve~on left in 1971 and with a total of 10
months tn the magazine field Pezman became
pubh~her
"l d1dn"l rl'alh kno\\ what the word meant
.rnd I'm '-ltll r1niltng out." he notei. with a smile.
Pl·1man s.1~ 'i lhl' magazine, which has
grown to J 16 to 1:12 pa~t·~ and a circulation of
11:;.ono to 1:.111.0011, m11 ror., the marketplace as
much .1'> 11leaclc.11 'It'-. c•volving all the time."
<lrw or lh ""'"' popular themes now is
1r;l\'l•I , tw .,,\\'"' Bui 11c1111t1 n11cs lo provide first·
111·r-.11n ac<:ounl . 111101 111on on surfing and
.. qu1pml'nt ''"" 11l1-.1·n o1ltt111'. on the sociology of
lht• sport
··na!>1call v 111• 11 \ lo keep 1t a surfer·to.
-.urf<>r c·omrrn11111'.1l1011," he says, adding "ideal·
]\ """" Jo\'l• to ~"' <• National Geographic for
._"urfl't " '
WltlLI: MANY SU RFING publications
hav<> <:omc and gone over the last 18 years,
Petman views the gap between Surfer and its
pres<>nl competitors as having narrowed In the
lai.t few vear~. lie attributes Surfer's staying
power to 'its "superior" photography and belng
in svnc with the marketplace.
\Vhile Pezman says many aspects of putting
out a magazine are trying, he feels "grateful to
have been lucky enough to make my living in-
volved in this sport In any way."
Bul despite Surfer's success, lhe publisher
doesn't feel they have ever had a perfect issue
that successfull y portrays the sport. ''Surfing is a diffi cult thing to portray two
dimensionally," he says. "It's such an lnt~nse~y
person:tl thin~ for each person who does at. It s al~osl like you're wrilmg peoples' biblt;s .!or
them. IC you do it wrong they let you know 1t.
"Surfing 1s JUSl. about to suffer a ~en·
c.ussance,'' Pezman says somewhat sarcastical-
ly. "The muss media is going to pay attention to
us again." Part of the reason, he says. is because of
upcoming fcature·length movi~s dealing w.lth
surfing in the early '60s. Ooe 1s a $10 mllhon
'Warner Bros. production called "Blg Wednes-
day," directed by former MaObu surfer John.
Milius.· "I predict it wilt have the same effect
He adds: "Each issue has a chance l~ be
this rather definitive statement on surhng.
That's our goal and we rarely achieve it. But
It's that elusive goal we try to reach."
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY
' .. Gidget" had in 1959," says Pezman, noting the
iilnuence of the Sandra Dee beach movie. "The
sport was a slumberlDI giant. It was a dry
tinder then and 1 think "Gld&et" sparked It ...
PEZMAN BELIEVES SURFING today
refiects current value1. It'• one-on-one w1t.h a
natural element and It's an accessible low·cost
, recreation, he say1. "It's bard to learn but it'a
fun all the way.
"It's a sport tbat'• evolved from an eccen·
tric's put.lmo to a fad to now a nationally re-
coanlJed form of water recreation. second only
to 1wlmmlni and bat.hln1." •
W.....Y•W..t ......
ltDHll'Mrlh'4-
C•• -141-o021t
............ ~
about all chllclren -not
juat tho 1tart. Tbe truly
bn1ht ooes wlll maoaa•
wlthout your extra at·
teotlon. It's the ones
who have difficulty who
need you. Please meet
the real challenge of
your profession or,10 do
s o m el h 1 n g e l s<e . -
CO N CE RNED
If you don 't like ·PARENT.
WEDNESDAY, J~.11
B1 SYDNEY OIL\&&
ARIES (Marcb 21·Aprll lt): Accent on emo-
tional re.pon1e1. mooev that vou can tDend. taxu a,nd bow to d .. l with them. Cancer,
Capricorn persons fiaure ln picture. Coll.ct,
pay, consolidate, open heart to love. Vea, you
deserv• to have wish come true, prayera
answered. lt will be!
TAUBU8 (April 20·May 20): Emphuls on
standing in community, civic duty, preaU1e.
career, how you r e late to proteulonal
superiors. Burden is removed. Happlne11 ta
children -get out of the
teaching profession. Our
children &pend a great
deal . or their lives ln
school and you make
them unhappy. You also
give them a poor 1,elf·
image and make them
hate school.
DEAR C.8 .: Well
aatd. Thank you for lay·
tog It OD the Une.
DEAR ANN
LANDERS: The sirl our
son married ls not the
one I would have picked
for him but she it a
pleasant person and l
have accepted her.
. back in picture, playina a leadinc role. Gemini,
Sagittarius flgure prominently.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Good Moon
aspect coincides now with travel, writln•·
pubUshing1 advertisln1, communlc-tlon.
&P,iritual ins11hta. RestricUon ls temporvy. You
ha\te strength, but it may not be apparent on
surface. Check fine print, details -re•d
between the Uoes.
A 11 children are not A
students. Those who are
don 'l need your atten·
tion nearly as much as
those who get Cs. Os,
and Fs. Instead of call·
ing the poor st.odents
··1a:iy" or "stupid," try
to find out why they
don't understand. Don't
just ignore them. Help
them ! That's what
you're there for.
Instead of displaying
the A students' oaoers. it would be a lood idea
to pin up a C student's
effort and write across
the top -"You arc Im·
proving'" Whal a great
ineentive that would be.
A good teacher cares
F or the first year of
thetr marriage s he
called my husband and
me ''Mr. and Mrs." I
asked her not to be so
form al and suggested
that she call us "Mother
and Dad." Instead she
calls us "Jane and
Harold.'' This rankles
m e and I cart,t get used
to It. Should I ask our
son to talk to her? -
PARSONS, KAN.
DEAR KAN.: No. Get
used to IL You'd be hap· py to settle lof "Jane
and Harold" lf you knew
what some women call
their ln·laws.
The Erma
Principle
l've "always loved The
Peter Principle by Dr.
Laurence J . Peter and
Raymond Hull who ob·
ser ved that if anything
caa go wrong, it wlll.
I'd like to add some
from m y own ex·
periences:
Anything that requires
a skilled laborer and ls
vital to the running of
your household will
break down on Saturday
E,.,.a
BonelJeck
night. three months only if you
Any appliance cov· are the only one in the ered by a warranty will room.
last until the day after it People who buy their
runs out. rearly supply of greet·
Any college that would mg cards at one time
take your son he should may one day Uve to see
be too proud to go to. February and March
Know that a happy cancelled.
dieter has other prob· Most book clubs work
tern s. under the assumption
A man who checks out that your lust for "His-
of the express lane with tory of Papercllps" ex-
seven it.ems is the same ceeds your desire to put
man who will wear Supp-an x in the NO BOOK
Hose and park in the ·box and mail it. back
R e s er v e d for Han -before the 15th of the
dicappedspaces. qionUt.
Show me a child who Parent·teacher con·
. has jus t been outfitted in ferences only serve to
30 pouoda of warm retnforce your mother's
clothing, driven to an s uggestion that you
isolated hill ai the edge should have rai.sed Irish
of town and put on a pair setters .
of skis, and I'll show you. With the emphasis on
a child who has to go to the Miss America
the bathroom. pageant's acbolarsbip
An old car that has and personality values:
served you so well will it is only a matter or
continue to serve you time before we have a
until you have just put homely Miss America.
four new tires under it Ignore what all the
C~NCE& (June 21·July 22): Di& deep, be
willing to let lm11tnaUoo roam .. Aceeot on
partner's money, the occult, ablllcy to analyze,
to face truth. Member or °"'°'lte sex i• pro-
vocatlve. but may not be ablito offer security.
Message will be clarlfled.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22): Emphasis oh
·publicity, public relations, marital 1tat1.t1.
Home, family relationships are b11bll&bted. Go
1tow, be diplom•Uc, be alert to 1ubU• tlpals,
nuantes. Circumstances dictate actlons. Ride
witb tide. Taurus, Llbta individuals could play
key toles.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22): Obtain hint from
Leo message; lake Ume to perceive what is real
as opposed to wishful thinking. Accent on work,
health, dependents and pets. Pisces Is in pie·
lure. You receive communication relalin& to
employrn.ent, medieel or dental appointment.
LIBRA ($ept. 23-0 et. 22): Wbal you do UY "has more impact than is apparent on sut#ace ..
Relationship is intensified. Money, emotions,
significant changes blend. Nothing is halrway -
all or dl"O. Capricorn, Cancer persons figure
prominently.
· SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21): Finish wha\
you start -complete plans, build on solid base.
Excellent for transactions involving land. prop·
erty, rt.al estate. Aries, Libra fi&Ure in picture.
If speculaUng, stick to number 9. You can profit
if willing to let go or losing proposition.
SAGITl'ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.·21): New ap-
proach to neighbors, relatives is necessary. Be
versatile, creative, independent. willing to
make fresh start. Leo, Aquarius persons figure
promineotly. Relationship can progress from
friendship iolo something more "serious." CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19): Emphasis
on finances, consoUdatlng gains or assets. Get a
good filing syst~m. Be positive of m aterial and
how to quickly get your hands on what is re·
quired. Cancer -and another Capricom -
figure in scenario. Yes, the money is available.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18): Stress In·
itiative. indeoendencc. plead your own cue. Your timing, Judgment are on target. You make
favorable impression -you could win populari-
ty contest. Socialize, make fresh contacts, ex-
press yourself in enthusiastic manner.
PISCES (Feb. 19·March 20): Restrictions,
temporary confinement come into picture. You
gain strength. allies from unexpected source.
One who had been in seclusion "comes out" to
demonstrate that you are not alone. It ts a
beauurul gesture!
lf Jan. 11 ls your birthday, you are lntuiUve,
a teacher in the best sense, sensitive, prophetic
m that you know without knowing, that you
perceive, Lhal you have that extra sense or
hunch which amazes friend and foe alike. You
mak.e marvelous new start in 1978 -July will
be your roost significant month. Love, indepen-
dence and creativity are part or this year lor
you. Incidentally, Cancer and Aquarius in-
dividnals play important roles in your Ufe.
Wedding and engagement announcement• run on
Sunday tn the Daily Pilot. Fonm are atlelilable al all
Daily Pilot olfkes or by calling the Ftoture1 D~rt·
menl,642-4321.
To avoid dfsappolntment. pro~ive brides ore
reminded tO have t heir ~a stories, with a blo.ck-
and-wllUe gf.ouy of the bride or of the couple. to the
f'ecture1 ~rtmt?\I one ~ek before tM weddmg.
and then will rau apart. c 0 • c h e s a n d
A preg nancy will pbilosophers say about
never occur when you "playing the game" -
have a low·paying job winning is better than
which you hate. losing.
Engagement onnourtcnnent&, with black-and·
white glMri/ of the future bnde or the couple, m1'1t be
recdved bl/ the F'toturea DepartrMnl .U weeks before
the W«ldtng dale.
Cl® Calnadar nms each Wtdnnday in the Doily·
Pflof and ~afM notice• of womtn'• and •troiee club
meetings 01ld ewnts for the /ollowmg week -Thurs·
day th~h Wednelday. Send nohcU to Club Calft·
dar, DoJ.ly Pilot. P.O. Boz 15«>, Costa MeJC, CA~.
Be aure to lnclwU your tUUM and phoM JWm"'"
Noticu mwt be fn our handl two~ tn adoa11U.
An ualy carpet will ----------last forever.
A woman sees every
acquaintance she has
known en route to the
beauty shop. When she
comes out, the streets
have turned into a ghost
town.
A baby will speak his
firs t full sentence at
n-.•.-.........
RllAlllW• • ---
To requeat a picture, wrfte or coll tM Feolllf'tl ·
DepartrMnt, 642·4321. PfctuNI ON limUed to /tmd·
raiaert opm to the publtc.
PUT YOUR BEST
F)\CE FORWARD!
r -See for yourself the wondrous
l"esuns of the facials at our center!
Watch those Ones diminish •.• ................
can begin with Y'O\.lf flrtt vislt!
Paman, wbo 11 one of the earlT 1\IJ'f dls--
elple1 wbo beCan nd1n1 w•m 1il bllb sc.hool ia Looi BeMJ>, deic:rlbta hlm•elt u ,._ toml on.
· FR£E OELIVEaY
Wa\cn now qufckJY 4CMl can be controtrt'd
For men ahd women of an agq bro\IPS · '
The .at<Jn Qare yeu f'leed 1$ avallabla at 2L"· . Wt1ITE'S --1 ••
.ii'
j
1
CAl.IFOANtA I PEOPLE: I NATION
Tuead.ly Janu.iry tO, 1978 0~11 .. Y PILOT Q;
Tll •. AMILY CIRCUS. By DHKHnr -
Budget: A Record Fpur Killed
By Guerrillas
EDI TOR'S NOTE -Tha. r.,,orl was poa1N by gov.
t'l"rlment ~•after mtnoT change1.
~ALISBURY, Rhodesia CAP> -Black na-
llonhat guerrillas attacked a farmhouse about so
mUea southwei.t of Salisbury and killed four whites a . 74-year-old woman, her son, one of her
C IN SHORT
grandsons and a nother l J t ee n -age boy, th e, Rhodesion military com
mnnd reported today.
T he guerrillas de
.' man ded mon ey and
broke into the hvm1: room of the farm house, firing 1n~~sc r1minately with. automatic weapons. the military sald.
Tw~ 12-year ·old wh1l<.> boys were wounded, but
n ot seriously, in the att;ick Monday, while a
woman and tt 7-year old girl in the house escaped
unhort. the command said. The guernllas-were
believed to be the sume group that killed two white
. women, three bl ark ~ccunty men and a black
civilian in two attacks 20 miles southwest oC Salis bury last '4 ct:k
Canebodio Cloit11M 1\ i lark
. BANGKOK. Thallund IAP> -tambod1a ~la1m ed today that. Victnisme.se forces had struck
mto the country'!. remote northeastern corner and
that "several thousund" had been killed ln fighting
• along strategic Highway 1 leading to the capital, Phnom Penh.
. Radio Phnom Penh said Cambodian force~
continue to pu~h Vietnamese troops out of the
coun try, c.t chu m discounted by most Western
analysts fo llowing th e sharp frontier conflict
bf lwecn the two Communist neighbors and trad1·
tion al alli~ that erupted last fall.
Ford Plans E'~l-<"uf •~r
DETROIT <AP> Ford Motor Co. has aban·
. doned plans for a six cylinder engine that can run
on half 1l:. cyhnder~ ln:.tead. the automaker con-
fi rm ed Monday, ll will try to do the same with a \' 8
Ford had unnounc·cd plan~ earlier to put the
fuel-i.aving cn~inc on some light trucks this model
't:ar. The announcement didn't say when a "four
hy eight" might be available.
Treafy Sto11d Firm.-d
WASJllNGTON fAP> Despite pressure from
Senate Repubhcani. .ind signs of flexibility among
Punamaman leaders, the Carter administration is
:.landing firm on 1L'i po1>1tion that the Panama
Canal trc;ity neC'ds no changes
Stale Department ofrl c1als say it's clear that
the United States would have fully adequate de·
ft•nse rights after the canal 1s turned over to
Panam a in the yt.•ar 2000.
Dbfribacfflr# .\iuafu Trfb
NEW YORK <A Pl About 60 percent of the
"ccond li.liuc or th<.· nc>w morning tabl oid The Trib
did not f!t't lo n1'W'>'>lands for commuter sales to-
day bt•ealli>E!' C'mplOYl'l'S of almost all its 28 di.s-
tributori. balked at handling ii
WallC'r H.out•h. circul&t1on director of the
paper . !.atd !.hortly ufl<'r 8 a m that he understood
1hc Mailer'> and Deliverer'> l.Jnion was insisting
that more mt>n 'hnuld he hired by the dit.tributors
10 handle the• p<.qwr
"Grandma? This is Billy. I con whistle!
l is ten' .. "
UCI Reporis
Open Classes
ThP rollowing schedule of activities open to the
public has been announced by the UC Irvine Ex· tension program .
TOOAY
''IOtnlffyln9 '"' M•rket,'' 8111
MllU\ell, ••e<ullve Yl<e Pr•~IO.ltl,
W•••r,.rlltiO Hom ... *-of• UC
l rwln• E..cl•n•'on l«ture \erl•t,
"Proltut ..... t PrKlltt\ In ,,,....., ...
lnQ IMUStrY." 1·9 :IO pm, Rm 101,
Pnysl<•I $cieftce• 81ag, UCJ <•m-.
Fee SI?
TUISOAY, J..i. It. 11, 14, •l'Mll It; ..... u
\ATUltOA"f, J.,. 11, SATUllOAY
•n• SUlfOAY, ,.._ OIWI•
PttfU'ltOf'•C. IP'41eft Aoc-AH ol
Southern C•IUerf'lt•, • h ••< C
E•\tvo1d, 8 A. erc~l091c.i c0tt
\Ult•nt •nd lt<h1n r A VC Irvine E• f~tulon COCit'M lnch.1C:t1no lot Cure\ •
ont-<1ay hekl lrop to pltloOr•PM on
Wulern Rl .. ut<le Coumy, •ncl ..
.. t u eno trip 10 '"• l lr1tte •"d
Netdlt > lnteQllos and u1rera.
petroolyPfl Sit-. LA<lut•>. Tundayc
1·10 pm, Rm , .. , Soc1e1 S<ot"<t
L•D, UC I <•"""6 lleld ltll>' !Mii
J•n 21 1-<Mv. S.I. -s..... F•D '
..-o ~ ----"•• "'· -· ""' 1n<IUOe IOOQ<"9anOtne•I>
WIONISOAY
'l'unoe,,_t•l•ol Te.cnl119 for tlM'
We•ftf't C•re lndtotry;• How•rd
WllSOI\, Pf'l\IOlnl, AOml,.l•lr•ll••
Rueercll ••~co•to. Int. A \JC
lt•IM E.i ......... -.cldy ...,,,,,.,,
,,)() •.m.~ lOp m .. HOUcMy ''"" ltJI 8<tUOJ, C:O.lt ~ fH \IO, ln-
Clucles lu'lth-cl.,>melt•l•I>
"Otse•>• Conc~ollon of Aftollotlsm," E"""t P NOOlt, M 0.,
proleuor, Oeper1..-1 ol P•ycllletrY
and Humen Bet..vo()(, PWcllOblotoqy
and M•Olc•I Pllum•<ofoqv •nd
T""''Pf'uliu, UCI: Olrtclor, National
lnttltu!e of Alcohol Abu\C •nd
Altonoll\m Fl"' Of a UC I,.,,,,. E. ""''°" lecture wrlft. · M..ilreJ •"" 8lo109fc.I A>Pt<h of ·~ O•M••f
Alcenolhm,'' I 10 p m , l'r .. hm•n
LtClur<' Hall, M<H:11<al !.ur09ry II 81119 , UCI <~ Fu CttOll, s•t, Non Credit, S5'I
• Asuumenl of Ille Hum•" Gtnlin,'' 9,-., 0·111_.,, Ph D
O•r•ctor of rtW:•rc"• ln\lllule ol
NNllc kleflCn 1'1"' ol • UC 1rv1,,.
E •fl'ft''°" -.Clutt\41"•n. TMGeft•\I\ of fl\t HumMI 8'tin 'MO pm., llm.
171 Humet111>n Hall UCJ u'"""-.
Fur Nor>-Vt<!fl, ~'· Cr..,•I "'· 1n1roovcuon lo Ille ~Ml'I' -
Hl\lorv o1 Arotlenl Egypt .'' J•~ A,
Brt \111••, Pl\.0.1 H~l•l•nl olr1<lor,
TM """'"'• lorA11t111u1tv ~ C1trl1-
11enlty, Cltr-Coll-. l'lrtt Of•
UC Irv!.,. l11tMlloft MKIUl't Af141,
"AftClel'lt I~ end Ille lhMl.INS of
Tulan1111-:• l·tO p.m., Rm, 100,
Socia! kl...ce H•lf, U<;I caml>ll\. ,, .. , N_,._,, UI; Credit. $11, f,..
"""'' adnihalon to e!llW~llon, Tti. Tr t•turu or Tut•11•1t•mul\. Tr..,f-'otlonrlOI lr>c:I""'°
llWIOllfaSOAY, JM. U, 11, U tff , ... ,
' Ecer>O,,,lt FKton '" Ell•lrOr>-,,,.,,,., PIMWllr>o.'' R-rt F A-~
Pr1 0 . prot••..-Of Et0r>0m1u , C••
!>,.le 1.-lleKll A UC ,,..,,.. E • ,.,."°" coww. ,.j p "' .,.., • »-• JO
Pm , llm no 5o<l•I S<•tn<• To-r, UCtu,,,_ FM '80
llrlONISOAY, JM. 11, 11, • .._ U; ..._. .... ~,,
Cl .. to< C.n ror Pl .. lure •nO
Prom " lloDert J Golllleb, J .O
autllOr, el!Offtey, '°''"''°" Clh •IC ur eOilor, Motor 11-llUv.>tlM
and VVUI _ _. .. ._ A UC Irvine E•
tt1•4lot1 •1•-mwtlnt '-... 1·~·» ~ m • Rm. 104, PhYMUI f>(,.,,, ..
81"9 • UCI (~. F .. ~S.
THUllSOAY
' "" tn-..•1'9ofllon Of Illa llllQtor>el ROI• In T•-lallon Pl...,,lftO ,. ...
llonw lde; fht F•O••itl Allltuo.
Towaro RllQ!ot1•1t•m," Or, EOO•r
Horwooo, pro1 .. ..,,.. 0e.,., Jment of
Clvll E nQlnetrln11, Unlvtr>ily of
We•h•nolon, ~ .. 111 •. f1"1 ol • UC
trv1n• E•ttfHton lecture courU",
.. Tran•PO•t•tlon Sr>l•m• M•11191.
mefll f lMn<lr>o and ln>Ulullon•I Ar·
r•noern•tH\," 1·10 p m.,. stm 10",
Plly>tul klencH BIOQ., UCJ cempu1
Fu sto.
"110AY
fM Sutc!M••on M41P Ac I," O•notl
J , Curtin, Clly •ltof"*Y• W•lnut
''""· chtlr""'" of tlw ZOfll"O •no PJ011nlrw:1 c:ommm .. Of '"" N•11ona1 ln>fllule Of Munlt11>41J Lew Olflurs
llot11rt E Morron. Jr., •nor,,.;,
!>l••nr1ar1. ~9. Felgenbe;,m "
l •O•r \"" f rMdKc> A UC Jrvtnr E •ten\lon -·Gey proqrem, 1 I)
a "" .. ·~ pm, Mtl'9 v .... 11_,, '>outPI C~t ~LI Holtl, M6 A.nl.,,;
.,,....,, lllrliotol & s.n o'-"••·' C:.la AM ... F .. : S'O, lnc.,_t Jun<PI ..... ,.,,.. ""-'-
Angie: Show's All Wet
Short Robe's Fine, ·But Scrub the Baths
From AP Dispatches
Angle Dlckl.nson, star of television's "Police
Woman," says she may not r enew her contract
when it exp1rcs in two weeks unless the producers
agree to make some changes in the show -for
starters. she wants to take fewer on-screen baths
and s howers.
Miss Dickinson told a conference of televi sion
editors at the Century Plaza Hotel that it was her
idea to wear a s hort bathrobe for the bath and
shower scenes to show off her legs.
But she uld she felt the producers bad gone
overboard in writing baths and showers into her
-.crip t for the NBC ~e ries. She pointed to
.. Charlie's Angels" as a n cxam~le of ''beautiful,
sexy entertainment" but not a police show. •
PEOPLE
her book "Sw~t Music," accompanying herself on
her father's guitar, Inlaid with molher-of·pearl.
* Hammersmith Farm, one-time Auchincloss
summer retreat and the scene of John F. Kennedy
a nd JacqueUae Bouvier's wedding reception will
open to the public May 1 a t Newport, R.I. '
The gujded tours will emphasize the farm's so-
called "Kennedy years: when the family played
frequent host to the late presl·
dent, says the new director of
the estate, Janet Crook.
F our g e n e rations o f
Auchinclosses summered at the
ocean-side estate, but Lhe trad1 ·
t1on ended with the death of
H111b D. Aucblaclou, Jac-
queline's stepfather. H11 widow
sold mOiSt of the farm to a group
of Rhode Island businessmen
last s ummer.
Hamilton Jordan, President, Carter's top alde.
and his wife, Nancy, announced they are separat-
ing.
tn a three-line s tatement distributed by
Carter's s keaman, Jody Powell, the Jordans
· save no specific reason fol' the
aeparation and mentioned
nothlb' about &heir future
plana.
"We have decided to
separate," the statement said,
"We know that our families and
our frlendl will understand and
1 respect our mutual decislon.''
fl was siened: .. Nancy
. Jordan and Hamilton Jordan."
~ C''
Haak Ketebara, creator of th' Denni• the
Menace ~rtoon. was reported recuperaUn1 fron\
abdominal surgery for an aneurism. .
Brown Presents $17.4 Billion Plan
SACRAMENTO CAP > Gov
Edmund Brown J r. unvetled a
re co rd· breaking $17 .4 billion
state fipendmg program today
that pro m isei; m on e y Cor
rut uristlc s pace and energy pr~
grams and tax cuts for 7.9
rnllUon homeownertt and rent-ers.
ln his budget message, the
Democratic governor's "era
O( limits" wa rniRgs or past
years were replaced this year
by a promise that California "Is
blill a land of drcamb."
HE SAID BIS proposal was ··a budgel that builds ror the
future" with procrams to plant
SA CRAMENTO <AP> -Here
is how California :.tale budget~ ~ave &rown in recent years (all figures are the budgets al> in-
troduced).
1947·48
1951-58
1967·68
1977-78
1978·79
$645,281,15 1
$2,088,435,264
$5,070,016,168
$15.195,527,110
$17,380,330,193
millions o f trees, provide
money for soler, wind and
&eothermal power, and create a
state space lnslltute.
The 1,249-page document sent
lo the LegjaJature today ia an
election year bud&et, contain •
ing an eight-point proeram
aimed specifically at campaign
issues such as laxes, crime,
energy and mental health.
Brown saJd his budget can be
financed without new across
t he-board t a xi's because or
Cali fornia's robus t economic
boom . wtuch has generated an
estimated $3.21 billion surplus.
HE ASKF!D TIIE Legislature
to use Uult surplus to finance a
Sl billion annual taic cut for 4.3
million Callfomia homepwners
and 3.6 million renters.
Brown also asked for $100
million to build one or more new
s tate prisons with "2,400 cells
somewhere in California," plus
a nother $3.6 million to hire 183
additional prison personnel to
combat drugs and gangs.
He requested u $127 million
boost in state hospital and com-
m unity mental health funds
Those are the programs whk h
have become the mosl embar·
rassing problem of the Brown
adm1nastrallon, largely because
of Brown's tight lid on expen·
d i lures.
IN THE BUDGET, Brown
proposed pay raises average 6.6
percent for state employees and
.welfare grant increases of 7.07
percent.
Brown's e nergy proposal s
ranged from financing a plan to
develop energy from oUve pits
to a potential S2S million grant
to Southern Callfomla Edison to
help build a sophisticated coal
gasification plant.
The liil includes up to $250
million to develop a lternative
"benign" energy systems and
S2.5 million to equip the
furnaces that . heat the Capitol
and 15 other state building to
burn wood chips r a ther than
natural gas.
TH£ BUDGET PROPOSES a
increase or 3,000 employees in
the state's 138.000-person civil
i.ervice work force, mostly m
anti-crime and mental health
programs .
Potentially one of the most
c ontroversi a l item s in the
budget is a $34 million ap-
propriation to pay for the
ealima~ 70,000 Medf·Cal abor-
Uons for which the federal eov.
ernment hu cut off funds.
The spending package con-
sists of a $16.2 bllUon budget bill
to finance most state programs
and a $1.2 billion reserve for
companion bills panUn1 pro-
perty tax relief and creaUng
new state proil'ams in energy . ... ...
State Drops
Funding. for
2-state Unit
DISCUSSES SPENDING
Go~. Edmund G. Brown
development. conservation, re-
forestal.lon and housing.
IF ADOPTED AS Brown pro-
posed it, the fiscal plan would
booi.t state spending by 15.8 ~r
cent, a sinele year boost of $2.36
billion.
That represents a record·hlgh
per-capjta state tax burden of
$784 for each of California's 22
million r.esidents. or $3,136 in
i. .a 1 e s . 1 n com e , g a sol 1 n e .
cigarette and other taxes for the
iJVerage California family or
four.
The current per capita cost of
Cullfomia government is $687.
THAT BIG BOOST in per-
('ilPlta laxes can occur without"
tax rate increase because or
wh a t state Finance Director
R oy B e ll d esc ribed a s
"phenomenally high" increases
in business activity , taxable
:.ales , corporate profits and
personal income. .
While the state's population
g rew only by 1.4 percent duri~
the past year, personal income
went up 12.S percent, taxable
sales increased by 19 percent
and personal income tax receipt
went up 21.9 percent as million
of Californian's moved into
higher tax brackets.
Bell predicted the state•s
economic growth would slow
some during the next year, but
that 1978 will still be "really a
good y ear" as the boom.
economy of 1977 "slows down lo
normal.''
HE PREDICTED THAT boo:ie
construction and car sales would .
actually. decline in the coming
year, but lhat cons truction
would s t.ill be double the re-
cession level of 1974. and that
car sales will be 30 percent bet-
ter than 1974.
The bJggest part of the new
budget proposal goes to finance
the traditional state programs:
U .98 biJlion for he alth and
welfare. $5.81 billion for educa-
t ton programs from kln-
dergaiten through colle&e, $1.01
biJllon for highways.
But in bis message to the
Legislature and in a briefing (or
news reporters. Brown put em-
phasis on a few relatively Jnex·
pen1ive new proposals.
THE BUDGET BILL looks to.
the 21st ctmtury with a 15.8
mllllon appropriation to put
equipment for state use oo a
com muoications satellite in-
tended for launch in 1980 and
with .SS00,000 tor a s pace tn-
stltute at the University or
Calllomia.
Brown said the s pace instJtute
* * *
would attract scie ntists to '
California who tn tum would at-
tract more •Dace Industries.
He said Caltromla "ls at the
c rossroads " a nd space
technology "is where the rutu~
is . As H goes up, I wan\
California to be a part of it. ·
"STATES DECLINE AND,all1 because of lack of lmaein,uon,"
Brown added. "lf we are lolnf
to try to re1urgltate the 19th
century, we wUI decline as other
places In the world have. U we
are r eady to move into the tuture, and use s atellite
technology and the benefits of
s pace, I am ve r y confident
about I.he future of this state."
One or Brown's proP01al.a lor
1978 had a defulit.o 19th centwy ring to It. ·
That's the project to ~onvert
the furnaces which beat th~
Capitol and JS other omc~ build·
Ines frorn natural gu to wood
chip:..
"TRUCKLOADS OF WOOD1 will be coming pu t Governor's
Square into the power plant to
provide the heat necessuy for
the government office buildings
here," Brown said of the pro-
posal to switch state furnaces ~
wood. •
The plan to heat state build·
lngs with wood·burnln1 furnaces
is part of what is called a "bio-
mass conversion" energy re-
search program aimed at find·
1n g r e n e wabl e energ y
alternatives to lim1lecl oil and.
natural gas supphes.
Brown also said the budget
puts aside fun ds to m ake a stale
grant of $25 million to help fin un c~ a $293 million c oal
gasifi cation powe r plant planned
l>y Southern CaUfornJa Edison .
BUT HE SA.ID THE details
have not been worked out as to
whether that would be a loan; a
grant or an investment by the
state. '
Other proposals in Brown's
1978-79 budget would: ·
-Provide $200 million over
the next four to five years to in-
. sulate and remodel public bWld-
ings to cut energy use in what
Brown expansively described a~
"'the boldest commitment ever
made by a state" to energy pro-grams.
-Appropriate $5 million for
grants for sola r energy dt
monstralloo proJect.s.
-SPEND ,,. MILLION in a
five-year plan to plaJ>t 300,000
acres of trees in what was
described ru. the biuest pr~
g ram of its klnd ever un-
dertaken by a s tate.
-Provide $300 million over
two years for construct1on ·or 2s.ooo new apartments for low
and moderate Income families.
Brown s aid it would Involve "a rather complicated financing
arrangement" J.n whJcb the state
. would Join In the financing or
private housing projects In or-
d er to include more lower-
lncome housing units in those
plans.
-B~T STATE FUNDS for
local mental health programs
from $240 million to $311 mllllon
as part of a plan to reform that.
troubled and controversial pro.
eram.
-Create a new "Institute of
Occupational Health" at the
University of California to help .
e liminate hazardous materialA
in Callfomia offices and fac-
tories. •·we are afloat in a sea~
toxic materials," Brown sa1d,
explaining the need !or the $3
million program.
-Appropriate $1 million to
expand current apprenticeship
programs in the building trades
·to health, farm and aome whlte
collar professions.
-APPROPRIATE $Z million
for experimental ''community
oriented policing projecta•• de ..
slaned to b:rin1 police closer to the
people in the communities they
are ,ttemptlng to protect. Bro'WT\
said t WOUid be patterned after a Santa Ana police program.
-Expand tho CaHtornia
Conservatloa Corps, an ad·.
mlnlstratively troubled Brown
pct project. from $12 . .l mUUoo to
S20.t million and tncreue from
tho current 700 young ~orps
merrtben to 1,600.
* * '*
It's ~taggerhy:g
F ~Iii Beyond Iinagination
SACRAMEN'ro CAP> -How much mon.,t I.I $17,llO,aao ttt'P 'lti•l'• the beyonct.theolmqibUoo prlctta1 011 Gov. idmun4 Brown Jr. '1 lf171.7t budcet.
1117.• bUUon ont-dollu &Ull were laid end to end, they would
sti"eteh L'T nU.11100 mllea, enouiJt to elrcl• lb• eai'th ee Umtt.
It a Uos>I*' brouabt a $14.000 CacUUac once ev..-y hour It
:would \Ike lAl years and •even months tO •pend •11.• bltuon. '
WW'! $17.4 billloft, a peraon cOuld bulld U,3'70 maJUkm COit·
• U 1DUcl\ as t.bt empty It.alt manalon Bto1¥D refuat1to0«upy. n.. budcet wel~ S"it poun4a thl1 year, or $lt'J million po-r
ounc6. •
A lell.lmpnu'" mtuure: $11.4 blJUon 11 eouat\ to~ ut. lt4ttaJ ~llMllt tOf a !JUie U.aa two •Mb. . .
....
'' DAI 'I I'll.OT
··•••••••·············· .............•.............••.................
"-'" ,_ w. ;;;:.;;; .......... ;~·;;. ~·;;;;;; .......... ;;~; &;&;;·i:.:·a·or• ;;:;;;;,;;:~ ....... ;~·;; D;:;:;·· ...... ioz6 · .•.••••..•............. ...•..••............... ..............•........ •••••............•...•. ................••.••.. ....................... '
Gia"''.. I 002 &.-rel I 00 I 002 ............................................. Ge•rd I 002 IXCll'TtOMA.L ._..,,. 4.5 Lo• 3aJO SQ FT or .11rac1ous •
OPPORTUNITY Attractive 3Br+den. Ml ltvln11 . .a n~. 3 Ba, 2
RARE END UNIT
2 · s tory NPv. port Terral't: townhome
\\ ilh 3 bedroom s. 2 1 :.i baths. a view of
the park and only S89,500' That's
r ig ht! Nk cly dec·oratcd with rough
:-awn ecda r p a neling. s unny used
brick p;.itio j lH I do n't forget, the
T errace ha~ a pool. Jat·uu 1, \olleyball
;.ind ;,i park. Tlw prH·c again. ~9.500.
U~l()Uf li()Ml:S
ACAL TORS , 615 GODO
244:.J E:usl CoJ~I H1qhway. Co rona do•I Mar "'"IJ 111 Me\ 1 V 1•1 11•, .ol 1J lb !Jfl!JIJ
DISCOVER
That Home owners hip can come true•!
Why not earn SS h~· addini.: another
home on H.-2 lot? Become a landlord
for 594.750. can 640.6161
JOY TO YOUR WORLD --the sunsets
will make you fe<·I like you arc in
an other world. This home has been
t'Ompletely rede co ratod inside and
o ut. Copper plumbing. new roof,
beautiful new exteriors. New carpet in
earth tones blending with wullpaper
and paneling. Worksho p and patio.
Just listed. ~9.500. Call 54'-414 I
Serving Costa M esa·l rv 1n e
Huntington Beach-Ne wport Beach
Gflterol I I 002 G~nual I 002 !:~~!'! .......... !?~~,~~:! ..... : .... !?~~
.•••••••..............• .................••••••
MAMAGER~EAL ESTATE
HEWrORT IUCH
A prime opportunity with an
oulslancling re:.il c sla te organization + high earnings! Experience is a
mus t. Prcsli~iou s location . All
a p p Ii c <1 l 1o11 ., h c I d in s l r i c t es t
t·onfidenec. Plca:-.c rt>pl y to Ad #68,
Daily P1lol . P 0 Bux 1560, Costa
Mesa. CA 92fi21i.
~enuol 1002 GeMral 1002
···•··••··•·········•· ...............••...•..
INCOME!!!
PENINSULA POINT
-t Bdrm .. 2 ba. homl'. J\11 amenitrc~.
Lov<•ly area , fc v. s te ps to beach .
Sl 89,500
LIDO ISLE
Newly remodeled 4 bdrm .. den . .i
balhs. living rm . w cathedral ceiling.
Lge . mas ter bdrm. s uite. S224,950
BIG C.AHYOH
-1 HH, fam. rm .. 3 baths . Ikaulifully
decorated Broadmour Pl<.tn 3. on extra
large lot. S325,000
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
3 41 Boy\1dr Orivl· N B b7S· blbl
B\l lltl\ l'E "\I:'{ ; GeMral I 002 Gt'Mral 1002
\•·~u ' ~ouu~ ctupll·~. :i ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
lll• I\ :I tlt1\\ II Ill .... in ::.tcli• JOG TO BEACH
"I Ii I \ cl I' I 111 t' u I
11\'fll'l':-.h1p 11 111 111.rl), $87,500
COMMERCIAL l!•••icl 1 1•11 t J I 111 'ilor~ l'rofes~10nally dN:or;1t ~IK'J t~~l Im lud111i: land' e <I W .1 r m hr 1 t· I. LEASE 1,i;i M;1 .. I t.1.!·22JJ f 1 r c· p I .11· l' II ,, 11 ii ~ CORO HA DEL MAR gourmet k1tdll'n ov1·r
111 th•· lw.11 l 11f t'urnn.i look-; p a l111 :!nil Story
There's o Hew Home
In your Future
St>cu~ for tfola 1b
Bu rr White Rcalt~r
2901 Ne wport Blvd N 0
(7141675 46'.10
-1000 ~flUJr1· f1·1·t •111 qu1.-en s11e hdrm., F.1n ---------
cld :\lar ,\p11rcn 1111;ct1·1) hn.,t:. ma~ll'r & ;! rnon·1
)!ruuncJ nuur pith 2 ~rrl.111 la.,llc :"I\\ pl 'l\•rr;ct·c buy -
.1parlnwnh. I'.1rk111i: !or CJll now ix l illl1 ........,.....~
"I' tu 30 .1utumul111.. i.·> .. ,. ' 1' CdM Ho,.. w/Unlt
1'1·r >.qu.1n •foo1 1---------11 ® •' ·. i New lt<,ttn g' Cozy 3 COLE OF NEWPORT , lx'<iroom or 2 und den. 2
1n :.\l.TOHS OCEAN VIEW! ha th hnmc "1th opt·n
6 75.55 I I ~h·p-; tu ut''"'° • d i•lu"c Ile· a ms . la r j!c li\'ln)! room
duplex 4 & :! heir m . 11111ts . 11 1th I .inla)..tH' I trcplat·c· MEWBORT BEACH P·11 k :i ear ~ix:i.ntt0' -·AS-•S•U•M•P•T•l•O•H•S--1.11 at11·t1 "1 t h · ·01d 11...1EW CO ...... DO W1ll tr.1dc 1111 hvnw 1u .. >r Coron.• old :\l.ir <"h<irm .. " " lh1• li.t\ On'r 57 """uma bl(• Fii \ l\rJntl nl·W ~ 1k·dr m t;1111
S S Balbo B p or \' \ lo.ms <111 h c1m1·:. 111 AVE 4,000 a ay rop. lluntin1..'1on lk·ac-h, Fnun 111 re.II' \\tlh l1i:.1ml'tl t t>ll ·
Urand Ol'W <·omlom1111un1 Realtors 1,,111 \ .ilh•\ ,11 c·.i T.il.t• 1111:•., llr• 111.u·,· a 11cl .111
JU'l '-m1h· t111m 1111-.111 * 675-7060 * ll\c·i p;,\ml·nh \\tlh no liutlt1n ~ l..111n•l r ~'.
HARBOR VIEW HOME
\'cr y ~harp 3 bdrm .. or 2 &. convert
den Formal dining rm .. frpk. &
c o m p J l'l t' b u 1 1 t -1 n :-F r c s h l ~
r <'<lccoratt..'tl . You own the lund not
Je~sehold Sl39.500
759-08 11
~50 NEWl'OIH CENHll OHIVl 7!'>'1 0811
• I 1002 "GeMral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
MANAGER--IEAL ESTATE
NEWPORT BEACH
A prime opportunity with. 3D outstand-
ing real e::-.Latc orj?anization + high
e arnings ! Experience 1s a must.
Prestig ious location. All applications
held in strictest confidence. Please
reply to Ad #68. Daily Pilot, P .O. Box
1560, Costa Mesa , CA 92626
GtMral •002 GeMral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
WESLEY N
TAYLOR CO.
H.EALTOHS ~111t·t · HHu
THE ILU,.S~D UMIT-lEASE
Spal'ious cus tomize<! condominium m
ne west section of the Bluff!'\ 2 Lge
hdrms. dm \\.ith firepl, formal dining
rm + 21 ,. baths. Decorator papers.
c ptnf! & drapes. A C. ~ J\lo
WESUY H. TAYLOR CO., REALTORS
21 I I San Joaq• Hilb Road
HEWrORT CIEHTEtl, N.I . 644-49 I 0
I 002 Gf'Mt'al 1002
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ------BY OWNER
Cu1tom
5,000 sq ft.
Ranch Estate
Stable, l>Cpur .. tc m:11d or
i;ul':.l home. 1•nrloi.cd
is land for a \'IJI'\' nr
ammaJ Pndosun · rii1 ap
11rox11nate 31 • atTI.'~
7 45 E. Perotta
S&S BEAUTY
l.O buy wldti Oce1m View to bch. New landsc.plol muonn fplc II, aaunn.
Nearly new 2 Br home 1n t pVdrps. Ofr. M7-200$. ' rec rm. w/wet bar" lil«i.
<:npl11trano P».lbadet> ut ----BBQ Nr Harbor. !>t:hool::.
nnly $79.500. HURRY•' UNDlR $60,000 & i.hop111111.: 338)1 Blul!
Networta/Poiftt Rlty Se\eral homt!ll to choose L:i~tt•ro Ope n Dal.!~.
Call 496·5GGO from-all loc~ & 4 BR, 1·51 M, $214,000. 49'-97U -------1 wi no dn 0t u low as IY OW ... ER Ic:.111.--w.dtl M• I OZ2 ~ dn. llurTy for best " ••••••••••••••••••••••• sclectioo. <Aili oow. aat Beautiful, new 2 l>lQry HOUSE ALOMIE Dana Pt .• home. 4Br. 211
I lh h. . , 8 _549_·8062 __ . _____ 1 bo, llv. rm .. !am. rm ..
s wor l is pnce · ut focm. din. rm., UPl!r kit.. :rou can live near the 3 car gar. L&e c:ul -de•!l at'
beach In Corona del Mar 8 UNITS view lot . $120.000.
and have reur \ennnla Elgbl months old. Just "96·6573
help pay. $175.000. ll8led! Call for Info. 1---------
MORIMS REALTY WorldMR1e~2SEstat" '-talftY•.y 1034 * 494 .. 057 * .. .. ...................... . 1-~------·-------------i ltlDECOlA.~ SAVI$$ Sll,410DOWM OWNERDESPERATE Submit ofCcr ''as ii."'.
COIOMA DIEL MAR , NEWPORT H EIGHTS. 3 Paint & rfi!a~t. that is
2 BR 1 BA b R 2 Br 2 Ba. FR. $99,999. all il needs. Very des1ra· • ome on · Ownr/ iigL 642-3494 bll' 4 bdrm, 2\2 both
lot. Uve in front unit S48·1192 ' townhou•e . Eod unit. while building 2nd urut ---------1 ..
on rear or lot. Outstand· r. .... rrslDE CUTIE parkhkc surroundings,
0 l ~ pools & rec area. Cent.r:il in& inveslmr nt. n >' air. VA termi> 11vailabl1!. Sl~.500 This lovely 3 hcdroom 968-3371
CAU 955-03 50
fl ~ Tl•• l • lU l) ,,,~,'""''
f.1t A l f rlU 'o (Jl V l l 1JPl U1t
Abo•• ChlH Co•t
214 Dohlla
This charminl! 2 Br
home. has a m ost spec·
lacular view or oeean &
harbor jettr. If you like
beamed c:lngs, antlque11o
& peaceful living, t:all lo-
day. $189,900
home has JU1>t !)cen r e·
duc:ed to $79,500 & the
owners are unxlous.
Pnme locnuon & many 'Wal Estate
extra,,. Won't liust' Cull -for appontmP'llnow' 3 bdrm condo, dbl gar . 1 patio, nu carpet, paint. &
RA.NCH REALTY
551·2000
drapes. Vac unt. .By
owner. $55,050. 963-0029
~°" hoclt I 040 •••••••••••••••••••••••
•'IEACH WALK'•
SEP A.PT
D. Rlckett1 Rltr Colonial
For fmly member.
w/both & klt.chen. Great
for toonagcr. Main house
is lvly 2 story, 3 bdrms.
2'h baths, private jaruzzl
w/wood de<"k. Walk to
beach. 968-3371 .
955-0497 6.l2-3263
WANTED
Bu} er ror this warm &
charmmi!. recently re ·
done duplex ID old l:dM .
Never vacant & in hesl
area or Newport Beach.
SIS.UOO.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
GOL.f..TEHNlS .
AT NEARBY l\l.V.C C.
The orig owner offeri. 4
BR. 3 BA, w/frml dining.
St:.!S.000. TRADE /
TERMS.
HALPIMCHIM
HEAL TOR
675-4392
R-2
ROOM TO BUILD.
kerenlly remodeled 2
bt.'<lroom home on Jl.2
lot! Great mcome poten-
Loolu ng for a nl<'c home''
llow about ;i nl'at clPan 4
br in flalec·rc!.l arl'J of
C.:.t . Ly tto n Re alty
s..IS-4771
4 BK. frplc. ve ry d ean.
$71,i95 Approx 1550 s q rt
Owner out or bl att-.
960-4 1-14.
Meeds T.LCcre
3 Bdrm. 2 Ba-$65.000
Close to, Golde n Wes t
College & i:.hoppmg <:en
U:rs.
So California Rlty
~6·5605
Resale Spcrialisll..
3..l or S bdrm models
a vail. s ome w /pools.
968-4602
Pennington Properties
PACIFIC SANDS
Largest 3 Br model, l"•
ba, PV Stone Frplc wall.
"• m1 to b e a c h . B y
owner
S73,SOO
$.16-485.1
llal. $87•500 MESA DEL MAR OUR
llui:1" rn.a~lt•r ~111k "1lh '""" lth tll 1,11,.,h -.;., qu.ili ... 111ra)!1• 11Hlm .inti I 1 ar
\\arm "111111 c .Jt lwll 1 .11 f , 111 ~ .'\ 11 1 111 ,. ,.. , 1 p.1rk1n1: :-.C1p1•1 Suuth ul
1 \•ilin)! and hw111' ... p.ic ,. Znd HOME'>, t·h.llll.:t 111 ~ h " a ' Io 1· .it 1 on
Hills Dr .. 11\noheim
Shown by appl. llnl)' t•>
c1ual1 f 1ed b u ye r s
S9:i0,000 1714' 521·843-0
Cour)eSy lo Bkn,
...._. prof Inds< p , lt edwood 4 spacious bdrm::., 2 full ,j
18. iQp~~! ~ 3 Br2 Ba.nrw r pts,tplc:. IESTIUY
Jae, many xtra~. Prine bnths. li:e living rm w *""' a.-lfrii-only •ac ooo """ Cort-hrick fplc. country k1tch lur huh'.m a\ room \\ llh .•II ..!II.Ill ~11:,.1)()11
pu"1hl1• 111 • .111 '11•\\ Fur .1 :!ml horn\• at thl: llpl'rt F.\l·cuni: PETE BARRETT ..-• -,.752•1920 64~· ""° "'°'" foc faauly dining. Lge rc-
:.!JOOO mo\'l'' \1111 1n lwac:h.\\hJL1·11Ultl ht-""°l lnt1REHetwork -REA•TY-llurrv .in.cl lJk• ·"''"I\ t1·r tbJ ll .1 modern :! LI
1400 OUA•Ut NI~ HA<M ar yard for kids & dog~
5 BDRMS·l BATH --------1 Willi< to :.rhools & goll
.. ____ _
1.1~c. t·all!lll:.! i 7Kll h<l r m . :! h.1th mub11t·l---------6~M200 SU SURF SUH PRIME EA.STSIDE 1:oursc Only sro.900. MESA DEL MAR You 're gonna Jo\C lh1i:; KE:Y humi: 111li..i"tck\111.il!\'
r "L"ALTO".r,__ 1:!1l0Si1 rt .. "11hallhu11t HARBOR VIEW
WITHA
$175,000Furft. ----Se pa rate a dded o n d06e 1n28drm,2baCon· ~ COLLINS
"~ "~.... 1n' hoat '>11µ-.. ·"JI! SIX UNITS
Ser & hl'ar the surf and, _________ m othrr-1n ·l aw wing. do. Many amenil1C!> I & ASSOC.
bas k 1n t h<' su n o f IEU .. IQUEIN'78 Sn.l(le sloryheavy shakc dareyouto im .•1t--\'ou'll 96A 2425 Durux s--11.500 HARBOR VIEW Newporl n e.1ch II\ in!,!. Doe::. the thought appeal roof. l bdrm could be buy 1t. $8),900 ..-
1 bt•clroom 111111'
) I 0 :i . u 0 II . l' r I <I 1· Cl r
"" ncnh1p h X\:(•llenl
l.o,ta :i.tc:-...i 101 .i llun.
<~nl'r :tAAIOO~
642-5062
Century 21 Crocker
EASTSIDE
COSTA MESA
Beauurul :i yrar ()lcJ
duplex t:jt h unit h;is
kmi.: '11111 hl·ttnimn,, :1
u~t.ur-. -r 2 tin\\ D!>lillf'.
t:;1t h ha' \\0011 burni nit
11rr11IJrt· hu1lt 1n elt·c·
tncJI .1p111t11nl"<'' Ju'>l
like ii hnm1.• SI Hl SCIO
Wilt l'xchiini:<'
A Di\ l'IOll nr
lla rhor lm·r ... trnrnl l'u.
Flr!>t T inw Offt•rrtl 111
tht• nni:1n;d ,..pf'ltnn ol
llarbor \11w Jl1ll ' 1111
lhc \ ll'\\ ~10l' Hf \\ h1l1•
Sail:. \\',!,.), .111 c•i.tcp
tion.111~ ~harp I Ur. :!I ·
IJalhs. f:Jm rm he.ml''' 1t h
formal <l1 n1n~. lo\ cl~ 1---------i pool &. J:Jru1.11 Low t·i1rl.' l_;;;;;;;; ___ -;;;; __ .,I yard
South of Highway
Nl·wly re modeled. Spr1t
h•vcl. 4 IH-<lrm!., 3 balhl>.
O\'t•r..1zecl lot w 1th pot en·
liaJ l•> bullrl l<1ri;!c add1·
t1onal unit.. with i;wim·
m 1n 1: pon l I" lt11ut'
Slbi,500 ~I i :!iO
,\:'1;0
A S perl arular Ot·(·an,
Bay, bland. & ni11 ht 11.;ht
\'ICW S2W.500.
C~I 644-721 I
FOR I> ETA I LS
J U::; T ST t: I'S T 0 to ~ou? lf ~o. consider rrml din rm. Many xtras. p RI
lit::ACll. Lari,:\' ~ ndrl)l JOin1nl( lhl.' prc-.ll,l(IOUS c.ill now lo !>CC thl!> Un· M=l~;';,saty. WATER
unit:. with pa t io~ & ofrl res or 1Jnu1uc• llomes usualhome.54S·~9 l. ILOCICSAWAY-
balconics offer l'ltl'dlcnt for It fantastic 1978. AC· ( ~~~~~~~~~I Small development or C;\·
rental units for sum· rclerated commlsslon oJ'1'EjJ!;jijlt'UHI Beautiful 3br family e c . r cs Id e n c e,,. mcrtwlntC'rrental~ schcdul-..,in·hous<'swlng h o mC', 1800sq.fl . Cathedral cel11ngl>.
OPENDAILY 1·5 luans. creative s ales Real Estate Gorgeous frplc, ·.~acre. massive firepl a ce.
4604SEASllORE DR. aid!.. eomputer tr rminal Xlnl school dist. $73,900 ~wecpin" staircase lo
-
•· ti t I · " •· ·' New Condos, 2 Br, 2~1? Ra, .. " Wi\T[Rf··tONT "'ac ve r a nin,. ll< au· 2 frplc:'s, ceramic tile As sumabl e. n on · master suite. private
ttOMLS mirustrntion. lk unique kitehens & bath. Pool & qualifying VA loan. By Rludlo. separate family REAL ESTATE . In '78 with Unique Homes owner. 557-3590 rm. big country kitchen 631-1400 Real Estate. Contact Jim _s_p_a_.6_7_5-4_9_1_2_B_r_ok_e_r __ ---------1 with br eakfast/lunch
1--------Wood at 6?5-6000. MlSA VERDE • IMAGINE plus fancy formal dinin~. --- -VIUA A beautiful, immac, }:;very lastc11t a ppoint
INVESTOR'S
SPECIAL
$47,500
c;unrckd itatcway pro-WHAT A IARGAIMI
tct'ls lavish i:round., with Lusk Realty hns lo oHer
pool Seclucled entry to lD new ancl experienced
t'"C<'Ull\ t' h vini: room. salespeople
IOACRES
pam,pered home that bas ment. Rkh exterior with Sharp 2 bdrm unit. Up· known o.nly 1 fastidious pitched clay tile roof.
graded cpta & drps. Lge owner! Me u Verde. BKR.536-9311
pnvate patio. Pool. Near $100,000. Drkr will show
s hopping & s chools. anytime. Private party has cstm 3
Motivated seller says So. Coa.~l l nves lment bdrm dwntwn Hunt.. Brh Su n~h 1 n c i: ou rm e l •Reccive top i·omm.
kltr h cn overl ook !> •lnc:enuvepr oJ,!ram
«.J(ut S"ci~ ~ p ri \ al c t• ou r Ly a r ti •Guaranteed S alei-pro·
~~~ _ S1o1.•ccpinr, maMcr hdrm grum
"I' -----& child .., rctn ·at Owner •Great reh-r-ra l 1uo
Rancho California.
Prime avocudo eoun·
tr y• I Great income
potentia l Good lerms
avail. Con ~1d l'r c x-
c:hangl' SS0.000. Call
s.io.11s1
submit your FHA or VA Cdt645•1 IOl hmo, 1ntere!>led in trad-
olfer. Will hst~n. Call Lo-1ng cqu1t1es w/part,· da y 0 n I y S 59 , 90 0 . _F_'O_R_S_A_L_E_D_Y_O_W_N_E_R_ h1wlug <'Ondo in Sun,.,t-1
R£ALJORS ---------1 1-. anx1ou~ Subnnl any gram _:;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;:1 MEW OH MARKET nf'frr' 1147.r,010 •PIWi much more
Spoclous/ .. autlful ·• Y • • "' •· CaJI today for conrtden-Jv~ HERITAGE
• • REALTORS
~-949! t Br, 2 ba in fo'rcedom Bch or 11 H a rbour
Home tr a cl to settle ~ 9583
estate. Principals only. 8Y ownr Prei.tigc 2 i.ty. 4 ~-0317 80, upgraded, nr schl!. &
MODOWM shops $89,500. IWO·lSO'J
,.
,.
COLI OF HEWrORT
REALTOHS
675·551 I 4 ID~~5~:.f OL F'r~h :.~!~d~~a~t-d <le [ ~ 11!1Mll :tl:al:l:nt:e:rv:ie:w:.:960:4:36:1:~1~~~~~~~~~ HA~DYMA..._. 'S
Bike lo bc.1d1 from this cor Located•on a lnr,1(1' L. 'Q';:::.=-J-~~~--~·~-~·~-=~~· SUPER IUY $49,950 1"'111 1"'111 beautiful itardcn home. 1:orncr i n N c w1>o r l -=-DREAM HOME Best buy in IJuntington Beach. P erfect rumily VA TIRMS Eastslde 4..pa•Jt BeauUfully maintained CAPE COD Beach. S2300down or as· b me w /4Bdr mi; lgc adult only townhome In Fantastic opportunity SSl,000/$2, I 50 11Ume $240 monthly pay-f ~rm a I d 1 n in r.' rm ONLY $62,500 $170,000. Ideal location near s hop· for the handyman seek·
TOTALDOWM mcnt.s. Hurry! 963·6767 . wtnreplarc: formal llv· Dest buy In the areu. Air Excellent location, l ping le the be1c:h. Can't ini a large workshop at
MNlll'l•1111111<110 111N1ri• Ing rm PLUS paneled cond itioner and some block from 17th St. on .,0 wrong w /tbll bttl ho me. Big separate Windin~ roadway lo [ I ll _,.. I l ' ""-IU ""b 'II I b t f di " bui'di i b k ·, bl 1 ~i1Jj H 1J famil.v rm larue enoti"h vu1cr n ce x ra s."" ng ....... n o. n es o con · piece ot p"""....+y & such • ni n ac sw.a e Er£!di!~~a~::r~~r~·.,~~, ;idn) ~o~ :~1~a~dd t!b~~ci ~l~i°A ~~:k-;sI:: ~~ ~r.i~'°T!~ i:,e:i~~~ alowpric~146.7m. ~:r1c:~c:i:~:.fcia~.o~~
3 BR. 2 BA beauty on quiet street. Vl'lS no
down. $2300 down FHA,
payments like rent. It's
&!I iood ll4 aone, call
nowt
540·3666
Wltelc'ln
WALKTOIEACH
l\1agn1flcent landing
home, 1 year new. With
gourmet kitch & bltn 1
microwave, Vaulted 1
clgs. w/iotimate fireside
conversaUon area, and 3
Ckt gar. Price recently
reduced $5000.
living room. Gourmet. ---·-=·--~ landscaped yard sur· thll! year's best groundfloorapartmenu. ??? Better hutl')'! Call
kitchen overlooks sun·---------rounding this prime pro-Chr111tmas prc11ent Is 1 three bedroom , M.S-0303, ---'=;;;....;;;-"--"-----•
shine courtyani 1 Wind· S BR & 2 BA ~rty. Shown by appt. . yours. 546·2313 fireplace 2 bath + paUo Eeal Eatate 5 Bedroom
PIAI !\'All
t'W'11<1•11 '1•11s1111<1ro1tNC11 deck liVing area. NEAT, ---------1
ing stairway Juds to Wood flo or s. w ood -WATl.RFRONT r• 1! I CLEAN & HA NDY . CATALINA Larwlnbullt-bletnmily ~r~~~u~·t:~l~~~ ~~rea1:.~~:c. ns:~~;g~: RE~~:8~TE ' ··~ftl!W 400DonL'~isa thl. s ba.;;~ ~l=t~·~c!t~:~· ~t~:~~ ·-~-c-:;':l:"~i~s r:im~y8 ~~~
Hurry! Sc1llcr 18 11nxloua. GI/FHA financing avail. 631-1400 . -·-... 1 ·~~ udl _._ lot, jUllt 4 blks. from a:raded ext.ras. On 11 quiet M~,~~?. , " , ~1 ""'' SantaRAnoyaMnceCar ~Jr.ner. $57 900. C.MA; .-: f1a,,,, downtown Avalon. Vaca· cul·de·uc. near shop· [ I -OCIANFROKT • .~,_ I.loo fun spot ! $75,000 --------•1 pia'Jfi. nt" more details, ~ ll~ftH$ i!~:~=~;~t ~.:::~~n!t~'NwtpE~~ Romodefed s~nrtcr llA~~~R~~:.!161 ~SUM( c ~ . -=·••••=tt;f mlt trade. 308 1-: Ocean· home! INVESTOR'S • $AV£ 1--------front.548·72t9or 559 1221 REDCARPF.T SPICIAL4.PLIX • f'ORC:ST E
OLSON ChMNI I 002 Ci••NI I 002 754·1202 Quiet tree-Uned streets . ....................... ....................... GeMral 1002 wtMt'GI 1002 :ZYIARSHIW POOL HOMlll •nhance beautiCul 4
.... OCIAM s1re.-011 .... _ 0 --Ab S~e home • ·~-~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ~v aurumn.a1a.: $45,00000WH VA.TUMS w/potJJ. Two any UP·1 .. -------•I Pr1d• o1 ownt.nbfp unltl Trernendous a Bl' home arades to mentio n . t HUao.iy.a.ao
' .
754-7800
8A~ e tt .. ul f>lut~ Inc
wttb fantutlc alone I ._..,. f ... Situated ooa.enlud lot. ,.. ,.. · w OVetluau am rm • Price fior Imm_.. •al•. o..a.t lot with aharp flreplact1. EncloH.d maulve brick r,Jc oo ._ " 3 btd 1~ b th .. _______ ..i aar•••· All beautU\11, quiet. secluded st. Seller $80,900. Call oow. room, • ·Coldwe• Banlc8r ~ RlSIOE:NTIAL l!AOl<l~ CJ::MfJNft
. PllV ATI ADULT COMM\Hn
Imm culate 3 bedroom home
located In quiet cul-de-aac
surrowided by lovely mature trees.
Extra-large llvlng room, dtntng
room & master suite. Adjacent to private pool & puttlng green.
$111.500 llicludhlg the Jand. '
, ...... lout unlta. Owner , l .. •. J.C. .._..IMltort llol:'M. WoodsblnaltrOol, ..-t mus .. rnove n &utlfTY• 1r~-SIOI covtredpaUo,IUJedou· =~.~~t :.~ wm entertain any nu. --ble 11ar .. •, lenced lront.
ad.dlUonll tnvetttnent dfcr. 1--------.-i _. r.ar. Doo't ml11 thlA cipportunitlca. cau now 71 .. 7IOO onol ottered at 111.000.
98'J.7811 Welk to all 1chool1.
'°"11rn••1I HvNIO~l~ICf· 14().U51 8A~ C7 " I · ' : • HERITAGE
RF Al TORS
SUPER
3 Bedroom, 2 bath with
2h22' bon\lt r oom. 1t•eaturtng wet•bar, new
paint abd c11rpttl,
wAllP•J>l'r thna-out. Lot& cl ~Xtrat-hUl'J'Y Oft thll
onol Ll1ted at only
.. .JOO. 5'$-S880
· t .. HERITAGE
. JHJ\tT O RS
. .
'•
1
__ ..
.
Mi a"hrS. Fer~ ..._..,_s. nkrS. t ,_·s. . ···········-·····-··· ....................... ······················· .................................................... ,.. s.
Tu.day, January 10. 1971 DAIL y I'll.OT"
J O "-•leedt 1040 1044 a..g..1eect. -.act. t O" • .,.,,.,... ... ~ tOff ;;;·~:;· ...... ic;to -··-···-···· .............................. ······················· ······················· ........................ °"""' .... &tot• ~ l..t l:it• ....................... •••······••••••······· ............................................. .
.......................
UST I UY
ott OCEAMNOHT
Wllh 11 " OWll r..indy ~nc:b In LugunJ ~arh
$300,(JOO
494-1035
BONO REALTY
GRE.AT IUY
1n Nt•wporl (."ri.-•l
Spai·1ou~ i Bdrm 21,
bath h.1td1cl\ will\
M'J>&r .ttl' d1111n' 41rea up l(r.ukod c"~" & d1 .. .,..,
• ( Jr t.' a r J · ,. " 1 lb
autom•ll<' nrwn1•r ~·'<
\'ellent IOC'.1t100 ~ 1·11nd1
uon Tenrui. r<>u rt~. ix><>I.
JaCUUI, el(' Ph>nty or JUSTUST!D
lta.rbour Lane 3 Bdrm, 2~ bath end unJt w1lh 2t •
boat 1Up. Super Sharp!
SlSS,000 Call for appt.
l(Ut'lfl parking $114.~
1050 . li> ~nc!. Call Mi 1888
nowt
PURCELL REALTY
17141146-2121
OCEAN FRQMT
REDUCED! Loi.JI & vu
bom e11. som~ w t boal
11Hp. Brk/Agt, 846·561\B n tCE SLASHED
LEISURI WORLD
Finally, a t•hantt' to get
in! 3 Bdrm .. 2 bath & brand new hilltop unit.
F'..xpans1vc views or the
valli.-y. $85,900
HORIMS REALTY * 494-8057 * So !!harp II 'htnt'S Wood nine 1044 µaneled II\ rni: rm UJ\ely 4hr, Ir~ 1.1m rlll
••••••••••••••••••••••• fonnal dm rm :,unk1~t w frplc LI\ r rn. d1u rm LEASE/OPJIOM i:ourmcl lott'ht'n '"er· Bltn ehin.t 1 lo!tl'l J'ror
$55•000
looks pal111 :!nd Story deco. 3 CJT &;.tr 'r olll
(l(>f>t> m.t,ti·r 'Ulll' ~ 2nd °"nt'r 768-5111.l
Your own condo on th1• hd 1 1 -~ rm '"l'r no"tnA j?rl"en n.\or~c fnr r l:' pni·n ri• water. 8 l.t'nru:s court!>, '-·-It Th 11 h lnt ..,,. ' •
CLOSE TO IE.ACH
Two yr old duplex. Clean
3 & l liR. rpt'g, dr~.
bllns, 4 car 0tr
$159,900
JACOIS RE.AL TY
675-6670
MEWPORT DELIGHT
l.ot•att'd neJr thl' fJmou-.
°'lie\/> port Ht11•k u .. ~ on
the UluH:. rh1:. t lill t'Oll
tlo Iii " re:il dehi:ht (.'dll
ui. for a pnval(' lobo"mg
~;[. ~MJ'l~JoY· ~Br By Owner 2br. Iba w 11t IM-P't .. arty 200 le411tate ("......... JJ:U
• · -.p · mp re tached 1111r fnrd in back •••••••••••••••••••••• W.t.d J ff -,----··--~;~~~~ b~ach }rdoncotncrlul Pl·rfrct C OMPLITILY ••••••••••••••••••••••• • 4 a~urt•r hom ... us.~ WTOllD ., W A NTED 1'R dup)u. ttoo.e 6 m .
CUSTO M..-\.\.l3HJ.\8 Ohl Span11h m ani.1on J~)11NBCRt::t-;t-., t•tan ~.n::s!rr~e. CM
& CHEERFUL ~UNI HOftM•: R/\NC'll, 2 with 11nocean vh•w 3un 111 Wav~rt""t 011onl'I',. ---------
:.! Bdrm w \ge (<Am rm ~r I ea. hghted .ir~na, lll·Ont' mile to Oan11 onh 1M 11111 ~onfU\.
W\•tblf.r.Gre1&tCori.-nwr t1t1•k rm. pon} ruo Polnt Marina 121$.000. t~Yl!IOI
l.il1ung. Spac kilcb, din f72.000 1;4z.,17~ MORIMS REALTY tt....td • So .............. a Br 2 Ba. F&111 rm & walk·tn pantry --••••••••••••••••••••••• 1(,---
Xlnt l'ond lhru-out Pvt TuiHn 1090 * 494-8057 * Housar..t,....19'.d -. f~, ~·~u ~
putlo & pool Ma10l free. ••••••••••••••••••••••• -----••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~ .... ~:m:. 1 · !~'-~cpunce $161,000 Agt WOW!OuLY SS0 ,900 MIWPORTHllGMTS Mewpcrileocla 3 169 549-w:M'•a&·!Jll
U"t"I .,.., " DUPLIX ••••••••••••••• •• ••• ••• ... ------•·«this lovely 2 bdrm .. 2 Extra sharp 2 BR units. 1 Br. t blk to ocean. Cln, Brand new,. J bt. lam
GorcJeo-1 Palermo ba condo! Real frplr . both w/pn vate patlo1'. quiet. utll pd. No pets. rm., 21.it bat. fnM. MW
tr you hkc plush new wall alr-cond1lloner . lge. Owner will help finance. $2'75Wlnter. 541H425 oven. $525/14A. G J..1715
eorpeting drapes & 4 aarden-pal.lo. lnr aale or trade after6
Or,view, ih1a 1& lhe home $l3S,CSOO •. 9 5 ,., ,..150 Houlft Utwfunliahed 2 B_r_Se-pr-ua-at, Jrplc. no
tor you. -•••••••••• ••••• •• ••• • • • kids or pcU. .wa mo
Su. Coast Investment GettwGI 3202 2S45 Elden. Ms.:iOST or ' 1 I f ,, .. I I JI • ' , I·~• r I • Ceil 645-1 I 03 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 213/385-SOSS. 1ll
1091 S I 0.000 DOWH Westriutar i\!isume balan\'C of ••••••~••••••••••••••••
$140.000 al $1075 per mo llERE S YOU R CHANCE · h d b · Beaut 3 BR home. $2500 J r, .en. wel a.r. pool. dn. Call now. 24 b r
1mmac Owner will servacelN~agt t·arr~. no credit needc<l
lmmtld pos:.es:.1on '.tc 7~.(»4M a..-.... Est ...
,,, '·l t ' u 1~. I ./I l r 'Pt ''
TRIPLEX. C.M. '
Great Easts1de lo<' ne-wer Jbr. 2ba, frplc. yd
l21 2br. lba. p11uos. encl
aar. S16S.OOO Tom Lee. Rllr. 642·1603
Fw Rent Off' Lease ~ BR. deo. Counlr)' a.it>
3 8 R.$57S'mo \'11la condo "' Mes-<1 ~Acacia Trce L:.a Vt:rd\• Dbl gar. patio.
i BR. view. S~/mo. pool. adults only $425.
428,'9 Belloma Call 67~0 °' 546-0183
:! BR. den. Sti25 mo COZV 3 Bdrm, l ba. crpts. 1~7 Port Card1rr red yrd, pets It children
3 BR. den. \•few. $9'1S OK SJSS. 963-4567 A1ent.
·-
.
onl"" ...... ~w•i;.tr "" 1 "' duct11Jn lor r1u1 ek -uln pools, s pas and gym .,.,., .,,.,,., -· ~ Super s harp unal A °"~,,,1 9. . ., , .. .. 3Br 2 ba \0111fO Marl
Slll! ~
VALLEY ·~················ • ~ -VIEW. Uiiiiiea . • u=~ -~-i-• ::. ~ :!l?S Yacht Rodi ant -~ol_~. -~ _...-\...,. 2 BR.de~view.'$600 '" ""' ---
II I
GREATFIBSTllOME! it® IHtdtt -~=~~·'"·,::i ~\ £>\OI• p~
~ -. ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4·Plex.100ft.fromoccan ;
Redlac9cU I 0,00Q 27 Montanas ~le Detached 2 Br 1 Ba. aar.
Owner sald "SELL IT" 5 8~. $725/ mo fplr. new cpts fr drp&.
CottaM ......... ptlch 2 s17aclous 3 Bdrm 20&2PortWeybrldce adu.lta, no puts.~. 337
DOUBLE WI DE houses. Frplcs, beamed 4 BR. ram rm, din rm. E.. 18th St. 67~
UJXURYHOME cel l 'gs & M O RE ! View,S975/mo. Eutside Condo.2 bdrm 2
Ocean. Bay. Cit v Lights For StM I I 00
Pnme Mea. corner loca· •••••••••••••••••••••••
tioo. Call:
RANCH REALTY
SSl-2000
WOODIRIDGE
BROJ\OMOOn. I nn.
Cam. rm .. pool & 11va. all
lnd:.c·pg . d1·l·k1nl!. rcnc
mg. gorj!er>u' 1 mprovt'
menls, model hnme
cond Move in ready.
Agent &10·~ ----
Wdbrdi:: 21lr +den, 2b.i
Broad moor w 1 atrium.
Cor nr lk. pools & Lennlll.
SJ07,000. SSl-0685
BEAUTIFUL
STONEWOOD
In Woodbridl'e 1'1¥ce
ll'••tunng 3 bedroom'
· .tnd formal dining room
l pgr,1dcd throughout
<..iO!oe to park, pool anii
<'lubhouSl'. FAST t:scnow DESIRl·:u
Pnred right ut $134,!l:-10
RANCH REALTY
5 5 1-2000
GREIMTREE
By owner/agent. 2 Rr +
• family, qwet streoet l'losl'
tc,,-rL New drps. g:trdr
opnr, bnck wOl"k & mnre
S81.500. Dys 833·6 105.
eves, SS1·5238 -----IEAUTIFUL
DEERFIELD
\\'t> have a selcctwn of
Plan 2 Park llomcs Crom
Sl™,900 in lh1~ much de·
51red area of Irvine
Nice l y up)!raded
throughout For rurthcr
· 1ruor mat1on 1·all.
RANCH RE.ALTY
551-2000
CU LVE RD A L E ·3Br.
P.Ba. cathedral cc1l
angs. lg kit chen, up-
grades. cul-de ~ac, yd:.
from schl. pool, tennis.
$87 ,900. By owner
559~
Univ. Park. beaut. 4
bdrm.' ram rm, 21 .• ba.
n ea rl y nu carpets
lhruoul, many green
belta;. pools & tennis
$110.000 Appl. only.
WOODBRIDGE IM PRESTIGIOUS S248,000 W ti and!
2 PRESCOTTS SEA TERRACE M!irshall Rily 6754600 Lovely 2 Br & balh in $99,500-Su bmll offer 2019 Yacht Resolute
adult pet park. Gorgeous " i ba, 2 car auto gar .. Nr
Larl(e :.t Wood bn d ge 1.-ovely 3 BR. 1900 sq. ft. r.o Ft havfrnnt. ~ AR, den,
homt"S 2~q rt +3 ra.r home with fdmily room, ptl'r, on Pl'nmsula ~ .. r Sor I hr+<lt'n. 3 Ba. & dimn,i? room. Prwnte M:tr!lhull Rltr. 1\75-41;()()
atnum. air cond . fully beach an·t•..,:-,, guurd gatr -----
=~{:£:~!:;~~ ~:.7:i: ...._ .:;;.t~~:~~;~
lmbt· hljrhly 1111gr. Mt·X· community, lenn1i.
11·,in l'avt'rll tilti. Lge lot. courts & pool:. $147,500.
Nr Park & loke. $1~.ooo J AMCHOIAGE & St!ll1 ooo J...,c Sll2t; rno Bkr'Ownr :;:;i.4121 or IMYESTMENTS
"kdays M:IS ~!> f7141 496.77 t I
UNIV .
PARK
\'lll:i~e l Cambridge
)lode! on qwet :,trect. 3
Bdrms .. 2 t.i.i .• "ha ell has
many cxtra:s .. new dis
hw:.a,ht•r !'moke detec·
lor CU!'ilom pdnehng an
dt•n or bdrm. )1.u~l :.ec to
.ipprtc1ate'
wuonu H 1m; i-:
t'HOSSl="li
'llw \'11la~c of Wood
limh:r Thi• hrq or bolh
worldi. ,\rthllrdurally
uniqu1• .!&J b<lrm al·
taeht'tl & det.tchc.'<i re·
~ltll'ntci. r1 urn $!16,!)!ll)
~1161
Expansive!!
Fl\ e t>t-droom,. on pool
s1.icd lot with mature
land..,r;.pin~. i:atl' upon
mounllun..., & \alley~, dll
Uus & more, a mui.t M!e
home. Now sdltng for
$119.!IOO (;JS)
Ko/an
f?, .. ,, £ ·'·''" ,,,,
J /VI""""'' IJ.1y P •.i1.1
661 116 1 9 31 3R88
CONDO
Golf Coune View
Si.-n~ataonall~ JHll l•tl ! Show\ ltkc 11ew 1\ir
ronclt11on111ioi. 2', halh1'. :!
large h1'<lrourns l'uul
Steps to bus &. ~hopp111j!
5 )finutt·i. to h•'.11 he~ a11<l
fr<'l'W:.ay Hurry'' ~iii 500
3 .Monan•h lia> l'I J.ta
Laguna r-.1.:ucl
496°7222 83 t ·0836 ----
LoqunoBeoch 1 048 ~~~~~~~
••••••••••••••••••••••• ONTIIEGOLl-'COURSE
Bl'and new J bed rm home Deh ghtful 2bdrm 2 ba
w/s pectacular orean condo Wshr dryer
View in pnme N Laguna refng., mcl. Golf & trn
tor Plus add1l1onal rus. Ek'h_only 2 .m1 awa~
h<l\ISI' to hl'lp w/p) mnt-; l.~c $4::>0. 4!lt> IHO ur
Owner mntl\'aled. Suh 493 f~
mat all oHers. World ssicMt Viejo I 067
Wide Broken. 673 .. MS. •••••••••••••••••••••••
THEEXECUTIVE Bdrm. 2 ba. carpet.
W'h d d th r· l drpt;, pal10. l.indsraped, o eman s c me~ (ncd. beautiful \ 1cw
in quahly must see lhl!o 547.5550 or s;Mi :r.25
heaul1ful 4 hdrm . 4' ~
It.1th home in pn vale New J Br, h\ rm new or
oc~anfrt>nl com mu nlly Saddlebark. \or lot Nr.
Ai.king $350,000 lake. Air eoml & 11pgr1h
S~. 750. 0\\ n!'r l!lf. 'iJI;!
m~~~ ------~ll~~ New 3 fir Cordo\'a, rornl•r
499_2800 lot,. near lake J\/rond &
pnmt' up~r:v1<''1 $1;6,!l~
· ---496·7;)1;1or586 872.1
Huqe 4 Bdrm. ..-~ t.CK~Y' a 069
8realh'1aking vu fr. lg. ••••••••••••••••••••••• i;unken ~ster ll R & con-
\'Cl'!>ation p1l in war m.
woodsy f:lm. rm Skylil
wk. studio. Jacuizi in
ma. .. tcr BR $19SK (540)
OP&IHOUSE
Call for Drta11"
llARBOR VIEW 11 0\t E
3 Br. 2Ba with many
dpPL'!. Plans lo ad<I 2
more bdrms. Mo!>t dt•
s1reahle area Onh
$139.500
Newport
Condo
$79,500.
'' lllol·k lo Wci.trllff Plata CO/) 2 Ul•drm
h11m\ with pool Xlnt
INc;~~
W H tdiff Rfflty
OCEAMVIEW
CONDO, REDUCED
$THOUSANDS S
Redun~I lnr a f asl :. ale.
\'ac.uil .~ i.cllcr is :.tn't
11iu:. lk'.111t1ful ~ hr end
un1l " rpk Communlt)
pool, i...iuna & JJt'U/71 .\l
lh1i. flrll'l' ll \Hiii 'l I at.I '
1 lurr} ' (.' .tll &IS·!KIO:}
-CAMEO SHORES
<>n•· of thl· mn<1I eharm
mg homL'S w11h large ltv·
in)( rm. formal dining
rm hhrary, r.im rm 3
llr. 1000 'Ill ft. II a!'>
gorgeous orean 'aew
Pool & JOC Shown dail)
I I PM. 46.13 Perham Dr
t>.$6 7414 Bl.r. or 6-15 284.8
a:-k ror Lolli'>e Raker
•Harbor View Horne
:! Bdrm & den (or 3
Udrm l and 2 bath home
llaJ1an Lile ua entry &.
k1tchcn Sl36,500 Ry
owner Pnnclpals only
Call640 I UO
BY OWNF:R B1i;: Canvoo
Townhomc :! Br. 2Da.
rpl/clrps StJ!l.:'iOO Ph
!!.33 0821 or 640 071\!l ---------
NEWPORT
HIDEAWAY
$109,000
Perlt>ct home for geltinc
:.away & relaxing. JOG
TO WATER OR PLA\'
TE."Z'f'lS. Four b1.>droom:.
with totally separall'
master retreat & large
-.unde<!k. Massive ust-d
bnck hrepl11ce. Separau~
itame room with pool la
ble & bwlt·1n bar·hf'-que.
Don't mls-s lh1s OP ·
porlun1ly Call today.
tH6 7171
O ce-anfront Duplex
~'95.000
Be achHouH
Owner will consider
k:JSc clpllnn. $130.000
l'i•i; Rroms 111~~15 1531
A.B.AHDOHED
WESTCLIFf
FOUR BEDROOM
$144.500
Lush grounds & ma!.s1vc
t'Tllry leads you into this
lovely home featuring
two garden patio:. &
i.pcctacular rear yard.
Cathedral ee11ings with
natural wood beams
Floor t o ceiling
rireplace Gourm e t
kllchen. Storage galore!
Overs1.ied garage & RV
arcess . Call today
646-7l71
now~rs. rOt1es. chmbcn.. ----------pool. kids OK, no pets
hummini.:bird feeders. I•--------• ----------$365. 644-4486 etr PLUS i.w1manin~ llOMEFINOERS ----------
pool, Jllcuul. shurrtebrd. Builder d o1e-out Thousands of Rentals LRG 1.UX CONDO. So
i;oc1d.l 11ct1v1tii.-!. galore' The only 4 left. Duplexes Csl Plnza area. 38r. Only S:.!1.!100 Lie nr SC Plaza Bkr All arcas ullprices 2'2b11.llll mJr..ippl&a1r. HD93211~1 SS7·9710 Sampll' Pooh. tennis crts
SOUTII COAST SSS. l Br. furn. ulll pd $475/ mo MO 6~!17 or
Mobile H()mt-Salt"it TRIPLEX 5200. 2 Br. won 'tl,1:.l. ut &$6-21.u
2706 Harbor. Suite 206 <ONE YEAR OLD> ~3 Br. kid111(ncd )•d
CALLMO S!JJ7 Attractive k:asL Costa UFETIMESERVICF. Ire 3 br, 212 bn condo. Mesa: 2 BR uruLs. l' a oc 2 557-0122 w/frpk. all maJ appl 1n S 100/Mo. Rettt.. baths. din. area. Priv ,._ _______ _,. cld Air cond. alUched
COSTA MESA palaos. 5 sep single'' &ar w/OfJM. Comm pool
1978 Skyline. 2Br. 2 ba, garages Ea apl. w/frpl. FREE &Pl lenn~!...,,Nr. so831. 2386Cst
pl h h •tas.ooo 12a ..... ;> .. m<>. · u:. polio pore for that • d 536-4976 t.pec1al couple or periton AGENT SS2·™34 ys. --~es __ _
wtioen1oy111uxury Love-. RENTAL UST ~pac nrookv1ew condo ly loc~1t1on. sw1mmin~ 1"ewport llgtc;, nl'w 4·plex. We have homes in every end u rut. 3 Br 2\h Ba .
pool.el<' 4S0813>S2:l,!JOO aJI elee. bllns. lndscpng, a r ea. Vi ll :ige R ea l fplr. 2 patioi.. Nr pool SOUTII COAST i.paclous owners. unit. Mobile Home Sales F\r!ll user depTer1al1on. EA tale. 10082 Garfield tennis $495 8'6·9403
2706Harbor,Suite208 Walk lo l?th St. 642·7752 ~=·H.B. 963°"~7• No t.ieun3Br 2 Bn.2car sar.
CALI. s.io 5937 or 673 07_82__ ---------•I pool. t w n h s e . $390. ----WANTF.D Re1\idcnual 1n. ------ -IM7·3S630r557 2179
SESAME STREET c-ome 2. 3 or '1 umts l\lui.t Bdboa bland 3206 --k ----
3 llcauuful Mob1lt: horn<'!\ have 0 <' e u n v 1 cw . ••••••••••••••••••••••• College Par . 3 + Fam
I l ··• th s r I • Rm. 2 Ba. dbl fplc. h1ghl>' 1::. l"u in 111 • 11m1 Y Capi:itrano or Dana Pt Z·Sly .. 3 AR .. 2 ba., l{abled upijrlidcd. Adlt:s, $475 1~t p.irk 111 1-:1 Toro See area. 752 1830 beamed ce1I s . 11arage 5-iS·2066
U'> hdorr you b u~ •2 Blk. from bparh
I' I\<.: I I" i C C 0 A S T MMa Vtrdt 4-Ptex WlLUAM WI NTON Halccrc::.l J br, 2 ba bltni. HESi\Lr:~. lNC !>'JI ·~I Large 3 lir + 3 2 br umt.s. ~e_al E.1lnlc 675-3331 fenct'<l yd. Child & 'pet ok'.
12x..\<t Nl'w Skylinl'. 1 Br,
good loc. lll'ull rl'nl
Priced lo i;ell M8-7!!<JI
IUCH IEAUTY!
Change your hfe style.
h\'e 1n Driftwood Bch
Club right on a goH
ireen. pool, clllhse. va-
cant. owner out ol blale.
Prirt'd lo bell 1mmed.
Park renl even 1ncl'd!I
utilil'S. Just listed. 20X58
Parklanc '67. 2B r .
IFT48!16·71 . PACI FIC
COAST RESALES, JNC.
991-86ti0
,\II units h ave F .P .. Beaut. 3 BR. home, 2 ha. >t00f..o8
D_W., 2 Ba. Last phase & I f th (5000'J Pnn. only. Agt. gc. nm rm• WI M esa Del Mar 3 Br, 2 ba,
549•85060!" 6-l2-8SSO garage, elevator & i.mall drps. crpl., frplc; lcwely boatdock.SG7S yd. $450 w/g11 rden1:r .
LONG IEACH Rumbotd Realty 675 4822 $42S w1Lhout. Wkdya call
Two 1 Br + convert'd lallboa Pahnda 3207 afl 4pm 545·7913. D"1s
gar age bach. Gr e at ••••••••••••••••••••••• _S'8_·_729_s ______ _
sterter invest ment. Year Round. 3 Br, 2 ba, uu21R,2STRY P061live cash flow. Full " pnce $35,000. Call for cpts, drps, !ltv, refrig. Tn ·plex apts w /frpk S500 mo. Aft. 6pm • bltns. gar age, amall teri>: Ricbth Rltr . . 839-9317. yard.. 36S Hamilton. $350 ~97 642·3263 ~1trano leoch 32 I 8 ~-s-_3894 ____ _
') ••••••••••••••• ••• ••••• ... HI s.c. PL.AU .
.·4 Pt.exes. Xlnl rental 2Br l Ba garoae Ja lot 2 "'•-· E ---i area CM So Co11sl ln· · • -· • · "'""I xecutJve """' vest64s-1ioo . includes yd maint $3 home. 21100 $~ f t. 4 ----------t mo. 493·7649 Bednn. 3 bath, aocJ.udes
56 UNITS-Pride o Cor.adet M.-pool service. $650. mo. A.er~ few Sal• I 200 ownership. $450,000 dn, •••••••••••••••••••••• (Dave) 545-7506 eves.
SPACIOUS UVIMG ••••••••••••••••••••••• top Orange Co loc. 5 yrs, SAVE TIME Avail. Jan 20th, 2 bdrm
LIVIMG TWO $1.350,000. Owner/bkr. If looking for apt or hse condo. a ll appliances.
ACRES
~-only. 63J.l.234. In COM. NB, or Irv. eal pool & ree. facilities.
4 Bedroom . 2 bath in pre-ea 1 Bo d. R aJ sllg1ou,, Wcsl cllff ro nt Y ent 8 prlv. patio. Nr .,S.C
l'ormal entry open to Fixer upper hoos<'. 3 car SEAL BEACH T RIPLEX fr om $37 s. No Fee. P l aza. $325. 675·3412
large living room with garage, bunkhoust-, out Localed across lhe street 6'7S-S930or6'13·7229 eves., &752·7363 d_!Y!:--
THE LAND.. bn<:k nreplace. fully up· bldgs, fenced. Lots of from the beach on Ocean So. ol Hwy, 3 Br, 2 ba, SS.SO 2Br. fncd yd. Cpts/Drps.
1s you rr. wit h lh1li l'(r aded k itc h e n , trees.Pl'ict'<l for quick B l vd . O W N ER mo. Beaut. mun1cured kid• & d ogs 0.1\.
dramatic 2-i.ly. A·Crttme landscaped yard, renced. sale Ai:lt ANXIOliS mus t sell h W lk t h
3 8
° 2 b •~ lo · (71·4) 676•5717 · · · ome. a o s ops, S300/mo. After SP M "'• 11.: s"'p!! fru1l trees. \•egelablc OR ...... 2080 MAKE OFF ER! Only parking, brh. 548·1732. 957-0261
beach $125.000 garden. 2 car garngc ~ $150,000. ----------
OM THE CANAL 1140,000. Owner /Agenl. FIVE.ACRES J E FF REY -H OLM ES _J_a_s_m_i_n_e_C_r_e_e_k_n_e_w..i2 Br1 Ba. klds&pets,OK.
&.per 4 BR + rumpu11 673-7"60 Ltd r.""' + SlOOdep rm, + ram rm Ntat ---------Hard to find horse pro· (7111842'.7481 Wavecrest m~. 3 BR -.. 963.7ec>o
rf'dwond dl'l'k ovl'r thel----------pcrty,brandnew,3 8R,2----------beauty. avatl n ow .----------
watrr Walk 1n ocean! UDO ISLE BA home. huge family $1200/mo. lnelds tennis, Lge 3 Br + Fam Rm + $1~,900 New on mar ket. Lovely 4 room. wet bar, frplc • C.M. -UMITS pool, guarded entrance. den + ore or sewin1 rm.
ASTE.AU! br&3baonoverslzedlol caraar.Won 'tLasl.Bkr. 8 •2 B R p ride o f Agt..640~. SS15.53S-702l
2 + Dt:n , nr. oc•ean
$89.900
CAYWOOD REALTY
IMC. 541-1 290
$259,000. (710 877-5001 ownership unlt.s. 8 Mos ... EWPORT HEIGHTS OR 522·0530 PRIVATE 1 BEDROOM " · ----------4 new. These won't last. Spy&Jass view, Jbr. Cam Gas & wtr pd. Adults, no
J ust listed. lmmac. 3 br ~.ts IH!llerhurry' rm. Yrly. $1050 m o pets $.2.50 to $300. 207:!
&Cam r m w/2 used brick for Sale 130 540.3666 Gardener inel'd. 644-8184 Newpor t Blvd. Dy:.
frplrs. Sl 12,500. •••••••••••••••••••••• 548,.135; 646-6423 evs. Cotta Mesa 3224 .. MEW U STIMw Studio apt, Ros~moo
DOUD
Large family hol1\<! on Towers. Leasure World ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport Riviera Condo. 3
ponls1ted. cul de sac lot. f'o r 11 a I e. F. s ta t MESA WOODS br, 2"2 ba, ram rm. ten·
in lx!st Newpor t area. 4 Cdl
5414331
sacriOce. 494-3167 3 BR. 2 BJ\, big fenced nls els. pool, Jacuzzi.
KEN BRITIINGHAr,1
AE AL TOI<
tllfltelall lllAl l \fAlf
·Owner.~~1 ----· 2 HOMES, I LOT RHl\on, Est. 1907 Bdrm..'I .. 3 balhs. den. or· ~~~~~~~~~ y a rd. 4 y rs. o Id sauna. S450 mo. 646-2402
Brand new 3 BR. 3 ba.. CM•>67s.aoo fl~e. family rm. & lge ~ LotsforSGI• 2200 $5251 m o nth. CALL Newly redec. a br house, ----------1 stamed gla11<i, wood & rumpus rm Gour met LAST CHANCE! ••••••••••••••••••••••• 751-3191. w/w crpl.$, drps. 2622
TURTLE ROCK tile. Plu~ a charming cot· Bluffs 3 bdrm .. 2'4 bu 1Utr.tyc.he2n wM1lahswsinlvke·lnslpoanne· TO SAVE COMM. ON 3 Commercial lot. 40x t FIMISHED LOTS MES.A VERDE "B" Santa Ana Ave. Sml
Plan J , fee l and. C't I.age. Ocean view, walk ......,.._on lush "reenbell. BR B r -"' d yd CG Ill ""-........ ·t
d d od l w lh a h G b 'vuuu .. rrplcs. R V o r b oat BR.2 Ba.Cl1CfHavenex· ~"th ""'-nnn.... .... bulld inYorba Llnda.Fourlots 4 .2 A. encoeuy&r. · ar.ava ...... r -
1
pan o m e 1 to beac . reat arga1n a~e to s"hoob & shop ... , u ..... """""' •• ai •. · r""" 962 SOSO ereat Jacun l. Corn<'r a1Sl99500 ."" " storue; many other ec. home w/aep. guest lnic. Monthly In come ready to build. Plans new P nt"' carpeung. _-..:.---...· __ . ------
location. near pools and ~CORMACk pinit. Well priced al am~nl.lles, too numerous hse. form. din-rm, sun· Busy Newpor t Blvd. permit, street is In. One S52S/ mo nth CAL L
tennis courts. A supl'r y $135.~ with land in tomenUon,callfor app't. ken liv-rm & ch arm. By locaUon.$69,500. lot ot all. $47,000 to .556-2860... BToro 3232
buy ror the younf exec RE.ALT 494.75 51 eluded. $l9S.OOO owner 1 wk onl y. ,£ 1,.. .. -~1 · $49,000.Plea.secall C:SELECT •••••••••••••••••••••••
•. and the crowint am11y: Two lfou1es on Two R<i:!i,~g~~WO~~~o MIWPORT llACH $156.950. 646-0931 eves. • .....-PACIFIC COAST T PROPERTIES Beautiful 4 BR: 2 Ba.
Best value In the area. hutldoble lots . Short -REALTY 675-1642 tUPltat.Bd.N.B. Pkac9 PROPERTIES w/frplc, DW, Ail' Cond .
'D7$112,000 walk to Victoria S ch. NEW TOWNHOUSI:: 3Br, PrDp.!I tilta &-AZ ..$PICIAL Super area. MSO. 963-4567 0 c e 11 n vu , b r ll r . 21h ba. FR. $81,900. Park. Sell lhlnp fut with Dally HARBOR VIEW 7t2•mO 631-0400 _,,.,... 5 Br 3 Ba home on coll Agent. No fee.
714-661-1811 pool.SS7·1046or67S-074& PilotWant Ads. 2bl'" den °' 3br, 2b•. ,_.~•Ut.MI M ACH ""''r ...... Opt avaU. now. coraer lot. alt uprrad• o.lanl BUILDERS -w u -red hill •
'..~2 ·75 00 \1'1nd what you want ln ~~~~~~~~ Dally Piiot CtassHieds.
"--.._. I 04 1....,_IHc'-l 04 .............................................
YllW HOME
THIH ARCH IA Y
L..-o leach I 041 L..,..a leac.h I 041 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
tE
110111 ILllRS ca.
OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE
VIEW MOME
THREI .AICH IA Y
& deco fe~. J>arqU.t <Wt. 1.,. Complete Coastal Com· 1895 mo. 840-298! '-'-•tM•• V.., 3Zl4 entr. by owner. Sl•.no. I 10 milaioa Preparations& 3 BR, 2 Ba, frple. bltna, •••••••••••••• .. •••••••
"4•'14A, 6M).J.440 •••••••••••••••••••••• Su t. m I 1aIo11 1 . E x · ~ Senate St. $425 mo. Nice bme. 4 Br I Ba, blt.M,
2 a .. o.lnn pertenced 511.a21 1$t & last +sec. 833-9305 D/W, wood burnJn1 fplc,
Nt ar BcUldlt'owera dbl sw, encl back yard.
C 2 BR., t ba., cJ>U., EllEln RA1:D1 BAY, lie lot NEW 3 bl'. 2 ba. fam rrn·2 $39$. Roxle&U-4nOM·I' • IXICUT1VIHOMI v. 1arqes le yuds. pre1U1 ou.a pvt com· s ty, quiet, nr. achlJ, ........
1
__ ln awhile do ncomet10SSI*' month; munlt y. Plane a vail. mk rowave, MlS .. day& Beaut 3 Br Westmont.
uni .,.,.._ 11111000 each. o wne 71A"'96·'7'23 ~3437.eves f73..84M rofrti . W/D, D/W lncld.
you ftnd a quaUty borne d S4!IO m 7619&t53a..38~ comeonthemaritetlhat 547•2749 •r•; evH.6J 5xZ70. B·2 LotinW.lBrH\Ba UOO• ft · . .
ls PRICED lUOKT. at 64$-"7~ Costa M.esL 833·1927 art Glbralt.a.r.' Yard qNj:t~ Lovely 3 Bdrm. 2 Ba.
SlSUOO. You •Ill Ond a Principles only pl•u• 6PN lncld. No pet.I. '151·9662 w/frpk, DW, Crtt. fed ~~~:: 1o!.1!d ~t~1~;. e.c-ftope.ty 20• H r•o.w+, 4 0 forlnlo tJ:;:1:f..MMS8'1Altnt tr•. Rute yard, i>atlo. ••••••••••••••• .. ••••• .....,. 2 0 3 Br. i Ba. tom rm. pool fire lac•, fNit tr•••• ••••••••-••••• .. •••••• table, dbl aar, be aut oc~N VJE W. EQJoy JI UMITI.. C. M. RET'IQ'S on the O>~orado yarcL $42$. 6'2 5468 or I ........... a 3240
coold.nl u-.. •k ab 00 Pride ol owncn"lp, xlnt RI Y • r . 91 0 1 L s c 11 64.S-'483 •••••••••••••••••••••••
lbo par.lo iu BBQ whJtt cood. Income l l00,000. btllUtlhl.t ddu1.c 24 ir eo• 1 Bedroom Cl~ pDal
the kldt pla.y basketball ~ 4owa. OWoer w/he1p Mobile home. Uvtd In 7 E/Slde sharp a Br 2 Ba, tennis euper locauoa.'
or Yolttrb all on tbt floahce. P rlQc only m oa. A r ••'• 1n o1t Din Rm, fple, p.UO le ~~. •
pavollecuta TRULY 4 pt...._ beautiful park. Ca ll yard. Rel.tit, ltv, MS. ~'AMI.LY HOME. 12 UMTS.,..... (114)922-'7'9. Blythe. CA --___ ....... iiiiill ... s1::F.{~mav !!.':.,~4~~ CM.t~ ,._,Br 2 ... dbt cal' HAPPY
215 ft.o.I "'•r -.:C\U w/Mlp n nenee. Prtne. Pt•# 1rtr 2110 1ar. ~ • pattlal ~EW YE,.R
• .,..Uot • ' Ont1 pl••••· Coot.ct _ ... ___ .......... ocee *"· "'" Marina " "' ... Mil I .. _,,..M r.U.'711 w-.-1........:..:... Hl1 .. aDd1 atu . t4H ~ 1'TI ln a bf'IDS '""'~ me •• W1r pd. eu:.fllO ot new btuh laomt. .. ·-1&$--~------~.'"'....su.n. ou&. (rplc., dbl. prqe.
pvt. yard, Chlld.r• ~ •
pelt welcome. o.i, mo. Galb' t.a.
5lJ ll'Ua It. ..... --1. or...,:uu. · \
1
.... . . . ..... .
DM.Y PllOT 1.&a_.._,tt ,_..a..d Aperttfte•h u.tw-a. Af1w ...... u.fwa. Af ., ...... u.tw.. VecaK. ....... 421 Offk• Rtllhll ....•................. .•••................••. ..........•..•..•.•.... .....••..••............ ...................... . .................. .
H U. t ...... le.ch 37 41 c:.t. MeN ll24 c..M Mae 3124 ............ 1112 Rancbo Lu Palmaa tat· •OFFIC~•
1•11 Mille 1d ..._..,. U.._"' bd .,............. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1111 r~1crvaUons for I From $100, 2713$ For ......... • •••-•••••••• ••••••••••••-........ ••• •••• ••• ••••• ••••••••••• ....... .._.. ..,. BR brm +den. h1wrt0Ya r• Rd. Lacun• Nlsuel A
T~y. J"'U!!X 1011171
U n rt -.-&.. 3 •u L-..1...-... ,,..,..__ .. • 326' 2 ':t'm near beach. nuwl 2 _...room, auper East.side 2.Br, aba. upper, .... c. Z • $300 4' '32$. fW"nlshed. Cmr fairway R l.&n·tm·,...-. • r•---.... ....,._ 1244 ---~ o k St location. n o pet&, D/W, New. nocbUdJoenJ. Pool Ir ne tooa, quiet ··-• ...... · -1.-•• • • -••••••••••••••••• ... •••••••••••••••••••• •• .. •••••••••••,..•••••• !:.~~ ••5 • · S22S/mooth 568 W. pets.$320.Ph5Si2-$2!2 ...... 131·711f t ..... t •• •aman.---ote •warehouse spa
SlaG'lJl 3 b«lrm, 2 b•, New 2 BR z1, b1t Blutf1 eondo. 3 BR. 2 ba, Wlhon,ioq.aptE. Nl 1'aBR-.•& ....... ~ 4300 UOO 1q.ft. to 30001q. crpu,Cit1lif,fenced yan1 .tov.nh me 1~ Herala ~ 1.ikenewla&SO Mo ~HICJNf 1752 E/Slde.U&hl,alry3Br,2 ce --uf.No •••-•••••••••••••••••• f\rml!Olpc:rsq.f\ •
• ~ ~1 A&ent. no Park c:i1 bJ u rad~' AaenUl4&·1133 ••••••••••••••••••·~··• Costa Meu-2140 Thurin Ba, bltna lD tnplex. $360. kfd~/peta. SSO. of lat Yowia caroer atrl. non· Mt-44$3 6'2·7 fee. • I Y P~ · centc views, luxury Street.Brandnewdeluxe No pets 652·001 or moartnt.&.1l·T1S41 111nllr wanted to ab1re•---------t Gr~~~S:~3 B1c Can)•on 2br condo. lldwt apts furn " unf. 2 ~oom u'!!:. Lovely, ~Ha.1 Ml....,t .._.. 3e6t Zbr 2ba 11pt w/1ar, tlept ODl dlx suites. uUl
Nice 2 Br Condo J'. · View. Pool, jacuail & NearRe&~alShoppme s~~h°f8t0'f1 omeeype 1 8 1 b A all J •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• tobcb.CilllMoo.T\lesor A/C, •mple prk1. fr
batba,fn>lc.W/D,pallo, tennia640-1044 Center. Heated P<?OI. !""/ a:;: I}' ~~~ms. 15[h sl'istv r Nan. s.m.aBr 2b8a:tocl.i1U' Wedeve.~ • $16S.Nobereq.8'1 carport Cpts/drps j&cun1 Nr corner Alicia _.,., mon ·Qua ace · mo. r. nu • .._• • . $365/mo: Pb 963.2827: le«h 3241 Duple.x,2br,lba.newcpt, Pkw &P~eodeValen· Properties, Inc (7 14 ) schools &shops.99&--0659 D&At.ouwacb. coay,hORellableM/Ftoabarebtn It_... 44 ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• drps, pnt. wabr/dryr, 1 Y 752·1846, ask !or Mike ~· Nwpt Deb apt Sl9l mo. •••••••• .. ••••••••••
Br 1~ Ba\_fplc, view, nr 11tv, refni:. Mulure adlt.s. c 1t. ALICIA PLAZA Sullivan NEWh I BR~EDbAPTS l LM&ml 842·1603 Ja\/llt. abu. uut, yrly. 4DILUXIOJC.'S
Siper 3Br, l~ba, frplc, to bch k 11nops. No pet.s. no pets, ~/mo. S17"9 Bae eon "' 1 rs 1vai · N 61U1ZT Cont l 2S. bltns, patio, nr schools. Ad\IJta. $410 mo. 494.3223 Bo Is a, N w pt. H gt b & VlLLAGE 2 BR, l Ba duplex. Cpls, Slartlnc $215 to '26() • .No wpt Hits. lovely 2 81', -....i~m., Hlhs 1 lM32 Pelican $4.2S/mo. -5'8·5041 581-6151 581·6130 drps, refri&. &lv .. encl chlldrenorpet.s. new cpta, no pets. $295 BESE.LECl'lVE .,... .... ._,am. w e A
(714)536·8754 or bdrm 2 ba 2 frpls, Sorry,nopet.s. car. No pet1 $270 mo. 64~11 mo."94-3223orS48·5804 lncbooehlferoommate, ar.lorZyr.leue.KLa
1'""l'38-20 8 Emerald Bay Terrac~. PRIME RENTALS 646-12A6 CaUShareAHome/A... Forest aroa. e , .. u.. l O $550 Bi Ca 2 BR d . Lge Z Br 1~ Ba 2 sty Newport Hets 2 Br 1 Ba, ,,_ HattiN. Executive home n ear cean view. . g nyon, ., en Newporthoch 3769 • pool ltlds ok N'o pets' patio, 1ar, new cpLs. 845-'Hl50l'M4·5'51 '11(-5&1"9$3
ocean: 4 Br, 2 Ba, ram 6Zl·l62S ~Cove. 2 BR. $850 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Woodland Village Nr. achla, $26$ & up. 2310 drps, mature adlta. S215 llnuDat. needed. female. .
rrn. din rm, wet bar, U.V. Hills 3 Br. f1untty, 845Paularino Santa Aoa Ave, Cll. yrly.5'8-5306 Share 2 Bdrm 2 'Ba apt.,
ftrerlog, outdoor BBQ & nr park, S650 mo. Ph: den: lmmac. ~ OCIAMFttOMT Beautiful, new. •dull 64~;213-371-4032 1 Bdrm apt 1 ba. kitcbcn CM. Must~ neat. Rella; SlSO/mo. Doyl.e541-U
pool. $7.SO mo. Coru;ider 494-b733eves/wknds t~.V. Hllls 3 Br, tam. $800 3 BR, 2 ba, yrly. $595 apts. G!eat location. <! Very lge 3 Br 2~ Ba apt, &llvit\t, oewcpt. ble. SS6.2940 bcl UAM,"
be/opt.848-070'7 3 Br 2 ba atrium frplc Sherm.snAssoc. ti40-6SOO STEPS TO HACH pools.2;acuuli. . in quiet area ot CM l"e '300lmo. 673-6522 aft8PM.~ .......,.tAl..tal 45
IETHE ht!
Iri:-. brand new duplc•x, 2
. BR -2 BA, frplc. gar.
facing park. 1 child OK.
No peU.. $375/mo. incldb
waler. Cloi.e to rrwyi.,
• tthhl .. sh ~!--Ge
962· 771r7 or 536-0907.
WATERFRONT with
Boat S ap. Lavlilh decor &
, furnishmgs. Tennis, Jae,
• · the works! S.0...724
Co ' I j oJ w lk 3 BR. 2 ba, unf. $475 Move In Immediately ·• • •••••••••••••••••••• mp ete Y rem . a SHARP 3 bdrm. block to 2 BR, 1 ba, unf. yrly $440 encl pallo. $395 mo. BIG CANYON EAST M/F to share luxury 3Br, MOOSq n of Industrial P
to
1
b<:h & tow':r.J6.SOlmo beach . .JI extras. $600 Bach. unf, yrly.$235 Bachelor$225·SZ-l5 536-4144 Lovely S Br on golf 38& Condo, AC. W/D, perty w/1800 sq ft ol
t1l June. 640. 7 mo 64s-f.680 I '"'YIH!O·O.._.. CO .... DO 1 Bdrm S26S·S27~ co u r a e . S 7 5 0 I mo . pool, J8CUUI, tennis, pets ....__. oles. ,....&.1SS3. ~ noi. ", " Lge 2 Br. den, fplc, 1 ~ Ba. OK. 23 p eferred ,...,... -DOWMTOWH Charm1ngpanell.odocean· Sec.bldg.2BR.yrly$800 2Bdrm$295·S325 patio, i.h opnf. $325. 6M-&M9,644.o509 ove:r r . · RandolpbAve CM Adlts.642-7508or842-1Z76 $~ + uul. ~mul 2·1. ' L.AGUH.A fml home. 2 Br, l bu. Rental Office SPAHIOM' HEW 549-8642 lNDUSTRlALSP AC ~xe 2 bdrm . ~ath carpeted. s huttered, ~nD~-6 2Br, l~ upper, pvt 3 BR, 2~ Ba, Npt Hts .# ~ ~ 1 For ~l in CQ.s~ M
d p exrental. VU n<f7 frpk; .~ . .:SJA) ~ 'T'SL M'anafemenr ·gar1&&~.~'7ft'IO. -.,~-]'-?"""car glt;-"et\C elyea~ i Ba, f~~~ fb~ ~~.tr.;-aaiatti ~~:f:':ite~l~h~~v~f~'. 3 Br 2 Ba,2carearbeach 7~-008lor&t2-1603 m-0056 paUo, frplc, massive bcb t o San Clem warehouse or mf
io Lown & beach. Huge house. + pools & tennis. VILLAGE calEK ~e!~· 646-n75 or $140/mo. Must be nui: 64&-52Dor&t8-25&Jevs.
bv.rm:&dininga.lcove. ~~·~r yrly. WESTIAYTRIPLEXES New condo 2br +den reliab&e,aft&,49'l·7'91t COSTA"4ES4
Lge. kitchen wtb1lt·UlS, • Seek straight prof'I or COSTA MESA and3br,2ba,2carattcbd Nwpt Shores 2br, lba, Lge Nwpt Beb condo to ..._.'lOME
in cl. wash/dryer .Bluffstownhomeendunit. bos.mantoahrequally BRANDNEW iiar & opener. Across retric loci. Encl iar. abr avall 1/14178. All Build to suil 10,000
4 Br, 2 ba, ram rm. rued Separate 2 ~ar gara.ge. 4Br. 3ba, l'e COWJtry ldl., w/2 ot ttla peers a abarp· 1 Br From $280. from SC Plau. From Pool It lndry · UOO. faclllUes. MS-2632 Ft. Phcentla Av
yd. Close lo sch ls & An outstandmg offenng patio, nr shops, scbool & Jy furn. ocnvu hm w/lge 2 Br From saos. $460/mo. 75t·7979 & 64C).S07lot~ N.N.N. leaae
shops.$4SOmo.968-3487. at $500 Mo. Ref. re· pool.$S.'i0/mo.559·&H4 pool, $285. incld· ulil, 3Br,2BaFrom$395. 540-5570 StepaToBe~chBach;yrly Fem. b H nice condo WESLEY N . TAYL
I •• I I'" quired. Call: maid, n...4-r.644-0iM w/....,.J etc Near ocean CO -"' . Mls.5IONREALTY yrly 3br, 2ba, steps to 6'UJ• Del 2 b t +gar c $225. wntr$19S67~or ...,.... • ' ·
Freshly decorated 111 rhofte 494.0731 beach. tennis & pool. 2 Br. steps to bch, pool, till :~t'J.~1:~.1 ~I~~ 1;ca~~~ Coru;:llabreafenant. Y~l; 673-7954 · 846"°'20
644,.
910
H.B. Vacant. $2ti5/mo. $625/mo. 673-2493 June 30. $325/mo. Call near So. Coast Plaza. lsc. $300. 645-4266 SHARP XTRA LGE 2BR. c:-tdow• 1300 sq. rt. M·l Ai.k for Mack !162 17SS. $600/mo. On the ocean at &IS-0721. U I h I ---~ ------Ulue Lagoon Villa. 2Br. 38r, 2ba new, $525/mo. Children welcome. No Elslde 1 Br avl Feb 1. Steps t o beach. UP· Y nc)h pettHt d 223 ph elec·
LOVELY 3 . UH, :! Ba ~ba, p\'t bch. 2 Swim· Winter. 1 blk to ocean. OCEANFRONT A PT. pe~. Rental offlcu open Newly deco~'d, pvt patio, gr_aded. bltns. incl refria. Share a ome or 11ptment oor, • · wl!rpl,DW:.'r~~.k1d/pet ming pools, tennis . 6732493 2Br, 28a, $495 mo., S695 daily10·5.8.\0DakcrSl,I $'M5mo.54f>.5284 Wmter.631-0167 T""'·'f. CQ.uu~ Ter~nal W~~;.~~llt OK $415. 9634.367 Aitent. 1 2 1 3 ) 7 0 3 _ 0 2 3 0 0 r -yrly 1.994.2992 blk W. or Bristol. -~ • 10. -v. mo. """"""
No rec. (714)327.6771 1Br3 Ba. brand new 2 sty --557-5.215 2 Br. new crpts & drps, 3 Br 2 Ba, l blk bch, 'CU.t ~ ~ ~" 1_540-_9352 ______ -I
---executive hme. Lit. 1-'ll., 2 BR. 1 ba., winter ; 'h blk. patio. kids ok. No doas. dean, yrly. $400. c., ~ w ... 61~ ( M
3Br, llonui. rm .• t•pts, L-HICJU~ 3252 DR. 2 fpclc's, atrium. to ocean. S300/Mo. incl. $275.645-2274 Call673·2S07 Forover6yn.832-4134 1300 sq .. t. ·l spa -•~ f 1 "'':!JI -r-·-LA CASA ILAMC4 front olf1ce, large r "'I'-'• rp l'.~ mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• outsland1ngviewofn1ght util.Agt.675-1642 FOURSEASONSAPTS Big Canyon Beauly·2Br. New 2 br, 2 ba condo. door, 1791 WbltUer
____ 968_·714ti Lovely 3Br, 2ba, Cnc4 yd, hghts & ocean. Guarded S 8S I I f p I Boch, llr·A•I Mow Spacious 2 br twnbse.1~ on 10th fairway, sub-lse Oose to bch. Pool/jac. $220. mo. 646-0681
l brcoodo, carport. crpL-;, i.pnnklers, gar opener. ~1 ~~mm .. wB/lennls :..C,;,e'f.: amg e um. oo • All utils pd .• cpts, drps, Ba, pool, pvt P•.Uo, am !!,!5~. Callforappt9·S. N.B. (213)'103-0381. 540-9352 A~ ..,CJ\ mo No pe" nodogs$42S/mo.•97·3146 !"""• JllCUZZI. y owner . n .. 18 pool. ln<iry. rac·s. Adults hild 0 K N ls ..... 5 ............. .... ...,. -· .... --S9'75mo.~ 645-...... over 35. n o pets or c · · 0 pe · ...,, · Femal t bar 2B 2B l ..... 1W...a
• 979'7888 Beautiful Sea Terrac B h h'ld C l1 S 735Joann646-6483 ..__.. 2B· •-d 2u.. e os e r, a home.J Bdrm,3 ba.fam. Newport.CreslCondo,2or ac elor apt, s tep to c 1 ren. 61 ue: ...... new r ... en, ~ PkNwpt apt..DicelyCurn ••••••••••••••••••••
• 2br. 2ba. gar, 18 m1 to bcb rm . Crmldining & Hving. 3 Br, +den, tenrus, pool beach, ulil. pd. 556· 7707 or Henry: 2 Br uni, adults, no pets. Ba in prestigious Big Ca· $190.640-5342 et. resp. person tor
$395 o. .. community w/pool. fac, cl06e lo bch, Agent. gu.1334 or 642-6578 642.9137 $270. 1 BR unf, adults, no nron Townhomes. Ten· W •-' M/F 1 or 2br mobile home rn pet.s $230 22:82 Mlnor ms. pooa., sec. garage, Roommate an...,.. · Nwpt/CM area.
3br. ram rm, Ire master Jacuzzi, tennis & beach. 645-0295 aptA.64s-?096 • all latest amenities. No $137.SO/mo. Call aft 61-_;..------~
'. bdrm, pool, $475 S72Sl mo. Poss. lse/opl. Sub-lease, no deposit re· 2 Br.12 ba, all blblnsl. frplc, cbUdren, no pet.s. $725 pm. 645-3904 ...._./IPrit/
752-9223or4994611 qu1·red. avail. i·mmed San"'•-....... )776 enc . gar., a cony. mo For a Pp l -.... -m... Laundry rm. $325. DCIM Pohtf 3126 • · Fem roommate to occupy ,.._.
lma1une hvang m a new t.7!>-4912 Bkr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• TSIJ Mgmt 642-1603 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 213-928-l&&4 2 br 1 ba hse CDM. ••••_.•••••••••••••••
S9'l.000pati?homeforon· --PAHK LIDO lmmac. 2 Br apt, pool . Panonrna vlcw newclnl 2 Bedrrn Apt, w/2 car $162.50 + utll. Kim ..........
_ _ _ !Y $422 .mo. near ocean. 3 BR. 2 ba. :.plit·level !i~ndeek, 3 blki. to bch. VIiia Vl1to Apt1 & 2 Br 2 Ba+ den 4.ptex. gar!lge, utll paid. Llle 64().7408or 997-6146 ()pportuMty
Nice Jhr, ~ba dbl gur . 2Br, Fam Rm_. pool. townhouse, r:iccs pool. :.I $2SO ~o. Sandra Hart-2078Thunn Nopels Mgr 496·1097 avail. can rurn. 642·1334, PetlOll wanted to shr 3 ••••••••••••••••••••
fncd. many xtrJi. 2 Kid!> rlbh.-.e. oth~r xlras. 18 or C;ir c arport, ref rig., ne.s, 4!).HS6l. Br3Jld new. large 2 br. 642·6578 bdrm 2 ba hse. Tustin. TIAYELAGEMCY
O.K. o r Quut11r1ell ~.008·11623 wshr'dryl'r. ;idult cpl. 1'2 batownhou1>f1W/fnm l bdrm modern clean . 2 BR unf, cpts & S140mo.544-o'T71aft7. Lelus showyou how "ngll'~. S430'rn" Nr Niguel Shor es, lov<'IY only.$.i50.Hltr&l2·53~ ~nh room.Xlntarca.$350 -qulel&pnvale.$240mo. start an agency. Tra ;,o2~c~t;~1wn & "It•" land. garden hmc, 3 Br 2 lla, ~ h b . Ult -. 1 Unfumilhttd TSL M"ml 642·1603 49Hi220 :::rs:i:Ol. adllS. no pets. exp. not necessary. To
.,.. ,..,.,. fplc,cuslo~drps~cpts. tc~s.~\,!urly'poo , ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEW2BEDROOM BToro 3132 ~ startup & oper all
i.urrouhd 1n patios & PegBromsJUtr ti45.1531 lalboobland 3806 2 Hr. garage, A/C. $315. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SanClemt.t• • 3176 forlt!m 4350 capitalrequired$30,
grdns, walk lo beach , ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo. 6454655 New 38r, 2Ba, in 4·plex, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• (714 )838-9242 Hullti~on
3242
comm pool. sauna & ten-H arbor View home, Spac. 2 Br apt, partly ---AC cpts drps bllns. 2Br 2ba condo Lge liv SINGLE GARAGE o · Es ortSh H..t»Our rus. Guard gale. $600 mo. Carmel Jbr, fnm. Va· furn, compl cpt'd, O/W, E~'!SlDE sunny 2 br, ene'I aar, nopets,'586-7681 ' . . aung. c . are r ••••••••••••••••••••••• 493·1675 cant. $575 644 ·6977, drps, Swedish !pie, i.un· patio. garage, bltns. orsa&.al.37 rm .• dlnine. rm .• Gar. CarorstOC'aae. tala & employ. aaen
tf UN T t NG T 0 N 1137.3344 deck, eur space, lndr) $275.1602lstSt.548·2127 $325.(7H)63M720 $35/mo 962-3S.13 Sellorpartner.646
HARBOUR Sea Cialt> end 3 IR. 2 IA TH ----facil. Yrly li.e, no pets. no HuMhlC)tOft hocll 3140 T_. 3190 OHie• Rtttfd 4400 INTER I 0 R DEC 4
unit twnhSl' 4 llr on Large landscaped yard, children . $500 mo MESAPIMES ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• RATING, 11ai:nptl
lllgoon. 30' shp. l \r lsc. ~h1ldren welcome. San Clemente 3276 673-0279 New studio apt $230. 1 Br IRAND MEW $240 MCLD OFACI SPACE tal t.ucr 2 Or C
4hr, pool, 1 ~ m1 to ocean.
$625
7l4·8·hi,5666, Bob Graf
• no!J(!b. ~0.11..i:i $440 MO ••••••••••••••••••••••• S285. 2 BR $350 Avail. nd • UTILI fa of.a tos. T •. 645·8789:cve~ 5.'>7·j27J Entertainment condo on ldboo Ptnittsuto 3807 Jan. 1st. Pool. ja('uzz1 & 3 Br apt/co os, conve· Wattt, gu, eleclricity. 1·8 ROOMS 55<SQ Fl o.c a i ons. r a 11
---hall by ool Below ••••••••••••••••••••••• laundry rm. Adulti., no rucntloc.5umtsavl.$400 Uniqu e 1 & 2 Br ~ guidance. $8,800. "rerir
'"'M 3244 Ckean. Mtn, Shore Vll'W ma r k~f al $ 3 9 s St.cps to beach 2 br, 2 ha. pets. Open daily. 2650 up. 964·1507. 640·1751 Complete recreational 714·77G-1755. Mr. Hill
••••••••••••••••••••••• upgradcd3Br28a.S4iS Cathedral clgs, 3 Br, 2 frplc. encl ~ar. \dults, Harla A,·e. C.M. f~t~a Newdeluxetwnhsaptslg raeUitles. Adults ooly. ~<.O: OCEAN FR 0 N
l:mvl'klll,J Ur4!1a1Jo. +w.socdues.496-1177 Ba walk·IDS Xlnlcond no pets Yrly be $425. \'erde Drive l::a st off Jbr 2ba fplc bllru. WD Sorry.nopets. ~,~lfl MARKETMustsell! + bonus rm. OxToa!. •-h )
269
ts-s'molse !l68·86Z3 673-36tO:G7J.1900 HarborHl,·d > !>1924~ hkuppatJodblattachgar Cclfonl•Aph ~ ~ ;;.._,:_,, $35,000 y r . Age
S52S 547 1~1-1. 833-321. Mewport .... ac ----$395. S4S.3604. 963-4211 14932 Newport Ave. ~,,A··lt' &&2,.758 • -•••••••••••••••••••••••SHOR!': CLlfl''S, golf CoronadetMcr 3822 Spac. newly pnt'd 2 Br. 1 -Tustin.Calltoday: A4A)p-•-=-~_;_------'
REMTALS FIHERHOME coursenew,lse.J Br.dbl ••••••••••••••••••••••• ba, enc patio. dshwshr, UVENearTheBeach! 832-6122 (t' IALIOA
2 BR,2ba ....... $525 BIG CANYON.Absolute· gar, adlls. quiet area. no chldrn or pets. CasodefSol _._1 ntsfwnillMd Bayfrontfastfood.
3liR,2 Ba .. $475/5..15 ly smashing Augusta L.itUe yard care. part 646-5251. BeaulifulAdultApts -r=u;_-,_,11shed ltoO 1501 WntcAffDr. S30,000. yr. loco
•. 3 BR, 2'': ha . , ... S.9:"> f'tan. A masterpiece of rum. $575. 492·3666 n;SI ~ v G~ & Wat.er Paid. tJll' Newport Financial Clr Seashore Real Esta
t BR. 21'2 ha ... $500/625 dramatic design with un-.'[}... l~~~~.c."s_ ~~~ri~·elc~~ J1~!>~ 21661 Brookhursl, HB ;;;:;·;::;;;:~··~;;;:t Leotlftg Offlu S,.C• 1_67_5-_58)() __ . ---'----4
4 Bil, 3 BJ.··· .$6001150 surpassed golf couri.c S Ju __ -~ _ _ 0 • 962-6653 Call on Site!M1na1er ._ ... _ _. 'liR 3B $795 • R d CM m pkng.children K.Walk (Q!arde n Grove). ~ -3nn'2•i~;l1'111l,;,·;·$41SO $.::S7~o~th8 · & e n . Capbtrmt0 3271 GARDENAPTS to 17th Sl. 642·2164 or New dlx 4Plex. 3 8r. BilauUJul2bedroom1pu <n4>&G3luexu4s 0,pa ._.ty 50
HASTINGS & CO. ••••••••••••••••••u••• CORONA DEL MAR 673-0782 Frplc, bllna. w/d hkp, i n e x c e I 1 e n t becutf•e low htc •••••:••••••••••••••
.. ., '"LTORS 640-5560 Lge 2br. 2ba condo. Avail 2 Br Townhowse, frplc. 2 Br townhse. Also l & 2 br yard. gar S39S 54S.3604, neighborhood. Prl val Ole apace in Newport· lfyau re not getting 13. ~ now. $325/mo. Pool. tennis. Some ocean apts w/pool & jacuzzi. 962-4218 patio view Crom lovely Airport Area. Reception, return on your Inv
NO FEE! Houses. condos. 499·3~.S & Catalina views. Close 645·2't98 kitchens; encl osed phone serv., conference ment. call Sandy R - -A.af..l'\..let-Clean g a r a g e s ; p o o I : J\jax Co m 3744 du p I exes . Rent a I S.to .,.a 1280 to l''ashaon Island & fine ..,._ clubhouse. S3l5/mo. Call rm. kltch, secy aerv. die· · -
Pavilion, 675-4912 Bkr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• beach. Also I Br. 644·2611 2 Br. l '' Ba lol wnhousel. 2 Br 2 Bal. new cpt.a/dbrps&, Carmen <Mgr. Apt. 4) a tating & copy machine. ~to LOCll 50 ga r age, pat o, poo . gar, pat o, nr beac "'""o $290 (714 )7~" 7170 .._..., .--------•I al b 2 b """".ucu: Ol' Mike Sullivan ... m · -· •••••••••••••••••••• Super " ue. :1 r, a, --jacuzzi. Adults only. shoppi na. $310 mo. "'"....,._,
WALK TO BEACH. pool fplc, ow. carpets. Kids & SpoUetis. Walk tobrh. 646-2010 960-1279 at 752-1846 or $48~. THE EFFICIENT ht. w• 3rd T.D.'
& tennis. Exciting 2 pet OK. S41S. 963·•567 4Br3BaFm rm2100sqft QuailPlaceProp,lnc. LOANS AVAILABL . 1.1.523 c·• .. 11115ft... •. Jnu1"'E Stof"y, 4 bdrms. 3 ba, sun· Agenl, no fee. Yrly, 509 Acacia 645·7048 2 Br. bltns. gar: laundry 2 Br unfurn apts. StarUng TIIE EXCITING AL TERHA TIVE credil'not lmportan ,. ,...,ni """""" -~..:..._ ___ ..:.._ __ • facll. 2009 Maple. a t S2•5. Children u t l l __.. 493 310 --------~ deck & atnum. $G25/mo WntMnster 3291 Luxury lbr w/mlnl ocean 548-6185. S250mo. adults welcome, no pela. PALMMES4A"S. "'0· 0 mo. rent nc : ~•· •
'J\u1.l k b f lse. UNUTESTONPT Rec e pt. s er v. , eroc 4 r, am rm, ••••••••••••••••••••••• &jeUy views, only steps 846-0007 &636-0891 A personalized phone cpv· Money Available, ·ma
dlnrm,2ba,v1ewofUCI. LARGE . home on REAL ruce 3 BR, 2 na to China Cove. S4SO/mo. EASTSIDE 801 nl · 11 11 j Lse. Grdnr. water, ai.· WAl'ER with boat dock, w/frplc, OW, fed yrd 67S.ZS35or751--4117 LGE 2 Br 2 Ba. fplc, O/W, Bach.1&2 BR erage, co . rm. m a sources. a pro ec
. bOfl. dues pd by owner. 2 Slory w/4 bdrms: fam $410. 963-4.Sbi Agent. No -.._ ---:.;::;.. -HUGE newer t br. bltns. gar. $300 mo. 2164 fromS220.&up. serv .. undereround prke SSOKmln. 752-6052
$S7S. 18971 Antioch. Agt rm, dan rm & pnvacy fee. . ....---..-..-.--.--..v cpts. drps. tge walk in Brookhurst. 557-4579 Adults. No Pets & ~~IE~~'Ctrf~vE MoMy W..ttd 50 ~l-5032 $1200/molse. PRIME LOCATION closet. wshr/dryr. gar 1561 Mesa Dr. SUITE,640-5470 •••••••••••••••••••• --------~ UDO NORD best Joe a CoftdoRlilli..,. No pets. $250. 549-1438 or llACHWOOD AnS 15 Blks East ol Newport 2nd Trust Deed w111ted
Orangetree Condo, new I Uon. Exec. 2 Bdr m, din· Uttfwftlshttd 3425 Bochelor, 1. 2 &3 bdrms. 6.11-1.266 2 Br2 Ba. $275. l Br 1 Ba. Bl vd.) ExecuUve 1ultea. You business exec. roe prl
.., bdrm w/lofl. Brown cpl, Ing rm. New in & out ••••••••••••••••••••••• $295. to $495. per mo. New 2 Br 2 Ba cpl.a drpe $2.t5. adults. 962-1100 546-9860 oe«t an olflce? We need residential proper
self·cleaning oven 5700/mo. . NptTerraceNu 2br,2ba.2 67S-ZSU AGT. Days. N<l bltns, adu1tS, no' peta'. 2 Bdrm ($280) avail Im 12621 Flower Str eet •tenant. Your offer lo Call Jerry Harris, d Avail.n~~mo. ON LIDO. Special 2 car gar, pool. sauna, FEE. $330 mo. 646·7993 or med. 1 Br ($250) aval <GardeoGrove>.Largel us:from$22Spermo.\Ve 75141910,niles,51111-.:W~!ll
____ ;......:..:_-~--1 bdrm+ den. Glamorous jacuzzi. 556·8013 btwn ~ (i.12,1155 1115. D/W, decks, gar, bedroom apts., close to offer lo yoo; luxurious Mot..._ Tnut
On the Lake. Woodbridge hldeaway.$850/mo 12·2or64S.1064.962·2A36 · ocean& Hunt Hrbr h · W'll t k office, executive sec'y, ~ 50 Crossing. 2 Br. Nr. ON WATER. Fabulous LG. Ccny lbr, frpl, pool. 1 Sharp 2 Br, 2 ba. bltns, Ad 1 ts• no P el s s oppang. t a e personal phone cov· .,_.
Beach Club. $600/mo. VIEW 2 Br w/beaut de· Apartments Fumfshtd !!!!15h~lnd S"o~ !Jo ·7~ 0 fMrpl,Alndr)'752. 1
77Yr10· old. WS ( 2 l 3 > 4 3 1 . 6 6 2 6 • ~a~~A~!s~ n s:19~.s:o~1dr:: erage, recepUonl1t, con· ••••••••••'•••••••••
caJl55l·l234 cor$6SO/molse. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...--c ~. . o. il· . (213)598·7681 ext 286 'd I ference room. xerox, LOWEST • ......__111-~ 3706 W Utilities pa1 . Ca l notary. Near So. Coast University Park Terrace --2 BR 1 Ba upper. D/ • 3Br, 2ba. den. cpl/drpa, (714) 840·4728. 1686 636-73'3. Quail Place Plaza, easy freeway ac· ....,..tRahs
twnhme, 3Br. 2ba, frplc, Wat• '1owt HOMtt ....................... fptc, gar. No pets. $400. gar, wsbr/dryr hook·up. H0&klns. Prop, Inc. cesa. Tell us your need!!, I tT D • ..
dbl gar . $415/mo. C•'31·1400 Dix 2 Br, *ar, yrlY $450. 640-1840 Patio, no peu. 2 kids. IUHDHIW ltOOMI 4000 we wlll supply IL Call t • ·It to
•• 5S.2-'11186 Avail 1/ 16. Phone: So fH 2b lb ~5/mo. 181 "H" Del 1 38 nlta F/P m.2111 2-dT.D. Lo--.. ,..;;:::;,..,;,;::.:.-------1---------• 675-306.'Jevea'fwknds •0 wy, r, a. M 5-9455 •2• ru • • ••••••••••••••••••••••• FalreatTermaalnoel
Woodbridge Ne-N3Br,dinffarbor View Monaco 3 SUS/mo. bltna,aar.From$.270. Roomw/kltchenette ECPANOIH91M s.t91erM&oa Co.
rm, fain rm, atrium. Br. or 2 Br+ den, xlnl. WaterfronL, lower dplx. CaJl635-3607eves. 982-'T717ukforMac S50week&up. 19711 '4Z.2171 ... UM6
$500.Pb(7l4)4M-2458 cand. $576m0. inc grd.nr. 3br, 2b•, yrly, S7SO mo. VITHITIATTMDT 2Br,chtJdrenwelcome. n S41 . .gr~ Consider thl• be1utlfully•--------'
• DewlWd Townbme, 2 Br, 644-4728 S75-7009. l7S-840S Vet bc»p; Um.lted wknd pets, atartin& at $2'5 mo. Ambassador Inn in Costa lndsC'pd bullneu park In RetlAd c:ouplo hum 2~ b•. PaUn.. rrplc, gar W!STCUFF CostoMeso 3724 duU• In uchanee lot ~ Mesa. 2277 Harbor. Cen· the dynamic N.B Airport to lend. ht 4' 2D4 T.
• 00
d, Opn r~ -u' p ~ td ed. ••••••••••••••••••••••• rum. at.udlot:/t. Pref. ._,__ ~•.. tr ally located, 235 rooms. Buslneas area. Spa<?e Aceol. 81147• • 4 BR, 2 BA, fplc, fenced ~..a ori 11 ~ _... u y i b kl b ail 4c:c ft f ••oo/mo av al now ... ard, fruit trees, 2 car .... m. ea co ece •tte••••••••••• .. •••••• , .• AN wt te en, av : l -sq .. o pure Sold_~-l '. 551AIMlor9$24'88 ' student. CdM i7~1~ phoae 4' TV. SWln\mhtJ olc at t.Oc-Mc; •200&q.rt. _,......,. 0 ..;:;;~;.;.;..,;.;;...:~.;;...;.---t au .• apacioue, $600/mo. 9AN.$PM pool, jacuul, and l'ec. otctwuebse. Call Prop. haeh. Wiil aellr
N.w t-levcl 2 BR. bea\lt. Jsl4' lut. 87M5U. room. D•llY 4' weekly 14.at Judy Quit 13M813 sa9• 560 2nd T • D.
loc.'425110. SPICIAL ColfeMeM rates atartlng from I.a• or at.op by Commette m,ooo. cub. Oall
Aient.6'4·1133 3Br2~Bacoado,newly ....................... J.M>Of()fGngeCOt.lnlfS ..... Pft.4100BlrcbSL m-4545
Woodbrid10, New 4 br, decar'd. Opt.avail. Near LAM4MCH4Ans mostbeoutlfUlof)Ol1merl &4$-4840
3ba, lam rm., A/C, or Ho11 Hotp. U2S mo. 14• Z. br 1arden •pt.a" 3 ~A rlklllilg
park a. pool •S50/rno. tJ.t0.2981 br twob ... D1bwbr, NftlnOwllhsnotnl.•
bUDI. c:ncl. Ill'• gu bbq, ............ b ,ond ~ = .. pd.771Scot*PI. t:F.o.mopabls.
~ ICUlQ, bllordS.
and exellng ~
• loelal~ T'"'*-gym, anCI vow,tCll Cit
The Vlloge. Molt of
~vou'rt IOOkl'IQ for. iwnl\Q II Q¥Olotllt,
OMand?IW e.toom
Ad\11~ omc.QPen ~1o8:00.
Now '**"O· 11..,;;;.;..:c::=.:::..::.:..:=..::-:.;,;.....,.
7
'
~w..w . . . 7100Het.W•t-cf :.:• ... ·~ .
T~v. January 10. 11178
Schools and Instruction This variety of fine schoOls
could introduce
··~
Call 642-5678 you to a new tomorrow Ext. 325
FRENCH &
ITALIAN
COOKING
Your home-Bring a guest
& lets cook together.
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wOI IM wafHncJ for yow cal.
• THEATRICAL
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COSTA MESA, CA 92'26 (714) 540-SHl
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YOGA CENTER
OfC.....,_a
IA.,._.,,......_ ........ f1•d.t'Gfll
445 I. 17th St.
(btwn Tustin & lrvlne St.)
Costo M•ao Pk. '46-1211
PIANO MADE
FUM
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for inrormulion
673-1601
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Or Leon MHICICJt 493-5922
~ Irvine College
~ of Business
lndepel'ldenoe and Conr1denco :ire y'ours w11h an 1nteres1rng. well paid lob' At Irvine we car~ • abOut you about ttle goo<t 1ob that you want to have. We II help you 10 get there Take your choice of cJroerst . •
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GIHllAi. OfffCI ASSISTANT
•DAY .AND IVEHIMCi ,IOGIAMS •
A proper and ·Cdrrect 1Pu91no11 environment. located in the hub of the Newport.Irvin•
Business and ,lndu1tr11l1Complex Jot> Pf'acement Assistant.e? Most certainly! In th• last
15 mont~ over 400 employers nave reQ14ested Irvine graduates
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MORE ntAM JUST A JOT
BEGIN A CAREER
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developing new skills as a Cosmetician. Alter •
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COSMETICIAM CLASSES HOWi
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"TCHARI15 BEAUTY
CO(.LE&E
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MIWPORT
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11 ILUN CHILM4H
~ArtktflftM ................ k ..... 18 A Ur1.1v of Ant Pol-1 lflto)
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For htf--"-ul:
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H.wporl Air A1soci.... ffl9M Sct.od & Hyltl9 A aaedeli•
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$805
I S22:..00 OO<fl\I
•FAA ...... OVl1h
Course Include$/
35 Hours i1tgh1.11me In Cessna 150's with 20
hours •dual 1ni.1ruc11on. lnd1v1dua1. ins1ructlon
tar tored to YOUR ability. 38 Hours Ground
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20 41RCIV.FT • V •tLAIU 4 f
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For~ D .. 91s C .. MOW
'79·1155 · · lt711 Al~W.ys..ttl _ .. ,__ 0-C-.A.WpM
LEA RH
PUBLIC
SPEAKING
. the EASY • .,, I
No~. the ramous MAXIMIZE COURSE Is being
oflored In two action-packed. dynamic Saturdiy
s~sions. In th99e two meetings you wm learn
to.
•SPE'AK INPiJBLIC.
•BECOME MORE ASSERTIVE. ,
•BUILD CONFIDENCE & LE~OERSHIP,
•IMPROVE YOUR MEMORY.
PLACE: Airporter Hotel. Patio Room
OATES: February 11 and February 18
TIME: 8:00A.M. toS:OO P M .
• Study & Social ActlvlMes. Sommer Program '
Also Has Remedial Reading. N¢wport Aca~emy ~! M.Qge}i~g & Acting
For a FREE. BROCHURE fully describing lhe
OIJtstandinQ MAXIMIZE SEMINAR. 1111 out the
coupon and moil it -TODAY. __________ __,,_ ______ ___
ttilTMAM .AND ASSOCIATES
1103 Avocado, Wt• 235
Newport leach, CaOf. 92660
Certified TeocMr1
....,.,,_., lffcJa t7t·t24 I
20221 c,,... .. Sf.
Fowtt• Yahy 119·1750
I 0551 Mcfoddeft A• ....
s-ta Alta 54M75J
2515 w. s.iflower . ,.,.
.... 129-0321
400W.Arstrett
EmphHlzing "on-cam1re:: trelnlng by profea,ic>nala
• Photographic: Modeling ,
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• Profeulon8' Photography, Ramp,
& Com,,,.rclal Training
LHrn In A Motion Picture Studio That PrCJduc.a TV &
Radio Commercl1la I Faahlon Photography
• Call for free Brochure
(7 f 4) 546--4950
~pprcwed By C1llt. Dept. ot !duc1tlon
• Mastercharge / BankAmericard
1645~eyttoQdsu4vettue. 9~vlt\e
~. & ~ 530 Lost .. Fouetd 5300 ,tf'Mftall 5350 l'tnQnalf ····~················· ....................•....•...........................•••..•.••.••....
7100·....,w.tect 110
·SCRAM-LETS:
. ANSWERS
·vertty-Clout
Showy -Penon
OUVES
MJ uncle died because
he \ried to drive and
drink al lhe same lime.
He lost control of hls car
wtiile ttylq to fiod Lhe
OLIVES. .
•MICHELLE.S* Male Under 21 Wanted
Outcall Massage f't'lendshlp + PoS&lble
10AM·2AM 731•4482 Share Dch Hm John as-2282
Sphihlal Reader
1815So. El Camino RH!
San Clemente. Fully lie.
For appt. 492·7296
RELAXlNG MASSAGE
Bob J ames-.Llc Muaeur
OUtuU t-9, 4'M·5lll
MASSA•I
FIGUU MODELS
• ISCOITS
OUTCALL OMLY •l•·•••
For Your Valentine
Taaterua. claaalc Vic·
tartan alylc demlr(lude
portralt. Black " white
or color. Into & upp~
49' 3622 r
ASSISTANT TO
. BUYER/MANAGER .
GaJ's Department
. l'ttoM '7141644-7537
Name
Address ................................ .
City
'Zlp ...................................... .
Stato ....................................... .
"Phone ...••.•••••.....••••••••••• ,. ......... .
DAii. y PILOT C7. w..... 7100
····················~·· AUTOMOTIVE
WAAlA.HTY ClBK
Mu11l \ype. J::xcdlcnl
\\vtktnll cond1t1on:. 'and
bt•ncl1b. At.k ror Jerry
l'l-rkln1'.
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
2&8 llarbor Blvd.
COSTA MF.SA
546· 200
Automoth·e
Nt!W Del.ul Shop needs
help.
Top ~ages paid. F..nglne
Steamers, en1:1 painters,
buf'fers & pofuhcrs. up-
h1>l11 lery :.humpooers,
check oul, ~ack-up & de
llvtry. Al'ply °'t
205IJ Harbor DI. CM
&IS.1030
AVON
E_..,.
1e9"Now
ForAYON
IENISIMT ATIVES
Best time to e'ltabhsh
cllllt ornets. lnterested?
Call ~0·7~1 or Zenith
T-1~
Babysitting 2 da)IS I wk
from 9A1't to 4PM. Lite
housework. 1 Boy, age 3.
642-8980
Babysitter for 1 child, 1 v,
yrs old, 3 nit.es my b.ome .
7$1-6800
BABYSITTER. 2 girls 5 ft
6. Tue·Jo'rl, U :45 til 6PM. • Sat. 9-6PM. ~ weekly.
Refs. Call aft 6:30PM
$-lS.5165 •
Bubysllter. Reliable.
permanent for l yr old
boy. 4 dys wk. Clt . San-
dy, ~·7l32or 833-8312
BABYSl'M'ER, my home /
for 4 mo. old. 'Irv. area.
Tue-Thur, 8:15 loo 2 :30.
551-1421 .
BAKER Exp'd or appren·
Uce. Cnll blwn. 8AM & noon. 496·1410 ·
BANK
EXPERIEMCED
,ART· TIME
TILUR
UNITED
CAUfORMIA IAHK
2220c...A•.,.•
Lag1111ale_..
(71 ... 4944546
An Equal
()pPortlJnily Employer
I.Ml GIRL NeJghborhd
SV. full 4' part Ume. &i&-SS44 •
•1
l:ut'EHD8l;..EAD .
Expcr'd, mat111'e, full-•
tltnc. wt flextble hrs.
Must be peuonable &
neat. Cdl N ewport H•bor 'Yadtt Club for
appt. 673-7730 Interview· lns Wed, Thurs, Fri. &
Sat.
BEAUTY OPERATOR
F/Ume w/clJentele onJy
call for appt 5'8-3446
Boat Builder
Openlats ForMl*''d ~t-=='-5
Stock ROOM Ir
Shl""8cJ Cleric ~hH pay ck frinee . ben.eflt.s.
IALIOA YACHTS
2972 C-entury Pl, CM
556-3720, £.O.E.
Q DAl.,\'Ptl.OT T~ Januery 10 1071
Add it ... BuUd It .. Oi per it. .. Hamm r it .. Caroet it... Cement it. .. W1r~ it ... Hoe it. .. Clean 1t ... Movo
it .. .Press lt ... Paint 1t •. Nail lt...Pla~ter-it ... Fix il •.. DIRECTORY Plumb It. .• Patch t. .. 1pe It ... emooe 1 .•.
Roof it...Lendscape it. .. Tllc lt...Trlm lt ... Sewit...
Haul it •.. Ad It... Plant It •.• Alter. it ... Learn It... ·
.... me..... c_,.t S...lu C-*ectw . GtlMr' .. s ... tcff H&wrtd...... Mo.lft9 ,.....,,.,....... ~,.,...."' ....... Ser"fic• ...................................................................... ······················ .................................................................................................................. .
81cJ Appllantt~ ,._.._...1 EP_.•l'cr K J fhdfman & Son. Gen th ·1t. repair, ffmodel, ao MIVAKO Houi;l•rleontna "Two Men W111 Move paiftt YOAIJ' C•fl. PATCH PLASTERING RemoV1al1>, lrtmcn1n1. 11UPOIARCt:$tO ___ 55.,7,.1.io'=" • Contt Cu.tornAlt&Add. )'l"S carpentry & maiat Serv1ce.Wmdows,Wull•. You" We bandlo blf All t'p . l'1'et sinm_lns Prffeet.Uc'd,
2025 S. b.ui, S A -• pit l I 0 a, .,. .& IJ 111 " l.,. ~per Ph· 400-6822 Crystal, Sterling S"' er. m u v e i. o f It c c Aver••• Exl.r l Stry $39$ e&Uma~. Qtll M~ tnsrd. 008-9215. 642-2~ ~ -10 Yrs. exper. Hou10,., houtl'hold. Di11tance & :?Story $64S, lnlr SUrm
9Sl-OJ WeCAreCarpetCleaoer1. rormh:a.~ewconi..t.htit. ~dtg flent&U.Yach~.64tl57t9 Jucal. Jh.o pac kan1 • .Pri~lnclrnalrltlabor ,._..*J ·Tree lnrom111a attv1c"
.......... Slt'amcleanor1bampe>o 4c-omm 1 1>4S-41>4"' or ....................... or leave mew.age & ph. t..owe~t Jtigal rate. Guar/lmr-t'rtW\o>ot. ....................... Yard cleanui-. ~pen
·-•••••••••••••••••••• Al.ou~1tery.AJlwork ~~l l,.Jc"boodt!d Sluptolld1•r. Oumo trurk.1 numberrorreturncall. 1.ic/lru.rd. Cal T lH·!Ml. Uc320881.Ted6:$6-708S HO.MESAVERS. Plumb· dable +-reasonablf'. D~Cart-. Near So. Coast rar. ruck mount unit. ~al ContiactmgAdd1· fl aulln,r. lrt:e work Huuitecli!aninll-::ith°: ~278 MJCliAELS PAINTING: lna 4' H.eaUng. Free .:sl, _~_.C_l_t ____ _ ~~Ag~:birth6yn. ~~:·red rates. :~·J~~~od:~::~:;~d~ irt~~7ng, d emo etc !Jt!fSOOwtouch.Refs Pah1tf1MJ1P.-nft9 ext.,bouse1 & comm. =v~~~~Cl~'M~il~~w..-1• 546 ~ 536.6728 ••••••••••••••••••••••• bldgs.67~514lalt .5pm. ill·3~orl4t-0383 •••••••-••••••"'•••••••
c.p.tSen-k• 7~yrscarpelcleanln10r ~~~~le. Don Mil'>a.ey Hcllll'tnCJ PETF.RSPAINTING Finepaintingulstaybusy Pi n e & Solfd Oak
•••• .. ••••••••••••••••• Cly. Now 5 day 25""' dl!I· ••••••••••••••••••••••• LGldscaplftCJ P.:~pr'd. Reaic Rates. "'"'ce. Try me fr"" <l P1\ambin1: Replpe, re· watcrbed.s Complde lln_, rount to Introduce truck OCC STUDENT B ,. ••••••••••u••••••••••• "' "' t C ll G .,.. • • ....,.., • .... 1 l h ... A 5 *" R bl eari>et Man will lay yours ,_,., ....... factor" lo-your· lhdrieal . 1g • ~&~e,.tt1.:-~ . a ene hc/insrd. 83!.!·5M!; .-rs. wa er t>.._". ,. acc. eaaona o.
R ......... ~........ ~ ton lruck. Truh. tnm, LANIJSCAPIN.G. ....,..<>..., yn expt'r. Reas. Rates Terry's Nwpl·Bay or mane. ep1Urs " door. I enter your home ••••••••••••••••••••••• t.'tc Rand.,642-5703 Rea.M>nablepnce:.. . Independent Paper Jlm64~ 642-0l6l ··~e:ung too! Guar ~k with only wand & h06e. ELECTRICAL SERVICE J ~7-584ti -. PROFESSIONAL Pain\· Jlanfer. The fa nest a-~"'""'• •-..a . --------~-:'It. agi:er ~a,ingii. ee '11\reet1mesbettercle:in· CAU.S$15hr, &SMALL HousecleanlncJ 1..-----------1 1ng. lnter/Exter. Rea$, crartsmnnl!blp 41 vaal. -•ft...-r "~3646 log, f11ster drying. No JOBS 842·8233 ....................... Mmofw 'I work guar 642-0386 Ucllnsrd. Refs & free esl ... ~ .................. .
Shampoo & steam clean mess. Burton Carpet -;:: ........ ...-...a E:I__._; Want a REALLY CLEAN ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6'73·,;Jt>58 C4bmetshop haii returned $1.62 per DAY Color bri&hten,rs· wht Clt!:iners, C~t ti42·5575 ~ _ ... c HOUSE! CaJl Oln&ham Brickwork. Small jobs Pai.nling. ~xtr/hllr. ·Ex-------• pre·fln11.hed cabinet•
,.Pb to mm bleat?\. 'cteun C..•..t/,.-~--.a.-. --Uc:rnt36 6-45-6974 Girl. Freeest64S·Sl23 Newport. Coi.ta Mesa & ~ ~· honei.t. neat. reas. CUSTOM PAINTlNG. \J\at will flt. Into your
I d h II s _,......,.. Irvine b75·3175 ev<!ll. Uc-d !l&t-1045 Dave Exterior Speciall11t. 15 kitchen remodel plans IV, 1n rm, 3 JS. Avg ••••••••••••••••••••••• ELEGfRICIAN Pnced suusHIUE GIRLS I al _, • rm $7 50 couch $JO h " " yn oc r ... a. Uc/boo· Up to~~ oft No con·
That's ALL )'OU pa\
fora
, . ' • c r CE)1 ENT W 0 R K . All nght·free ":.t1 mate on Jfow.e<>learun" & off1re BJockwalls, i.lumpstooe, lntenor. exterior paint dl'd/insrd, J"•r work. t.ra<.'t.ors please. Carle & ~ Guar ehm pet odor. L ...... _ R bl .,. largeonunallJobo " bri l'k. "OltcrAte 111 g. Su preme ~ • b <)k repair. 15 yrs expr "''..u. t!Uona e. rree La-nsed 673-0359 i.ix.ociahsts. We welcome ' "' k nsh Cull J k ... oo ests. on t e un· Son¥ Wood Products .. 1)1') work myself. Jlcfs e;ta.Ca1t750-6625_ _ ... _... ------RE accounts Specials· dnveways, paUos. tile, wor ma · Jp. ac derbldll38-108t 6614251
·JO day lJd
1nthe
!)31·0101. ~mcnlwork.Onve~a)s. ~ Apts & Condo~. Day, cerAmtt",. q_uarry . 968-78&4~ ---------t---
. sidewalks, patios. & •• .. •••••••••••••••••••• week or rw>nth. Bonded, Rep&.U'S of All types of YOUNG MAN. ~yrs expr F\rllt. clu¥ ext/Int patnt·LJICllOfilaQ / DAILY PILOT
-~SERVICE ::,t.ua_ m. Q!_an:lioh••a~ ..._1,_,... .. __.._ fe .. ",_ • ._....11 ,.,,..._1,..._,,.t.,......, .. ..._ t1T"IT. tff'i.rd. Refs. masonry. Quality "'l,, 11 . F u1g. Pai)ilrh-~nrt~"-C· <; r C1 "t ., v \:" w 1111 ....... "'" "'C;&:.LI l'V " ...... \.)rs at w j n t er p ri c es. In w a covertna. ·ree Cublnels refinished etc. • ...................... . per1a . pt & Uphol Jt.~ si81l298 Weekly Mwntenanct> ~0·9525 L1· cen•ed •~ bonded. e&t.s. t>tS-8576 Andy 2Syrsexp. 979·2H ROO. f'S inalalled factory L1c/ln.'ird/euar. 3 rm, no Yrec est 64:!·9'J07 ---" °' "'"' llm1t us.~. halls & c.c.troctor -HOUSf'X:LEANINGasour 963·7339or673-0164 Profpaint'~tkpaperbanr· dir.ct: tilab~yn.Call DIRECTORY
h41thrm free. L·l·F·t: ••••••••••••••••••••••• G.MralStn'icn business. Reliable -1ng. Clean, work guar. ptast•/Repair llaroldGunnSt9-2961
Syste m s 631·53:>0, MARKSILERCONT. ••••••••••••••••••••••• scrvarc. ,Janice's Rai WOULDN'TYOU f're..-ei.t 951·0941, ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• RoalllFOC'Leu.Alltypes.
fHS.3939aft6 Newcoru.t.Rea/comm'I. HANDVMAN:C:irpentry, geclyAnn~at64S-lllOO. ratherbesruhng" 5364383 VERYNEATPATCJi Uolbond'd. lnau.r. 1"ree
Rm add. rl!model. patio electrical. plumbing & ----See classlficnt1on 9000 JOBS &TEXTUllE esUmate. 8'4·0421 or
Want Ads Call 642-5678 U c contr. Call 979-4411 noon . 847-t787, 557-4~ Sell idle items 642·5678 ll c.lln be u reality! Want Ad Help?· 642·5678 ft'eeest. 893-1439 537-4133
~~!'!·~ ..... ?!~~ ~~~ ..... !!~! ~~~.~ ..... ?!~. ~!!'~~ ..... ~!~~ ~~~!'.~·:~ ..... ?!~~ ~~~~ .... ~?!!~ ~~~ ..... !J.~~ ~~~ ..... ?!!0 ~-~~ ..... ?!!!
B 0 0 K K E E P E R • DRAFTING-CIVIL Insurance LEGAL RECEPTIONlST MAN~OEHENT.
f'/charge. up to trial · Expanding farm or en GENERAL "DAROS COMMIRCIAL N~rtCenter. General PEOPL~ PERSON h..Jance. Rapidly grow Career-Opportunity '11ronmental engineers & U CASUALTY office duUes incld'll fll. bee. needs p/llme ai.·
mg company has need of p I an n er~ near O. C LABORERS F'Ull & p/IJme. Work any ln 1 t t I ldU flUahfled, dynamic 1n Immt'<11.1te opening a\·a1lable 1n J person offlrt• Airport has ~rmanenl shift. N.B.11r4!3 • Uniform UHDIRWRITIR i!' x 0 YP nc 11 *re. soc. In whole1ale supply.
d1vMiual that po!>:>ttssei. of bu~ine~i> M.:rv1r<'s firm. Quulifil-<J applic:rnl J)O!>illons oJ>(!n for people Needed Immediately f\U'n. Retired ok. Telepb Requires experienc:~d red. exper In law of. Fully capital hed, notonlybkpngsk1ll~.but mu't hJvc a minimum 3 vrs bu,anes~ w/cavil engineerin g Lona & short term as· & car req'd. Nat'l co. eommercialcasualtyun· c.preferred.8«-6S1Z · 64Z·l6M. •
tho ub1hty to gra::.p tn· l?Xperil'nce. preferably 10 a Biu.m~s ~n·1t·P drafting exper. in grad· si&nments. Holiday & w/top pay & benefits. derwrlter for our UGALSICTY
tfostry knowledge & l'nvironment. This lncludell tl'.'11'.'phone and client in.: &improv~mentplaru. v a cat i 0 n Pa y . ~ C.ollect for lntervw Southern Califorrua needed for Newport lan•iement "'11>he~ to advance with conl3<'1. r:ipabllity to re,olve busine1'1 problem~ & record maps. Apply, Hos pitahzauon plan 10 your area. (213) Branchln-CosLaMesa. Beach law firm. Lecal • SUCCESSFUL
the f 1 rm. Cont n ct "n <1 run !'l 1on "ff t'l"I 1 vely w 1th II m It t·d JJrk t:. Raub Co. All.l\: avatlable. Start Todav! 6¢5-3950 COMMIACIAL .......... & ,.ood skills....... -,1 ....... Uarbara, Uyna Marine, i.u1wr\'lo,ioo General duties Include: accur<1ll' Personnel, PO Bo/C 5019, PROPERTY _,,... • ~... ..--vn
'lti0-2-UI l\'111ni: 1~ 601. dictaphonr & lettc>r eompo!ill1l'ln. 125 liak"r St, eo~ta Mesa UHDERWRtTEJl 540--MOS Espandin& bus. reef.; <iuflrl bcnl'11ti; program in modl'rn offrt·tt !f.!626. (714) 751·2510 Hostess, daytime, Apply r -Ill Sec' M ti ~oriented person
HOOKKl-:EPf.R, Pt!rma fal'1lltv. Sal:iry comml·n~urate \\1th :1bn,•1 - - --in person onJy. Derby Requlres1~~xper1~nced T;red. N~n-s!L 0~f;.· wantlnc2ndlncoo:i&bui..
nent Pilrt umc. Newport cxpcm•ncc l'lca!le Sf:nd re~ume \\Ith :>JIJrv Drain men wanted, plum· Rei.laUrllnt, J262 S.E . t."Ommel'C .u proper .y Un· Small, friendly 2.airl ot own. Call (or appl/ln
Bch, Law l)Hact•. $5.00 rf''Jlllrlc'mi:nt:.to. bt•rs w:intf'd. Will train 3848C-..aDrive Bnstol.C.M. derwrlter for our H.B.olc.848-1'00 tervw. Crown En ·
-pt'r hr. Mr.!>. Thomas. PETERSON, HOWELL, & HEATHER INC. )luo,t have own truck 546-4741 Southern California terprlse.s,8J8.3441. ~13 3776 J8bti"' :\1 J\ th Bl 1 1 C !i:!Jl.'> 75~~-_ <Acr0$S f<'rom Household furmlurc mov· Bran(h, Lefal Sec'y Trne. Nwpt
BOYS -GIRLS w • ar r ur ,., ·" n me. J Orange Co .. Airport> mg co. located m El Toro r... ••• Gd o/flce ~kill"' r"". MANA GR Equal Opportunity Employer M·F D . /H..J vu" .. • -.... _ • nvers apers\ Eq~al Oppor Employer needs furniture mov-Salary commensurate Nole&al exper. nee. Non· for matwbily boutique
L! 16 vears or age l::ven· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ cTa s s 1 c. D. Lt er/helpir, ovec 21. Call with experience. Xlnl smoker. Call Cath}' Muat be exper'd , Sul
tnR work. Obtain new -.HOUs1<;110LO GOODS) 830-4926. benefits. Contact Mr. 6'4·54%1 • • +comm.5S1.s'13t,
"Ubs<'n pllons for tht' Oat , .,._ e n)v :t I • n1..·. Nilet1 (714 )556-1700 for in· 1vJ>ilotworkin"withan HelpWanted 7100H..i..Wanted 7100 c.11pen nl'e 0 " PY· GENEruu.HELP Housekeeper S days per tlt'-..&•~1n· .. ,a-*. ana1em en t Develop· .. ...r Mon t.hru Fri, 9 A lo-4 week. Baby11t oc-terviewappointment. ~--.... • •· -... ... Tr-•-...... '-ad~ .tdult :;up~rva~or. Earn ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• -.... & 11ti.15 .a. UR.RIC.&. ~...., 1LUt11g-.g ~ ~·o to S30 sx·r wl•ek or Cocktail Weffreu P l\l . :! :s 7 2 a .v i a Cl.'l1onally. SaJary open '""" ""'9tlii A N.B. area. Gen~prae. e,i .. International Co. ne
tJ 1''abracantc, Mi6saon NEW Referen cAs. N•n · 1~ue.a.HCE per.!n5-014L ..-.., ..... pe .... ,... of un-morc Call <213) 500·0200 Expt'r. pref'd. Apply. Cultom phofstet"..-v · " v "~ ftA .....-··....... "'""
11onn to Sp m. (2 t 3 > Vactor lfu~o Inn. 361 Chrr Expr'd onlv. Top wages ieJo smoker. Balboa Island, GROUP U\re·ln housekeeper. Lew· questionable character
l'JH 3-173. 5pm·9pm. C.111 Or, Laguna Bt>orh Mon-& benefits. 5'18·oi59 Onveri.. earn xtr:> income OPENl. NGS 67f>.~9. • • Int. reliable mawr~ for2 for ituales m.anacemeot < Qlll-rt Fri bclwn 3-Sprn. early /\:\l's 3-6, $400/mo •Jloosckeeper/Comparuon children & working trainlne procram. Above OeJj.cterk~ needed. 11 1 min l':i:onomy car 3 llve·an, car nee. Rcfi. re· Inspection mother. R & B, lood avaller0aedge Collea~~!n.!s IC Hn·akfast <'OOk, ··~p
l'n,·at1• Coontry C'luh. r or 1nterv1cw rall
.-~ :>11>1 ------
hsloys
,\pply 1n Pt•r,on
DICK CHURCH'S
RESTAURANT
\\o1•ck days PIT. 2698
Nrwpe>rt Bl. C~t
COCICTAIL Mon·Fl"1 , 11 7 Sut-Sun. mui.t. Laguna Beach, Lart;e Corporation l·x· RICEIYING salary. + use of car. qua · ........... uca·
WAITRESS S2.75 hi:.:_~!> 1122 Call bet 11 & 2. 494...ioss Pan d Ing cu!> tome r q'd. 71-l/83:? 3771. INSPECTION Must drive~ 4.96·960S or t.lon preferred. Teachln&.
' -. •oh th m--t -------sen•1c-es ' 1 1ou~·L'KEL'PER LtVL' Sm a 11 Pre,.' s ion 122·2111 . sales, or manaaernent ..,..arn, ID.. rs e "" Deli Manager/Operator. URJVERS & HELPERS "'"' "' &:;• ... • backinJund l\elpfw. For exc-lt1ng, glamorous, Sftlary + ,....mmissi·on. N •• 0 E L 1 SE ... KS" indtndual•,;no IN, needed ammed to live machined fl molded
lunhl d ( D .. •v i (:;):; D. oca "' ., " In nong~n1al home f l LOTM.A.N . inter view call Jane .,, Y pa1 pro es:. ay 548·7863betwn8am-4pm. h h Id t' b l mu t be ' " part!> or e ectro-"" M El . SS1 1 or rve :-~tom;. Plare· ou 5 r 0 m ova n1o: e:<J)l?r. " c. u 11 w/school age children. mechanical devices. 8am·l2, 5 da)i., 18 yrs or c vaine · OU ·
ment ~Mbl. Good job OP· Dell /M 1-\llllf 17t1
7m27e8. {Some tcxpr neat & ambitiou;,. Somt' Eng nee, 536·7646 Work1n1 knowledoe or ovr Call 752-7100 E.O.E. L-l09 •wy ewsp..,. nee. a _ or app Of' 536·2320 t par. Perm:inenlpart-umejob -------Yl4.Struepos1Uorung& LYN'S t ATURE WOMAN
CdJ7t 4/751·9194 dehveringearlymocnlng Driver/D8'ivery $600 TELEPHONE proficient UH o( pre· 1.3 Medicalions. 11.7 p /tlme to welcom e
So. Ca lif. Cocktail LA Times to homes in E'<per'd dnver needed SOLICITORS cls1on measurtn1 lnstru· Cllarfe Nunie Good aal newcomers & contact
Waitresses, lnc. 17922 lrvine1NB areas. Must Req's good dnv1n.11 r ec. p M h Hou sewives, han · mentuec:fd.Da)•OJJlY· & f b · M tnerchant.1 • .P1exlbJebri.. IUSIOYS Sky Park Bl, Ste C, berehable&havedepen· Good cond'i, pay & er ont dicapped per1>ons. Sell STACOSWrTCH IMC: v r o~e ens. eu Need car, lit.o typin;.
l'rrsonabte & wll!IJ ,_1no_1n_e_._ca_927_1_4 ____ 1 dable transportation. benefits Apply in person Orange Cow.t's leading 1139BakerCosta Mesa ~t!r~vM:::S~~661 .. N_7~ __ s_. ------
s.:room1.od. Dinner house Salary $325 mo. 546·0235. or cull for appt. Alfred new!tpaper al home, your 549-3041 echanlo ..
.. xper pref'd. Apply. COMPANION 1\1 Gordon Dei.1gns. 250 Starting '>al .iry u11on phone. Salary + com· Equal Oppor Employer M41DS. Exper. mechanic. Gd.
\ll'lor lluaoJnn,"'ulCllff Woman. hve·m, lovely Demo1\S.!>11>l Ooyouwant F1i;cherAve,CM540·2860 quahf1catJons mission + bonus. Pt.I•--------""·ti & P / ,,., od ,, .,., f t h m ~ a career m Ort ho ulillt· ---ru Umo. u O worklnt cond. Tools Or. LaRuna Bcuch. Mon· oc c 3 n r 0 n ° "• all RD\ lull ? lime or full Experieneed benef1ll. Holiday Ion, fUm. Sal,...., open. Annlv l 'n betwn3·5pm. Newport Bc:ich: It. ang. your ' s s DELIVERY Salary advance::. rapidly preferred or will train. IHSPECTOR Laguna Hills, Contact ln .....,..:UM •~ 4PM. houselteepmg & cook mg. 640-0t:?l Good dr1v1n" rl'cord. & unltmited. ·All com-Call 835·6453 t ·.00·3·.oo ltE~RIVIHG n-----I"°"' CN\ll ...-.--""
Cof.+trie He4per
1' ti me worlt. ~kn :i hrs
'111.,l h:n·" <':Ir. Ct>t>la
.i'o11..,a, N~wport & CdM
.irca:. AJ'lply. Newport·
'11.-s<i Un1flt'd School Dis·
1r1i-t. 1-'oorl Service
fJcpt • 11157 r1acent1a
\\C, C':'>t. 556 3273. ---
1 \.\'VA.-,SERS WANTED
hourly pd. involving
pools. 644-61 !» -------
N k 675 "1.,1 .. .._ r ts -.n::nv1u1e ---· See mao•u•er Shell St.a-on·smo er. .,, " Denlal Secrt'tary 'Hecept. Mon thru Ft1. 9:30 to J pnny ucne 1 · PM only: Ex per. in qua11ty as· -.. '"1 $2 6"' t $2 75 h --------MAIDS WANT. ED·. For Uon. 3131 Harbor & Date Coaipan1on/babys1tter exper. nere,sary. ~alary .-.. . . J o • r Callfor1nformallon aurance for mech. com-small ex"luslve hotel. Pt.C.M. Mon·t'n for middle aged open. 837·7112 Mf'yerhof's Catering Call 963~ pe>nent.s. Small mfg plant ~ ._ _______ _
woman. !Mll-8500 :ifl 5pm !tide SS7-623:? in H.B. ~-5351 EOE. flexible hours. 419 No. ECHANIC, CLASS· A
Dental /\1mi.t.anl. G ~ M-'-.& <:'Ml Hwy, Laauna ~a.eb. for tune up & smo~
Cool(s Will Train. Dry Cleaners needs girl tftWU1 .. menmtee • H.S. GRADS · lNSURANCE dt-8521 certification. Uniforms
837 7 12 for counter & assembly C.1--.lnteftdfftt ... ---------Bre:ikfao,t, Lunc-h, dtn· · 1 work. 1\lu!>t be EXPEH. _,......, l.COLLEGETRAIHED UNDERnRITER MailDe furnished, commission
ner. Exper"d. Apply i,n Dental As111stant. ex,,..r. Good salary.963-3633 Exper'd In golf course Exper'd In personal lines pTartmer:;ie +on parts. 646-2503
per11on. Ma Ba~ker s necl!ltsar". Salary ope':~. maint. !lF. ,~ole, S3
1par No exper. neceu. No for expa.odrna a£ency. RAIH55 . Re.tnurant, 212 .E. 17th 837-71l2 , Electronie Assembly course. tame. a ary stnkesodoyoffs. Plenty 968-4166 WUlingtotrainconsclen· MEDICAL Secretary I
Sl c: \I Tr · E o E H n oprn. Ideal for rellred r k Call .. .,,.. 1183 tious indav. on vanous Rec e p l lo o l s t. • · · · -------• a.mee. · · · · person. Call 536·8871 for 0 wor · .,.,.,. • Int Lndsc Maint. Person mailing machines. Some EXPERI ENCED, for
COOK Dent!"d Axssi5t. Train~ ~r ___ Ca_l_lll98_-0960 ____ appt. 9am·2Pm. needed to care for live lifting req'd. S3 Per hr to busy G.P.'s office. Mullt. :f1tJ4s" ·UY ac. '· • Btctrical Assentblet"s , plants In commercl_al st.art+ good co. benefits. know termlnolosy, in· CAR WASH HELP Exper necesury. full ---------Exper'd or will train to Gen om~ girl, PIT, for setUng. E.xper. & t rans Apply. National Syatema 11urance kne>Wled1e anti
Overl8. l"ull·T1m~ tlmfl, apply in pen.on DENTAL HYGIENIST, 2 solder & assemble elec· one man lnsurance n ee. Call wkdays Corp.,4361BircbSt.N.B. like people. Starting at
"ETRO CAfl WASH LeBriarnt.z Rei,t, •tM N. days week. must live in trical devices. Pleasant broker's office. Secy llslcpr/llte cook Uve in for 8:JO.c:40557-01SO <Nr OC Airport) EOE. $700. mo.. 646-1631 Mon·
:!'JSO llarbor.C.M. Newporl Bh•d .• N.B. Mission VieJo area. small co environment. skillsnec 83.1-l4!lSA M. m:it. cpl. A!L 11 call J.&..--•.11.L ft-L9·$
D 64S-6i00 586-6030 Apply in person, JHU GENERAL 0.,.FICE 83.1-2382 "'"''-"' C.SHI . r • no 4 Hrs dally, Irvine. Mana&ement MEOICALP/T
toull ·p t. Reap per11on Cook needed for conv. Dental Aul. & recep· ~~·t~~~~~.ogan, Unit typing. ~aried dull~ to H.skpr, neat. lady for neat Perfect for retired gent. SAW TEAM MGI. Typtoc, dally charge en·
11\!r:!O. w1ll trn. gd pay ho6p1ta} •. AM & P!'t taonlat w /expenence. be learned one :it a ttm.e. home. 4 or 5 b.r1, 1 or 2 trn-3923. Tl•/Ufe Ubr.tH tries.Call betweenlOAr.t
\IE'rROCAJtWASH shift.&. F/t1me. Experd Expanded dut1ei.. 3&4 EngineeringTech !\~Ubl bu very ~ood .al days wk. Or consider --.----·----1 &2PM.6'4-6813 29SO ltarl>or.C.M. only. Apply In per'l~n. dayweek.Veryper!lona· Expanding nvi l figures , pleasant In· senior citizen live-In for Jarutoria.1 . h looking for a n, ________ _
Beverly Manor. 340 Vic· ble Costa Mei.a oHice. ert1incering & planninJ: formal working rond. lite duties. No smoke. N. 1 Aoonnan, • .,.....d enerietic & enth1.1Siastic MIDICALltlCIPT.
r'lllLD CARE. reliable, ton a, Cl\J t>iS-7580 ornce h'1s 1mmd. Qpcrung Non ~'!'oker · 10·5PM. BclL 642-3481 I rvioe. Eves. Also, ~~~= s~e!'aJ~ ~°! Busy doct ors needs
.11·t1ve woman to help ---------for a lrchnician to ;\lon·f'rt. wly by let· . p/time lite Janllorial. are the largeat phone resp., JnqeUc person •·are for energetic t.od· DENTAL/ORTHO reccp· perform ci\'ll englnec>r te_r HUB B 3184 H, Immediate openinas full Laguna Bch. res. only. sales co In t.ho world & w/111«1 front. ore exper. <lier WliO do lite lukPR· COOKS uonist. Nv.pt. Benefits. 1 1 t lh Airway Ave .• Costa orp/Ume.Noexper.nec. 979.3923 40 Hr. wt. Benefit~. : Live in preferred. Refr. Days"Night.s dent:i.1 expr req· Ortho ina ca cu a tons, ear Mesa. 92626. No phone Ages 17 thru 28. 540-4448. ---·------•your job would be
-
rf'Cl. &N·S891aft.4 expr pref. 642·2626 w1n'!"ko(fCJ1cueanlatilescu'1as1Juornvsey&. calls please Marine Corp. KfHMlt. PER.SOM aupervisanc sa!eslpeople ... 646-__ 390.1 __ • ------
ApAfplr.!..nt;r:on • .. " 'mh Pr f w h o :i r e s e l 1 n I Medical Ofc eicper. Xlnt CIVIL -Dental Ch:ursidc Assis· eost estimolang. Call GENERAIJFACTOllY lncometaxpreparer, ior am am otp. e · Ttme/LHe Boolta over oppor. S.F. co. needs
EHGINUltlHG Tht Allcl...t M..tner tant? Do you relate well Jack G. Raub Co. Attn: W()RJ(U exper'd, call some esper. 25-30 hrs per the phone. You ahould local sales rep to call Of\
D•a•G........ 2ll07 W.CoutHwy,NB w/people.Fullmouthre· Per~nel,125BakerSt., 962-1200. wk. CdM 673·1050 havesomephoneealaot doctors. SlOM +exp
_. ~ con1lructlon oractlce CM. 92626 (714)751-2510 Sportiq Gooda coqanYi---------1 9AM·5PM • direct sales exper. " -·-.,,_ .. "'l.. For 10• ~·d ln sub division needa exper,..d team . · · 7:30 AM t.o ':00' P.M. ----------i muat be aggreuJve & a --~·., wOfk. Apply ln person. to member. Please phone Exp. s1ller in my home fOf ~ KIYPUMCH . · ~ call Ma. Copelin. .... F l R b t 0 k 2 _.,,ldren l l Am 6PM ---------11n1urance • Data En•-Opr. Day ~a~.ForperlOIW 21.3/54.5-3807; ... r. uen es, o er • C 0 S 64S-8770 lo arrance con· fl ~ .. d, ,,., .. "'"'~.......,. A-. • .... ,.,....... a&rUT"'lY 11hlft. lft'°:H iouse Com-anterviow, Call Jan aLi----------.Bein; WIWam Fr<>1t & fiidenUalin•arvtew ve a, .. aw,.. ...... ._ --..,_ ~ "' --·...,......____MIAUiau · QuailS NB lf....••P/tt "' · -"spu ~a•-rJaJ "'andler for Dictaphone fo r I D· ..... _ 11-·11-...t •·a -· ~"-"'"" • ~"1401 t, · .--AllShlf\a'• ___ D_l _MT_A_L---i .... "' :a~lnlnS41operaUons. a u ranc.e claims ~~y.6Key ~;.:: Equal OppEmplyrm/f W a n te d .aood
Pl t • I NB SwlDI lblA. 4·10 Hr days aupetvlsoc. Type 60wpm per. helpful. Sal open. peraooaUUea. aeveral
ouan roop " · • --------•I + o.-ertlnMt. Roean. Jnc. w/recent dlctapbone ex· Xlnt benefit.I & working penon& wbo enJoY work· •TOP PAY need a 2 employees. flberglass 2901 w. Coas~ Hwy, NB per. F. Vly focatlon. ~\.; conds. Apply, NaUonal MAMAHl. IXPd. tni w/otbera. Start.$4 hr.
•GOOD llMIPITS FtBaocnkt OOffcc. CRheaca.er~tl.de&. rtasffc L_..at«t E.O.E. hrs per wk. For appL c:all S)'stems Corp., '31$1 Wom.'s clothln1 •tore, Jlteaaant •or-lrint con<b .
.Apptyr.P_.._
jojo's ,
RaStiinilt
·A Fam11t Rf!fburant
Dedtcai.4 ToQuMllt1.
2750H ..... INYd
C...-Mne .EOE.:~~
0 --------1 Mary O'Conner, 963-6183. Birch St, NB (Nr OC (WI Ume. Jntervlew1 held Meals lncl\aded. Pension Includes alternate ~at Fountain Vly locatJon. Gtnabam Glrl houacclng E.O.E. M/l''. . Airport) EOE MOfl·Wed-Frl lrom ~or & health tnsur. p 11c1.
AMs. £xper'd only. Rapidly expand1n1 ..-vtce ftd4 women P/T,1---------·1 7.9 Refs. a must. Krazle ~days.CaJl &U·5404.
64().1122. manuf. or plastic " top$, car nee. MS·S123 lnsuranfct~ a,... •R"' Kats Fasblona 9931
fiberglass produc~. in· --5 " ~atnllton Ave .• H.B. Ap-'fotel Cler'tr fr MaJd. 9.3. s
cludlnlt tubs &1bower1, GflLSHllDED lmmed. openlnlt re· LAITICH , ~ytnperaon. -A~.NearCO .. t Hwy4'
hu lmtt\ed. openings in Sandwich dellvery, 5 quire• Wint aptitude, ll~IDICAL NewpOr\ Blvd. 12.6S br. wr F. Vly mold 1hop for daya wk, 4 hn doy. Own pr-"loua lnturance U.• • Mariner fot~ 3026 w.
exper'dlamlncatcc-11. transp. ~m ovr $3.50 j>eienoebetpfw. .EMGl..atlMG Coas H NB
m .... ol(• .. an -• .. t "ta--•-1 hr. Call 2-4Jlftl, 54o.83!9. TYPtST ASSIMILM $1 &~er Day t wy . •
"'"' -,..,. ., ~·un lmm«L open.in' Ill typ-Sal1117:$l 08IS""mon1h ._&:., "'OU P•'~,,_ MOl'ORCVCLt: ~:~.,lt:~:",!~~~~: Good Job ~.f..!'~'i!:~'-_:.:: ··:aoctal~lll~'f·. w.~pfyu~i;_aj,tJm.-.
nJCldical/dtnlAI ute in· 2 4'1• por Week. Car. ~~we u-!!'~~~:f :~ D•fLV.U.A• <PJUmoJ. Call "°"41U •"1'., .P•ld boho.,. • Penalaaen Ptet Ptnba· perieacereq~_recl. r-onn various pro-.,. •1 ..... "''' t-S. • nca + 1'«'0lttahannc. IMIJLm.:ztl' ' c~C&AL ~ aasfpmenu ln SMYICI
• Apply ln Per.an wes .. ,. . eu.pportClf ~po de-DlllCTOIY . Nat. co. niedt 3 eip. WCOIMDUSTl•S ,, ___ 1 ... ....,. _ _.. .... ~--Olmedlcal de-ftftJT ........ t ~~:..;.~
2ZSIE.Ml.raloma _...._., -·---· •lea . 1 .... arUflcfal ~ nvw WIOl'tft'Oa.asOft.filu•-:AAMielm'114/98;M.!20 • )TH•P•d.wta~ beut valv.. embolec• -w11 • Salu1 + coma.. •
'4uaJOppEm_plrrm/f 'Y ot" cuuialty.: rat.In-.· to1111 catb•t•ra aod 1~~~-=-------...; eo; P8lcS I.Al. rar 'l1U ~J; ID ~ metnbrallt CIQ...... ~Ul1MM081
DQWUlinent1q dept. We Will do JriiC'edUr_. t•t
wtU Cl"Oll tt&la t.ba Idec-HlculatJom ud anal)'Al1 tlve candld'te Lo become ...1 ... I .... aML\IU·lln•Ut.c.r. ua ,..utLa., mawll I\ rn• JU"Un\ents Md PffPatO report.I.
•
• ... • r •
~~~ ..... !!.~! ... ~:!'.·~ ..... ~!~! ~.~~~ ..... ?!.~~ ~.~:!'.·~~ ..... !!~. ~-~~ ..... ?!!! ~~.~~.~ ... ~~ 10, 1978 OAJlY PILOT
MU;l$1SAtDIS R l.l-OTATt; SICl.ffARY llttv.StaHel ncf'ckdhti· HelpW_... 710 ~ IOJO '°'
1'.J1P«r d oe))•. F:lduh * •$50.000 * * SALIS exper'd, full tlm• for tlOwpm+. Good •pelllnf. med. Fl.Ill J pit. Apply, ...................... i:::::: .................................... .
man ln eon~ bo1p ltt:AL ~hTA rt. C~ ~l .. /Ceaw-r 1peclalty shop. 631· lnt«e•Uq Job w/xlnt II) E. Cit Hwy, Nwpt Waff•/Woltrets : \JS!DBJKES B Mare. U .3 II ~~,~~..:"-~ ._hco-llm. SALUP£OPL~. Jcun lf yw are ~n uper'd ur1~ 9951 •dvancement. potent. 8cb. t.vnch ahin only. Dlaner , Recot!d. 'Buy, sell. trade. BEAUTIFUL. SOUNO ._ ~ wJolalpm .im. • CR'"""' 'titlhp~r..uri In dlrN:l ----Oranae Co. Al.rport com-........ f'd I (.)tel"' .. ~ ~-N l::naJl1b or We11ler Call collect <211) 1.11 .:u ~· w/lw s 11 1t>-. "t·akina pl4ut-N.B.11ao.$301. SEWERS.exper.Ofrarrn , ....... e~J)t'rprt' App-,BlYd •• ...,.,. 00 ew Vtryalblehe l2500/~t tJ$.191. many tllCAu. 101*> + C If A 1 L t: N 0 1-· SaildwH h Shop and itrala~t. aewl nc ly Vlctor llu«o Inn, 381 Yd.CM. "2·791_0__ dfcr Mll·7l36 ~
cum m . tt EAL.Ty S ·r A u' l LI Ty • i. Gl::Nt:RALllELP Slatl'TAJtY-IXIC. 493"'2'79 Cliff Dr. Lquna Ucacb.. WlchgMattri.b 8021'--------"'"' 7 .~~~dlSu ~~0!_\.~·-~!.lle Salea BF.N~nTS. lot'• talk' P 'T. Non Fri. Call Xlnt iecy aldlli Monf'r•bt'twn3~pm. •••••••••••••••••~••••........., ·I071 ...,. .... lief'.,..,. •. m a "··~", . ......,.,, N d 1 of "ti l bdwna.J,&13-8919 +knowledge of froup SHIPPER ••••-••••••••••••••••• Vll'de Colw Hoep 661 • t.-w 1v11 on n.. on11 _ --WAITRESS For S44Jc: Approx !00 aq n Cer.iwrS&.CM~·· corp ntt<la 1tle1~ople =~~~: bea.:~; DPM*4CIO for Ph.za. 18 yr1 "over. ttberflau ln11utatton. WANTED •
IUCB'TIOtilST "IDJU)ae~r• Xlnt fnnait' SECRETARY motivated & have lood STAIT$710 MO C&ll541·711S3 Johns-Manville .RU. TOP CASH DOLLAt.. ..
HUUU AJDlS OeQcraJ froot olc t>Xpc·r. ~u<'kal(e. Call Mr. hon, 11~..-r10HIST MORIS W /EXPORT llOOlot. Ma-0282 PAT O F 0 R YOU ....
1-3:30. Exper preC'd. lite t.ypln11 t0/llme po:tl· :JIW 1~17 Re:i~!te offl~e. :.~n!~ta~W!~-~~ OPUIEHCE WAITUSSES Dogs 1040 JEWt:LRV, WATC'HE ••
Country Cl ub Conv Uoo.Startln1111S120wk· Mon arch Bay Plau, Qulckpayralaei. Exper'dfood&C'oc:klalla. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ART OBJECTS. COLI>~
Home,5'9"3061. ly. Drl&ht cb~tir> Sales Laauna Nleuel. Prefer SECRETARY f\Jllcompanybent'f1ti. Day or nlght. Apply In DOOTRAINING SILVER SF.RVlCE,
Nu";;lna aide & some 1icr110Dallty.ContactJiAn, FULL/P/TIME real tl!ltatelit'rnsee, but R ... AdfNMstrtltloe NewportBcachcumrrnny perhon . Mr . C'1 YoutPlacoorMlne FINE FURN" AN--
h&ekp'a for d1aablfd f•m !7:1:~~..SOS·~· ~~7 ~~Te t:arn Good S " lfaH• oo 11elbnl( dut1ei.. Conluct Exper'd In OMV pro· 646·2123 ~:taurant, 3100 lrvlne, John Marlin 548~ TIQUJ!:S. 645·2200 ;.
Exp 1.r•l'd but not r~· uhraries, Inc. Fun! . CI 11 rl o J obn son at cedute., auto leuln1 It ---- -Ladi«> Jlunlll.on watch. quir'. Ll\lein or oul. Noexper.neceu.Jobin· 644·0060 A/Pay+ secy skill1. Womento show&takcor-8 PRINGElt Spaniel. 14 K while gold, :16 PIT. 898·2233 volve1 interviewing & Xlnt co. beneflta. Call den for Queen'11 Wlty lo AKC. ,B/W, spayed fem . dlornondii, $700. 673'893l
-Hecept needfd. Pvt men's completing credit ups lo 714/8SJ.!3p. SHIPPING/REC J<"asWoo Clothing. No in· 8 mo"· 1entle family alt Gpm
Of rice clerk fuU-l1mo, club. N.B. Hts 6:30AM· majOC' retail stortlll near <>l>t;nlni for person ex· vest. Cat & phone nee. do&. $200. 613<-09e0 '------,
vaned duties, It typing. 2PM oc 2PM·lOP?t1 call home. F1ex. hra SICllETAIY·Sll. per d in s~ll ofc pro· Interview 9aa.J866 or 1\t I s h T I U'f..todl I07$ 1M80 BandlUer Cir. f"V. 7""·-o s i:-~uat oppor. emplower Xlnt secretarial 1kllll, + udUret. Sluppin1 & re· u"-3lS3 • a e cote err er• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ,,_,, A. • . 2l3t945·3961 ""4 ~ i I f .,.°" J\KC ShoU 646-1800 or 983·981U 71u 523.:m15 ext$30 atati1Ucal lyplo• & ce v n,g o men'.11 & ---• · · Reg. Moraanmare. brok QCB'TIOHIST niure aplltude required women• clothlnc. Llte Women for Houseclean· G42·:t706 to ride & drive blk
OFftCIHllJI Good aec'y akllll1 Cur SALESLADY Secretary-Purchaslnf for acctng depart. Must typlnat & tllln1. Call 1ae. Port tame or full otd Engllab Shttp dot parade Morcan aeiding
Must be able to do A/Rec estab'l land developer at ·for maternity boutique. ~!a~[0i:1~?f:itngor:i~'r: be sell moUvatecU1 httve betwnlOam415pm forio· t1 me. Top u 1 ar Y . 2~ yr. rem. AKC. Price En&,. ,Western (114 l
& B&lltna. Newport new ofc 1n Irvine. SaJ Must be expcr'd. S..il + good public relatlona at· tervlew644-6500 642·7207or 646-487l neg t>U~ :m.um
Dunes. 1131 Dack Buy t'ommen.surate w/exper. romm 557.5734 ~0/ee1t0euds cln onsTtruusctt~o" ~ tilode. Xlnt Co. benefit.a. THE LOOK · --------Or, NB lh·~ume PO nox 7250, _ · 714-333·9329 --WOOO CRAFTSMAH Elect. bark coll1r (lralner M11e.n-.ous 1080 ·
---------' Newport De ach. Ca Sah.-:. exper required. Type Shoe Sales, 2S·30 hn1 wk lndoors-Small Shop collar> Cost $80. Sell $30. ••••••••••••••••••••••.•
OFFfCI TUIMIE !Y.!663 Let's be Honeat 60wpm no 11hort.haod.. SECRET ARY E.xp'd pen100 de111rous of Vancty of shortruns Rechari:e. s.:t&-U•o WA ..... TED STJdff-f62S-MO ---t:ontuclPeuyll3S-3001 , Typiog&.shorthaodr xlnl.)Ob.SaJary +comrn Skilled-Power/H und " .. RECEP1R>RRT 1f)ot1 Wot'l't"tlookm1r Tcrsffiillc>fc.5ecl'Etan ~'"bnrt t. C?ltttfl't'n's Tools-to-Yo.I I04 TOP-G-A&J.1-00lrt:.Af\.-~
Quick Pay Raise. N~-dlld by Ch1~0 ral.-tor ~-~'dne"'. career, you po6ltlon in So. Laguna. Bootery, F111h. Isl. NB lnC0ih1Me~a ••••••••••••••••••••••• PAI 0 FOR YOU fl Advanc,ment Potential . ....... t be((' 1dlnj! this Secy/Sales Dept Pleas•ftt wor .. '"" """Dd. J L• -·-t _.. l JEW"''RY WATCHL"" V&.netyofactlvillcs Pcnonablc, i l,)pist ed. and If w~ weren't .... ..._ ...v Mr M lter644·2464 ·, t'ullco.bencllli> .-em-.-ca, spay ..... o ,..,,. . ~. :>W 5559 , • & opportunity lot advan--4 ~AL.ARY OPlH good home. Very affec. ART OBJECTS. GOLD
FUil co benefah . · lookl.ngforsomconclodo E.xc1tinC po•lt1on w1tb cement."99"5'7& · Shoe Sales, oppty fore~ tionate.9.s5-08388ves. SILVER SERVICE,
NewportBchcorrp .. ny RECEPTIONIST ajob,lhaadwouldn'tbe fastgrowlngco.Muaten· per M/F. Good hrs. nu 64'-2123 PINE FURN. & AN.·
64'-212J wunted for re.al cstntC' co here. If you are a career joy working w/people & Secretary, ambitious. at· Sun. Xl nt benefit!!. UIOODWOR"'•Rs 2 sml fem mixed dop. 1 TIQUES. 64~2200
---------• N k s I Sl20 minded adult &c want the have several years ex-tractive younc person salary -t-comm. Top ..,.. -pup, other spayed. Xlnt -------Office Attend_. wk.1~~~T ast ~~'{Ron. oppty to earn three to per. ASllertlve personall-w/typtng, 1teno1r~hy & g r ade ro o t wear. Ml II men. assemblers, -~/kids. 540~, ~ LUCiGAGE TAGS-·
Mature, resp. p erson. 963-7M3res five hundred dollars a ty & 11 good mat.h ap-clerical exper. Op-WestcUff Shoe1. Mr. Cur· sander&, sprayers & P/time, ~. ':JOt:>m· -week. ull toll free, titude with a 11trone em· portuntty for advance· ren. M8"6M, NB 11ta111ers. Ex per. req. Male t'OCkapoo. $ma old. from your bwaloesa card.6.t
l2:30am. u.so hr. R. ~.Sales 1·800·327·9696 11nytime phu1S on PR needed. ment. Call '152·9Ml Mon· Xlnt pay & benefits. 3201 loveskids. Send r'e card for euwcp-
Bayvlew Manor. 350 W. C4lntury21Adamei5now <rorrecordedmcsaage>. Xlnt co. paid fringe Sat W. MacArthur Blvd., 6'0·1139alt 6. tag pus one apart'. ~~1
Bay..,t c a.·164•3u•a ' t · r I ben fit W k I S t ST~11 CLr.RK SantaAn",CA return permanent!~ " . " ,.. JV... in erv1ew1ng or !la cs Salesperson e s. or n an o -., " Bea4tiral blk w/white scale(! attractive tae ''
J>(.'Oplo ~or lhe1r 2nd off1l·~ lnt. I>cc .• he.ivy drupery Ana ofc. Call San Diego Secretcry P /tt.. FWlhed Goods y ACHT SALES Lab. s t.t o ( e m . strap, meeting alrli n~ . OPPORTUNITY in Alma Town Ccnt~r. sal~ exp. t;1trpel Buza Culled (l) 292-4222, Mrs, •·fUlrs a day. SeU starter Per form sl mplc llb· H. 0 us c b r 0 ken g d l.D. requlrt-ments. Pre
lf you are not makinl( $6 •.cnl!>S th~ street from 871-b"701 ttr Oryun for more inCorma· w/pleaaant peraonallty & sembJ)' work & maintuin l-:xperienefd yacht sules wat c hdog . loves vent lOl.ls & then! For ~ •
per h°'-lr, cnll u~. 1-\111 or Gcmrn. 1-nr appt. c11ll --lion. phone manner. Xlnt typ. finlahed goods Inventory. person wanted by rapid children. 497-2097 or personullzcd ltql enclost
purt time work uvuilu· Man.ud Adame, Brkr .. or Sale~ Pe-r~on, p111me, _ irig, nice appear . Coll Exper . prnf'd Days f.: row 1 n g FU J I I 7~J.1139 wallpaper, fabric 01•
ble . .Musthuvedependa· Loui~c Jul1•au, M1:r. matun· ll.H.(;1H~hoµ 752·2002askforBarbara. onl)' YAMAHA Dealer.Call •0 GI.. •-•
ble trims l'h t"uller 83t-264o !JtJ.3.6000 STAC:OSWITCH IMC SOUTHWISTIRM l')'ee mini Lab. fem, 10 ~l~ybac~ :al~~";.::~·
BrushCo.7S.l-647l • _____ ;;;;~-----1 SECRETARIES SECRETA•Y 1139BakerCostaMeu YACHT SALIS mos. good w/cblldren. l6'""· Or try two cn..A.1 . ----•-S!l.les.per~on. CO'!lu Mt'' ii. '° 71•1678-921 988-39TI alUPM -... "'? Opportunity for unhmit~ R E SoJeapcople stationers, 270 E. 1 ith !-ii xlnt secretarial & Inter· 549-3041 1 buck to back.
income In a buii. or your WAHTID (':\1 l'. tirne. appl} 111 & TYPISTS personal skills req'd lo .Equal Oppor Employer Men:hcmtdls• Blk Lab/Auatrallan 11\ep. PRIC~·
own. Rcq'Herious C1esire Call Lu!>k Heall}. fNr•mn. 10 12 Be particular & get the assist exec. In N.B. ac-mix. 2 yn old. Habrlm, S2ea ot 3/$5 & wlllin&ntiis to work for !!GO 4361 -------best Work temporary counting !lrm. Some ••••••••••••••••••••••• aood watchdoc free. 4/St:ags ll.60ea. it. No investment ,._ ________ I SALESPEOPLE itallttical typing 4' die· TEACHERS, Cbr11tlan ......... 1005 644-'170 ' 619tapll.50ea ,. as!tlgnmenll with tbe laphone traAac:rlpUon. School. ap~ly. 16835 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lDor moreS1.40ea. 646-1989focappt ,._ ________ I WA:'<:TEO 11gency that work1 for "-'opeft c._ ... ,,_,,meln Brookh\lf'lt.fo'V. r.. .... ~. 1050 Sal-Ta"lncluded -------"----•· Tu l>l'll advert1i.int: (,ood ou ~ ... ....,.,.. ·-'" rw rnw -.. PA.5TEUPArtlslwanted. RESTAliR\NT produC'ers $25,000 to y . HOFEES full confl•ence to: MUSICIOXES ••••••••••••••••••••••• NOCARO?
Exp prcl'd or w11l 1ra1n SlS.000 a year. Car .. 1 Cull Today' Oasatned ad no. tl9, c/o Telephone Sales CLOCt<S STOREWlDli:SALE Draw your own or u~
F /tJme pos, Co. benefit~ J ... CK,.... lowance. b<1!'tC. ·1 oklnR Dally PUot. PO Box 1580, Slot M hi N' k 1 N--•-us...a fum appl's name. oodreu, phone"-
I P "' " ~Q~ off . ,.._._ .. _a ,.A,._... LOOK AT . ac nes, ac e o· ..,_"' ru • • u-11 m ake one card per Appy, enoysaver, l6ti0 1nlt'n1c"l> nov. c.tll ice • .....,. .... ., ..... .....,.,_ rru w·•·--· B .. .,
Pl I A CM THE lox • deons. phonoeraphs. sc. 1....-.s ar1a10 tag ........ ~each. acent a ve. 1714149~ 4SIAl Q l d N..,.., """' •· 9u W 19th nuu..,-F over oa SIClllTARY THIS"" World's I argest aelec-"""'· .......... -. • Send check or money or
PERSOMMILCLERK amilyRestaurant Si\l..ES-P/lime. Fahru Challeo1lng pos. for a .... lion .. Also g_Hts . ~2·7930 &~-3262 derto:
Muat be ablti to type liO fULL&,.ART•TIME ~hoJl.l'~I 557-0061 persoowhollkesvariety. T\me·Ure Libraries has furniture. antiques. 5•,Hl.longcustompadded PILOTPRIMTIHG
· wpm, Doltes tn\·ol \'", Call IHti 4~0. L1111IJ 372.1 Birch St. NB Some ex per in penonnel openinas for part & full Amencan lf'!lernal.lonal; po t b I ... n '"It"' po Do le.>" • '" lmm-'irtt> op nln"s on 1802 Kettering; Irvine r 8 e " r .. " · · x _., typing r l'port<1 & ror· l"• i c ., & insurance work de· time telephone soles W , · multiplex tuner, 8 track co.ta Metia, Ca. lr.!ti:!tl resp .. mnintenanrc on all i.hlft~ Applicants 111 SALES-RETAIL sired. Sb 80. typing 60. representati\'es. Good 7M·lm. Open ed.-Sat. & turntable·all are bulll· ------'---
personnel nlt·s. asslt1line Wldovcr only. Pleaseap. Offictl bUµpllei. & f.t,1 Irvine Induat'I Complex. wor king atmosphere. ins·plua two custom lnveslora hand signed.
in employmt>nt an plyanpununat. t1onery f'ull & p1um1• SECRITARY/RICEPT Call for appl. 5'0-7639. Mulce good mom•y. llrly WTou&ht Iron bar atoola. Ut.hoaraphs: Chagall,.
tervlew:i;. wat::{· & salary pos1twns avail l'hon1• l'o:ntion 11va1l. 1mm<.'<i E.0.E. wogc + bonuses & WHOLESALE Sharp! 58l-744G. Maro. Dall. Calder <\tot admlni~tration & olher JACK IN for appt M7·0212 1u;k for i\l'curate typist, 85 wpm. guarunteed comm. while · olhera. Low pri ce11.
functions. THE BOX \Ir. Wrst. Newport Sta. Sh or sreedwrltlng. S ECTY/BKKPR. must workinit nex1hle shifts. TOTllETRAD.E ••1 IUY*·* 752.5009
MnstcrsSpeclnltar11 c0 t1onerslnc. Diver s! l ed dut1e~. havt> exper. ln R.E. & Wemakeltfun &pror1tu· NOW OPEN ____ _..;.... ___ ~··
1640 Monrovia, CM 385 E. I 7tti St Operate smull electronic construction. Salar y ble for you. If you can Good used Furniture & Court report.er'• nu steno~ 1
Equal Op_ por 1-:mploycr Costa MHa 11wllchboord. Xlnt co. Qpen. Box 561, CdM, Ca. sell or have the desire to TO PUBLIC Appliances-OR I will IP'apb machine, case • • SALES bent!fit.s. ~ team. cnll us at this sellorSEI.LforYou. •land +book.II. S36-i41S, ..
PHOTOCRAPllERS 120Slaker SLAP A SMILE Call494-940lforappl SECURITYOFCaS number OPEN70AYS MASTERSAUCTIOH _an_s:_30_. ___ _
RF.P. CostaMtto TclonJc/Berkelcy * * IJl .. 095 AW.EEK9-6 64MH6&1J3..,625 50 Gal Aq·uorlum Commercl al f1u,h Ion 2825 Laguna canyon Rd Estab'I security firm YOU WON'T BE Sundowt1 Aftthp.les Ltd
photogrnpcr !'teek11 ON YOUR FACE Lal(unaBcach needs r eliable men & DlSAPPOINTED! 152921otiaChica Wrouaht iron, custom :;:.\~.1~ ~;1m~ .~~~!u~!~~~t~a;:~c~\c~r: ~~~~~~~1~m~J~~1~~1~1~po~c~/~~~~n~~~·)~· ~I Equal Oppor Employer ~eot'~~rt:0~~1~1{:~~~~ TIME·LIFE H.L 17141193·7509 ~~~e1 ~~; ~jr~ ~lk: lawnmower 1125. Llkt>
· 11tarter or hJve 'lnml' -& A BULGE Cost.a Mesa. Full or pit UIRARIES, IMC. casuai chair <n~ed1 a:e.,_new __ lr..;:;a....;r_e_frt....;i;..._84_7_..0.S_07_ knowledge oradvert1~1ni:1---------IN YOUR WALLET schfdulesavall. Retireei; F.qualOppEmptyrmH cover lo1n-us. C~lll Poof t•ble, 5x9. cu11tom
or t'ommcrc1al photoi: Rc6tt1urunt •Secntcirfff SI SK welcome. PhOM collect, &U-01.!8. w/all at'Cells $800 or b!->t
necehar} Truly un HOWHllJMG TIM E/LIFE TooManyToUsll!I ~a1:1~~· Cor appt. (213> TelepboneSates C" .. H PAID 'dt.8ell<7«ziafl~~-
• limited l•JrninK poten LIBRARIP.S P.mployers Pay All Fees ---------• Adverl!•lng, full or part F '"" , -, -t1al.Models also wan~ DAY HELP ll<b both rull & part L11 Reinders AJ:ency Sec . Y / m 0 de r 8 t e ume. 53.00 + comm. or gd used, rum.-bnll· 3 Pc J:lauan: Sora. chr.
494.3622 Apply ht>twn 2 5pm Lim\! pos1t1on. .. ..iva1I 4-02\l H1rch. Ste 104 s••Uatical tvnln& exp. re· Must be enthuaiaatlc. quH & cir TV 11, 95'1~US3 corntt tlll (Jd cond I,
Printer for 12~ '1u ll1, indi\'iduals who are call ror Appt/~tab ·ss quired. Local CPA firm Will luln. 835·9692 or Medll.erranean furn: t•· -" """ en ------Wtndt'•Old 4Funlonni:articulale NNportBeach 833-8190 .. II' Be ...... sh-·r eaJe gre
good working 1on'1 40 hr, Fash Oft~ euoer to learn how Npt. n4.f33..9887 ~7296 hie w/6 ch rs, 1 JeaC drapes w/pleid.cd valan • d k H--'-"--s .. ....,S/ofr·. bookc ft·~'a'"-•f eel rods. a mos old • 4 · a y w or w e e k ..._, .,.... t k to $$$S$$$S -• -•-Sev Benefl!JI. 979.7eeo 2&iOS. Bnstol. SA 0 ~E O~IR Secretary/ Recept AtLrac-S.cy "°sh to SI 000 lcort Print, benutitully w/2 dn on bottom '$50, erahlaes. 4'19·3105
Printing
OFFSET PRESS
OPERATOR
Seeking on Individual
w/ability to oper ate AM
26.'IO & 1250 off11el pre·
uea. Dovolo1> offset
plales & a working
knowledge of bindery
work, collating & cutting
paper HoC'k. Co.
·~sored lnsurant'e
al.loo.i.1 refund pro·
gram&more. ,. Please Appty To
• Personnel Department
PACIFIC MUTUAL
700 ......,_.Ctr Dr ... ,..,. ......
Equal c>ppor Employer
Hestaurant
WANTED FOR
HEW
VICTORIA ST A TIOH
RES.TA UR ANT
There are immt>d open·
ln&s for many full & part
time positions. includlnit
coolui. burtenders & food
service personnel.
\'lclori11 Station nrfers
compet11t1ve wn1<es &
llber&l benl'f•t~. Also op.
ply for Jdvanccment.
!''or more lnformal1on
contact
Yldoria Station
RntCllW•d
14041 hoch llYd. w ............
191-4702 1-: 0 E M F
PrinUna Collater, p/time. ~~~~~~~~~ NO* ~eeptln1 appllca·,._ ______ _
•
Uont for Moo & Tues•• 1"ibl •hlfta. Apply 9am· -'Pm. Penaaytavor, lll60
Plecentt1 ca.ta &ten.
RETAIL
CLERKS
UTOTEM
C-.•enc:• Mwkm
ff•lp Wanlfld
1st, 2nd I.ant Shifts
Noexper. req'd. We train
those hired. Applicants
apply at Utotem Stores
located at:
111 DeJ Mar Ave, C.M.
1390 N. Pacific Cst Hwy
Laguna Beach
We are an equal
apportunity employer
IU:TAJLSALES CLf;RK
Art Sul)ply Store Jn N.B.
Prerer eper. In P'•Oblc atta. Good oppon,tln~
for advdccment In a tun
et.motphe r ... Call
0-al .llan.,.... PAS
~tea Jn~. T54'°'22
U\le, 18·ZlYr1 old. Llte Free. Pres. of co. •eeks TELEPHONE rramed, slaned, make c a b I n • t. I o r OYATIOH fM'ITAI Hawfy Salary sec'y duties. Customer bright person w /good of'r. <.:all 673-6512. sl«eo{st«••• Sl30/oft': 673.nu
Gucnt Commissions relat1orui. C.M. 645-89$1 typing tousume resp. in SAL£S also dresser. z dra•~. ~ •i'
lnc..wff•• lo•H• Cnll 9·5:30Wlcdays lhla career oriented AMTIQUE SHOW w/beveled mlr~oc $100 Newport .Bo.ach Tennill' •
change ot pace J>09. oC· Work P art.4me In one of Onr 30 D•alers (old oalt). Aft Spm, Oub Membership Bes\' CALL US TODAY
AND START
SMILIN
833-8095
TIME/LIFE
UIRAJllES, IMC.
F.qulll Opp Emplyr m/t
SECRETARY; 1 girl ofc,
rh al lengi ng position.
GroWlng Co. Dictation &
reconlln8 keeping up.
helpful. $700·$800 ranae.
CM. Submit resume to
,\d No 26. Dally Pilot
PO nox 1 SflO, Coat a
l\feH, Ca. 92628
Secretory
EXEC.SECY
fering lots of variety & our circul a lion sulcs UNDER ONE ROOF NS.7857. oCfer. 644-5128
great potent. Also Fee rooms " still have TWODAYSONLY -.I~ I
Jobi. Call Chri1 540-6055, pleas ur e time f or J 21 Io ' Coastal Personnel Aaen · yourself. You can work • ' .... pm.
ey, 2790,Jlarbor, CM near home & still pursue . J• 29, I o .... 6pM.
SEC'Y/RECEPT outalde .actlvltles We To be held indoors al
New Soundetlslgn atereo, Lr~ Commercial pwr
antq. chr. aittq. end tbl, mower $50. IBM ex•~
antq . sewing mach.. typewriter, dnt concJ '
beaut. ~ l c l u re. S800. adding machine' 1
bookshelf. Reas, S86·0177 $101 call 642-1334, 642·6S7i' •· ror i;mall archltectura.I pay wa1e1 + com~. PM EST AN Cl A H I G H
firm In Nwpt Bcb. Ute & AM hrs av all. Call tor SOiOOL • Costa Mesa. Gold leaf hndboard. dual Exclusive Tennis Mem·
bookkeeping & typing detaUs ncketssold at door St.so. sz. 2 t.wn sa box spring & berslilp, at prestii:lou'
req. caJ Chris DeBaun LoeA.nfelesTlmes Ook Hoosier, xlnt cond. mall. Elec blanket & Newport area Tenni1;
for appt at 758-9141 ~l Newly refinished. Cstm ti.!daprd. 963-3377 Oub. Priced lo 11ell. Dr&.
Sl,.'Y/RE,._ ---------·----64~2-'-734-7---iTwl n Mediterranean &3l·3$70: evaS81-108S National educational ~ --• TELEPHONE SAW firm 11 seek.Ina ao ex-Well oraanlied. aeU SOlJClTORS llOC'u, both !Ot SSS. lge Undy mla w'1der. wire
$25 000 $50 000 pcr"d prof'esalonaJ aecy start.er to work with R.E . .,. 00 h M ANAHEIM.JAN 14, 15 Mediterranean coclrtell fed. Oas or electric al ' • • toworkforlheSr.V.P.of el e.o oc -· per rtoslart, r. Z3rd GLASS table, $40. 552-8878 art tachmenl.$300orbellof ~~i:!~~~~~ ~~ finance/ administration. ~po~:°8;~nt ·,":.a;y: Kllko496·2980 SHOW.SALE 8PM _f_er_._1179-_962_1 ____ _
•Part-Umetoslart Applicant must. be at· beneflts. Send resume TOPUIMIMG.5 ANTIQUE& For Sate: Newport Beaclt
•Full commissions tractive, well groomed& Box C-19$15, J(Vlne, CA FantutJc opportunity if COLLECTIBLE 5PCPLAYPEN Tennis Club m em• ·Fr~training prognm. have 1klllt oC typlng 70, 92713 you enjoy meeUn1 peo· IM of Tomorrow (2) B'SOP'~. • bershlp. Super deal ..
-Orange County oWces sh 80. Know 'I or account· pie & workllll hard in a u10W. Katella LO £.SE T · k B"eAppL~ Call Now Inf helpf\11. Pleaae apply Sec'y with general otnce challenging profession. Sat.10AM·1PM (1) V A ~w dayi. f I n.-in person betwn 9·12 or ildU.. Accurate typist. SUcce11ful rlrm seeks Sun Noon·5PM 2 O'CTOMANS Simmon• 1pindle crib.. • ~~O~ERsr 1·3:30 Call Pat. for interview trainee for commercial Dlspl11y1 & Door Priies SACRIFICE Kantwet matt.resa. S70. 8
Laauna Nll(uel 831-1618 MatfCMal Systems appt.. 830-8522 real eslate. License re· ONLY $ 4 88. drawer changing dresser
Central OC 8'70·7"140 CorporcrHon Servl«t St•. Attendant, quired. Private office, ---------3PC ROOM GROUP $45. Both SUO. Xlnt cond
-------4361 Blrcb St. N. B. exper'd. Full er p/t.lme. draw~ benefits. Appl.en · 10 I 0 5PC BEDROOM sa6-1140
Find what yoa want in NearOC Airport Apply Aico StaUon, 17th REALONOMICS •••••••••••••••••••n•• 7PCL1VING R~ Surfbo---arct-.-6-'1_"_w_a_v_e_t_oof_. 1
Pally Pilot Clas'\ifleds:_. F..q11nJ Oppor Employer· & Irvine. C.M. CORP. . 675·6700 FR~~rJ> ~.~t~~ ~ 5PCl>INETTfo~ used ont'e $100. 838•71lTI''
Http W..W 7100 twp W.t.cl 7tOO Service Sta. AttAodDnts, f<1W,dT1:ck D!aveAs f ' w. Warner nr ff arbor, $588 eves. · .~; ••••••-•••••• .. ••••••••••••••••••••• ......... ('1'•=:.1~:;;g· Hr· ~W.Tow'Tn/.1~J!i!.; Santa Ana. 979-2921 4 DRAW~.R 'CREST $18. Mse•---• ., ,
Re ... ·u-nt Y + Ave1 NB642-1252 , CASH PAID Walnutffrilsh W..e.d · 1011 •
C
... ... Service StallOQ Allen RAVEll TRAINEE w FOi' Wshr/Dr)'n/Refrta c..rtf•'*lllt8r• ..................... .. ooks•Hostesses E~":a. ::r:~·u~:.1 wtll lraln. Good typln • worldngornot957·lt33 ll6l~i!Ti~ CM ~~~~:97~~~7~~~f::'
Ho t \ll. :..,, ply Shell St.atloa 17th req'd. Non •moter. N~ JWria 2-dr, upper·k>wer, ea.ueo s S•wwa1uesses Irvine, NB. • travel exp noo. Foll . coppertone, A-1 cond. ,. \II. •t B H I travel benefits. Call S300. Mr. Main. 552.7500 Un[que L·sh•Pe4 sofa, Mmlcal f, yy~a• ers• U$ e p s.vt2 Orco5 n18!!:. NJ• ~k. AAtteodm:v,',...64Mt---:_U---:f.::-:5 M:--0t1-:=·Fr_1. __ 1 _______ .. 1 ~ondvel_!~.~--.iout. ..... ...... 1013
...,. .. , I ~1C .~ •••1•••••••••••••••••••
D•1shwashers Sbell.11th61tvlne, B VETMmATTMOT Weslin1bou1e w asher LESPAULCUSTOM • • Vet. hosp; limited wknd S95. Frieidalre portable Baratool1 (3) Royal blue SUNBURST. $450,
lhcre s a new Denny's In Costa Mesa and
that m.-ans ne-w family eating fun and new
full t1mt> and pCJrt-tlme job•I
• lntervnlns now
• I~~ 6 '"••per~nced • ,., pay
• ''" Jna&u•nH • r.w vaqtfoM
• Ptvflt lharlnt
' b•v • ...,,~na and nlatit lhtfu are open. Yoci'\I eoJotlthi •ttracttvt "at l'IOIM" u"'°'ph.,. and tht plf.._,,t wotld,.. condlUon• tn ocit
populat famlfv rts••11ta1't. Appllc;&ntJ. mutt
be 13 and above. ~pply In .,.,,on M~ay
thru Wedne$d11y, January Cl thru tht 11th,
se.-vlce Su. Alt.end. dull• ll\ uchl.ft&e ror d.lshwshr sso. Whirlpool rumg 13", Utco new Stoo. Oill G4().20'3 £ddle
P/thne. Exper'd. Nea rum. studJo apt. Prer. washer $75.. Guaranteed Call S.W-115' at\ 5wkdys
appear. & handwrlOna. oolm. oriented college 5*"8'72 Lr·Hd·LP • Cu1t.orrr
AJ)ll(y. =eo Newport .Bl student. Cdld 873·1050 ~~~~~~~~~I K1ns 1l1e 1n11ltren & box· $250/off, Qullt•r Duek•'' CM MM·SPV ;.; Aprln(J, hke new. 1135/ntf, Gibson an\~' --------;.;:;.=::.:.:...=..-----I KerunoreW&ahlnlllacb Matchlni heedboard A Sl5/df, WahorPhaseaJ • W..eM 7100 Good coodlUoo nlt.estand, e100. 548·57'78 ea. s .o. body '70. All wft J.'
SU. ~ Charmiu chen7 drop· p.Aft«&:~\517 • •
rrt,idalre retrt1 lU cu leaBW 4twl c.lo*. both Offlc.,w, .. tw •a !.!..::i_ ..
ft. avo. cron rrtt, $350. druU:SO.A.tT-3102 ... ,.... IO '
JQnmareavo~7drJr, .,. ... s... 8011 "•-••••••••• .. ~··0 .. •
nr no. tDlnt Corid, sue>. • ...... •••••••••••••••• .. YIAJl IND 309 MllriJrt So. fAa. s••• '!."' 09-tHs ••ytlrne, MOVIMG--... " · -.a733. l-6PM dnly NA If 16ffH~ c:Qln. Mat • wood deabl~
di-~ ""'-•uw• .,._. ·-top • •oocl con.. rutA> $1~ .. ~~ 11• ";.-.... ""'~ ....... -,_.. Ull. GJmfttt. wa11 wall • ...... • ns ....... f• ·r. rncn. conct. Wblto. Seta table!. -Kl .., 41.; 'fiJ•, l«ter a• 4 drJW .~11 918·042 X·H d 11. "'~ ..... A~ t'I llU.aral, IBM cud tu
MJ.731' ~ .C\1110. '"1nf t~ble,' :ur~ deck rues. Exec. cbal~ •.
fet & Pbyc:fl couch stcrctary chtlrt, rectQ.,,
Whit'' YourTra.cle? N6.G4o · Uon room furn • hea 11 Qpor .Day diy work lablea $4
11ud.'•UW.t.opsy OAM<;,f'l SA.LB HO thto lypewrit..., calcoJa J
far an ad n tho Dally Pt.lot l·U . T4 Ka•atakl to, ~Y macblntt. M .. y
Scrvtce Dlredal')' that un '100. Paru lot Yamaha miuaaat ltems. 131.JAt ~
e.f;.Nl$b10'Jl'prd.-lonal • twtn ..,1 ._,~, Of m.zm. _.. Place. l~ollt1. l'or &DON ln· a1111. b'oot.t. ••m. ~,.u~·~"~"'~°'~------~~.~·;
fl1rtf'laUallcall1CJ.51?1. == ~ ~ N. ff,8.
f
7
I I
I
1'
'
..... -. ~ ..
• W...l•fMNfwd ,....._,_,....... l•p1rt.4 · .I-art.cl .W...UMCI U"4 . ............................................................................. ~ .••••.•......••••••••.•.....•.•.••.••.•••...............•.• Cl• DAILY Pit.Of TU!Mday, Jan11.-y 10. 1078 •
~.~.~ .. ~!! .!-.!.~~~~ ............ ~ ............ !!.~ ~ ............. !!.i.~ ~ ............ !?!~ ~ ............. !?~! Veno 977 ~!!!:! ........ !!!~ ~ ............. !.'.•.o •••••••••••••••••••••• • ~e .. Brlt.Od Nanw Pianoe t'°loelW.... t1•0 eo t'ut\i PU, VI, 1uto, 77 MOB, Yellow 2700
u1·.uv4!C'cc.t. ••••••••••••••••••••••• aood coodhloa. $1115. '12 Datsun 240Z, 45, mile•, Railey Pa~k. mottlYOUt&rf lt6l.l'Olla BeiarbMu"c~ntei' MotobK 60 Vob)'lctte 6Tum:J mJles,wpeed. $4800/oeat offer. Alter A.US9VOLVO, IAMCMWAGOM
11-lOt Bucb Blvd, H.B. 1800 nil. 1ood cond For &ale l9?4I Ford FlOO 5'9-2305 ePMS.56-7723. See ua at S~uthorn ,. llunt flOOC" •hlft. •mall
M1 1.\36 Cal by. s s 7 · 3 818 ; .......4 ... all _,. • ._• '75 Dal.Aun 8210, •·d r, ,.,,__. 974"' o.-an,e Coun\1 • Volvo • V8 ~ " In ucep.
-'lbom--as-tr-amu.lor orcacs. 644-«JSOwlr ~roape, c ... v . .v aullO, Xlnt cood. 25,000 =-··-··••ooeo~ u:u1s·v0&.vo '. ~"irJ>r.ood condltloa. modelA~~~~.t'ond. Moforcye.Ht/ 1974 FlOO neeuadc. PIS.. m1.$277S.:WM044 "120ptl Ralb• Calm.War MiSSfONVJUO , ! MOw()lllyS"I
_ --"'"""' S Scac....., • 9150 PJB, AM radio, dac an 1978 BMW's 1970 1600 Roadster. Mu1t to Manta), Hp. XJol. 13t-UIO 4tl-1210 ; ...,.,,.tw llMfn
SportlfNJ Goo.ta 10t4 ....................... {mt, 8' bed. Lal than HERE HOW! sell fast. Best ofter. Sll.95. m..moevea • lSIDHarbdt. eon. lie ..
••••••••••••••••••••••• 1974 250 Yamaha MX· 47,000ml. '3500 ~-0297 IW0-6099 'ortdle t750 OIAMGICOUMTY 'It 642-0795
.Fucher Superglaai. T~ltltrront forlt,Bo& lNT'LSte Van-rorsurf COMPLiT! ·n Z40Z. Super sharp!••••••••••••••••••••••• VOLVO • .---------
Snov.sk1s. l!ISC'm $200 ~oc.:SJ:c. 7isoo. Call OC' wcrk PNew 'ures gd IODY SHOP Burnt orange, 4 11pd, Poracho '14 911 Tarca. EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO it It Mustan( II Ghia, 2-dr, 4
new . now j'!11l $75 ~w/o · er p.m. run'g. s?oo. ~J.236.1 °' mags, alr, 1 owner. 44K ml, lndla red/blk Largest VOivo Deai t , cyl., 4-spd, Air, P IS,
• b1nd1ngs1. Ka11Ue, Kast ,74 Honda Triali bike. SJl-6463 MOWOPEM S3m5.PP673-2S2t trim, Jeatber, lmtnac lnOrangeQiuotyt ~OGERMllLEASAYS, P/B, 211k m i. $3850.
inger, Dartmouth It Xlnt cond Brand new 644-tSlO BUYorLEASE SMOftlYPHOHr 76&-5807«499·2766
?tlun url Sk1boot1>·11izcs $600 6'6·8149alt6 . '72 Ford Couner. 4 spd EXCELUMT ll>'12 1600 P .U. w/shell DIRECT 494-UJt 14~tt'7 1Jm2-d.rCort.lnaGT, ~Hi. 7, 8 & s•.2 from $7.SO · w/sbeJl. Sl450'bst ofr. SELECTION OF Clean eog., good cond. ;n 9UT, 5 tJ>d, Taraa. Al ·
wS45. Call tl42·0L38. '77 Hoada CJ360T. Lo mi. 646-<l3:50alter6 PM IMW REs ... • 11:.5 $2195, Call eves art '1. IO)'S,. new l>lreJU.., MC. ~·.,~'l'l~r.r.mn-1-.. ~~-.. ~-$200. ---------Mu&t sell Make ofr - - -,.._ 5.56-61.23 homac,.$9,750,675-0745 liiiJITlllMllillriiliiillll.;iAill\1&1• SS!-5292 t.::!°i::t~~~~. 833-2S7Satt7PM . '77~C'f~~;.tc ~~:::Ut!r~~~:l~.~~ '76 DUO. Must sell. Xlnt l914'GM.Webercmi..!4 72 Gran Tortno ~ufre,
QllJ559-0.388eves. fbldaTra1170,lomi,xlnt 548'6331 ustoday! coocL19,000mLS3650/btt Ir, I Uru, rblt, ~C'. S. _ __ AIC, PS/PB, A /FM
comllt.loo. $375/Best ofr. 131-2040495-4949 oCr.957-1133 w/rectlph. $tS95. ~~-atero. Mat aell by Fri Set or ·n Lynx Irons. 67~ '63 Jnta-n'l PU. Short box, -,_,.cri 9723 41N.ZUO "''°'_," 760-2011
1
_1188"S920 _______ _
Maiitcr Model SlOO. wht spoke whls, Jrg knob· .., SC. -... . _, W.-tt•o a:u.2797 tmH~s:iO,runsgood, bies, 4·CYI eng. Orr. ~·3••0•~••••C••••••1•uu•• ~ ,:~ .. '!'~_; J.mVolvo:MSWagoo.Mr, ~ ............. ':..
callatU:30. 979-0l&lor754-0l46 1 100 pe. mmac. _, • stereo radio, lufrate ---------t
NEW Pro-llnt: ~olf clubs, 963-oc70. &'Sf• UOAOWAY New pnt.. IU\r, 82,000 mi. $7S00.492·317e rack, &t ofr. 499-4650 '7.S Malibu, 2 dr bdtp, OllA.NGE COUNTY'S
cObtSSOO. &ell ~s. 1964 -..:. ton Chevy PU. '74 5 ... , .... ,. $18,000. Cao as m lae. ·~coNTINE l. R.eblt eves & wkenda. '131·"11 auto, PS, PB, bdow Blue .-WIST
496· 1130 '76 Yamaha 400, 200 mUes :rn. eaders. suck, nu " " " 833-1656 644-0668 af'l 6pm. eng. parliaJty restored. days. Bit. $2895. S8l·i4M UNCOLN·MERCURY
1V llodlo. new. Good cond. Barely clut , JU.'>t tuncd up. nd:. 835·3 l 7 r SJ.J.60/ofr. Wkdy 75'-0C22 Dealerah!p is now OPEN
HJR St 8091 nddeo. $800. After iPN some body "'rk. $1000. THI uLnMAn 011rv1110 MAa!M 75 Morua 2 +2 Htchbk, 1 RA y FLADEIOE •••••• ; ••• ":::! ••••••••• ~7822. D•ys 540-3383 &n •USEO BMW's• Hondo 9727 '73 Porscbo 1114 1.7. Ap-AlfhM. UMd ownr, lo mi, AK/FM, UNCOUl•MEBCURY •
Several beaut. color TV's MoforHo.Ms.Sd•/ v-9570 '712002Aut.o 598LPO ••••••••••••••••••••••• pear~· A'M/hM radio. •••••••-•••••••o••••• l21$0/bst.S$2-420l .. .!8-llA.utoCenttrDr. ~!Slup S&STV. 642·5340 Rmf/Storoge 9160 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '7!120024 i;pdS/R<4!162> lrandHew'77 $C700. ~" AMC t901 62Nov•,·~lntconchxcep Wf'Wy·Le.keForestellil
2052Newport Blvd, CM. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1977 Chevy \'an h ton '752002A Ser . 2231$ tm 9118, 1000 ml, au ... ••••••••••••••••••••"• nds eni. Blue. $150/ otr. lRVINE
• --.. • Rent a 1977 Excullve XJntcond. $4400. '7tl2002'1spdS/R40JPDP HONDA Ccrs roof, leather, Joaded. l at Pacer x , aut~ loaded. MUC94or845--0611 IJ0.7000 !:..i.n~o 19 Color '.l'V'· 6 Mot orh ome or M in l· Call 714..a:J0-4034 '765.lOiA S/R 7l2PQ~1 u ....... , $18,000ta.ket.640~ 15.000 mi. Ulte nu. Must
mos old. l "> yr ltailt.ed molortlome from Her b '77320tAS/Rl17RSK '"""" •77CHEVY 76 Mooarch Ghia. 2 dr,
warr S350. S56 7379. lo1-1edlander. Call any or 76 Dodge Van, V8. PS, Qosed On Sundmyt To Cltoote ffoomt 1~61 91 2 ma 11, sell. 963°"'133 CHIVITll sunroof, loaded, like
--. bl ERC thesenumbers auto, $3000 or best ofr. U..._.IVERSITY c1meteAM·YM. Many .. ell "10 2 Doot Hatc hback. 4 ~,tWM· ~M.!kncls & alt
• '77 8.~R Turnta e, : 891-6777 63l·S19'1 or 67$-6465 ii.ft ORANGE COUNTY'S ""' extras. ldust tee. $4950. ••••••••••••••••••••••• adl bne alls or ............. ~~i:'er~~~~~~~o~ti!:L 537.7777 GPM OLDEST OldlmDWI• ~-1na 73&tat.eSt.aWgn,stAlreo. ~o~~:w · w ,a-.-75-M;...e_r_c_u_r_y_W_•_&_o_n_,
-82Mlll ... _.....__ W-'"-~ 9590 $ , Honda Ccrs ~ GMC Must sell '70 fl14 Porsche, tape, all pwr,eqp&. '1800. Mow 0Ny SZ"I . custom trim, st.eer/brks, : ::\la:1tcrwork receiver . -.va lllR'fwv :. Trw:lu prime "ond. New •.""ena. 645-5088 HOW ... lD CL-rolef air, UOOO. 830·3376, · · C<irrard turntuble, 2 M01'0RHOMES ••••••••••••••••••••••• boC'BI d " &." • A -· SIJS.5989
:-plm,. i\11 for $40. Works WE WILL IUY 2850 Har v • Call 0 > &76~n2 days. '67 Buick "Cr and. Sport.. Dov.e & Q\lail S". 1---------
0 K. Brcnl 6451700 Evcs From~?~.~~~0-0644 YOURDA.TSUM Sales·Scrv1C'e·Leasing CoslaMesa 540.9640 Eves (1)676-5840 P/~. P /B, auto, AI C, NEWPORTBEACU '7 5 lt on a rob'
RCA Color Con\ole TV, R"' .. ...,.. Fircb"ll . ..,. Self PAID 1-'0R OR NOT RoYt CcrYet" Inc. .'77 Red Honda. 7,600 ml. '68 'Porsche 9lZ Tarta, radio. Fal.reond.Mt-200'1 llJ..0515 833.0I t6 WblkVmatoon top & inL
""'' • .. c-> T-DOL• ... R .,,.,Is > • ' BMW $3,650. Call AM/FM stereo c~sette, Ccdlec 9tl S ~•.. tt.2I 8 C)'I, air, etc. Make of. 1o:ood C'ond, remolll con· C'Ofll. Auto/air. CC, CB, vr -'""' •O}Ce • 644·M4lor540-2372 xl t -ooo 494 '730 • _,.. fer. BI B 84&·1'40 or
_trot. S75 675 0253 . stereo, sl!)l'I 6 645·2283 FOR TOP CARS 1~0 Jamboree • n • ••· · • •••••••••-•••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 546-9264
Newport Beach f)<I0-3444 Jogiter 97)0 w.-.. 9716 '76 Cordoba, Silver &1--------loats & Mcrfn• · 1976 FARWEST mini ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••&.•••••• v · Ml.It. vinyl top, leathe.r Mlnfml) tt52 Ecppnwnt motor home. tor rent. 74 BMW 2002, wht air. '72 XJ6. Lo tnUeage, sun #l DEALfR fN U.S.A. bucket.seata. Center con·••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• 9ps 6 .. $165 wk, 6• mi. Blaup ster, mainl r ec. rool, stereo. Bought new eoltt. cndae control, etc. 'SS 289 Classic. PS/PB,
GftMral 9010 SJS.7007 ~~~11615 •4271 ; Jag,Muatsell.$8100.Ph ~ ltOY • · $4950. P/P Ml-1440 or racl air. Beat offer. •••••••••••••••••••••• Mto Senic•. Perts WE BUY 640-3201 PP tAIVElt • 540-131W MO-a8>
Classic 1938 Century. 2 & .A"nsories 9•00 · CLE.AM CARS 1970 BMW 1600, asking Mmda t7lt IOUS·ROYCE °"8l9f C...ty•a · ,76 Cordoba. xtra ctn, •gy Must811c. clean body,
. rockpats. tullv restored.••••••••••••••••••••••• &TRUCKS S3000. Reblt eng and •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• ••->•...._... s.rileC..... 1oadecl.Silver. Make off. automatic. $1000,
rblt eng. yarni!.hed huU .64 .• 77 U:1ed Mus t ang ~:~· 640·029$ ask for :t:' ... ~ • 113/59'-8l73, 7H/7~lO 5'8·32119 ~7000 631 ·2517 Parts. 990 No. Parker, <lOSIOMltfOA.YS 197' CA.l>fUAC eo.t t927 "18 llu~ Mach l , apd,
loah, Powef' 9040 Orange. Cali 997·2000 CONNELL 1970 BMW "Classic'' 2800 SIYILU ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• moo. root, every oplloo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• CHEVROLET CS Coupe-4 6pe<.'d, sun· '661 R.~. Sit.~ Sb~ohi All .luther, stereo ta~, '77 Coantt 4-dr I cyl 14K ml, mint cond.
SEA RAY'S ~!~.~~~......... 2828Harbor Blvd. ~\~iF~\~c~~z:.rel~~~~·~ 2150 tWhr IW. sa.~n!s~·~r.'a1~1 d~~=:a (~2fcv~e 17,000 tnl, iuto, .:tr. AM· 6'2-4800,S8&-l7" Anti~/ COSTA M fo:SA windows, pwr. steering & Cost. Mesa 645-1700 Robin . $95.88' . F~. ,.!!int cond. Ownr 'M Corivt. 75,000 orig. mi,
All 1978Modet• OCaslcs 9520 brake&, ligh t alloy ,.,,.._ '7'5 WJ..-.•*>.960-37'8 clean.$3700/olfer.
18'.JO' ••••••••••••••••••••••• S•6·1200 wheels & .only 6.3.000 ~S.. 97 .. 0 ••• .. ••••"•••••••••••• (4)'7'7&'76SevWea c.r..... t9l2 8.11-2080 &U-S2SO '.'~Chevy, Belairw/center WL~PAY TOPDOl.LAR males. ~tJNr condition! .__llYOU ToCh006eFrom ••••••••••••••••••••••• _...__ .... n• •tSS .., '"· $11,500/best offer. Pn. •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• ...,_ --HARRISON'S pclbt. Very sharp. $2000 FOR TOP USED Ci\HS 1972 Ml• 2200 .... • "'OUI • "11 tcr¥ett1. sll•er/ red, ••••••••••••••••••••••• tH2-4720 FOREIGN, DOMESTIC pty. Call6420l38. .. -• Nabe T·tol> 41,000 ml, loaded. '72 .ru,1. 88 2 d Al SEA RA y or CLASSICS Automatic & air cond. TOYOTA, rs 114110, offer. 742•fS21 ........., . oor, ..• 2J27So.Moin,S.A. Moving, Mus t sell 2 lfy~•rcar iuuvlf·•clean r~ 9715 For the luxur y of a S U Ua wkd"tta . ~2100terms. Cub disc.
540-6555 fo:d&l'IS, l eng. & xtra see~first. "~"' " :.:':::••••••••••••••••• Mercedes & the erticlcn-EE S! Cacti• C .. J.. .......,.
:.11ot Coast !fwy.NB. ports at junk price. I.AUER BUICK '7t Capri 1600cc eng. 4 cyofadlescl. (B34EIE). MAIOUIS TOYOTA ~ · 9935 cutlass Delta 88, PS,
631-2547 !>l6·2771 292S Harbor Blvd. spd, Good cond. AMI FM MAKE OffER . MISsION VlltJO 2600 H.11~m BlvcJ. ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• PB, air. xlnt. 50 day fact 211--f-t._U_nanate Sportfi!~her . C<istaMesa 919.2500 ~~1$1100 or best. .197SMIZZSO lll.ZU049S..IZIO CoslJMl.'~J.540-9100·. ·~~i;'°afn~.;~~=: suar.$1050.li4·2301
\ owner, in mint condi· R.a.aHOMI TOP . SEDAN. Tobacco brown "77 Corolla. Standard Int, st«eo. $2,000. 844-0318 tt57
lion & loJded! Custom an · Vehidn 9530 '71 Capn, AM/Ft.{ con· & 1.n immaculate condl.-ddwte eJtt. Make otr or '72 El Do. Blue w /wbt •73 Olallen«cr, vs, auto •••••~••••R.u••••::.:·:~:· ttorior, pilol, A.D.F, ••••••••••••••••••••••• DOLLAR sole, $1550. Aft 6PM tion. (229M!"W>. Muat Lo.p.548-IT<Wafta vln.YI top, all xt.ras. Xlnl trans, All/FM s tereo, 19'74 Pinto na...,...,. ..... t
VHF, i.unlog, outrig. eoovt 4 seat street legal PAID 046-8104 Days, 752·78.S!i seetoapprec1at.e. cond.$2,995.673.-t743 ~;.,.1~5, PB, $2JOO. Scoodl.c.-:.Lotnileace..,:un~.,.,7 ~ers,i\CIOCnaturalgas dune buggy. $800. Call FORCLEAN Ext56 MowOnlyS,995 '70C«onllMarkUWgn. .._......... OiN __.,,.,
rcfnAcrat1on &. cooking, 529-3-186 DGhw\ 9720 Nu Ura, runs, nds writ. 'fB Cad. .C Dr· all power, _.....
9960 b10llru top w l'nCIO!iure, '72 2aorr. 4.S HN\ 962·1ID aood -"'iu-gd tires --.. ,,,." , ___ , ..
·················•••••• ~ ~· D ~of ~ ~4M\. • .,...... .. " ···················••el'" m•w t"'hrJslcr rrurn1folds, Heavy steel Go·Car t $1000/u•>< r.-·7"WU ••••••••••••••••••••••• n:.cr.., & <.'I hows plU'i ex· frame. $.50. or b6l ofr. No * DRIVE 4 * A classic Mercedes Beo1 T...... 9767 1974 Ply. Satellite Sta.
tra fuel. Call IJulc at access. Call Rich aft LITILE wluch shows super b care , ... ••••••••••••••••••• '71 CoQpe de VUJe, a real I~-PHIL · • Wai. 11 pass., P/S, P /B,
l!Jtl 270'.}. apm, 645·78$7, Costa * ... * & IS .Juxur1 equipped. 1975 Triumph Spltrlre. beauty, loaded. Prlv. LONG Atr, Cd. tires. trans.
Mesa. S •VE A LOT <422EHA). Jdech:i.nlcallv ucellent. Ply. $1795. 841·6668 or FORD Cooler, air shocks, iau:.\TFISHING BOAT! " steceo ta pe & super 631·2333 trailer hitch. CB Radio
:!Ii fl, flybndsc. bait '111 Ford Camper deluxe IMPORT CARS SHOP&COMPARE sh&rl>1nt.erior&extertor •• 74 CAD "'-ville, lo mi··s. incl. Good Cond. Sl,900. tank. 111lley. hcnd. Carav•n. Ne w cond. Prt r-6y $3495 Call Don uc: &34--0899
Sleep:, 4, t:n1une com· 23.000 mi. only. Mags, ALL MODELS M-P~t· a.O..asOo; even· lmmac. ahape. All xtras. ,...;.. ___ . ------
Plt'tcly rublt. ~ledronlc toifol, stv, ref rig, sips 4. WE lnas alter 8 pm. call $5400/bstofr. M2·12S2 Pontiac . '965
$:!'ar Includes depth cruise control, s now M ... -......... Bena, •73 280 548-5163. '73 CoupecteVUle,aJlpwr, ••••••••••••••••••••••• finder ft bnand new, un· tires. Must see to apprec. HEED ...... .,....... leath "16 POQtiac Catalina. xlnt.
used 2·way FM radio & $8,1100. After 6PM The?l1AreHwe SEL, mint, lo ml, 1919TRll1li&PHTR7•0nly blltext. er. ccmd.Only1,000mUes.
HOF. $7500. Call eves & 64o-T8Z20ays,540·3383 CL.I.AH Allmodela&colors. SS&-0975 ia.~_.1mutn~!.l...Catmlne 9S1·1008Af'UPH '--,._ ... ...,..._,.,_ . m.~
wknds&45·9:r76 USED CA.RS ln11Mdl .. e w/amYu • uinot. aun· '75 F1twd Brihm D'El. ii11._.._~ ....._ MOW '76 MB 3001>, cleaA1 )0 rod, air eObd•, AM/FM Velour lnL 42K. UU new. Hard to nod, 77 Firebird 4fl' Converted Coasl 4Wlttt1Drhn 9550 D.U.,.ryToday! miles, like new. •14, 00. cassette, MJP fl much $6500.963-8377 Ellprit.. young exec car,
Guan! Bout. Twin diesel. ••••••••••••••••••••••• CALL PAPPY Priv. Pty Eves. 768-8502 morel hnrnacul•\el On· '16 Gran Torino. Blue Jo mj, ste reo cass,
I rl cab In' p h : ( 7 14 ) COST A MESA 540-s 630 Last chance for fant.a~tlc Ulm M ed 230 6 c 1 4 ly $5195. Pri. ply. Call a • .,.... . 9920 w/wbt vinyl top. Stereo, cust.om int. Railey whls,
:ns 5558 savlnp on alt rema1rung pd ere ts1 • Suy • 640-l1'7&or53'7-&659 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8 tr. AM/FM. $3SOO/bst priced to sell. Must see tu AMC & JEEP '77mQdelslnstock 5 on co umn. per · 731-4433 apprec. Oys, 831·3S10; ''{?, F~~m¥li.l!l~I~~· :~~~ TOO cl:SS:i~:~e:S46.ml "12TrlampbSpltllre. New ;~~~~!. 'Tf Whon, P /S, P /B, Eva,581-~
S3500. 6'7:> 9933 M•MY 2626 HARBOR llVD. 11•>.~.nfj.? or642-ui99 ;:87~~· MlnL $2900. 642·S'S32 AM/FM radio, Gd cond. y '974
JEEPS COSTA MESA_ ,_~_i $al06"0·1°'4 .!!! ................. . 21· SklpJark, Clybridge. MUSTSELL90 2MSHARBOR BL D. 1975 MBZ 4.50 SLC. 13,000 Vel&twtigM 9770 1961 Chet-1 4 dr, orig. Sq W 19'14 Vega Htchbck Air
twin 170 Volvos, 170 hrs, JEEPS BY WEIUY 54M 410540.0Zll total ml: Ong owner.•• .. ••••••••••••••••••• OWN'. $345. Well main-64 Ford Country an, 1.s~SlOOOt k • pp' VHF, sumloi, Oomcter, . JANUARY 31st USED CA.RS! F\tUy eqwpped Incl. sun· HUGE SELECTION tained. Good Ures fr bat-new tires, xlnt cone!. 1 auto. U a etl. •
bait sys, glv trlr, twin . PleueCall roof & cassette. Call u~.a..usgor.ang tery.~ttr54~2000 awnr.$500.67.S.211197 _n;....;..5-38~------We're the new Chevrolet 759-U66C appt. l ...... • ~ battmes, SS7-47S8 549-I023 dealership 10 the Irvine or ....._ Mnt tl04t~ Mew ,tlOO Alltel. Mew tlOO
28' Trojan Sportllsher, ZSMHARBOR BLVD. AulO Cent.er. We need l9QJ 2S>S 4-dr. Wbt ext, ••••••••••••••-••••••-ie•••••••••••••-•••••• ••••••••••••••-•-••• tlybndae, VHF, Depth Coata Mesa your used car! '77 Cl._mct blue inL Stick shift. Gd
f nd r t, · I t JOE Demo & executive" sale Mlcb. tires. Becker 1 er, very as m x n ,77 Jnternati al Sc t
con d. 1 n al i p . H . on ou · u .a.c •HUSO... now going on-hurry! Radio. $5000. 6'75·1530 Harbour. Sell or tnde GrHt deal. Must ~. """ ,-" 1188 DOVE STREET
Tor car or? 738-11184 Molt Mll. Trade small CHEVROLET (Near MacArthur Blvd.
---------• tnack or car plus cash &Jambol'eeRoad) 3J' Concord Brilf, twin considered. 837 ·9710 21 Aut.o Center Drlve NEWPORT BEACH
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9705 F I A T
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7
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Huntington Beach
Fo1•ntaln ~ailley -*
-·
'
VOL. 71, NO. 10, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFOR~IA TUESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1978 TEN CENTS
: . . Delly ............. ..., •k•nl .........
SAN DIEGO FREEWAY NEAR ORANGE COUNTY AIRPORT AT 4 P.M. MONDAY
Commuter• Can Exeect More Driving Weather Like This, Weath'errnan Says
.Surf's Up,
But Tides
. ·Lessening
Surf was running higher today
along }Yest Orange County
beache!' from the Santa Ana
River jetty to SeaJ Beach, but no
Oooding was reported, due lo a
1 lessening in high tides that caused
~dal slopover Monday.
. "They're up, about six to seven feet. really stormy and muddy
looking," said Huntington State
~each Lifeguard Supervisor Jack
Kramerofthewav~s.
Pounding s urf crested the
beach at Surfside Colony Monday
morning and afternoon and
washed over new parking areas at
Bolsa Chica State Beach, but
1 created no major problems.
I
• Sookesmen for the Fountain Valley Police Department an(J
Public Works Department said
fl<>me street Oooding occurred ln
the city's industrial area,
specifically a segment where con·
struction is currently under way.
Public Works Department aide
John McDaniel said the hardest·
hit sectors involved Edinger
A venue between Brookhurst
Street and Euclid A venue and
Harbor Boulevarcl from Edinger
Avenue-Lilac Avenue.
!Police Probe
: LI>ng Beach
·!\Ian's Death
Investigation into the death of
a young man wh~i body was
tound floating foW" mUea of(
Newport Beach has shifted to
~al Beach today Where detec·
lives say the dud man dlaap.
peared from a beach party on
t'Jew Year's Eve.
The fully ' clothed body of
Crnle Gene Rettlnaer, 20, of
North Lona Beach, was dis·
·cpvered Sunday afternoon by a
r•shing vessel and teco~ered by
• Coast Guard vessel. . .
Newport Beach poljce handled \he initial invesuaatlon bec•use ~he body was brouaht into
fl{ewport Har~. •
The investigation, however(
was transferred to the Sea
Beach department whep lt was
discovered that Retffnnr'•
brother had flled a mlutni
person report tbere lut Wednes..
d~y. ~
Off -and-on Storms ,,
Persist Near Coast
By JACKIE HYMAN
CIC uw o.lty f'ti.t St ...
Tired of the rain? You may
get a respite tonight, bul you're
likely to see more of the wet
stuff on and off through next
weekend.
"We have a lot of fa st·moving
fronts. They're going to be hard
to lime," said John Henderson,
a National Weather Service
meteorologist.
He said torught 's forecast is
for partly cloudy with local
dense fog and a 10 percent
chance of rain, rising to 30 per·
cent Wednesday as a new storm
moves in from the northwest.
A small craft advisory is still
in effect as seas remain choppy,
Henderson said.
Monday night's heavy rainfall
Tanged from .65 of aq inch re·
ported by the Orange County
Wunty Murder
Suspect Hunted
After Escape
A handcuffed murder suspect
was the target of a night·long
search in FuJlerton after he bolt-
ed from the North Orange Coun-
ty Municipal Courthouse shortly
before 7 p.m. Monday.
The suspect identified as
Gregory J. Teron, 24, was still at
large early today. acc9rding to a
sheriff's spokesman.
He sald Teron was extradited ·
from Midltg~ tecenUy to face a
double murder ~harge related to
an Anaheim crime tha' occurred
two years ago.
The suspect was in court for
arraignmetlt Monday and m•de
his break rot freedom as a group
of prisoners was being taken
from court t.o a bus wait.in, to
return them to Oranae County
Jail.
Officers Crom Fulletton,
Anaheim, the Marshal's Office
and sheriff's deputies combed
the area daring the nldlt
without fmdiJtV a tras:e at the
escapee. the slferifl's
spokesman said.
!Agh;tning
Strikes KFJ
A Los Aneel~ radio tla·
Uon was put olf the 1lr to.
day when lllhtnln& at.rutk
a power transformer.
A KFI lpokerperson
said there was nC) hi·
dlcalion l1ow Joni It would
take to repair &be
transformer.
The llebtniot bit at 8i'4
1.m. "
Harbor Department In Newport
Beach to 2.3 inches at Santiago
Peak on Saddleback Mountain.
John Gietzen of the Orange
County Flood Control District
explamed that the peak, at 5,680
feet the highest point in the
county, generally receives the
most local rainfall because of
the tendency of air to cool and
release water as it rises.
He said the season's f..llinfall
on the peak has been 22.6 i~
compared to 14.4 inches last
year at this time. He said the
mountain's 26·year average
rainfall total for this date ls 10.2
inches. with an average of 26.4
inches by June 30.
In Newport Beach, the .65
inches recorded for the past 24
hours brought the season total to
6 33 inches, up from 5.89 inches
laat year .S. lbis time.
Charles Lewis at Orange
Coas( College ln Coa\a M•a r4-
ported 1.to fnches since Monday,
for a SeasQn total or 8.58 lnches.
Last year at this time the season
total in Costa Mesa was 5.95
inches.
Rainwatcher J . Sherman Den·
ny reported a downpour of 1.47
inches overnight in Huntington
Beach for a season total of 8.40,
Just a shade below last year's
8 52 inches at this date.
The Moulton Niguel Treat·
<See llAIN, Page AZ)
CAPO MAGAZINE
SURFER 'BIBLE'
Published in Capistrano Beach,
Surfer Maaazine Is prob-
ably the bible of the sport. See
Featurtsig, P~ec1.
Stax Granted
On F;xecutions
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) -Three
me,h scheduleJi lo dle in
Nebrulca't el~c chair have
w9p •t least another 90 days rePrl~ve,
The State Supreme Court grant·
ed 90 day ataya ot e~ecQtion Mon-d~y Cof masa slayer Erwin
Cllarlet Slmanu, and for con-
• aemned murderers Jolm Edward
Rust. and Richard Dean Holtan.
Slmartis was ecfleduled for ex·
ec"Uon Jan, 21 for murdering «Jx
merqberi ot tht Henry Kellle
family ot&rtberlaftd. Rust was to
be execut-1•'Jan. 23 tor the ms
murder ot Mfcliael KeU01i. who
WIS •hot to dnth while tr)lng to
cop,ie to tht aid otpO&lle wlto wue
HCh&Jlllft ~ wttb Rust tof1o•tnc••~.lrhtrobbery.
Holt.AA, achlidUNCI tor execution
JaD'. • waa·••taHd ~ dle for ~;~:cse_.a an Omaha
bi,,.i-1\~ilftftl •t'Obber)'. , .
Rocks, Mud Slide
~alling wa~ ~
One in State Storm.
87 'l1le Associated Pres•
Thundering surf and torr'enUal
raias have claimed at least one
life as they inundated Soul.hem
California coastal communities,
broutht traffic to a crawl along
miles of nooc:ted highways and
touched off numerous rock and
mudslides.
Authorities said Derrek W.
Price, 57, died when a soaked
BA TTEAED NORTH BRACES
FOR THIRD BIG STORM-AS
hillside began oozing downward
and toppled a retaining wall on
him at his home in La Jolla, an
exclusive suburb of San Dieeo .
Price had gone lnlo hls yard
when he heard rocks cascadln&
down the hill, police said.
Meanwhile, heavy surf from
the Alaskan storm that has bat·
tered Soutflern California for
two days left water up lo 3 feet
deep along more than 15 miles of
highway north of San Diego,
bringing traffic to a standstill in
many places and slowing it to a
crawl in others. Many cars were
reported stalled in the middle of
intersections.
By 6:30 a.m. today, l.lS Inches
of rain from this storm had been
recorded ln downtown Los
Angeles, bringing the season
total to 10.34 inches.
Drenching rain was reported
in many parts of Southern
Ca lifornia today, with
forecasters predicting rain
throudi t.oniJ(bt, with a chance
oC s~o~ btttlDl\iog again
W edJie.tday allemoon.
The Natiooll Weather Service
said surf that hu powided Ule
California coast alnce Sundtty
would continue at least until
W ednesclay.
Just west of Los An&eles, ex-
clusive Malibu Colopy -one of
the nation's most expensive
communities and the honie or
such stars as actor Steve
McQueen and singer Linda
Ronstadt -was sandbaJ(aed (or
WOfficer's
Wndition
'U11Changed'
Fountain Valley motorcycle
oWcer John Masterton, who suf-
fered a severe skull fracture
Friday night ln a collision with a
car, remaibed in unchanged con·
dition today.
Masterton, 39, a Fountain
Valley resident and former
California Hlghway Patrol of.
ficer, ls fisted in serious condi-
tion at Fountain Valley Com-
munity Hoepital.
Spokesmen say his vital signs
have bec9me stable since the
6:45 p.m. craah Friday, but he
remalns In a coma due to the
basal skull tracture. ·
The vicUm. who joined the ci-
ty fo"rce nine years a•o alter
leaving the CHP, also sustained
a fradured collarbone and mul~ple-other injuries.
ft{otorist .#Qhn Richardson, 51,
of 1823s· Crater Lak~ Court,
Founta!Q Valley, was neither cit·
ed nor held pendins fW'ther in-
vestigation of the accident oo
Brookburst Street just so~ ot
Talbert Avenue.
Witoeans told authorltles
Bicbardsoo'a car p&.llled out of a
commercial plan to make a left
turn 10UU.bowad on 8ookhunl..
Street and lt "u thu the two
vehicles coUid.cl.
the second d"y Monday -agalnst
a Pacific Oce"1 assault oo lts
doorsteps.
But Monday's tides ·were les1
severe Lhan expected and
caused no immedlately apparent
damage, said.Los A.ng~lea Cq\lft·
ty Flre CaS)t. Harry Williams.
Dally l'I._ Staff .......
DROPPING OUT
Huntington's Gibbs
bcean conditions forced the full
thrust of the high Ude on rocks
and bhdfs just oortb ot the ex.-
elusive tcJiony.
On Sunday, waves demolished
fences and stairways of ocean·
front homes.
HANGING IN THERE
Huntington's Wieder
Ba~tlett, Wieder
Seek Re-election
By ROBERT BARKER the council when municipal
CIC 111e oat••"''" statt strife flared two years ago.
Ted Bartlett and Harriett He said Monday that be can
Wieder both said Monday they fun ction properly with the pres-
will seek re-election to the Hunt-ent city council composition and
in1ton Beacb City Council in with what he said are improved
April. conditions In city hall.
Bartlett is the oldest city coun· Coen served as mayor in 1968,
cil member in age and 1n lime of 1972 and 197•.
service, Several others. have an-
The 75.year·old sewice station • noun~ed that they win run fo~ of·
operator was fi~t elected to the Ike 1n the April 11 election.
city council in 1944. He has More ~andldates are .expected
served for 20 years, the last 12 con-when filing for the o~f1ce opens
seculively Thursday at 8 a.m. in the city
He was ~ayor in 1946-48. cleric'• otfice. .
Mrs. Wieder said that she will The filii:>g deadline Is Feb. 2
seek a second term in city office unless an incumbent chooses not
while also leaving the door open lo seek re-election. In that event,
to run fo.r Orange CoWJty filing wj.11 be extended until Feb.
s upervisor in the second dl!trict. 7. . .
She said she wants to serve in Any resident who has lived m
whatever capacity that wtll best Huntington Beach for 30 days
benefit Huntington Beach resi-and is 18 years of age or older
dents. may run for a city council seat.
Mrs Wieder was mayor In Candidates must pay a $100
1976·77. fee at the time that. nomination
The council seats held by papers are taken. Signatures or
Bartlett and Mrs. Wieder are 50 registered voters in Hunt·
two of the four that expire in lngton Beach are needed to com·
A pri I. The terms of Norma plete the papers. . .
Gibbs and AJ Coen also are up. Besides the four city council
Mrs. Gibbs said she will not posts, the office oC city attorney
seek re--elecUon. She has served is up for grabs.
two consecutive terms and says In.cumbenl Don Bonfa, who
that eight yea'rS are enoup in has served ln that poslti<>f? since
an elected city position. . 1966, ls chaJl~ged by GaJl. Hut-
. She added that.she is consider· ton, an,"attorney wlth the city of
Ing the possjbillty of running for Santa Ana.
county s•rvisor:. She said that. The election will mark the,.
if Mrs. Wieder is leaving the first ~lm41 Ulat Bonfa bas had op-•
door open for that race, then •he posiUon.
would too.
Mrs. Gibbs was mayor ln
1975-76.
Coen, who was elected to the
first of three consecutive tenn5
in 1966, said \hi\ he is Wtdedded
ab<>ut seek.in1 ~lection.
Coast
"J'JI let you know before the
filln• date expires," he sald. • Weather Coen i'fCViOPSlr bad votced. • · Ten percent chance of
disenchantment -1th suvinl on showers tonlaht with 40
percent chance Wednes·
day. Continued cool. Lows
tonl1hl 45 to 53. Hi&b• Wedl'.\dday 58toM.
INSIDE T8B4' y
Gov. Ednwnd Bn>&Cllt Jr. tm•
Hf!fd. ii ncord 111.4 "''"°"
atat• '"'.-."" progrQm todar • that fncluda tas cuu /or 7 .9
mllllo" h<:1m•o11111•r•. s-. etorft1, l"agf C3. •••ex· '
I
I
t
-
I 7
'!? O~IL Y PILOT H F
. " WASJ[I NGTON CAP > In the beglnnln«. there.
wa~ only LlTE beer. Then came LIGHT and LYTE.
And next came a lawsuit.
T he s uit was filed by Miller Brewing Co. to pro-
. tecl its trademark on UTE as a name for reduced·
caloric beer.
The U.S Supre me Court on Monday let stand a
low~r court d ecision that LITE is simply a misspell·
m g of a generic term and ca nnot be a trademark.
Miller sought to overturn the appeals court rul·
m g that gave G. Heileman Brewing Co. the right to
sell LlGtIT beer. · ·
The suit against Heileman is one o·r lO llled by
Miller against other brewers, which use the names
LYTE or LIGHT. The other trademark-infringement
s uits named Schiltz, Genesee, Peter Ha nd, Anheuser-
Busch , Pittsburgh Bt:ewmg, Erie Brewing, Oly mpia,
Rheingold and Rainier.
Ferguson Relates
Senate Candidacy
Orange County pubhc rela·
ttons man Gilbert W. Ferguson
a nnounced today he will seek the
state senate seat being vacated
b y Dennii. Carpe nter , R·
Newport Beach.
Ferguson said he will s eek the
Republican nomination in the
J une primary for the 36th
Se nato rial Dis trict, whi ch
stretches from Seal Beach south
to Oceanside.
F'erguson, 54. 1s a retired
Mari ne colonel and former
J rvine Company vice president.
IJ c now heads his own advertis·
rng and pubUc relations firm in
"Newport Beach. ·
He also serves as executive
rl1rector of Californians for En·
v 1 r o nme nt, Employment,
Economy and Development,
1CEEEDI, a coalition of busi-
nci.s and labor interests.
E-:erguson has served in posts
\\1th the county Cost or Housing
Committee, the county Open
Space and Conservation Com-
mittee. the Greater Irvine In·
dustrial League and California
Coordinating Council.
Ill' has also st'rvcd on fund
raising comm1 ttccs of t he YMCA
;ind Uni ted Way in Orange and
SEEKS GOP NOMINATION
Senate t1opeful Ferguson
San Diego counties.
Ferguson lives in Newport
Reach. He and his wife Anita,
have four children.
o.i1,,.. ... ....._ ARROWS INDICATE WHERE SURF POUNDED HOMES
Expert Saya It's Shape of the Bottom That Count•
Tidal Action Effect
Due to Topography
·By SfEVE MITCHELL . . °' ... o.11, ...... ,....,
·Why is it that hieh tides and
waves batter homes in Malibu
and Oxnard, and break windows
in Capistrano Beach, but leave
other seaside communities like
El Morro Trailer Park relatively
unscathed? .
It's the way the sea bottom.
looks, combined with high tides
a nd high surf, according to a
graduate ·student at Scripps
Jnstitule of Oc~anograpby in La
Jolla. ·
• ·'The effects. of tidal ol\Ctlon U'8
4ae to local lopograpey.v• ex•
llained David Skelly, a araduate ~udent of oceanoerapby at the
51aside insUtute. · ·
He said the makeup 0( tbe sea .
*ttom .can aCfect Wh~• lhe 'f ~ve energy goes.
The problems 'raced by
homeowners in Malibu and
Capistrano Beach are a result of
a com binatlon of high tides &id
larger than normal surf.
That wet alliance actually
raises the mean water level,
hence the ptoblems that race
oceanside property owners, he
said. .
•'Think or tides as actually
waves," he said. "It is a wave in
a sense, in that lt has a period
and a wave length."
These shallow water waves,
com~inJd with deep wat•r
waves, (those that break on the
shore> create the coudttion that
damagesbomes on Uwtbeacb.
.. But it's th• topoaraP.bY
(makeup of the sea bottom) Utat
makes the difference." SkeUy said.
Charter .
• I
'Eo '.Bo to 1'.. ' r ,. ~.,.} ~ . ~
Public?
Huntington Beach City Council
members decided Monday night
that aome of the mol$t con·
troversial proposed changes in
the city charter should be voted
on separately by the people.
One of the measures that ap-
pears certain to be headed for
an Independent vote ls the etatus
of tho omce of. lbe city at·
tomey.
The clty charter revision
panel has recommended that the
po1ltlon continue to be elected by the people.
Council members say they
--thfoJC Claat• the city attorney
should be appointed by them or
the city administrator. At any
rate. the co~cil indicated that
the issue will be put in the laps
of the electorate for an ultimate
decis ion ln the June primary
·ballot.
The charter committee . had
r ecommended that the entire
charter package should be de·
cided by a single yes or no vote.
Council members took the
stand that some issues are
crucial to the people and merit
an Independent vote.
The council generally left rec-
o mmended changes intact
Monday night but it sqpimartly
dismissed a proposal that the ci·
ty treasurer position be
eliminated in favor of an elected
city controller.
Mayor Ron Pattinson said he
was "very happy" with the
treasurer (Warren Hall), and
would strike lbat recommend•·
tlon from the Ust of propo&ed
changes to be voted upon.
Other items being considered
for a separate vote include a
limit of two consecutive terms
for council members and a pro-
vision to set their pay.
Mayor Pro Tem Ron
Shenkman said that eight years
are a long time to serve.
He said that extended time in
office tends to result in a lack of
initiative and apathy on the part
or the officeholder.
He said that motivation can
lag after a number of years.
"The council needs fresh new
blood," he added.
The charter recommendations
also propose a pay raise for
councll members.
It calls for a monthly salary of
$400 when the population of the
city Is between 150,000 and
200,000: $500 when the popula·
tion is between 200,000 and zs o,ooo and $600 when the
population ls more than 250,000.
The mayor would receive an
additional $100.
The present population of the
city is about 160,000.
Council members are present-
ly paid $175 per month and $125
for expenses. The m.ayor gets an
addlUonal $100.
Pattinson said the council
would consider other charter
changes in two weeks.
Fro111 Page AJ
PILOTS •.•
vealed no small aircraft landing
during the time Evans lost sight
of tbe plane from Meadowlartc,
Morrlsoasaid.
Morrison aaJd "touch and 10
landings" are prohibited at
Meadowlark Airport.
The tiny airport. surrounded
by houses and apartment build·
ines, has been under attack re-
cenUy by nearby residents who
claim the facility is a hazard
and nuisance.
Morrison said It is not known
at this time exacUy what type of
criminal charges could be filed
against the pilots of the two
planes if they are ever ap·
prehended.
But Morrison admitted that provtnc wllo was actually flytng
the_ pfan• Sunday nJcht would
be dUftcuJt. •
Federal Aviatioil Admint.atra.
tlon ofOclala in Lona Beach aald
tOday they bave not ~elved
word ot the Sunday ni1ht incl·
dent tit Meadowlark Airport.
l'.-P•fleAI
RAIN ••.
ment Plant In Upna MsueI
meuar.d 1.2 lacbet OY~
ror ·m· ...... tot.a, aim•t • dou-11 year'• I.ti IDcbet.
Ra all In 8-nta Ana, tbe
fiood e.troi dllti1ct'1 Glttaen
Hld, W• l.Crf tncbel OYVDICbt,
bno1lnt tbe ..... tOlol to 1.01 tncbea com~· to $.43 l.ncbM Jut,. ....
Diedrich
\ .
Judge '
Removed
By GARV GRANVILLE
OI UM O.lly flt ... 1i.tt
Oran1e County Superior Court
Judie PhlU_p Schwab was ~
moved Monday rrom the ca~ in·
volvln( bribery c:barges lodced'
by tbo county Grand Jutr.
acalnat Supervisor JhlpH
Dledrtch and architect LeRoy •
Rose.
It wu Judge Schwab who
ruled ln November Utat th• Dis-
trict Attorney's Office shouldn't ,
handle the prosecution or
Diedrich, Supervisor Phi'! An-
~i:--..._ .tbOft¥ .and.J-._.~ other def&n·
dan\I in a political conaplracy
.... , ......
COSMONAUTS JOIN COMPANIONS ON SPACE STATION
Vladimir Janlbekov (left), Oleg Makarov
Soviet Cosmonauts
·Sent to Rendezvow
MOSCOW (AP> -The Soviet
Union rocketed two cosmonauts
into space today to rendezvous
with two colleagues who have
spent a month aboard the Salyut 6
space station, Tass reported.
Successful docking of tho COS·
monauts would mark the first
time four men have been placed
aboard a Soviet space
laboratory at the same time.
The Soviet news agency said
cosmonauts Vladimir Janibekov
and Oleg Makarov blasted off in Soyuz Z7 at 3:26 p.m. Moscow
time (5:26 a.m. PST). Already
aboard Salyut 6 are flight com-
mander Yuri Romanenko, 33,
and fllebt engineer Georgy
Grechko, 46, who were fired into
orbit in the Soyuz 26 spacecraft
Dec. 10 and linked with Salyut 6
the followina day.
Grecbko took a walk \n space
Dec. 20 to check the space lab's
docking ports and reported them
in good working order.
JI the Goyuz Z7 flight follows
previous patterns and the dock-
ing maneuver is successful,
Janibekov and Makarov should
join the other two late Wednes-
day. Janlbekov, an air force
lieutenant colonel and com-
mander of the spaceship, is
making bis first space flight,
while Makarov, a civilian and
flight engineer, new befbre on
Soyuz·12 in 1973. .
Tass said after the docking the
four cosmonaJJts would can-y
out joint research and experi· ments.
The agency s aid Soyuz 27's
sys tems we r e functioning
normally and tbe two new cos·
monauts were feeling well.
The last time the Soviet Union
had four men in space was in·
October 1969 when they new in
three different spaceships,
Soyuz 6, 7,.and 8, and carried out
joint maneuvers, including dock-
ing of two or the spacecraft.
Four spacemen were aboard
one !hip in t.he joint U.S.·Soviet
docking of July 1975 but again
this was not the same type ol
operaUoo as the docking of two
spaceships with a space lab as In
the planned Salyut 6 rendezvous.
Three U.S. astronauts spent 28
days aboard skylab in May 1973
and later were.joined by a three·
man relief crew in a mission
that lasted nearly two months.
The government has not an-
nounced how long they are to stay up.
cu~ .
· It was a1ainst tl\al back·
iround that the DA., otfice filed an affiduit ot preJudlce acatnst
the Judie.
He quickly responded to the
affidavlt by removln1 himself
from ttte bribery case, an
alternative to hayln1 another
judee decide Ube b prejudiced.
lh his ruling last November,
Judge Schwab said he could find
.no true prejudice or bias on the
part of the district attor,ney.
The judge ruled, however, a·
possible appearance ol prej-·
udice because of opposite posi-
tions sometimes taken by the
Board of Supervisors and Dis-
trict Attorney Cecil Hicks might
undermine public confidence in
the courts lf Hicks prosecutes
the case.
That case was put on the back
burner Mooday where a ten4
tative trial date of July 31 was
set, meaning the defendants in
the political campaign con·
spiracy case won't swd trial
until 13 months after their
indictment. ·
I
j
I I
I . Blazing Auto I
·Loss $1,000 i
·1n Huntington ·f
. I The engine compartrnent or a
parked auto burst into names in·
a Huntington Beach con. 1 dominlum garage Monday eve.
ning and caused about $1,000 in
damage, firemen reported.
Witnesses told firemen the
late model sedan was driven into
the garaee at 18547 Edgebrook
Lane at about 5:20 p.m . The ;
driver, who was unidentified, l
left the scene. I
About 20 m inutes later, the I
engine was ablaze. Exact cause {
of the fire could not be de-
termined, firemen said.
. John Collard, a nearby res-
ident, used a fire extinguisher to
contain the fire until firemen ar-
rived . No structural dama.ge
was report~d.
"' J
7
Irvine
"'
... ,
Toda,·'s Closing
N.Y. Stoek
VOL. 71, NO. 10, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIF.ORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1978 TEN CENTS
.Cos1nonauts Join Comrades -in Space
l
MOSCOW <AP> -The Soviet
Union rocketed two cosmonauts
into space today to rendezvous
with lwo colleagues who have
spent a month aboard the Salyut 6
...swu:e.stalion..'Iass_repoxted.
Successful docking of theJOS·
monauts would mark the "first
time four men have been placed
..aboard a Soviet s pac e
)aboratory at the same time.
The Soviet news agency saitl
cosmonauts Vladimir Janibekov
and Oleg Makarov blasted off
in Soyuz 27 at 3:26 p.m. Moscow
time (5.216 a.m. PST>. Already
aboard Salyut 6 are flight com.-
m ander Yuri Romanenko, 33,
and night engineer Georgy
Grechko, 46. who were fired into
orbit in the Soyuz 26 spacecraft
Dec. 10 and linked with Salyut 6
Launching Progra•
the following day
Grechko took a walk in space
Dec. 20 to check the space lab's
docking porU> and rePorted them
in good workin~ order
H the Goyuz 27 fughl follows
previous patterns and the dodt·
Ing maneuver is successful,
Janlbekov and Mal..arov should
join the other two late Wednes-
day. Janibekov, an air force
Former Apoll o ast r onaut Rust y
Schweickart <center and closeup, below>
talks with students in the Irvine Unified
School District's 19 schools Monday dur-
ing inspection of closed-circuit cable
tdevision system. Schwe1ckart, Gov.
Brown's science advisor. ts backing .Pro-
posed satellite communication between
chstri<:t and other schools in country. With
him are <from left> video proJect director
Melody Williams. distnct Trustee Fred
Gahm· and Mary McLuhan of Newport
Beach, mcmhcr or the State Board of
Education.
,, \ $1.1 Million Saved
i By School-park Plan
Five years of coordinated de-
velopment or city parks and
public schools has saved Irvine
taxpayers St 1 million. accord-
ing lo city and school district ad·
lninislrators.
Nearly half the savinas-
$500,000 was on one project
alone the Heritage Park
aquatics complex, say Paul
Brady Jr., asslstant city
manager. and Gene Hartline,
Irvine Unified School District
assistant superihtendenL
They are the authors of a re·
V.S. Dollar
Rate Mixed
1 LONDON (AP ) -Opening
rates for the U.S. dollar were
mixed today on Weatem Europe's
tnajor money markets. There
were modest fractJonal 'alns irt
London and Parill and losses in
Frankfurt, Zurlcb and'MUan.
• These were the openlna rates,
•compared w\th Monday's late
~uotaUons .
I
r
' I
'
port analyzing cost savings re-
l.ulting from joint development
'Of parks next to school sites.
It will be presented to the City
Council at tonight's 7:30 meeUng
at city hall, 17200 Jamboree
Blvd.
Hartline and Brady conclude
in their report, "The city and
the ... scbool district together
have achieved some develop-
ments resulting in cost savings
that few communities ever
achieve."
The joint development pro-
gram was beaun in 1972 when
Irvine voters approved a $16
million park bond.
Besides the development of
Heritaae Park, next to Irvtne
High School, which is credited
with a total f7l'l ,000 aavlngs, the
administrators cited Cour other
joint project.a in the report.
They are:
-U n iversity Community
Park/University Elementary
School. The city used achool dis-
trict Jandl for park development,
and buUt a lifbted buebaJJ field
needed by the district, aavin1 the
districU75,000.
-Hoeptner Park/Los Naran·
· Joa Elementary Scbool. Land
awapa netted j.he diatpct $150,000
savlngs, and Uie city larger play·
ar-eas for tho park.
-Pre.ley Park/El Camlno
Real School. Jotnt de\'eJop~ent
of a tot lot 1aved Sl2,200, t.he
ad mlnistr&ton estimated,
-Cha::;;;,.t Par>t /Bonita Canyon . Jolnln1 ot \he
park wlU. tbe athool reault.s ln a
nlne·acrt park U\ thta Turtle.llock area; five acre. u. tllJ patt.
four are tchool Cltatricl pWtn1
lieJcla. 8aW.,S fl'OID a coaibb:Md
us., in tenn• of ._. acrea1•
needed than ror aeparate develop-
ment, la •timated aU150,000.
A 110 on the counctl a1enda is a
propo1al to relnltu• a uuner
bue p~m~ •lUUn th• eity, .. ,,... on~~ rn.e ~Y but pro-
1ra111 •• ....... May from me ti...,_ by the ~u.
He~vy~ss,
Man's Life
By Tbe Associated Press
, Thundering aurl and torrential
rains have claimed at least one
lift as they inundated Southern
CaUfomia coastal communities.
brought tra!Clc to a crawl along
mllea of flooded hipways and
touched olf numerous r<>Ck and
mudslldes.
Authorities Hid Derrek W. frtce, 57, dJed when a soaked
lieutenant colonel and com·
m.ander or the spaceship. is
making his rirsl space flight,
while Makarov, a civilian and
fHght engineer, flew before on
So)'l)z 12 in-1973 .
Tass sai<t after the docking the
four cosmonauts would carry
out joint research and experi-
ments.
<SttSPACE, Page AZ)
Foggy
Showers
Expected
By JACKIE JIYMAN
OI tlW D•lfY ll'llet SIMI
Tired of the rain? You may
get a respite tonight, but you're
likely to see more of the wet
stuff on and oCf through next
weekend.
'"We have a lot of fast·moving
fronts. They're going to be hard
to time." said John Henderson,
a National Weather Service
meteorologist.
He said tonight's forecast is
for partly cloudy with local
dense fog and a 10 percent
chance of rain, rising to 30 per-
cent Wednesday as a new storm
moves m from the northwest.
A small ~raft advisory is still
in errect as seas remain choppy,
Henderson said.
Monday night's heavy rainfall
ranged from .65 or an Inch re·
ported by the Orange County
Harbor Department in Newport
Beuch to 2.3 inches at Santiago
Peak on Saddleback Mountain.
John Gietzen of the Orange
County Flood Control Disttjct
explalnecS Utat the l>ealc, at ,5,d&o
feet tl\e "hlCh~t poln' in the
co\lnty. ieoerellY receives lhe
most local raint'all because of
the tendency of air to cool and
release )Yater as it rises.
He sald the season's rainfall
on the peak has been 22.6 inches
compared to 14.4 inches last
year at this time. He said the
mountain's 26 -year average
rainfall total for this date Is 10.2
inches, with an average of 26.4
inches by June 30.
In Newport Beach, the .65
inches recorded for the put 24
hours brought the season total to
6.33 inches, up Crom 5.89 inches
last year at this time.
Charles Lewis at Orange
Coast College in Costa Mesa re-
ported 1.10 Inches since Monday,
for a season total of 8.58 incbes.
Last year at this lime the season
total in Costa Mesa was 5.95
inches.
Rain watcher J . Sherman Den-
ny rePorted a downpour of 1.47
inches overnight m Huntincton
Beach tor a season total of 8.40.
just a .shade below last year's
8.52 inches at this date.
<See RAIN, Pace Al>
* * *
............
COSMONAUTS JOIN COMPANIONS ON SPACE STATION
Vladimir Janlbekov (left), Oleg Makarov
Irviite Cleaning Up
After Heavy Storm
By Pmf.JP ROSMARIN
OI ... o.lly l'INi ,. .... ,
Irvine city maintenanc~ crews
were sc h edu led to work
emergency shifts as still another
rainstorm caused more flooding
in the wat.er-ballered communi-
ty. officials said today.
Last week's storms flooded
nearly a score of city streets
which were closed to lraflic.
Public works department
superviS<>rs said motorists can
expect more or the same this
week 1f comparable ram falls.
Today, Calver Drive was
closed from Barranca Road to
Main Street, and Jeffrey Road
was blocked from the San Diego
Freeway to Irvine Center Drive.
Culver Drive will be closed al
least three weeks, according to
latest city estimates. Part or the
road, where it crosses a flood
control channel near Barranca.
was destroyed by churning
water la.st week.
Eilimated total damages from
Jast week's storm to roads and
construction projects in Irvine
reached $133,SOO.
* * *
Those costs were shared by
the city, de\'elopers and utility
companies.
A breakdown complied by
public works estimates:
-City personnel costs, over-
time . s uppli es and waler
damage: $17.000.
Southern California Edison
Company costs for material and
l bor: $5,500.
rvme Unified School Dis·
costs for personnel, over-
repairs of leaks and pump-
ing of water from an El Cami.no
Real School classroom: $6,000.
-Irvine Company costs for re·
pair of Culver Drive and the in-
tersection or Barranca and JeC-
f re y roads . c lea nup of a
mudslide on Starcrest Drive in
Turtle Rock. a nd general ·
cleanup and pumping: $82,000,
with $60,000 of that going for the
Culver Drive repair alone.
-North Irvine Assessment
District costs to repair draJnage
facilities and eroded curbs and
gutters. $13,000. Flood\ng of city
(See8TORM, Page AZ)
Safa~i Swims Lightning
Strikes KFI
'Close Encounters' Reported
.By J'ERRV CLAl1SEN
Of• o.fl't ,.. ... M.eH
T he hippopotamuses and
monkeys are happy, bul the six
Inches of rain that has fallen on
Llon Country Satari have pre-
sented st~f members tbere with
some UD"5Ual problems.
One rhinoceros which often
waded lD Oso Creek for water
and baths nearly drowned last
Thursday, a park spokesman
said, when strong currents and
deep, rain-swollen water got him
in over his head.
Rangers stood by to help, but
the 3,500-pounc! rhino finally
made it out of lhe "raaing tor·
<See SAFARI, Pa•e AZ>
A Los Angeles radio sta·
lion was pul off the air to·
day when lightning struck
its power transformer at
La Mirada.
A KFI spokesper son
said there was n o in-
dication how long il would
take to repair the
transformer.
The Uehtning hit at 8:44 a.m.
7
l I
I
!
'
..L .! OAIL Y PILOT T
CAPISTRANO
8[ACH
D•llJ 1•11a1 ,._,,,_
ARROWS INDICATE WHERE SURF POUNDED HOMES
EJcpert Saya It's Shape of the Bottom That Count•
Tidal Action Effect
Due-to TOpography
' By STEVE MITCHE LL
01 ti. o.lly P!Nt Si . .tt
Wh y is it that high tldes and
waves batter homes in Malibu
und Oxnard, and break windows
in Capistrano Beach, but leave
other seaside communities like
El Morro Trailer Park relatively
unscathed" * * * ...
FrotaPa9eAJ
FLOODING
1n ~any pa rts of Southern
~alifopnia today, with
forecaster s predicting rain
throu~h toni~hl, with a chance
of s howers beginning again
Wednesday afternoon.
The National Weather Service
said i.urf that ha~ pounded the
California coast since Sunday
would continue at least until
Wednesday.
Just west of Los Angeles, ex·
r lusive Malibu Colony -one of
the nation's most expensive
t•ommunittcs and the home ol
such slars as actor Steve
McQuecn and singer Linda
Hon sladt was sandbaRRed Cor
tne second day Monday· against
.:i Pac1f1c Ocean assault on iL'i
doorsteps
But Monday-., lldes were less
'>t'Vt'rc th a n expected and
c-aus<'d no 1mmrd1ately apparen'
dam age, said Los Angeles Coun
tv Fire Capt. llarry Williams.
Ocean conditions forced the full
thrust of the high tide on rocks
.md bluffs JUSt north of the ex·
C'lus1 ve colony.
On Sunday, wuves demolishe<i
f<>nces and stairways of ocean-
front homes
In Ventura County, the seven·
root tide flooded at least two
homes in the Faria Beach area
and caused som e $10 ,000
damage to each Several homes
1n the Sencliff area in the
northern part of the county also
"ere rtoocl<-d
H1~h w~1vcs forced authorities
In shut lhc l ,200 foot Ventura
J>ier The IOS·year·old pier was
c-loscd \\hen pier pilings and
cross bracings c.:1me loose.
Up to lO·foot waves swept the
H1ncon area between Ventura
;rnd the Santa Barbara County
line U S 101 near Emma Wood
State Beach was closed off and
on, and lhc beach itself was
c losed
.
22,000 Acres
It's the way the sea bottom
looks. combined with high tides
and high surf, according to a
graduate student at Scripps
Institute of Oceanography in La
Jolla.
·'The effects of tidal action are
due to local topography," ex·
plained David Skelly, a graduate
student of oceanography at the
seaside institute.
He said the makeup or the sea
bottom can alfect where the
wave energy goes.
The probl ems faced by
homeowners in Malibu and
Capistrano Beach are a result of
a combination of hi&h tides and
larger than normal surf.
That wet allian ce actually
raises the mean water level,
hence the problems that face
oceanside property owners, he
said.
"Think of tides as actually
waves," he said. "It is a wave in
a sense, in that it has a period
and a wave length.''
These shallow water waves,
com bine<l with deep water
wave!\, (those that break on the
shore) creale the conditiOG that
damages homes on the beach.
"But ll 's the topography
(makeup of th<' sea bottom> that
makes the J1fference," Skelly
said.
lie said h1J(h waves do the
damage when they are superim·
posed on low frequency waves
<tides l but added that the im·
pact depends on whether the sea
bottom is comprtsed or a
canyon. headlands, a point or a
gradual sandy incline.
"The bottom determines
where the wave energy goes."
he said. ·
A beach which fronts onto a
deep canyon may not catch the
brunt of the high tides because
the waves cannot push past the
deep water with as much effect.
I
The bottom can refract. or
turn a~1de the impact of the
wave on the shore
Rut it appears the triad oi
surf. tides and topography go
out of their way to create
problems for homeowners In
Capo Beach and Malibu.
And leave other coastal areas
intact.
Mission Viejo CO.
Eyes Denver Land.·
M 1ssion VieJo Company of·
ficials announced this morning
that they have entered into an
agreement designed to lead to
the acqu.isition of 22,000 acres
south of Denver.
The purchl)se of this land, the
Highlands Ranch in Douglas
County, will make It the com·
pany's largest holdine.
M lssion Viejo is only 10,000
acres and just about half o( \l
has been developed so far. The
company's other Orange County
holding, Aliso Viejo In La \Ula
ORANO"E COAST
DAILY PILOT
Hills, is 6,700 acres. Develop-
mentor this land atUl ls in the in·
ilial planning stages.
The company also has been
developing another commwlity
called Mission Viejo east of
Denver in A~rora. This &40-acre
project is half developed.
In a press release, PhlUp Rell·
ly. company preaidenl, said,
"With the valuable experience
gained in Aurora, the Mission
Viejo Company had been seek·
Ing addltional land to continue
it• long.term involvement in the
Denver area."
The terms of the agreement
were not released. A company
spokesman aald lhey had been
ne10Uatin1 for the purchue of
the property "for awhile." The
a cqulalUon acrH ment WH
111aed wlt.h a 1roup of alx
Colorado buelnet1men Monday.
he 11Jd.
In the r.leaH , Reilly· aald
company offlclal• wlU be
evaluaU~ an upectt of lona-
lefm, bafanced cominunJty d•
welopmel\t of the reneb .tth ·Do•claa County offlcla11,
clth en•' aroupa at\d all •J>·
proprt• at.at• .. ~i• dwms
Ulene.i~.
Tbe compeaJ M>otet-.an Nila
they pnibabb wnt dri~ ruuter plaa won diCICUna wt
•bat ~-t wUl ...
• OD tit• Jaod. Tia• CO•PHJ
foUOWad tM .... ~ ....... ....... YlilJO • Viejo, ., ~ ........... '*9
; ..... " Ula Ill ••• vwo • CompMJ, wlU bi WOrk\al .aia til . mQwr,..-bU...MW'..._, ••ti de.'llilo ~ -~ for the eol8P1Df'I t.. OrillP
COunly project.:
'
Jl was a blue Monday for two Laeuna Beach
police officers who put up with verbal and
phyisical abuse from three motOrbls during their
ihllli.
and Anita Streets.
lie i.rud the woman smacked him the lace and
cut his Up before he gained the upper hand, atteSt·
Ing her on charges of being under the influence of
alcohol, misdemeanor hit and run driving, resisl-
ing arrest and assault on a police officer.
It all started al 5:45 a .m. Monday, when Sgt.
Terry Temple pulled over a motorist he claims
was speeding on Coast Highway. Yourex booked the woman into Laguna Beach
Jail but found himself bacJ~ at the station seven
hours later -this time walking with a slight Ump.
"The euy WQ obviously upset when he got out
of the car," Temple recalls. •·He ripped off his
classes and threw them on the pavement, pulled
out bis wallet, tore it In half and threw it in the
street, then walked to the back oC his l'JUDper truck
and put his fist through the window."
"TIUS TIME IT was a woman who had had
her driver's license revolted," Temple said thts
morning.
T IDS UPSET T E MPLE somewhat, consider-
ing the guy was ln excess of alx. feet tall and ap·
peared unhappy.
The officer called in tor a backup, telline the
dispatcher, "Hurry 'em up, l 'vegota big one."
He said Yourex recognized Rhoda Sowden, 24.
of Dana Point and pulled her to the side of the
road. •
"She refused to get out of the car, so he called
Cora backup," Temple said. "That wu me."
After arre&Unc that motorlat for two outatand-
ing traffic warranta, Temple's trauma was over.
Officer WilUam YourexJtad yet to begin his
blue Monday work day.
The two officers finally convinced the woman
to leave her vehicle, al which time Tempte said
she began kicking at the officers.
Y OUKEX'S FIRST ENCOUNTER began at s 30 p.m . Monday when he pulled Barbar a Pr6c·
tor, 47. of 603 High Drive to the side or the road
after i.he allegedly hit a parked car al Glenneyre
"H E R BOOT LANDE D right on top of
Vourex's Coot," Temple said. "And you should
have seen the heels on those boo~." be whistled.
Miss Sowden was arrested on charges of re·
sisling arrest. assault on a police omcer and for
being an unlicensed driver
Add Insult
To Injury
McKEAN, Pa. (AP>
The gale.force winds that
stranded many motorists
a l ong Erie County
highways left one man
more marooned than most
-in a gas station ladies·
room for an hour.
"Our m en's r oom is
broken because all the
pipes are frozen," said
Tore Heubcl. an attendant
at the station, located off In·
terstate 79. "While he was
in the ladies' room. the
wind slammed the door
shut and the lock froze."
He was freed when the
lock wa1 removed with a
cutting torch and a
crowbar.
Frort1 Page Al
SPACE •..
The agency said Soyuz 27's
systems were functioning
normally and the two new COS·
monaulS were reelinJt well.
The last time the Soviet Union
had four men in space wu July
1975 when Soyuz 18 and 19 were.
up. During that period another
Soyuz craft with two cosmonauts
aboard linked up with a U.S.
Apollo spacecraft.
The last time the Soviet Union
had four, men in space was in
October 1969 when they flew in
three different spaceships,
Soyuz 6. 7. and 8, and carried out
Joint maneuvers, including dock·
ing of two of the s pacecraft.
Four spacemen were aboard
one ship in the joint U.S.-Sovlet
docking of July 1975 but again
this was not the same type of
operation as the docking or two
spaceships with a space lab as in ·
the plann<'d Salyut 6 rendezvous.
Three U S Jslronauts spent 28
days aboard Skylab in May 1973,
left and later were replaced by a
c rew that spent two months·
aboard. The space record Is 84
days aboard Skylab in 1974.
The government has not an·
nounced how long they are to
stay up. The Soviet record for
manned space flight I~ 63 days,
set i n the s u m m er of 1975.
Americans hold the wor ld rec-
ord of 84 days, set tn 19'73·74.
Frottt Page Al
RAIN ...
The Moult.on Niguel T reat-
ment Plant in Laguna Nlauel
measured 1.2 inches overnight,
for a 7.55 season total, almost
double last year's 3.98 inches.
Rainfall in Santa Ana, the
flood control district's Gietzen
said, wu 1.07 inches overaieht,
bringing f.he season totol to 8.07
inches compared to tl.41 Inches
last year.
STORM •••
Irvine Charges
'Victim,' Suspect
' Held After Tussle
Irvine police responding to a
call Monday that a man tWn.
cbokln' a woman rescued the
victim -and then jailed her.
Otticel"'S said Defla Harris, 19,
of Westminst er, wiun't grateful
about being saved from a man
choking her. In fact, they said,
she refused to admit a nything
out of the ordinary had hap·
pen ed.
Because of that, 1be was ac·
cused. along wit h Gary M.
Scor u, 28, of Santa Ana -
whom police said wrestled with
and kicked at \hem -with U ·
sault and battery against a
police orflcer.
Officer Philip Povey and Dave
Scroggins. a public safety aide
on ride-along with him . said
they arrived al an apartment
house at 3800 Parkview Lane to
find a man struggling with a
woman outside one of the apart·
ments.
She was being choked, they
said.
Povey said he ordered the
man to release her and was 1g·
nored. The officer said he
wrestled with the suspect and
finally dragged him off the
worn an with the help of a
sergeant who arrived.
Povey and Sgt. Al Muir
handcuffed their suspect and
draJged him kicking lo a police
car, they reported, then bound his
feet andsh.oved him inside.
inside.
Meantime, the woman r an.
police said, but was found by
a noth e r pol ke officer who
escorted her back. She claimed
never to have been in a fight,
and never to have seen Scorza lo
her life. accord.lni to police re·
ports.
Both Scoria and Miss Harn &'
were booked Into Oranae CoW'lty
Jail: Scorza was held on $1,000
ball, ahe oo SlSO bail. .
Fro111 Page AJ
SAFARI •..
rent" on his own, the spokesman
said.
Park visitors are delighted,
though, when lions and other
mud·haling animals walk along
the paved roads from which car·
en closed viewers watch Lion
Country activity.
"The animals are more ac·
tive," the spokesman said. "We
dofinilely are having several
close zoological encounters of
the third type."
And then there a re t he
giraffes. "Their bodies are like
huge radiator s," she said.
··when it's wet and chilly. we
have to keep them in the barn."
Park maintenance people
have been busy constructing
small shelters and windbreaks
for several species, she added,
e!lpecially the cheetahs and their
rain·hating cubs.
SEEKS GOP NOMINATION
$enate Hopeful Ferguson
Ferguson
Runs for
State Seat·
Orange County public rel a·
tions man Gilbert W. Fer1uson
announced today he will seek the
state senate seat being vacated
by Denni• Carpent er, R-
Newport Beach.
Fe r1uson said he wlll seek the
Republican nomination in the
Jqne primar y for t he 36tb Sat tor ial Dist rict , w hich
sf tches from Seal Beach aouth
to eanslde.
er1uson, 54, is a retired
Ma r \ne colonel and former
Irvine Company vice president.
He now heads his own advert.is·
Ing a nd public relations firm in
Newport Beach.
He al.'lo serves as executive
director of Californians for En·
vlr onm e n t, Empl()yment,
Economy and DevelopJnent,
<CEEED>. a coalition or busi·
ness and labor interests.
FeriUSOfl has served In posta
with the county Cost of Housing
Co mmittee, the count y Open
Space and Conservation Com·
mlttee. the Greater Irvine In·
dustrlal League and Cahromia
Coordlnallng Council
He has also served on fund
raising commilt!es of the YMCA
1nd United Wa~ in Orange and
San Diego counties
&litor Murder ed
MANAGUA. Nicaragua CAP>
-Pedro Joaquin Chamorro, a
lead ing Nicaraguan opposition
editor. was ambushed and shot
to death today, a colleague re·
ported. Chamarro, editor of L8
Prensa, was a long-time opponent
of the Anastasio Somoza dynasty.
7
l
f l
Ii
•
Tueeday's
Clo.ing Price NYSE COMPOSI'I'E
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Planning Helps ·~1
Elderly Make It l
81 SYLVIA POltTEft --.. -... Lut we.le, when t.be flnt of lbe Chrtatmaa bills piled up
by Mary, 71, aod bet bu.band, 71, came In, Mary took a
credit card they once uHd only occaslonaJly and applied &4
the bank I« a cub advanu.
Without it, they could not even have pa_)d Lbeir Januny
rent. Althouih when Oeor•e retired ei1ht years •to. the)'
mana1ed euUy on their accumulated aavinaa. Social
Security and h1a modett penalon, they're now over their
beada ln debt.
WORSE, TREV'LL tifEVElt 8E abJe to repay thetr'
debta: they lace duddn1 their creditors until lhe d.ay lhdt
die.
Even tlJoee wbo create a retirement income t.otalin1
about the Hme U actUJ.J earnings DOW Will have at retire-
ment about half what other Americans ar~ then earn.in;:
lnnatlon w1lJ force them down lhe livini standatds scale.
The retirement
dream is in reality an ·
economic nightmare .
Millions of elderly are
forced to depend solely
on inadequate Social
Security benefit checks.
Private pensions are
. ..
I
Money
Worth
1.i~ • . ' .
. ~ .....
often either equally modest or actually a mirage
As a result, one in four lives ln poverty, and poverty is
increasing among those over 65 and at a far more rapid rate
than for those under 6S.
There is litUe escape for those already ln this posillon.
They should seek advice from financial counselors. But b
victims of lack or planning for retirement, their options are
exceedingly limited.
THEY SHOULD SEEK AS MANY WA \'S as they can
find to raise their income without forfeiting benefita. Pos~
ble jobs ran1e from baby sitting to house sitUn1 to beaL(1 care for those less physically able.
They should band together with those in simllar pos{•
tions to save by buying foods ln bulk. by sharing costs of
transportation. by exchanging services, etc.
But the real solutions are for those who begin to plan for
retirement in their JOs, 40s and, at the latest, early 505. Here
are guidelines:
-SOME EXPENSES WILL BE higher: for Instance.
costs for medicine will average 21.; half times higher than
for younger adults.
-Some major budget items will either cost less or
cease to be important. The mortgage probably will have
been paid off. Education bills will be finished. Food cost$
may be lower because the elderly often eat less. Medicare
will. be crucial.
-Retirement. offers prime money·savlng tax breaks:
extra exemptions. home selling tax breaks, other special
deductions.
Planners must be coldly realistic in estimating needs.
An emergency savings fund, extra health insurance, and an
·'inflation cushion'' are good ideas.
Nut Credll counseling
..
Wsers 2, Gainers 1
As Market Stumbles
-' .. '·
NEW YORK (AP) -Bluechipstockssteadied today, but · 1
the rest of the market was unable to halt its early-1978alide. ,
The Dow Jones n era1e of 30 industrials. which had
fallen more than 46 points in the first five tradlng days of tbe
new year, fell another 3.03 points today to 781.53.
And losers outnumbered gainers by more than a 2·1
margin in the broad tally of New York Stock Exchan1e-l!sted
issues. .
Analysts said the depressed prices of many blue chip #
stocks attracted some buying and covering of previous short J
sales with the Dow at its lowest level ln more than two yeara.
But they aho noted that the market was still faced with '.
concern over rising interest rates. )
St~lulttT#w
Spotllgltt
NEW YOAK IAll)· Sal ... 4 P.rfl. a<•ce
-flOt <~ .. -"''""' """'' acu,.. New Yor11 5'ock f:~CM"9e '"""'· trad?j!i MtloNolly •I ,,_.. 11\aft i 1 A eo<p.. . U'l)llO 21~ + \l'r Am T • . • •• • • • 311. lDO ,,... Vt llldd Co. . . .. . . U7,«JO M._ '1lt
0.ll Motor-I... 217,IOO JI+. "t
G.eftflOU Co. . 17'.lQO U ... -I ... ll!Kk Oe<IC,. , Ht• 141'1 • •;, llM . lU .IOO »I I'> lrll Pet . . .. • . ftl.1'00 If-'. '•
£•JOfl • . '°'·'°° "" IV. g1,~'f:.~.... ~:= ~~ ' ..
5ffnlU1 . . l lt,ttl Jt\4 Wet\Ofl El. 1U-11 •, AUlllCllll ltl,000 4111) ._
Norton Slrfl 1p,-It • •
HI'# YOllK IA~I· s.tff, 4 11 "'· 11nce
eftlf net cllenat of tM ,.., "'"' acu .. A,,..rlc.., SlotlL f:•<"--l»Uft. lfa411"9 11 .. '-lll' el mot"e IMll $1. ,.,01• on 111.100 ,..,. HOllOllM • . . , ICM,600 2'lli 'lo
Glel\4 Vall. • • . tt.IOll 1 IV• -'Ao lNl~I .. A ••••• , S1,J0t 10 -" W•f~ Oh. ~... .,, 100 , • .,,.. • "> G\8H ... \....... '4.tot 1 -I'>
POE t.Jlld. .. . ... •.:ioo -'"
0.-M,,.. . 16,400 "" • '" UVJ"" wt........ Jt,MO 2" GoW!lefd Cp U,50I I '11
NEW YOlllC IAlttt
~.
J.octay ~
101' 1107 ,,. m ll'O ,_,
4 •
1H Ill
Due to late transmJ55ion todav's listing will not
appear in the Oallv Piiot.
WMAT' AM•x 010
Nl!W YOllK fAPI
-, Television. IJ6 DAILY P1LO r TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS Tuttsday, Janua"1 10, 1978
Tl ! .. .Silt\ Y
EVENING
·-. cu HEW1 ae HEWS 8 EMEAOE.NCY OH£1
LYNH
IHACKLEFOfilO
t8 Tl* BRADY BUNCH
Mi.a Ind CerOI P19n '
c:ampjng lrlp lor lhl whOle
IMnlly
C1J THE AOOKIES
When a burglV .. err_.led
and aubaequenuy dlee, llO•
1>ollc:e·h111ng aon 11
betri.ndld by Setgean1
fb~RtC COMPANY
~ A8 MAN 8EHAVE.8
''CnM!lvily" <II AeCNEWS
e:30 I) MOVIE
••• "Juar~·· (1t'9)
P.ul Munl, a.tie D...._ A
IWtOflc* ~I of ll>e
!Md« wflo c:tUACMd tor
1~ r.._. ot Mtudc:o from
Prine. Mulmlllen'1 F~
CIOmlneUon IS pr-1.0.
(2 hr9)
• ..au.vwooo 1'£UVl&IOH THL' TlA
'TM "-II Of Mt. Fu~"
Jo11p11 Cemp•nella,
Andr .. M-'"'. Avery
Schreiber 1nd Je-11•
N~ -IMluted In tllla
c:onllmporery Ruu11n
ptay wl!lcll <*'II.,. Wound
the 25-~ teuriloo Of ,_
World Wit II "9tW-In
Ille aouu-acarn region Of
Ille US S .R.
'11) WHY NOT A
WOMAHf '"° 0 Ill V.vt.AHE & SHIAlEY
"The Mortk:IM" U-
hllla tor • mMt wno dlNM
• big black llmoullne but
llMde $hlt1ey'. hel9 In
Meler to gel • date wtlh
hlm. '
* * •v. •·A Gathering 01
Eaglee" (Pll1 1) (1983)
Rode Hudaon, Rod Taylor
Sl>Od<ed 1>y ,_ huablnd 1
ae.nlng hatSl>neA 10 hi&
men, •n Air Forca
C:Of'IVTIAn<lar'• wtle ... v ..
l\lm (1II<,30 min.)
0 NBA 9.ASKETBALL
Chicago Bulle v1 Los
Angelea Lakerl
Some Kisser Q) CA088-WITI ~ O'l!.R EASY
Q) ~THREE SOM8
Unele Charley buya 1 vac:a·
hon lot. on4y to fond that
he's been hoodwinked. tD Olo'El' EASY
\ mt·rnher of lht' rock ga uup hi'"' 1l
J11...,tralt'" :'\BC Xe\\s cont·!'\1>0ndt·n t
Ed\\ in :'l.L'\.\ man's r eport on tht· promo
11on ;rl hu .... tn<'"" on The L;1ncl ol If\ Pl'
:111 d c;1111 ·' t11111ght <tl Ill on Channl'I I
Jun Minh; credit cerdll,
.,.,.,"' •• holC>llal ellglblll-
ly
91>0 IJ (J) M•A•S•H
TM unll'a -geons 1n-.t
a vaac:uler damp to atop
arterial bleeding, and
recover Hot L.lp8' ~Ing
rl110 .Jain Merlh; c:<edll c:ards,
11e1er111'• hOIPll•I aOglblh·
& GROWING YEARS
"'Children In FamHi.a"
fil) MACNEJU U..REI\
REPORT
Eil) L.A INTERCHANGE '"•'Cl• Srra;ohr '1)) NEWSCHECI(
0 @) THRE.E'S
COMPANY Ci) EARTH, SEA AND
St<V (J) THE QOHO SHOW
®) HOU. YWOOO
SQUARES
"The Rlvell" Jaok
bec:on'9e entangled In a
laud be.._ hll two
roommac.. when Janel
8C(;U-Cl\riuy of 8\Nllng
• hat>d-~ 9XeclU•
t1ve from her
(() C88NEWS
(!t MEIW ORIFAN
G..-1a_ Glen Cornp~ll.
Mort Sahl, p,,,ry Kong
"lunar Geology"
CJ) TO TELL THE TRUTH
7.00Q HBCNEWS
7 30 Q CANDIO CAMERA 8 NEWLYWED GAME 0 SOAORITY 'e2
8:00 IJ Cl) THE
f1TZPATIVCK8
The premature arrival OI
Maog11 • baby takes Ille
Fil:rpa1r1ck1 by aurprlM.
Q MAH FROM
ATL.AHTIS
Q UARSCLUB
0 A8CNEW8 Ql I LOVE LUCY
"Vacation From Mamege ·
(I) AOAM-12
Ql THE BllW>V BUNCH
Carol l1u a mtnar acoldenl
on rhe parking lot ano It
1urna 1n10 • big court ~.
CD AOAM-12 lhe lur ..,,.,,,vong c.111zan ot
Atlanlla la c:ornmlMIOn.a
to locale• ml&Sl"g aubml·
nne aNl return Ille bOdlea
of Ila et-lo shOfe, an
ualgnmenl 'Nhlc:I\ leads
htm lo an ullra-seetat
op«1t10n "-did by • tor.
mer Oii geotoooll (R)
0 IAONS&OE
"Cheollmat• And Murdff"
Q) MEllV ORlfflN
G.-11 Gier\ c.mpbell,
Mort SIN, Pvry King,
PeteH1mlY Ottooera Malloy at>d AeeO
o•t 111 unexpeoted aaaia1
from en ex-c:onlllel when o
gang ol hOOOluma an.a.1
them
The olflc:era call lri Firearm
end· Exploslve• 4t•Pflrl•
when a llrlnga bolt la·
round tn an llae1rona
faclory.
'1)) W.STEIV'IECE
TliEATN:
··Hall WhO?" Callgule·1
maleYolwlt ~trk:lllft
arid ludlc:rou• m11111ry
~ atlr ~llelft
In the court Channel Lbfing•
tJ KNXT 1CBS) Los Ant')eles U COL.l.£0E
8A81<ET8ALL
ll::M>IJ(I) OHU>AYATA
TIM& 0 II.NBC tNBCI Los Anqelt''>
0 KTLA llno I Los Anyt!le'> 0 KABC TV 1ABC) Los Anyelt•
14) 11FM8 (CBS) S.:in 01090
O KHJ TV (lno J Los AnCJPIP•
10 KCST (ABC1 SJn Ou·Qo 4D K Tl'./ (Ind l Lo-. Anq1•1t•.,
Cl) KCOP· TV (fnc1 ) l o'> Angt.>I• .,
fB KCE. f T'J (PB!::>l lo:. Anu"'h:,
Noire D-vs Unnlef11ty
of S•n Franc:lac:o 0 ({§) HAPPYOAYS
"Pot ... Gell Ptnned" Pot-
.i. penic:I when he t~
the tr11erri1ty 1n111111on tor
~•no ptnned 10 a sororny
gorl
"The "-~·· Arin'a
plane tor romenoe bec*llnt
wt>en 119' , ... ,'°'*"" with
ari exciting ,_ ck1wt
tall ... most audden and
uriuauel lurn. (Part 2 of 2>
0@) 80AP
a!) 11.0C[ -TV I PU$) Hun11nQt11n Bt: .Jlih
4D CAROL BURNETT
AND FRIENDS
II) MOVIE
(Epleode SiXtMn) CorrlM
angrily orders -'-lea and
Cheal8f from her jaH c.tl
When trigrld, the rnyatllf'I.
Tony Bennett
Sees •Rock'
Trend Fading
LAS VF:CJ\S. Nl•v IAV>
Tony llt•nnt•tl who says he·., a
"tunes m1Lh," not a prog
nost1calor believes that lhe
"rock" trend may be wcakc•nmg
. and popular mu!\tC may be re·
t urnlllt.! tn more• tr.id1lton<1l
form .,
'"l don t t·<1rt• how long it's
crock) bet•n l!Olnl! on I can't
help but think it's sltll a IJ1g fad
that \\Ill kind or fade awav
becaU'>t' it-., not really based on
t c r rift\' rr111~ 1 e. • ll<•nnct l E'"<
da1ms
OVER Tiit: PAST 25 year:..
Bcnn<.>tl. in his early so~. ha~
t''>tabli~hcd h1mselr as one or the
~real !.tn~t·rs, r anking tn the
l'lass or th(• l:1IC' Bing Crosby, tht'
late Nat "Kin~" Cole and Frank
Stnatra
The four. alung with a handrul
of others, huve mastered the art
of "1nlima1c l>ingini:." Therctli a
certain carin~ for the audience.
;.in undC'rstatcd graciousness and
~tyle ~hi ch can't be learned
"Tllf: MllSIC' NEVER over
l'Omc~ 1rs mature music, it'"
crart!t ," Bennett said in an tn
1erv1ew between shows at the
Hotel Saha ra h<.>re. "It's nice
and gentle, and 11·s a performing
kind or thing ...
Rut while good music lovers
bemoan the ract that greats are
dying and l?Nting older, Rennell
as confident that there's nothing
lo worry about because he sees
young musicians coming out of
colleges and universities who
will fill the footsteps.
•·r THINK THE new genera·
lion or young adults coming up
ri&ht now ia tremendous," said
BenneU. "I'm starting to find
out that thelr paco Is muth dif.
ferent than the aeneration
before the late 19SOs and 1960s
crowd. Their elders were vJc•
. tims of lbe whole 60a scene
which got pretty neurotlc. I'm
very encouraged by the new kida
J see coming out or colleae."
· It's not that Bennett d1allltea
the ''rock" music, he Just feell ·
ttie generation of the rnl<MOs Is
rediscovmns the "blf band.a,"
Jan and the cl ct.
• '••THE N'EW KIDS really like
Cood Jan,'' Bennett explained.
"The 1eenerallon bef orc It wu
stridl1' rotk and they wouldn·t
adhere to ~nf elH• '' •
Brother"
.J an-'!\Jicha('I \'1ncl'nt. left.
• 1 n d K rt s K I 1 !'\ t 0 rr <: r s 0 n
p ~, 1· t r a y b r ot h (' r s 1 n
· \'igtl<lnte Foret>,'' t1> mr on
CHS Wedn('sday at 9 pm.
'Gypsy' Film
Will Remain,
In New York
NEW YORK CAP) --A moV1e
with a $6 milhon budget that
almost lert New York to I.Jc
filmed in Chicago because or a
Jabor dispute probably will re•
main here after all.
Producer Dino De L aurenuis
had threatened to move the film-
ing of "King of the Gypsies''
when Local 644 of the lnterou
tional Photo.iraphC'rs of the Mo
taon Picture Indui.try blocked
Swedish cameraman Sven
Ny kv1&l from workin& on the
film -
BUT AFJ'ER a meeting with
union officials. Fred Sidewater.
executive vice president of De
Laurentiis Productions, said, "Ir
there's no change from our dis-
cussions. the film will r emain in
New York.''
He said Nyquist would be the
cameraman. Union orricials
would not confirm that Nykvist,
a member of the union's Los
Anfteles local, will be allowed to
act as cameraman for the pro-
duction.
LARRY RACI ES. president or
the local, said he believed the
film would be made in New
York, although he said the
aflreement between the pro·
ducers and cameramen would
have to be endorsed by vote of
his membership.
Raclet said he did not beUeve
the film nu•.kcta aver bad any ln·
tentlon of movlna productlOb to Chlc~o.
"We t.hln.k it WH j' t a red
herrlnt:i h saJd. "They'd have
to mov8' Ninth Avenue to
Chlcato lo make tho movlo there."
S11>£WATER SAID D•
t...urenlfis, •boba.d aaid a.he dl•
pute wu "atupd," had made no avet-m t to hi~ • New York
canematoiraPhet' as a backup
ror NykVbt, bUt tnalcattd th9't
such a m0ve wu lllte.ly.
De LaunnUU who..h11 ntmtd
.. Kint J<asi1. • ''9erp1co" dd
"Three Dap of the Condor"
here, alto bd tllrHt•~~ to
rno~• ~ )ll'dducUOn, "FC*t to Oo,,. W Califomla.
Linda Blair
Victim of
Her Fame?
WF:STPORT. Conn (AP)
Adrc.s.s Linda Hlair. a rrested
!J:-ol month on drug charges,
:-.a~s she 1s not involved with a
nJ
0t1onw1de drug ring operating
out of Florida as police allege .
In a rnpyri~ht story in 1:he
Hr1dgt'port Ttdc•gram. Miss
Blacr said her urrest on drug
charges has been blown out or
proportion She said she is a vie·
11m or her fame.
M i£s Blair, 18. is best known
for her role in "The Exorcist."
She was arrested Dec. 20 at her
home in Wiltom on a Jackson·
ville, Fla. warrant charging her
wilh conspiracy to buy or sell co-
caine. She also was charged by
local authorities with possession
of a sub~tance found in her
purse later identified as an am-
phetamine. She was released on
S2,500 bond.
"I am a person who is known
throughout the world so tbey
would love to get someone like
me on a drug rap. It makes for
good ink." she said. "The fact is
I didn't do anything wrong. I had
nothing to do with this dtug btt.''
s he said.
•·some people may not un-
derstand, but J really don't like
them. When any of my friends
get lllvolved with drugs l get up·
set."
TUBE TOPPERS ·
K COP I!) 8:00 -"Juarez." Bette
Davis and Paul Muni ~tar in ltus 193S:
ht~lorical movie drama aboul the Mex-
ican revolution.
KCET@ 8:00 ·"The Ai,cent. of l\tt.
Fuji." Joseph Campanella. Avery
Schrelbe r and J ean e lle Nolan are
f eaturl'd m this contemporary Rus~ian
play on Hollywood Television Theater.
KTLA 0 8:00 -Notre Dame plays
San Francisco tn college basketball
game al Oakland.
KIIJ 0 11:00 --•·suspicion:· Cary
Grant nnd Joan Fontaine head the cast
of this 19-11 movie dranut.
-vlaltor trom &:iuador •
-,,... Identity, (~ llCMMI...,.
dlac:nlUon.) tO:OO. (J) L.OU ~
Lou lnourl puj)llc outr ag4'
ovw the Thbune'• --age ol • looal colleoa tool·
bllll cneettno _,.,...
., N8C MPOllT'S
"lAnd Ol tiype And Olorf'
The mvltWnllion dollar
~ ol ~. movla
and rode ""*° promotion
IS Namined by CON ..
apondent Edw4n ~en.
Among the cetebrlllM
~!no -.>acquelltle BIMet. 8hltWy MeclAlne.
KISS. Ootww ~Md
Al1 Buohwlkt. 88 NEW8 09 f'AMll.Y_,.
"nwt Prin-In The
T-" Kele, 1Utferlng
trom houaewlle bW..,
takll oft by '*-" Md
wlncU UC1 loe*ed In a modtl
oondomlnlum wltn • young
woman (l<lm DtlrbYl •bouc
to glw blf'lh.
8) HOMEYMOON!M
Ralph and Ed ~ on •
~.,_,In-en
o1-rmonev.
• 8CEHO f1'0M A
MA.MAGE
''The Art Of 8waeplng
Under The f\uo" MltllnM
II aw-of an undellne.ble
anxiety. SM , ... ~
ffllng la wrong tMlt-her
Md.Johan
tri) NA TION4L
GEOORA....C SNCIAL
"The l.-gecy ol LS.8.
LMlcey'' The tfe of lden-
1181 LOU1e S.B. IAelcey.
c1lled tha 01twln 01
llumen pr~tory, II tOkl In
hll own worde through
fflml meda tnn>ughout Na
fWMlltllbte oar-. =1•=0N£Wa Love. AMEAICAN
•'Tn2 G MOYIE ***'4 1·su1p1etori·•
(1'411 C.,., Grlnt, Joen
Fontalnl. A young__,,
•uepect1 hll' charming
hUlband of ~ •
murder. (2 hn.)
• THE 000 OOUf>l.E
Fallx, hoping to get
bOOked Oft • -tallWlllon thow, r9QrganR.M hll Old
c:ollage band.
I LET'S MAKE A DfAL
OICKCAV£TT
MACNEIL I l.!UREI\
fllEPORT
11='° 8 (I) Ce8 lA TE MOVIE **\.\ "cetlow" (11171) Vul
8fynnat, Rlcnltd Cfallna.
AT-~llaantlo
llTMt • former -·lime
friend, • cettle nietler """°
.. ell.er • fcnune In ......_
can Gold buMIOn. (A) CJ TONIOKT
Hoit: John11y Careon.
Gu.et John 9yt,.r.
Q Lovt. AM£AICAN
8TYl! 09 A8CM<>Vle *** "Nlghtwatc:h" (1171) EllDbeth T ayl«,
L1urenc:a Harvey. An
e11111Cttve woman .,......,_
lh4I flal -a murder In
Iha ~eel~ eclro.I
\N courtywd, but II only
hUmored by her dllbellev· tno hulbend .and • c:loae
Irland.
.., HEWS
., OIT8MAAT
An old benll robt>ar wen11
10 .,~ the ..aaoe ot
two fomwr cwonlal.
• CAl'T1QHU) A8C ..we
MORNING
12.-00 I =ZOH
'1llHWOOO
...,,,,,, ,...... few • -
Femwood ~. ""'9wy
talc ... aolernn -.MOW ** "FrOMW Oal" (11M4}
y-De Carlo. Aod
C.tf'*OI\ A MloOf1 ownw
and a ~·· roditiy mar. tiao. le doomed ID tallute.
(1 hr~ 30 min.) tt:ao• MOVIE * 1t ~ "The lnvl1lllle
Woma"'' (IUO) Joh11
8errymore, Vltglnle en-_
• Oengillate Allen'14>t to Ii.el
• ldenllll'• aec:r.c of lm4-
elblllty. (I hr., 25 IT*1 ) •
• MOVta
• • .. Horror Hou••''
( 1970) Fran4tle AVtllon, Jtl
~. A4fovp of YoUn9
peoc>le, . bofed With ....
decide 10 eltplora • llal.;rlt-
ed ,__, (, hr • 30 min.)
1;00 D TOt.tOMOW
T-)ournatle18 wt10 wit•
"aatlort .. ,,... coll.Im"•
f9'>0rt on tMlr -Ch lot'
•"awer1 lo problem•
poeed by people wtM> wrile
10 ''*"· 0 ISPV .. .,,. °'1V Smith ..
1. ti (J) KOJAK
"OMd On Hll FMC" A t.,..
"**'Y II detectM CHwry
0111rdlno) beoomH
ob-.d """' flndlOg t1141 rnufder ... of f\la .... part-
.... (R)
'1:30 CD MOVIE ••~ "Johnny Stoot
PlgeOn.. (t8C8f Howard Oun. SMOey Wlriten. A
lf._,ry 9Q1nl a.II e
oenglW ,, .. , lloploo 1141
wfll lead him to hit
undefWorld C°""9Cllona.
Irv .• 30 min.I
1:40 HEWS
1:N HEWS
2'°°G NlW9 Q MOVIE *** "Night Club
Sc1nd1I.. 118371 John
Barrymore, L)'Mll 0.....-
mM.. Att.r he mutder'I 1111
Wlta, • doctor frame. the
•omen·1 1o¥« tor the
en.-.. ( 1 "'·· 25 """' ) G MOVIE • * • • "Genevieve" C 1853) John Gregeon. Ken-
Mlh Monl. Two EllOfllh
COllplel ltllll' • Cl"OM-
c:ountry ·-with anrlque
GarL (2 Na )
• MOVl8
··~ "HorrOr Of ..... '#ood C.U." , ,..., Atw
...__.._.klflnOlet
lllM!wooct e.-... ...
6llld Ylt'd la Giiied II\ to
lrWIMtigli.. (2 In.) l:IO. HIWI 2:9' ~
• • "L4w Attd l<IMlt ..
(1Me) Aide....,.,, KriMln
~. A hlOI\ ectlool
~. on the .,,_ to
OG19oe. oetl IMfried end
dllnlp\9 ..... .,llr• ~
h04d. (11'11".," mlr\,} i:001 NOl8 ·~ HIWI uo MOY1EI • * "Touch Of O.tt1'•
(ltll) Wllll1m Lucu.
~ tkirN'Mr. A rOl!Oefy
oamad °"' by tlv'M "*' • end8 1n tr9CIY. c1 tw .. ao
min.)
• 1t ··&aux Olly eia."
(114f> 0.... /lwtry, l)nn
Aobenl. A oowbo)' With
~Wllllty .. ~ b1
1 talenucout.( 1 ht )
4:00D MOYia
***~ "Odd Mlln Out,.
( 1M7) .,_ -...-,, Rob-
ert .... on.,.~
""d•roround teed er
~ the obJact of •
mueN9 l!Wlnllunt. l2 In.)
-~ . • * * "C.qn.. (1M8) J-M-, e.t.r. l!lel
Geddll. A young __,
II""'°'"~.._, IN , ...... her ,_ hwbend
... ~ltl..12hr1.J
. \ Wedne•da11'•
Daytb•e /tlo,,le•
MORNING
e:*>G"AJ G""""'"'" (dral 'IJ•
Fred M«Mu<••'f, Oerollw
"Al Gu-nt" ldr•I ··~ -Freel MIK"'4irt1Y, 0...Gllilf' #a•-. w .... Br-.
10:GO 8 * • * "TH We Meet .Agel11" 111140) Merle
Oberon, Oeor"ge 8'9nt. An
_, ~· btlnol hap. pl!-. to 1 terrnlnlly • girt
...,_ .,.. , .... In .IOW ""
a ~ed murci.tw, (:Z "' .. ~
AFTERNOON
12l00 • ** * "The BecMlor Alld The Bobby SOlllt"
( 1'47) Cary Orant. My\"ne
~· A ICf>OOI girl. JirAno •
orvlh on an lllglbla bllclh9-
1or, ~ l!lm. (2 hra., 20
min.) •
Newman Inspects Hype
'Massive Publicity Makes Millio1Uljres'
By JAY SHA RB UTT
LOS ANGELES <AP) -Hype
is when certain parties seeking
millions of dollars wangle free.
massive national publicity in a
short span or time for a new
movie, book, rock group or
worse .
. It causes Babblenews, where
the hypers babble about their
wares, do it often and strike
everywhere -magazine covers.
newspapers, TV.
FORTtJNATELY, NBC'S
. scholarly Edwin Newman has
pondered the rise of such
flatulence. And tonight, he has a
one-hour study or it in a show
called "Land or Hype. and
Glory." (Channel4, 10p.m.)
After wryly noting the pro-
gram is "unprecedented. com-
pelling and superlalive," he
dwells at length on how publicity
helped make mtlllonaires out of
four distinguished nx:kers called
Kiss. .
They are distinguis hed
because they wear face paint.·
occasionally destroy suiters,.
breath lire, vomit fake blood
and even sing via a aound rig
sporting only 40 ampli!lers and
150 speakers.
JN INSPECTING . this gonzo
group llJld their guru. Blll Au·
.coin, Newman deftly establishes
that. 1uclters are still born every
( ) that blurb phrases really beloog , '"' to lbe movies. TV REV fE W . Whl. ch leads Lo a s.tudy or mov· · 1e-byp1ng. particularly a
mesr:fterizing section on a new
$21 m illion sci -fi movie.
something about close encoun·
ters. and bow it was publicized
in New York.
minute, and thanks to hype.
many or them are Kiss fans.
The show drags a bit in perus-
ing what Newman calls "hype.
literary division," the promotion
of a book, why one is pushed and
another not, and the frantic big-
bucks hustling by agents and
publishers alike. •
But all is redeemed in his
s hort. discourse on "blurb
words .. used lo push the goods -
like "tantalizing, mesmerizing.
terroriflc, twnultuous. stunning,
· dazzling" and so on.
HE ALSO NOTES that for
some books. blurb words are
brought together for "blurb
phrases'' such as ''a voluptuous
novel of perilous pleasure," but
Lo, there's a dazzling
ballroom or tumultuous scribes.
Each gets a press kit complete
with a tape recorder for record-
ing such tantalizing words as
these, from a stunning actress in
the lerrorific movie:
"I thought it was wonderful."
LATER. NEWMAN SHOWS a
producer of a different movie
telling a New York publicity
whiz be hired: •· •.. that's why
we've come to you, because I
think you can manipulate lhe
media sufficienUy weJl."
l wish Newman had in-
terviewed a few New York mov-
ie critics on lhe use of blurb
words in reviews and if .t.hey
<'Ver blurble just lo get equal
billing with the movie in
newspaper ads.
GEE. IF I GOT a dollar every
time they declared a flick "pro-
foundly moving'' I'd be in a cas-
tle in Ireland and not sitting
here declaring Newman's hour
••entertaining. • .pe r cep •
live .•• badlyneeded.
Singer Survives -Eras
'Command Performance' Stars ·Peg~ Lee
By IAY SRARBU'IT
LOS ANGSLES (AP> -.. The
lass has a great flair for phru-
!ni. . .that ahe feta a fine beat,
that abe 1inp ln tune, and that
she's awfull)' lood·loolring are self.evident,•• critic Geor1e
Simon wrote tn 19'1.
The object of his cheers:
Pe11y Lee, tl, a ne• 1lQter 1tl
Bent\)' Goodman'• band. Thirt)'·
1ht yeart liter the words still
bold true. Tho bionde·btlred lus
ii a lf'fJ)dmother now, but atW
coinf .uoni.
ON PaJDAY, MISS IM, a
tlft•d 1m1mter al' wtll as
1ln1er, Will do a turn on a CBS
1p•cl1I, "Peopte•a Command
Performance,'' reprt1lft1 such hilt u ••IJ That All There la.:•
"Loverl! Md ''F ver:• (ChQnel
2, 9 p.m.)
A 0trfedionbt wlto tj[ud
conftdenee. 1be Jauahf.d. m re-
c&llloa u_. ...... abe. teJt la
JNl --lbe to' tbe PN•erbtil bll Weik •till• 11a11n1 1il a
Cblt•IO eh&ti aftAlr liW• ~ • elH•..._
A ·llMIJ:whD tat.r became Bm·
•1 ~ .. wUe Jur'M lalm ID ·~ to Mar t.M •Ulob·
voiced Miss Lee. a nat~ve of
Fargo, N.D.
.. l DIDN'T THINK Benny
liked me," the sjneer saJd.
"When she brought him in, be
looked at me in a rather preoc·
cupied way -wblch l later
learned was just bl• war of
ltsteninc. of bein1 absorbed in
mustc."
He was absorbed enou1h to
htre her. While wllh bis band.
1he co-~ and recorded her
flrat b.lt, a bluesy lament. .. Wb.y
Don't You Do Rlabtt". Tim
ao.d tutes cbanae, but 1be'11 1tlll
00 toe· So ~ doel a llnfer 1urwt.o
mu1ical eras that ,o from blg
banda to m.idd.le-of·lht·road to
roct 'n • roU to add n>eJt to all of
tbeseT She took a deep breath
and trftcl to tum It up.
••WELL,'' 88B SAID, ''I think
it>• belnne,nilriebr Jna..reatid In
•hat'• coma on, ln die mOOdl ol ~ public. cbool'lq Ole be.st of
Ttla.it I CD Interpret While contl•
nutns W\lh the 1t.Diardl. ••
87~•1».m•ant NDd
by .cote ~orur. Geor1~
Gerallwta. JoiluiDJ Metter. 'l1'e
er .,.,. tndude roe b1
such as Blobd, Sweat & Tears
and off-the-wall works by Rand1
Newman.
As a talent considered in •
class with Frank Sinatra and
Tony' Bennett, Miss Lee wd
asked for a few observaUons oD
youngu .music stars and other
assorted matters in popular
music.
-PAtJL SIMON: "I LO~ him. I sing anything of bis that
woman could ain&. He sho
1ucb deep feelings 1n so m
di verso direct.ions." -Dt.sco music: "Happy an4 fun, but It can set a llttl• monotonous after a while. I'n'
·an for lt. but not as a set1QUJ
kllld of musJc." · 4 -~er "Klng of the Road lflllert "I love his atµff. JU&
humor ls beautlCul."
-Carly Simon: ••rm a blJ tan. And other hU1band (Jam~
'l'aylor).0
-MA.Joa INFLUENCES:
"Hard to answer. 1 learned from
a. lot 61 JrUleluw by U1ttaln1 to
anyone Who bad aometblDI that
.oun.d..S lood to m1. I t1naline 1
... a11bcOn.1C!loU1tY 1tuay1n•
ttthnlques, ~·· thJn,. U-.. th•t.laUllam leantlri1 •• :• '·
7
• i
,.
i
7
Lag11na/ So&ih Coast Afternoon
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 71, NO. 10, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1978 TEN CEN~l ~--------------------------------------------------------------------------._. ______________________________________ ..;...;-... __ o...;.;.;.;....;.-..;.;.;.;;. ________________ ..;..;;.;.......;,,
\
TOrrential ,, Rain Claims Life
By lbe As~lated Preaa
Thundering surf and torrential
raina have claimed at least one
Hfe as they inundated Southern
California coastal communities,
brought traffic to a crawl along
miles of flooded highways and
touched off numeMus rock and
mudslides.
Rock, Mudslides, Flooding Tallied State Beach was closed off and
on, and the beach ltaelf was
closed.
In San Di ego, a poltcie
spokesman said many low-lying
areas and suburbs were flooded
and some roads were closed to
traffic al the height or the
deluee.
Authorities said--Oerrek W.
Price, 57, died when a soaked
hillside began oozing downward
and toppled a retaining wall on
him at his home In La Jolla, an
exclusive suburb of San Diego.
Price had gone into his yard
when he heard rocks cascading
down the hill, police said.
Meanwhile. heavy surf from
.the Alaskan storm that has bat·
tered Southern California for
'
two days left water up to 3 feet
deep along more than 15 miles of
tiighway north of San Diego.
bringing traffic to a standstill in
many .places and slowini It to a
crawl in others Many cars were
reported stalled in the middle of
intersections.
By 6.30 am. today, 1.15 inches
of rain from this storm had been
recorded in downtown Los
Aneeles. bringing the season
total to 10.34 inches.
Drenchlllg rain was reported
in many parts of Southern
Ca lifornia today, with
forecasters predicting rain
throu~h tonh~ht, with a chance
or s howers beginning again
Wednesday afternoon.
The National Weather Service
said surf that ha11 pounded the
"' BA TTEREO NORTH BRACES
FOR THIRDBlG 5-tORM-A5
California coast since Sunday
would continue at least until
Wednesday.
Just west of Lo8 Angeles, ex-
clusive Malibu Colony -one oC
the nation's most expenalve·
communities and the home of
s uch stars as actor Steve
o.111 ru .. r...,.. ~ """"" ~
SAN DIEGO FREEWAY NEAR ORANGE COUNTY AIRPORT AT 4 P.M. MONDAY
Commuters Can Expect More Drtvlng Weather Like This, Weatherman Says
Fire Hits
Oe01ente
McQueen and ainger Linda
Ronstadt. -wu sandbagged foe
the second day Monday a1alnst
a Pacific Ocean assault on its
doorsteps,
But Monday's tides were )ess
severe than expe~ted and
caused no immediately apparent
dant•ge, said Los Angeles Coun·
ty Fire Ca~ Harry WUUams.
Ocean conditions forced the full
thrust of the high tide on rocks
and bluffs Just north of the ex-
clusive.colony.
On Sunday, waves demolished
fences and stairways of ocean-
front homes.
Foggy
Showers
Expected
Ry JACKIE HYMAN T Ol t .. o.11, f'li.t 14aH
Tired of the rain?I You may
get a respite tonight, but you're
likely to see roore of the wet
stuff on and off through next
weekend. ··wo have a lot. of rast.·moving
fronts. They're going to be bard
to lime," said John Henderson,
a N atlonal Weather Service
meteorologist.
He said tonight's forecast ls
for partly cloudy with locaJ
dense fog and a 10 percent
chance ol rain, risina to 30 per·
cent Wednesday as a new storm
moves in from the northwest.
A small cran advisory Is stlll
in effect as seas remain choppy,
Henderson said.
In Ventura County .. the seven·
foot tide flooded at least two
homes in the Faria Beach area
and caused some Sl0,000
damage to each. Several homes
In the Seaclirr area in the
nortbem part ef the county also
were flooded.
High waves forced authorities
to shut the 1,200-foot Ventura
Pier. The 105·year-old pier was
closed when pier pilings and
cross bracings came loose.
Up to 10-fool waves swept the
Rincon area between Ventura
and the Santa Barbara County
line. U.S. 101 near Emma Wood
In Escond.ldo, police sot scat-
tered reports of floodine in city
streets. lawns and some seepa1.e
into bomea between 7 p.m. and'
p.m . wben the rainfall wA
heaviest.
Tides, which normally run
between thr~ and four feet, were
expected to crest about 7.3 feet
along San Diego s hores, accord-
ing to the National Weather
Service at Lindbergh Field. 1
o.llJ ,. .............
ARROWS INDICATE WHERE SURF POUNDED HOMES
Expert Saya lt'a Shape of the Bottom That Counta
Tidal Action Effect
Dire to TopOgraphy
By 81'EVE MJ'.l"CH LL .... .,...,,...,..,. makes the difference," Skelly
said. ·
..
~ .
Ferguson
Runs for
State Seat
Monday night's heavy rainfall rant~ ft-om .a of a ind. _...
ported by the Orao1e County
Harbor Department ln Newport
Beach to 2.3 inches at Santfqo
Peak on Saddleback Mountain.
Why is it that high tides and
waves batter boQ\ea in Malibu and Oxnard. and break wfudows
Jn CapJ•trano Beach. but leave
other seaside communiUes like
El Morro Trailer Park relatively
unscathed?
He said hlp wave1 do the damap when they are superim-
posed on low frequency waves
(tides) but added that the im-
pact depends on whether the sea.
bottom is comprised of a
canyon, headlands, a point or a
gradual sandy incline.
i Laundromat
A malfunctioning fluorescent
light fixture was blamed today
for a fire at a San Clemente
laundromat Monday which
caused an estimated $25,000
damage.
The laundromat, located at
the comer or Ave San Fernando
and South El Camino Real. was
closed for remodeling when the
fire broke out there just after
noon, said Capt Jerry Galati of
Ut e city's fire department.
The laundry is attached to
P ark Liquor, al 3119 S . El
Camino Real, and customers
and employees were evacuated
from the liquor store while
firemen fought the blaze.
The fire was contained in
about 10 minutes by 21 fire
fighters, who remained on J.he
11cene about two hours to com-
plete mop up operatlona, Galati
said.
There was nodamqe to the liq-
uor store. Oanull(e to the laun-
dromat was estlm,ted at $20,000
to the structw. and $5,000 to
contents.
The building in which the two
businesses are localed ls owned
by Ben Hopkin, of 5l3 Ave.
Magdalena. Mra. Hopkin said
.major remodel.in& wlll have lo
be done lo tbe laundromat
before it can reopen for bull·
ness.
If
Weatlier ·
Ten pel'CeM chal'\ce of
shower• ·t0nl1hi with •o
percen\ ~ Wedntt·
day. CanUa\liid eoo&. Lowt
tont1ht •• to 53. Hl•h• Wedouayll1o&t. ~
SEEKS GOP NOMINATION
Senate Hopeful Ferguson
2 Cosmonauts
Join Others ,
On Salyut 6
• Orange County public rela-
tions man Gilbert W. Ferguson
announced today he will seek the
state senate scat being vacated
by Dennis Ca rpenter , R·
Newport Bead1
Feq:u.'>on :.aid he will seek the
Republican nomination in the
June primary for the 36th
Senatorial District. which
stretches from Seal Beach south
to Oceanside
Ferguson, 54, 1s a retired
Marine colonel and former
lrvine Company vice president.
He now heads his own advert1s·
Ing and public relations firm in
Newport Beach.
He also serves as executive
director of Californians for En·
vi ronmenl, Employment,
Economy and Development,
CCE EED), a coalition of busi·
ness and labor interests.
Ferguson has served in posts
with the ~ty Cost of Housing
Com tnltte~, the county Open
Space and Conservation Com·
mitlee, the Greater Irvine In-
dustrial Lea1ue and California
Coordinalinl CoU1lcil.
He has also served on fund
raising committees of the YMCA
and United Way in Orange and
San Diego counties .•
John Gieuen of the Orange
County Flood Control District
explainf!d that the peak, at S,680
feet the highest point in the
(See RAIN, Pa1e A%)
* * * Rain Causes
Closm_-e 'Ji"'"\/
Thorough/ares
Another inch of rain falling
Monday on ground already
9aturated by two weeks of
downpours had slate, county and
city road crews clearing rubble
today from South Coast
thoroughfares.
A 6 a .m. mudslide five miles
east of the San Dieao Freeway
blocked only a shoulder or the
Ortega Highway eaat of San
Juan Capistrano. CalTrans crews
cleared the debris away this
mornloc, requirlnc no closure of
the scenic highway.
The extreme Inland Jane or
Pacific Coast H11hway was
closed most of the way between
downtown Avenida Plco in San
Clemente and Doheny Park
Road in Capistrano Beach early
(See SUDES, Pa1e AU
It's the way the sea bottom
looks, combined with high tides
and high surf, according to a
graduate student at Scripps
Institute of Oceanography in La
Jolla.
•'The effects of tidal action are
due to locaJ topography," ex·
plained David Skelly, a graduate
student of oceanography at the
seaside institute.
He said the makeup or the sea
bottom can affect where the
wave energy goes. The problems faced by
homeowners in Malibu and
Capistrano Beach are a result of
a combination of high tides and
larger than normal surf.
That wet alliance actually
raises the mean waler level,
hence the problems that face
oceanside property owners, he
said. .
"Thlnlt or ttdes as actually
waves," he said. "U is a wave ln
a sense, in. that it has a period
and a wave length."
These shallow water wave.,
combined with deep water
waves, (those that break on the
shore) create the condition that
damages homes on the beach.
'·But it's the topo1rapby
(makeup of the aea bottom) that
(;nstomers NQt Right
~ Cops Handle olltmged Citizens
It wq a blue llqnday for two Laiuna Beach
Poltce officers whd )>ut up wJth verul and
physical abuse from three motorists dwins their
ah Hts.
lt all starte4 at 5:45 a.m. Monday, wbtn Sit.
Terry Temt>l• puUtd over a motorist tM clalmt
Wll 1peedlot OD Cout Hi&hWay. '•the ~ wa1 obvle>usJ1 upset when he cot out • ol the car,' Temple recalls. "He ripped oil hi.a
1luaet and threw thent on tbe pavem•t pu~
out bis wallet, tore It In llall and tbuw It ·u. the
street, then walked to the bllclr cl bl.I camper truck
and put bll flit throq~ the wlnclow. 0
and Anita Streeta.
He aaid the woman amaeted him the face and
cut b1a lip before be talned the upper hand, anest·
int Mr on tbarces ~ betn1 under the ihtl\Mllce of al~hot, mlademeanor bit and nm driviQI, reaist-lq arrest and usault on a PPllte otti~r. .
Yourex booked the woman into Laiuna Beach
Jail but found himself back at the ttaUon teven
ho\ars l.tier-thb UQle w•lkint witb a all1bt limp.
''The bottom determines
where the wave energy goes,"
he said.
A beach which fronts onto a
deep canyon may not catch the
.brunt of the high tides because
the waves cannot push past the
deep water with as much effecL
The bottom can refract, or
turn aside the impact of the
wave on the shore.
But It appears the triad of
surf, tides and topography ao
out of their way to create
problems for homeowners in
Capo Beach and Malibu.
And leave other coastal areas
intact.
l)odger Chief
\.
To Speak to ·
Ckmeme Kids
Los Angeles Dodgeri manaier
Tommy. Lasorda will address
ShorecUffs Junior High School
studenb Friday at the dedica·
lion of their new school in San '
Clemente.
DedtcatJon ceremonies will
begin at 1:30 p.m. on the achool · campus, 240 Vla Sotorro, aaJd
Maureen Redfield, princlpaL
Opening day at the school wi.s.
postponed two months, from •
Sept. 12 to Nov. J•, by construe·
tlon delays. While they waited
for their ~hoOl to be completed.
SborecUff1 students attended
Marco Forster .Junior Hi~ m
double Se.Ilion in San Juan
Caplatrano •.
Tbe $1.t mllUoft 1thool In
north central San Clemente bu
a tapacity ·o1 800 student.a. CUI'"·
rent enrollment Ja no atudentl
ffOm Sm Clemente and the Alto
CAplatrano a...e of Sen Juan
CapiltrMO. •
J
42 DAIL V PILOT' L SC
McKF..A N, Pd !A P >
Th ~ gale forct.' winds thut
stra nded many motorists
-1l o ng Eric C ount y
h1ghway1 lert one man
more maroon~ than most
an a gru. station lad1ei.'
room for iin hour
"Our rn en's r oom is
broke., becauac a.11 the
pip11 are frozen," 111d
Toro Heubel, an attendant
at the station, located off In·
terstate 79 "While he was
in the ladies' room, the
wind 1IMmmed the door
•hut and the lock fro1c."
He was freed when tho
lock was removed with a
cutllna torch and a
crowbar.
fAJrnp any'
Plans Land
Purchase
Mission Viejo Company of·
lklals announced thiB momlna
that they have entered into lAn
agreement designed to lead to
the acquisition of 22,000 acres
south ot Denver.
The purchase of this land, the
Highlands Ranc h in Douglas
County, will make 1t the com.
pany's largest holding
Mission Vtt.•Jo 1~ only 10.000
acres and jUst about half of 1t
has bet.'n developed so Car The
company's other Orange County
holding, Ali so Vat-JO in Laguna
Halls. as 6,700 acres Develop·
ment of th11 land attll la In the In·
ltial planning 1ta1es.
The co mpany also has bet•n
developing another community
called M1 ss1on Viejo ea!.l of
Denver m Aurora. This 640·acre
proJcct 11 haJI developed
In a press releai.e, Phahp Real·
ly. company prei.1dent, s aid,
"With the valuable exper1enc•
gained In Aurora, the Mlsslop
Viejo Company had bet'n st'ck·
mg t1dd1taonal land to continue
its long term involvem ent in the
Denver CJrt'U."
Thl' tcrmi. of the agreement
were nol rel<'11sod . /\ company
o;pokcsmun i-.aid they had been
ncg1>11ating for the• purc-hase of
the property "for •while."
f'rom Page A I
SLID ES ...
today Mudslides along the
Pallsadt's dumped rocks and
clump:, of mud Into the roadway
then:
Severe Ooodlng was reported
he forc dawn t oday In San
Clemente on Camino Capistrano
near Avcn1da Vaquero and along
part11 of El Camino Real. Police
suid the Ooodina prcunted no
traffic hazard or dan11er to
property. however.
A San Clemente radio 11t1tion,
KWVE. Willi l)peratina again,
after liahtn1n1C 1truck its
tranamittlng tower late last
week. pultinl( tho elation ore the
air for about IS hours.
Storms In tha MidwHt delayed
revaira to the radio transmit·
ten~. said station mMnarer Pete
Moller. P arts had to be llhlpped
from Quincy, Ill. which has been
heavily h.it by snow.
County maintenance crews
monitored lhe Beach Road area
of Capistrano Beach today u
well ai. I.he Palisades. H11h tides
and h eavy s urf damared a
'"breakwater and broke windows or homes an the private Beach
Road community Sunday. No
addltlonaJ damage ha1 boen Pe·
ported since then, but sandbag-
ging operaliOl\a are contlnuint
with local homeowners tided by
Explorer Scouts.
A muds lide along the
Palisade• Frtday dumped •bout
five truckloads or dirt on P•cll\c
Co11t Hiahway and undercut a
ollfltop home there. County
workers are wMtchln1 tht 1itt
cloHly, but have reported no
ntw ero1ion, a county spokesman said.
O"ANH ~OAIT 1.11<
DAILY PILOT
By WILLIAM HODGE Of, ... 0.llt ~ .......
Land-use plans -a precunor
to development-for one of tht
Orana• Cout'a lar1est remain·
ing ranchland areaa wUl be aub-
mitted to county Environmental
Management Agency officials
~xt month, a top Mission VieJo
Company official said Monday.
The Aliso Viejo rucb, tbt re-
maining 6,700·acre parcel of the
va s t Moulton Ranch, was
purchased by the PhlUp Morris
Corporation in October. 1918.
Th• company alao owns Miu.Ion
Viejo.
Art Cook, director of envi~·
mental affairs tor the Mlasaon
Viejo Company aald alternatJve
Jand·use plans were being dla·
cuued within the company,
which alao managea the Aliso
Viejo ranch.
"We are selectins alternative
plans tor the area •t thls polnt,"
Cook aald. "We expect to submit
a plan to tho company pre•ldent
later thi• week."
tr the recommend•d
alternallve Is approved by
Philip Reilly, Mission Viejo
Company president, land·UH
plans based on the recommends·
taon wall be drawn up and aub-
m itted to county oltlclals in
February, Cook sald.
., .. ,........
COSMONAUTS JOIN COMPANIONS ON IPAOI STATION
Vl1dtmlr J•nlbelcov (l•ft), Oleg P.11k1rov
He declined to say how many
acres may oo develop~ as res·
idential uses. but hinted the
plans would leave much open
apace area. . Initial construction will prob-
ably not oogin oofore 1980 or
1981. he !>&Id.
Cook said the company had
been approached by several in·
d1v1duals and the city of Laguna
Bea c h desiring to purchase
pieces ofthe6,700-acre ranch.
· · Laeuna Beach wants lo
purchase 10 to 200 acres of the
Moulton Meadows area to use as
a park tor the Arch Qeach
Heights and Top of the World
a reas." he said. "We will oo
meeting with Laguna Beach but
we have to wait a Uttle loneer
because the area ls part or our
entire plan "
Speaking before a League of
Women Vo ters m eetin1 In
La1una Hills, Cook outlined
pro blems auociated with de·
veloprng the ranch land.
"It was not c.i typical type or
approach to 1ubdlvl1lon," he
said. ··it was o planl\ing type of
approach
f'ro• Page A I
RAIN •..
county. 11enerally receives the
most local ralnfitll because of
the tendency or air to cool and
release water as It rises.
lie said the season's rainfall
on the peak has been 22.6 inches.
compared to 14.4 Inches hu1t
Year at this time. He said the
mountain's 26·year irvera.ie
rainfall total for this date Is 10 2
lnche11, with an avera&e o( 26.4
Inches by June 30.
In Newport Beach, the .65
inches recorded for the past 3'
hour1 brouaht the aeason total to-
6.33 inches, up from 5.89 inchct
last year at thl• lime.
Charles Lewis at Orange
Cout Colleae in Costa Meaa rt·
ported 1.10 inche• aince Monday,
for a aeaaon total of 8.58 lnchoa.
Las t year at this time the season
total in Costa Meu WH 5.95
inches.
Rain watcher J. Sherman Den·
ny reported a downpour of 1.47
inchea ovemlght In HunUniton
Beach for a 1ea1on total of 1.40,
ju1t a 1hade below l11t ye&r'•
8.53 inches at thia date.
Th• Moulton Niguel T.-eat·
ment Plant in La•un• Niguel
mea1ured 1.2 Inches ov•rnltht,
for a 7.55 season total, almost
double last year's 3.98 Inches.
Rainfall in Santa Ana, the
flood coqttQJ dJatrlct '• <lletsen
said, Wat 1.07 Jnohet ovem lthl.
bringing the season t~ol to 8.07
Inches compared to 6..43 inches
last year.
lionB to Note
Anniversary
At Party in LB
Laguna Beach Llona Club
members will be celebrating
lhtur SOth anniversary at the
Hotel Laruna thi1 Frtd•y lnclud·
Ing three membert with a com-
bined 1111 yeara in the local or· gan1zalion.
Lions president Gerry M aUock
said more than 300 Invitations
have been 1ent out t.o members
and guest.a for tho celebration.
Past president Ron Armatrong
will be t h e master or
ceremonies, •nd Dr. Warren
Groene, pa!it director of Lions
Internation al , will be the
1poaker.
Memben Don Wilbur, Dr.
Ray Newton and Dr. Leon Ax-
1lrod will be lauded for their 118
years or perfect attendance,
with 40 yeara each chalked up by
Wilbur and Dr. Newton.
Dr. Axelrod. acUve in Project
LOOK which p r ovideg
eye1la11u for Me1elcan
children, ha1 attended 38 years
or Lions meeting1 without f11l.
The •olden annlvtnary
ctlebrallon will lnclude diMer
and a 1tant birthday cake
decorated wtth SOcandlea.
Girls Club -
Programs Set
For Laguna
Winter programs organized by
tho La(SWla Beach Girls Club
gel under way Monday, with
rcgl1trallon llCheduled all week at
the clubhouse.
Sl1nup11 are from ' to 6:30
p.m . Mondey, and from 2 to s
p. m. the rest of the week at the
Girls Club, 1470 Temple Ter·
race.
A ctivtlles tor the wlntor
soaston lnclude claaaea In cratl8,
cookln~ sewin1 and babyalttlng
skills. Sparta pro1ram1 include a 1ymnaatJc:s clHs, baaketbaJI.
tennis, soccer, tumblln• and a
team coo~rallon class called
• 'ne-.v 1ames."
For mor4 informatJon, call the
clubhouse at 494·7830 between
11 :30 a.m . and S :30 p .m .
weekdays.
Proje cts Backe d
SACRAMENTO (AP) -~
AU•n'l ~lY Health" OonuntttH vot•d 7.0 M0nday 'to aet up at
least two pilot projects provid·
Ing specialized care ror the
t.rmlnally lU. ·
. A~la11~lp E'He• I•
Nixon Celebrates
\
His 65th -Birthday
By Alloclatecl Preti
Former Pr .. lden\ Rtob'ard Nlsan ctJtbra*i hJ1 au. ~
day at bis favorite Mt1dcan
ruta\lrant 1rttr old trlentl
Robert Abl>lanatp "ll•w tn ftoen
lhe ea1t lo 1urprl1e '-Jna,'' a •J>Okt•man 1.W toc111.
Jack .8rtftllan, an atde to tbe fQl'IQtr prjlildea&. ._.. hlldw
\ Abplao,ip~~ ~ta 6m9f M~Q,a&Ol.WNa bll ~WlftiJa~ d1u ••~·~'lallt ,.,.._ .. .,
Dav l'Jl••••.:'1..,...i. a ml lloNli9 bUllMlllUft ilM
promtnent onetim e bacbr ol u,e
former Pttltdettt.
SPACE •••
ment1.
The a1ency .. Id Soyus 17'•
1y1tem1 were functlonln1
normally and the two new COi·
monauta were reellna well.
The lut Ume the Soviet Union
had four men In 1pact w11 In
October U16i when they flew ln
three different 1paceahlp1,
Soyua 8, 7, and 8, and carried out
joint maneuvert, lncludin1 dook·
101 of two of the 1pacecratt.
Four spacemen were •b9ard
one l htp ln the jolnt U.S. ·Sovlet
docldna ot July 1975 but acaln
this wu not the same type of
operation as the docklnf of two
spaceships with a apace ab jl in
the planned Salyut 6 rendezvous.
Three U.S. aitlronauts spent 28
days aboard skylab In May 1973
and later were joined by a three·
man relJef c rew 1n a mis1100
that lasted nearly two months.
Editor Mu r d ered
MANAGUA, N1eara1ua (AP)
-Pedro Joaquin Chamorro. a
leading Nicaraguan opposition
editor, was ambushed and 1hot
to death today, a colleague re-
ported. Chamarro, editor of La
Prensa, wa1 a lon1·tame opponent
of the Ana5tasloSornoza dynasty.
dynasty.
..
Report er Slain
Killers to Get
Gas Chamber
P HOENIX. Ariz. <AP) Two
m t:n convlcted or first-degree
murder in the June 1976 car-
bom b sli\)'lng pf newspaper rt·
porter Don 8olle1 were sen·
tenctd to duth In the iH
chamber today.
Max Dunlap, a 48 ·year·old
Phoenix contractor1 and James
Robl:ton. 65, a plumber from
t>uburban Chandler, were found
guilty Nov. 6 of murder and_ con·
s piracy in Lht b o mb1n1
Pro&ec-utors asked that they oo
¥entenced to de~th.
1'he death oC Bolle1. who11e rt·
portane specially for the Ariiona
ReP-ubUc was crime, brouahl a -team o r l.~..i-ldf"nr-1,1tct
newspaper reporters and editors
to A riiona to investigate or·
aanlzC<I crime.
Their report was ills ued in
May.
Robison was convicted of det·
onatintc the bomb which ex-
ploded Wtder the newaman's CJ&r
as he was lt!aving a midtown
hotel parking lot. Dunlap was
convicted or arran1in1 for the
"'urdu. Thoy were both 11en-
lenced to not les1 than It years
or m oro than 30 year1 on the
conspiracy charge. .
John Adamson, 34, pleaded
guilty to :iecond·deMroe murder
charges in January une and im· '
pllcated Dunl•p and Roblaon.
Adamson fuces • prison term of
20 years
In 1 statement to the Judi•
before the sentence wae lm·
po1ed, Dunl•P. broke into tears
as he aaJd, "l m lanocent."
The defendant said he had '"'ueA-bl.s dausht.eu ...telJ!ni
them "never be ashamed, my
only cuJlt h-. been worktn1 tor a
llvilll and for my fellow man."
A1 ramlly members broke into
1ob1, Dunl•p Hid, "You'll never
be able to take m)' free &piril. lt
Is Innocent.
Canyon Land Sale
Proposal Hits Snag
La1una Boach Mayor Jon
Brand didn't 1et the answtf' he
w•nttd from Irvine Compan)' ol·
tlclal1 Jut month coocernJn1 cl·
ty aoqu.lalUon or a 10.aare •lte on
Laauna Canyon Road.
The mayor met with Irvine
Company olficlala to see I( they
would be Interested in sellln1 the
Laurel Canyon land juat north ol
tht El Toro Road lnteraectlon to
the clty.
He told councUmen last week
that a meetJnc with Jrvlne Co.
executive Richard Roeae con·
firmed the company i• not In· \erta~ tn 111Una the proJ>4trty,
which Reese &aid could become
part of the proposed San JoaquJn
lranaportatlon corridor.
"The lrvine Company is not
willin& to sell, and they in<Ucate
thev would resist u sale." Brand
irnld. "tt could not be a friendly
ocquis1hon."
Brand wants the land for
peripheral parklnti durlni Fe~tlval or Art.I weekend• in U\e
11ummef monthJ. He said that by
creating j park/parklne lot on
the lO·acre site, the clly'a butl·
nesa district will not be
1wamped with summer feallval
vl11llora and traffic woea
Tht •Ito could 11crvt: 11 a park
durlnt tho rut o( the year, un·
dtr Brand'• plan.
But Ute mayor wants to lay a h~avy hand on the Irvine Com·
pany, UIJJOStinl that the city
ahould perhaps boiin condemna·
Uon proctedln1i 11ain1t the lrvlne Company. .
•'I thlnk w• would be rootllh
not to Uh our leaal ablHUtt tlMi
vote to condemn the land and •
1et lt for the fatr market v-1\lt,"
Brand told fellow coUhcll mem·
ben.
But he met opposition from
other memben of the panel, in·
cludif\1 Councllwoman Pb)'llla
Sweeney who Hid. "Wt have an
obligation to tho trvlne Com·
pan.y to try to reach • friendly
al(reement."
''Maybe we won't, but we need
to 10 In there In aood felth."
Councllrnan Jack McDowell
questloned the need for the Pfrk·
ln1 site year-round, aayln1, • Ae·
quiring something to use for 1!
days (.six festival weekend$) al
1& 'phenomenal co1t does not
make sense.'' .
He sueecsted lhe city look into
other s ttC's c.'loser to the various .
festivals for peripheral parking
lhat mtihl be let5 expensive.
Councilmen a1reed to send a
letter to lhe Irvine Company
suy1ng the city is seeking ao ap-
praisal of the Laurel Ctnyon acreage
Then lhey asked City Manager
Al 1'heal to find out by the Jan.
18 meet.tna how much an aP-
pralul of the land would cost
the City
"If 1l'1 dirt cheap," Brand
said, "then we ml1ht be 101vtn1
our park1nar problems lnex·
pensively,"
.. ,
I
I
Orange Coast
EDITION
Today's Closing
N.Y. Stoeks
j
VOL. 71, NO. 10, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TU ESOA Y, JANUARY 10, 1978 N TEN CENTS t
.. Bitter Cold Forces· Power Cutbacks
By The Associated Press
The winter's worst cold spell
forced widespread cutbacks in
electric power from Mictugan to
the Carolinas today, with tem-
peratures below zero in many
area~ and plunging to the teens
'as far south as Alabama. The
cold was blamed for at least 16
deaths. <Related photos, A3, A4>
The Northeul cold spell
rained so much power that
DOgReseued
Co mmonwealth Edison
engineers in Chicago reported
that the nation's electnc clocks
ran an average of 27.7 secands
slow during the night and this
morning.
'• Jt was a nationwide problem
because or heavy demands,"
said Bill Harrah, a s pokesman
for CommooweaJUt Edison. It was so cold m west.em Penn-
s y Iv ania that residents veotur·
ing out of ~OOMI were warned
that exposed flesh could freeze in leas lhan a minute.
.. The problem ol electric
power is pretty common
throughout the middle section of
the country," said William
Webb, a spokesman for the
Federal Energy Regulatory
Com mission. ..There ls not
enough capacity to go around
right now and this appeitn to be
Ra miro Gularza administers oxygen to h is
fl•malt' Iris h setter with the aid o f
caused an estimated $15,000 damage to his
home at 416 N Newport Blvd. Firemen
found the dog after dousing n ames and re-
port s he responded to treatment and b ex-
pl'clcd lo recover.
7 1 Newport Bench fireme n after lhe dog was
"lrapped m Galarza's burning house Mon-
day night,. Gala rza tried to rescue his pet,
bul was driven back by flames tha t
Dense Fog,
·More Rain
Due on Coast
Tidal Action Effect
Due to Topography
By JAC'KIF. HYMAN
Ol 1111 O••lf ltllot St•ff
Tired of the rain? You may
get a respite tonight. but you're
l1k<'ly to ~ee more of the wet
Muff on and off through ne>O.
weekend.
"We have a lot of fast·movlng
fronts. They're going to be hard
to time." said J ohn Henderson,
a N ataonal ·Weather Service
m<'leorolog1st.
He said tonight's forecast is
for partly cloudy with local
den se fog a nd a 10 percent
chance or rain, risl.ng to 30 per-
cent Wednesday as a new storm
' moves in from the northwest.
A small craft advisory is still
in effect as seas remain choppy,
Henderson said.
Monday nll)lt's heavy rainfall
r anged from .65 of an inch re-
ported by the Orange County
}larbor Department tn Newport.
Beach to 2.3 inches at SantJaeo
Peak on Saddleb•ck Mountain.
John Gietzen of the Oran1e
County Flood Control District
explained that the peaJc, at 5,680-
feet the hlchut poiht in the
county, generally reeeivea the
most local rainlaU because of
the tendency of air to cool and
release water'aJ it rises. •
He said the aeuon's ralbfall•
on the peak bu been 22.6 inches.
compared to 1•.• inches last year at this time. He saJd the
mountain's '26·year average
ralnfall to\al for thl.s date is 10.2
inches, with an nel"aee of 26.C
inches by June 80.
Jn Newport Beach, the .u
lncbes recorded f()r the put Zf,
boun broupt the season total to
6.33 incbet, us>: h'otn S.88 inch.:
, Jaat year -1 Ull.t Ume.
Charlea Lewl1 at Oran&•
(Sff Mll'f, hfe AU
By STEVE MITCHELL
Ot IM 0.llf l>li.t Sta41
Why is il that high tides and
waves batter homes in Malibu
and Oxnard, and break windows
in Capistrano Beach, but leave
Police Probe
Long Beach
Man's Death
other seaside communities like
F.l Morro Trailer Park relatively
unscathed?
It's the way the sea bottom
looks. combined with high tides
and high surf. accordang to a
graduate student at Scripps
Institute of Oceanography in La
Jolla.
"The e!fects of tidal aclion are
due to local topography," ex·
plained David Skelly, a graduate
student or oceanography at the
seaside institute.
He said the makeup of the sea
bottom can affect where the
wave energy goes.
The problems faced by
homeowners in Malibu and
Capistrano Beach are a result of
a combination of hi1h tides and
larger than normal surl.
Tbat wet alHance actually
raises the mean water level,
hence the problems that face
oceanside property owners, he
said. .
•'Think of tldes as actually
waves," he said. "It is a wave in a sense, ln that it bu a period
and a wave leneth."
These shallow water waves,
com btned wlth deep water
waves, (those that break on the
shore) create the condition that
damages homes Cl> the beach.
"But It's tbe topo1raphy
(makeup ol the aea bottom> that
makes the dllCereoce," Skelly
said.
He said blah waves do the
dama1e when they are superim·
posed on low frequency waves
(tides) but added that the im-
pact depends on whether the sea
bottom la comprlud of a
(See'l'lDES, Paae.U)
fairly general in a broad area
from Michl&an to the
Carolinas.''
P ower system s in Penn·
Sylvania called for rationinl
and cut back electricity supplies
because of exceptionally heavy
demands.
In Ohio, where seven deaths
were blamed oo the cold, ~m
peratures near or below t~ro also prompted utility companies
•
to cut back electrical output 'and
call ror power rationing.
Cleveland Mayor Dennis J.
Kucinich, saying the problem
was beyond the city's capacity
to deal with, requested emergen· cy assistance Monday night.
Gov. James A. Rhodes declared
a snow emergency and ordered
out National Guard units in the
Cleveland area to assist
authorities.
The National Weather Service
said 8.6 inches of snew fell in Cleveland since Sunday, and
heavy winds created drifts and
reduced vislblllty.
Cleveland's 113,000-student
public school system was cloeed
for the second straight day.
In Alabama, residents
shivered with temperatures in
the teens, and winda whipped
(SeeCOLD, Pa1eAZ)
Grant Refused
NB_ Council Rejects Housing Aid
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of 11w o.ttr rti.t....,
Newport Beach city coun·
cilmen Monday unanimously re·
jected plans to apply for a
$536,000 grant from the federal
Department of Housing and
Urban Development (HUD).
The vote came at the con·
clus1on or an hour-long public
hearing in which the majority ot
speakers told councilmen they
opposed use of federal funds,
especially to provide housing for
low and moderate income
families.
Councilwoman Lucllle Kuehn,
Jong a backer or the HUD
grants, joined with her col·
lea«ues ln the vote. no(in.ll bH·
terly that the "ignorance" about
the grants that emerged in
testimony showed that city of·
f1cials had failed in their efforts
to inform Newport residents
what the money was to be used
for.
Councilwoman Trudi Rogers
was one ot those sin~ out by
Mrs. Kuehn as an example. Mrs.
Rogers had said earlier that "I
don't ft!i!l we're responsible for
providing housing for the
greater Southern California .,.. ...
The granl in question was of-
fered-under an utenlion ot the three-year ~ant tbat the city
had used to finance its senior
citizen center.
While 10 of the 12 speakers to
address the council decried the
use of the HUD funds, one, Con·
nie Mumford. thanked coun-
cilmen for taking the original
three.year grant.
She detailed the growth of the
center which opened Aug. 27
with 400 members and one class
and now offers 15 classes and a
variety or special programs to
1,100 members.
.. Well somebody bad to say
somet.bing about the people it's
helping," she commented later.
City officials s aid they
believed acceptance or the grant
would force the citv to use the money on projects direcUy
related to housing for low in·
come families.
City Manager Robert Wynn
said his tallcs with federal of.
ficials led him to believe that
there has been a change in em·
phasls in the grant program.
He said it is apparent that
.projects, such as the purchase of
the senior citizen center in
Corona del .Mar. which was al-
lowed tmder the first three years
-of the grants, would not be al-
lowed now. Future projects. he
said, would have to concentrate
·on housing.
FergDson Relates
Senate Candidacy
!
I
t
}
\
SEEKS GOP NOMINATION
Senate Hopeful Ferguaon
Orange County public rel•·
lions man Gilbert W. Ferguson
announced today he will seek the
state senate seat being vacated
b y Dennis Carpenter. R·
Newport Beach.
Ferguson said he will seek the
Republican nomination in the
June primary for the 36th
Senatorial District, which
stretches from Seal Beach south •
to Oceanside .
Fer1uaon. 5', ls a retired
Ma cine colonel and former
lrviae Company vice prealde.nt.
He now beads hlJ own advertis-
ing and public relaUons finn in
Newport Beach.
He also serves as executive
director of Callfornlans for En·
vlronment, Employment.
Economy and Development,
<CEEED), a coalition of busi·
ness and labor interests.
Post Office Curb
Will Remain Red
FergUM>n bas served in posts
with the county Cost of Housing
Committee, the county Open
Space and Conservation Com·
mittee, the Greater Irvine In-
dustrial League and California
Coordinating Council.
He has also served on fund
raising committees or the YMCA
'lnd United Way in Orange and
San Diego counties.
· U.S. Dollar
Rtite Mixed
The red curb in front of the
Riverside Avenue post office
will remain red.
That was the conclusion
reached by Newport. Beach city
councUmen Monday after they
conducted an hour-long bearinc
into a proposal to pa.int \be curb
green to allow 10.minute parlc1ng
in front of the heavily used
facUlty.
But that proposal 11ould have
meant wiPinl out the bicycle
lane that nms in front of the post
office and testimony from bicy·
cle riders as well as written re·
ports from ctty officials con·
CAPO MAG..4ZINE
SURFER 'BIBLE'
PubU.becl ln Capt1tran0~acb,
Surfer Ma(ulne is prob·
ably the bible of the sport. See
Featuring, ~age Cl.
vinced cotmcihnen that the front
of the poet office should remain
as is.
Councilmen did pledge to work
with postal officials on re-
arranging parking in the orfice
Jot and to provide six 10-minute
spaces oo t.be north side of the
building oo Avon Street.
The vote on the proposal to
chance to a green curb was 6-1
against. with only Councilman
Paul Ryckoff swayed by pro-
~reen curb spakesmen .
-They ar,Ued di~ congesli~
al lbe Post office could be sub-
stantially reduced by making
the red curb green and cemov-
lng the bicycle lane.
. .
LONDON (AP> -Opening
rates for the U.S. dollar were
mixed today on Western Europe's
major money markets. There
were modest fractional gains ln
Londol1 and Parts and losses in
Frankturt,Zutich and Milan.
These were the opening rates,
compared with Monday's lale
quotations:
London-$1.9185 for the British
pound, compared to $1.91875;
Paris -4.7375 French francs, up
from 4.'13125.
Coast
But bike rtclen, including stu-
dents representing the atudent
bodies ot Horace Enaip Middle
School and Newport Harbor Weather High &bool, told councilmen
that putUq two-wa7 bicycle Ten percent chance of
traffic in \he one lane that would showers tonight with 40
be left on the opposJte aide (If percent\chance Wednea·
Rlvenlde was probably Ulegal day. C-ontlnued cool. Lows
and dellnltely danaerou.. tonight '5 to 53. Highs ~ncilman Don Mchm11, wbo Wednesday58to&4.
moved that the curb be left red·
and the blcycJe lane JeCt ln INSIDE T08A Y
place, commented wryly that '--U Goo. Edmund Brown Jr. cm·
we don't watch out, we'll re-Nfz.d .o nctmf JJ7.f bfUfo,a deaf.Ill the wa.ote tow!l. • ..---toda
.. Tbe CllJIJ' aolutloa, lt louncb ' ::::,;;,;:~/or 1.~
Uk• io me, II that we ~ to mutio• llomtot0ntra. See
move !M sic:-toftlc&." he Aid. · fjoriu,e.CJ .
, Jicrele Sioleii · •••••
tJ 10 ,..,.
Rocks, Mud
Falling Wall .Hills
One in State Storm
(iy Tht A8i;odaled Pre111>
,\I ll'j'.'it 11,000 n•s1dl>nti. wcrt·
ll'ft w 1thout powt•r briefly today
1n Los Angeles County, aind one
pl'rson died in La Jolla as u
lightning-punclueitcd rainstorm
began lo "'anc with another
front Just one dJy bl·h1nd
Derrick W Pnc(', 57, was
t rusht•d to death when a i.oakc.-d
* * * f 'rom Pa9_. \ J
COLD ...
lht• cold du"'n to thl' t•qu1 \ JIL·nl
of 10 below t<•ro m Jluntw1lle.
In northern New England,
bhllard warning~ and a threat
of river floods follo ..... t•d a s1.1va~f'
storm that cau'>NI n11ll111ns or
llollars 111 damagl' ac-ross the n·
gwn
t'aribou. Mame, with a tem
IJl'raturc of 5 above and wimh of
:1.'i mph, n·<•ordNI 11 wind dull
fot·tor of '10 hdo\\
Tht• National Weather Service
warnl•cl of n1>0<h along the Kl'n
nl'bcc am Androscug~in rivers
in Maine. "'here Monday's
hea\ y ruins <and nwlling snows
rl'lcascd 1ec JUnls
As the !-!W<·ll<, surged
downnv<•r. tht· K1•nnebec wtts
•·\pel'l<'<l Lo lrl'"l 1n J\ugu-.tn at
'>t'\ en ft:t:t ubm·c flood 'luge
:\I t•an\\hil1· 11ff1C"1..ih 11aid
d.1m.1gl' n porl'> \\t·n· still <'11m
1ni.: 111 .1ht·1 th1· ~ .. I\ ·•J.!I' !»l1Jnn
th..it h .1tl1·rc·d thl· J\tl;JO\IC' C'uasl
f1om '\'1·v. 1':nglnnd to V1q~ini a . ,\ 1:. \Car uld fisherman at
Orr·, 1 ... 1.111i1 \1J1nt-. '<ll!I he had
111·\ 1•1 "'111 'll('h furiou-. wind-.
.111d \~ .. ,l's 1•v(•n durinl{ hur-'''"111''' .111d N<•w YQrk of-
f H 1 ah .... Jul llw Jl"llnrl ini.: !>urf
:-.w 1·pt ;l\\;1\ :.i:; fll't/'1•nt uf
llockuv..1\ Ut•m·h 1r1 Nt·\.\ York
I'll\'
Ht•..,l!l••ni... 111 lluffulo, NY .
<111~ 0111 11f '-flow drirt.., r<'m1n1c;
1 1•n l of th1· hli11ard'i of 1~177
* * *
t 'rum Pog~ 1\ I
TIDES ...
, ..inyon. hrJdlancJ!;, u point or i.l
J?radual ~andy incline.
'The bntlom dHcrm1ncs
"here the \\J\'e cncr~y ~ocs.'
h l' '>Old
\ 1,..,1d1 \\ l11!'h fronts onto a
d1•ep canyon m.1y not catch the
l1r unl of lhl' hiti:h l1dei; b<'cause
th1· wa\l'" cannot pu~h past the
d•·t'I> \\at er with a~ muc·h effect
l'hl' hot111m cun refrnct, or'
1111 n ,1..,irh' the• 1mpacL of the ".i' 1· on t lw ..,hon.•
But it Jppt>ars the triad 0 1
... urf. t•clt>.., and topography RO
nut of thci r way to create·
problems for homeowners in
Capo Heuc h and Malibu.
And lcavl· other coastal nreas
intuct
* .. * ut There
Be Rain. ..
A., thr· r:un poun•d down out
:-11Jt·. Nl•wport Buch City coun-
c1 Im l'n opened their Monday a.f.
tNnoon -.tudy S<'"!>IOn w1lh lhe1r
u-.ual comm1ttet' reports
When tl came time for Paul
Rvcko(( lo report on the latest
<i<:ti\<1tles or the Wntcr Commit-
tee. he noled: "In r<'8ponse to
many request.a, the Waler Com-
mittee hu~ orranJ(ed that you
have some -it's r nlnlnl( out-
~1dc"
t\s the audience chuckled over
the report, Councllmun Lucille
Kuehn dcadpannC'd, "Mr.
Mayor. is Councilman Ryckofr
playing Ood again?"
ORA HO I COAIT 11
DAILY PILOT
._ .. _ ,.,., ..... ,_,..,..,_
, .. _. c .. ...,
II o ,. .. ,_ .... -M ,,._.
T-•1tt...it ......
'=.'if.~
·~"'"-~ ... .. ""'"""' ............ .....
r('laln1ng wall bl.'hind h1!» home
111 the San Dwgo community of
La J ulla collapi.E.'d on tum.
Soulhl'rn CalHorn1a Edison
('11 off1ci.ds »ail.I 10,000
ru:.tomcrs in .,, arious parU. or
Los Angl'lci. County were
hlacked out al various times
throughout tht! morning in Lung
Beach, Wc::.t Covina and La
Puente.
In Ariela and Sh<:rm<Jn Oaks,
both 1n lht• San Fcrrwndu \'aJlcy,
't·attc•rl.'d l1ghln1ng storm~
h1·g1111Hng a:-. l!arl) a~ I am
I.. n nt k l'd o\ l'r t rl!ei. on p~wl'r
lint·-.. bl:.tl'ktng out ai. many d:>
J .000 homt·s an<~ businei.M.'~ in th~ area, ... aid Elizab('th Wim-
mer, .spokt-swoman for the
Department of Waler and
Powe r. l.1ghtnin~ alw uffl•ctcd 250
rt'!>ldt.'llts in the Silvt•rlukc area.
Mrs. W1mmer:.<.11d
"We've had some problt•ms,"
she suid. adding thut wuter
dumage to underground cabll'S
BATTERED NORTH BRACES
FOR THIRD BIG STORM-AS
in the Los Angeles Civic <.:enter
t•au sl'd !'tome power outuges
between 6 and 7 :30 a .m .
The i.torm thal dropped 1 38
1nrhl.'s of rain 1n Southern
<':ihforn1a since Monday was ex
P<'Cl<'d lo mm e completely out
()f the <Jrt-:.i b.> tonight
But llw .'\dl1on:.d W('dlh<'r
St•n 1t·1· :-.Jitl anolhc:r storm 1i.
mO\ ing 111 from the Puc1f1c and
will come pounding into
Southr m California a~ early as
\1.'l·dnL·sda) <iftl'rnoon
Mnnd <1y's storm, whic h
followed Ct weekend or fair skies
an1I mod1·ralL• tt•rnpt•raturl'.,,
floodt:d highway!», !Jacked up
traffic and caused high surf to
hatter coastul arcu homes.
Residents of u clozl'n homes an
lhe Pacific Palisades area were
warned by fire officials to
1•vacuate Monday because of
rock and mudslidci., but mo!>l
<·hose to stay in their homes.
Just west of Los Angeles in ex-
dus1ve Malibu Colony -one or
the nation 's most expensive
comm unities and the home of
s uch star s as actor Steve
M cQueen and singer Lindi.
llonstadt -was sandbagged for
the second day Monday against
thundering seven-foot wttve11
thal washed into many of the
homes.
Jn Ventura County. the -;even
foot tide flooded ut least two
hom<.>s m the r'una Beach area
* *
f<'rona Page A I
RAIN •..
Coasl College In Cosla Mean re·
porkd l.10 inches since Monday,
for a season total or 8 58 inches.
L<.1st year al lh1s time lhe season
total in Costa Mesa was 5.95
mch<.>s
Hain "'atcher J . Sherma n Den-
ny report<.>d <1 downpour of I 47
inches ovemtjitht In Huntington
Reach for a season totaJ of 8.40,
Just a shade ~low last year'11
8.52 inches at this date.
The Moulton Niguel Treat·
menl Plant in Laguna Nifuel
mea11ured 1.2 Inches ovemleht,
for a 7.55 season total, almost
double last year's 3.98 lnches.
Rainfall ln Santa Ana, the
rlood control district's Gietzen
<..aid, was 1.cn inches overni&ht,
brlnilng the season totol to 8.07
inches ~mpared to 6.•a inches
last year.
* * * Flood Just
'Nuisance'
In Newport
Newport Beach cllT otttdab
11atd today that the •ont th.lnr
that hu happened to tbe city In
lbe current aeries of raln1torm1
1s "a UtUe nuiaanc. fioodlnt.'1
Newport's only real problems
have been the Jack ol dra1D11•
on the Balboa Penlnaula and
Balboa Island. clty oftlclala sald.
General ServicH Dlrectol'
Jake Jdyndene explained that
s torm drain• In tho••
nelahborboocb run dlffetly tnto
the Day and when a hl1h tide OC!·
curs, tb• draws are closed to
keep the Udal watert out. 1b1a
moon1 r~n waters can't draln, beaaUl.
Tbl• weok'• rain eomblntd
wltll ut.rem• Udt1 h11 •I·
J?Hltel UM problem 1UPUy,
ht HJd ~ &bU ~t1 CNW1 were c~ out earlr, till• mom·
Jns to •lftdbtt a r.w Mm• ta thote two IMlabborhDodl .,....
wat•r tbrffttnod to run c.ver the
curb llne.
1
and caused so m e $10,000
damage to e.ach.
S\lveral homes in the Seaclirt
.irea In the northern p art of the
county also were flooded, while
up to 10 foot waves &wept the
Rincon area between Ventw-1
and the Santa Barbara ~t)
line.
The storm brought the total
season rainfall in the areuip to
10,57 ni. of 9 a.m. Monday;~m
pared to 7.04 inches lut season,
llenderson said. Normal rainfall
for this time or year is S.57
inch Cl)
She'll Retire
.............
Opera star Bev<'l'ly Sills ha:,
annount·ed thul she'll retire
from singing Ill I he Call of
1980.
Schwab Removed
From Diedrich Case
By CARY GRANVILLE
Ot IM 0.11\' ~l .. t autf
Orange County Superior Court
Judgu Philip Schwab was re-
moved Monday from lhe case in·
volvine bribery chareea lodeed
by the county Grand Jury
a gainst Supervisor Ralph
Diedrich and architect LeRoy H.oi.e.
1t was Judge Schwab who
ruled 1n November that the Dis-
trict Attorney'g OHice shouldn't
h..t ndle lhe prosecution or Dicdri~h. SupervtSor Philip An·
I hony and three othe r def en·
danls in a political conspiracy
case.
Jt was against that back-
S? round that the DA 's office filed
an afrtdav1l of prejudice agaiml
the judge.
lie Quickly resoonded to the afftdav1t by removing himself
f rom the bribery case. an
altern&live lo havln1 another
judge decide lf he ls prejudiced.
In hia ruling last November,
Judie Schwab aaid he could rind
no true prejudice or bias on the
part of the district attorney.
The jud1e r uled, however, a
possible appearance of preJ-
udlce because or opposite posi-
tion s sometimes taken by the
Board of Supervisors and Dis-
trict Attorney Cecil Hicks m l&ht
undermlnc public confidence ln
the courta if Hicks proaecutes
the cue.
That case was put on the back
burner Monday where a ien-
tative trial dale ot July 31 was
set, meanlng the defendants in
the p olitical campaign con-
spir acy case won't stand trial
until 13 m onths after their indictment.
Abplanalp Flies In
Nixon Celebrates
His 65th Birthday
By Associated Pre11
Form<'r President Rich ard
!\ 1>.on rclchratcd, his 65lh birth-
d ,1) at 111-. favorite Mexican
rt.·,t a urant aft(•r old friend
lluhcrl Auplanul1> "flew in from
tlw ea-.t to i.urprise him," a
'>pokc~m:m '>d1d today.
J :1rk B11·nn;111, an aide to the
form er prl!s1dl•nt, -.aid besides
Abplanalp, Nixon \\Cnt lo dinner
Monday ni~hl with h1i. wire, Pat.
<laughtt•r Julie and son-in-law
David Eisenhower. Abplanalp is
a millinruurc businessman and
pr<>m1nl·nt on«timC' backer of the
form<•r President.
The h1 s tor1c E l Adobe
restaurant adjacent to the 200.
yea r -old Missi on San Jua n
Capistrano is about 10 miles
from the Nixon estate In San
Cle mente. The restaurant was a
favor ite or Nixon 's when be WU
president, and he sometimes
2 Cosmonauts
Blast Toward
Space Meeting
MOSCOW CAP) -The Soviet
Union rocketed two cosmonauts
into apace today to rendeavous
with two colleagues who have Spent a month aboard the Sal)'ut 6
space 1taUon, Taas reported.
Suocetarul dockin1 of the coa-
mon a uts would mark the rlnt
time tour men have been placed
oboa rd a Soviet space
Jaboratqry 1t tbe same time. ·
The Sovtet news agency sald
cosmonaut.I VJ1dlmir Janlbekov
a nd Ole• Mirkarov bluted off
and Olea Malcarov . blltted olf
in Soyua '11at3:28 p._m. Ma1cow
time (S:26 a.m. PST). Already
aboard Salyut 6 are 1U1bt eo~ mande.r Yuri Roma.nenko. 33,
and flight engineer Georgy
Greehto, .ce, who were ft.red into
orbit ln the Soyuz 26 apacecrall
Dec. 10 and linked with Salyut 6
the followiq day.
Grechko took a walk 1n 1pace
Dee. 20 to check t.be space lab's
dockln1 port.I and reported them in l(ood workinJC order.
I( tho Goyus 27 fii&ht f ollowa
previous pattems and the dock·
lo( maneuver la 1uccH1ful1 Janlb•kov eod Matarov al)oula Jotn th• othet two Jate Wtdnes·
d•Y· JanJbekov. an aJtt force
ll•utenant colonel and com·
mandcr of tho 1paoe1btp, ·11
makla1 bll fi.nt ••• fll1bt1 wblle Mlkarov, • oltlllan ana
fl.,ht enit.neu, fl•• before on
Soyu1 12 fn 1173.
Ta11 Rldaft4ir u.. doddnt UM. four t~auta would carq out Joint reaearch ln4 upert• mentl. ;,
went the~ for dinner during San Clemente visits
"He had a birthday cake with
65 candles and a fterwards P<'<>·
pie crowded around to shake h1i.
hands and wish him & happy
birthday." Brennan !)81d
Earlier, Brennan s .. 1d, Nixon
"'spent a normal day working
on the end or his memoirs."
Reporter Slain
Killers to Get ,.
Gas Chamber
PHOENlX, Ar12. <AP) -Two
men convicted or flri.t-degree
ll)l,l(der i,n the June 1976 car
bomb sl aylrig of newspttper N:·
porter Don Bolles were sen-
tenced to death in the gas
<.·humbertoday. . .
Max Dunlap, a 48·year ·old
Phoenix contractor, and James
Robison, 55, a plumber from
::;uburban Chandler, were found
guilty Nov. 6 of murder and con-
i.. pira cy In the bombing
Prosecutors asked that they be
sentenced to death.
The death of Bolles. whose re·
porting specialty (or the Arizona
HepubUc was crime. broueht a
team of b r oadcast and
n~wspapcr reporters and editors
to Arizona t o investigate or-
g anized crime.
Thelr report was issued ln
May. •
Robison was convicted of det·
Hanna Wins
Conspiracy
Trial Delay
Former Orange County con-
gress man Richard Hanna h11
won a delay untll Marcb 20 of his
trial on charges or consptrin&
with South Korean officials to
buy influence in Congress.
Chief U.S. District Judge
William Bryant set the ne w date
Monday in Washington. D.C .•
but refused to send Hanna'•
lawyer, Charles McNells, to
Korea, where U.S. prosecutors
are q uestlonin1 rice dealer
Ton1sun Park.·
"Tongsun Park's either 1oin1
to exonerate my cllent or bury
him." McNelis told the jud1e.
"I'd liketofl.ndoutwhlchltfs."
Bryant did not act on mollons
by McNelis to dismiss the case
or r<.'ducc lhc cha rges. Hanna,
\~ho is now livjng in Arkansas,
did not altend Monday's'-hear·
ing.
Hannu 1s charg('d with accept-
ing more than $75,000 In bribes
from Pork to help in an illeeal
lobbying operallon in Coneress.
Hanna, the fi rst Dem ocratic
congressm an ever e lected in
Orange County, !>erved in the
House for ~ years untJI his re-
llrement tn il74.
He wal\ indicted Oct. 14 bv a
federal grand Jury on 40 f<:Jooy
counts, including conspiracy,
bribery. mail fraud, accepting
an Illegal gratUily and failing lo
register as a foreign agent.
Judge Dry ant look under ad-
v1!.em ent a motion to dism iss the
bribery charges.
onallnJC lhc bomb whlcb h ·
ploded under the n~waman'a car
us he waa lcavln1 a midtown
hotel patk.in& lot. Dunlap wu
convicted or arranging for the
murder. They were both sen-
tenced to not less 'than 2t years
or more than 30 years on t.be
conspiracy charge. · a
J ohn Adamaon , 34. pleaded
guilty lo second-de1tee murder
charaes in January 1976 and Im·
pllcated Dunlap a nd Robiaon.
Adamson faces a prison term of \ 20 yeara.
fn a 1tatement to the jud1e
before t he sentence was im-
po11ed, Owilap broke lnto tea.rs
us he said, "fm Innocent."
Late FBI
Director
Corrupt?
W ASHJNGTON <AP> -The
late FBI Director J . Ed1ar
Hoover was accuaed by the
JUJUce Department today of ac~
HpUnt apeclal favora and
aervlcea from FBl employffl
and bkln1 part wltb otber
former FBI olficlall ln a pattern
of lone·at.andlna and widespread abuse1.
Hoover, who dled ln 1972 at the
aao of 77, was aaid to have ac~
cepted favora that ran1ed from
additions to hla home, includin1
a front portlco, a fl1hpond,
shelves, telephone 1tanda and an
Oriental fruit bowl, to tervlcl.ni
of hls lawnmower, snow blower
and replacement of lawn lod
twlce a year.
"Plots were reset , metal
polished. wallpaper retouched,
firewood provided and furnJtu.re
rearranged," the 40-page report
said. "Employees were on call
night and day for this work."
On other orcaslons, the report
said , Hoover got free tax advice
from a bureau accountant and
members of the FBl's Exhibit.a
Section were called upon to build
gifts each yr:ar for Hoover on
Chris tm as, hl1 aervlce an-
nive rsary with the agency and
other special occasions.
The report detailed similar -•
and related ChA11res aealnst a
number of other former FBI hl ~h ranking officials.
Uut it said no clvil action was
contemplated against any of
these persons. partly because
the statute of li mitations m~y
have run out and because "the
actual amounts Involved are
small compared to the expense
of litigation."
7
Saddleback
VOL. 71, NO. 10, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA -.. . TUESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1978
~fternoon
N. 't:'. Stoeks
I TEN CENTS!
Viejo Colllpany to Buy 22,_000_Acres?
. M lsslon Viejo Company of-
ficials announced this morning
that they have entered into an
agreement deaiened to lead to
the acquisition of 22,000 acres
south of Denver
The purchase ol this land, the
Highlands Ranch in Douglas
County, will make it the com-
... pany 's largeM. holdin&.
Mission Viejo is only ·10.000
acres and just about half of it
has been developed so far. The
company's other Orange County
holding. Aliso VleJo in Laguna
9'ills, is 6, 700 acres. De\felop-
ment or this land still is in the in-
ili al planning stages.
The company also has been
developinr . .!!)Other commwuty
called Mission Vi.ejo east or
Denver in Aurora. This 640-acre
proJect 1s half developed
ln a press release, Philip Rell·
ly. company president, said ,
"With the valuable experience
gained an Auror.a. the Mission
VieJO Company had been seek-
ing additional land to continue
its long-term involvement in the
Denver area."
o.11, ,....,. ,,_..,. ,. ..... ,.. • ...,..,.
SAN DIEGO FREEWAY NEAR ORANGE COUNTY AIRPORT AT 4 P.M. MONDAY
Commuters Can Expect More Drtvlng Weather LJke Thlt, Weatherman Sa ya·
I,
California
Reeling
From Rain
By The Associated Press
Thundenng surf and torrential
rains have claimed at least one-
life as they inWldated Southern
California coastal communlUes,
brought traffic to a crawl aloo&
miles or flooded highways and
touched off numerous rock and
mudslides.
Authoritjes said Derrek W.
Price, 57, died when a soaked
hillside began oozing downward
. and toppled a retaining wall on
him at his home in La Jolla, an
e:1Cclusive suburb of San Diego
Price had gone into his yard
when he heard rocks cascading
down the hm. police said
Meanwhile, heavy surf from
the Alaskan storm that has bat-
tered Southern California for
BATTERED NORTH BRACES
FOR THIRD BIG STOAM--.l5
two days left water up to 3 feet
deep along more than 15 miles of
highway nortb of San Diego,
bringing traffic to a standstill ln
many places and sloWing it to a
crawl in others. Many cars were
reported stalled in th~ middle oC
intersections.
By 6:30 a.m. today, 1.15 lnches
or rain rrom this litorm had been
recorded in downtown Los
Angeles, brinting tho season
total lol0.34lnches.
Drenchin1 rain was reported
in many patts of Southern
~alifornla today, with
forecasters predicting rain
• throul(h tonhcht, with a chance
o( showers beginnina . again
Wednesday afternoon.
The National Weather Service
said surf that ha& pounded the
· (See ft,OODJNG, Pase A.2)
Safari Swims
"-
'Close Encounters' Reported
By JERRY CLAUSEN on11e 0.11, ,., ... su11
The hippopotamuses and
monkeys are happy. but the six
inches or rain that has f111len on
Lion Country Safari have pre-
sented staf( members there with
some uniq~ problems.
One rhinoceros which often
waded tn 090 Creek for water
and bath& nearly drowned last
Thursday, a SJdk spokesman
said, when strong currents and
deep, rain-swollen water got him
in over his head.
Rangers stood by to help, but
the 3,500 -pound rhino finally
mnde it out or the "raging tor-
rent" on his own, the spokesman
Hid. '
Pnrk visitors are delighted,
though, when UoM and other
mud-hating animals walk along
<SeeSAFARI, Page A%)
Moulton Aereage
Aliso Viejo Ranch
Development Eyed
By WILLIAM HODGE
OI U. Dllltr ~ltlt&a.H
Land-use plans -a precursor
to development-for one of the
Orange Coast's largest remain-
ing ranchland areas will be sub-
mitted to County Environmental
Border Check
Law Proposed
SAN DIEGO CAP> -Attorney
General Evelle J . Younger says
only thieves need fear secret.
border check alerts proposed by
Callfomia law enforcement of-
ficials.
Not every car would be
stopped -••only those with
Jicenae numbers that acore a bJt
on a computer" ln Sacramento
-be told a ·news conference
Monday.
The. atate lealalature ls con·
1lderlo1 a bjll by Auemblyman
Wtlliam Ctaven of Oceanside
and Serl. Dennis Carpenter of
Ntwport. B•ach. both
Republicans. At a cQSt exceed·
iDI $1 mllUon annually, offic:ers
at undl1cJ0Hd polnts would acan licehle platu aod dtlv..,. of
1outbb0und can and alert -IA.·
flceta ahead ll stolen cars. suuor
other 1oodureau.~ted.
Management Agency officials
next month. a top M1ss1on Viejo
Company official said Monday.
Th& Aliso VieJO ranch, the re·
malning 6,700-acre parcel or the
vast Mdullon Rane h, was
purchased by the Philip Morns
Corporation in October, 1976.
The company also owns Mission
Viejo.
Art Cook, director of environ-
mental affairs for the Misslon
Viejo Company said alternative
land-use plans were being dis-
cussed within the company,
which also manages the Aliso
Viejo ranch. '
"We an selecting alternative
plans for the area at this point,"
Cook said. "We expect to submit
a plan to the company president
later this week."
If tbe recommended
alternative Js approved by
Philip Reilly, Mission Viejo
Company president, land-use
plans based on the recommenda-
tion will be drawn up and sub-
mi tted to county offlclals in
February, Cook aald.
He .tccllned to aa,v bow many acre.s may be developed as res·
identlaJ usea, but hinted tJ'\e
pJ11>1 would leave piuch open
apace area. In1Ual conatruouon wm prob-
ably not beslq tiefore 1980 or
1981. he said.
(See UNCH, P•&e 2 >
The tenns ot the agreement
were not released. A company
spokesman said they had been
negoUating for the purchase of
lbe property ·•for awhile." 'nle
acquisition agreement was
s igned with a group or six
Colorado businessmen Monday,
he sah,i.
111 the release, Reilly said
company officials will be
Foggy
Showers
Expected
By JACKIE HYMAN
OI t• Oall1 ,.,._. "Ml
Tired of the rain? You may
get a respite tonight, but you're
likely to see more of the wet
sturr on and orr thf9ugh next
weekend.
''We have a lot of fast-moving
fronts. They're going to b6 hard
to time," said John Henderson,
a National Weather Service
meteorologist.
He srud tonight's forecast Is
for partly cloudy with local
dense fog and a 10 percent
chance or rain, rising to 30 per-
cent Wednesday es a new storm
moves In from the northwest.
A small craft advisory is still
in effect as seas ri?main choppy,
Henderson said.
Monday night's heavy rainfall
ranged from .65 of an inch re-
ported by the Orange County
Harbor Department ln Newport
Beach lo 2.3 Inches at Santiago
Peak on Saddleback Mountain.
John Gietzen of the Oran1e
County Flood Control District
explained that the peak, at 5,680
feet the highesL point in the
c9unt¥hl~:-~ r~qelves the t. • I •caoae di
the tel1dency of air &.o cool &ad
releaH water at J~ rtaes,
He,. 1atd the.. ae&IOCl'• ralnlalf.
on the peak has been 22.6 Inches.
compared to 14.4 lnches last
year at this time. He said the
mountain's 26·year average
rainfall total for this date ls 10.2
inches, with an average of 26.4
inches by June 30 .
In Newport Beach, the .65
inches recordt!d for the past 24
hours brought the season total to-
6.33 inches. up Crom 5.89 inches
last year at this time.
Charles Lewis at Orange
Coast College In Costa Mesa re-
ported 1.10 inches since Monday,
for a sea.son total of 8.58 Inches.
Last year at this time the season
total tn Costa Mesa was S.95
inches.
Rain watcher J . Sherman Den-
ny reported a downpour or 1.47
inches ovemiJ?ht ln Huntington
(See RAIN, Page A2)
Addlmult
To Injury
McKEAN. Pa. '(AP>
The gale-force winds that
stranded many motorists
alona Erle County
highways left one man
more m~ed than most
-ln a gas station ladies'
room for an hour.
"Our men's room Is
broken because all the
pipes are frorerr," said
Tore Heubel, an attendant
at the 1tation, located oft In·
terstate 79. "While he was
in the ladles' room, the
wind. atammed the door
abut andtheloc"irroie. ••
He wu freed when the
lock was rel'noved with a
cutting tore& and a
crowbar.·
evaluaUng all ~peels of long-
term. balanced community de-
velopment or the ranch with
Douelaa County oflicials,
citizens' 1roups and all ap·
propriate state agencies duJiiig
the next year.
what development will be done
on lbe Ja.nd. The company
followed the same process with
Mission Viejo and Aliso Viejo.
Jim Toepfer, executive vice
president of the Mission VieJO
Company, will be W()rking on the
master pl rut for the new develop-
The company spokesman said ment. He also worked on plans
they probably wtll develop._a.. . ''lt. the comp an~ 's two Orange
master plan before deciding just Coun~y projects.
1 •
I i
/I /1 /
. .. .... ..,.....
COSMO~UTS JOIJf CO,..PANIONI ON SPACE STATION
~adlmlr Ja.nl.bekov O•ft), Oleg Makerov
Cosmonauts Join
Comrades in Space
MOSCOW <AP> -The Soviet
Union rocketed two cosmonauts
into space today to rendezvous
with two colleagues who have
spent a month aboard the Salyut 6
space station, Tass reported.
Successful docking of the COS·
monauts would mark the first
time four men have been placed
aboard a Soviet space
laboratory at the same Um~.
The Soviet news agency said
cosmonauts Vladimir Janlbekov
and Oleg Makarov blasted off in Soyuz. 27 -at 3 :26 p.m. Moscow
time (S:26 a.m . PST>. Already
aboard Salyut 6 are flight com·
mander Yuri Romanen.ko, 33,
and flieht eneineer Georgy
Grecbko, 46, who were fired into
orbit in the Soym 26 spacecraft
Dec. 10 and linked with Salyut 6
the following day.
Grechko took a walk in space
Dec. 20 to check the space lab's
docking poc:ts and reported them
in 1tood working order.
If the Goym Z1 fll&bt follows
previous patterns and the dock·
tng maneuver ls succeasful,
Janibekov and Ma.karov should
join the other two la(e Wedn~
day. Janibekov, an air force
'lieutenant colonel and com-
mander of the spaceship, ls
making his first space flipt,
while Makarov. a 4!lvili.&a ~
fllght engineer, new before on
Soyuz 12 fn 19"13.
Tall said after the docklng the
four cosmonaut.I wou.ld carry
out jo.tnt research and expert·
menls.
The agency said Soyuz 27's
systems were functionin g
norm ally and the two new cos-
mona uui were feelin«i well.
The last time the Soviet Unfon
had four men in space was July
1975 when Soyuz 18 and 19 were
up. During that period another
Soyut craft with two cosmonauts
aboard linked up with a U.S.
Apollo spacecraft.
The last ti me the Soviet Union .
had four men in space was in
October 1969 when they flew in
three different s paceships,
Soyuz 6, 7, and 8, and carried out
joint maneuvers, including dock·
ing or two or the spacecraft.
Four spacemen were aboard
one ship in the joint U .S.-Soviet
docking or July 1975 but again
this was not the same type of
operation as the docking or two
spaceships with a space lab as in
lbe planned Salyut 6 rendezvous.
Aurora Park
Project Wins
MAC Approva
Aurora Park in northeastern
Mission Viejo moved a atep
closer to reality Monday as Mls-
• slon VleJo. Munlclpal Advlsory
Council members voled • to 0 to
recommend final adjustmerus
on a $196,000 bid package. •
Progreu on the blddinf por-
tion or the park development
was delayed last month when
MAC members were told the
park WU '80,000 over bud1et,
accordinl to architectural plans.
Tbe proposed park is loeated
at Mvpuite Parkway and Via
Ouadix..
Mon4-y, MAC members rec-o)n mende4 the co\Uily Environ·
mental Mana,ement Atency 10 ~
ahead Oft tbe biddini packaae.
Th•1 ••ld certain item•
tthedoled for the park ahottld be
c11tletabW. • • Jetable.
Certain equipmtit wowcl be ~Wider the plan It the bl~
acted tbie $111,000 .Uocu.cl Coe
th pa.rt'• 6"elopment. ..
DAILY PILOf T
For Col£ege
Panel Nixes • ••
Border Shift
A pro~al to drastu~ally shirt
the boundaries of Orange Coun-
ty's community college d1i.tncts
or form one district for the en·
lire county waa kllled Monday
iust dayt. after 1t wa!I rerom·
mended by ' a state agency':;
Sl'aff
Confronted with objections
. and crat1cli.ms Crom represen·
talives of each of the county's
four two year college djstricts, a
committee or the Cahforn1a
Postsecondary Education Com
mission <CPECJ voted unan·
lmously to discontinue further
d1scuss1on of the recommenda
tions.
dleback and mto the reahrned
Rancho Santiago distract.
It also would have placed most
or the northeast county in the
North Orange County district.
The Coast Community' College
District would have been un-
l'hangcd
During the committee's meet
ing in Burhnl{ame, Dr. Edward
A Hart. Saddleback's assistant
s uperintendent for general de-
velopment, argued that the pro-
posals failed to recognize that
work on his district's second
campus already has begun.
. CAPISTRANO
al.A CH ... ,, ......... _
ARROWS INDICATE WHERE SURF POUNDED HOMES
Expert Saya It'• Shape of the Bottom That Counts
Tidal Action Effect
Due to Topography
Fro"' Page AJ
COMPUTER •
Curren Uy, tb• dllftrlct't
budget development, accOW'IU
payable, wanhouse inventory,
personnel payroll, financial
statements, vendor payments,
warrant listings and enrollment
projectJons are done on the dis-
trict's computer.
This accounts for little more
than half or the district 's
$137 ,556 data processing budget.
A total of $6.5,580 is spent on out·
side contracted services for
schedulin1, grade reportilt&, al·
tendance accounting and some
testing and surveys.
Moreno said these contracted
services probably could be
phased out gradually 1f the dis·
I ricl accepts an "on line'·
system
The proposals were included
in a report on the county's com
m unity colleges .... h1ch was JW.l
released to the d1!>tricb Thurs·
day.
The administrator charaed,
"The author started with a con-
clusion and wrote a paper to
support it.''
Others branded tfie study's
conclusion), as "111 conceived,"
"completely misdirected," ''Car-
retched" and "so full or fantasy
that lt 1s almost grotesque."
8 y SfEVE MITCHELL Ol U. DeUy ,.,._. llalf
seaside insUlute.
Consultants who studied the
district's central office opera·
tion last fall contended the dis·
trict's computer 1s not being
utilized to its potential. Moreno
argued then th11t he bad neither
• the staff nor hardware to do
what the consultants proposed.
The report recommended that
two campuses currently planned
m the Saddleback and Rancho
Santiago districts be delayed un-
til some new s tructure 1s pro·
posed to the voters.
The staff report favored the
establishment of a countywide
district with lesser governing
boards al each of the"collegcs
An alternative propoi.al in the
report was to realign existing
district boundaries This would
have moved virtually all of the
Tustm·lrvine area out of Sad-
The report was a followup to
another study prepared for the
county colleges last sprlng. That
original report was primarily
responsible for CPEC's endorse-
ment of Saddleback 's new Irvine
campus and Rancho Santiago's
planned campus in Orange.
While tabling the new report,
committee members promised
there would be no change rn
CPEC's stance on these cam-
puses
Why is it .that hi&h Ude& and
waves batter homes in Malibu
and Oxnard, and break windows
an Capistrano Beach, but leave
other seaside communities like
El Morro Trailer Park relatively
unscathed?
It 's the way lhe sea bottom
looks. combined with high tides
and high surf, accordinar to a
graduate student al Scripps
Institute of Oceanography in La
Jolla.
"The effects of Udal action are
due to local topoaraphy," ex-
plained David Skelly, a graduate
student of oceanography al the
Customers Not Right
Laguna Cops Handle Outraged Citizens
It was a blue Monday for two Laguna Beach
police officers who put up with vcrtfal and
physical abuse from three motorists dunng their
shirts.
and Anita StreeL'I.
It all started at 5:45 a.m. Monday, when Sgt.
T<.'rry Temple pulled over a motorist he claims
was speeding on Coast Highway
lie.said the woman smacked him the face and
cut his lip before he gained the upper hand, arrest-
ing her on charges of being under the influence of
alcohol, misdemeanor hit and run driving, resist·
ing arrest and assault on a police officer.
"The guy was obviously upset when he got out or the cnr," Temple recalls. "He ripped off his glass~s and threw them on the pavement, pulled
out his wallet. tore ll an half and threw 1t in the
.,treet. then walked to the back of his camper truck
and put h1:-. fist through the window."
Yourex booked the woman Into Laguna Beach
Jail but round himself back at the station seven
hours later -this time walking with a sliaht limp.
"TIDS TIME IT was a woman who had had
ht'r driver's license revoked," Temple said this
morning.
THIS l'PSET TEMPLE somewhat, consider-
ing the guy was m excesi. of sax feet tall and ap
peared unhappy
He said Yourex recognized Rhoda Sowden, 24,
or Dana Point and pulled her to the side of the
roud
"She reruscd to get out of the car . so he called
for a backup," Temple said. "Thal was me." The officer called 1n for a backup, telling the
dispatcher. "flurry 'em up, I've got a big one."
t\fter arresting that moton!it for two outstand·
mg traffic warrants, Temple's trauma was over
Offlter W11l1cim Yourc'I( hall yel to begin his blue Monday work day
The two ofhcers finally convinced the woman
to le~~r vehicle, •t which Ume Temple said
she h111>an "licking at the officers.
VOllRF:x ·s ,..IRST ENCOUNTER began at
5 :JO p m ~ondav when he pulled Barbara Proc
tor. 47. of f.03 ll1gh Drive to the side or the road
. 1ftl.'r shl· allegedly hat a parked car at Glenneyrc
''HER BOOT LANDED right on top of
Yourcx's foot," Temple said. "And you should
haH' seen the heels on those boot&," he whisUed.
M 1s:; Sowden was arrested on char1es of re-
s 1st mg arrest, a!>sault on a police officer and for
being an unlicensed driver.
f 'rom Pag~ ill
FLOODING DAMAGE. • •
c'ahforn1a l'Oast sinc(• Sunday
would 1·ontrnuc Jt least until
Wedncscla}
Just \l.<•-.t of Loi. Angele!'!, ex
rlusive Mah bu Colony one of·
the nation's most expensive
ror:imunllle'> and the home or
~uch sl<irs as actor Steve
M cQuecn and singer Linda
Ronstadt was sandbagged ror
tne second day Monday against
a Pac1f1c Ocean assault on its
doorsteps
But Monday's tides were less
severe than expected and
caused no immediately apparent·
damage, said Los Angeles Coun-
ty Fire Capt. Harry Williams.
Ocean condillons forced the full
thrust of the high tide on rocks
and bluffs just north of the ex
elusive colony
On Sunday, wavt>s demolished
fences and stairways of ocean-·
rront homes.
ln Ventura County, the seven-
root tide flooded at least t wo
homes in the Faria Beach area
and caused some $10,000
damage to each Several homes
in the Seacli'ff area in the
rlorthem part of the county also
were flooded.
ORA NOE COAIT t11
DAILY PILOT
nit Or-Cool Doll' ~IOO """"''''""I\'°"' .. f\llllldV'"fNt'lllliA p,,,, l\C)Vb0~b'l l"'9Qr-~
G«Hlt ~1"''"' co~•,,• ~ .. , IKIO~\tn ,.,.11 ...... llH..... , ..... .,.. ~ •• .,., ... (f'l•
Me.. --1 ...... H~•ll-...... ~-· lMft Y•tltY lrvl"• \•1Hlt!M<\ V•l .. -y .-. "-eto<••'-"lhC<MU 4.....,..r-lo4l· !lei\ I\ _.~d S•ll# ... Y• -~I"• T ... ="c'.J::!.~~!.~.·ro:.~,~.;~ ue we" a.y ·-"-... -...... _,_
JKll •• C ..... .., .............. , .... o.-·· ""'-,_, • ...,11
CdllW
"':.~.;.~
• ~"·'""' •IC-PMlll ..... ,..,, llleMel .. --·
~~~~~~
• Offtff•
CMt•flNM U..,_.~...,~-lfltlell .. M"' lltll .. edl .... •t-~• .. c~ 11t40-.,.1M-1
T...,hoM (?14)tQ..W1
Claum.ct Adff..itlftg '6Wll
High wa\'t!S forced authorities
to shut the 1.200.foot Ventura
Pier. The 105·year-old pier was
closed "'hen pier pilings and
cross bracings came loose.
L'p to 10-foot waves swept the
Rincon area between Ventura
and the Santa Barbara County
line. U.S. 101 near Emma Wood
State Beach was clo!ied off and
on, and the beach itself was
closed.
l n San Diego, a police
spokesman said many low-lying
areas and suburbs were flooded
and some roads were closed to
trartic at the height of the
deluge.
In Escondido, police got scat-
tered reports of flooding in city
streets, lawns and some seepage
into homes between 7 p.m. and 9
p. m . when the rainfall was
heaviest.
Tides, which normally run
between three and four feet, were
expected to crest about 7.3 feet
along San Diego shores. accord-
ing to the National Weather
Servi.ceatLindbergh Field.
* * * FroM Page Al
RAIN ..•
Beach for a season total of 8.40,
just a shade below last year's
8.52 Inches at this date.
The Moulton Nieuel Treat-
ment Plant in Laguna Ni1Uel
measured 1.2 lnches ove~.t'· for a 7.55 seoao total, a t
double last year's 3.0I lneh•.
Rainfall In Santa ADI, the
flood con\rol district's Gietzen
satd. was 1.07 tncbe1 ovemt1ht,
brtnling tho aeuon totol to 8.07
i11chea compared to 8.'3 lnchtt
lutyear.
Prejudice Denied
Lightning
Strikes KFI
A Los Angeles radio sta-
tion was put of( the air lo·
day when lightning s truck
a power transformer.
A K FI spokesperson
said there was no in-
dication how long it would
take lo repair the
transformer.
The llghtn1ng bit at 8:44
a .m .
Fro,.. Page Al
SAFARI •••
the paved roads from which car-
cnclosed viewers watch Lion
Country activity.
"The animals are more ac-
ll vc." the spokesman said. "We
definitely are having several
close zoological encounters or
the third type."
And then there are the
giratres. "Their bodies are like
hu1e radiators,'' sh e said.
"When it's wet and chilly, we
have to keep them in the barn."
Park maintenance people
have bee n busy con1trucbn g
small shelters and wlndbreas
for aeveral 1pecies, 1be added,
especially the cheetaha ud t.helr
raln·hat.ina cubs.
But fences pose the larcest
maintenance problem, abe said.·
Especially when a near-two-tort
rhinocenMS brushes .. alnst a poet
embedded in earih that has
tumffto•toaae •
So far, tbouch, no animal h•
escaped d•lrite hetdlnt prol>-
l•m• eaUled by JMJ> wbMll lf&D~
nlnt ln tlv•lneh deep m~. abe uld.
R an1u1 allO are kteplaf
sharp t)'et on Ult two flood
11lu UiJl bott19 up• poitloa ol
Oao Creek to f orJQ .. Lake
Sbuilee" Whtt• the bJpp0e ,...
aldt.
He said the makeup of the sea
bottom can arrect where the
wave energy goes.
The problems heed by
homeowners in Malibu and
Capistrano Beach are a result of
a com binaUon of high tides and
larger than normtl surf.
Thal wet alliance actually
ralsea the mean water leve1,
hence the problems that face
oceanside property owners, he
said.
• 'Thi.nJ<" or tides as actually
waves.'1 he said. "It is a wave ln
a sense, in that it has a period
and a wave len&th."
These shallow waler waves,
com blned with deep water
waves, (those that break bn the
&hore) create the condition that
dama1ea homes on the beach.
"But it's the topography
(makeup ol the sea bottom) that
makes the dlf(erence," Skelly
said.
Fro• Page Al
RANCH ...
Cook said the company had
been approached by several tn-.
dividuals and the clly of Laguna
Beach desiring lo purchase
pieces ofthe6,700·acre ranch
. "Lagun a Beach wants to
purchase 10 to '200 ucres or the
Moulton Meadows area to use as
a park for the Arch Beach
Heights and 'fop of the World
areas." he i.aid. "We will be
meeting with Laguna Beach but
we have to wa1L a little longer
because the area is part or our
entire plan.''
Speaking before a League of
Women Voters meeting in
Laguna Hills, Cook outlined
problems associated with de-
veloping the ranchland.
"It was not a typical type of
approach to i.ubd1v1s1on," he
said. ''It was a planning type of
approach
/
The business manager said his
recent report was not written ln
response to the consultants•
criticism. He said tt was begun
before they had submitted their
repot"t to trustees.
Moreno said a new system
would have to be piloted at a few
schools before It could be ln·
slltuted throughout the district.
"You nev~. want to force a com·
puter down someone's throat."
he.said.
Whether or not trustees accept
the recommendations when he
for m ally presents them, Moreno
said, they will come to be even·
tually.
"In 10 years. whether we want
it to or not, (the computer> is go-
ing lo be .just like the
telephone,'' be said. It will, he
predicted, become "almost a
necessity."
Stay Granted
On Executions
LINCOLN. Neb IAP) -Three
men sched uled to die in
Nebraska's electric chair have
won al least another 90 days
reprieve
The State Supreme Court grant-
ed 90 day stays of execution Mon·
day for mass slayer Erwin
Charles SimanU;, and for con
demoed murderers John Edward
Rusland Richard Dean Holtan.
Simants was scheduled for ex·
ecullon Jan. 21 for murdering six
members of the Henry Kellie
family of Sutherland . .Rust was to
be executed Jan. 23 for the 1975
murder o( Michael Kellogg, who
wa" shot to death while trying to
come lo the aid or police who were
exchanging gunfire wilh Rust
following a supermarket robbery .
Holtan, scheduled for execution
Jan. 25, was sentenced to die for
the shooting death of an Omaha
bartender during a robbery.
SEEKS GOP NOMINATION
Sen•te Hopeful Fergu1on
Ferguson
Runs for
State Seat·
Oranae County public r•l•·
tJons man 'GUbert W. Fer~
announced t~ay he will SHk the
state senate seat beir\I vacated
by Dennis Carpente r, R -
Newport Beach. ·
Ferguson sa1d he will seek the
Republican nomination in the
June primary for the 36\h
Senatorial District, whlch
stretch~ from Seal Beach south
to Oceanside. •
Ferguson, 5.t, is a retired
Marine colon el and former
_Irvine Company vice president.
He now headJ his own advert.ii·
ing and pubUc relations firm in
Newport Beach.
He also serves as executive '
director of Californians for En·
,. i r o n men t . Em pJ o y m en t .
Economy and Development,
ICEEEDl. a coalition of busi-
ness and labor interests.
Ferauson has served In posts
with the county Cost of Housing .
Com m1llee. lht• county Open
Space and Conservation Com·
mittec. Ufe Greater Irvine In· '
dustnal League and California
Coordinating Council
He has also served on fund
raising committees of the YMCA
and United Wa..., 1n Orange and
San Diego counties
Editor Murdered
MANAGUA. Nicaragua CAI;>)
-Pedro Joaquin Chamorro, a
leading Nicaraguan opposition
editor. was ambushed and shol
to death today, a colleague ~·
ported. Chamarro. editor of La
Prensa. was a long.timeopponent
ofthe Anastasio Somoza dynasty. dynasty.
I .
STOCKS I BUSINESS
llT Mio ll•ll<l 1.IOllJ 8a<lle .'4017 lla\rll\11 ... 10 llaodO~ IO i lallC~ I 6 llallyo I 1012
llallG 2.16 t lal\Cal I01J
11•1'h• 40 ' ··~""'' • s IMI pf t . llft•Ytll6 llllOfVa t'11 11a11111 .. n ... I .. ,.Hr ) 1 llllTrpf J.JO llkfrpf 02 ....... , IClll ..... , '..,,, .. ,.,It ....
llarMGp .to 1 l•tl<lft 1 :ID •
Tuesday Janu4fY !O, •!11e s CA.LY PILOT ll~
In the,'$_ed
t ' Pl&Dning Helps !
Elderly Make It.
By SYLVIA PO&TEa .1119••--
Lut week, when the flm of the Christmas bills piled up
by Mary, 71. and her husband. 73. came in, Mary took a
credit card they once used only occasionally and apptted to
tho bankfor a cub advance.
Without It. they could not. even have paid their January
rent. AlthoCl*1J when Geor1e retired eight yean •co. they
managed euilY on their accumulated savinas. Social
security and his modest. pension, they're now over their
heads ln debt. ~
WORSE, THEY'LL NEVER BE able lo repay their
de bu; they race duckioc U)eir creditora until the day they
I
' ~ I
die. _
-~jbasewbc~ ·ar.etl~mW.~ t
about Oie same as actual earnings now wm have at retire·
ment about half what other Americans are then earnina. -.
Inflation wiU force them down the Uvang standards scale.
The retirement
dream is in reality an
economic nlghtrnare.
Millions ol elderly are
forced to depend solely
on inadequate Social
Security benefit checks.
Private pensions are
Money's
Worth
_,
often either equally modesl or actually a mirage.
As a result. one in four lives in poverty. and poverty is
increasing among those over65 and at a far more rapid rate
than for those under 65.
There ls littJe escape for those already in this position.
They should seek advice from financial counselors. But as
victims of lack or planning for retirement, their options are
exceedingly limited.
THEY SHOULD SEEK AS MANY WAYS as they can
rind to raise lheir income without rorfelting benefits. Poss•·
l!le jobs range rrom baby sitting to .house s1thog lo health·
care for those less physically able.
They should band toeether with thQse in similar pos1·
tions to save by buying foods In bulk. by sharing costs or
transportation. by exchanging services. etc.
But the real solutions are for those who begin lo plan for
retirement in their 30s, 40s and. at the latest. early SOs. Here are guidelines :
..
I"
I
-sOME EXPENSES WILL BE higher: for instance,
costs for medicine will average 21!.r half times higher than" l
for younger adults.
-Some major budge' items will either cost less or
cease to be important. The morteage probably will have
been paid off. Education bills w11l be finished. Food costs
may be lower because the elderly often eat less. Medicare
will be crucial. I I
--Retirement offers prime money·saving tax breaks:
extra exemptions, home selling tax breaks. other special
deductions.
Planners must bf: coldly realistic in csllmatmg needs.
An emergency savings fund. extra health insurance, and an
"Inflation cushion·· are good Ideas.
,.,. trt: Credit C01111$tling •
Countians Win
Job Promotions
Jane Hussey has been appomted assistant manager of
the Laguna Hills Bank of America. A 22-year BofA
veteran. she had served as the .reneral lending ofricer -:
there since Mal"ch 1974. She Joined the bank as a stenog~ ,
rapher in 1955 and was named loan officer while assigned to j
the Van Nuys main office from 196S to 197<1. ,
• .. t
J ames C. CJlm> Howard, JfunUngton Beach. manager
or the Seal Beach Bank of America, has retired after 30 •
years with the bank. t
1
l
Howard went to Seal Beach in 1971 after three years as • ,
assistant manager of the Belmont Shore branch in Long • :
Beach. Ke bad previously served u operations ollicer of ~. : :
BofA omces in Montebello. Santa Fe Springs and Los •
Angeles. He joined the bank in 1948 as a
teller.
At retirement. Howard was a
member and former director ot the Bel·
mont Shore Lions Club and a member or
the SeaJ Beach Businessmen's Aasocla·
tlon. He had served as treasurer of the •
Salvat1on Army. March or Dimes and •
ChamberorCommerceln SeaJ Beach.
Bom in Globe. Artzona. he attended
Moatana State t;nlverslty in MlssouJa
and is a graduate or the American
Institute of Banking. . _ ..
Dr. Wllllam F . Rallhaus, president of Beckman lnrtN•
meab. Jae., Fullerton. hat been elected president of the
California Cbam.,.r of Commerce for 1978. He h•s served
as first vice presf4en& of the chamber since November
1976. 1
He joined the firm as p!'eSident and a dlrect01' in
January 1965. aft.er aervin1 as executive vice president
and a director of the Northrop Corp. since 1961 . • Lowell Rayes, Mls~lon Viejo, has joined Weatlano
Bank as commerclaJ loan officer. Former owner or a
mortgage loa" business, he has alao bandied construcUon
lendiia, ror tJnltM CaJJtornia Bank and has served as
brand) manager fOf' Imperial Bank in Orang~. Joininl that
officebefore conslnlction was completed and coorcUnatlng
the various actlvtUes attendant to opening a bank office .
• Joa S. Wlerb, HunUnfton Harbour, and Charles A, Muaoa. Ftdlertqn, have open~ new offices at 2651 Eaat
Chapman Ave .• Suite 208, In Fullerton
Prior to the tormauon ot the new partnership. eacb
had a decade ol upertence ln public account1n1 . •
•••10 L. Pa ...... Oraftae, hu been Hlned leu-
fnl ~encatlve ot the new Lake Fora& olllc• ot Vala· cia Bank. Bia dutMI wtll lncla upan4.ln.1 Valencia'• car leuma operatklll bi tbe tout.bem part-of the C!OWllJ to
bu.shl9Uel ad 1iid1Yktualt.
• • • . .11 .. ii ......... El Toro. has been named bt1"ctt . rnan11• ot the MW Vateecla Baok ln l.ake Forat. TM
Waridl, lcWultd to Cll)eD 04r.'5, It VaJ~ncta'a nrat banlflftl
f aclllty ln south Ora.nae OOU'1t1.
MUJOI\ was formerly a oclated with Mluloct Bink, Bl ,,
Toro.
., -· r
'B6 DAILY PILO T
-.... Television TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS
I -'['i""'
l u•d.ly, January 10, 1978
I l 't:SDA \'
EVENING .. -<J\8 OU HEW9 11•~ 0 EMUOEHCY OHEJ 0 LYHH
8HACKLU<>fl0
QJ nit: 8AAOY 9UHCH
Mio encl C.,OI pWw\ •
~ping trip lor tlM wnoMI
l11111lly
Cl) THE ROOt<IU
When • burgl•r It 11rr•19d
.,,ci IUbMQIH!ntl)' dlM, hit
pollc•·ll•llng ton It
Dtlfrlended l>y SerQMl'li
!!!"• W ELECTRIC COMPANY
e'i.) A8MAN8EHAVEa
• 'CrMIMty"
QI A8CNEWS
e:.30 I) MOVIE
..... ~ (1931)
PIMA Munl, ~ 0..... A
hlet«lcel acoount of the
IMder ""'° CNMded tot Ille ........ Of Mujoo fl'Cll9
Prlnol Mexlrnlllan·• FfWldl
dol\WMltlon .. sir-itecl.
(!_In.)
9 HOU.VWOOO TEUVlltON~Tu.
··Tiie ~ Of Mt. Fuji ..
Joaepll Campanell•,
AndrM Mt11COllificl, AWlfy
Sc;hfelber tllld Jeanette
Nolen .,. ... tured In lhlt
contemporary RuHlan
play wNctt cen..,. arO\lfld
Ille 26-~ r~ off-
World Ww II ~-In
the IOUl'-lem region of
111e u.s.a R.
~ Wt4YNOT A
WOMAN?
1:30. Ill lAV!AHE.
8HIA&.EY
"Tiie Mottlclan" L..r.1wM
fella tor • man who dffle8 • ...-i.a. ~-*ic;.ewt
~ Sl!Wie(• help In
ords lo get a da\e wttn
him.
••••.Ai .. ,,. Oathet1ng Of
EagiM·· (Pwt 1) ( t"3)
Ao« H\111'9'1, Rod T~,
Shocked by II« huat>llftd •
~ llllflh,_ 10 n1a
men, •n A tr Force
~ ..... , .... _
tum (1 hr., 30 min)
0 NBA 9A8t<ETMLL Son1e Kisser -~ C111cago Bunt vt Loe
A~LAker1 \ rn<:mbt•r of the roek grn11p K1-.s ti Jean M.,.,,; credit Ctllda;
vel•an'• ~ etiglbik-
ly G) MY THREE 80H8
Uncle Charley l>uy9 a vw.c.-
11<><1 IOI, only to ttnd 1111i
.,. •• ~ hoodwinked.
tr) OVEREA8Y
I u-.tn1ll''-"-:Bl' :'\ l'\\ .. e!Jrn· ... puncl<·nt
Ed\\ in '.\l'\\ nlJJl°::. rl'porl un the promo
t 11 •n a I bu-.. mt· .. .., on Till' L und of 11 ~ pt·
..111d Cl11n· tn111 gh.t ;it 111 on Ch~inr1cl l
8'00 IJ Cl) M"A"l"H
The unlt'I 8U(gec>nl lnYent
8 VMCUllll clamp to atop
arterial bl•edlng, and
recovet Hot Upe' wedding
rtng Je9n Mllfall. credit cerd1
veteran·• lloapltal el1g1bifl·
& GROWING YEARS
"Chlldren In Fam0te1"
()) C88NEWS 9 MERV GRIFFIN
Gunia: Olen Campbell.
Mort Sahl, P8fry King.
7:00 II MIC NEWS
0 UAR8CLU8
Q ABC NEWS
G) ILOVELUCY
··vac•llor'I From Marriage"
Cl) AOAM-12
Olltc•a MAllO)' and Reed
get •n unexpected asa11t
lrom an ••-convict when •
OlllQ ol hoodluma attacka
them.
tr) MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
~ EARTH, SEA ANO
SKY
··Lunar Geology"
I TO TELL THE TRUTH
7.30 CANa.O CAME.AA
MEWL VWEO GAME
fJ SORORITY '1!12
G) THE 8AAOY BUNCH
Caro! hu • mjn0< ecodent
tn the P9f'klng lot end II
turn• Into • big court c&M. en AOAM-12
The ottocera call jn Firearm
end EAl)IOSjves e•1>41rts
When • strange box IS
found In an electronics
l.Clory.
('hannt'I l .-bfin9•
0 M~l<T (.0 >)L O'> Ano•" 0 KNBC I t~UCJ L O!> An Jl h >
O KTLA (lncJ I Lo'> AnCJ• 1 " 0 KABC TV I ABC) L oe, Ar1111•l1 1• ~ FMl3 1CAS) S,m D1eqo
0 KHJ TV (Ind) Los Anrw l•''
110• KCS T \ABC) San 01P90
(D KTTV \Ind.) LO'> Ang1•1t• en KCOP TV (Ind) Lo.., Anew It•
tD KCE T ·TV (PBS) L o•, AnqPh•>
a!l KOC£. TV (PBS) Huntington Bu 1c h
Tony Bennet t
See 'R ock'
T r e11d Fadi n~
Brofhf>MI
tr) L.A. INTERCHANGE
• Inside Strao0n1··
a!) NEW&CHECt<
(JJ THE OONQ SHOW
11~ HOlLYWOOO
SQUARES
8:00 tJ (ll THE
FITZPATAICt<S
The premature •tr1v11 ol
M9g0Mf1 b•by takos the
F1tzp1trlckl by IUfPflM. 0 MANFAOM
ATLANTIS
The teal auM\llng ClllHn of
Atlantll la commlak>ned
to IOcate • m1aa1no tul>M•·
rino and retum the bodlee
ol 111 er-to lhore. en
8S&tgnm8(11 wt\l(:h lead•
n•m 10 an unre-MCl'el
oper1lt0n h4Nlded by I IO<·
mer oo geotog•ll IAI
Q COLLEOE
8ASKE'TBALL
Notre O•me vs Un••er.,ty
of Sen Franc1aco 0 @I HAPPY DAYS
"'Po11Je Geta Pinned Pot•
soe ~mc:a when lie lllG4HI
the lr•!ernl!y lnltlallon IOf
be•no pinned to e soror11v
~· W CAROL BURNETT
ANO FRIENDS
ti) MOVIE
0 9 THME'S
COMPAHY
··rhe Rlvaia·• J•ck
bec:omee entangled In •
feud betwewi 1111 two
roomma1e1 when J_.
--. Chflaly of atMllng
a hend-young execu-
llve ffom lier 0 IAON8IOE .
··Checir.mete And Murder·'
G) MERV OfW'f'Wf
Gu.ta: Glen ~
M«t S8N. "l.peny King,
Pete Hwnltl. e'iJ MASTERPIECE
TWEATRE
"Hait w11o·r CallgUI•'•
~I eccentrlcltlM
and iudlCloue mllll.,y m_,,,.,. 1ur d~elon
m the COUtt
8·30 tJ Cl) ONE DAY AT A
TIME
n,. ~ Dmw" AM·•
plan• ror rornance bec*flre
..,,.., lier , ... tlOMll!p wttll
en •xcitong r-driver
!all• • ,_.. IUdden encl
unuau.I turn. Wart 2 of 2)
fJ QI 80AP
(Eplaode 81•1_,) Corrine
•ngrlly orders Jeulca and
Ch8el9t trom II« )ell cell
wtlen lngtld. the myat•I•
Linda Blair
Victim o f
Her Fame?
LAS \.EGJ\~. Ne\. 1 \ P J
Tony B('nnett "ho says h<··~ d
• lunesm1th.·· not J prov
no:.ticutor hchcv1::s lhJl tht·
··rock" lrrnd may be wcukC'ning
·and popul3r mu,ic may bl' re
turn1n~ to morr tradit1onol
forms
.J,1n-'.\T1chal'I \"int:l'nl. kit
\\ ESTPORT, Conn <AP> -
\C'trcss Linda Blair, arrested
la~l month on drug charges,
"'YS she 1s not involved with a nationwide drug ring operating
t1ut of Florida as police allege.
"I don t care• how long it''>
Crock ) bl•en ~om~ on. l can't
help but think 11 '::. ::.till a big fad
that ~•II ktnd of fade away
hecause 11 ", not really based on
terrific music,·· Bennett ex
claims.
OVER T HE PAST 25 years.
Bennett, in his early sos. has
cstablb hc·d him:-.l'lf as one of the
great singrrs, r;.inking in the
class of the late lhng Crosby, the
late Nat "King " Cole and l-'rank
Sinatra.
The four, alon~ with a handful
of olht>rs, have mai.tercd the art
of "intimate smgmg." There i1> a
rertam caring for the audience.
an understated 1'lrac1ousncss and
slyle which can't bi.' learned
"TllE MUSIC NEVER over
<'Ornt''> • it's mature music. 1t''
crafty." Bc>nn<'ll sn1d m an m·
tcrv1ew between shows at the
Hotel Snhara here. "It's nice
and gentle, and it's a performing
kind of thing."
But while good music lovers.
bemoan tho fact thnt greats are
dying and getting older, Bennett
is confident that there's nothing
to worry about because he sees
young musicians coming out. of
colleees and unlve.rslties who
will till the footsteps. ·
••t TllJNK TUE new genera·
tit5n of young adults coming up
right now is tremendous," said
Bennett. 'Tm starting to find
out lha~ their pace is much dif-
ferent tban the generation
before the late 1950s and 1960s
crowd. Their elders w~re vie-
. tims or the whole 60s scene
which got pretty neurotic. I'm
very encouraged by the new kids
I see coming out of colleie."
It'• not th•t Bennett dltllk
th• ':.rock" !llualc, he jW1t CM! ·
~ 1meratJoo of the mld-70s is
redlscoverinc the "big bands."
jua and t.M classics.
• '"TUE. Ntn¥ JDD8 realiy Ute
eood Jae,.. B~ett tlll)lainfJL
.. The 1C11.cr•Uon botoro il·. w-•
1trlctly rack and they wouldr\'L
adhtre to enythln1 elao. •·
• 111tl Kri:. Kri~toffc-r.,on
portra~ brothrr .., 1n
\·1gilante Force.'' to air on
CBS \\'e<lncsday at 9 pm.
'Gypsy' Film,
Will R emain,
111, NeuJ Yor k
In a copyright story in The
Hrtdgeport Telegram, Miss
Blair ~aid her arresl on drUg
char~es has been blown out or
proportion. She said she Is a vie·
I im of her fame.
Mil's DJair, 18, is best known
for her role in "The Exorcist."
She was arrested Dec. 20 at her
home in Wiltom on a Jackson-
ville, Fla. warrant charging her
with conspiracy lo buy or sell co-
caine. Sbe also was charted by
local authorities with possession
or a substance found in her
purse later identified as an am·
phetamine. She was released on
S2,500 bond.
•· l am a person who is known
I t\roughout tbe world so they w~uld love to get someone like
me on a drug rap. It. makes tor
J.!OOd mk.'' she swd. "The fact is
I didn't do anything wrong. I had
nothing to do with this drug bit,"
she said.
"Some people rnay not un,.
derstand, but I really don't like
them. When any or my friends
get involved with drugs 1 get up-set."
TUBE TOPPERS ·
KCOP Q) s·oo •·Juarez." Bette
Davis and Paul Mum star in this 1939'
historical movie drama ;ibout the Mex-
ican revolution. "
KCET ~ ~:00 -"The Ascent of ML
l''uji." Joseph Campanella, Avery
Schre iber and Jeanette Nolan are
featured in this contemporary Russian
play on Hollywood T e levision Theater.
KTLA 0 8:00 -Notre Dame plays
San Francisco in college basketball
game at Oakland.
KHJ fJ 11:00 -"Suspicion.'' Cary
Grant and Joan Fontaine head the cast
or this 19.U movie drama.
to .,.,..,. the eeoac>e of
._ tormw cronlee.
• CAl'TlOHID A8C ..wa
MORNING
12:00 I = ZOHE
FDWWOOO Pently ,...... 10( • _,,,
F«nwood CllUM, Jeffery tall•• tolenm vow.
G) MO\llE • * "Front• 0111" (1845)
Yvonne 0. Cerio, Rod
~on.. A uloon _.,.,
and • oowboy'• rocky m.,.
rtaoa le OOOrned to ..._ ..
Ct "'·· 30 min.) 12:aoD MOW
**~ "Tiie lnvttll>te
Worn•n" (1940) JoM
Berrymore, Virginie ~
Oangetert •ltwnclt to •teal
• Klent191·• _... of lnvl-
.. bllty. ( 1 hf~ 25 111111.) •
• WOYtl
• • ... "HorrOt Of lllec*·
wood Cutle" ( 1 ... ) Allet
-· ..,_,., kllllnea • lted!wood c..tle, Soot·
lend Y..S II eeled Ill to
'"~ .. (2 IW'I.) 2:JOI NIWa . 2:M MOVW • • "t..ove And l<IMee"
( 1 M6) Aidt Nelllon. Kltllll\
""'9on. A hlOfl 9dlOOI
iltMkl•te. on the WllY to
~ o-t-ll'llltTted Md dllrue>t• 1119 ent.W. --.
ll06d. (t hf., 35 min.) i-001 NtW9 S;2f NIW9 ~. tiitOVl!.a * • •·Touefl 0t 0..th ..
( 1968) Wllll•m lUCU,
Oftld Summet. A robbery
cwr19d out by une "*"
• .,. "'trl!Q9dy. (1 "'~ *>
min.)
- --AllM94 --=-~ ....
-,_ ldllnttty.
CD MOVI& ..: -..,,..-~-·1w,,....i'Ocf ---.. .,,;· '""HOrrdr rtlfUM-
fltme ,,_,.~Ilia ( 1870) FfWlki. Avalon, Jiii
• * "Sioux City Sue"
( 1941) O.W Autfy, LYM
~e.. A CClWbo't llWl1ft
~ 9blllty .. 90Ugllt by
• talent _,_ ( 1 llr.) (*'-ti.,......~
• dlacrellorl.)
10:00 8 Cl) I.OU QIWIT
~ 1ncura p.ibllc ouveoe
-111e r~·· <»vet·
908 °' • local college foot· .,.. d\Mtlng 8Cllndel.
1~1,_...,..· ..;:--· H-1tl. A group of young people. bored wtth lit.,
1t:OO =~~ decldetoup6ot9ahau111-
8TY\..I ed~(l hf., SO min)
4';00 0 MOW!
••• ~ "Odd Men °""' ( 1947} ._ MMO!t, AoOo
G MOVIE 1:00 D TOMOMOW "'* *.,. "Sueplclon•• T-.o ,loumaliau ..no -••e
«t New\on. " -.lded underground leader
8 NeOA90ftTI
"Land Ot Hype And Glory"
The mult.knllllotl OOller
~ of book. mcMe
and roell mueio promotion
la UMnlned by corr ..
8P()ndent l!dWtn NNmen.
Among the oelel>rlt"8
8PPNf'lng .,. J9CqUtllne
81Met, 8lllrttty Mecl.alne.
KISS, Donna &llM* and
Alt Buol!wtlld.
•·9e11on llne" column• (11Mt) CM)' Grant, Joan report on their -Ch tot
Fontaine. A young WOlnWI
~ the object °' • maeelw manhunt. (2 In.)
• MOW! • ·~ lier chatmlng an•were to problem•
hu9band of plannlnO • pOMd by people w'10 -ti• ••• "Ceugllt .. (1941)
J.,.,.. Muon, Bwbera Bel to ll*!I. murder. (2 Ive.) D i aPY
CD THE 000 COUPl.E "Tl'lll Guy Smith"
Qeddat.. A young -la t•ror-etrldcen when lhe
Felix, hoping 10 get 1: 16 Cl) KOJAK
boofl9d on•,_ ltolevllion "Oiied On Hie FMI" A ter•
,..iiz.. .,., -lluabancl
••• ~·th. (2 hrt.)
tllow, r410f'OM1Z*a hie old mlnally Ill detective (Herry
oollegel i..::nc'..Na!ADIAl. Guardino) become•
OICKCAVETT o~ with tlodlng the
•• NEW8 0 9 FAMIC.Y
MACNEIL/ &.BiAER murderer of 11111 lal• Piii\.
R90AT , ner. (Al
U:IO 9 CJ) m8 lATe MOYIE 1:30. MOV1£
Wedn~•day'•
Da11tlnee Mol'le•
MORNING "The Ptlnoeea In The
Towet'' l<ete, auttef'lng
from h~ewlle b~.
tea• off by ..... Md
wind• up todleO In • fftOCW
c:onOomlnlum ...m • young
woman (Kim ~ al>Out
to glY8 blf111.
"'*~"Catto'#" (1871) YUi •*"' "Johnny Stool ~. Alcllard Cnnna. Pigeon.. (1~) How•l'd
AT-merlNlll la..,., to Dutt, Shelley Wini.,._ A •r• • '°"'*' ... tfme lrMIUl"f ~t .... •
l:aO D "Al Gunpoint'" Cclr•l '.tS -
Fred MICM4/t'rl'f, Doro!!¥ gangaW trM, hoping lie tr\eftd, •cattle rustW who wlll tHd him to h it le ettw • tonune In Meo.
.. ,., Gunoo1n1·• (Orel '4) -
Fred M11<.Mvrny, Oorottiy Mil'-, W•lter8r--can gold bulllon. (RI underworld oonnecuone. G TOHIOHT C 1 hr., 30 mill ) G) HOMEYMOOHEA8
R.elph and Ed ICIPMI' on • ,......., .,_ In MfltCll
Holl: Johnny C•rton. 1:40 I NEWS
o-1: Jonn Byner. t:66 HEWS 10:00 8 • * * "Tll We MMC Again" (1840) Metia
Oberon, Ge«ge er.nt. Alt
or M8Y money. 0 l..OV!.. AMEAICAN 2:00 II NEWS
STYLE 0 MOVIE fD &a.NE.I fROM A
~ fJ !II A8C MOVIE * * * •'Night Club -YO'JllO' bttngt Np-~IO a lennlnellr • Oift
wher> etl8 .... In love wtttl
• corMcted ~. (i
hta.)
··The M Of 8-.ptng
Under The Aug" Metl8nne
,. -• of an undefirlable
411\lllely. She ..... --
thing II wrong ~ 119'
and Jol\en
• •• ··Nlghtwatcll·· Sc•nd1I" (1937) John
(1971) Ellzal>elh T9'(1«, Barrymore, Lynr>e Owf.
L•urenoe H.,vay. An man. Alter lie murdere his
attractive women ~ wit•. • doc1or tr-the
alle llu -•murder In woman·a lover for the AFTERNOON Ille 6-ted hOllM acroee Cllme. (1 ~ •• 25 min.)
12:00 ••• * "The 88dlelot
And The Bobby So...-
( 1841) Caty QrMt, ~
Loy. A edlOOI girt, hevfllg a
CN8'I °" .,, etiglble beclle-
1«, pur-him. (2 tn., 20
mill.) •
U!) NATIONAL
OEOGRA.....C IPECIA&.
"The Legacy of L.S B.
Leeker" TM Itta of acten-
tJat t.oul• S.8. LMlley,
called the Oarwln of
human prelllltory, le told tn
the counywd, but 111 only G MOVIE
llufnOfed 1>y 119' dl8bellev· * * * * "Gane v I ave ..
1ng llu•bWld end • oloM ( 1953) John Oregeon, Ken-
friend. nelh M«L Two Engllell 4D HEWS COUOIM enter • o-oe ..
• QET 8MAA'T country r-wltll 11nt1que
An Old blnk robber ..... 1, care. (2 lltw,)
Newman Inspects Hype
'Massive Publicity Makes Millionaires'·
By JAY SHARBVn
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Hype
is when certain parties seeking
millions or dollars wangle free.
massive national publicity in a
short span or time for a new
m ovie, book, rock group or
( ) that blw-b phra>cs •eally belong • lo the movies. ~ TV RE VJ E W Which. l•adsto '.study of mov-1 e ·hyping. pa r ticularly a
mesmerizing section on a new
· . $27 million sci-ri movie, minute. and than~ to hype, something about. close encoun-
worse .
It causes Babblencws , where
the hypers babble about thei r
wares, do it often and strike
everywhere -magazine covers,
newspapers, TV.
F ORTUNATELY, N B C'S
many or them are Kis~ fans. ters and how it. was publicized . The show drags a btt In J>erus-in N~w York '>
'!1g what .~e~m~ calls hype, Lo, there's a daizling
hterary d1vts1on, ~he promollon ballroom of tumultuous scribes.
of a book, why one lS push~ and Each gets a press kit complete
a nother not. .and lhe frantic big-with a tape recorder for record-buc~s husthng by agents and ing such tantalizing words as
publishers ~ke. • . . these, from a stunning actress in But al~ is redeemed, .in his the terrorific movie:
s hort discourse on blurb ··1 thought it was wonderful.,. words" used to push the goods -
. scholarly Edwin Newman has
pondered the rise of such
flatulence. And tonight, he has a
one-hour study of it Ln a show
called "Land of Hype and
Glory." (Channel4, 10p.m .) ·
like "tantalizing, mesmerizing, LATER, NEW~AN SHOWS.a
terrorific, tumultuous, stunning, producer or a d1rterent. ~ovte
. dazzling" and so on. tel~lng a .Now .York pu,bhclty
HE ALSO NOTES that 'for wh!z he hired: ... thats why After wryly noting the pro-
gram is "unprecedented, com-
pelling and superlative," he
dwells at length on how publicity
helped make millionaires out. of
four distinguished rockers called
Kiss. .
They are distinguished
because they wear face paint,
occasionally destroy guitars,
breath fire, vomit fake blood
and even sing via a sound rig
sporting only 40 ampllners and
150 speakers.
JN INSPECTING this gonio
group and their guru, Biil Au·
.coin, Newman deftly establishes
that suckeni are 1UU born every
some books, blurb words 1tre w~ ve come to you •. because I
brought together for "blurb lhm~ you c.an manip~!ate the
Phrases'' such as "a voluptuous med1a suffi c1enlly well. . · ,. b I wis h Newm a n had lD· novel of penlous pleasure, ut tervlewed a few New York mov-
ie critics on the use of blurb
words in reviews and if .they
ever blurble 1ust to gel equal
billing with thl! movie in
newspaper ads.
GEE, IF I GOT a do llar every
time they declared a fhck "pro-
foundly moving" I'd be in a cas-
tle in lreland and not sitting
here declanng Newman's hour
••entertaining .•• pe rcep-
tive .• ,badly needed.
Singe.r Survives .Eras
'Conimand Pe~ormance' Sta~s ·Peggy Lee
1'1 JAY 811AllBt1Tl'
LOS ANGELES (AP) -"The
lass has • ireat nalr for phras-
ing .•. that. ahe tell a fine beat.
that she aings ln tune, and tha.t
she's awtully good-looklnf are
self-evident," critic Geor1e
Simon wrote in 1.9U.
T bo object of bta cheers:
Peuy Lee, 21, a new •ln11er in
Benny Good man'• band. 1'blrt1·
ai:r years lat.et, the words atill
hold~ The b~halred
b a irancllQother now• but. atlll •
1otn1 tlJU\I.
voiced Miss Lee, a native or
Fargo, N.D.
"I DIDN'T THINK Benny
llked me." the singer said.
"When she brought him in, he
looked al me in a rather pTeoc·
cupied way -wblch I later
learned was just his way of
listening. of being 1bsorbcd in
music." He was 1bso'rbed enough to
hire her. While with bla band.
she co.wrote anct recorded her first hit. a bluesy lament. ''Why
Don't You Do .Richtl". Ttmet
~d tastes change, but sbe'1 ltlll
on top.
So bow does a lln1er aumvo
mu.teal eras that 10 Jrom bi.I
bands to mlddle-of·the·ro•d to ~k ~n· roll to add rock to all ol
these? She look a deep breath
and tried to tum it up.
"WltU..," Sil£ SAID, '11 &hlM'
lt '• beinf ienutnely Interested ln wbat'J tolnl on, in the mOOcb or
tlte publl.c, ~ \.h~ best of •bl I eu mterpret w:hUe contl·
such as Blood, Sweat & Tears
and off·the-wall works by Randy
Newman.
As a talent considered in a
c1ass with Frank Sinatra and
Tony Bennett, Miss Lee was
asked for a few observations on
younger music stars and other
assorted matters in popular
music.
-PAtJJ., SIMON: "I LOVE
hlrn. I 1ln1 anything or his that.a
woman could aini. He .•hows
such dtep f eelln11 1n so many dlvene directions... •
-Dlaco music: "Happy ant
fun, but it ca.11 aet a llltle monotclaoUI after a while. I'm
·an fol' tt, but not. u a 1eriooa
kind of music." • ! -Roeer "Kins of the ROacJ~ Mlllor: "l love hlt stuff. Hll
humor ls beaattf\11."
-Carl,y Simao: "J'm a bl.I
fan. And ot h r b'Wib1nd (James
Taylor>"
-MAJOJl fNFLUBNCES;
"Hard to answer. I learned from
a lot ot aaUllcllnl by U1tentn1 to
anyobt Wbo lald 10methila& tb1.t
IOUDded loOd lO me. l lmaalM l wu aubcon1cloa11y 1i&aayln'
l.CboiqUll, ........ u.ua.a ••
tbaL 11\W amJumln1. • .'•