HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-01-18 - Orange Coast PilotBy 'lbe Aaoelated Pri!lel
The second Pacific atorm m three days struck the nOrtbem ~oasl of California early today
and began sweeping south, b
foreculerl said rains would not
be as heavy as expected.
The National Weather Service reported the ralns moved ln about 5 a.m., litUe more than 24
Hours after the first storm left drought·rava1ed regions reelln1
from a nurry of floods and
mudslides.
OrijJnal predictions Indicated
tOday s storm ould c ~· even more dam•••· but we thu service 1poke1man Chuck
Pusevlch said ln San FranclKo
urly tOday, .. Now lt do n't
look like it's colng to tit ..
atrong as we thought it would
tie yesterday.'' That was good news to resl·
d nta of the floodplains of rivers
hicb overflowed durlDI Mon·
day's. storm and caused m-.s
evacuations ln some towna.
The f cral JUver Forecut
Center as ~let\ that the rivers WOUid rise again wlth the
w totm but officials declined
to forecast another rash of
OOd.
Among the nrca1 hardeat blt
l>y tbo fir t storm .wa•
FBI Files Show
aoclateS resort to harsh nun•
callln1 to describe such crttlcs
aa Mark Lane and Dick
Gresory.
But they also reflect tbe of.
ficia1t• tacit admtasion that they
would bave to Jive with the
cr1tlcl1m as best they could
bec&Ule it was certain '° COD·
sex Surveyed
Men List Love 'Essential,'
NEW YORK (AP> -Men prize Intelligence,
humor and self ·confldence over good Jooks ln a sex
partner. according to a Redhook magazlne survey
report. Most important of all was that the partners
love each other, the survey indicated.
The women's magazine said it based its findings
on 2,000 out of 40,000 responses to a llG·item ques·
tionnaire published last June. Redbook asked the
women who read the magazine to give their
husbands or boyfriends the questionnaire.
That the woman love him was listed as absolute-
ly essential or very important to sex by 81 percent of
the respondents, the magazine said. Sense of humor
was highly prized by 67 percent; intelligence 64 per·
. cent and self ·confidence 56 percent.
Nice legs were essential or important to 40 per·
cent, a pretty face to 33 percent and a big bust to 16
percent.
The magazine said it believed that the
responses, while not necessarily representaUve of
American men as a whole, were a good mirror of at·
titudes of young, middle-class married men.
Fro• Page Al
STORM •••
rainfall in all reporting stations
finally topped normal levels.
The Nicosia Dam in parched
Marin County reached capacity
Tuesday. overnowine water into
spillways for the first time since
the winter of 1974-1975, officialJ
Stud.
During last week's rainy
weather more than 700,000 acre·
feet or water was dumped in the
Shasta Lake, a major source ot
water for Northern California
now holding abQut 2.3 mlJUon
acre feet ()f water, state -a
officials said.
Dave Coleman, chief of the
Central Valley· water project.
said JC the recent pattern of
a bove-seatonal pr-.lpft•tlon
continued, the lake would reach
norm al capacity of abOllt 3
mi I lion acre feet by mid·
February.
One of the hardotl·hlt areas,
Santa 81ltbara·, •received 1.95
inches ot raln by 4 p.m. Monday.
San Dieao County authorities
Tuesda)', called off their search
for Ivan Bertman, 27, of Del Mar. mtsstng and presumed
drowned after his J>lckup tnick
crashed tnto an earthen dike and
tunbled into ram·awollen Penas-
qultos Creek.
Sunday•• \'fctl~ Included a
San Diego couple\ drowned when
their car WH eneulfed by nc>oawaten In Mlaslon Valley.
TWO alStera died in Tijuana tn
tho collapee 61 an earthen dam
outheast of the Mex.lean clty.
J11 FalJbroOt an aaricultural
dam 1taited C)verflowln1 Mon·
day and caUied evaC!Uatlon or IO
])Orton . The evacueM returned
to tbtlr homH Tu ea day, but
used aandbap to prepare for tho
next rain.
Jn tbat hllly oommunlly,
homesii ec~ an4 b111laeqa
were Ooded and road• wubed out from tho rirlmi of the put
few days. Some hom•• wore flooded~ Umes Jut week.
Plane Forced
To Return,
I.ands Safely
. An Air Califomla Electra prop.
Jet carryln1 86 passenaers •x· pertenced en&lne problems abort·
ly after takeoff from Oran1e
County Airport early'today, fore·
Ina the plane to return and land
wllb only three engines.
engines.
Oranee County fire crews
manned the runway when the
· plane landed alely 1t 7:~a. . 'l'here:were no inJurt~. •
Aecordln1 to Alr California
spo,Jceaman John Eri~aeq. the
pllot nv1na the noo-stop tun to
Lake Tahoe reported that one of
the plane'• four en1lnea bad overheated.
The enitne wu abut down u a
precautionaJ')' mea1ure and the
jet returned to Orante County
Airport. Erlc1en 1ald
passengers were trmulerred to
another fliibt.
,...,..PogeAJ
lWDEi\.ST •••
mCKS •••
Others, incJudlnr author
Edward J . Epstein, found fault
with the commilslon's report.
At the same time, tbe bureau
waa lnv.U1aUn1 hundreds ot
Ups, namon ud leUen from
.. crank1, moat•l cuea and patriotic cit.liens."
Hoover and his a11oclate1
floundered In search of an eftee·
ti ve public counterattack wb!cb
would 1queJcb t.be crttidtm and
aatW'e that the FBI'• .reputaUan 1urvlved Wltcathed.
In moat cues. Hoover fave up
in exuperatlon and told under·
lings the beat response to
criUdsm was no retPQDle at .U.
at ltut In public.
In 1984, Lane wu writlna a
boot critical of the FBI and
Warren Commission conclualon
that Lee Harvey Oswald had
kllltd Kennedy and that lie hid
acted alone. Lane and Ore1ory
were attractln1 attention to
their thearitt in speeches &lid
broadcast interviews. The FBI
kept careful records of their
comment.a.
''We have 1001 sUJpected that
Gre1ory ls demented," an FBI
offlclal wrote at the time.·
"Neverthelen. Uie commedtl be
h .. made are utterly ridiculous
and we should confront him and
tell him in no uncertain terma
that he better stop puttfnai out
such gutter talk."
Another official wrote that he
1aw ~·nothin1 to be 1atned by
this" approach and Hoover
a1reed. ,, . 'J
.. , coacur. He II obviously •
sane.'' the director scrawled on
the bottom of thf'p.je.
The memo also ref erred to
"the trash put out by the Jn-
f amous Mark Lane, reportedly a
communist s1mpatblzer." Scores ot memos ref erred to
Lane In tbolo terms.
Patrol Find8
I.Ost Docto~
t>ALM DESERT (AP> -n>e
partially cloUscd bbdy of a 31·
year·old Palm Desert Country
Club woman was found in the
balhtub Of her home by her 11·
year-old daughter. authorities
said Tuetday.
River.Ide County Sheriff's
S1t. Mike Ludke Hid Ann Louise
Ny er was dlacovered lyin1 face
dowp in bout " foot. of wa\tt Monday ahernoon by her da htat, Who had Jun ntumea
from 1chool. He Hid there were
numerout bndla on the body
and tlto boUs9 wu ln a 1tate ~ disarray, ._pparently the result
ol • atruute.
Then choose again, from
literally hundreds of COi·
ors and patterns! Sliop
quickly. thouJh, while
these very spec:al prices
remain ln cffecq ·
Eastnde Mesa
A poup of eut tide Costa
M bOme61'DOrt hu won re-versal ol a city plan that wciuld
have cbangtd the %0Dlne of their lani from medium to low
denalty.
The Jon1·runrun1 baWe ended Tuesday n11ht in council cham·
.bora when councilmen voted 8-2 to accept a new recommendatic>n
from cltyplarmers.
· Councilmen Ed McFarland
aJld Mary Smallwood voled
'Vicious
Cycle'
Claimed
Diedrich Again ~aps :f!j ~--. .. ~ .. -
ful n oa such bid, trial on camPatsn fund vlOla parln1 thelr CH• a1alb't
Orance County Supervtaor cbar1n contalried 1n an earlier Dledrtch, SUpervisor Phlllp An·
Ralph Diodrteh will try •Caln in indictment. thony and two codefendanta. Tbo
Superior Court to eonvtnee a II Diedrich la succes11\11 ln tbe trial 11 JllllikeJy to •tart be!o
Judge that Dl•trlet Attorney 1rl111 Jan. J1 before Jude• JuTl~Y811~ ...... m~ "'"·--.a ... i.:. -... Cecil Hlcu should be bvJ'td ohn L PJyU Jr. It will mean, fl ~ lllU .... ~..., ... vu
from proeecutln• him. tbe 1ppeUlt.e ci>wu ~pbold tuch ten 1, as did the e~Uer 1u9·
Diedrich'• mot.Joo refets this a rulln1, that the ltale Attom~ cnaful mOUoo, that· nicks and
time \f hla lndlctrn•nt on . General's office will Maln pl hplraeJoufdlfl~ .. ~~tiidt Db'leddl.trl"hpl~~ bribery charaea. Hieb baa up tbe prosecution chorea. -_..,.. " u.,...
alrndy been removed from the State lawyen already are pre. up to U,. time that tho 1r&Od
-jury rettiniod It.a l.nCtletment.: The' tndlatmeiu Qam d
Diedrich, 64, and Anabeiln
architect LeRoy Rote, 49, on
bribery charcea conaected wUh
a declaJon by the Orange County
Board d Supervbort to permit
development of 2,200 acres in
Anaheim Hilla. Both men have
pleaded innocent.
Rain Damages Pipe
Costa Mesa County Water District workmen (from left)
Gerry Aguirre, Mike Parks, Jim Smith and Scott Pratt,
r<.>pair water pipe on Tustin Avenue Tuesday after rains
undermjned the pipe's foundation and caU5ed a leak.
About 40 homes in the area near Walnut Street were
wi thout water for about six hours as workmen repaired'
the damage.
\ t'
Couple -Su:e Dealer
~-r.~,B.lil·ls Repair ..
A Newport Beach couple who
claim their Sliver Shadow Rolla
Royce hu 1pent. in<f' of Ult two
yearst tb«bavcr owiatd :tt tlS the
repair sho:r are aulrt1 the
makers ao 4latrlbutors. for
more lMn .... o«>ln d.anaa1111.
Donald and Mary Chapton ot
124 30th St. claim in thelr
Oranee County Superior CoUrt
lawsuit that the 1'78 .a,111 hu
spent G> days in the repair •hop
at Roy Carver Inc. since they
boucht ltin January, 1976.
Namlri& U\e Carver fl.nn 1'4•
Rolla 'Royce u defendanta they
claim that the New.port Beach
comp&n)' hal falled to ca_rry out
adequate t palr1 en multiple
fault• that became evident ID tM p,;ooo vehlele.
Cooipan1 pretldent Roy Caner WM In h1I office tOday
but could not be reached for
comment.
The actiOQ stat.et that the car
was guaran~ on purchase for
three years or 50,000 mlles and
haa only been Cltlven tor 51000
miles in tho6e t.wo years. •
The Carver dealenhip t1 ac·
cuaed .at mun»nc the Rorts to
the Chaptoria on each of the 17
occulona without aufflcJent
serviclD1 or repalrln1.
Winderman
Rites Held
Funual tervlce1 were COft•
ducted t.Oday tor MlltOa Win·
dennan. past treasurer of the
Harbor Senior ClUzen1 Club,
who died Monday at the ace ot 73.
Mr. Windennan, a araduatt ot
Harvant UDlvenlty, wu u at-
torney arid certllted publto •c·
countant in New ~ork City
before h• reUred to Newport a.a.eta tour yean •10.
H• la •Utvtm by hJa wlf•, El•l• Windetman ot New~
Beach; aoa. 'Jay Wlndermu Of
Claremont, and« 1nnifdau•bt..r Su•an Wlndlitman ol Clartmcnt.
D fenae attorney Sylvan
Aronson ar~ before the in· dictment wu returned that th
district aUomey'1 office should
be barred frora Plll'luliaf the in·
veaU•1Uoa because of the al·
leaed prejudice.
Superior Court Juctce WlWam
L. Murray held a hearlnt lnto
the defense allesatlon lnd de· nttd the moUon.
But Dledricb's contlnuln1
araument appears to be
atren1tbened today ln the Ucht
of the CaHfornla Supreme
court'• ~nt decialoo not to in·
terfere with the, rullnc or
su.,.rtor CoUrt Judge PblUp E.
Schwab In the alle1ed campaJgn
fu.nd vtOlaUon cue.
Judie Schwab brou~bt the atai. Attorney OeJ\eral 1 ofllce
into the cue 'after rullii1 that
there •u an .. appearance of preJudl~" in the prOffeuUOQ by Hicks.
Judce Schwab noted that
Hicks and 1>1edrlcb had te•
peatedly tanS)ed over: the yean
on several llaues that had come
before the County Board of Supervllon.
Judie Schwab'• writ.ten otder b1rrln1 Hieb from the trial on
the campalsn fund lrutJctment
wa1 aU.Cbed to tbe motion that
will be arcued be/ore Judge Flynn Jan. ZI. ·
.F ..... PqeAJ
STORM."\.-.
rivers would rl-e acain with the
new ato'1J\ t»tt om~iala dtcUru!G to forecu( ·another raah of. noocts. • •
Arnont ..the areu hard••• hit by., t bl •tlrat 1toJ"m• ••s
Guerne\IUJ, 1n Sonoma County.
Some a penon.a were evacuatr ~d when the Russian River over-flo-ed.
Along parts of the Sacramento Rl~er. rtalnc waters apUled over
into Oood control areas, said Bill •
Clark, of the State·P'ederal
Flood OperaUons Cater.
One of the hardeat-blt areas,
Santa Barbara, recelvfd 1.95
inches ol mo by .f p. m. Monday.
San Dte,o OoUnl)' autbOntlet
Tuesday called oft their search
for lvan Bertman; :'1 • ·of Del
Mar, ml11ln1 and preaumed ·
drowned after hls pickup ttuck
craabed lnto an earthen dike and
tunbJed into rain-swollen Penu· qulto1 Creek.
Sunctay•1 vfdim1 lacluded a
San Dt110 eouple, drowued when
thelr cu wu en1u1ted by noochr~ tn·~M!Uloa v.nn.
Two ttat.n &ea ID' TtJuea tn
. the eoll•PM of an eut&• dam
aoutheut of the M.exJcan city,
In P'allbrook an aancultural
dam •tarted overflowln1 Mon· day and caused evacuation ot 80
~,..OllS, nte nac:uees retutnc!d
to tbtlr homN Tueaday, ut
used 1andbaca to prepare tor tbe •
next rain.
Jn that bUly comznunl&y.
homes, acboola anO. by.,lDe.1141
were flooded and l'Oldi wuhed
out from the ralnl of the put l•w daya. SOme homea w•r•
flOoded three Um• lut week, .
Jn VtmtlU'a Co'Untr.' lhrttr1
depuU ~ th• resDllnl
of Frandeco R lru, 1.1 of Moorpa,rlc. lWbO oWDed e att 111pUqg tO ide acroA a
flood contrill channel.
•
Reatmtrateur
].L. Marshall
Dies at Age 94
Joseph L. Man1haJI, who sur-
vived a aaber cut by a Cosaack
durln• the RUJSllll) RevotutJon
and later became well·known
Balboa r..iaurateur, died Sun·
day at the 11e ot P'·
No formal aervlc s wlll be
held, said his dauahtci'. DOlO?"a
Perlin Ot Costa Mesa. Burial at aeajli handled throu b the
Nept Scielety.
11ie Collack at ck oceui'red
when her father •as onl)' U,
Mn. ~erUn aatd. Mr. MonhaJl
was bldinf.ln a hayitack when a
Cossack thrust hll sword lnto lt to aee ll anyone waa there.
A Ith ouch wounded, ;Mr.
M 1r1hall kept quiet and wu not.
dlacovered.
Mr. Manhall later lmmllf•t·
ed to the U.S. and lived ln
Balboa for 42 years, mana1tn1
the former ChrlstiAn'a Hut
reat•qrant tor 24 of those years.
He 11 survived by dau1~tert
Bernice Chipps of Van Nuya and
Mrs. Perlin; stepson Glen Owen
of Carmel: two crandchitdren,
and three 1rent·arandchtldren.
~eadGiven
LISBON, Portucal (AP> -
Socl•llat Party lead•r1 cave
Mark> Soarn the co·ahead today
to forin a coaUUon cabinet with
the conservatives.
•
For a very limited
.tlme -we welcome
you to the upholstery
event of th~ )!earl Choose Crom .a
superb selection or
framo styles.
of die family's plight.
As for Eddie, he's taken a few
st,ps already on le11 ttlff ened
wllb br.-cea and bis bo.(t.Y aup ported bi par.ilel bars.
"He's spunky," a pbyalcal
therapllt at Cua Colina aald
thl• week. "lie'• really ~ute, e
Just love b1tli.'' Thea. bee e
Eddie wa1 bntiag dUflcult
time poppi.rig Mell~ he eave
him a hand, holdinc the back o!
h1' "heelcbalr'.
'JONIGHT
'1A OOLVS HOUSE'• -South
Coasi Repertory Theater.
T\leaday.Sunday throu•ti Feb.
.19, a p.m. • ~
OCC LECTURE -"American
Folk Art," Flne Art.a 110, 7:30 p.m.
TRVllSDAY, IAN. lt
OCC LECTURE -"Middle Enence, Second J~enUty
Crilit.'' Fine AN llt, f:IOJ).m.
TWO ONE·ACT OPBRAS -
14eiiotti'• """'1uh~n9" and "H'efp! lleti\P 'the0 Glob0Unb"
pr~en~ by OCC Five PeJUty
Q;era Coinp~_nyd Auditorium Thursday and Frie ay at t p.m.
1980 ~orld'a Fair
Slide Show Slated .. i . A slide show loo\ at tho
World'• P'Alr to be held•ln 01\~.
tarlo wtll be preaented at a
Thul'fday inornJna ~1et1n1 ~
the Clthlena Harbor Are4
.Research Te.am.Jn con. Meo.
.Dick Carstenaeo. reclonal
director ot the World'• Falr
Committee wUJ antwer queaUou,
a bout local impact. of the lair at-.
7:30 p,sn, meeUq at tb Down\O'Wn community Cent.It ~94 Center St. TbepubUclalnVl'
to lhe eteepraentaUoO.
....
Scotts Seared
$15,000 Set
Top Teamster
Aides'Rich
OH 0 Y: Alu, )'OU must
surfer f\D'1)11&e 1n that the
popul ce t,alloWed u lmpar.
t.ant S8th amuveraary to pus
this week with barely a public
notice.
It WU on Jan. 18, 1920, when
the United States launched what
came to be known u The Noble
Experiment.
Thia was when the 18th
Amendment to the U.S. C<>111Utu-
tlon went into effect, outlawlDg
the manufacture, sale or
transportation of alcoholic
bevera1e1 wltbln the United
States.
Those persona of 'enormous
virtue who pushed for paaaace or
Prohlb1Uon had fou1ht the 1ood,
long fl&bt. They had aou1ht to
dry out and sober up the coun·
try ever alnce they formed the
famed Anti-Saloon League in
1906.
THEY MUST HAVE been
vastly disappointed with the re-
sults.
Inatead or banlshlng booze
from the land, ProhlblUoo aim·
ply drove the purveyors -and
consumers -underground,
formln& a vast new industry ot
bootleggers, moonshine
manufacturers and hijackers. A
whole new criminal element
arose acf'OIS the land.
Our own Oranee Coaat is
steeped in legend and lore ot
what happened durtnc that era
when liquor was llleeal.
The only legal alcohol allowed
in the country was for medicinal
purposes. One 1920s·era drug
store in Balboa reportedly
specialized in this kind of
medical treatment. Gallons of
the sturt was stored above a trap
door In the roof.
THERE WAS HIGH demand
ror the stock. A lot of people
seemed to be ~urrerlng Illness.
All kinds o( clandlstlne plots
were in operation to import ·ll·
le1al booze into the country.
Powerful yacbll, painted dead
black. plied the waters between
Mexico and our &horellne, o(len
unloading liquid car10 aJon1 the
Orange C<>ast undu-cov r or
darkneu after outrunnlil1 UM
Coast GuariJ's meager del~
Imes.
Some ·DIOtl ta trUllN)rt tUeaat
alcohol fhto our. region were,ln·
gcnloua and novel. One such
scheme came orr ln Lasuna
Beach, when a motion picture
company se t up on the
beachfront to aboot a pirate
movie.
A1 eJCplained to La1una
natives, the plot calleCl for a
pirate ship to heave-to Olt!bOi-e
and rowboall to tr•nsport bar·
rela or pirate booty ashore wblle
cameras whirred ·awa1~ A
number of Lagunana w re
employed u 11movl1 extrll" In
the barrel unloadlnl scenes.
THE CRAG&INED LalUJl&ns
lat.er learned the movie com·
pany was a take. Tbtre wu no mm In the cameru. And the
barrels ~ had been swtatlni
to unload contained dlsUJled liq·
utds of about 90proof. The movie company inad•
coOd l~ 1etaway ln ttUcks.
ProblbtUon U\C Noble Expert·
m ot, lutcd~f :ycan. Jt puaod
into obUVioo wlthJRepell, adO~
tlon of the atsl Amendment. In
1933.
'epetil r n an entire un·
derwotJd bu Jn s rlaht down
the drain. And )'OU can drlftk to
OKAY, COllPA&180N8 are
odious and recall tricky. But un-
der-rehearsal 11 obvious, a
pinched reed aqueaks and
eauUout to lackadaisical work
bf. aldemen doesn't 1et toes taJ>-
P ne. The orti1JW kin• of swine. re-
sem blina at momenta a studious
Buddha. J)eVer wu much of a showm~ this time wu ultra·
No ftljurieS
. ALTHOUGH AVOIDING ex·
act dupllcailon o( the Jan. 18,
1938, I.bow which lntroch1cedJan
into tbe ataid ~tron1bol of Horowlh, Krejaler and
Toscaninl, Goodman neverthe-
leu re~ on •olden oldies for much of the 30-ptece repertoire.
''Kina Porter Stomp," .. '!bat's
A-Plenty," "Stardut," "How
Hllh the Moon". an4 .. Jersey
I •
Snow Collapses
Coliseum Roof
HARTFORD, Coon. \AP) -The roof of the Hart.lo.rd Civic
Center Collaeum collapsed early today, apparenUy under the
welsht ol heavy snow aftd freezln& rat.n, only a few boun after
nearly S,000 per1ons had watched a collese baaketb'all
doubleheader tbere. No one wu burt. Tom and twisted f raameota ol metal and insulation crubed
onto surroundlnl streeta.
TWO SECV&ITY auarcb lnslde the 10,000·aeat coliseum
escaped unhurt when the roof caved in about 4:20 a.m. A fireman who wu one of the nrat on the scene said the entire
roof wu IM&dded In th• ahape of a cone, reacblnl dOwn to the floor
of the elliptlcal, three-story :arena.
H• said tbe security 1uardl inside "said they just heard a UtUe
rumble and~ walls started shaking. They tbouabt the roof was
comln' down."
THE 11,eoo.SQUARE foot collseum, completed ln November
1972, ls situated at the northwest comer of a S'IO million, ?~·acre
civic center complex in downtown Hartlord which also houses un·
der separate roofs a Sheraton HC#l and a variety of sbopa. Many
patrons at the hotel, which towers above the collseum across a
street, were awakened by the crash.
"l thought an airplaM must have hlt the buildlna." sald Joe
Soltys, 1porU lntormatloQ director at the Unl•eralt,y of Connec·
Ucut, -Aowu 1tayin1 ln a room on the hotel's 17th noor. "It looks
like a wrecking crew demolished the bulldln1."
Treat• F
ST. LOUIS (AP> -A poliUcat
••truth SQUAd" opposln1 the pro-
poHd ~anama Canal treaty
hopes to Set ill CtOSl•Counti'Y
campalan back on courH, f oJlowlna diS!UPUons that can·
celed four ol et1ht aeheduted ..
:that. "'"'illSUC'Otli5'4ilb' pearanccs.
.
KING OF WINO RETURNS FOR JAZZ CONCERT.
Benny Ooodma[I Celebrate• Mt" Annlveraa!Y ot ShOw
Town Remembers mm
Fri.en& Pay Tribme to 'P~' H"!"PhreY
DOLAND, S.D. <AP} -Tbe
people of Doland have said their
form al f arewella to Hubert
Humphrey -a man they knew
as a freckle-faced youth ealled
'"Pinky."
About 100 townspeople
gathered Tuesday night tn the
United Methodist Church to hear
tributes from Humphrey's
claumatu, friends and
teachers.
HVllPH&EY BAO uked that
no eulogies be aiven, but a
former clas1mate aald, "I know
h• wouldn't mlnd ll we deviate a little."
So for the next hour, people
shared their peraonal memOrtet or the tor. who Uved in the
little .prairie town until be'
sraduat.ed frqm bl1h 1cbool.
•·When an)'thl.n.8 wu 1o0d he
always wanted lt bitter,•• aald
Lulu Herther, a former teacher.
Mrs. Herther aaid ahe was also
speaklns for hel husband, Irvin,
who hid been Humphrey's root•
ball coach and felt be could not
make the apeecb.
Mas. HERTHE '•ld the
youne Hubert never ean up in
any actMty, even football, even
thOUlt\ he was remembered as a
11chany youth.
DAILY ?ILOT
642·4 21
bate contesta.
Humphrey called th• Hertbera
D•c. 27. "I'm sure that was
aoodbye," Mid Mra. Berther. "I
wrote him a letter and I never iot lt mailed, but I'm 1ure ho knows about lt. ••
HUMPldlEY'8 LOVE for the
ltttJe town and bis loyalty to old
fr&en4a were the themes of the
service. The pride of the com·
munlty ln it• nat.lve aon wa.a ap.
parent.
The acrvke end6d wtui ~
sln1ln1 ''Am•rlca the
,Beautlrul," one Of the sen tor's
favorite • not solemnly but
Joyfully.
Carter has been ln ._ _______ the lnteoaive cue unit
( )
since under1olng tall ·PEOPLE bladder aur1ery Jan. 8. "He la dolnl ~rly,"
--------a ho1plt1l apokeaman
• said.
Cuter la the father of Georgia state Sed. B•Oa
Carter and wu mayor of Ptalm. Ga., for 28 years.
*
About $8.8 million t.n donaUom have been
made or pled1ed to the Hubert H. Hmapbre1
Institute of Public Aff alra to be bvllt at the
Unlvenlty of Minnesota.
· · The Ufl1venlty of Minnesota Foundation aald
the total included a $1 mllllon gin. anDOWlced dur·
Ing the weekend by the Japanese government.
Sponson are 1eekin1 a total of $20 milUon.
*
Richard Honp1to, who 1ave up belnl sheriff
of San FrancLa~o to become police chief of
Clevel1nd, la payln1 another
vlalt to San Francisco -to take
a bride.
EUubeth Colton said she
and Honglsto will be m1rrled in
mid-February. • It wt11 be the flnt ...-maae
for her and the second for
Hon11tt0, who divorced b1s first
wlf e several yean aeo.
A gradu1te of Flo,rtda State
1 Untverslty, MiA Colt.on la presl· "°"°'"° dent of the San Fr1nclaco Federated Younc
• Democrats. •
Two UCLA aenlon and a Berket97 1radu1te
t student have been nominated by Untvenlty or
Calllon:ita 1tudent pr11ldonta as flnaU1ts to
become the next student member of tbe UC Board
of Reg'1ltl. The Student Body President&' Councll aald the
nominee. are Glen Smith, 22, a UCLA J>OUUcal
science major: 8eoee Turkell, 21, a UCLA En1Jllti
major, Ind .Jeff Kooa, 85, a 1radu1t.e student ln
hleher educ1Uon at UC Berkeley.
One of°" thref will be recommended by a re-sent.a' coinmlttee for confirmaUon bY the board
nut month to a one-year term belinnlni Ul JUJY • •
HI '\ I'\ 7~ l·.XE('l Tl\'E 'lOTOH 110'.\11 '
I I\ n '1 111. HP. I ' IU LI> L \' U I . H I H PO H I'~
'\.'~ '\SX~ 01 .):ti-Iii;, S!JS lii7i l<'\l. ~·~•
.,... .. F ..
Slitgeon LOses
Appeal in
Mal,practice
SAN FRANClSCO (AP> -Tbe
CalUornla Supreme Court bu ovtr·
ta.med aq ~pptal court rullDi which
had revei'Md a'tamUUon malpractice award a1alast~.l:l>r. Johl'l Nork, a
former Sacramento ottbopedlo !.ur·
1eon. The wWUmous deciilion Tuesda1
b1 Ju1Uce.Mathew Tobriner upbeld a
Sacramento Superior Court tullnl
which denied Nork'• requeat to
withdraw bi• Prlor Ytaiver of • Jury
trlal ln the clvllsUlt.
It ordered UMi case to the State
Court of Appeal in Sacramento.
Albert Goaulerbad med the
malpractlce and fraud swt 11a1Nt
Nork and Sacramento Mercy
Hospital clalmln,g back 1ur1ery be
underwent 1ri Ul61 t.tu unnecessary,
pel'formed incompetently, left him
unable to work and uJthnately c1used
cancer.
·Edison Granted
Rate Increase
I
LOS ANGELES' (AP> -For mo1t Southern
CalUomla Edison Co. customen, turninl on th•
U1hta and usl.Dc tho electric stove an more a·
peo1lw tod y.
Tbe Callf ornla Public VUUUes Commilllon
Tueaday ll'&nted the comp&Q)' authortlJ to lm·
mediately boolt electric rat. 7~ ~ u a
seml·annUll eo1t 1dJuatment. The PUC said the tncreue was needed
bec1us& the company•• cot\I have rlMai dil.rtJll the
12 montht mdln1 lut Aua. IL
\
Althoufb Costa M ans ppear c about how I the city bould deal th l annu share of fed r 1
J'unC!s, the local housln Md commumty dovelopm nt
eommlttee hu come up with a comm ndaole expenditure lis~ that has been approved by the city council.
I Out of a fourth year share of $859,000, the clty WIU use
' ~.ooo tar Its hlghly important land acqubiUon and t relocation proeram for 111ew housing for low· and
l moderate-'incdme persons.
InclUded in this progrnm IS a new propoaal that may
Jead to land purchases fDr a mobile home park for
qualified residents. This possibility requires more
ll ~ rch to establlsh U such a purchase ..-ou.l~get the
maximum benefit from federal dollars, as compared to a
multi-unit development.
A $50,000 allotment for curb cuts and ramps to make
life easier fo,r handicapped Costa Meaana fs an
expenditure well worth applau~. ·
· One ~ Uie least used but most :important programs is
the rehabilitation loan and &rant program. More than
Sl00,000 now ii available for outright grants or
low-interest Joans to i'ep&ii' such problems as le~g t roofs or damaged foundations. ~ Aaded city efforts should be made to let the
t commUtilty know thefrogram is available.
I While Uie use o federal funds is often viewed as
1
1 wasteful exercise in bureaucracy. those involved in
compiling the budget should also be commended for
spending Jess than io· percent of the federal money for
administrative costs. ! They have done a good job even though their task
gets little public attention.
McNallY. Questions
Last wee~ trustees of the Newport-Mesa School Dis·
trlct officially declared the site of the McNalty continua•
tion high school surplus property.
The declaration is the first step in selling the Costa
Mesa parcel at 19th Street and Newport Boulevard for
what should be a substantial sum.
However, while the paperwork to sell the property
has begun, trustees have still to solve the larger problem
and that is what to do with the students who attend
classes on the campus and district services still located
there.
The McNally site houses wore than the continuation
high school. Jn addition to tfie 350 students who attend
continuation classes, the site also is used by the 150
students enrolled in the separate f.roaram offered by the Newport· Mesa evening high schoo.
The property also houses the district's central
kitchen which will have to be relocated along with the two
groups of students.
While it may ..seem that the sale of the site is proceed·
ing, the trustees have the most difficult part of the proc-
ess still f acinJ them and that is deciding where those three
school operations will be moved.
Dear
Gloomy
c ...
. ,. .
THE CANCER Institute laaue<l
lts atarmm1 flndlns• 'to alert 33 mllllon women who uae hair
dyes tO the potential danser. A
warnl.Jig wu about the only 1'1V· ernment actlon possible. The
Food and Dtui Admbil.stratloo
I.I power! to take uy actloo
afaln1t li*lr dye1 because of a
1tran1e, special exemption ~
Vided the induatr)' 40 yean ago.
The Cosmetic. Toll~ Jmcl
Fracrance Assoclailon, a sweet··
10undln1 name for a bard·Mled
lobby. launched an immediate counterattack. On behalf ot lta
cllenta, the association eroUDd
out a blanket denial that ball' dyes are 4'1azard0us. Dyes with
the benitdhle derlvaUvu were
.no longer bein1 sold to tbe
public, the usociation added soothingly.
Thia was quickly proved false.•
Con1re1stonal lnveatieators -·-...-:=llllli;l'.
walked into a Washington drug ·· • store and found them on the 1helvea. Temporary hair dyes
made by Roux Laboratories and
marketed under 'allurinl brand
•. -_ ... -. --.. --·-"" .: -_.. l .._ -. _._
\
ill • -•:zw:
. . .
'-t'AX EXEMPTION CONSTITUTES a aub·
1idy by the tax·paylng public to owners of exempt
,Property. The publlc therefore hu a rl&ht to know
the extent to which it ts en1aiinc in Ult ~pen· diturea•,,. l.Jle wrote.
The Associated Preis uked atat.e tax. depart·
o menU which do not keep aucb recorda tO expla.ln
Jl.-the lnf onnaUon sap. Several responded that sucb
record-keeping was a city or county responslblUty.
s Others said they saw no sense in wutint atalf
., •r•x exe•p·
:lJ. •leil e.,..tlt•in
a •ubddfl llfl tM
~
(I" tax•pa11l119
'P••lle to
time and money to U• aess property which
isn't 101D1 to be taxed anyway.
The North Carolina
Department of Revenue
sald il doesq't 1ather
tax-exempt information
becaU'le "exemptions
have a fairly IC>W prtori·
ty because very little
can be done to reduce them."
Court Aide
01,ass Set
A fuU·Ume baale court reporttnc class will be
off ertd tor the flnt Ume
at Orange Coast Colle&e
in Costa ldeaa tbia-
1prln1. Spring aem eater
claaaee bestn Feb. &.
For more information
about the program
phone 556·5362 or
' ~-58457.
THE MICHIGAN Re1iatratlon for· s t a t e T a x C o m • spring classes hi under-·
mission, which al10 qay weekdays throuab ~~ doean 't keep ruords Feb. 11 ln f:he Occ Ad ..
aald lt was because of mlsalons Office. For re-
tbe .. expenaeln'Yolved. •• gia.tratlon information.
Slate officials in Tenneaaff, on the other band. phone 55&-5735.
have dedded to begin a statewide study of tax-
exempt rolls, but they appear to be an excepUonal PVBUC NOl'ICE
case among states that haven't kept record8
before. ,. ~ ..
Aside from the ttme and ttbuble of record·
keeplni, tu experts note that rockin1 the exemp..
(. lion boat. -evesi with the simple act of keeplna
· current assessments -11 not ~met.hlJlg many ~ atate Jea:lalaturea relish. Those who receive ex· • ~rnptlons frequenUY command votes •M cmllar • -~ J,ichidlng churches, univenlue.s. clubs. weilthy
• landbOlderl or vetetam rou~ • ..
'
• . .
•• . .
. .
Deaths
1El8ewlwre
. DALLAS (AP) -
Helea Corbit&, 71, re-tired director or
restaurants for Neiman·
' Marcus restaurant.a and
author of "The Helen • Corbltt Cookbook, .. dJed Monday.
Mazatlan
Sailors
Invited
The Loi A~gel.~1 Yacbt Club hu Alread1
ilaued lrivitaUont !or lta
10th biennial Loi
Anaelea to Masatlan,
Mexico. race 1cheduled to 1et under way Nov. 4.
General chairman of
the 1,033-mlle blue water
eluslc 1J l•Mnn Gray.
Chairman of tile
Mexican committee
aealn will be Robert.O
Goro1tl10, one of tbe
leadlnl yachtamen and
bu1lne11men in the
..
JOutbem republic. ThlS Prfndle-18 catamaran tried to ~ under a brlqe at Key Bis·
1 t~r:~t.::: L~C: · cayne, Fla., and wound up u baJt for fishermen on the bridge.
A n 8 e l e 1 H 1 r \> 0 r The skipper tried to sail wtler the bridle by lieelln1 t)e boat 1o
lirhthouse and flnlibes the mast· woUld clear but failed. Result: The mut had to be
at Creston lilhthouH off _b_ro_k_en_u;..:p_to._free.;;...-.th_e_bo~at ... ~-~~~--~------Muatla harbor.
AltbOUlh the race 11
not untll November,
Gra7 aald C<llliderable
interest baa already
been expressed In th1I year's race, indicatlns
that the limit of 50
entries may be reached
early.
Hobie Cats Vie in Mexico
Hobie Cat 1allor1 from throUahout the SouthWelt an aettlng their i11bti tor San Felipe, Baja Ca,llfornla,
Mexico, for the annual Midwinters
West Re1atta sponsored by the Hobie
Clasa A11oclatlon. The event 11
Collectors Pia" Straight
•cbeduled Feb. '-5.
Entries 1hould be malled to
Mldwlntera West, Hoble Claa1
AsaoclaUon, P.O. Box C-19509. lrvtne,
92718.
t • •
MidWinte
egaua Due in February
t Southern Caltfonla Yacbtl~•
Auocl•Uoc CSCY ~' has eect the dalC!I ol F b. 1&~20 ior .. -th.~e~Gth •
annual llldwlater Reaatta, the
Jar1est aallina .vent In tho world.
Tbo "MJdwinten'• In rec•t :yean ha• 1pread to areu ttom Pana Polot to Mar;lna dCl Rey and involves more
than a ~ )'tcbt clubs •\IPefVlllnf compeUUOD by more than lJJOO boats lo nearb' UlO cl •
CLUBS B0611NG cl11H1 ht thls ~ r'• event .,. th• Alanlltcl iBq
Yacht Club, Cabrillo Beach Yacbt
Club, Callfornla Yacht Club, Del Rey
Yacht Club. Huntln•ton Harbour
Yacht Club, Kine Harbot Yacht Club IJtUe Ships Fleet ot Loft&
Beach. Lona Beach Yaebt Club, Los
An1el11 Yacht Club. Ba1ala
Cori.Dthlan Yacht Club, Daa Point
and Capiltrano Bay yacht clubl,
Newport Harbor Yacht Club, Lido
Ille Yacht Club and S.al S.ach
YacbtQub.
Tbe llJdwintera la opeo to Yttbtt enrolled In SCY A and. other yacht
clubs outalde of Southern CaUtonta
recolJW;ed by SCYA..
PO& J!ACB CLASS the required
number of eotrtea should be in tho
bandl of the host club no later thQ
Thur.day, Feb. 18. ln order that
claa1e1 may be e1tabllabed and
'W1tall4~ u tlie
l'rtdar AqUna
Club ol N.wpo:rt t O'CIUP't
annual ln1taUaUon banqaet
WednudaJ, Ju. 25, at Newport
HarbOr: Yacht Club.
0th ome-a Clec:tcG for 1171 .. Ed Youq, vice pr Jdcnt: Mute
Black, tecretary-trea1urer, and
Lucia Noeenzo. pro1ram cb&lrman..
Tbe club meets every l'rtday at
noon at NHYC. Jt ii a llOll·prOflt
or11D111tlon. Money raised in tm wH 1lven to euch charitable
oraanlzaUone ae Toye For Toti,
Tralntn1 For Seelnt·EY• 4011, 1cholU'lhlpe at UC Irvine and the
Shrlnera Crippled Cblldreu•a
Hotpllal.
CHARLEY BROWN~ DEAR PAT: I• there a 1tate agency tbat re1ulatea eollecUon
acencles? I feel that a eenaln Cllle
baa been using unprofe11lonal
technique& 1n trying to collect a blll
from me. I plan to pay this debt. but
can't afford to pay ln full
·lmmedJately.
TWILIGHT
PRIME RIB DINNER
AT AN EYE·OPENING F.W .• Calta Mesa $5.,51 The state Bureau of CollectJoe and
lnveatlgattve Senlcet admlDJ1&era
the Collettfon A1enc1 Act. Pbobe (213) tZO·Zt47 &o report your
complalD&. Nex& time Jotl d.oll't lmow
.. wbere to coaplaln," clteck &be
wbUe p11ea uder "eoua•er."
Problem area• are llated
alplaabetlcally followt4 b1 _&••
F o R T L A u • re1alaU111u•eoe1'1 plaolle amnbtt.
DERDALE, Fla. tAP)-
Leo Goodwt.DJr.,a, bead Bdiaad l'..a P.Cteltee
ol a financial empire that
includes the Government
Employees Insur
Co.,dledSunday.
AU>•aMAM DCLMla V. ALDtlllMAN, ~
el Coret1• del Mor, "'Mel owoy
Jt""•ry 16, 1'11. He It~ llrf Nt
wife, Mr .. l!Ve Alder-oM -c10111hter, Ar1elo T""*"I Of Cor-clel Mer, • 1rl!l«llllOn11, 11.-.rt,
\
••
RelaiioRfliips Verified by Red Cross
Sou Aaian refuaees now
ll I I th Or.tDI• Coast are eettlnl help fi'OD1 w Red
Cron ln Nunltinc their families.
UDd« a1peclal Protrarn, \J.S.
,. mbaulea abroad are
ch Dtllnc to th• .Red Cr°'•
appUeaUons from refu1ees in'
the Far EiC who c:J.al.m to have relaUves in the U.S.
The Red Crosa then attempts t! verify tbe relaUauhlp. 'nle
wlormaUoa la sent back t.hrou&h
the State Department to the
embaaalu, wblcb fJnllh
proeeuin& the appllcaUooa for Jmmt~atfon.
II'. THE APPLICANT turns
.. out to llavt a blood relatlve ln
J tbl• country, be may enter under
• a 1oven11Dent quota 1ystem.
"Wben we receive these wt.res
• from our national headquarters,
.. we 're given the name and
!• .. Women in Music ..
~ Set Fint Meeting
The first meeting of the
• Orange County chapter or
Women in Music will be held at
7:30 p.m. Thursday in Santa
Ana.
. TbeJroup, open to women
·: lnvolv in all upecta of the
recordine industry. wUl meet at
the Staie Manaaement Agency.
13912 Pooderoea Ave., Suite H.
Additional information is
: available by caltlni 558-1239.
addrea ~ the local refu1ee and
contact them to s tt tbey do
cJaJm that~ a a r laUve. ••
aald Barbara McGrath. who
bead• the proeram in Oran1• County.
la som·e case1. local realdenta
have proof ln the form of
marrla1• Jlc.ase1 or birth
record.I, 1he aald. They alao 1lcn
an affidavit of relat!omblp.
• SHE SAID AB01.JT H• 1uch relatlonsh!pe have been checked
out in the past year Jn Ounae County. _
.. We've had mdy more cues.
tt>o, where people have come to
ua to initiate tbla kind of
action," Min McGrath aald.
•'They've learned tbat their
relative is ovenea.s and we've
assisted them in maklnt out that affidavit and 1ettin1 it sent to
American embaulea."
The Red Cross tries to follow
up on the interviewees. she said.
"WHEN WE ASSIST THE
client. we always tell them, 'Let
us know when your family's
comlna. • There have been many
s tories of reunions," Mias
McGrath sald.
"Just before Christmas a man
came in to brinl hla son and hla
son's new wffe and her father to
introduce them to me."
Eileen Anthony, volunteer
chairman of the Red Crosa
Service to Military Famllles
Committee iD Oran1e County,
explained that many of th6 new
Jmmttrmrt.a were lo preea.rlous
dreumltancel before the Red
Crota came to their aid.
••mOSE WHO Aa£ aeeki.na
U.S. ent.rY at thll time have been
1D ref~ cam.,_ in Alia atnce
1975 or. have escaped from their
homeland by boat and are not
belnt allowed to Jand Jn any country." sbe said.
• 'So01e bave been living in
these boata for almost two years
and cannot return to their
countries because of fear of
reprisal by the covernment,"
Mrs. Anthony said.
Interpretation .
Of Dreams Taught
Dream interpreter and author
Jan Ice Bay Us wm present a
nine.week workshop on dream
interpretation be1lnnin1
Thursday at Golden Weat
College in H\DlUngton Beach, at
the GWC Community Center. .
Reservattons for the class
may be made by calllne the
G WC colle1e actJvlUea office.
Admission to the 9 to 1l a.m.'
Thursday courses involva a $3S
tax-deductible donation which
will finance student
scbolarahlps.
Man Eyes Statehouse
~ .. •• ~ ::
RUNS FOR GOVERNOR
Csndldate 0-eoro-AtnOICS
By O.C. UlJSTINGS Of nit DlllY ...... Slaff
Native Gallfornian and
lon1t1me Huntlnaton Beach
resident George Arnold has
taken out nomination papers and
begun collecling slenatures to
run for aovernor a1atn1t
incumbent Edmund G "Jerry"
Brown.
Arnold. who w11l be 49
Saturday, took out his· papers
Fridal at the Oranae County
Clerk 1 Offtce in Santa A'nt·
A part·time rest dent •or the
Baratow area. where he
maintains a poultry ranch,
Arnold la runnin1 for electton as
a RepubUcan. ·
HE C I TES GENERAL
dissatisfaction with Brown's
perrortnance durin1 hl• term as
governor and a deal re for takina
prof resslve action to re·ahape
Ca lfornla 's deat.lny and
dirtttlon.•
"The at.ate ia slldln1 down a
hole. t"' says Arnold, •ho has
been a candldate for the
Huntington Beach City Council
six times in the past.
A U.S. Army vet.era». Arnold
was raised' and schooled in
HunUnitoo Buch and Pomona and says he expects a broad
base o! support from contacts
throuahout the stat• made over
the years.
ONCE A PROFESSIONAL
c ircus clown . Arnold is
e mployed occasionally as a
mal-ntenance and land1cape
specialist and accurlty auard, m addition t.o ranching.
He plans to base hls campa.lan
headquarten ln a mobile home
trailer in downtown HunUncton
Beach during his bid to win
election and a new address: the
Governor's Manston in
Sacramento.
"l would Uk~ to debate Hrown very badly,'• Arnold satd in
announcins bis candidacy,
addinl that be wtll press for a
televttfon confrontation ff he
wina a apot on the prlrvary election ballot.
i~-----....;....i;_ __ ~--~------~~~~~~--~--~~~----:---~-----~----~
"-· ..: ~ ' ' • t ' • • • • • • • t
' • • •
DAn.YPClOT
... _.. .................. .....
.. I atM ...... tll JIJ'L
Higher Interest than commercial banks pay plus the assurance that your sav-
ings are sate, Insured by a Federal Agency. A deposit of $1000 or more in a
6 year Investment Certificate yields 8.06% annually. Or, a $1000 Certificate
of Deposit Account for only one year yields 6.72%. It's in your best interest
to start your savings account today. One minute and one signature ls all It takes •
• INCOME TAX PREPARATION -
This year, spare yoursetf the drudgery of filling out income tax forms. With a
minimum deposit, a sp4:)ciallst at Los Angeles Federal Savings will figure. your
deductions. do the math, the whole jot> of preparing your personal Federal
and California standard returns, no charge. It's one Of many valuable services
you'te entitled to as g Los Angeles Federal Saver. '
Suggestion! reserve your tax appointment now and avoid'ute last-minute rush.
Besides. the sooner your returns go in, the sooner your refund check can be
malled.
PWS 20 MORE SERVICES
In addition to Income tax preparation, there's a Jong fist of additional servfces
you don't have to pay for. With a minimum deposit, you can have a safe
deposit box. checking account at a cooperatjng statewide commercial bank.
Travelers Checks, money orders, document duplication, even trust deed and
note collectton.
What you save each month on ah 1hese services can be earning addftionat
interest for you. Isn't it worth a minute of your: time to start YQUr money roiling
up more .profit In a Los Angeles Federal Savings account?
•• Annual
Yield
8.06~
7.790/o
LOS ANGELES
FEDERAL SAVINGS
INVESTMENT CEATIACATES Current AnnuaJ Rate
72/•0/o
7Va,.o
• •
What a Pane
.\ window washt.•r era\\ b over the dome of the Detroit
Plata Hotel sw1mn:img pool. Towering above him arc
huildings thut make up the Renaissance Center complex
on the riverfront. The towers contain more than 2
million square feet of glass. making it. ac'fording to
<'enter officials. the world's biggest window-washing job
'Unitary' Taxing
SYstem Supported
WASllJNGTON IAP 1 The U.S Supreme Court has fused to
hcur a challenge to California'i. controversial system t taxing
multinational businesses 1
In their decision, justices declined to hear an appeal by the Chase
Brass and Copper Co. against the state's "un1tary'' tall' ystem.
which bases state taxes on the
percentage of a firm 's total
payroll and assets in tne state.
rot her than eurninas of a firm 'i;
California division .
The court concluded the ca e
presented no ••aubst<antlal
federal question' wli n it let
<1tand a state coUrt 'Of appeal
r uling that i>upportcd a
'Californta Tax f'ranchise Board
dec1s1on on thl' Cha~t: firm.
THE 8 lo Ht
both Chasl! and it1 parent
company, Kennecott Copper,
were subject to t'4att lox a "unit~ry" toxpaydr&. • '
Cha11e hod argutd that the
California. \11xatlon 1yatem.
among other thln1&, turned a
1955 net loss or $1.3" tnlllton In the
state to a profit. of more than $1
milhon
In addition to the Chase suit,
attempts to rcpeul Californiu'i.
unitary true have been pushed
simultaneously in recent months
on three cJ\h r front ••
'fh1s may be the year of the other sector of the houalng
condominium. • market.
Total condos &tarted or
ronverted from rental ahould
exceed 300,000 and may match
the approximately 350,000 ot
1973, the previous record.
The turnaround ln the condo
market from Its low point in 1975
has been 1tron1er than any
.
CAPITOulZE
WITH
CAP.tTOL
• .. *' • ... Jil ............. .
y IOANNE RE YNOLD
Of, .. o.ll• 'llet...,. Thla year should l>e one or heavy bulldint actlvlty In the Harbor
area. according to representatives or Irvine, Newport Beacn •nd
Costa Meaa , •
Starr planners for Newport Beach and lrvlne and a ctty• council
candidate from Costa Mesa wbO spoke at the New~rt Harbor-Costa
Mesa Board of Realtors meeUng
last week all had one message in
common -there will be a lot or
new homes. otrices anCl
industrial buildings going up th
year.
With the new con$truct100 will
come Increased demands tqr
roadway•, parks and other ctty
services, which also will expand
an 1978, they soid.
HERE' A BRIEF look at
what each city representative
had tony:
Dave Dmohowski, advance
planner for Newport Beach,
predicted the city's housin1
i1lock would Increase by 350 to
500 new umt.l lhla year.
And commercial IJoor space
throughout the city wm increruJe
by about two mlllion square feet,
the equivalent of the floor space
nlready existing an Newport
Cl'nter 's high-riH office
buildin~s, he nid
.. p ............... M I .,i
ncome'
Won't Buy Much
.,THE aESULT.'• nlEY FOUND, "ii an lDcreue in
combined Income t xa and Soclal ~nty taxes of 231 per~ent ln the ume nlno 1 n, or an annual ra~ ol ift.
crease of more thaD 14 perc nt.
· Taxes would riae futtt income not only because
of proa~ve ;lncreut1 In SoclaJ Secunty taxes, but also
because of the DtO&renlve nature ol tbe tncome tax. Now enters inflation. If it were to a\'eraae 5 percent-•
which la lower than lHt year's rate and the rate projected t
for lt78 -eflei".tax buylnt pow~r ln 1187 would have ln·
creased bY '2 percent. ' ·:
THAT Ht PEllC£NT RAISE, better than 10 percent a
year, la down by alJnOit 100 percentqe polnts to an nnua\ ·
avera1e of juat' percent. Conch.11lon~ .. Advancement to an earnings level pre·
viously auoctated ln tho mind with 1ucces1 and & much
i111proved Ille style ls apt to tum out to mean a Clluppoint· ln&Jy modat Sa.in 1AreaUncowv.-" __ ....,,
.... _... ,_,,..... ............... -----·-·-·--·· ... _ ... ___ ~ .......... _. .. --
PALM SPRINGS <.\PJ -A thre ·da)'. ord al
in the San JaciJlto wilderness ende"a for (our youn1
Escondido rnen when two or them stumbled
throuah hea\'.)' anow and rou«b terrain to •afety in Palm Sprina1.
"We were really lucky to make.it out live,"
uid Curtis Wade, 18, who with 11-yeal'Old Tom
Licon walked into a druiatore Tue day and phoned the Riverside County aherW'a departm t.
TUE FOVll LEFT BOJIE Frlday and drove to
Humber Park near the mountain resort of
ldylwild. They began bikini up ML San Jacinto
Saturday and pitched their tent at the top Of the
10,7IO·foot peak.
' CALIFORNIA I NATIONAL
Th four t s y rOugb
snow In an eastern direct.ion. Evcntualfy they
dropped their equipment, lncludlft8 1leepln1 baas.
because they were t and h vy.,.1lh snow.
The)' left the anow level by Mond y momln1.
and Licon said their hopes were reviv~ .
LOOKING FOR MR.
GOODBAR?
"But that .U,ht we cot hit by a bliUard that
knocked over the tent," Licon said ... We left it. and ~~'JS.,.,~~~"",..,...,.._.,_. tried t4t find OW' way out of the anow ...
The tour apparenUy stumbled only a abort
distance before they collapsed with cold and hunger. 1
You won't find any of that sweet
stuff at Or. Flanzer's -he's a
dentist. But even though Or.
Flanzer is a family dentist, he
doesn't bar singles. They too can
have a complete range of dental
servlces. And take advantage of
Or. Flanzer's conviction that
modem dentistry doesn't have to
be e><pensive. Could you save
money having Dr. Flanzer as Your
dentist? You don't have to be
married to find out
Opera Rehearsal
:\Ictropolitan Opera stars Beverly Sills and Sherill Milnes 1·e·
hearse duet In Massenet's opera "Thais." Miss Salls. who recently
announced she \\ill retire in 1980. sinjZs the title rolt• in the op('ra
which has not been performed at the Met s ince 1939
Horses' Rights
Mulled in Troy
TROY, Mach. <A P > -JC dogs un walk on
!>adewnlks, why not horses?
That ic; the question being considered by the
Troy Caty Council.
Caty Manager Frank Gerstenecker said
curr1?nt laws prohibit horses in parks or on private
property, but say nothing about sidewalks
J amc•s Myers wants that changed. He says
neighbors nde their horses on the sidewalk on
front of has home lo spite him and lhat the horses'
droppmRi; crealt> a health hazard.
The city's Animal Control Board has opposed
the proposed law, noting thiit It is legal for dogs to
walk on sidewalks
The city animal board says horseback riders
should be allowed to use sidewalks because there
are no bridle paths in Troy, some roads have no
shoulders and it's dangerous to ride in the streets
AnORMEYATUW
BANKRUPTCY $95
DIVORCE $95
tJ nt'On tested
640-2507
P"EPARATIOM OF
TAXRETURMS ,_ ...... , .. ,.....
Martin I Schnever
Allornev at Law C•-1111
Cwtof . .., Pv .. oc: ilttOU"'••
"'llA Cl 0•11""' ~ft•• of L•..n ft•••''°" Pr¢f11MOf of Ta.. l ,,__,
l c:v,,.,., Otfor• us r •• C'A>rl ~UC'\ if:H-10'..,.. C '''
•OOd "'""'et f,., ""ii' 1.1
tof•o\l)QH S.tr·h CA i~hO()
833-1164
C•ll 642-5678
Put • few words to work for ou.
FL.O\WRJ m.eom
and -mlNDJCAN
TOO
ENROLL NOW FOR A JPRING
LEARNING EXPERIENCE AT=
"JIM DAVIS STARTED throwlnc up. That'•
when we started to get really scared," Wade aald.
Speed Read Class Set
A rap1d-readin1
course tor students and
adult.a will begin Mon·
day at the Ormge Coast
YMCA.
The F.ducational and
•
• h ............
I # ••
w~needay. Janu.ry 18, 1m ..
StUltborun
By DL STSINC&ODN
Dear J>r. S&ebacroba: >.. I was ••nnc
to my husband t.b• other day. "Don't be
110 stubborn." The trouble With him ls
that he feels one vtalt to a doct« many
yeara ago deserves a medal.
He had attacks of 1out. He wa1 put on
colchicine tablets that. helped him a lot
ln 1etUng crrer hit attack. But be kept
on aetUng them more ofteu.
LATELY, THEY almost mcapacltate
him for week.I. But be won1 co to tbe
doctor. He says, .. Colcblctne la
supposed to be the treatment tor 101.tt.
so why should I waste my Ume and th•
doctor's?"
MADlTO
Sill FOR 69' ...
I s DAY PRICE I
3,o.$1
WHnMANS
GIANT COMIC
COLOR BOOKS
~,: s1_
2.00 ...
I have a friend wbose husband alto
haa &Out. She 11,YS be hu been taJdnl a
new medlclno that prevents him Crom havlnl ao many attackl. 1'm alter my
buaband DOt to be so stubborn. Perhaps
you can put eomethlnt ln your column
to convince blm. -Iha. IL .
COMMENT: How stubborn are you,
Mr. H? P«bapa you won't Ustee now. If
you're free trosn an attack. ut eave what I am about to aay tor the time wbttl )'O'U' toe or knee or aomo other couty JOl,nt flares up and tA>rtUrili )'Oµ. •
It'• true that colcblclne bas been
helpful ~r the yean for patient.a with
inflamed jol.Qta due to sout. But lately
HEAVY SHAM aonoM
CRYSTAL CLEAR GLASSES
there have been lmproveD\ent1 tn
treatment. In relying only on colchtclne,
you are Uke the man who lnsilta on
drlvln1 bb otd Jalopy beeaUH be won't
even look at th new modell.
WHEN HYPE&UJllCEIUA ttoo
mueb uric acldJ la preaent. it'• the
doctor's job to preacribe medlc1nea tA>
drive the exceu out of tbe bodJ or •
REG. 4 s1 49' ea. FOR
EXPRESSO PWTIC 'POINT
PEN IN COLOR CHOICE , ..... .., ... ~.~..-......... ........ ........., .,..., Dey Wt ,.., .... flc ................... "write
•tttlf ptll. hH ..... M•l 0114.e Aiiettltr.,.. ...... '"* .. ... 2 ,.-.a.wfftl sllllw'-"1111tfwf..., ....
O<lllAIDAY 3 s 1 SPECIAL FOR
MADETO 6 s1 SUL FOR
39c .49e .a. FOR
REG. 4 s1 79'-89' ea. FOR
,
UBULAR PLASTIC SlACI RACK
WITH 6·ACCESSORY HOLDERS .
SALE OF HANDl-MAN
HARDWARE FASTENERS
0.ft.y....it ........ tt... ft ..... wttfl • ..,,.
., ,nftctt~ ................. "'"'' litits& .m, tacla, ..... , ..... -.n.
cunx CREME, FROST OR
STRONG NAIL ENAMElS s.,.,.,nc.. ~.,,..',..... ... c.tt1
Wlwlsile.....,.tf futlh• ... t-.n. ...... ........................ .
• . ,, " ~y PIU)T AJ.1
FLOUL DESIGN STURDY
HOUSEHOLD PLASTICWARE ............... , ...... ~. ,...,.....,,
12 ... ..,...""' ..... n'J . ....., ""*Y ................. ,....,11 ............
CHIFFON
FACIAL TISSUE
PETUNA
CAT FOOD
.
'
Assorted
Flai1ora
&OZ.CAN &i89c
~ VICKS SINEX
NASAL SPRAY
'
• ....., .................. u 0 ·-----·
LIQUID AJAX
for DISHWASHING
Mild f rarrance.
BED
PltLOWS
"FOAM FILLED"
Prfnted cowt with
smedded ~ art• . thane fllt. Nowller• '~U 123" •
. 2i3.BB
' .
Th ~ docton. t a ocrn eontercnce at Ma 1 aacbu1ett1 Gen er al
Hospital. one ot ~veral f aclUU
that bave been testin1 It for four yean. .
In 1ome cases, the new
FINAL NET FABERGE Organics .
CONDITIONER or
SHAMPOO
GREAT
MEDICINE
CREST
RIGHT GUARD
••AOU • .()N"
fNnl GIL~ETTe
Reg. a Unac.nted.
[
,
...
•C mies
INEW ORLEANS <AP> -H rold "Red" Gran1e, the tint of
football'11upentar1, can't forcet
the 1U1ma ~lated with hi•
twmin1 proh.alf a century ago.
·•1 would have been more
popular if I had joined the Al
Capone 1an1." aafd the 74-yea.r-
old 1ridiron Immortal, Illinois'
fabled Galloplnc Ghost who wu
he.re to officiate the coln·toss1n1
ceremony at Super Bowl XII
.. My coach, Bob Zuppke,
dido 't tallc to me for four yean.
My fat.berwasn't happy about It.
All of mf friends looked upon
me as l I was a traitor or
sometbln.r. H lf I had done
aometbbli terrible. .
0 Jt w the 5tate of the game
iathose days. The whole country
w s wUd about colleee football.
The proa were nothln1. Geor1e
Halas <own,r of the Chicaeo
Bears) woUld write out his own
pre11 releuet, take them to the
newspaper offices downtown and
Juet pray he would get a few lines
on pacethrfforfour.
A triple·threat, ball-carrying
le1end at Illinois, Grange ia
·credited with giving the pro
came the Inoculation needed
tor survival. He became a
charter member or the pro root·
ball ball of fame.
Grange, now retired and living
a life of consummate eue ln In·
dian Lake Estates, Fla., d
this would. be the first Su r
Bowl game he haa seen
"I love it," he said, "b
,.
have been footballing all my
llf e. It'• Uke aohw to work. t
don't have a routln• any mot I
wake up at a o'clock 1n a.he
mornina and lt .ther .. h
somethina I wAQt to do f do it. If
not, I rofi over qd go back to
sleep. 0
Old No. 71, once known to
almost every kid in the nation
for the number he wore on hit
Jersey, was a picture of trim lit·
ness when be visited the Super Bowl press room and be1an rem-
iniscinC about the era of Babe
Ruth, Jact DemJ*y, Bill Tilden
and Bob Jones -known u the
Ase of Wonderful Nonaen•e. ··I played in the fint three pro
championsbJJ) .sames," he r•
ealled. ·~ fkat WU 1932. W•
played the Portsmouth, Ohio
team •• wbich latet became Ute
Detroit IJons.
"A bl& snow storm came up
and we had to move into the
Chicago Stadium. This was the
first indoor championship. The
only trouble was the stadium
was only 80 yards Lona. So when
a team reached the SO-yard line
it was penalized 20 yards
automatically to make up for the
misslng20.
"The sidelines were five feet of
solid cement. The ball was
broucht out sh~ inches. ll was a
concrete floor with six Inches of
dirt and other fragrant material.
You see, a circua had been there
the day before."
Grange and the Bears won the
Knicks Toppled
Bt:st Game of Year
F or-Abdul-Jabbar
LOS ANGELES !AP > Lakers coach Jerry West pro-
nounced Kareem Abdul-
J ab bar's performance against
the New York Knlcks his finest
of the season, but added that the
I,os Angeles center 'Still has
some adju.stments to make.
"Kareem played just sensa-
tional, bis best game of the
season in my mind," West said
alter the Lakera had downed the
Knlcks 121·108 Tuesday. Abdul-
Jabbar scored 27 polnll, had 15
rebounds, four asaisll, an equal
number of steals and a block.
"But." West continued. "with
Adrian DanUey ln there, Kareem
11 not 1olng to set tbe ball as
much, and it's more crowded in
the middle.
"He'll have to do some adapt-ing to the new playen on the
team."
While the Lakers were •nap.
ping a •Ix-game loslna skld, the
Knick• were loslng their fourth
in a row -all on tbe road -and
New York coach Willia Reed
sal4 h\s team's "adapting" m~
take a lot of time. "These 'IU.YI
go up_,~nd dOwn," !leed said of
his KDlckl. "They re skyblgb
one nisbt and down the next. My
youn1 players need about three
to four years to mature so they
play consistently from one 1ame
to the next."
HEW YO.K CtOll -H~ 27, SlleltOll 1'
M< 4"0 21. CIHMOlll •. Montot 11 K11"'1t 10. !IH'd 14 ...... lO • ICll. • LO$ AltGELU ll211 -o,,.11e¥ 22, F.-11,
Atldvl·J .... 27, NhlClll 10, S<Oll •. H~,IO.
Ca,, 6, ~ 10, O.YI• 2 ...... K11 t :ill'dtlte
•111121. H•• Yori! 2J 11 at ~-Lot ""9tl.. 21 30 JD l>-121 ll~:,:1 fouls-Hew Y«k H. LM """"'" 21. A-
... .
Stops Slew
ti c
d
(
«
(
(
(
J
I
i
,
• •
Barons
Tangle
Soccer
University
Puts Skids
,
. . .
• •
HB Puts It Together
To Club S.ailOn, 11 49
CBrson
Sparks
Tri tons BJ GLENN WHITE .... .., ........
Huntta1ton B aah
JD1b put tt all to1etber open man wttb th pau,
Tuead.,-nJOit. r boundint and iboOUD1
And tlu·crlppJ.•4 accurately.
Newport Harbor JU1h waa on the recelvtnl end Tbeff ll P:Jl1 ooo thlria ot ttie bUb u tho Oil left aft« 10U'vt doae all
raced to a '11"'9 suuet tbat-ctdeue. And tile
Lea1ue baketball con· Ollen were exceUent
quest bdore 8" fanJ in tbere u Utey became the winner'• eonttnea. tbe only team to bOl4 It wu cloN onl1 for NewPorl UDd 10 polnta
U.•.nnt threO ~lnutcs tbta ltUOG.
when N8wpori jumped The OUen Wtiiatled In
to a '1-4 lead. -52.t percent of th field
Then coaeh Roy ioat trit1 UwY ~
Another Sque~er
For CdM, 50-41
t bounded the S llor11
1. Four OU cored
In oubl u Cu.rt 81 OG CA'RL&ON t lnba ed the way Ot .. Olil'r,.......,, with 15. Por an athlete with
Re a1lo bad elcbt re· only H :l?ofplaylnttlme b0un41. Rico "Dampson to bl• credit, San
bad a 1parkllq effort Clemente Hl1h'1 ~6
with nine rebound•, John Ca.non domlnated et1ht Ul1atl and el•bt Tue.day nl1bt'1 South
polntl. Coast Loque buketball Ne~toundoffcmae same ln atrlktn't
a , l o u j h lt • m t 0 fublon.
I erate, aitbouJb Dan The smooth Trltons
telcol and Brian ataadout scored 11
MaraYitll ltatted bJtttnc polnll ud dld It ft'ben
In the latttr •:.tea ot the came was on tho line Ute came and ed H aa San Clemente cap·
and u pOIDtl. tured a 52..ta victory
.. J. t one Juncture over the vlaltlna El Toro
N e w p 0 r t w e D t 1 Cbar1en.
inhu1te1, lt aeconda CartOll. and everyon•
wltbout a field SQ&l ana else for that matter, w~
that 1titili ftna11Y ended :J~~l~~laecl by Althekarlftlell-"'hen o..._ Paqum nttic1 o« u ln a 27-footer at tb• anit W. • Wella. ud
B1 l!aNI CASTILLO frame. AM when Dana halftime buaer. on the bench Wlt(l °' .. ....,.,.._. HUia. closed to Within Then the Sanon Wftt tbret foul• wlth onlt
Jtff Burde'• tbrff· one on a pair ot tree another 1:a Wltbout a 1:011~. ..
point play wlth oot tbrow1 by Dou1 ~n· bUcktt. '1nally, anotber But~ he D)ado hf&
second 1howln1 on the drew1, BUidtb pit t.be 2:3t Without a aeon left ftnal return to the flOOl'
clock lifted vl1ltln1 Sea 1c.tn11 '1P 6y four tbem down 44·21 wltb 1tt'ltb 5:21 lett in lb•
Coroba del Mar to a wltb '1 :13 on a three· s:ot to p la the third game St wu CarlOll who
5 o • 4 7 Sou t b Co a 1 t pe>lnt play. perlOd Ucl tbe1 were out made tM dlfference.
Leaaue buketbaU vie· Two buklta by Mlke otit. The Cbareeu had
tory over Inspired Dana Samuell tied tbe 1core Eventually they were elo&ed the l•P to 39-38 Hllll TuoedQ nllht. at the $:40 mark and down by 21 belore aubl on Rick Reid's inside
It waarttbt sey~nlh Samuel• matched a finished the ••mo for abot with an oftenslve
lea1u• t umpb 111 at bucket b1 Abeani th1" the winners. rebound. But Canon re· many outlD11 for the mlnutellatertbatMtup Curt Wooten and taUated wltb a tllree·
Sea Kln11 but the Corona'• laat allot Marco Papuelll bad polntplay.
aecond atrallht -,ame ln 1trateo. nifty performancea fOC' Aa•iD El Toro made a
wblcb they barily 1ur· Tb• firat quarter I.be •let.an. rwa at &be Tritom with vlved qaimt a decided thtundflne~bJ' ...... ...,. .,. Wayne Carlander. the t underq. Corona beat both teams. ...,.. ,. en ,. " "frelhman lefty, acor• u
1
n 1
1
v er~ll1 H l 1 h .-,._ -.,..eca : : : ;.; lnttolT~lt~.a4MOa -i.••ce < rv ne), 1 .... In over• ,,....... ,. •" • ..__ a 1 1 s E -... iMl\I \;11-Um• Frtday nl&bL ~ ~ : ; : ...... 1 • • 2 to Ue the game at the
On the wtniilnt play oettw l 1 a ,. ~::"' ~ : : ; tree throw line, but mis·
T u e 1 d a>' • B u r d e n =.. ~ ; ~ : '=• 1~ ; J ;. Md Ute tlm of a one-m uac ted bl• way un· TMr11t111 • o , • ,. 101 ..-m, and·one •ttuatlon,
derneath for an of· ~: ,: ~ 1~ !; c-.. tt "" " Caraon Wat fouled while
renalve rebOuild follow· ,.,_,.... ~ : ; : rebound.Ins and convert· inl a mlaed abot and c.r-•*'ue, 1tt11\Mw 1 1 1 u ed It lnto two free
without eveQ a fake, Allfft'11 'I~ 1 ~ · ~ : : : ;: U.rowa.
1'CtDt atr•l•ht batk up •"'*11 s 1 • 11 ~ • • a 2 Momenta later Canon
with lt. U1ln1 bl1 8·7 =:!: ! : : 1
: ~="' : ; ~ 1
; bit from six feet out and nel~t to advantafie• he "•1111 ' 1 1 t t .. ,,_. 1 o 1 2 John Stepb~•Jut the
ban ed h.... f th tttct11tt • • ' • ""'.., ' • o a lid on •t -:.-A th 1· ... c A I "" 0 e ....,,.,... t t 1 t T ..... t t1 t 16 11 .. ....w1 -81111 from CJOle ranee. TotelJ U t ~t • ~ ........ to IO with 8 pair of free
F l_... hll ~a ~*'Mir ,, 14 • ,._,. ..__......., '* • 11 ,...... throw1. OU 9111 w e luvvwnf, O.N1Ht1t1 11 u 10 1-47 tt\iiltlllltM9Mdl " • u 1~1 B u r d • n a d d e d a El Toro'• balance was cllncbln, rree lhrow U.at reflected by tbe flrat r!•;w~~=·~:::: Jardine sets Pace ~~!·:=.b::i~
wblle Dana Rilll tried acoriDa. onelaltdes~rateplay. l E .. . m • El Toro bad Ill pro-.st:C~t ! ::i~vT!n~:i n starreia I~ in ~t:~r:.:erJ= !:
the·cowt inbound.a put, BJ DOWAaD L. HANDY With Price hlWnf w. Mark KlelD aDcbotl.og a Shawn t\he&ra came up ot .. Dlltr .... ..,. der tho bullet in the 1·~1 scno and when the _
with an terceptlon that Jim Price acoftd the e a r 1 y 1 0 l n 8 an d Chars.., went to a S41le,
sealed the Dolph Ina• first slx pc)intl and DOu• fllllsblnl the nl&hl wUb SC reCu.sed to attack,
fate, Jardiae bit. a for the lt point.a, the Eailes walUnc outatc!e and fore·
DanaHllllw the••· nlgbt to propel tile movedlnfrontearlJand lnC El Toro back to its «tator tM>ughout. :J'he Eatanda (c.ostl a) wen never bOblnd. JMD•to-man defense.
D01phlha domln tat the a11 s to a 62-51 Cen· Even whea Foothill .. ..,..::-,. •
thli'd quarter behind the ll.ltY ~ bubtball made a run ly ln the "· ...._ '1 1 '! u
Pi•Yl>f Ou11 Ooller and •tctory o er bo t fO\irtb ~to el<IM ~ ! ~ • ,.
cm two occastoos led by Footblft ('J\tltin) Hl1ll tb caplo..,.wtthl:M ~ ' • : ~: tbrM PdJJitl. Tuesday blgbt, left, 1t dldD't ratUo tbe :;.::,..... : : 2 :
-But Abeam'• 254footcir While Price and E11I .,, Ja'dln8 led an TNI• . ,. • ~ •
tbat :hllt beat U.. r .lardlne dl4 '&be acorlq elabt~ aprlntfor the •a.-:": ,,. • rve Coi'oa& a*-lead for coach Larn SUD• VlctOn IA4 tbe clolelt WMt 2 :z J • eadlna intO the final 4 rman'a Eall•, Job.a r._ootthlll eciuld aet .ner ~ ; ; • .. Cariido and ,))an Mad· ,_a WU MveD ~ta.. ..,._,, t o ~ 1~ ~~::a':.~~ wl~:!t•nel~:J•o1 ~=• J J J J bap~. •tirUn suard Miko .,T ._..,......., ·
Camao, thi • est Ca p wbO 'liJUNd bl• s-=-. :: ~ ;t :;::: mu oa tbe ~ tto e ea In practi He wu
tbe ball alx dmea, la u~lform but Sun·
pas• d lnald• Jo bls derm held ldm out to Pro SOOree taller teammatea for letthetontmtOnbeaL ICO and brOQht the c ................ -..
ball .1-....i.a-~-····----f9 ", • .......-,; ....... .. UVWIKU\ln. &LUIHo ,.,.._ t " AtlllltUtt,~c.n, .. th FOOtblll de. .tM'dllle n 2 • H .. on-..,...,..n
r ~ J • ' a.ii,.,,..,..,~"· ti) ~ 1 1 a a.~-· * lhdC!oet pld:ia aft c-.w. a .• • .. .....,.,,.,..._..., • ................ ...... ,. ..:n ._ r '°""""" • ....., .. ~ .. ~-.au. 111 tbe &AeA ...... tJ'l,NIWV ...
float qaart!~J. and .. _....._"'--othetwile lP1!Q CU· ~;c::.,-..v-.::1.•• • rtao In backoowt. ---:."'!'!"'~......,-.;....;...;.-.... ...... ;....;;.;..~--._;,-...;..
The Eatlee are tied ~-.-.~-... -•J111e1e11-... •-.. tot' lecond in uao J sue 1tandlnp wttb Tustin
and WW bOR Ute Tlllen Tb~ mcM, ill tbetr
D XtOUtlng.
Winter
SPECIAL VALUES FOR
l:ODAY THRU SUNDAY .
COSTA MESA -FULLERTON . .
1530SJWIBOR BLVD.
PHONE: 870-0700
120 E. fJRST sr. 'f; CYPRESS
PHQNE: 547·7477 • .
QUAln • IODINE
IKT AMGtlll STYll
FOG LAMPS
Cl£AI 01 AMIEI LUIS
12YOlT ftl8 =~~ ..... ._MM IP•. ;'7:(f
ULTRA-PLATE
SHE\DS & sms 1 R.189 -·-HAID sua1aas OL
IMTMS.. ,RT, MaOtASS tll,llC.
Standings
. ~
' ,
' i t I
,.. 17• 202
111
122 -no
C:IMTllaY U.AOVI W L ,.,. II~ s em S1te11<le 4 1 311
T11alln • 1 m
11111t••,,. ' 2 ns VIiie Perk 3 1 211
"0014\111 I 4 2M Or•noe o J m
Sant• AIWI VllMy 0 S 3i2
T....,..ek-11 ModtN .a, TlllCln S6
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El Meclene •I s.m. Me
"Mtlllll M VIiie l".nt u. v111.,,.0r..,..
Area w·restling
o..-.. ...... ••-we.city,. 111-,iwre (ltl ""'-4S Sl1M1 I · .. 1Z.-Trejl (01~ llM\l,.11•a.
l:M-... i.y IOlciK Qu11111 IU,
10-Lo-. 101-llf '°'""'' 110-Alll>,_ (0) di< Her11t 1).11,
ISi L•r• IGlclt<-... »s.
ttl -Orr11.., IG>-•t~r.
111 'unkho11aer 1111 plnne• "'•n'I00<•.17
1t0 • ltotll IOI pl"'*' LMfflw 1:44.
HWl_,errw 101 lltd •llh Jlll'llMn '' G•••11-... •· s...t,,_,_ • 1'\11 Sliney (010.C CellaclO l .. S.
IH-Tr•lo IOI-. 11'1' lotfelt.
l:M-hdley IOI Pinned MM1111 l:JI,
142-Lo._. IOI dee CAlcllwy 2.M.
UO-Alltlroall 101 dK Ceitlle ~ ))I-Lire IOI_, e,. fonelt.
'\ l•T-Ormen 101 pll!Md O.lerwM
J " 171-ltoin.ro (SI pl~ Man-
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114-••"'-tt !M> -.,., ......... -1tt-l'ell• (Ml dee.....,.f.I.
12'-I-10 -llr ....... t -OV<loa.
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lChristian
/
Fives Roll
"" "' m 27S
U1
"' m
"' '"
NOTICE
t • "' •
. .
BASKETBALL I MISCELLANY
"1 r And non
"This la that 'welcoming committee• I was
telling you about, Marmaduke.'•
FUNKY WINKER BEAN
'
•
'
DOOLEY'S WORLD
-~---.-...-.. .... \'MAT A GooF·OfFI IVE ~SEEN ._,,,....._.. AtJY0COY
SO LAZY, ..
SO LIMP! ••
WHY,. WB&.oL;., ~UL.P YOO WANT l:)()GTOR
&•Aa...f:I TO s•s YOl.J Wl'T'HOUT MAKE!UP P!
''· ,..,.
P ANUTS
vndetWJ)'
42 F11t11rt pl&ftl
44Fltldtrt'
concerns 45 Concoc:tliid •7 Moitattlac-tlve
,. I
I I .
DAlLY PU.OT
·.
\\TllNf<!'\l>A 'I'
EVEHtNO e:oo
Jackie Gleason will be the emcee for
the eighth annual Entertainer of the
Year awards show tonight at 9:30 on
CBS, Channel 2.
Oaanael Lbtlng•
1J KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles
D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles
O KTLA (Ind.) Los Angeles
G KABC-TV (ABC) Los Angeles
()) KFMB (CBS) San Otego D KHJ. TV (l"d.) Los Angele~ 0 KCST (ABC) San Otego
G) KTlV (Ind) Los .\ngelH
• KCOP·TV (Ind.) L.os Angeles
• KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles e KOCE·TV (PSS) Huntington Beach
MORNING
~ G **If "Tiie Bio....,., ,,...., "°'*' ~ ..... or.er. A..._ Plr-
roll ll~by.n
Jvmy ofllaW flt« ....
0-0411 cf!... tllroUOfl
Mwcaoo. (1111'., 30ftlln.)
10:00 e • • "I Wint vou·•
(19521 Dana~, ••
ley Ora119ar. A young
-·· lncllotlol1 Into !fie Arfftt d&lriilt ttie KONIM
W• --frtotloft 11111191 .... bnaa end llmlfV. (2
"'11 l
AFTERNOON
U:OO ....... ~
(!Ml) 06di ~ w ...
llalalt. A Wllglfll llrft*'
.... out !fie Nat ... C'.ll1r'*W ,..,. n n tor
-~-..... end dlld. (a bra.. IO"""'>
a:oo«1••"AadTom11tr \""
(1981) HoWlrd I( .... Jo.I
Olulfllld, M Nr#t oftlO#
•lt•mpt• to ward ott anou.r .....,......,,..
bll'O ewtet'• Liil ....
(!_"' .. 30 ,._)
••• ··~·"TheOeedOOn"t '*'' (1871) ~ .......
ton, Rey Mlllnd. While
tryfl\Q 10 pniove tllat hie
btotMr w. wrOft(h ...............
~ ln\laMd .... 111·
Ulldll WOl1d oC llllmlMI, (1
fir .. to "*'-• ~'"" __________________________ _. ______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ..,,
Super Bowl
Was Super
In Rating By JAY SHARBU
LOS ANGELES <AP> -wm
"All in the Family" be back
next fall? The answers are <al
maybe: (bl maybe not; <c> perhaps with half the cast and a
new title, and <d> perhaps as a
frequent apeclal.
CBS proerams chie! Robert Daly says: "We have an option
pn the abow for another year and
we re"trY1n1 to convince the
talent t.O atay.'' A spokesman
aid Daly m•ans the entire cast.
But producer Norman l;ear,
whose hit aeries began on Jan.
12, 1971, say• Jn a carefuJlY;
qualified 'l.nawer the ''..Family '
as we know it hi finl becau e two
oi Its four 6'tan are leavin1.
one ae•en montba from now.
balf·bOW' comedl UU are biS
main .. .}<» • Whit He ••Y• hi• frl 0113 in movies alao ask him tha~
Kitty' Battks Cancer and Wins
-· ENT/MUSIC
at
County Concert Worth Wadirig For
Those mU1lc lovers "Who bravely made
. q:tit from tbriutQ Ana~ '8
do pour t S.tUrday Df1ht deserve a 1peclally
st.ruck medal ltom tht 0Ta.DCe CowltJ Pbllarmonic Society. •
At the ...., 1eut. tbelr dnotioD deaerved
aometblq out of the ordiaary from the Loi An1eJea Pbllarmonlc Orclltltra and two dtsUn,W.hed pest
artists. And that. It mun happily be ncorded, ii·~-actly wbat tM:y cot. • ' .ONE WOU ALONE WAS wtirtb tbe diacom·
fort of ft •boa and damp trouser bottoms: Beetbone'a JOJful 0 Empvor" .pl~ concerto
whJcb took on n.. luster via .the brlllia.Qt in·
terpretlltJoQ ol Claud.lo Arrau.
. The veteran Chilean planilt amlllngly concedes
that the ••Emperor" b h1s "party piece" and he
•bowed m •h.Y lut weekend in a 1Utterin1 perform~ tbat left hi• audJeoce spellbound.
There are tlM»e Vibo araue that the retirement
.Liza's Flu Costs
$30,000 Per Day
. ---=---. .. TOM BARLEY~
Mualc Box
of 1\ube:nlteln leaves Arrau u the foremost concert
planlat ot our day. It ll very dllflcult to refute tho
1u11eat1oa lo the Upt of thla 1uperb <>rant• County performance.
ARL\U F.8'1'ABLl88ED AN envtible UalSOil
with tb• LAP<>'• 1ecood cuest artist: Jesua Lopez.
Coboe, ~ SP8D1ab CCDduttor who II currenuY In
great demand ID many ol the world'• music ceaten.
A1&1D, lt ls euy to He Yt'hY. Lopei-cobos ls a
dWgent., almost austere craftsman wbo dlld.aina
frilla in blJtpuault ol perlecUcft.
Tbe 5Panlard 1ot preelle11 that ID the "Em·
peror'' and went one better ID tbe leCond bal.f ol the
procram with an lnapirtd rudini ot Ceaar Franck's SymphoQy 1D D minor •
• • , .. t\ •
T1ll8, ONB TBOUOBT, wta w•· where the
LAPO really cam• Into ttl own Saturday Dflht u tt
l'UpoDded DObly to tM 10w kq but alwap etftctiye
NEW YORK tAP > -Llza MinneJll haa a 1iiiifiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiii $30,000.a-day cue of flu.
That'• bow much the producers of the
Broadway show "The Act" say they lose when the
show ls closed. .
And when Mis• Mlnnelll i. out there Is no
show. She bu no undentudy ln what is virtually a
one-woman show.
The Shubert Organization,
which owns and operates the
Majestic Theater, says lt has
been forced to refund or
exchange approximately
$330,000 worth of tickets
because of Mias Mlnelll'a Ulneases.
She missed seven
performances in December and
was ordered back to bed Jan. 14
by her physician.
"'There ls no harder working performer than
Liza," Shubert President Bernard Jacot. said
Monday. "She really ls sick, because It would take
literally a bashing for her not to get on stage. She
has that 1ense of responsibility to the show and the
people worklni wlth her.'•
Radio Boost Due
W ASIDNGTON <AP J -People wbo llltert to
public radio stations wlU have a wider selection of
progra~under a plan announced by the Corpora· lion for blic Broadcasting. The CPS wants to
shift pu ic radio stations to aatell!U traosmlJSion,
enablin them for the first Ume to receive live,
high q ality monophonic and stereophonic pro-
grams.
The CPB announced a $12.3 mllllon contract
wllh Commercial Telecommunlcatlona Group
Rockwell lntemaUonal for the construction of 192
public radio station satellite ground terminals ill
the United States, Puerto Rico and Alaata. ·
P_ ..... --,,,.... ·~:tJ·,.;~
'I ' ' I :.ll'•f'P
"The talk around Hollywood I• that
our movie may be a heavy favorite
for an ~ademy Award -No
kidding. an Oeoerl
I may even have to rent• tuxedo!''
WINNER 5 Golden Globe
Nominations
Beat Plctur•B•tt Actor-Richard Ortyfuas
BHt Actreas-Maraha Mason
Beat Supporting Actreaa-Cutnn Cumming•
h•t Screenpley--Hefl Simon
'' ... Ned Simon makes
feeling good legal •••
GENE SHALIT, NBC-TV
-
A RN SIM< PflDX'1lCW <EA fD8Eiff" GS Fl.M
NEJL~·s
"THE GOODBYE GIRL:
RIOiARO DREYFUs.s• MARSHA MASON
end~ CJ,JlNN <UtMl~ .. WcY
rt=:;::;;
Wr1111n boJ Nat.SIMON • Pl'Oct.IClld by RN S't'ARK
DAILY7:1S.1:11
FRI 8:00, 8:00, 10:11 •
IATISUN 2:00, 4:00, e:oo. 1:00, 10:15
ur1~1 cl Its dJU1eat '"' .. t COAductor. -• 'fl'lt_~@rlCk.Y!'ork iJM undoutMd.UW, I • ty that has always el)Joyta a lar1e public ollowing,
much to the concern of 10 o.iled puriata and com.
pUel'I ol Pl"Oll'•m notea wbo tend to bore the pants
off tbtl writer by burbllnl lnten:n1n1b1Y about wbetherUMW'Ol'kcan be c.iled aaymphooywnot.
CALL IT A TBA Clddf, 1f that wUl help.
Whatever lta ~truetlon, lt ii oat ot the most
memorable and movtni wol'kl ln the concert rep. ertotre ~ and It achieved Qew stature ln tb.1a .-.. ....... _______________ ....,...
wrltu'• notebook alter the aterUoe performa.aee presided over by Lol*·Cobol.
atnf Who cared t That <>CPS coacert &tut--
day nl&ht wu worth a trip to tbe Arctlo ctrcle.
CHOllDS AT RANDOM -'lbe downJl()W' last.
weekend pn;duced aome atriklni rain 1ea.r alllOOI
the audience, particularly &.me!n• the ladles. But
the writer'• ll"Ud priJo 1oea to OC.PS Ital wart Jean
Tande>Wlky for herh11hly decorat1'• boot6. About all ~efi lack.edlncl*=«aUoo was atrebloclef.
Golden Globe Nomination•
BHt Plcture-Orema. 8t1t AotrtH~1ne
Fonda. 8••t Actreu In Supporting
Rolt-Venta.. R•ifgrave. ltat Actor In lupportl~ Ro~aaon RC»hrd, MHlmllD1n
lcheU. Ifft Dlrector-fNd Zlnn1m1nn. 8t•t
lctH ~la Int. --
ltt fl7t they CIOHN
ttte lfO!dl•• • , • wm. "'°P9
•nd °""' ... ~ ~ _,~Aciu~...-t.o 1' d,...,,. •••
••
. lcrass Tha Br11t
Now Dlv'Jdl Umlted Showing Engagemen
FOt1nt1ln Veley •••••••• , ••••••••••••••••••••• a.-1
UA Clf1 c:an.tN ........................ , ••••• tM4111 hctctte~ ••••••••••••••••..••.••.•••••••••• 111
UA ... uttt Coett..... • • • • . • • • • . . . •• • • • • • • • • •• • _
Weatman.tw Mau ............................ ll).054
El CaMlno .................................. 144-1
lue1t1 ~ D,t .............................. 12i a1001thurtit .................................. m
Nlgwt ...................................... 4ff.m
Ot•nge Mata •..•.••••••••••••••••••••••••••• t'7
Fountain Van.y D,t .•..•...•..........••••••• "2·241 Mltam•r •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •
'o• F11tt..ton ....•...•••••..•••.••.•••••••••• 125-474
4 Golden Glo e Nomination•
Beat Plcture.....:O..ama
Beat Actor Jn Supporting Role-Alel
OulnneH
Bnt Dfrector-George Lue11•
Bat OtlOfn.l Score~ohn Wllli•m•
•
..
OAILY PILOT
County Concert Worth Wading For
J ThoH b~ mu..slc lov"8 •ho bravely made
their 8)' to from the Sant.a Ana Hi&h Scbool iD
a downpour lut SatUtday Dlaht desftve a specially
•truck medal from the Oru.i• ~ Phllatmonlc Society. •
At the wq least. tbdr .... ~
aometbinl out o( the ord.lnary from the Loe AD1e!oi
Philanpoalc Orchestra and two dJstlneulshed 1uest
artlttl. And that. it muat .b.al>pily be rocorded.1' ex.·
actlJ Wbl1 the)t &oL
ONE WOK ALONE WAS wOrtb the d!Kom· fort of wet shoes and damp trouser bottoms;
Beethoven'• Joyful ••Em~.. piano concerto
wblcb toot on llt1f luater via .the brilllant in·
i.rpr~ ol Claudio Arrau.
. The veteran Chilean pianist 1mWngJy concedes
that the .. Emperor" is bis ''party piece'' and he
showed UI why laat weekend in a 1lltterui.
performance that left bla audience apellbowid.
There are thote who areue that tho retirement
Liza's Flu Costs
$30,000 Per Day
NEW YORK (AP> -Uza Mlnnelli bas a $30,000-a·day cue of nu.
That'• how much the producers of the
Broadway show ''The Act" say they lose when the
show 111 closed. .
And when Miu Minnelll la out there is no .
show. She has no understudy ln what is virtually a
ooe·woman show.
The Shubert Oraanization,
which owns and operates the
Majestic Theater, says it bas
been forced to refund or
exchange approximately
$330,000 worth of ttcketa
because of Mlsa Minelli'• illnesses.
She missed seven
performances ln December and
was ordered back to bed Jan. 1'
by her l>h.Yslclan •
.. There b no harder worldnt performer than
Liza," Shubert President Bernard Jacobi said
Monday. "She really is sick, beca\L!e It would take
literally a baabine for her not to set on 1t.a1e. She
has that sense of responsibility to the show and the
people workina with her."
Radio Boost Due
W ASmNGTON (AP> -People wbo listen to
public radio stations w1ll have a wider select.Ion of
programs under a plan announced by the Corpora·
lion for Public Broadcasting. The CPB wants to
shift public radio stations to satellite transmiaslon.
enabling them for the first time to receive live,
high quality monophonic and atereopbonie pro-
TOM BARl.EY-i.j
Mualc Box ·
of Rubenltetn leaves Arrau u the foremolt ccmcert pianist ol out day. Jt I.I very dltncult to refute the
IUIJettkln ln the Uaht of th ta superb Oraaie COUnty
perf Or'ID8Dce.
AllliU E81'ABWllED AN tn\'table llabon
With the LAP0'1 MCODd 1uest artlst: Jesus Lopez·
Cobol, U.. SpaD1ab CODduct« who la currenUy 1D
1reatdemancl1Amanyottbeworld'1mllliceenten. Acatn, It ts easy to see why. Lopez-Cobos Is a
dWect. almost austere craftlman wbo dildaiM frW.s In bl.I punult otperf ectioa.
Tbe Spaniard &ot predsely that in tbe "Em-
peroT" and went cne better ln the 1eeond half ol the
protram wltb an lnaplred read101 of Cesar
Franck'• &ympbaQy lA D minor.
TBl8, ONE 'l'ROVGBT, wu we where the
LAPO really came lnto tta own Saturday nllht u It
ruponded DOb1,y to the low key but alwap elfectlve
,
uTh• talk around Hollywood I• that
our movie may be • heavy favorite
for an A~,ademy Award -No
kidding, an Osoarl
I may even have to rent • tuxedo!" ..
grams ~~!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ The CPD announced a $12.3 mllllon contract
with Commercial TelecommunicaUons Group
Rockwell International for the construction of 192
public radio station satellite group<! terminals ~.
the United States, Puerto Rico and Alaska. WINNER S Golden Globe
Nominations
Beat Ptcture-Bnt At:tor-fttctfsrd Dreyfu11
Beet AC1reaa-Maraha MHon
Beet Supporting Actre11--0uinn Cummings
Beet Screenplay-Nell Shnon
'' ... Nell Simon makes
feeling good legal ...
GENE SHALIT, NBC· TV
A Mr' STMK ~CF A HERSERT rl)S.S F1UC
NfJLSIMOO'S
"THE GOODBYE GIRi:
RJOiARD DREYFUSS• MAR.SHA MA50N
nl~ QUINN OJMMINGS.Lttj
w,.., boJ NEIL~ • ~ boJ Mr'STARJ<
1,;:;::;:
DAILY 1:15, 9:15
FRI 1:00, 8:00, 10:15
8ATJ9U.H 2:00, 4:00, 1:00, 1:00, 10:15
urgin1 ot Ill dlllgmit aueat conductor.
The Franck work Is an \mdoubted tblai ol beaa·
ty that has always enJ07ed a tvae public !ollowtns. much to tho conceru o 10 called ~ and com·
pilers ol Proiram notes who tend to bore the puts
off thll writer by burbllaa interminably about
•bethertMworkcaobeoalledaaYJQpbooyornot.
CALL IT A TEA eadd)', U that wW help.
Whatever lta comtructlon, tt ts ono of the moat
memorable and movtnt wotka In the concert rep-
ertoire t¢ay and It achieved new stature ln th1a _ ..... _.....,...,_.;.;...o.~--...... -~-----i.wrtter'1 notebook alter the ater11P1 performance prealded over by Loi>e%·CobOI.
Rain7 Who careen Tbat OCPS cooee.rt Satw'-day nlgbt wu worth a trip to the Arcuo Circle.
CllOllDI AT aANDOM -nie downpour Jut
Wftkend produted aome 1trlkin1 ra1n 1ear amcn1
the audience, partlcUlarly a.moo1 the ladlea. But tbe wrtter'1 sranct priie 1oea to OCPS at.al wart Jean
T1ndcnwkyfor her h.l1b1Y dtM"aUve boot.I. About all ~eylackedlndecoraUon•uatrebleclef.
Golden Globe Nomfnltlon•
Beat Picture-Oram•. 8Ht ActrHt~ane
Fond•. Beet Actreu tn Supporting
Rote--Vene11a Redgrave. leat Aotor In
luppOftlng Aol~eaon Aobatd, Marlmllfl1n
8ch1U. Belt DINCtor-f'ntd Zlnnemann. 8nt Ser-. Yin Sar int. --
••• NfWPOft F11Mott lllMd
NewportC.• ......,. MKArttwr. J1mbof ..
ec Pldtle Coatt ••IY ~
'1IVIJF IS 111 BEST ••• ".:..~.
Now
Showing
4 Golden Globe Nomination•
But Picture-Dram " Beat Actor Jn Supporting Role-.\le~
Oulnn•H
Bfft Dfrector-Georoe LUCH
nt nal or•~ohn WllUame
. .
• JanUAtY 11 1971
A.eeent Reborn· for Starring
After three years at the American Academy
Miss Pescow went on ummer tour in Eugene
O'Neill'• "Ahl Waldern s f" wath Richard Kiley
and Barbara Bel Geddet.
FOR '1SATURDA Y NIGHT Fever." where she
plays AMette -who want.a to cet married, stay in
Brookl)'ll and rllise a famlly-ahe had to return to
Bay Ridge and make a conscious effort to listen to
the speech patterns.
"When I auditioned for this part, I almost
didn't get it because I couldn't et the accent
back," she said ln an lnter\llew
al the offices t>f Paramount Pic-
tures.
Working with Travolta -
who plays Vinnie Barbarino in
the television series "Welcome
Back . Kotter " was
"fabulous." she said. But abe
was "scared to death" at first
when she found out all her
scenes in "Saturday Night
,.
l
'"
-..
,/', ,,,,, ,.
l
'
Fever" were opposite Travolta. P .. cow
He portrays a paint store clerk who is trapped
ti •
ENTERTAINMENT I MOVIES
in his Brooklyn nei&hborhood and escapes momen-;:::::::=;~~~=~~===~~==~=~,
tarily every weekend by immeralJ\8 himself in~ ·~----~--~lililjiiiiiil--llCHllil\.Dlllllil"""2:111111i ... ~ co dancing. He eiv~ Annette the brusbOff when be
decides that upward mobillty means a Manhattan
• UW\ ....... PEARL BAILEY WITH STUDENT ID CARO
Full-Um• Student With Heavy Schedule
Pearl Now
A.Student
WASHINGTON lAPI
-Entertainer Pearl
Balley, 58. is a freshman
at Georgetown
University.
She enrolled ·Monday
a11 Pearl B. Bcllson, her
married name, signing
up for courses in
Frnech, Islamic clvlllza
tion, Jslamtc religious
thought, Egyptian art
aod introductory
philosophy
That adds up to a full ~ 1~~1111 schedule of 18 credit!
and she said he would
• like to have t ken more.
J a she serious about
lifestyle.
"THE HARDEST SCENES were the car
i:.cenes. menlaUy. I had to deal with what she was
going through and trying to show that. And also I,
as Donna not as Annette, waa totally a basket
case. I was really nervous Just dolna those scenes
in general.
"Also dealing with how my ramlly would react
to all that. I kept wanUng to send my 1randmother
out for popcorn. But they were fine. I think I was
C•ll 642-5871.
Put • tew word•
to work for ou.
.
t I
"LAST TANGO
IN PARIS"
a:SOONLY
"MYRA
BRECKINRIDGE"
7:00' 11:05
R1chltd Cualcclly. HERALD EXAMINER
previous statements that -------------------
":OPENING NIGHT ... marb the 94th·
appearance by Joan BloOddl fri a major motion
picture ... She bas never pelfonned WffJ1 more
richn~ and understanding." Bany Brennan. EVENING OUTLOOK she would Uke to be a
teacher? "I want to be
ready if Ute calla on
me." shesald. "The alterilating currents of affecdon and anger
that flow betWeen Miss Rowlands and Mm Blondell
charges 'Opeiilpg Night'~ the film to be a
triumph for both.'' Kcvio Thomu. LOS ANOELES TIMES
FOR BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
JOAN BLONDELL
°"' .... , ••• you 1verylhln1 rou
wa 110 kt>OWI your
Fillets a la Shrimp
These fish fillets with hollandsise sauce and shrimp are real
winners. For recipe, see Page C5.
,.
'I
Deart·y Recipes
The Heart Association has published a cookbook for a healthy heart.
Beef Manlcottl, Beef Boureutanon
and Pineapple Cheesecake.
SouOd like a good diet for a healthy
heart? ,
Absolutely, says Uie American Heart
AaaoclaUon. which includes thes.e' re·
cipes ln its recently published cookbook.
Tbe secttt. ls fixing them in the most
healthy way T-w1lh just the rtaht klnds
and amounts of fats.
Today, in the U.S .• the assocladon
says, the average person's diet is 40 lo
45 percent faL
The rw are of three klMS: .POlY·
uosaturated <safflower, soybean, com,
cottonseed and sesame seed olls>.
saturated <meat, lard and butter> and
monounsaturated (ollve and peanut
oils>.
The goal is \0 reduce fat consumpUon
by 10 percent and include no more than
10 percent of each kind of fat bl the diet.
"Polyunsaturates ttnd to help the .
body get rid of newly formed
cholesterol,•• the book state •
Cholesterol Is deposited alon1 the walls
of arteries, or the blood veuel• that.
urry Jood and oxy1en lo all parts of the
body.
The formaUon or cholesterol ls only
one way the body handles fat, lbe
cookbook states. It also is burned to pro·
duce enercy or atored in tissue.
So, if there is too much fat in the diet,
a lot of It is bound to be deposited on th
artery walls and lead to trouble in the
form of atherosclero.,is.
By preparin fOOds the "hearty" way,
the problEm cnn ~reduced and on of
"life's great t pl ures" restored \0
lta full measure.
The Cookbook, which was prepared
with the help or volunteer workers, ataff
members, laymen, physicians, dieU·
Uans and nutrlUonists from across the u .s.. •• available from the orange
County Chapter of the American Heart
Asaoclatiori at 1°'3 Civic Center Drive
Wellington Plus
Flank steak wrapped in a pastry robe makes entertaining a b~eeze.
Add taste, sparkle and
a spirit or if&Cious llv· tns to fOUr company
menu. Serve Flank
Steak Welllnston. This
eleeant entree makes
what was once called
.. ent.erta1Ding" not oD.ly
a breeze but an un·
foraettable, aavory ad·
venture.
You can complete all
preparation early in the
day. Slide the Well·
ln1ton into the oven
about 90 minutes before
you plan to dine. Then
the only thins left -
almost rituallstic -1s
last minute carving.
Novice and veteran
cooks alike can serve
expert Wellingtons by
following the directions
closely. It's almost an ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~· ''lnside·out'' version, .
Best BDY,s
The weather is the word
again in the fresh fruit and
vegetable industry. Continuous
rains in the West, bad weather
in the East. have just about
shut down ve~etable produ<?·
lion. Items from Mexico con-
tinue in i:ood supply with ex·
cellent quality and low prices
VEGETABLES The rain in the West is hav:
ing a disastrous effect on
vegetables in the short run.
Lettuces, caulifiower, broccoli,
and green onions will be much
higher priced and poorer quali·
ly for the next Cew weeks
because or the tremendous
amounts of water beating on
them. The rain interrupts a
proper maturing cycle and
should the commodities reach
the proper stage of maturity
.:rowers are unable to harvest.
Mexican vegetables such as
bell peppers, cucumbers, eeg·
plant. Italian squash. and, a
new item, peas are your be t
vegetable buys: Quality is ex·
cellent and prices very re·
asonable.
Good new~ for tomato lovers.
Tomato prices are coming down as the volume has picked
up from Mexican growing·
areas.
Adverse weather in FlorHia,
uch as extreme cold, is be1in·
ning to affect ·vegetable sup·
plies from that area. Industry
buyers are watching that re-
gion very closely. ·
In the long run the rain will
have an excellent affect on
produce but for the time being
fruits and vegetables will suf·
fer. Once pleasant weather re·
turns consumers can expect to
see artichokes, asparagus, and
brussel sprouts. The rain bas
also helped the upcoming
strawberry season. Plants are
blooming much earlier and we
may begin the strawberry
season earlier than normal.
FRUITS
Excessive water is also af ·
feeling Coachella Valley
citrus. Again, growers •re una·
ble to harvest, and the flooded
fields cause Ute fru.it to
breakdown quicker. Another
side effect ts some mildewinJ.
This ls not yet a problem but 1s
an area that is being watched.
Excellent buys are in \he
areas or citrus from Texas,
bananas, tangerines, and
pineap~le.
Mexican arrivals of
honeydew melons and
watermelons will make their appearnnce in supermarkets.
Prices wUl be higher but quali·
ty is excellent.
with outer crust. an in·
ner layer of succulent
meat, tben out-of·thls·
world stUfflng. The most important step ls ~d·
log the meal Otherwise
the 1teik will be dlfflcult
to roll.
Tbe light crusty ex·
terlor -the flnbblne
touch -is nothing more
than a basic pastry. Cut
1hortening l.D\0-erirlcbed
nour, ~ liquid and roll
on a floured surface to
deslted size. The pastry
not ooly adds appeal to
the entree, but also
helps seal ln the aroma
and natural Julcet. Jt
al10 provides an In·
teresttni way to get one
of your dally bread aerv· inas. Bread is neces1ary
l• your dally diet
M1au1& lt adds needed
carbohydrate u well as
Important vltam.ins and
minerals Enriched
breads have the B vitamins -nlacan,
thlamin and riboflavin
Working men end
women Will
IOve Satnon
Tomato
Sos /OP
•
Quiche Cuts Calories •
.--Salad
·on a
-Tray
Clp a these ••Ill•' couponS mMI
save one dollar on your next
sl-.opping trip. to Ralphs
,. ..
Wines & Spirits
-----
-
~ 9111
~a••
I ~t411
Any PurchlM of a
Pelfaod
- -
Super Bakery
--
"' .. ,., • ,_ • ,. •• , ..
~"2'·
Super Floral Home 'N l.P.isure
------
... 99
... 3"
• l)M.YPILOT
~
Low-cmorl
quiche trfllde
with milk.
Frozen Foods Super Produce
~3 ... 98
-:98
': .39
-:.29
': .12 Pantry Fillers
, .... 45 ..... IWlllUM ,., ••• ~ .25
,,.._ A• .... -.., Super Deli
,:::-.53 ~jwtceyf ..... , .
f.i ~88
t:: .59
OSlWPc~
~i~S 1
.,~ 1'' ~ ~ Ctieeee
Health & Beauty ~ r~.,Yaa1ogna
G tr;;;T_~:-o-... s .... 98 EJcrn-otw. .... , ..
1"'
i•:......:..• ~
':::: .59
':. , ..
;.i:; 10.•
':.r.14*
::.89
I I . I
•
~.
'
r
•
Super Sweet Potato Bread.
~~~.oney C)f ................... " ..... ".-1
An Idea
Honey Glued Squash
tranaform1 ordhsary acorn equaab into a
muterplece that tastes
H 1ood as Jt looks.
HONEY GLAZED
8QVA8B
2 or 3 acorn squub
Cut squash ln half; re-
move Heda. Plac., cut·
aide down. In shallow
pan, Add incl\ hot
water to pan. Bake in
350 degree oven 40 to SO
minutes, untU almost
tender. Turn cut-side
up: sea.son with salt and
pepper. Combine honey,
butter, worceatenhire
sauce walnut1, and
r lsins, poon Into
cavities of aquub.
Return to oven Md bake
15 mlnutea Jon1er, until
flllini ia heated and
squash tender. 4 to 8
ervina
TROPl<:AL SQUASH
BAKE ·
2 or 3 acorn squash
'.\cup flaked coconut
~ cup flrmly packed brown 1uaar
2 tablespoon1 pre-pared yellow mustard a tableepoooa tiutter
or maraanne, ~ftened
at room temperature ~ teupoon aalt, ir desired
Cut aquuh ln halt; re·
move aeeds. Place cut
side down ln shallow
bakln1 pan; add ~ inch
bot water to pan. Bake
In 3SO dearee oven 40 to
SO minutes, unUl tender.
Pour off watu. JJslnr
SJ>OOn, carefully remove
squash !eavtnc a ahcJI
about "' inch thick. Maah squash: atlr ln
coconut, brown suaar,
-mu1tard, butter. and
salt. Spoon into squash
•hell•. H dulred,
aprtnlde wtth additional
coconut. Bake 10
minut• longer. 4 -to 8
.. ffrvln1s.
'Make-Do' Bread ··.Hearty
Do you keep putting off the ln·
evitable day when you must rid
your refri1erator of a cup of this
or a dallop of that? Wait no
more when you find an ample
stock of sweet potatoea.
Stir toeetber cups nour and
dry yeaat. Heat mtlk, water,
sweet potato, oil, auiar and aalt
until very warm, (120 to 130
degrees F. ). Pour liquid all at
once Into flour·ytut mixture.
Beat at medium apeed of elec·
tric mixer wtW amOotJt, about 2
minutes or 300 1troke1 by hand.
Stir in enoueh additional flour to
make moderately stiff dough.
Tum onto lightly floured 1urface
and knead until smooth and
satiny, about 8 to 10 minutes.
Shape into ball; cover with bowl
and let rest 30 minutes. Divide
dough in half and roll out Into
two 7 x 14-lnch rectanfles. Roll
rectangles up jelly rol faah.lon,
beglnnlnr with the narrow aid~
pre11tni dough into roll at each
turn. Presa end.a to seal and fold
under loaf. Place In two 1reased
4"'2 x •~·Inch loaf pans; brush
with oil. Place in warm place
(80 to 90 degrees ~-) until
doubled, about 45 minutes Bake
in preheated 400 de1rees F. oven
35 to 40 minutes. If bread is
browned before baking time is
up, cover with foil tent. Remove
immediately from pans . Cool on
wire rack.
----------------~------------------------------------------------------~--
Bake a lod ol Sweet Potato
Bread. Just one cup ot muhed,
cooked sweet potatoes does
ireat thln1s for homemade
bread -u. well u your sense of
creativity, fn11allty pd spirl~ of
·•Make do." M a.a addlUon to
bread, they're tar more interest-
in1 than they would be just re-
heated and aerved.
Sweet Potato Bread colors the
menu at any meal. It's a savory
delight t.oa.ated, a aound invest-
ment with a slice of meat or
cheese, tl&! plain rood at dm-ner, or s aa a snack on tne
run.
SWEET P<n'ATO BREAD
(2 loavff)
~II.a to 8 cups enriched flour •
2 packat{es dry yeast
1 cup milk
2• cup water
l cup sweet potato, cooked
and mashed
2 tablespoons oil
2 tablespoons sugar
1 tablespoon salt
Oil
Flank
<From Pap Cl>
-plus the mineral,
iron.
FLANK STEAK WEIUNGTON
1 a~ to 3 Jti.) flank
steak
2 cup1 enriched
flour
2 teupoona bakint powcter
1 teupooo salt
\it cup lhortenlnf %to~cupmllk
Pound flank at.at to
tenderbe and make
euter for rollinc.
Prepare atufflnt and
spread av.r surf ace ot
flank steak. Boll flank
steak up beOnnin• With
the tborteat aide. If
necessat7, Ue with thin
strln1 to aeeure, Stir
toiether flour. bakln1
powder d salt. Cut tn
abortenm• '8Uil pteeea
re,emble coar••
crumbl. Stfr 1n milk to
mab ICJft\'!oaah. Knead
aenUy on Jt&htly floured
surface ao aeCoodl. Roll
doucb h>to a rectan11e.
about 12 to U lncbta or
to a tectaDJcle that Will
flt your ffank 1tuk.
<Mako it about 4 lnebee
lon1er and I inches
wlde.r.) Conr roJled
flank With dough. s 1 • .Place on
r ck In pan d
~ake ln d I oven
1 hour Md mlnut or unUl cnitt S old
brO
•spoon flour into dry measur·
ing cup; level. Or follow direc·
tions on bq.
<From Pa1e Cl>
the oil until tender. Remove them to
another dish.
In the same pan, saute the beet cubes
unUI browned. Sprinkle wlU. flour and
seasoninas.
Add bouillon aod wine. SUr well ar1d
simmer slowly tor B~ to 2 hours. Add
more bouillon and wine (1 part stock to
2 parts wine> as necessary to keep beer
barely covered.
Return onions lo the stew, add the
mushrooms and cook stirrin1 30
minutes !oncer, addln& more bouillon
and wine lf necessary. Sauce should be
thick and dark brown
Yield: 6 servlngs.
CHICKEN SALAD CASSEROLE
A hot dish with the character of a
salad. this is a good luncheon offering,
summer or winter.
2 cups cubed, cQOked chicken
1 small g~n pepper, sliced
l 4-ounce can mU.9hrooms. drained
1 ~ cup &livered water chestnuta
1 1 cup mayonnaise
'• cup skim milk
1 2·ounce Jar sliced pimiento.
drained
• 2 teaspoon salt
Best Idea Since
Shopping Ca~ts
~'. Y.~Now you can do a week's shopping r without forgetting a single
Item! U e pre-printed
shopping lists
prepared for you by
PILOT PRINTING.
140 • .,.,.te pfint9d ft•"'•· plu• eddttlonet apacH y.-.
c.n flR lf'I yo11rstlf.
1 can French fried onion rings
<about 311 ounces>
Preheat oven to 3SO de&rees.
Simmer ereen pepper slices in water
until nearly tender Drain.
Comb!ne milk with mayonnaise: add
pimiento, green J>t?pper. mushrooms.
water chea\nuls. chicken and sail.
Place ln a 1-quart casserole and top
with onion rtnga. COwr and bake lS
minutes. Remove cQver and bake s
minutes loncer, to crisp the onion rings.
Yield: 4 servings.
WHEAT GE&M PANCAKES
These pancakes deserve the ravea
they get, both for t'asle and for nutn-
hon. .
1 cup whUe flour .
2 12 teaspoons baklng powder
1 :a teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon sugar
1 2 cup wheat germ, toasted with honey
J 1 J cups skim milk
2 tablespoons oil
1 2 cup low.fa&. cottage cheese
Sift together flour, baking powder,
snit and sugar. Add wheat 1erm.
Com blne the milk and oil and stir into
the dry ln&redlcnts until Just mol.stened.
Stir In cottage chee!le only until mixture
11 sllchtl,v lumpy. Clf a smooth bat.Ur is
dealrtd, you may whip the cottage
r heese with the hquid lngr~ents IA a
blender.> Drop batter by .s~ula onto
a «reased pan. Cook until bubbles ap·
pear on upper aurf ace, .then tum and
brown on the other Side. Tum only oqce.
Continue unlll all batter ls used. setve
with maple syrup Yield: 10 •·lncb pan·
cakH.
SPICED JlED CABBAGE
4 ups shredded red cibbare 1 ~ cup ci~et vine.iar
1 ~ cup water
1 • tea.spoon ground allspice
l 4 tea11poon around cinnamon
1 • leaspopn 1round nutmeg 1 teahPQOn salt
2 tart apples, peeled, cored
~ced •
Sugor lo t<A~lc
ln a saucepan. combine l>hredded cab-
baae with all other ingredienta. except
apples. Cover and cook O\'er moderate
heat for 15 mlnutci;, tossing several
times so the cabbage will cook eveiily.
~dd apples, and to s again. ~~r.
and cook 5 minutes longer Add aucar to taste.
'
ews for Nutritionists an Calorie Counters
(/-··
A short course
In buying beef.
Some of the ladles here at Lucky prevailed
upon our Head Meat Buyer to talk about
what he looka for In 111ec:Ung beef to put on
your table. We found out It takes a whole
new vocabulary to .nter the world of the
meat apectallst. Uke, for Instance:
Thlnskin:
kno led1eable about brt 11tfeedln1 than
obatetrldans.
PAT SKELETONS -Skeletal difference• may be related to
overwet1bt, accordinc to a rePort from tbe
.. New Z.aland Medical
J 0 ·U r D a 1 • ' ' lhaturemeat• of us 1ehool ehildnD ... es e
to 16, 1bow.ct that the
thiDDe.I' ~ had
eomparltlTtl1 .1ar1er thorn• witll more area
Thls doesn't mean the beef embarr~
easily. lt does mean an outside fat covering
on the beef carcass of less than an Inch. We
look for thin skin because you don't like fat.
and we'd just have to strip It off, anyway.
Leu waste means less price, and that'1 the it's natural enzymes to work. Once
necessary, this procedure is rarely used
now, since modem feeding and meat
handling developments am ensure you of
getting fresher beef that is more tender than
ever before In history.
name of the game, Isn't it? ·
Marbling:
We're sure you've heard this term before. It
means those thin Jina of fat within the
meat, whlch help both~ flavor.end the
tmderness. It's ~Ible to reed thoee bnes
like a road map. to determine when there's
enough, but not too.much.
Confonnatfon:
The Ideal outside shape of a meat animal. A
rounded loln &eetlon, a full shouldir, are
what we look for 'cauM that me nt more
meat on the bones.
Youth:
Thlt Is probably the aJngle most Important
factor In choo.tng beef. Too much exercise
creates tough mUICle fiber. We want
younger beef, 18 to 24 months old. for
maximum tenderness.
A-.ng:
A natural tendeitzlng pcocau. Beef II h kJ
under camutly controUed temperature
conditions for lo~ p8dods Of time to apo
· ..
Fresh Mata Fresh Mea
Out Bond is
as gOod as gold.
The beef you buy at our stores ls fully
guaranteed for your satiSf actton. That
means If any cut displeases you for some
qlOI), return It with proof of purchase for
jl un refund.
¥ou don't have to
be an expert.
Because we do the selecting for you, all
you have to do Is take your shopping llst to
Lucky. You'll find high quality and lower
prices throughout the meat CMe ••• ln f ect,
on your total food bill. The Items listed
below are representative of the thousands of
gr: t values we have in store f oc you this
w ek.
.---..... ~~~~-------~:.IOIN ........ ·~H £5'.WRm ......... 68
fOJ.TWtOW:STEAK iTOP SIRLOIN toao ................ Ul. :f • 98
~.a. 11 8 alOEYEStr.AK 4'1~ ~9 ............. la. 2.78 ~~ ..... lD. l . ~~DIWPATlW 2 .. 8 _.,.;..:.;.-ii-"'"'""_...-.-..... """""-llOtUOID* tA1> .,OLl. ,.J OfUCK EXTM~GAOUNOIUF
ROAST &9 =·=LND ........ tt. 1.28 ~lilF ••• ,, ••• UL .~ ~.,...•··•••••·• •••••• 1..1.. .79
.79
·•
000
... what ckount is aD abOut.
•tt•••--~ IA.Ill.
• •
... . . .
Family Style Roast framed by potatoes.
,,.. .................. , ...... .
Leftovers are a _c.b•U~to ven. tb ~st of a and you can
make them lnteresUn1 !
The next time you find
yourself with l nover
meatloaf, roaata, or
ham, try using them ln a
baked· bead main dlab.
Canned brick oven baked
bead• are a natural
fla•or partner for a
variety ot meats. Jn fact, 8-h r ulta re so lint·
· rate, :,rour I mlly will lbink you atartea from
s'Cratcb. For Meatloaty B ans
lmpl1 comblb a can of brick oven bilked beans
with cubed meaUoaf.
Soatgn the mixture wltb
chm tauce, sweet pepper
relhh, and cbopped
re ppe.r. Tbe beans
wUl keep the meaUoaf
mol1t and flavorful as
they bake to1ether ln the .oven. It's euy to com·
ple'te the meal wllh a
tossed salad, crusty hot
bre d or rolll, and freab
fruit for dessert.
Pork ls a traditional
favorite with baked
beans. Cul leftover roast
or chope Into bite size
pl4!cea and add to baked
beans with bits of apple,
onion, and a llttle brown
1ugar. The 1avory
aroma as th.la caaerole
bakes will entice diners
tothetabl .
W'.anacs,ay, January 11. 1t11
....
For a aklllet aupfer Meatloaly beans make an OWN casserole. that ls ready ln f ve .r ' minutes try a comblna· <J·:
tlOnofbeansandleftover meatloaf, chili sauce, chopr m8.iningapple.Jn·
1lam 1 eoed with ma· 1'Weet pepper relish and a medium casserole mix
ple syrup. !The surprise creen peppet. Bake toettber baked beans,
la a julcy cruabed about 30 minutes. pork, cbopp d apple,
plpeapple toppint you Makea: &servings. brown sugar and onion.
spoon over tho mixture APPLE "N POU Place reserved apple
ju1tbefonbeaUn1. BEAN BAKE 1licesontopofcaaaerote.
llE4TLOAFY BEANS 1 apple, peeled and Bake about 25 minutes.
1 can (28 ounces) cored ~ Ma.tea~ 4aervings.
brick o baked beans 1 can (16 ounces) or 1 SWEET BEANS
1 pound meatloaf, Jar (18 ounces) brick 1 can (28 ounces)
pineapple over beaa
mixture. Heat about S.10
minutes. Makes: S se"·
in11.
Apple PeadtY
cubed oven baked beans · brick oven baked be•ns
I/• cup chlll aaue• IA cup maple or pan·
'4 cup sweet pepper !,A, pound _pork, cubed cake syrup
relish 2 tablesp00ns brown l cup diced ham
2 t a b I e 1 po on s sugar 1 can (20 ounces l
choppedareenpepper 2 tablespoons crushed pineapple,
A Roast for the Famil,;
hip: Slice fresh peach
into a baking pan, aboUt
3 cups. Add 1 cup canned•
apple sauce. Sprinldei
with autar, clnnamorr.
nnd dot with butt ••
Make drop blacuita froiM
a mix and drop over
fruits. Bake at 35ct
de1rees l.Ultll the blscuilll
are puffed and brown,
Serve with ttearn. or· t~
cream.
A typical favorite in
most houaeholda in
terms of economy and
flavor ls a bralstd beef
roast. However, for a bit
of variety, try this tasty
variaUon.
Famlly Style Roast
starts with a thick cut ot
round steak, often called
a family steak. This cut
is an especially 1ood
value u ll ii lean, bone-
leu, and there ta no
waste.
The basis or this zesty
sauce la a c•n of toD\aloes, accented with
worcestershire 1auce
and chunka of celery and
green pepper. To further
simpllry preparation, an
envelope o( brown aravy
mlx is aUrred lnto the
tomatoes when combln·
lnl the lnCredlent.a. This
clever trick thickens the
sauce durinc cooking so
you don't have to pre·
pare eravy at the last
minute.
Serve this attractive
roast garnlsbed with a
rinc of Golden Glow
Potatoes. The potatoes
are made in a jiffy with
an en~e of potato
1ranul• to which eel
and cheese are added.
They become golden brown when placed ln
th.e oven for a few
mlnutel before servine.
Complete your meal
with lettuce wed1es,
pineapple upslde·down
cake and mJlk or coffee.
FAMILYSTYLE .
ROAST
2 pounds top or bot·
tom round steak. cut l\oit
inches thick
1 tablespoon fat
1 envelope ('4·oz. >
brown aravy mix 40'
1 can ( 1.·.·l b. )
tomatoa .,,
1 cup chopped celery
'4 cup chopped
rreen pepper
1 tablespoon
Worcelterahlr6 Sauce
1 tealpoon l\ll&r, lf
desired
Brown steak In fat ln
skillet. Place iil aballow
casserole. Combine con· • tents of sravy mix en·
velope, tomatoes, celery, ere en '\)epper. worceater1blre 1auce.
and 1uaar; pour over at~ak. Cover (use
aluminum foll if
cn11erole bu no cover);
bake ln 350 dearee oven
1 IAI to 2 bciura. or until
tender. 6 aervlnp.
Shrimp With Sance
1 slice lemon
Preheat oven to 325 chopped onion drained
decrees. In a tar1e Preheat oven to 32S In a large skillet mix
cauerole dish, mht'deareea. cat six i.4-mcb tosetber beans, maple tocether baked beans, allcea of appte, set aside; syrup and ham. Sprand
DS OF THE
•
(From Pase ct>
SAVORY BEBF 8BIN
4 1llet11 beef 1bank
or sbln (about 2 pc>Wld.a)
One-quarter cup bot
waler
1 cup tomato JuJce
1 teaspoon prepared
mustard
2 teaspoons
Worcestershire sauce
• onions, peeled and
quartered
3 stalks celery,
sliced '
1 clove garlic
1 bay leaf
Salt and pepper to
t aste
Three-quarters cup
cold water
1 teaspoon
arrowroot or cornstarch
Combine s hinbone ·
and water in a nonstick
covered skillet or heavy
Dutch oven. Cover and
steam 10 minutes to
melt fat. Uncover and
•ontlnue to cook over
tnoderate heat until
liquid evaporates and
beef browns in its own
lnelted fat Turn to
prevent sticking. Use
the tip of a knife to
tltslodge fat in the
marrow bone. Pour off
all melted fat from the
p• t.
Add remaining in·
gredlents, except cold,
water and arrowroot,
atirrin1 well to scrape
up flavorful brown
residue. Cover and
simmer OVOf Vet)' lQW
heat. one bcMlr orJbMJt•,
until meat ls tender.
dd a llUle bot wllter,
4leceuary.)
At tbe last mlnute, com bloe oold water and
arrowroot and 1tlr
amooth. Stir into the pot,
unttl sauce thJckena aod
cleau. Makea four urvin11, undtr 300
calories each. (Serve
wlth cooked brown rice,
if desired. 90 calories per half-cup.)
FOOD
•
Full, Rich,
Smoked·ln
Flavor
With coin, scratch-off all silver boxes.
INSTANT WIN-If any 3 Identical dollar
amounts appear In a straight row, you win
mount Indicated. For example, three $100
amounts In a row wins $100.
nm YAWi
SERIES IL·22 ODDI CHART
EmCTIVE JUUARY 18, 1171
ODDI ODDI 1 11 TICUT TICG'l'I
U.S.D.ll. Choice Beel
SAFEWAY
RM POT ROAST
f •
.DD
COLLl!CT A WIN-Separate the 2 bingo
number pieces at bottom of ticket and place
in matching bingo number spaces on collec-
tor card. Collect numbers to complete any
straight row of 4' boxes. Pilze la Omltecl to
amount 1hown for game regardless of
number of rowa completed.
~" Oom~~-Gob scc;:~:z:~eat = 699
~Trash Bags 30 °:.~1~:~1ze ~ 99~
~ riscO Oil PureVegeta~e 24-Gz.a•
~Hili 11111 Beans ~::.. ,=-39~
Variety Department! .
SAUJEPAN ;
Sltverstone •
8i:' _!399
'
'•
I
1
:DAr~ANUT u. cut eras •lie
~roayonn
2tabh poqt\S honey
1 tabl pc>9ll Tia ana ~ cup choj>pcd nut.I
\It cin> •hreddoo coconut
: Arrll'nge tho UcCd banana1 on a bed of let·
tuce. Mix mayonnaiae, boney and Tia Maria in •••mall bowl and 1poon over Ute baiumu. ~rlDkle nuta and cocunut all over. 8CO'ITl8B LEllON FILLE&
\9cuppo,vdered1u1ar
3 tablespoon• ftour ~cup lemon juice
3tablt poonallmejuice
J,lj cup hOney
l en, Ulhtly beat.en
J tablespoaaa Drambuie Kbt all 1n&redlents in top of double boiler o~er hot water. SU• until thickened. Cool.
Delicious u spread between layert of cake
or ln pie shell. DANISH HONEY PANCAKES
3eas
l'h cups milk
1\4 cups sifted nour
!
~ tablespoon powdered sugar
Duh of salt
,_, cup boney
~ cup powdered sugar in reserve
1 cup Peter Heering
Beat enslwell with hilh strokes until con·
slstency Js bubbly and light. Stir in milk and
, add 1u.car1• salt and flour. Mix until smooth.
i Keat &riQQle to a moderate temperature and
· spread evenly and thinly. Tum when underside l• ·
brown. Fold onto.platter and sprinkle with aug-;
ar. Pour Peter Heering onto pancakes. When
namea are out, sprinkle with sugar and serve
am mediately LEMON LIME DllESSING
2 eggs, taahtly beaten
"• cup lime 1ulce
14 cup lemon juice
l tablespoon Sciarada
'"!I cup honey
,, teaspoon salt
l tablespoon chives
i 1 cup sour cream r Mix eggs. juices. Sciarada and honey in t saucepan. SUr over low beat until corWiteacy
is thick. Mix salt. chives and sour cream in a l small bowl and fold into mixture in saucepan.
" Chill. HONEY BRAN MUFflNS \
2 cups sifted flour
3 teaspoons baking powder
12 teaspoon salt
':i teaspoon nutmeg
Spjcy P,ear Crumgle with Date Sauce,
\ .
:Pear 1'p '
!With Dates
•
,....unam
WD .. IAll. 11 tlml
JIU,, JAii. M, 1911. . ,.._, _ _... ............. -·----
-
.. ESH
GROUND BEEF
I '
t I I I ~ .
BEEF LOIN
BONELESS TOP
SIRlOll
. STEAKS
II 2'!
iEEfmBE STEAKS 19}
DUIU9U1
COUMftY MMD BACON
CRISP R D
DELICIOUS
APPLES
4 lbs.
11 00
IEEFROUND
BONELESS
CAPICOD
SIJ,000/$2,110
TOrALOOWH
Wiadln• roadway to
I09l'lDI 2 *11)' ftltteat!
Prlvate ~ protect MOhaded eiQtry to lavish tMn1 room. Gourmet
kitchen overlooks sun· ahlne cou.rtyard I Wind·
1nl' tlttW9Y leads to aweePlni master bdnn
;i =u• cblld'a retreat! l Seller la anxious.
8"1 0
Ol'(l'f lll9•11S~IOWMt:'ft
~~ --' THE REAL ·
ES!A_TER_S _·
TIAILaPAIK »"l!Dac..11\0Ulelt •1'4 aiwl~DOolcm •~ ~ •k• wllb Iott or treee and J&Ddscapln-. Room far apamtoa. Of. tenct at 111t.• with .,.., f avarabl• flnaDQ. ""-can m-l1Dl
C:SELECT ~PROPERTIES
~ · ~ .. HERITAGE
. . HEAITORS
58R&21A
Wood floore. woocl lblnil• root, fireplace. dbl•.-'.'•"···· '$14.500. Ol/nL\ ftDUolq anU • lll&aADll nurWaraer. a.yw.c....
lllO Mcw~llT4. c.e....._ Ml·m•:
TUESDAY CL\18: The :Newport Harbor
1roup will meet for a brunch In the Balboa Bay
Club at 11:80 a.m. Tuesday. Jan. 24. Entertain·
ment will be provided by Paul Tracey, a native
of 8oUth Alric
EXBCtrl'IV£ WOMEN INTEaNATIONAL:
Tb• r::;> will obeerve its 26th anniversary by
inata MW' officers Tuesday, Jan. 24, dlllner .
at 7 p.m. Speaker wlll be Paul Mitchell.
New olftcen are Peny Michel. president;
Jean.De Hein, vlee J>l'ftldmt; Irene Ehrlich,
secretary. and Mary Hernin1. treasW"ft'.
JllESA VERDE REPtJBUCAN WOMEN:
New offlcen will be installed at 10:30 a.m .
Tuesday, Jan. 24, in the Reuben E. Lee
r"taurant. Seat.d will be Jrene Hajek.
Marybeth Collum, Delores Irwin, Edith
Beamlab, Pbylli5 Bradley, Cort.ie Cullen and
Ruth Fleet. lntettsted women may call Mra.
Hajek. S46-2402.
• IBLF·ESTEEM CENTER: A seminar on
How to Get Whal You Really Want 1n Ute wlll
be -1>reaeoted by the Barkldale Self-esteem
Center at 7:30 pm. Wednesday, Jan. 25, at the
center, 3400 lrvine Ave., Newport Beach.
Speaker will be Ed Harmon, director. Addi·
tiona) information ls available from the center.
751·133t.
BETl'ER BREATHERS' CLUB: Orange
County residenta with lung conditions are invit-
ed to the meeting at St. Jude Hospital.
Fullerton, W""'1esday, Jan. 2S, at 7 p.m. Paul
Ovando, M. D .. will speak on the subject
Pulmonary Function Testing. Additional in-
formation is available from the Lung Associa-
tion, 835-LUNG.
SMITH COLLEGE CLUB: Mrs. Paul
Rekera will host the annual winter meeting in
her Corona del Mar home at 10 a.m. Wednes-day, Jan. 2S.
Carol Allen will speak on The Gathering or
the Clans and show slides of the event. in Scotland. •
REUNION: 1968 graduates or Estancia
High School will have their 10-year reunion
soon. Class member5 are invited to call Dorinne
Wagner. 645-8935, or Norinne Wagner, 645-3363,
for details.
Bol111a Grande High School's ~lass of 1968
. also w1lJ be meeting. Graduates may call Donna
Downing, 968 6038, or Judy Williams t2131
439-6133.
TEEN CHALLENGE L.,OMEN: Kay Smith.
wife of Chuck Smith. past;;r of Calvary Chapel.
will speak ror the 11 .30 a.m. luncheon planned
for Thursday, Jan. 19, at the Teen Challenge
Center, Orange.
Reservations may be made by calling .
633-3000.
ALTA BARIA COMMITfEE: A musacal
proaram has been scheduled by the Orange
Counly Philharmonic Society committee for
11:30 a .m. Thursday, Jan. 19, aL the Newport
Beach home of Mn. Edward Scbwnacher.
Performing will be Thomas Mancini.
violinist; Mary Mancim, pianist; and Jam~s
Ronacca; baritone.
KAPPA ALPHA THETA: The El Camino
Real Alumnae Club will hear a talk by a
• DEAR ANN
• LANDERS: l wrote to
: )'OU several montba •10
• •to ask what to do about
: ; my busbianid ttcklllil our
• three•)'e&r·old son. We
had manr arguments
about lt. felt he was
' subcon1clou1ly an· 'ta1onlllo1 the cblld
because '1\mmJ always
, ended up crylof. My •hua.baod aald was
' cra11 -that ~ ~u 11
t in f\aD anCl the drt)d WU
' ef)'int f'lOm GbabStlon,
but he reaU; liked It. Your n1pon H,
' --i'ell ~ bdSband to
CBa191'1AN WOMEN'S CUJ : A Fresh
Start will be the theme of th .Hunttnatoft Beach
1rou1,>'• :hmcheon Wedn.eldaY;r;_Jan. 25. at the
Hununatm Beach lnn..1~ak.er Will .,. eon.
Alexander, a beauty apeeta.Uat from Redlands.
Reserveuons may be made by calllnc Mn..
John Murray. Huntlniton Beach.
AMERICAN LtJTHE AN CBUBCH
WOMEN: A proaram on alCIObolllm WIU be P.i.
sented by Al•Anon for the Newport Harbor
Lutheran Church group ThundJY. Jatt. 19, at.
7: 30 p.m. at tho cburch, Nt~ B ch. The
public ii invited. •
DENTAL HYGIE • ASSOCIATION:
Dental l\yaiecllsta from Soutbem Catlfornla "111
meet fOl' a ccmventlon at the SoUth Cout PJua
Hotel Frida.Y·SUnday, Jan. 20-22.
Speakera wW include Seo. Paul Carpenter, ..
Aasemblymao Robert Cline, and ElteT' WllkhiJ
Gallagher, D.M.D. ToplCI wUl be com· •
prebm.aive patient care, early cletectioQ of oral
cancer and the dental hy&itiUSt as aa. 'indepen-
dent contractor.
BIBLE BRUNCHES: Angelyn Danluma
will speak at two brunches at the Balboa Bay
Club Friday, Jan. 20, and Friday, Ju. 27,
becinnlng at 10 a.m.
The events, for women only, are tilled Vital
View1><>lnt and Pie in the Sky. R8"r'Vallon1
are .available from Helen Mundy, 6'78-1898, or
Julie Pope, 759-918S .
COSTA MESA WOMEN'S CLUB: P11t
presidents wUl be honored during a noon tuncb·
eon Friday, Jan. 20. A musical program will be
presented by Pam and Jimmy RhOdes. ..
AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY: A con·
ference tiUed The Orange Couoty Connection
<The People Side of Cancer) is scheduled for
Friday, Jan. 20, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the
Anaheim Hyatt House. 11\e PUJ'PCl!50 ta to up-
grade communication methOds' ror social
workers and others who care for cancer pa·
taents.
FRIENDS OF FOlJNTAJN VALLEY
LIBRARY: Dorise Jesko, first librarian, will
speak and show slides of Greece durin& a 10
a.m. meet.irig Friday, Jan. 20, at the librat)'.
The group will celebrate the Ubtani's 13U\ birth·
day.
'
.... " . . . ..._.
-
-------
..
Far left, Josh Logan
will speak in Town
Hall series; left,
Mrs. Jerome Paiken '1
of Hadassah.
~adcq/. ~ notices to Club Caln·
dar. Da:iltl Pilot, P.O. 8oz WJO,
Co1ta MettJ, CA ns2!. 81 IUt'f to tn·
wtlb In Cld0aftc1.
• clalde IP'" nam• and p#aon• "'""ber. Notlca mud be m our h4ntU two
To rtqUUC a pktun, torlt• or ccU
the Feotur" ~rtmtnt. fa..4121.
Pictures art UmUid to /""4·~1
Oplm to l/w ~f>bC,
worker 'co t and was plus tax, St.OS: Total
sure the penoo who did S19.82 •
the collectiJJZ pocketed Anybody who WIJIU
some of the money. the .louly Job can uvo
I JJed · offt 1t. -PED UP ud: tel :13u rro: DEAit no: ,I doa't
Heh penon ts like polJ.. tlabak yo • ,,4 take
tris teeth. We are 21 peo-
ple on our noor, which
means Im collect $20
alnce the one honored
doesn't donate.
I
The World
Of Kids
It's a celebration of
children's art, depicting
the imagination, talent and
spirit of joy in a child's vis-
ual world.
By MARCIA l'ORSBERG
Of Ult o.lty .cltl .....
Self portraits and still llfes and can and
shapes and peoole. Water colors. crayons, pen
and pencil, Chalk pastels. It's an art show, but a
special one, because all the artists are children,
ages 5 through 9.
Selected drawings, painUnp and sculpture
by young children In Orange Caunty wlU be
displayed through Sunday, Jan. 29, in the
comm unity gallery at Golden West College in
Huntington Beach.
Curator of tho exhibit is Harvey Clemans,
Newport Beach resident and art instruct.or at
GWC.
He worked with art coordinators of selected
school dl11trlcls in the county wblch have
exciting art programs, he uid. Artwork from
Garden Grove, Tustin, Anaheim, Irvine and
Orange distracts la represented, along with
individual pieces from the El Toro and Newport
Beach areas, he added.
''This l11 a celebration of children'• art,
depiciliig the imagination, talent and 1plrit,«>C
Joy ln a child's vlsuat world, 0 be tald. Works
were chosen for lndlvlduallt)', orl1lnality,
imagination, Insight and fun, he noted.
The 60 pieces have a rresb and bonest
quatity--2:".:::some show meticulous detailing,
others 'V'eil a happy.go-lucky attitude.
There are clay Mexlcu bellJ, a full·ltncth
portrait mural, pictures of a parade. a
.caterpUlar, Indians, nowers in a 1l11a vase, a
striped snake Jnd a sun.
There's ah Inkblot, papler·macbe erittera,
crayon resists, a •triking phot.ogram and a
thr ·dlmen1Jonal aculpture made of
construct.Ion paper •
.. W wanted· to show a child'• own :untque
tndlvldu uty," aaid Clemau. ·we w r.n't
looldnl for a Jot e>f adult aupervf1lon, and the
1how wasn't based on an adult level. Instead,
t'• chlldren't lnal1hta lnto the world."
• The PUl'PPM Pl the abofltill lt 0 to upoae
the general public, our tt.Udenta anct our facultr,
tO the quality ol art that a child ls capable Of, '
h I Id.
Ga bOOt'I m l to 4 p,m. weekdaJS and
' to t J>,.m. dnosdays, or by 1peclal
arran Wit&: cfemau i toura and flel4 '
1ri •
.. -... . ... '
orum-cm~om
wom n sp0rtswear
........
Above, workbyHeidi ·
Faessel, 9, read!:
'This is a picture of
Christopher Colutf}-
bus' boat. He sailed
with three ships. All
the men were look·
ing for India but
they ended up in
America. When the
men sailed up on
shore, they were
happy, but the land
was not India. The
picture shows them
at sea.'
Left, Alan
Kinkaid's
'Marcie';
below, John
Winker's
'At the
Docks.'
ARJ < arch 21·AJ1rll lt): N w approach
1trves youa: purpose -be ell , rs tUe, Will·
inl to expertmcnt nd cour cnG'1Jb to be
orl1lnal. , Aquarlu fl r prominently.
Aspects re &Ood-wny will ved. welcome mats are out and you are .. ln.''
T.4.V& tApril 20-May..20): I>Clbt.s are paid
-you rec ave c l~ due. Aquarlan llrures
promlnenUy. Ac ent on valuables, peraooal
pode lions, income. One who aided in past
could a'lak reap arance. Spotlicht Is on prof·
it. You are ,i:olng to win -you'll be richer
for the. ~l>Cri nee. ,
GEMINI <May 2l•June 20): Check OP·
portunity that had-app r nUy: slipped away.
You will be gcttln1 a econd ch nee. Make the
most of tt by taking lnltiaUv , beinC versatile,
fulfllling social obll1aUon1, dinl borlions.
Sagitt nan could be in pkturo.
CANCE lJuoe 2l·July 22>: Stick to facts,
get be~· n information. A 1ecret cop·
lerence ®uld be under way~d you could be
the main subject of dllcusslon. Maintain poise,
dignity, btlance. Aquarius, Scorpio and Taurus
figure ln scenario.
LEO <July 23·Aug. 22): Accent on
friendship, romantic interests, alcniflcant
chances, creative outlets, written afat rial.
Your position is good, better than aomo persons
, would care to admit. But yo1.1 know it and abOUld
be confident. Yes, there is room for love!
VIRGO <Aue. 23·Sept. 22): Check resourees,
protect bom poss lobs, 1aln cooperation of
those ·tn pocitlon to in ur• zohlng, to beauuty
surrouildinc . TaUTUS, Ubra figure prominent·
ly. You are going to bo offered more money for l
your producL' or senkea.
LIBRA <Sept. 23:oct. 22>: Acknowledge
past favors, services without beina subservient.
Long.range "Yiew serves best purposes. Adhere
to principles. Don't dilute meanlnes. 1oals,
asplraUons. You will receive nolice wbicb
amounts t.o a "green lii:ht." SCORPIO lOct. 23·'.Nov. 21): Organi&e
priorities -1et businesa and penooa1 aftalrt ln
order. Older individual, who may control pune
strings, ii observtn1 and c:onsidertn1 a poaible ,
promotion for you. Act accordln1ly. PartDer or •
mate preaenta "schedule of expenditures.••
Maintain open mind! '
SAGITl'ARl1JS lNov. 22·Dec. 21>: Accent ~
on public relaUons 1ectlin1e story to more peo. ~
pie, solidlC)'irir goals, aspirations. Lecal affairs :
are in picture. Aries, Libra fiauro prominently,
In matters of speculation, stick to number 9. An
aegressivc individual should be "alven his l
head." Means wait, be patient.
CAPRICORN <Decft 22-Jan. 19): New •P· '
proach to everyday tasu ls essential. Beine
bored ls not good · and you know it. Open :
yourself to challenge. Leo, Aquarius flauro
prominently. Service lmprove1 -you're able to '
make oonlribullons, eucieatlons which result in 1
progress. •
.AQUARIUS tJan. 20-Feb, 18>: Emphasil on
creativity, children, cha~~·· spec:ulaUve ven-
tures. physical aUraction. ~r Aqaarfan
!iiures promlnently. Hunch p dMdiitd!. AC·
fair of heart could cloud Jopc. Sttl\'e for
balance. •
PISCES <Feb. 19·March 20): You may be !
attempting to crowd too much into too small a ~
space. Know it and make necessary adjust· ' ments. Gemini, Virgo and Sastttartu. figure •
prominently -and so does the number 3. What
appears t.o be a minor detail actually requires
closer examination.
If Jan. 19 Is yoar blrtbda:r you art lndepen-o
dent, courageous, temperamental, stubborn,
creative and somewhat vain. August could be
your most significant month of 1978, a year
which features broader rccognlllon, the reallH·
tion that most or the "bad Umes" can be part of
the past. Leo, Aquarius persons play Important
roles ln your life.
Get the Regis spirit.
IHEI
I .,
Enjoy the best • • • right at home!
. . " • .• • • • . • ' • -• • • i .
' ; SJ09 : 7 Bone Roast... •
: Chuck cut of U .S.D A. Choice beef • ·~-------
,
0 Bone Roast ••• s119._
Chuck cut of tJ.S.D.A. Choice beef
S.,moked Ham 69(
SHANKS •
Oeliciour;! ... put on a pot of beanA
p,1,t Mignon ... the epitome of dinifll
delight! Tenderloin of U.S.D,A. Choice
beef, naturally aged, carefully trimnu•d!
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
FILET MIGNON
Stn·e 1teak u ith thu magnificently mecty
f reah Pacifi~ Lob1ter •.. flat· or and
ttndemeu you'll find 10 nu ardity!
OCEAN. FRESH
FROM THE PACIFIC
Beef Roast ::ious 516\ Ground Beef :rn:$1 1\
Chuck cut Choice shoulder clod Lean,..does not exceed 22r~ fat
Sausage or Bratwurst
Our ltlliln style $149 IMll• tr lrlbnrstl ,.._ml_. 1t1111ilw • ltt •
~:~LER 69~
Meaty Gr "A" fryer, with 1ibltt11
S uper -Fresh Prod.uce! ,.,
..... ...... ,...,_..
Bordeaux Wine
l&C Ptattt Litts SJ49
W •Wtt-S•
Breast of Veal •• s 14t
El Rnnchn'a genuine milk-fed veat
MILK FD ,
VEAL RUMP . SJ89 ROAST ,
Hound cut genuine milk.fed \-tel!
Veal Steak:" •• s2at
· Catfish Fillets s 11\
Braal:all ....... .-.... ti!
El Rancho·11 ccnuine milk-fed!
Veal Cutlets •••• s21t
RP.al milk.fed \leal-bonelea.' dll>ed
Veal Chops ••••• s31t . . ~ Garden frtflh! ... all 1reen ..• to taAt)', from tt'ndcr atalb tn delicate floret l.oin cut-itcnuine milk.fed veal! ~ _ Freflh watervar1tty-frt11h froun!
~MAHI s 129 •. ~MAHI ~ .I.Qr those memories of Haw•ii!
JUICY 29 LEMONS ~
California's tart, tangy Oavor
~· .. ~ S hopper Stoppers
J Miracle Whip ........ CJac
• That femoua t1alad dre11ing, from Kraft, that d<>e11110 many thinga for you! Quart
·Peaches · on Mom •••••••••• 49c
;i·hcx Halv or Slic of th kret ilk-smooth golden cling ! Jl.:o 21"1 can
Cottage C'-eese .... 6Jc
• Ch<>O$tl Largo or Small Curd or Low Fat ... dairy good from Sprinifleld! Pint
Zee Napkins • • • • 55c
Cour\try Garden prlnta-pka of 140
L & P1 Sauce • • • • ggc
Lea & Perrin· W0rccat.erehlre-lO en btle
Margarine • • • • • • 49c . Pecan TJirls • • . 45c
t Qu latyond~ lue! l lb AuntFanny'uwctittr at!pkaof6
\ Delicatessen
heddar Ch8ese .. s 15!
ORANGES =::... 4ias$1
Erozen Food
ORANGE 69c JUICE
Cal Fame concentrate-12oz can
Broccoli Spears 55c .
C & W ••. tender aarden IOQ:dn -lOoz -Chicken Pie S1tlJD .ssc
Van de Kamp'a cood eating! lOMr oz
Red ripe little 1t•m11 .•. 12 oz. b kl
Cherry 49c
Tomatoes •••• ,
MILK FED VW.
SHOULDER . s2a9
ROAST •
Boneleu-gonuine mllk·fed!
Shopper Sto'ppers
·Tomato ·Juice ........ 55c
Ubby•a, tM one you prefer for quality and rich navor! '46 ounce t'an
D • BERNSTDN'S 45c ress1ng LOW-CAL ••••••••
Ch005C IL4lian, Italian with Cheese or Vinairttltt> French .• ~ 8 ounce bottle
P-Nut Butter ~~~DFJt •• 89c
Tho Old·faBhioncd kind-just es ifit ~ame out of the tub! Smooi>l or Nutty-16 oz
. Crackers wrsco • • 59c
Salted or Unaaltcd-J lb carton
.. '·
HOW 50/ OVER
REDUCED YO FACTORY
TO INVOICE
MEW 1978 MUStANG 11
• 2 DOOR HAIDTOP
5991.9 4 •peed manual transm1ss1on, bucket 1eat1.
carpeting. t8Chometcr, amp & temp. gauges. wheel
covers, 231itrel·4eng1ne, p1natr1pes.wawb1asurn, IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ON power rack and pinion steering, power front dlec .y
brakea, front end rear bumper guard•. AM radio. NE~ 1978 11f TOPSI'' tinted glau-complete. Ser #8AQ2Y103010 Stk. IS& l.ff • •
~~1: CUSTOM CORNER
EXAMPLE RO·l~S.DISCOUMT
MEW 178 HOLIDAY WHEELS ~UST. CONVERSION
Cust. paint. carpet. Vista bay window. mags and $ 20 OFF
tires. rack and ladder. drapes, bkt. seats. auto. o I l.._.DOW
trans. tint glass. pwr. steer . etc. (Stk T476) (Ser W "
#AG5446) (Wtnd. Slkf. $11.378.20) STKR.
LEASE DIRECT.
AND SAVE
WE LEASE ALL MAKE
CARS AMO TRUCKS
COMPARE •
OUR COMPETITIVE RATES!
"' '13fP.RD LTO t Di\ NHGt...,dt~ .. :S'-'·-r"··+---lll!pClla 2 Dr. Hardtop
V•f, Automatic Tr11ns.. Power Steering.
Tinted GI ... Wtre Wheel Covers, Radio,
Heater. A great buy for great tranaportatlonl
Lie. tWSE270 SlJ(. f3140A
v.a. Automatic Trana.. Power st ..... Power
Brakes. Factcfy Afr Cond .• Stereo Tape,
Vloyl R~ Radio, and HHter. 1.0. 1158520~1P3127 .
52099
4 cyl., 4 fl*ld, h•ter, 1... t~ 42.000 mlles. Immaculate. Lie. 't249LJD Stk.
IP3216
l
llG CANYON TOWHHOMI, J IDIM
Beautiful new! 3 bdrm Pinehurst
model (or 2 and a don) with
:spectacular golf course view and a
location that's close to the pool.
jacu7.zJ and tennis courts. Whatta way
to live I Completion expected by
December. so hurry. Presented at
$199,500.
UfllillC)UI: fi()Ml:S
REAL TORS). 675-6000
2443 East Cotst H1gliwav. Corona del MM
also in Mesa Vt!rde, at 546·5990
8wrol I oo2fch•rel I 002 ....................... -;i; ••••••••••••••••••••••
·-------------------------MANAGER-IEAL ESTATE
NEWPORT BEACH
A prime opportunity with an
outstanding real estate organization + high earnings! Experience is a
mus t. Prestigious location. All
applications held in strictest
confidence. Please reply to Ad #68,
Daily Pilot. P 0. Box 1560. Costa
Mesa, CA 92626
Ga•rtl IOOJGIMrol
MICIOCOMPUT i-We have ~ust
placed this delightful new home on
our computer and you can be the first
to inspect a beautiful Mesa Verde 4
bedrm for only $112,000. Elegant
upgrading thru-out for tbe
discriminating purchaser. 64CM 161
· llAUTIFUL MESA Y.IRDI -
>'•Exceptional" describes this
bca utiful adult occupied condo!
Immaculate condition. new carpetingt
outstanding location across from poo
and school. Praced at $62.900. 146-4141 --
Serving Costa M cs;i·lrvlnf•
Huntington 8eoch·N cwpo1t Beach
I 1002 GHerel 100
HARIOR VIEW LUSK
PltlYACY -PllYACY -PllYACY
This 4 bedroom haven is an executive
reward -green bills, blue Pacific, a
home to make it aJt worthwhile. Corona del Mar at its best! 1436
Keyview. Open daily till sold. $259,000.
·=~~~;.~~ ····~~~··.. ~
'bask In thr sun or HIAROCEAN ~
W ESl.l·:Y ~
TAYLOR CO.
HEJ\ LTOH~ ~1111'l' 1 !H(i
Newport Beach llvlnf. $45,000 DOWH
J U S T S T E P S T 0 Pnde of ownenbJp unitE
BEAOf. Large 2 Bdrm with fantut1c stone
units , with patio• & fireplace1. Enclosed balcoruea olfet excellent eara1ea. All beauUlul
rental unit• for 1um· spacloua unite. Owner
mer/winter rentals. bought another -must
OPEN DAILY 1·5 1acrifl~I Hurry! Many
4604 SEASHORE DR. additional Investment
-
WAlVlfRONT oPPOrtunltJea. Call now
HOMES 96:M881
·~-~~liijl
ATTENTION POOL HOMlll
VETERANS! ::=:~
Rent till youn-l:lu&e 4 Treme:Ddou a Br home
Bdrm w /11• countrr w/oven.l.ied Cam rm as ~tcben. maaalve brtct m.aulve brtck tplo ·on
trplc. trult wees 1alcre. quiet, Hduded SL Seller
OwDll' WUl ~ all must alO.e I• a hurry " • olffln. AtkiDJ $12,SOI. will tnla'taiD an.y reu.
CallNaw. aa.r.
J.C. .... a.dten 714-780(» 54~5101
LUIOA ISLAMD-SIH.500
What a great fun area to live. Steps to
beach, quaint restaurants & unique
shops! Lovely 3 BR comer home incl.
s pac. mstr BR with study. Comer
fireplace, 3 baths & south patio.
WESUY N. TAnOR CO., ltlALTOltS
21 I I S-Ja... Rood
HEWPORT CBn'Bt. N.L 64-Mt I 0
1002 G1•r .. 1002 ..............................................
llACHRmlAT
$17,900 VllW
Slepa lo pouodlDt surf aixl crystal aaodl Back
yard aa b~ area pl-r· lfQUnd. Wlndinl wooden wllkw~ loaec:luded en
try I Gourmet kitchen. ~ conver1aUoo area plu. tire pl ace I
SuDalllne breakfast
patio. Pool·Jacunl·
volleyball Gardeu Uvina
atlts tlnelt.1414010
Of'(N Ill 9 •If$ 'LW TC>lf NICf'
BuyincJ a
House?
FOR BUYERS
AND SELLERS!
One year protec:1.loa plan
on all appUancea. t.lec· tncal, plumblnt & heat-ln,c. Fm-info call:
Al .
I~~ ~ 11'13~.eo.telllleM
LIDO ISi.i HOIWH
Prestige home• BR. •Ma ths, formal
dining room, 2 patios on ov ized
corner lot. Designed tor f amlly living
& entertainane. S375.000.
Newly rem~eled +-bdrm, den, "
baths, living rm w i catbtdral ceiJ.tng.
Lge. master bdrm suite. $224,950.
ltG CAMYOM
4 BR, fam rm, 3 baths, Beautlfully
decorated BroadmC)Qr Plan 3 w/p tio
views from each room. S325,000.
-
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
3·11 Huy-\•d•· Ur"'' r.i B ti!'> tilt.I
EASTSIDE-:-COSTA 'MESA
Sparkling. conveniently located
Tri-plex. 2 Bedrms & convert. den
with fireplace on groWld fioor front.
<~ > Studio type a.mitt with livin1 area
& halt baths down & 2 bednns with
full baths up&talrs. There la an
enclosed garage +parking apace each
unit. $145,500.
759-0811
LIUHIW
COUMIPA.RI ~ Walk er t; let:
Completely redtc. 4 br, I R•al -late
ba POOi home with oew ---"---~~equip. All new cal1)41t. 4 BR. frplc, very clean.
cuat.om paint. dbl frplc & m.m. ApprO.ll 15SOaq fl.
mtn)' DOW xvu. .toO Owner Ht of 1tate. a·.Prtnc~ By Oft SllM144 &U"71P ves. •---· ...,_ _ _....,.._.._
IU.&.111._.~ 9-'S l\etalt Speclall1i.. -• .._ 3,4 or I bdrm modtl1
A beautiful, lmmac, aoll,;. som• w/pool1.
pa1'\~ home that bu lles.400'.I JmoWft Only 1 tasticllou Pennlqton PropertJH
owner! Neaa Verde.
l beaullrul on el a
kmd Purdu M l in Colle t Park. Tbla s
bedroom or 2 +a dn
bome ls prot .. 1lona1Jy
tudluped' and decarat·
ed. tdcaUy louted oo a c«n« lot watb loacb ol
prtvacy. Must ae• to
btlltvt. Aikin& ODI~ -I
1109,0: Brier w1U allow 4 IR•$69,900 UNCH ltli'-TY ~ eoUtlnvesbnent Two full b1ths, l1e Hvln1 111-1000
CdJ 645-1 I OJ :':'=c:r.~fy C:n'ia~ ---1-----
Ice reu )'ud fot kkll II • S J SledrOom
IArwtn bullt~ll falt\lly room. dintn& room, s car
1ar11e. Plut many UP· srldtd extras. On • Q\IJel
cul-de .. ae, near abop·
ping. P'or more detall.t, eell~
r:one:sT E
OLSON .. . ... .
dop. Walt lo achoolJ Ill • -0111111111
'°'1COUl'ff, San Mateo llodel.
· Proleu1onally dec:orat· COLLINS ed. BeautJtul view nl&bt
& ASSOC. •day. m.am• t404lM ~425 _OwnJ_.;._,..,. __ ·~~~--
~.::.i:..,. GREENTJIEE
atmosphere I Boat aala a bcaroom ::-~• ana. Dramatic with lovely paUo and ar doatp. Dbl •· atrium alf 11M11t.w suite •
•ac .. , trYtol"loopenUvlnf,• EXcelletit loeatlonl "' -----------tamlly areu. Mus ve block &o park and 1ude
-------• flreplaee. Swttplaa tclM>ol ! Call us lotee~I __ TAX$HaTER mutet'. Cbel kltcben. REDCARPET754· ""'ohtlffcil sunlit interior decor. Eatlllde Co•ta Mesa,_Bkr __ .-._93_u____ UNIV.
three 2 bedtm hom• Ill -------• p •RK room for moni uaJta. 300' HEW flHA. PROGliM " deep lot. Hurry I Call ""'""E"' ., .o;. ~•u 3 B d r m • • 2 b a • ~ .... ~ ... n .,p .... wn_____..., Townbome. Ono of th•
~-:•HERITAGE
$1100. down on $60.000. man popular moclel1 in Plic:e. We bave 10 choice vw. n. Eactilent lou-homim from $57,000. to Uon. ov•looldq 1n11jor CorOMdtlM• 1022 CailhtMeM 1024 S14.IQO.wlthFHAterm1. &NeftbelL Let ta lbow ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••• .. ••••••• .. •• ~~~!!!!!!!!!~~!! 001 tar detaib. stl..00 yout.blabometocl11•
• • REALTOHS
Au• .-... • :f84MIS ..; Optetvenlqt. · HOUSE Al.vnti0 _.,... "" TRIPLEX. old lld'I U Mefw•tl la worth this prl~l But ATNEARBYM.V.C.C. lhwaits~'fl.:...tc.:
you can Jive oear the 0rt1owneroir .. c aa. a .. -coo.BU.~ beach in Corona del Jdar BA. •/formal dtnl.q 4' .....:-~~~~~.;..;;.;...;...
and have rear tenaota famll~ Sl25,000. te~
beip p~. $1 ?S.OOO. 'n'.SHAL PIHCHIM fWj
NORIMS RIAL n REALTOR PODlllcr Loft! * 494-1057 * 67MH2 ~ ~p.tuted condo. In demand "Loft" model 2 South of Hwy EMTRTAIMMIMT bedrooms, 2 baths, w~
llACHHOMI
S&ml1 area Of la.rs• uec.
$13 '. 500 cena cablneta. eaUna ar~a. en· ·1.n abaolut.ely cbarmln& PreeU,e llvl.n1. Spatkl· try ball. Larae mast.er bdck work. landtcap1n1,._ ______ _
2 bedroom on PotnsettJa tna pool Ii jacuni. Lute lui&e. BKR,' call 540-1120 fou.ntaina. exterior 1l1ht· GUAT PLACI
wtth beautJfw hardwood family room wlth -· inc! a1oa,5oo. BKR. GUATLOCA.TIOMI nOOl"I. Owner occupied firepl~ & wet bar. 4 5'M311 1'hll Sycamore model, la
forever and in xlnt cond. Bdrm. Seller bu moved. I Woodbridl• Creekalde tbru-out. 2 Full double Make oifer. Call todayl • • ·· SlOOODOWH home features 4 BR i caragesCNot tandem>. A M&-zn.s . ~I 11t Calltonlo.. Tbat even pa ya yoar 1:u FR and th.la brand
real doll house offered Ol'fN 'jj •·"st~ ro111N<t• · clottnf totta tool Oo th.ls ~ ~ la adj
tor the fint Ume In over 27611.0UHlO 2 bdrm 2 batb condo In =t.otho~:.t PoOl aa:i
Uyean. Lovely 2 al)' 5 Br. w/ prime H.B. location. recreallon area 1hl• C:.644-721 I pool-1ood area & P~mecullkereot. Call Usthlalaooeott.hefin•t
fot>.. s schools. SU0,000. Act. now bu,ys In Irvine. Prleed at
/Jn NIGEL. WTSIDI ~OHDO S4$-llO:S M0-3U6 $105,900
Immaculate move In • MIAJt M. V. 01\lll y &
/\SSOCll\ l ( S coodlllon. Curbside COUMTRYCLUI
P&l'kinadoor' CJQlyV ~ .. from -~-3 + lamlly rm.,
tlfltelc1n
•«Al l!>IAll
LVSKHARBOR
troatdel • sy-arp 1 bule loL Priced dibt. 1 _______ ......., ____ ,
bdrm + den ualt. lckal year warraot7. Call •"•IOO DOWN -W. HILLS atMtw bome lot )'OUDI fGCl .,...
red hill jlj.
552-7500
3 Br. 2 ba. Jra Jot. betut. couple er reUreda. ())v'd eva. llACH COMDO landsca~ln~ Prol. de· pa\Jo w/utro turf. To ~ Sharp 2 br, condo wlth GlllMTlll corate . By owner. ¥Mw,calloow. 54S-Mft. Clll.LISl"tl pool, p1.,~ and a 11!,f_,~1::/a t; I Br :t-1205,000 FH. UH llALTOll Clfdree IIte at,yle. call ........,., lltneteJOM
Sucreat Dr. CdK. '6J.ltll-DOWIAaeat5418082 lo.,..-tt. ewdnlil,1ardr 644-4201 opor, brick work It more. -v-OW Real Eatate Kllecrest by owner. Nice GLEMMAI Nl.SOO. Dys 833-C405;
---•• 3111' 1iw. ba. trplc nu cpt Exec. Home. ' Br + evea,SSl..$231
ARBOR VIEW
WITHA
HAUORVIEW
2 Bdrms each unit.. scar New eo.k1a, 2 Br, 2~ Ba, "~· o.e to shoppanl ••Gentlemen'•.. den. -..-.. s• ••NED pr. Deck • view from 2 fl'plc'a, ceramic Ule ll M:hoola CCJftventic>Aal BeauUlully appointed. riu-..._
--------upper unit. ~·~i. newly ldtdiem "bath. Pool & 1oen. S11.5oo. 3061 Loren Total A/C. Vacant 4' Soabsp It lhliMa. Woad
c:oastruct.ed. SIS.• Pb spa.8'JS.491%Broker La.5'Wl77 Wa1Un1. $9J,tlf0. fc•Dtled lhlnt ,rn.,
~ 645-9161
/Jn mr,rt.
131\1 Ll Y b.
1'1'J'JUUA T E.S
IEACHHOMI
Loveable 2Br bome In qulc~ 1rowtn1 area near anne4 MUina lD Hun n1ton Harbour.
Thia rerreabln1 bome bu S2l&C> mo. lncomo ln
-
associated
1tur~•111 •. Mf ~ • w·,,
'It: ....., ~ ~ • • . I. '
VATBMS
OML Y $62.500
Best buy ln the area. Air
condlltoner and aomc
other aJce xtra'1. Callln1
us i. a m\llt. -The doa
blteal A qlllck escow and this year•1 beat
Chri1tma1 present ta
497-3516 MIS• -DI Aaent l40-IS60 crmal d!n. rm., sun tilt A·-lllAMD ..W • •••av 0 _. aourmet. kitchen over.
11UMIOtlllM78
Does the ~bt appeal
lO you? If to. cOnlldtr' Jolnlne tbe pr.-Utloua OlOce& OI Unique Hom•
lot a faotuUc 19'18. Ac·
celerated ~ommlHlon IChedWe. lil-bouH swlnl
loau, creative •alet
..... COllqlQter t«mlnal
6 actlve tl'alnllll & ad·
-
s,, HERITAGE
. . ?U\I T'1H~ -------
CONDO I/SIDI -.,..,_ loob paUo. 2nd St.ory
Vsy sharp 2 bdrm unit. ~ ES Sharp 3 Br, up&raded tx.ta maateraulte +2nd New cpta "drpe la ll• CO!._}MofcolA. Coodo. 2t,\ yrs new, b4rmoverlookh11ireen-rm. din rm " kit. area. Buyer'• cuw~-~ • l~S.. 2 at.ry. Pvt lndry, belt. Thls 1arden home T ~I decor ted 1 now~~._,.. ............. • patio, 1ar+carport. No oaly-500. call 101700
w:.m .~•colon~ Ulla custom 3 bdnn, 2 common wall. Col:llm MN1119•11ui.wTe>•MN•
You11 tall ln love wit.bl• ~ bomeed bardas flrepLolac1 e Poot. , U a. 4 O O, N 0 r::~ti"i~iiiliiiiii!liii'I
one. &abmtt your FHA • :.e'a~ 7 • ve Y AGNTS. 9G3S2'1.
~· OraJt '59,900. • .. :t '=1:" .. -.. -••• .. ••••• a BR. 2 badli. NO -.c.
JUST UST!D dues I Xhit loc. near Jl.tJGUr !AM a nitrm_ 1cbool5'1Heritqe P..t. i------...__.,,, ... DI.a tlMM 2~ bath end Witt wtth itl $74.000. Broker~
:;: \Val km f; I r.r.
r: or.u: s l r;
OLSON . . .
...,._ ............. IL llLLS bo.t allp. lbarp 1 .,.._..,_"°""'"• Sl55.000 Call for appL ~9"dll 1041 ~?OU oowr ...................... .
_.. ,_CIU.UA.LTY llSTIUY
see UiJs _.,, ~n con· '7141146-2828 ON~MT
1tncted IBr. l'ABa rn.. 1044 Withltaonaandybeaeb
ODw1lrf cbarmer or So. ........... •••••••••••• In La1una Beach.,.
Qt Pt-. $042200 mOlf· WOOOlllMI s:no,ooo.
•yoalL«ll"'5e0$. BROADMOOR, 4 BR, '4t4-IOJS
Baccola built bome. 4 fain. rm., pool •spa. all
bdnn; ram rm, din tm, lmdlepc., decldn1. fenc· aJbailvt.w. 0pee dalb. lQs. cotsecm IGP'O" .. l~~SUT.5'>0. m•nt1, model fholile
Dlillle,_ I 02' eaad. liot'HDhldt.
-
BOND REAL TY
, tiogo
Ru\
LAGUNA
NIGUEL 4.9$-1720 •
DANA
POINT
4!13·8Sl2
LAGUNA BEACH 497.1331
THI
REAL ESTATE
CORNER OF THE
WORLD I
presents the charm of
NewportHelghls, 3 BR. 2
BA. fanuly room, wood ~~~~~~~~I declal, + gazebo tropical part-like yard Includes ..... Hiit 1050 •••••••••••••••••••••••
CJ Coldwell Bonker
s Kourcb Bay Pt UI
[;aguna Niauel
49~7222 111.013'
pond. A mUJt tee to •P·
predate Call for pre-
nuer showina.
540-1666
IT'S IM
NEWPORT IEACH
FOREST E
OLSON ...............
UHIT8> ROKUS
0... Smta.rfliiift
675-562'
AU.IM
THE FAMILY
can live eomtortablr ln
Uuupaclous home with 4
bdrms., den. t•mlly rm .
44 New Skyline, lBr.
l(ood loc. Reas renL
Priced toaell. 5'1-7991
TllPLEX. c.M.
Great Eutstde loc, &..hforSale 2200
newe-3br. 2ba, lrplc, yd. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~gi~~Uoa. eacl'. Ready to build on lot. fan·
TomLH. Rltr &42·180.1 taaUc ocean view Ir. walk
---------·---tobeacb, Lacuna
l block from ocean. I bt',
1 .. !>-. blta IUtc:b. Pref.
f nul)'. $ll00 mo. yrly,
f7M011
IMJ C4n)'on Buuty IBr,
din. rm .• 2~ ba. Paii·
taltlc &all course view,
Nr tennla II pool.
SlllO/eno tff.7170
Rita 2 aa +dbl 1ar, l.rdilr.·t4i&Omo. Avl lJll,
i7NOUn /wknch
? bdrm l ba, vu, frpl. bit· --------
Vlnt.a1e beAt'h cotta1e. 1 ins, D/W, wshrtdry.,
br, yrt1. New crpts. 1ar.141$lle.875-606l
:::.klnJC. '300. 175--0804 --------•1C:O.t• Mesa H24 --------························ Westcliff 3 bdrm, 2 ba !\dull 2 Bedroom, auper
w/pool. patio, water ADULT C:OHOO location. no pell,
paid. SGOO/mo. Ml-899.!.,.. 2 BR, 2 ba. yrly. '450 u 2 5 /month 51 I W.
STlftS TO llACH Wiison. tnq. apt E. I Br, 2 sty, 2 ''ar 1ur, blk
to bch, clb. prlv. lmmed 3BR,2ba,•nf.ft75 I .... u ....... -.a ....... -. nus JS THE PLACE!
2 aa. l ba, uitf. )'rly. S440 -""""'""'""Ar'~ (4e lront unit In triplex, IAYPIOHT COHDO Lee 2 br aarden .,,.. Is a a«llt.1, no pet.a. 07-8829
e...-.bld1.2BR,yrly•-br twnhse. Dah·whr, ---'--;;.__---....-~ -bl 1 b~ 5175 Clean 1 br dpl• lot
occp. mo. '42-3242
Nwpt Hilt, nr Hbr HI. 3
Br 1(., Ba. 1tove, fplc,
fnCd yd .• dbl 1ar. wlr " srdnr pd. S4:SO mo. lit 4' tut. no pets. 2418 Holly
Ln.""92S associated
tns. enc . tar .... 1 • __ .. I 'd ~Gas pd. 7718cott P . non ............. re•· r911 · 6G-&073 lnq. 954 w. 17th 541'°351
Woodland Village • au Paularifto
lllllKIV'. 111 1\i f tli:,
/ i)}' ""' IJolt'irou f •I 'I a. I
S. Q....te 327' Beaullful, new, adult
.. ••••••••••••••••••••• •Yrly BEAal Rentala ~ ~ location. 2
~ 3 Bl' a Sa twahae, 2Br & bach .• furn. apt.a •A · McWe t!fm':tdlately
w/View. Nr ocean, fplc , blk to ocean In Nwpt.
dbl 1ar. tennis & pool. Av 1 1 I. Ju n e . < 2 13 )
M2S 7H·060--l 268 790 801.3
S. Juan 'iew Duplex. 3 Br, 2 ba,
Capl1traM l271 frplc, lae suod~k. IA ~lk
••• .. •••••••••••••••••• beach. Winter $SOO. Avail
! brm 1 ba. brand nu, aummer. 494·1719
tOcat. In San Juan Viii. 1.lOOJSLE
9360. PeU/k1d1 OK. h 1 .., 731·5511. Hayward· Bae eorapt.-somo
Wauon Roni Eltate 671-3186
-furn 2Br Apt. Yearly JBr, 2ba. family rm .. La• auodeck. close to
back yd, 2 car ••r., vehl· everythlni. $34S. 873-0236 cJe storaae. tennis, no --
pet.. '335/mo. 492·57n SU2 Soalhoro. Vac. 2 Br.
S.. AH JID wtnt.er or yrly. Gar, DW,
••••••••••••••••••••••• nwlydec. M2·1714
~per value, 3 br, 2 ba, l BR Avail unUI June 15.
fplc, DW, carpet.I. J{ICS." S300 mo Includes ulll.
pet OK. $395. MH5'7 AIL 17H&U.
A&ent.oofee. 377'
Bachelor ~sao
1 Bdrm S285-S275 #
2 BdrmS295·S:W
Beautiful ne• 3 unit Wldlnp. Xlnl location near So. Cout Plaaa.
Children welcome. No .._ ..... ~,
peta. Renbl otnce open daily 10.$. MO Baker St, I
blkW. ol Briltol.
557-$215
. Yllti ..... ...,,.
20781burln Bran4 MW. lttge 2 br,
1"' ba toWnbou.ae w/farn room. XlM atta. '350.
..... If. ... . ....
•
I'
'
~.
PBX OPERATORS AllBoardl l.orll • 1hort tttm 11 • 111nmenla. Holiday ,.
vac pay. HotpJt&li&atlon
anav.-aj1111. -·-
c..,...0rt••
146-4741
(Acrou1"om
Oraote Co. Airport)
Eqaal <>PPor Employer
P~ICS
MOLD PRESS OPR
To operate injection ... moldlnt machines &
trim 1mall plastic parta.
Day lhU'l. Exper. pr.t'd.
Will train.
STACOSWITCH IMC
llJ9 Baker Colla Mesa
54t-l041
Equal Oppor Employer
PRESSER
PAltT·TIME
For Men'• Clolhlnc Store In
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' I
Slates Quits
Chairman Post
OellyrllMIUft....._
NEW LEADER
HB Planner ·Finley
Cops Find
No leads
To Bandit
FBI and Joell ~lice Offldala
satll today they have no new
leads in their manhunt for a lkl·
masked gunman who snatched
$44,130 ln loot from /l Huntlniton &each bank Mondat,af'lemoon.
But authorities indicated the
bandit may be respomlble ror
tx other Southern California
t:i•nk holdups lncludln1 two re-
cent heists in Laguna Hills.
Police and bank offlclals
would not confirm wtiettier the Monday holdup at the Bank of
America branch bank, 1oia1
Adams Av ., occufod:i'duriag a
cash delivery by art armored
truck ...
aut Police Detective 0 . D.
Lockhart said wltnesaea saw the
• bank robber stand.Jn& in line at a ~lier'• window before the 2 p.m.
tioldup. Th~ man dOhned a black a.kl·
mask WlLh orange clrcl around
tbe eyes, drew a blue ate l
liandgun -and leaped over the teller·~ counter. witncsaea tOJd
lice. '
"Don't anvbOdy move and no wW 1et hurt," yelled the
~rly bandit. •
Tho ·fool, tbree-lllcb run·
nian. ihlnl 240 IJOWldl, or· eted ono man weartn1 a raln· at up alrtit a all
Loekhirt silid the robber may
ave thought th bank euatom r
as a pdllce olficet'.
Tb menacing unman r •
~rt dly proCluccd • blue dcith ,~ag and stuffed c b lnto lt.
t of the money · ln a tnY ( 0 L ,DS, Pa~ .U>
* * *
Roser Slates resiped ~
day night u the chairman of the
Huntiniton Beach Plannlni
Comml11lon in a move tbat cau&ht some city hall observera
by eurpriH.
Slates, who ii a real estate
broker with business connec·
tlon1 with the Huntington Beach
Company, will cooUnue to MrV•
on the commission.
Ruth Ftnley was elected to succeed Slates, whose term u
chairman of the seven·member
panel was due to expire next
Aususl.
Slates waa unavailable for
comment lh1a morning but col·
lea1ues aald that he had bffn
thlnklnt of stepplna clown for
some tlrne because of bu.slneu
pressures.
"He h11 been busy aellin1
land and fiaured that lt WN a
1ood time to step down,'' one of·
tlclal said. "There are no red·
hot issues right now."
However, other orficlala said
they didn't hear of Slates' lnten·
lions until shortly before the ree·
\liar meeting of the Planning
Commwion Tuesdar nleht.
· Slat" bu come under lire ln
the pat. because of bi• connec-tlona with the HnUnston Beach
Company.
A le~ wu sent to Slates late
Jaa& month from U. Oran1e
County Dlatrict Altome1'1 of.
flee. caut!onlnc him that ll• bad • coaruct of interest beca\IM of
bu lntu connectlOGI wlt the Hunt~ Beach Co1Dpany.
He was told not to ~rtlclpat.e ln or bl any wa1 attempt to fn.
nuence a covernmental decision
which would have • material ef•
feet on the Huntlnatoa Beacb Co.
Assistant City Administrator
Richard Harlow said that Slates
metlculoualy abatah~ed from
votln1 on any llsu that poMd a
posal~e ~ct ol lni.est.
''The letter from the DA dJctn•t
say anytbinS that Slat. dJdD't
know about." Harlow said.
Slates WM elected to bl.a third
term as chainilan ot the Plan·
ntni Commt.•loa to a con·
troverslalacUon lut Au1uat.
B Police ProbirJg
9 Armed Robberies·
By,'l'be Aaoelated Prea
Ra1D, snow and sleet today
na1sed the Great Lakes and the
Tenneuee Valley, where more
than a foot of snow shut achoola
and bQSin and made road.a
lbfpa11able, Kentucky Gov.
Julian Cam>U declared a state
of emeraency. .. The 1tate'1 virtually hn·
mobwted." said Tom Little of
* * * New Pacific
Storm Ldhea
Nor.th State
•
er Clash
.Attorney
~oFight
For. Job
111 ROBE T ,BA E
Of .. Diiiy ""' .....
A bitter di pute between two
attorney n the Huntington
Beach lecal department escalat·
ed today wlth the firtns of Depuo
ty City' Attorney Jobn O'CoDDOl'.
· O'Connor had been placed on
uspen1lon wltbout pay since
Dec. n ..n.er a physic I alterea·
lion between him and City At·
torney Dorl ~a.
Both lawyers claimed In·
nocence ln t aeuffle and ac·
cuaed the other of assault and
batt ry. Both men su~uenUy
took lie detector tests which
each claimed backed their
version of tho confrontation.
Bonfa'a decision to fire O'Q:Jn.
nor w11 made official today
followin1 ' meetloi Tudday ln which O'Connor waa 1lven a
chance to respond to charces.
Bonfa ltrat made the an· nouncement· that he woUld fire
O'Connor immediately after the
tu11le occurred ln O'Connor'•
foul'.·storyofficelncltyball.
O'Connor said after Tuesday's
hearln1 that he would 10
through trlevance procedures in
an attempt to win hil job back.
He also labeled Tuesday••
meeUns wt.th BGn!a and otber d·
ty offlclall as a study ln futilib'.
'Bo w tbe ;JudJ•· JUl'J and execuUoner, .. O Co r
Hid. .. u 11 '41 Illa In· tentl to ti m and I tb1iJk
the wbolt procesa was me•nln8·
Jess, .. o·~r aid.
Tue day'I meetinC WU beld
behind elosed door• over tbie
protest of O'ConnOr. o•connor: said city olficlalt
could dO an)'lhitll they wanted
to ibeh nd closed doors.
"If they didn't have anythlnc to hide tbey would bava held the
meet1n1 llA the°'*'•" o•eoanor
declared
Bonla aceuled O'Connor of as-
saulting him and Dlalclnc tbreats ot bodily harm lD a formal wri~
ten notice OI disciplinary actlCn.
Bon(a said ln tM notice ol 1
pension that O'Coc:mor not only
failed to apolOglze for such mls·
conduct but flied a false report
with &he police department
clalmtne that BoDfa attacked
hlm.
O'Connor aald that the cue
11aln1t blm involved f alae ac• cusatlons and f alu ctiar1es.
He dalnled that Donia per-~ur hlmselt ''by clalmlna be
never tOudled me or threatened
me In b1I PoUcereport."
Arrives in Denver
NewStonn
To Bypass
Coast Area
• A m~ storm that hu been
playlnc cat and mouse with
forecuten for two days ls now
expected to pass north of Orance County, dropping only light rain
on Thursday, the National
Weather SCrvice said today.
And tbere'a more &ood news -a h11b pressure ridge appears to
BB School
BOondaries
Meet Topic
HunUniton Beach UnJon H1ih
School District officlala will meet With ~ta toolcbt tO ~
cuas a •eri• of proposed acbOol
attendance bowidary chan es.
Tbe bOUridarv ahlft m eUng wlll be Jield at the DI tr1ct
Education Center, 5201 Boin
Ave .• Huntbitton B acb, at 1:30 p.m.
Propos d boundary line
chanaes would affect current
el1htb 1rade students Jn tho
Marina Hlch School, FOuntaln
Valley mgh ScbOOI, EdiJton High
SChool and Ocean View High
School attendance areas, Of•
flclal1 said.
SeboolbOardmem n neon.
alder the boundary plan neXt
'rUUday. Current hl1b tcbOOl m
would nOt be affected by th
po dcbanc•·
Partly cloudy tonlfbt
With 20 percent chance of
rain and «> percent chance
Thur ay. Cooler Thun-
daJ. Lon toolg'ht low •
HJ1haT:bunclay la the 60i.
AY
~King o/ SIDfng' Benn~
Goodman mamu' to Cc1Mgte
flail to mark fOth Oft·
nlvntarr oJ fftd '1Qi% cem-
ent. PnformtlflCe ealUd 'rm-dmofwlmm,• bf Crit
P.agcAf
l•elex
iM Y..,t.'4111 M Ml .......,.
£e:-==-~ 1 ft.~ ~cl'.1
o.lty ........... ,..... .., ..... O' ......
EDDIE RUA HASN'T LOST HIS WILL TO WIN
Therepl1t Cheryl Hershey A11f1t1 In ExerclM
'De's Sp11nky'
Paraplegic Takes 'First Step'
By JERRY CLAUSEN °' ... o.ll'f ...... iUff
Eddie Rua may have lost the
use or his legs, but the 12-year-
old Laguna Hills athlete hasn't
lost his 1oparklc and determina-
tion.
H l• was all<.'mpting to do
"'hcches "-Ith his wheelchair
th 1s week at Ca1>a Colina
Hospita l for rehabilitated
ml'd1cme in Pomona where he 1s
n•cuperattng after Calling from
the roof of his home while string-
ing Christmas hghts Dec. 10 ..
The former soccer halfback,
swi m mer and baseball player is
now a paraplegic facing months
of physical work and mental ad-
J Ustment before he returns to his
home at 23551 Venisia.
Doctors report that Eddie's
~pi n al cord was severed in his
December fall and that he'll
nev<·r walk again But Eddie's
mother, Mrs. Octavio Rua , said
today that there is hope her son
will walk with braces
·'He has regained some feeling
on the skin inside his thighs and
there is hope his hip flexing
muscles can become st rong
enough for hi m to swing his
legs." she said.
When Eddie's pli&ht beJame
k now-i \ ht, ct;u.arc• St.
Nicholas where he served as an
altar boy, parishioners started
an "Eddie Rua F und." to be ad-
m in1stered by the pastor, Father
Otto Sporrer.
The fund has topped $6,000,
Mrs Rua said.
And aid has been promised
from another quarter.
. Jonathon Kirby of Laguna
llills has offered funds from his
Associated Charitable Cau1es
fu nd-raising drive.
Fro• Page Al
NO LEADS ••
near the bank vault, Lockhart
said.
The thief'• work waa finished
within minutes and he dashed
out a side door or the bank. FBI
agent.I aald they believe the aun-
m an ran to a late model, rour-
door, wtute sedan parked nearby.
FBI a1ents aald the Hunt-
ington Beach robber may be the
sam e man who struck at the
La1un1 Hilla Banlr. of America
Branch Jan. 5. Officlala refused
to say how m1,ach loot was taken
In that holdup.
The same bank, at the comer
of Paaeo de Valencia and El
Toro Road, was atruck by a ft.U'·.
man last May 2'. The robber
netted a re~rted $62,000 in the
holdup. .
FBI Officlals reported an Oct.
12 Bank of America holdup in
Granada JUlls whero $42,000 was
taken. Ortlclala aaicl they
believed the robber was the
same man who hold up th
Laguna JUlls bank Ma,Y 24.
Kirby's or1anizatlon sells
merchant-sponsored dlscount-
ticket books In the Saddleback
Va lley for charitable causes.
Kirby. who says his or1anlzaUon
1s non-profit, has promised 20
percent of the proceeds to the
R ua family.
Meanwhile, Eddie's father,
Octavio. a control systems
engineer laid off his Fluor Com-
pany job shortly after his son's
fall, is interviewing for jobs of-
fered recently -at least one oC
which was the direct result ol a
Da ily Pilot subscriber who read
of the family's plight.
As for Eddie, he's taken a few
steps already on le11 stlffened
with braces and his body sup-
ported by parallel bars.
"He's spunky," a physical
ther apist at Casa Colina said
this week. "He's really cute. We
just love him." Then, because
Eddie was having a difficult
time popping wheeli es, she 1ave
him a hand, holding the back or
his wheelchair.
Newport Beach police, work-
ing from an advertisement in
the weekly newspaper, the Ad-
vocat e, arrested a La1una
Bea c h man on prostitution
char1es Tuesday .
Homer Dudley Martin Jr., 42,
of 2690 Park Ave. was taken lnt.o
custody by vice offlcers at the
hotel where he allegedly agreed
t.o meet one of the officen.
Sgt. John Slmon of the
Newport Beach vice detail said
he contarcted Marlin by
telephone after an anonymous
tlpster phoned police t.o tell them
of the advertisement.
After tho meeUne wu aet up,
Simon alleged Martin took $35 ln
exchange for what was to have
been an hour of sexual stnicea.
Martin was booked Into
Newport Beach city Jail at about
1 p.m . and wu rlieutd a few
houra later after poat1n1 $500
ball.' , t
SNOW •••
GµnmenKill
2 Customer&
...
Mideast
Talks .
Halted .
CAIRO, E1ypt (AP> -Presi-
deht Anwar Sadat hu ordelff
his foreiin minister to break off
talks with Israel in Jerusalem
and return home, E1ypt'1 ln·
form Uoo mlribter announce<l
today.
His offtcial •tatement sald
Forelan Minister Mohammed
Kam•l aa ordet•d bom• because It "became apparent
from the d claratlon of the
prime minister of Israel and ita
forel1n mlnlster that hrael in· mt• on ~tin~ pa.rtlal solu-
tions th t cannot lead t.o the
establislurl Of a Just and last· 1n peace."
Tbe cement, broa
by Calro radlo, was made
without w~. It aid Kamel was t.o retum "ill.\lllcdlat.ely. ••
lnformatlon mlnlster Abdel
Jdonelm el Sawy.aald Sadat tOOk
'1thl1 deet ave dCetslon" to avoid
the talk ••contlnuln1 in
vicloU1J drele."
Sawy iald the dilcuaslg_ns tn
J•rusalem have been 191111 "in· to aide laaues. movlna troll\ an
Issue whose examinaUon has aot
been completed, .&o llsues not up
for dlscmalon ao u ~ make tho
no1oi1at.ona become en~
Jn obacure and vape quesUou
not 1ervtn1 their aims."
Roof Of th~ sports arena of the Hartford,
· Conn., Civic center collapsed early tOday
from weight of ice, snow and rain dropped
by the severe winter torm. There were
no Injuries reported In connection with the
mishap. Hours earlier an estimated 5,000
rans had watched a college basketball
doubleheade r in the coliseum. Xwo
workmen inside at the time of tho cave-in
escaped. See story on P,age A4. '
Tho israells, b; said, h~d kept
the talks "fiuld."
The mlnlater said Sad t called
!or an emer1ency meeUne
Saturday of ~ypt'• parUament
-tho P~le'a Apembly -.. to
place before the representatlva
of the people all the !acts of the
11tu1Uon.''
It wu from the same~
'that Sadat offere.d to visit ,
Jerusalem last November,
be1lnnln1 the blatortc peace In-
itiative. ·
.
I.and8 Safely
An AJr Call(ornia Electra prop.
jet carryinJ 86 passen1ers ex·
perlenced enetne problems short·
Jy after takeofC rrom Orange
Coun.tY Airpqrt early tod •Y. fOfC·
ln11the ptane 'to return fnd llftd
wltta on It three eneines.
engines.
Orange County fire crews
manned the runway when the
plane landed safely at 7:53 a.m.
There were no injuries.
Accordlne to Air Callfomla
s pokesman John f:ricsen, the
pilot Oylng the non-st.op run to
Lake Tahoe reported that one of
the plane's four en1ine1 bad
overheated. • •
The engine was shut down u a
precautionary meHure and the
Jet retumed to Orance Co~b'
AlrpQrt. Erlcsen said
passeniers were tramretttd to an~er rught.
caboOse RUie
&mes Youth
Diedrich Plans 2nd
Court Ban on Hicks
Four Killed
In Chopper
TOKYO <AP) -A U.S.
Succe11ful In one s uch bid,
Oranie County Supervilor
Ralph Diedricb will try again ln
Superior Court to convince a
Judie that District Attorney
Cecil HlckS should be barred
from pawecutlng hlm.
Diedrich'• motion refers thla
Ume to hla Indictment on
bribery charaea. Hicks has
already been removed from the
trial on campalen fund violation
charaes contained In an earlier
indictment.
If Diedrich la auccesaf ul In the
bearing Jan. 27 before Judie
John L. Flynn Jr. It wm mean, If
the appellate courts uphold such
a ruling, that the state Attorney
General's office wlll apln pick
up the prwecutlon chores.
State lawyers atrepdy are pre·
parln1 their case acalnst
Diedrich. Supervisor Phlllp An·
thony and two codefer\danta. The
trlal 11 (&nllkety t.o start before
July 31.
The motion filed Tuesday con-
tends, 11 did the earlier auc·
cessrul motlon, that Hlckl and
his office repeatedly displayed
prejudice against Diedrich ri1ht
For a very limited
time --we welcome
you to the upholstery
event of the year!
Choose from a
superb selection of
frame styles.
up to the time that the erand
Jury returned its Indictment.
The indictment named
Diedrich, $4, and Anaheim
architect LeRoY Rose, ••. on bribery charges connected wlth
11 decision by the (>ranae county
Board of SUpervlson to permit
development of 2,200 acres In
Anaheim Hills, Both men have pleaded Innocent. ·
Defense attorney Svlvan
Aronson areued before tho in-
dictment wu returned that the
district attorney's offlco should
be barred from pursuine tho In-
vestigation because of the al-
le1ed prejudice.
Supertor Court Judge ~tuam
L. Murray held a hearine Into
the defense allegation and de-
nied tbe motion.
.But Diedrich'• contlnulnf
ar1ument appears to be
strengthened today In the Ugbt
or the Callforbta S•pr.me
Court's recent declahm not to in-
terfere wlth tho rullnc or
Suµerior Court Judie PbUlp E .
Schwab ln the aUeeed campaign
fund vlolaUon case.
tarine Corps helicopter •
from Okinawa crashed to-
day at a Marine rifle
rantie t the foot of Mount , Fu l, a U.S. Milltar7
1po esman announced.
The spokeeman said
there were no puaeneen
aboard the CH·41S Sea
Knight helicopter.
The aircraft was at-
tached to the Medium
Helicopter Squadron 164
on Oklnawa and was
pai1lclpatln1 ln a training
exercise.
The names of the dead
were being withheld until
the next of kin were
notlfied •
LOS ANGEL"E!S (AP.) .._
Superior Cdirt Judie Leiter JI,
Olson h roJected a motion ~ •
Bustop, an anU·busins orguma.
tlon, to dlsquallfy Superior Court
Judae Paul Egly from the inte-
1ratlon cue or Los An1e1ea·
580,000·atUdent school district.
Then choose again, from
literally hundreds of col·
ors and patterns! Shop
quickly t thou,h, while
thesq very special prices
r emain in effect!
· 1 ·· Jtwsttngton 'Benc11 Uruon Hl*h SCliool 1>1strtct.: of· ficlals should take a hard look at their neetor 11blg buses.
California Highway Patrol officials took four of the
vehicles off the road last year until brake defects were
corrected.
CUP officials have been joined.by two bus drivers In
their criticism of the district's school buses.
Two bus drivers claim the buses are poorly m in-
tained and unsafe. They also say the district does not pro·
vide adequate emergency bus evacuation drills for
drivers and students.
i School board members have ordered a state in·
• vcstigation into the district transportation system.
Last January the Huntington Beach Union High
School District eyed a plan to do away with the entire bus
• system. Trustees dropped the plan but did cut back on the
number of field trips and home-to·scbool bus rides for stu·
dents.
Are district officials slowly phasing out the school bus
c system? If they arc, allowing the buses to be poorl)' main··
tained is no way to accomplish tbe goal. There is too much at
stake when children's lives ride inside rundown buses.
If trustees plan to maintain the bus system, students
deserve nothing less than the best when it comes to safety.
School board members should be wary of the state in·
vestigation becoming a whitewash if problems exist.
Feud Makes a Point
Ever since it first broke out, the feud between Hunt-
jngton Beach City Attorney Don Bonfa and one of his
deputies, John O'Connor, has taken some fitful twists and
turns.
The feud had been gathering force ever since it all
began in December of 1974 when Bonf a wrote a critical
pcrf onnance evaluation of O'Connor. ,.
That evaluation first went to he-ar:ings before a state
administrative law judge who ruled that O'Connor was
the prevailing party and that Bonfa's comments should
be stricken from O'Connor's records.
From there, the dispute went to the city personnel
board which largely upheld Bonfa's position. •
But that phase of the dispute didn't end there. O'Con-
nor has filed suit in Superior Court asking for the city to pay
his attorney fees.
The last straw in the feud <it is hoped> involves the
physical altercation between the two men Dec. 27. Each
man claims innocence and says that he was attacked.
Both underwent lie detector tests and. predictably,
each claims he passed the polygraph examination.
Now Bonfa hos fired O'Connor-and O'Connor vows to
fight for his job via a grievance procedure. This, of course,
does nothing to resolve the idiotic situation, nor does it alter
the unprofessional image wrought by two members of a sup·
posedly honorable profession.
One thing has been proved: The city attorney should be
appointed by, and responsive to, the city council. It ls not a
l position that should be filled by election.
f
l I Two errant pilots eluded Huntington 'Beach police on
the ground and in the air in a recent pursuit at
beleaguered Meadowlark Airport in Huntington Beach.
One pilot reportedly performed three "touch and go''
landings before a police patrol officer tried unsuccessful·
l.Y to nab the airman for performing illegal maneuvers.
The officer had no wings on hia patrol car and the
suspect aircraft got away.
Meanwh.ile, the Huntington Beach police helicopter
flew by ana reported anoth<!r swooping aircraft. Tho
slower helicopter lost the plane m the fog.
Police and Federal Aviation Administration offlctalS
admit there is Uttle lhey can do to nao the illegal fly r •
Officials lfo1d it is difficult to prosecute them because
it is not known who actually piloted the craft.
Ain>Qrt offic1$ls should see by this incident that their
fac1Uty must be more closely policed by the pilots who
use it and tho e w1to ontrol it.
Meadowlark Airport is o longer loc.ated in an open
area. P lots should train there only under close
super\'ision.
ar
Gloomy
Gu
..
ASID OTON-=-The
rnultlblllion:.clollat eoemetlca ln·
duatey is tranUcally tryin1 to
W•uad · mllllona ot Amerlcan women that thert la no canc~r
rtalt in usin1 those highly ed-
vtrtlaed hair dyes.
So frantically ls the industry
peddllnc th1.a propaJanda J.ine, in
fact. that it.a
W 1bln1ton
lobby ha• ru bed out an
erroneous
claim and
some suspect
studies.
At isaue la
the flndini by
the National
Cancer
lnltltute that a majol". lntredlent
1n most hair dytl, 4·MMPD, bu
caused cancer in laboratory test
animals. The 1overnmern sclen·
tilt.a also diacovered that some
hair dyes contain derivaUves of
benzid.lne; this, too, is a proven
carclno1en.
THE CANCER Institute bsued
it.I alarmm, flndin&s to alert 33
mllllon women who use hair
dyes to the potential dan1er. A
wamlnC wu about the only gov-
ernment action possible. The
Food and Drug Administration
l1 powerleu to take any action
acalnst hair dyes because of a
1tran1e. special exemption pro-
vided the industry 40 yean a10.
The CoameUc. Toiletry and
Fra1rance Association, a sweet·
1oundln1 name tor a hard·nosed
lobby, launched an immediate
counterattack. Oil behalf of lta
client.. the usoclation ~
out a blanket denial that hair
dyes are hazardous. Dye. with
the beniidlne derivatives wero
no tonier bein1 sold to the
public, the asaociation added
soothtn1Jy:
This was quickly proved false.·
Con1ressional inveatlgatora
walked lnto a Washington drug
store and fQund theqi on the
shelves. Temporary hair dyes
made by Roux Laboratories and
marketed under alluring brand
Mailbox
To the F.ditor:
From time to time judges are
criticized for sentences or other
decisions they may have made
where the decision or sentence
was mandated by the ~pplicabte
statutes or appeUot decision •
Thia ls jCllt what has tiap~eCI
In the case involving th 11en·
tenclne of Patrick c~pe • e
so·e lled "Trash Bae Kill '
Letters conceml"' this sut>Ject
hnve been published in various
newapill>'!rs.
The trial Judge of our ~ourf.
who' sentenced Mr. Kearney
1ave him the' maximum en·
tence under the Jaw that exiSted
al the time ,the murders· re
committed. The judJe coul ~
have 1lven the defendut tho
death penalty ()r ure lmpri on•
ment wlthOut tbe ~bflity of
parole on the ptcaa !involved.
The J w which provide such
penalties did not become effec-
tive untll AtQ?. ll, 11r11, fter th
murders Involved here oc-
curred. By appellate court do-
clalon. auccesstve life entences
cannot be lm~sed In mulUpl
murder cases.
'DEATH ON T:UE DES RT -
On D c. 18, uno, n under·
ground nudear test shot. called
Baneberry, was et oft 900 f t
below the earl.h's surface. P
ta on aclent.istJ misc lculated
the force of the explosion, and a
radioactive cl011d unexpectedly
mushroomed 10,000 feet .into the Nev dasky.
Th cloud drifted over a
nearby workers' camp. Thirteen
guards, aettin1 uide their own
aafet)', frantically evacuated the
camp. EinhtY·li~ peraons from
the camp showed radiation el·
fecta and had to be rushed to a
nearby health facility for e~
amination and decontamhlatlon.
Three ot the 13 heroic auards 1ubsequently died of leukemia,
apparentl.Y because of their ex·
posure to unsafe amounts of
radiation. TWo or thelr widows
have sued the coveroment for
necli1ence.
THE JUSTICE Department
contended, however, that the
three dead cuards bad not been
exposed to enouch radiation to
have caused the leukemia. But
now we've tearnedlfrom Justice
Department soutcu that the
covemment bu offered to settle
with the widows out of court.
This offer by the Juatice
Department is the first lnwca-
tion that the 1ovemment is will·
ins to admit possible nuclear
ne1H1ence Iii connechon with
the Nevada tests.
INVESTIGATOas for the
Center for Di ease Control in
Atlanta are quietly Investigating
whether the larae number of
leukemia cases amone veterans
of a 1957 nuclear test, called
Smokey, was the result of over-
exposure.
The "massive resistance" Mr.
EU refers to ts not a func-
tion of not wanu.ng to addreu re-
gion al iaauea on a regional
b11ls: and the disaereements between the Air Resources
BOard nhd the Air Pollution Con·
trol Ds,trict are not a manifest•·
tlon of such an alleged bias. The
resistance, I submit Js based
firmly on the reallzation that we
do not need to add another layer ot government to resolve our re-
1lonal problems.
· K.~AULRAVER
Fbra l •~to""
f
' .
DAILV~T
peline
Pianist Marks Approval
Annivenary MUU'ed ReP!1,rter Latest Victim of Berkel.ey Rapiat
__.,.,... LOS ANGELES tAP > From AP Dta~ic T~t Soutl Coast Alr , The queue outstde Carnegie H'nUWoUnd Quality Manaeement
around most of a city block as snow blustered Di t f t 1• to Id ' :through an icy momin1. but many In the Uoe bad 1 r c ... cona er to· been wanned with coffee sent by the virluoso day whetber· to approve
Pianist they wan~ to hear. a *500 million project that would brlng crude The attracUon was Vladimir Horowtts, the oil from Alaska to
73-year-old Ru11lan·born artist who Is com· Southeru Calllomla then
emorating the 50t.h anniversary of his U.S. or· send it J)y pipeline to
cheaLtal and rccltal debut.a with twin conet.rts at Texas andtbe Midwest. arneale Hall In March. On Tueadty, a 1tarf
"It'a been quite an ordeal doing this," Manbat· report recommended " .. ..._.. an lawyer Wllllam Bestow, wbo wu first in line 80TH RAPE VICTJM
at 3:!0 p.m., remarked after be bou1ht four or· ( l:."flt..1.TE ) CerOlyn Creven cheatra aeata when the box office opened the next ..,.A ___ _.:;.. ____ _
morning. "But I would have kicked myself if I bad "'
BERKELEY tAP> -Veteran ltltvlsloD
newswoman Carolyn Craven had reported at least
three t1mes on the rapist known u "Stinky."
Now, po.lice aay, 1be has become hit lateat vie· uw . -"He covered my face and mouth with a stoved
band and stuck a knlf e ln my neck ~th the other,"
aald Ms. Craven. "ff• told me to abut up or he
would kill me.•'
MS. CRAVEN, WHO LIVES ALONE In south
Berkeley \WUl her 8-ycar·old aon Gabriel, said the
pun1ent odo~embllns mec. hanlc'a ~.ease con· vinced her that she wu auaiilied by "Stlnlij." we thon 60 women raped in the Berkeley
area In the past four years have described a
similar odor on thelr usallant.
Ey-es Measure mi11ed this." ' that the AQMD approve s
• the project -the last enate Comedian Paul Lyade, arrested Jan. 11 in link In a multlbillion
• front or a Salt Lake City tavern on a charge of in· tranaportatlon 1y1tem
terferlni with a police ofCicer, that atarta in icebound T L D • k • A ~:~r.~.~l~~ias~~ Innocent Af::m~e~ri~oecarnl.~e ~dN~~ 0 ow. er r1n IDa ae
Lynde, who made the plea " e
brou1h Salt Laite attorney However, aJ>Qkesmen
;Joba Kesler, forfeits bis SSO for Standard Ott Com· SACRAMENTO (AP) -The idea thou fC h, to a m a j or It y of bond, said City Court clerk pany of Ohlo (Sohio) or 19·year-olds sipping martini& Senate Governmental Organization.
Gloria Demu. declined to comment on cauaes HiellW*Y Patrol officers to Committee members. They sent to
Lr.nde was arrested at 1: 50 the acceptablllty of 1s ah udder and a state aenator to recall the Senate floor a proposal to put on
. m. n front of the Sun Tavern antl·poUutlon condlUona ·boyhood adventures. the ballot a meuuN to lower the
Ila. Craven, In a mO\'e JQ"al bf •I c.. ct..
clded to talk. publicly about tbe early Saturday
mornln1 usault.
SllE MID ltE8 and a tritnd bad Jell
ber hom about 11:30 p.m. and ah weht to ateep about an hour later. The uaallant apparently berit
an aluminum hinp on a bedroom Wiridow to satn
entry to her house.
"The next thins I knew I aaw tbe Imai• ot a figure fiY1n1 at me, leaping at me," she aald •.
The commotion •woke her son and be came to
thedoorothubedtoomwhetehtacreamtd.
THE RAPIST, SH SAID. "told me lf Gabriel
came lnto the room he'd klll him. 11 Sb coaxed ber
son back into hia bedrocnn where be f tll uteep.
M1. Craven 1ald the man uaau.Jted ber In·
termittenUy for aboul two hours ud ordlNd ber
lo "act as if you -Uoy It."
She recalled thlnklnt, "If I aurvtve this I bad
better remember every detail. If be'• already de-
cided to kill us there'• not.bins I can do."
Her hand was cut at one Ume, la\er nquirini
five aUtches.
ALntOUGH SHE NBVB• SAW HIS face. M1.
Craven aald abe noticed his dark complexton ahOJ't..
ly bef~ be blindfolded her. And at.. aald ebe
would recognize b1a volct lf lhe beard It aaain.
She determlned that h1I baJr was cut ln a abort
natural style, that he had a stubble of a beard and
that his biceps were 1tron1 .
while an omcer waa inve1Ugat· insiated upon ln the ataff The Idea wu accel»table enouJlh, drlnkin& aae from 21 to 19.
!ing 't9.'o car bur11ar1es, lnclud· Lv .. o• recommendat.ion. THE vors WAS •·2 Tuesday on E1 ~!-on· G•,.nted
1ng a limousine owned by• Osmond Productions. Gift Ad•iteed ~---Lo ACA5S, which puaed tbe Assembly (l,t3' • ~
Alton Carter, the 89-year·old uncle of SACRAMENTO <AP> ~geon Se& last summer. 11 two·thlrds or tbe
President Carter, IS reported In "very serious" -Lobbyis t Robert Senate approve 1t by Jan. 25• it will Rate lnc~ease di 1 • ~ l • go on the June e ballot. If the con l on at Americus-Sumter County (Ga.) Becku1 confirms that •~a in leilslaUve approval come• after Jan. Hospital. his firm spent $2,871 for r-Carter has been in a golf club membership 25, it would 10 on the Nov. 7 ballot. LOS ANGELES tAP> -For mc>1t Southern
California E:disoD Co. customers, tUJ'1llnl on the
lights and u.sinl the electric stove u. mon U·
the intensive care unit and dues for state Sen. 'M6-lp,•J11Y1tt;1tn At the bearln&, Capt. William
s ince undergoine 1a Alfred Song, chairman a1ency feared that lowerln& the ( J 11 ir.ifU • ~ ~ Oliver of the Hiehway Patrol said hia
pensive todar,. ~ PEOPLE bladder surgery Jan. 8. of the Senate Jud.lei•..., ·'He is doine ~rly," committee. -., SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -'The drinklnt aee would result in more The California Public UUllUea Commlalon
TUesday granted the company authority to im·
mediately boost electric rates 7.1 percent u a
semi-annual cost adjustment.
-· ---------California S Court has youthful drunken driven. a hospital spo esman Although the 1972 lift. upn!me over-He said hll deoartment's statlltica said. isn't affected by Prop 9 tumed an appeal court ruling wblcb lndlcate "that people under ace 21
Carter ls the rather or Georgia state Sen. B•tla passed in 1914, it wo~ld bad reversed a $2 million mal&ractice already have acceu to alcohol
Carter and was mayor of Plains, Ga., for 28 years. have violated state law award a1alnat Dr. John orlt, a throusb.illeeal mearu.'' or 225,000 In· * had it been proven that former Sacramento orthopedic •ur· t~icatlonodrivln1 arrests lut year ln
The PUC aald tbe lncreaae w11 needed
because the company's cost.a have risen durlri1 the
About $6.8 million in donations have been
made or pledged to the Hubert 8. Humphrey
Institute or Public Affairs to be built at the
University of Minnesota.
The University of Minnesota Foundation said
the total included a St million gift announced dur-
ing the weekend·by the Japanese government.
Sponsors arc seeking a total of, $20 million.
*
Richard Hongisto, who gave up being sheriff
o( San Francisco to become police chief of
Cleveland, is paying another
visit to San Francisco -to take
a bride.
12 months endln1 tut !--UC. 3L , Sons cast a vote or took ,.on. . any other official action The Wlan1mou.s decision Tuesday California, nearly 12,000 involved
in return. by .Juatlce.Mathew Tobriner upheld a penons 20 yean old or youneer, be THE COMPANY HAD TO P.\Y 1108!:
Sacramento Superior Court rulln1 aaid. • because of the drouaht, which precluded purc:bue EQ!•ption Baclc which denied Nork'• request to THE BILL'S SPONSOR, As· of cheaper hydroelectric power from tbe
SACRAMENTO <AP) withdraw hit prior waiver of a jury semblyman Louil Papan, D-Daly Cl· Northwest. and the resuJUna u .. of hlaher-prtced
-Le11.slation to exempt trial in the civil suit. ty, said he feela a drinking age re. fuel oil to make up the deltclt, the PUC aald.
the proposed Sundeaert It ordered the cue to •the State duction would reduce peer 1roup pre· The rate increase, effective Tueaday, will not
nuclear power plant In Court of Appeal in Sacramento. sure1todo1J<>methin1me1at. be passed alon1 to "UfeUne" ratea or the nnt 300
Southern California Albert Gonzalea had filed the "There was a drlnkln1 driver kilowatt hours per month for domesUc uae.
from state nuclear ~alpractice and fraud suit against problem in 1939 when I went to hlth whichever la areater.
safeguard Jawa baa Nork and Sacramento Mercy Achoo!," commented Sen. John Doll-.r amount of the iacreue t. $70.t mlllion
cleared a state Senate Hospital clalming back sur1ery he Dunlap, D-Napa. "One or the reasons for alx months.
committee. underwent in 198'1 was unneceaaary, was Jt wu a pretty excltlns thing to Resldent1al service wtll nae trom tbe prelellt
The Senate Public performed incompetently, left him do because it waa a1aln1t the law. 1.4 cents per kilowatt bour to 1.1 centa Wider the
Utilities, Transit and unable to work and ultimately caused ll's a veiy important element tn tho new rate bike, and from 1., cent.I to 1.7 centa for
Energy Committee vol· cancer. motlvaticoal factor." other usen.
ed6·2Tuesday. -.------------~.;___:_----.;,p,;..;_,_:...;.:;.-.;.;..;.._..;..... __ ~-----~--------------:...0..---=------Ellubeth Colton said she
and Hongisto will be married in
mid· February.
ll will be the first marriage
for her and the aecond for
Hongisto, who dlvorced his first
wife several years ago.
Tbe laws haw-1m .
posed a moratorium on
new nuclear plants in
Callf ornia. •
FarnRabed I I l II
A graduate of Florida State _, .._,,_
University, Miss Colton is presi· "°"41TO
dent of the San Francisco Federated Youn&
Democrats.
*
Two UCLA seniors and a Berkeley graduate
student have been nominated by University or
California student presidents as finalists to
become the next student member of the UC Board
of Regents.
The Student Body Presldents' Council said the
nominees are Glen Smith, 22, a UCLA political
science major; Renee Turkell, 21, a UCLA English
major, and Jeff Koon, 35, a graduate student in
higher educatlon at UC Berkeley.
One of the three will be recommended by a re-
gents' commlUee tor confirmation by the board
next month to a one-year term beglnnlnC ln July.
•
SAN FRANCISCO
<AP) -1be state Public
Utilities Commlsalon
has approved higher
farea for the famed
Skunk Line train in
Northern California.
The PUC approved
Tuesday a request by
Mendocino Coaat
Rallway Inc., which
operates the 1cenlc ·
paaaenger service 1
between Fort Bra11 and '
WUUti, to lncreue tho 1 rares on Feb. 8. •
DawCa•pa~
SACRAMENTO tAP)
-Ed Davi•, th• blunt former police chlet of
Loa Anaelea, baa ,
launched his campatp
for the Republtcan
nomtnatloa for 1overnor
wlth a promise to boost
bu1ine11 development,
acrlculture and nuclear
eneray.
In a CApltol news con·
ference Tuesday just 100
feet from Gov. Edmund
Brown Jr. 'a office,
Davll aald u fovetnor
be would promote "a
fNe·enterprile ecoto11° that would attract new
bUlneu and Jobi.
..
SAVE UP TO 50% OFF
Stacks of shoes from
atl our big ~·
LADIES' SHOES
290 to SJ fj90
Egypt Quits
Peace Talks
JERUSALEM (AP) -!!OPt broke off peace talk• wlth Israel today barely one day aft.er they
started and !!l)'Pdan President
Anwar Sadat ordered hla forelp
inlntater back to Cairo.
In Cairo, InformaUon llinllter
Abdel Mooeim el Sawy, an•
Hoover's
Hatred/or
Critics Told
UPSET NIXON WROTE
TOHOOVM-AI
lat• resort t.o banb aame-
runi to dcScrlbe aucb eritlcl u Mark Lane, Diet G~
d New Orleans District At. torne)' Jame1 Gatriaon. But
they al.lo tefleet . the ol.ftdals' !felt admlalon that they Would
tiave to 11" wUh ertttcsm Ula\
was certalD tO contlnae. :,;yrbose memos AN put ol the 59. 754 pagea ot fll• the PBl
de public to complj 'witllll'Or
99estl und r tM l'rMClolb Gt rn. f1 at.Im Ad. WUb I.be !40,001 ' <he BOOVBll, Pap Al>
f'No one b s 1ultered any
home damage, nd the reu
that have been proporlf con·
struet ore all orldn •
"So 1 ask (Public Work• Dfrectot ~£ M'Udlow), wbat
it would coat m to construct a
proper torm draln f acllity in
the rural areas of our town, ao that we DO ton er bav to worry
about our l'W'il road.a fJoodlnl
when the to.year, ot 1even·1ear,
* * * *
An AlrcallfOrnla Electra prop.
jet carrJtni 81 pusenaers et•
perienced encine. problems abort· ly alter takeotl from Orange
COWit1 ~early today, fore· m1 the ~· to retum and land wlthonf¥thteeen0nes.
Oran•• County fire c~ manned the nmway when the
plane landed safely at 7:53 Liil.
'l'ber• wen no lnturles.
Aecordlna to .. Air Caiuonila
teaman lobD Erlcsen, tb9 flY1DI the aoa~ nm to
Tahoe reported that oae at
th .plane' four engJ.Dea bad overheatect
wu shut don u a a measure the
et nturne4 to Oran&• County
Airport. Erloaen • d4
PM.HD#ft were ttustetted to ~Cl' Qllb&.t •
Uan Country,
Ir.Dine Area
BlOckedOut
, •
'
Storm Closes Schools, Roads
Four Killed
lnC~pper
TOKYO (AP) -A U.S.
lf artne Corps helicopter
from Okinawa crashed to-
day at a Marine rifle
range at the foot or Mount
Fuji_, a U.S. MlUtary spokesman announced.
Th• spokeaman aald
there Wel'9 no pauenaen
aboard the CH·48 Sea
Knight helicopter.
The aircraft waa at·
tached to the Medium
Helicopter Squadron 164 on Okinawa and was
participating in a trainin1
exerciae.
The names of the dead
were being withheld until
the next of kin were
notified.
~ Wuple Suing
IJealer Over
&ll,s Repairs
A Newport Beach couple who
~laim their Silver Shadow Rolls
Royce hu spent most of the two
years they have owned lt In the
repair ahop are aulns the
makers and dlatrlbutora for
more than $88,000 ln dama1es.
Donald and Mary Chapton or
124 30th St. claim in their
Oran1e County Superior Court
lawsuit that the 19'18 Rolls hu
1pent 420 days ln the repair shop
at Roy Carver Inc. since they
bou1bt lt in January, 1976.
Namlnl the Carver firm and·
Rolt. Royce aa defendants they • ~la\m tbat ·ttte ·Newport S.a~h
eol'ftparr,y haJ taJled to carry out
adequate repairs on multiple
faulta tbat became evident Jn the
$35,000 vehicle.
Company prealdent Roy
Car,,er was In hli office today
but could not be reached for
commenL
The Chaptona claim the car
has bffn returned to the Carver
firm on 17 occaalonll ln two
)'Hrt for~ repairs lncludln1
brake falture, leakln1 in the
coollnc ayat.em, water leaklnl in
the pusenger area1 faulty win·
dOWI and fiaklnl paint.
Other faults llsted .Sn' the
lawsuit Include d«>c>r bindlea
that fell off, faulty trannnlaaloa, a panel that fell off the
da1bboard, deterloralini and
mllsln1 nabber moldin1 and a
radio tbat olUn dldn 't work.
The actSon states that the car
waa auaranteea on p~rchue ti'
three ,.an OC' I0,000 miles ud
haa only bets\ driven for 5,000 mllta In thoM two yean.
Tbe'Caner dea\enhlp II ac·
cuaed of retumlnl the Rollt to
the CbaptOm on eacli of the 17
occa1lon1 wltbout 1utflclent
serviclna or np&lrtDi.
Dhuter and Emer1epcy
Strvlc • Most public booll In K •
tucky were closed today a were
1cbooll ln acattned ,areu ot 11·
Unola, Ohio and Tenn
ctactnnaU recorcled more than ii lnchel :Tuelda)'. Al much u
U lncbH burled parts of
aouthern Illlnol5. Ohio Gov.
Jam ea Rhodes db patched 77 Na·
tional Guardlmea to Pomeroy,
Ironton, Portsmouth,
CblUlcothe, Mancb•ter, Fellcl·
ty and Newark to help clur aoow. · 1
Missouri and Indiana alJO bad
heavy snow wtth hundrodl of
schools ~ buslneue• shut. Schools cJOHd for a fourth day
ln Memphis, Tenn., because of
icy roads. Hl&hway conditJom
worsened throul)tout Tennessee
when more than two inches of
anOW fell.
Heavy rain on top or a day's
1nowtall turned the New Yotk
tnetropoUtan area Into a slush
pond early today u widespread
power 9Ula•ea coatlnued for a
fourth day in Lone llland 1ub-
urb1.
Gov. HUCh Carey Jent 508 Na·
tlonal Guardsmen lo Lons
bland on Tuesday to help U\Uit.y
crew• to re1iore pow P to
tboualndl of homes that bl.'to l>eea t0ld and daHc If nee t
weekend. But. a Lona Island
L11htlnl Co. apokesmao aald.
.. We never asked for these troops ...
What U!co dld uk for wu
perml11lon from the White
House to rent two bu1e C·SA
Galaxy military jeta to trauport
workers and eqc,llpment from
Chlca10 and Detroit uUlltles that
offered aid to the beJeacuered
Loos llland company.
But. when. ihe approval ar·
rived, puttln.t the coat of the tt.n·
tat at $10,000 an hour, LUco
scrapped ~ ldea.
Early today, LJlco reported
30,000 customers at.ill lfithout. power. down from about 100.000
reported out durln1 the
weekend.
F,....PageAI
FLOOD CONTROL. • •
The' city oritlnally •&reed to
issue such permits to the Irvine
Company oo Just such a coodJ.
lion, that the San Dieco Creek
Channel be improved.
With the channel desl1ned to
handle runoff of a 10-called
100.year nooct -the result of •
rainfall tnten.tlty expected about
every 100 yean -Woodbrldte
and other residential areH
would be removed from the
haaardarea.
Huard areas ttere defined by
ibe U.S. Army Corp• Qf
Enslneera in a December 1974,
report prepared tor Oran1e
County Flood Control.
Documenta on file with county
flood control ahow that the
Irvine Company decided to build
the diversion channel whlle the
* * * NewSwrm
Will Bypa1Js
GxutArea
A ~aJor storm t.hal has been
r.laying cat and mouse with
orecastera for two days ls now
expected to paas nonh or Oran1e
County, droppin1 only ll1bt raln
on Thursday, the National
W eat.her Service sald today.
And there's more food news -
a high pressure rldl(e appears to
COUNTY FLOODS
NOT IMMINENT-A3
be movinl ln over Southern
Calitornla and could divert
following storms to the north as
well.
"W• ahoulcS be 1ettlna leas and less (rain),•• the weather
service'• John Henderson said.
A atonn once forecut for tut
nl1ht and then for tonlpt la now
beaded nortlli With only a 20 per·
cent chance o! lhowen pNdlct·
ed here toal1bt and 50 percent
OD Thunday~ald.
_,..PaeeAJ
HOOVER •••
San Dleco Creek ChaMel waa
beln1 worked on.
The dlver1lon channel, the
Jrvlne Company arrued. would
allow the cloalnl of eaerow on
Woodbrid1e homes several
months before the completion of
the San Dleco Creek channel lm·
provementa.
The clt)' went alon1 with the
plan, and ••reed to l11ue de· · velopment and occupancy
permlta wlth the construcUon ol
the dlvenlon channel.
Besides the dlvenlon channel.
the Irvine Compal))' •treed to
build a system of elrtben lev
Intended to protect hom" fl'Qm
floodln1 tn cue a bl1 ralnltorm
hit while tbe permanent lm·
provementa to the San Dw10
Creek aUll were ln pro1res1.
The April 19'16 a1reement also
included llJarantee by the Irvine
Company to be reaponslbJe for
any loas, damaee or Injury thet
mltht occur lf the temporary
flood protecttona fal\ed.
The City of lrvlne waa to be
"entirely free and harmleaa
from au liability," lhe company
a1ieed. ·
91 is because or that agree·
menl lhat lhe Irvine Ql~p~p~la
dol11g ttie repairs to CbJWr and
Jeffrey roads that were caused
by the recent rainstorms.
* * * FronePageAI
WATER •••
"I don't know.
"But. I lhlnk that for those who
want to Uve In a lowly populated
area, and llke the rural at-
mosphere, perhaps we'd betttlr
set Uled to the few thln11 that
have alw1y1 been tradlUonal
rural America ...
F,....P~eAI
EDDIE •••
'
•
Suceeqful In one aucb bid,
Oranie County Supervisor
Ralph Diedrich wW try again in
Suptrlor Court to convince a
Juose that Dlstrlet Attorney
Cecll Hicks tio\lld be barred .
Officers Set
Members of \he N1wport
HatbOr Atea Chamber of Com·
merce will meet tonl1ht at the
Marriott Hotel to mstall a new
slate of officers and honor UMlr
Man of the Year.
Guest 1peaker for the banquet
that 1eta imder way at 7:30 ,.m.
will be Dr. Arthur Laffer o the
Center for the Study of Private
Enterrnse ot USC's Graduate
Schoo of Business Administra-
tion.
Outgoing chamber leader l>en·
nis Harwood will Install the
chamber's n w slate of officers
led bf Preaident·elect Rudy
Barons.
For a very limited
tim~ we welcome
yo\flo the upholstery
event of the year!
Choose Crom a
superb selection or
frame styles.
from prosecuttni tilm
Dledrtcb'• moclon r r1
time to b11 .Jadlelrcu t oo
bribery charjea. Hick• bas
already been removed ..from the
trial on campaJfJl fund )ttolatlon
tharces celltalbed in an.,earuer
indictment.
If Diedrich ls successful in the
hearlne Jan. 27 before Judge
Jobn L. Flynn Jr. It wtll mean, tr
the appellate courts uphold auch
a rullnf, that tbe state Attomey
General'• omco will again pick
up the proeecuUon chores.
State lawyers already ore pre·
padtll their cue agatoat
Dledticb, Su~n-isor Phlltp An·
thony and two codefenddnts. The
trtal ls unlikely to start before
July 31.
The mOtlon filed Tuesday con·
tends, b did the earlier auc-
cn1ruJ moUon, that Jflcks and
hla office repeatedly dlsplaye8
prejudice aaalnat Dfedrkb right
up to the Ume tha\ the ci:and
jury returned its lncllctment._1 l
The indictment nameCJ
Dtedrlch, 54, tnd Anab;elm
architect LeRoy Rose, 49, on
bribery charges cp{\nttted wi\h a die IOri by tlie Or ge County
Board ol Upei-VIsors to pe~it
development of 2,200 acres th
Anaheim Hills. BQt.b men have
pleaded innocent. ••
Defense attorney Sylvan
Aronson arsued before the in·
cUct.ment Wa.J returned that U'8
district aUorney'11 office should
be barred from puraUln1 the in·
vcsticalion becauso of the al·
leged prejudice.
Superior Court Judee WlWmn
L. Murray held a ~artn1 tnto
the defense illeaaUon and ~
n.ied tho motion. ·
...
Rogers Recovers .
:ORRA CE (AP) -Weatena
at " oy Rogers isn't up t.o i'lc!·
lng horses yet, but he has token ·
bis first steps since underaolna
opea·h•art surgery lait •
weeSCead. He ••• descrlbecl
Tuesday as "dolnl flftt" at Lit·
Ue Coinpany of Mary Hospital in Tor11 nee. ' •'
JERUSALEM CAP) -Eaypt
broke otr peace talk• with Israel
today barely one day after they
started and, Egyptian President
Anwar SAdat ordered h1I foretsn minister back to Cairo.
In Cairo, Jnf«matlon Minister
Abdel Monelm el Sawy, an.
nouncinc the recall of Foreisn
Minister Mohammed Kamel,
said It was because the talks
were continuing in a vicious CY·
cle."
•'The talks are effectively
ste>ppln1," said U.S. State
Department spokesman Hod·
dine Carter.
Carter, clearly taken by sur·
prtae, aald be did not know tr
tbts meant the collapse or talks.
''We are obviously 1oin1 to
• talk to them (tbe EIYPU
and find oat," be said.
The announcement from Cairo
came two mcotbs after Sadat
visited Jenusalem to be an
hiatorlc dlrec:t dlalo1ue with Israel. ,
Amerlc~ sources reported
deep divUions betweea JsneUs and EcypUans 01> the PalesUn-
ian problem and lsr••U de·
mands that it be allowed to,...
lain settlements in Arab lands in
a peace settlement.
Egypt opened the talks Tues·
day with a finn repetition of lSI
demand• for total luaell
withdrawal from war-won lands
and creation of a nation for the
Palestinian people. hrael
~Teplied to the opening remarks
LB (jouneil Agenda
fay Hike, UirilJg: .
Freeze Assailed
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of ... O.lly l'li.t 1e.11
Two items on tonight's City
Couocil acenda have drawn
~rilleism rrom the president of
Laguna Beach's Municipal
Employee:. Association.
!\ltchael Townsend, who works
for the city's parks department,
said the two agenda Items,
placed blt(k to back nea~ the end or t.he published council
•~btdule, don't make sense to
him.
The first seeks council ap·
prov al to place a freeze on rmine
vacant citr PQSlltOnJ 11'fttil tho
o-.tcome 0 the J arvll property
t,4x reform pro~ al ls known
pext Julf. ,
The 1ecood ts a requ for the
council to consider adoptlnc
higher aalar)' ranges for top
Laguna ShOw to R~ate EgyptWn A.r:ti/acta
Ir you didn't eet tlcketa to see
lng Tut ln Los Anaelea, you've
still got a ch1nce to view the
treasures of E1ypt In the 43rd
annual P1geant of the Mast~ra
\his summer.
Festival director Don
Willlamson unveiled plans for
t.he six-week pro m ta m l·
lps or the bc>Ata or cton and
4tafC Tuesday algbt on th
te1tival 1rounds.
The Paieant of the asters •H live models to re-create
orka ol art. And the hlehlllht
of the 1978 show, Williamson
aid, will be displays of about a
dozen pieces ft'om the Kint
Bri~e• Washed Out
Four small bridges spanning Aliso Creek in South
Laguna were washed out or heavily damaged in the
most recent storms. The rain·swolten creek overflowed
its banks taking bridges. heavy sewer pipes and uproot·
ed trees downstream. The raging creek also did heavy
damugc to Ben Brown·s Golf and Country Club before
1·etu1·ninf! to normul size Tuesda~·.
--
°"" ~ 1&1111 ..... .,., ~·lftd .. ._. EDDIE RUA ... SN'T LOST HIS WILL TO WIN
Therepllt Cheryl Hlfthey Aatf at• In Exero .. •
Fro.Page Al
EDDIE •••
today that there la hope her 5on
will walk with braces.
''He has regalned some feeling
on lhe skin inside his thi1h1 and
there is hope his hip flexing ·
muscles can become strong
enough for him to swins hla
legs," she aald.
When Eddie's pUeht became k~own at his church, St.
Nicholas where he served u an
altar boy, parishlonera ittan.d
an "Eddie Rua Fund," to be ad-
ministered by the pastor, Father Otto Sporrer.
T• fwid has topped $8 000 Mrs. Rua said. ' '
And aid has been promised
from another quarter.
Jonathon Kirby or La1una
Hills has offered funds from his
Associated Charitable Causes
fund-raising drive.
Kirby's organization sells
merchant-sponsored discount.
ticket books in the Saddleback
Valley for charitable cauees
Kirby. who says his organJzatio~
is non-profit, has promised 20
percent of the proceeds to the
Rua family.
Meanwhile, Eddie's father,
Octavio, n control iiystems ~neint!er laid off his Fluor Com-
pany job shortly after his son's
fall, is interviewing for joba of.
fered recently -at leut one or
whicb ~a.s the direct result or a
Dally PUot •ubscriber who read
of the family's plight.
As for EdcU,, he's taken a few
steps already on lee• atlffened
wltb braces and hi• body auP.
ported by parallel bars.
"He's spunky," o physical
therapist at Casa Colina said
this week. "He's really cute. We
just Jove him." Then, becau.e
Eddie was havln1 a difficult
time popping wheeUes, she eave
him a hand, holding the back or
his wheelchaJr.
Fro• Page Al
HOOVER •••
Sewage Spill
Caused by
Broken Line
South Coast County Water Dia·
trict crews have construC!ted a
temporary bypasa system on a
stretch ot sewer pJpeJlne that
was ripped apart at Aliso Creek
during the most recent storms.
More than 700,000 gallons of
raw sewage escaped to the
ocean Monday after more than
150 feet or 18-inch pipeline was
destroyed by the raln-swollen
creekbed, which runs through
Ben Bl'QWn 's Golt and Country
Club lo South Laauna.
But water district officials
said today the pipeline, which
brings Taw sewage from South
Laguna homes up to a treatment
plant a mile above the golf
course, has been temporarily re-
paired.
"We began pumping the
sewage up to the treatment
plant this moming," said.water
district general manager
Raymond C. Miller.
He said crews should have the
pipeline repaired by early next week
From Page AJ
·MIDEAST ...
Weizman J>rushed aside a re·
porter's question about whether
he still planned to go to Cairo
Thursday !or parallel military
talks.
"Please don't bother me " he said. '
. Sawy said Sadat was conven-
ing an emeriency session of
Egypt'8 Parlfament on Saturday
to explain his "decisive de·
clJion" and "place before the
representatives or the people all
the tacts of the altuaUon ...
On Sunday night, 'When the
EgyptJan deleeatton lelt tor
Israel, an official spokesman
said Sadat haCJ cancelled au ap-
pointments tor 10 days to follow
developmepll in the peace talks
ns closely as possible.
Heart F or11m
Set Tonight
In S. Lagoha
A free public forum on cardio
pulmonary resuscitation will be
presented tonlght at South Coast
Community Hospital in South Laguna.
Dr. Sol Sloan, director o(
medical education at the
hospital, will head the informa·
tional forum, which will include
the film , "Pulse ot Life."
Dr. Myron Wacholder, direc·
tor of the h~itaJ. enaerienty
room, Laguna Beach fire de· partm~nt officials, and nurse in·
strpctors wiU 181!\0 participate° to
the meettna. ~ · • :o. •
Interested persons will also
have ano opportunity to 1ien up
for many life-saver classes
scheduled by the hospital this
year.
The meeting will be held from
7 to 9 p.m. in the' hospital
auditorium. For more Informa-
tion, call 499-1311.
Tide Pool Tour Set
A watklng tour ol tide pools
near the Dana Point Harbor
West Buln Ls scheduled for 2
p.m. Jan. 22 by the Marine
Studies Ittstltute. Re,ervations
may· be made by caurng 4113·9890
between 9:30 a.m. and 3:30 p.m.
weekdays. Donations are ac·
cept.ed.
•
F • •
~xSurveyed
Men List Lave 'E~,
NEW YORK CAP) -Men prize intelligence
humor and self-confidence over good lOoks in • aex
partner, according to a Redhook magazine survey
report. Most important of all was that the partners
Jove each other, the survey indicated.
The women's maaaztne said it based its findings
on 2,000 out or 40,000 responses to a 11&-ltem ques·
tionnaire published last June, Redbook asked the
women who read the magazine to give their
husbands or boyfriends the questionnaire.
That the woman love him was li.sted as absolute-
ly essential or very important to sex by 81 percent of
the respondents, the magazine said. Sense of humor
was highly prized by 67 percent; intelligence 64 per·
cent and self -confidence S6 percent. .
Nice legs were essential or important to 40 per-
cent, a pretty face to 33 percent and a big bust to 16 percent.
The magazine said lt believed that the
responses, while not necessarily representative of
American men H a whole, were a good mirror of at·
titudes oC young. middle-class married men. ; . ,. '
For a very limited
time -we welcome
you to the upholstery
event of the year!
Choose from a
aupel'b selection of
frame styles.
~alBipgo
Considered
In San Juan
Blnto sa.,,.._..,,ctioaed for
munlclpalities throu1b a 1978
alate law ch.an1e-may aooa t.e
comln1 to San Juan Capistrano.
Councilmen will conalftl'
tonl1ht a new clty ordinance de-
111 n ed to allow various or•
ganlzatJonJ in the community to
conduct blnao 1amea.
Tbe 1ames ot chance would be
conducted for cbarltabte
purposes under the proposed cl-"
ty law. Organization.a en1astq
in bingo sames would also be re-
quired to pay an annual 11
tna fee.
The proposed ordinance was
developed after realdeota ot
Capistrano Valley Mobile
Estates inquired last November
about an ordinance allowing
blnao.
The councll meeting will take
place at 1 p.m. in city offices,
32400 Paseo Adelanto.
G1mmenKill
2 Customers
SUN VALLEY (AP) -A ~uatomer who Jau1hed and
another who balked al 1Mn1 up
hu wallet were •hot fatally by
two 1unmen who held up a Sun
Valley bar and fled after the
abooting, police uy.
AuLboriUea identltled the vie. •
Uma Tuesday aa Joae •
Chacon, 36, ot C~on ~
and Lam P. Ray, 23, Of &Ii Valley ....
Then choose again, from
literally hundreds of col·
ors nd patterns! Shop
quickl,Y, though, while
these v ry !Special prices
remnin in effect!
L guna B ach City Coun n mbers re conJid rio
r;qulrin 10 acre of lond out iuna Canyon Road for
asa iiph ralp rkin1lotcomeaummerfestlvaltime.
T pl • Cormulated by Mayor Jon Brand. would
h :v f Uval v itora park their cars in Laguna Canyon~
then c tch free buses to the various festival grounds.
Brona enVlslons a few artist displays located at the
parking aite to draw visitors to the lot, thereby
alleviating traffic jams and parkin& problems ln the
city's central business district during the six summer
festival weekends. The canyon land would be used as a·
park the rest of the year.
But the Irvine Company. owner of the land, has told
rand it does not intend to sell the land to Laguna Beach,
and that it would actively resist any condemnation moves
-by the city to buy the potential parking lot1park.
' However, the council is movin& ahead and getting an
• estimate ol the cost of an assessment of the land. That
figure comes at toniaht's council meeting.
Whatever the cost, the city mighf think hard abOut
buying·a large and expensive piece of land which might
only be actively used 12 days a year.
I Waluabl~ Service
Until recently San Clemente residents who needed
human services usually had to leave town to apply for
them. but the San Clemente Seniors program for older
citizens has changed that situation.
Representatives of a growing number of public and
private agencies have been brought to the San Clemente
Community Clubhouse, where the Seniors meet, to pro-.
vide tax, housing, legal, consumer and other support
services.
The foresight of Seniors staff workers has expanded
availability of these services to include all area residents,
not limiting them to senior citizens.
An open house last week offered nearly 200 visitors
an opportunity to meet the staff of nearly 20 agencies
represented at the clubhouse on a regular basis.
Additional information on this valuable community
service ls available by calling San Clemente Seniors,
498·3322. - -
Rape Program Works
Not one fotcible rape case was reported in Laguna
Beach last year -compared with 17 cases during 1975
and 1976. This must say something for the city's stepped-
up investigations of t'hat crime.
Admittedly, all the credit cannot go to new police pro·
cedures, but a three·point rape prevention program in·
itiated by the department has shown definite results.
For inslanl!e. Police Chief Jon Sparks says his de-
partment now places the same priority on rape cases as
on homicides.
The clearance of all nine reported rapes in 1976 would
· seem to point up the success of that program. .
In addition, officers are offering extra patrols to resi·
dents who complain of prowlers, and the city's crime pro· ~.
vention unit will check homes to make sure they are in·
truder·proor. ·
Officers also receive training in how to deal With a
rape victim in a sensitive manner, with the end result,
Sparks says, of gettins accurate information on the as-
sailant rapidly.
And the departmenf's rape prevention community
education program helps women protect themselvn.
Jn all. laudable results from a laudable program.
Bo~d/Feminine
Q. ·~DOblrU bave,ean?"
A. '1'tiat tbey a6. It'•
noteworthy. howner, tbal
they allo 1enae soundl to
some depee with their tall
feathen.
THE CANCE& lnatitute lllued
lta ahmnln1 findings to alert 33
mllllon women who use balr
dyes to tho POlential dan1er. A
warnln, wu abOut the only eov·
ernment action posaible. The tood and Dru1 Admlnlatratian
11 powerless to lake any action
a1aJn1t h&lr ct.Yet because ol a
1tran1e. •~lal exemption pro-
vided the Industry 40 yean qo.
The CosmeUc, Toiletry and
Fra1rance Ailoclation, a sweet·
1oundlna name for a batd·noHd
lobby, la1mched an lmmediate
counterattack. OD behalf of it.a
clients, the association ll'OUnd
out a blanket denial that h&1r
dyes are huai'dous. Dyes With
the benzidlne derlvaUvea were
no tonier belnt 1oli1 to the
public, the association added
oothlngly.
Thl• WM quickly pro\'ed falle.
Con1re11tonal lnve1ti1ators
walked lnto a Wuhmiton drill store and found them on the
shelves. ~emporary hair dyes
made by lloux lAboratorJes and
marketed under allurtn1 brand
Mailbox
To the F.d.itor:
trom tliiie to time }uCfges are
criticized for sentences or other
decisions they may have made
where the decision or sentence
waa mandated by the appllcabl
etatutes or ap~Uate decisions.
Thl• la Just what has happened
in the case lnvoh1ng the en·
tenclng of Patrick Kearney, lb
10·~11lled '.'Tram Bas Klll r:·
Lelt>era concemhuJ lhll aubJect have n ppblishCd in \larl®S
newap4pen.
a'he trial judge or our court
who· sentenced ~r. Kearney
aave him the maximum aen·
tence under the law that exUtca
at tho time tho murde s wer
committed. The Judie could not
have alvtn ttio defendant the
death penalty or ure lmprtloft.
ment withOut tb ~slblllty of
parole on th pleas .Involved.
The tow hlch provld such
penalU dld not become effee·
Uvo until Aug. 11, 1971t rter the
murders Involved n r oc·
curred. By ppclJate court de-
clllon, IUCCCSSlYC lire entenc
cannot be im1>9Sed Jn mulUpl
murder cases.
and suddenly ound bimself un·
der attaek by hu1e. unleashed,
growling, ianarllng, 75·pound
Labraddr that ch raed hls dbp,
Uaing his e1ne, the elderly
gentleman was holdln• th t
maddened brute at bay when,
Just as 1udderil7, the 28·year-old
owner or the beut howled out of
hls house, slammed the aeolor
lnto an embankment and bepn
1trikln1 and beraUnt the old man for defendin& his do1s.
t
RObef't N,
f
* Comedian Paul L7 de, arrested Jan. 11 in
· front of a &alt ~· Caty tavern on a charge of bi· terferina wlth a POllce officer,
chanted .hiS plea from Innocent
to aullty, a clerk said.
Lynde, who made the plea
throu•ti Salt Lake attorney
Jeh• Kesler, forfeit.a hls $S0
bond, aald City Court clerk
Gloria Demu.
Lyna wa1 arrested at 1:50
a.m. in front of the Sun Tavern
i wblle an oltlcer waa lnveattcat-
Jn• two ear bur1Jartes, Jnclwl· LYN 1
Ina a Umoushie owoed by Osmond ProducUona. ..
AUon Carter, the 89-year-old uncle of
President Carter, Is reported in "very serioua"
condition at Americus-Sumter County <Ga.) Hoaplt.&I.
Carter has been in
--------.. the intensive care unit
[ )
since underaoinc gall PEOPLE bladder sur1ery Jan. 8.
"He ii dom, poorly," _______ _. a hospital spokesman
said.
Cart.et is the father of Georha atate Sen. Hap
Caner and wu mayor of Plains, Ga., for 28 ye an.
*
About $8.8 mutton lo donaUons have been
made or pledced to the Bubert H. Bu.mp•rey
Institute of Public Affairs to be bullt at the University ol Minnesota.
The University of Minnesota Foundation said
the total included a Sl million aift announced dur-
ina the weekend by the Japanese governmenl
Sponaora are seekln1 a total of $20 million. ..
Richard Hon1lato, who 1ave up being sheriff
of San Francisco to become police chief of
Cleveland, ls pa11ng another
visit to San Francisco -to take a bride.
EUubetb Colton said she
and ffonaJsto wlll be married in
mld·February.
It will be the first marrtaae
for her and the second for
Honelsto, who divorced hl1 first
wife several years a10.
A iraduate of Florida State
Unlvenlty, Miu Colton ls preal· NOU1no
dent of the San Francisco Federated Younf Democrat.I.
*
that the AQMD approvo s ·
the projeCt -tho lut enate lint lo a multibilllon
MS. CM VEN, WHO LIVES MA>NE ln aouth
Berkeley with btr t.y ar-old son Gabriel, aakt tb
punaent odor res4mbUne mechulc'1 &r::'• con· vinced her that ah was a aulted by " '1· ..
More than 60 women raped In tb Berkeley area in tJt put four yean have d rtbed a similar odor on their aaaallant:;
Ey,es Measure transportation syatem
that a tarts In Jee bound ,...., L D • 1 ::_ • ' ~; ~'"~~°"~.~N~~.1.0 ower r1n1ungage Am•nca. ~
11owever, apokeamen
for Staodard OU COm· SACRAMENTO <AP/ -Tbe idea t b o u « b , to a m a J or it y of paoy ot Ohio tSoblo) of 19-year·olda 5lpp ng martini& Senate Governmental Orcaniiatlon
declined to comment on causes Highway Patrol officers to Committee membet1. They sent to
tbe acceptabWty of 15 shudder and a state senator to recall the Senate floor a pmposal to put on
anU-pollutton conditions · boyhood adventUl'el. the ball~ a meuure to lower the
OT AS
TH£ IST, 8AU>. "told me lt Gabriel came into the room he'd kiU blm." SH coaxed bv
IOA back: into bla bedroom where IM f eU uleep.
a. Craven nld th man unwted ber ln·
termltteriUy for about two bOun Pd ont red her to .. act if you elijoy It,"
She recalled UWOOns, .. If I au.rvtve Ulla I bad
better remember every detail. If be'• already de-
cUled to klll us there'• nothlq t can dO."
Her band wu cut at one Ume, later nqu.lrtnt five aUtcbee.
. ALntOVGB SHE NEVER SAW IDS face, !11.
Craven aald she noticed hla dark compleXJon abort·
ly before be blindfolded her. And abe aaid abe
would recQgDJze his voice tf •ho beard It apin.
Sh• determined tbat hla batr was cut ill a abort
natural style, that he had • tubble ol a beard and
that hi.a biceps were 1t.ron1.
!rillated l.lJ)OD in the atafC Tbe idea was acceptable enouib. drlnklnl ace from ~1 to 19.
recommendation. THE VOl'B WAS •·Z Tuesday on E1-J.!·-on· G•,.nted 6'1t .4 .... ftted Q.•.....,~on Losa• ACA.55, which paned the Assembly Uf,S • ~ ~ e~ ~ laat summer. lf tWO•thirda of the
SACRAMENTO <AP> Senate approve lt by Jan.~ it will Ra J
-Lobbyist Robert ~ l . go on the June 8 ballot. If the te ncrPase Beck us confirms that tJ'l.PQ . IR lectalaUve approval comes after Jan. .:;:;
hl.e firm spent $2,671 f?r 'r""' 25, It would &o on the Nov. '1 ballot.
a golt club membership U-rp ... ,.,,.,;,,.~ At the hearlni. Capt. WUliam LOS ANGELES (AP) -For most Southern
and dues for state Sen. ir~Uf, • ·""' ~ Oliver ot the Jijabway Patrol said hia Callfomla Edlaon CO. custOmers, tumlnc on the
Alrred Sonc. chairman agency feared· that lowerlnc the ll&hta and uslfta the electric stove are more ex-
Coof the,Senate JudJcla.ry SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -The drinklnc ace would result in more pensThiv•.~-~r;orn. la Public uww-Oom-•--100 MJD ttee, C U# ' YOUtbfW dr\lftkeD drtVetl. "4W•' -UIUO
'!ltbou&h the l972 1lft t:m~~": :;&:!f1':0~~1;: ,!hl~b He said h1a deDartment'a atatlsUes Tuesday cranted the company authority to lm·
ian t affected by Prop. 9, bad reversed a $2 million mal~racUce Indicate .. that people under ace 21 !'!:Sf.~uat ~ :rJ1~ir.:~~ 7.1 percent u a paaaed in 1974, it would a-ard •&•inst Dr. John ork. a already have acceas to alcohol C h have violated state law ... Tbe PU aal t e Increase was needed former Sacramento ortbo--';,. aur· tbrouch illecat meana." Of 215,000 In· be '"' , ""' ..... _ ... had it beeQ proven that a·on. ~.. tdXlcatloo~vlnC arrests last year in cao..se ~• company 1 costs u.ave a~ dwin1 the Soo0 cut a vote or took "" C -1 1 12 moot.ha endlnl lut Aua. 11. • The ..... __ ,_,. de"'ls1·on Tu--'ay allfouua near Y 12 000 involved any Other Official 8CtJ0Q W'4UUuov-... 'l:li"llU t old t b '
In return. by Justice.Mat.hew Tobriner upheld a P4!J:'50nl 20 years or younaer, e THE COMPANY RAD TO PAY MOaE
IC'-lo B ,_ Sacramento SuperiOr Court rulln1 said. • becauae ot tbe d.rouabt. wblcb precluded PWChaae ~pt • ae~ which denied Nork's request to THE BILL'S SPONSOa, A•· of cheaper hydro.lectrlc power from the
SACRAMENTO <AP> withdraw his prior waiver of a Jury Hmblyman LoWa Papan, D·Daly Ci· Northwest, and the reawtJna use of blcber·priced
-Le&lslation to exempt trial in the civil 1uit. tv, 1ald be feels a • drlnk:1n1 aae re-fuel oil '°make UJ> the den cit, the PUC l&ld.
the proposed Sundesert It ordered the cue to the State duction WOUid reduce peer aroup pre· The rai. increue, effective Tuesday, wW not
nuclear power plant In Court of Appeal in Sacramento. 1ure1todo10methlnellle1al. be pUaej alon• to "llfelloe" rates or tbe ftnt aoo
Southern California Albert Gonzale'S had flied the .. There was a drinking driver kilowatt hours per month for domeatlc uae •
from state nuclear malpractice and fraud suit aaalnst problem In 1939 when I went to hlg}\ whicbevert.a1re•ter.
s afeguard laws hu Nork and Sacramento Mercy l'chool ... commented Sen. John DoJlar amount of the Increase li $70.t mllllon cleared a state Senate Hospital claiming back surgery he· Dunlap, D·Napa. "Ooe of the reuons !or ab moothl.
committee. underwent in 19151 was unnecessary, waa·lt was a pretty txclUn1 thltif to Resldelitlal aervtce will rtae from tbe ,~
The Senate Public performed Incompetently, left him do because It wu against the law. J.4 oenta per kilowatt hour to 1.8 ~•ta under the
Utilities, Transit and unable to work and ultimately caused It's a very lnn>onant element in the ne~ rate hike, and lrom 1.• cell.ti to 1.T cent& for Enerey Committee vot-cancer. rnotlvatJonaHactor." other users. edWTu~~ t
The laws havle1m-
po1ed a moratorium on
new nuclear plants In
Callfornla. •
FarnRabed
SAN FRANCISCO
<AP> -Tbe1tate Public
Utilities Commission
haa approved hl1her
fares for the famed
Skunk Line train in
Northern Callforula.
Tbe PUC approved
Tuesday a request by
Mendocino Coa1t
Railway Inc., which
operates the scenic
pa11en1er service 1
between Fort Bra11 aod • ·
Willits. to lncreue the
f area on Feb. 6.
Da1'1sCa•palgn•
SACRAMENTO <AP>
-Ed Davt.a, the blunt
former police chief of
Loa An1ele1, baa 1 launched .b1a campaJ1n
for the Republican
nomlnat!On for 1overnor wlth a promise to boost
bu1lnes1 development,
a1riculture and nuclear
eoeray.
In a Capitol news con-
f eren~e Tueiday Ju.st 100
feet trom GOV. Umund
Brown Jr.'• office, Davia aaJd as governor
he would promote ••a
tree'1Jllfi'i>riff ecology"
that would attract new
butloeu and joba.
uster Tned
Diedrich 4-jain B.aps Hreks
I
Sex Surveyed
Men Lut Love 'Eaentia'l'
NEW YORK CAP) -Men prize intelligence.
humor and a.elf-confidence over good looks in a sex
partner according to a Redbook magazine survey
report. Moet important of all w~tb t the partnen
love each other, the survey indicated.
Tbe women's magUlne said it based ~ta flndln s
on 2,000 out of 40,000 responses to a l16-1tem ques·
Uonnaire published last June. Redbook asked the
women who read tbe magazine to give their
husbands or boyfriends the questionnaire.
That the woman love hlm was llsttd as absolute·
ly essential or very important to sex by 81 percent ol
the respondents, the magazine said. Sebse of humor
was highly prized by 67 percent; iriteWaeoce 6' per·
cent and self.confidence 56 percent
Nice legs were essential or Important to 40 per-
cent, a pretty face to 83 percent and a big bust to 16 percent.
The maga!lne said It believed that the
responses, while not necessarily representaUve of
American men u a whole, were a eood mirror of at-
titudes of young, middle·class married men.
Fro.. Pflfle AJ
STORM •••
Guerneville ln Sonoma County.
Some 250 pet'IOlll were evacuat·
ed when the Russian River over· flowed.
Plane Forced
To Return,
lands Safely
Along parts oC the Sacramento· River, rlslng waters spllled over An AJrCalifomia Electra prop-
Into nooct control areas, atld BUI Jet carrying 86 passencen ex. Clark~ oC the State-Federal perlencedenctneproblemubort·
Flood OperaUons Center. ly aft.er takeoff from Oran10
One or the hardnt·hlt areu, County Airport early toaay, rorc·
Santa Barbara, received 1.ts ins the pla.ne to return and land
iqcbea qi rain by 4 p.m. Monday. • witbonlythreeea,mri. •
San Diqo County aut.laOiitlet Ocango County fire crewa
Tuesday called o!C their search manned tbe runwa1 when tho
for Ivan Bertman, 27, oC Del plane landed safely at 7:53 a.m.
Mar, mlsaln1 and presumed There wel'9 no injuries.
drowned alter h1I plck;f truck AccordJnc to Air CallfornJa
ctaabe'd jsito tn eartben le ind ~ apok.,man John( .Bries~ the tunbled flto raln·awollen Penas. pllbt ny1ag the n01t·1t.Qp run to
qu.ltoa Creek. Lake Tahoe reported that one oC
Sunday!i vt41;lm1 ldd~ a the plane's ttur en1lnea bad
San DleJc:f ~pJe drowniid when overhe1ted. their~? ear. wa:tl ri ulfed by The enstne waa shut down u a
flood•atera in'ttl n .V.Uty. preca~ mea1t1re and the
Two s1Me?1 died Jn, TUuana ln Jet ret..ned to Oran1e County
tbe coUaPH oC an earthen dam A l r Po r t. E r I ~ a e n • a 1 d soutbeut of the Mellcan city. paaaeneers w~ tranafefl"ed to
Jn Fallbrook an a1rtcultural another night. .
dam started overflowlnc Mon·
day and ,_used .. ·v.cuaticSd bl IO
peraonl. The evacuea returned
to their bomea Tueatay. ut
used elU1dbu1 tb prepare for~· next rllln. , -·
In that l!Ulf community,
homes, 1chooll and bUlllMINI
were flooded and roadl wubed
out from the rains of the past
few days. Some homes were
flooded three times lut week.
Winderman
Rites Held
... _.., -~ . -. ' .•. . . . . -·· . .. . ' , ... r·•
BirdWatchers •
PLtll Tour
Ml1rat1n1 waterfowl and shore birds 'NIU be the roeua of a
culded tour of th• Upptr Newport Bay Ecoloaloal Ruerve Saturday.
The free two·hour walktn1
to\11'1 Will beclil at t a.m., wtth
the last grmap leaTtftJ about 1o:ao a.m. from th• comer or Back Bay Drive and ut .Bhatt
Drl\'e tn Ne~ Bftcb.
Friends of' Newport Ba1
1pon10t the tripe ln tonJunetl«\
with the state Department or Flab arid Game. lnl01'11'atlon ta
available from Barbara JOhnsott at m-88U or 81 'Nathemoa, or
Ralpb Yocmc at CJU) ao.;11J1S .
New€hamber
Officers Set
•
Dies at Age 94
CO.aliead Given
LISBON, Ponu,al APJ So~lah1t Party leaders gave
M~rio Soares th go.aftead today
to rorm a coalition cabinet with
the conaervaUvh.
For a very llmlttd
time -we welcome
• you to the upholstery event of the yeu !
Choose Crom a
superb selection of
frame styles.
1
About $8.8 million In donaUons have been 1 made or pledged to the Haben R. Rampbrey
, tnatltute of Publlc Arf airs to be built at the
University of MiMesota.
• The University of Minnesota FoundaUon said
the total Included a $1 million gift announced dur·
1 lnf the weekend by the Japanese government.
; Sponsors are seeking a total or $20 mllllon.
*
Richard llon1hrto, who save up being sherlff
of San Francla~o to become police chief of Cleveland, i1 paying another
visit to San Francisco -to lake
a bride.
Ellubetb Collon sald she
and Hon&ilto will be married in
mid·February.
It wlll be the fl.rat marrtase
Tafor her and the second for
Hon1iato, who divorced hi.I flnt.
wUe several yean 110.
A gnduate of Florida State
• Uruvenity, M1a Colton la presi· MOM1NST0
dent of tho San Francisco Federa\ed Younc
Democrats.
* ! Two UCLA seniors and a1 &rkeley craduate
student htve been nominated by Unlverslty or
California student presidents aa finallata to
become tho next student member Of the UC Board
of Regenta.
The Student Body Presldenta' Council Hid the
nomlneea are Glen Smith, 22, a UCLA pollt1cal
science maJor; lleaee TarkeU, 21, a UCLA Enall•b
maJor, and Jeff Koon, 35, a 1raduate student tn
hither education at UC Berkeley.
One ot the three will be recommended by a ro-
1enta' committee tor confirmation by the board next month to a oo•year term beCUmlnl In July. •
ALTllOt1GH B N&V MW face. M1.
Craven Uld ab• noUced bll dark COlaplexlOD lbOrt·
Jy before be bliDd.f olded btr. And lbe aald abe
would recocnhe bla vQlce U 1be Mud lt •lain.
She determined that hla hair wu cut in a ahort
natural style, that be had a atubble of a beard and
that hls bleeps were stron1.
LOS ANGELES <AP> -For moat Southem
California FAilOll Co. cuatomen, tum.lnl oo tile Uihta and U11na the eleetrtc atovo are more ex·
pe~ive tod~.
Tbo Callfomla Public UWlU• Commilllon Tuesday cram.cl the compuy a~b' to im•
mediately boost electric rata 7.1 percent u a
semi-annual cost adJu.slment.
Tbe PUC aatd tbe lncre111 waa needed
because tho company's COila have riMD durlDi tbe 12 months endlna tut Aue. at.
SAVE UP ·TO 50% OFF
Stacks of shoes from
all our big names ,.
LADIES' SHOES
Reg. to '16 •• • • • • •••••• How s71o to $16 90
LADIES' FASHION BOOTS axcw •err llLICTIOM
..... to .................. s259o'°s3190
. ~·
MEM'SSHOE$
.toS...95 ........... NaW s49o to s24"0.
Newport Beach city councl1men, ton1 opposed to the
ol generated by commercl I jet traffic at Orange
CouDty Airport. find themaelvea f acin an important de·
cislon.
The airport's varlance from the noise standards set
by state law lapsed in December. The hearing on grant·
ing a ew variance will not be held until May and that
date is likely to be delayed even further into the summer.
As they have in the put, clty officials plan to oppose
granting a variance because they feel the airport and Its
jet-operating tenants have not lived up to their promises to work to reduce jet noise. City people also coqtend there
should be no expansion of the airport until the noise levels can be appreciably reduced.
· • Meanwhile, a group of Newport citizens thinkS the city
_ ought to go a few steps beyond its usual opposition at the
J
noise variance hearings and start legal proceedings
,against the county.
Councilmen have a tough decision to make. Should
they risk the substantial amount of money that would be
required to hire a noise litigation specialist to presa theic
., case in court? Or .should they stick with their existinf
I game plan. in the h~pe that it might produce some respite
from the airport notse?
The answer is as difficult to come by as the solution
. to the airport problem itself.
f McNally Questions
Last week, trustees of the Newport-Mesa School Dis-
trict officially declarea the site of the McNally continua·
lion high school surplus property.
The declaration is the first step in selling the Costa t Mesa parcel at 19th Street and Newport Boulevard for
.• what should be a substantial sum.
.. However, while the paperwork td sell the property
has begun, trustees have still to solve the larger problem
and that is what to do with the students who attend
classes on the campus and district services still located
there.
The McNally site houses more than the continuation
high school. In addition to the 350 students who attend
continuation classes, the site also is used by the 150
students enrolled in the separate r.rogram offered by the
Newport·Mesa evening high schoo .
"I:he property also houses the district's central
kitchen which will have to be relocated along with the two
groups o( students
While it may seem that the sale of the site is proceed-
ing, the trustees have the most difficult part of the proc·
ess still facing them and that is deciding where those three
school operations will be moved.
Soccer for Coast? f Following a low-scoring financial year in Santa Ana,
the California Sunshine professional soccer team is hop·
ing to find a new home at Orange Coast College in Costa
Mesa.
The team's bid 'b pl 1y aoout 15 Sati.irdaY: eveninaa-
this . ummer at Stadium is now beirie kicked
arou ~ by Coast fij. ·ty COilege Distnct tru5tee •
who have indicate~Jb r just~aY. let the Sunshine in. _, __
ApparentJy tbeT would be no connictS w1lli sctioo
athletlcs, and if last .year's attendance figures are any in·
dication <sometimes1e than 1,000 fans ~r game>. access
streets and OCC' _pafk J lot would not be overpowered by
.lraroc. • .
Truttees have wisely sought assurances that the
team wlll meet the co t of renting the stadium and pro·
vide ne~ security nCl stadium taff. • .
IC the Sunshine can· Offer'. these guarantees, the pro.
posal looks worthy ot approval on a trial basis.
The most jmpresslve as~ct or the team's "communi·
ty concept" is' an off er tO hola a number of free instruc-
tional clinics f'or young Orange Coast soccer players. •
This certainly would be n plus for the kids and their
parents. and, who knowa, perhaps we may have a case of
; 'Sunshinemanla'' one day.
#
Boyd/Feminine
81L.M.BOYD
The more feminine the omen. the more likely abc pref n bath to a ehower.
Or such be the flildinl of a
Com U University reaearcb
team. Maybe so, don't knOW. m. It's kDOwD that abOut 50
percent. Of the women like the ehowei-bett r. Why ta not
alto1ethtr a myat~. Hllr
bamp0be4 In tho ahower
till
•
WASHINGTON -The
multlbilllon-dollar c:osmeUca In·
duatry II ifruUcally tryln1 to
pereuad IQUlions of American
women that there la no cucer
rlak In us101 thOso hlsbly ad·
vertl1ed bair dyes.
So f rintieally ls tho indmtry
xddUnc thla Pl'9P•1anda line. in fact, that its
Wuhln1ton
lobby has
J'Ulbed out an
erroneous
claim and
aome 1uspect
atudles.
At ila&ae II
the llndins by
the National
Cancer
Inatitute that a major lnir'edlenl
1D most hair dyes, 4-MM'PD, h ..
caused cancer in labOratory teat
animals. The eovemment 1cien·
U.tl also dlacovered that aome
hair dyes contain derivatlverOf
benzldine; thla, too, is a proven
carcinogen.
THE CANCER InsUtute issued
its alarmlnc flndlnga to alert 33
mllllon women who use halr
dyes to the potential danaer. A
warning wu about the only ICW·
ernment action posaible. The
Food and Dru& Administration
la powerless to take any action
.. a1atnst hair dyes because of a
1tran1e. apedal exemption pro-
vided the lndustry 40 years ago.
The Cosmetic, Toiletry and
Fra1rance Association, a sweet-
soundlng name f dr a bard·no.ed lobby, launched an immediate
counterattack. On behalf of it.s
clients, the uaoclation crounct
out a blanket denial that hair
dyes are buardoua. Dyes with
the beruldine derivatives were
no longer beinc sold to the
public, the association added
soothingly.
This wu quickly proved false.•
Conaresaional lnvestt1ators
walked into a Washin1ton drug
store and found them on the
shelves. Temporary hair dyes
made by Roux LabOratorles and
marketed under allurln1 'braocl
names auch u "Black J\a1e, ..
••chocolate taa•• and
••Frivolous Fawn° contained
benzJdln deriv Uves.
A SPO E OHAN for the
cosmetics lobby acknowledpcl
sb.e bad m de a mtatakt. "l was in a hurry,'' he explalned. A Roux representaUve told UI the
firm ha now 1topped u11lD1
beoaidlne derivaUves ... We real·
ly don't tblok they cause
cancer," he said. ••but our
To the Editor: the FBI wu far·reachinf bOta n~m Ume to ttme1\fd1es-.re---nanonal and Internal onal.
criticized for sentences or other Lar1e crime syndicates were
decl1i01\S they may have made put to n.lght.
where the declsioo or sentence
was mandated by th applicabl
1tatutes or appellate decl ions.
This is just what has happened
In the case involving the
tenclne of Patrick Kearney, the
so-called "Trash Bag Killer."
Lettera concemlnc this aubieCt •
have been published In vanous
newspapers
The trial Judce Qf our court
who· sentenced M~. Kearney
gave him th maxlmum 1en·
tenet under the law th t exlited at the time the murders were
committed. The Judie could hot
have 1tven the defendant the
death penall)' or lite fmp#faon.
ment wtthout th pou\blllty of
parole on tho pl s involved.
The law whlch proV!des uch
penalUes did not com f •
tive unW Aug. 1, 1977. ft I.he
murders Involved b re oc·
curred. By appellate court de·
cislon, su Ive life sententet
cannot ,be lrnt>osect in multiple
murder cues.
I
NOW YOU and the "son on
crime liberals" climb aboard a
defenaeleu man, whose fear·
lessness put fear ln the tiearta of
crlmtnala and, ln mr oplriion.
did more to fi&ht al ty~s ot
crime in the U.S. than any Other
a1ency in our government.
I think in all f aimess a COJJh pltmentary article should be
written and .published to off.a .
the damage tM other arttcie has
done in the nilnds of our hi1b
&cbool and collegeyouth.
W. HAROLD SUMNER
-
~Gs tom may set nervous."
In c:b~llen1tng the Cancer
Jn titute•a findings, th COi· metlcs assoc I tloq trotted out in·
du1try-eublld11ed i@udi claim· ina halr dyes are sate. But con.
1re11lonal ;aourcea point out
many of th atUdfes are aubt .
On. Of th m, for exampl , wu
c:onduded tiy Industrial Bio-T t
LaborAtOrl . This ouU1L ls now
under mveStigoUon tor GllecW11
falslryin1 t t resultl over 10-year apan.
THE JUSTICE Depaf;tment
contended, however, ttiat the
three dead 1uards had nOt bOera
uposed to enOuth radlatioo to
have au5ed the ldemla. But
now we've kametl from Justice Department IOOrces that the
coverntnent bas Gn'efea tO MUle
with the Widows out of court.
This ofter by the 1u1tlce
Department Is the firat dica·
lion tbal the aovemment ti Will·
tn1 to admit possible nuclear
ne1H1ence Jn connection with
tho Nev test.I. •
INVE8TlGATOll8 fur he
Center for Dl ease Control in
Atlanta are qwet}y lnveat11aUng
whether the lar1e number of
leliktmia cases amona veterans
of a 1957 nuclear teat, called
Smokey, was the result of over-
exposure.
l
81 JERRY CLAUSEN °' ....................
Eddie Rua may have lost the
use of his lep, but the 12·YMr·
old L•auna HUis athlete hun't IOst hll •J>4J"kl and determhia· UOn.
He was attemptln1 to do
wheelies with his wbeelchalr
this week at Can Colina
Hospital for rehabilitated
medicine in Pomooa where be is
Egyptians
Mideast Peace TaUts
quests uncler the Preedom of ID·
formatm Act; With the "°'001
pages released lQt moatb, they
com pr{ae virtually a11 the ·
bureau's rues Oil the asaassln•
tlon of the president Nov. 22,
1913, ln Dallu. '
In the year alter the murder,
·Sadat
Recalls
Emissary
JERUSALEM (AP> -E1ypt
broke Off peace talks with Israel
today barely one day after they
atarttd and Egyptian President
Anwar S8dat ordered hla foreJcn
minister back to Cairo.
Aronson arcued before the ln·
dletment was returned that the
district attorney's office should
be barn!d from pursuing the ln·
veat11atlon because of the al• leged prejudice.
Superior court Jud1e William
L. Murral. held a hearing mto
the defense aUe1aUon and do-
llied the moUon.
( ,Pa1tA2)
•
w
· entueky
Storm, ClOse Schoo'8.) Roada_
•1 n. A.Mectated Pra• aln_, snow and •leet today na"ea the Great LaJCa and the
Tenneuee Valley, where more
than a f'oot ~ anow abut 1choola
and b and made roads
tmpHHble. Kentucky Go•.
Julia Carroll declared a state
of emersency.
"The 1tate'1 virtually Im•
mobilized," said Tom Little ~
tho Kentucky State Dlvilloo ot
Four Kill,ed
lnClwpper
TOKYO CAP) -A U.S.
Marine Corps Mlfcopter
from Okinawa crashed to-
day at a Marine rifle
range at the foot ot Mount
FuH, a U.S. MUitary
apokesmao anaounced.
The 1poke1man aald
there were no paasengen
aboard the CH·46 Sea
Knight helicopter.
The aircraft was at·
tached to the Medium
Helicopter Squadron 114
on Okinawa and was
partJclpatlng In a tralnlni
exerclM.
The names of the dead
were belnl withheld until
the next of kin were
notified.
Di1uter aad Bmerteacy
.5ervlc-. ...
Most public schools In Ken-
tucky were claled today as were
1chool1 In acattered areaa ~ ll·
linoll, Obio and Tennessee.
Clnclnnatl i'ecorded more than
11 inches Tuesday. Aa mucb u
15 Inches buried parts of
soutbem JlUnola. Ohio Gov.
lames Rhodes dlspat.cbed '11 Na·
Uooat Guardlmen to Pqmeroy,
Ironton. Port1mouth ,
Chillicothe. llancheater. Fe'lld·
ty and Newark to belp clear
aaow. · ·
Mlaaou.ri ud ID4ia.Da also bad
beuy snow with bundreds of
.chools aDd bullneues abut.
Schools doeed for a fourth 4ay
In llemohis, Tenn.. bec•UM ol
icy roads. HlsJiway coadlUaas
worsened throu&bout Tenne11ee
when more than t1'0 IJ'ic~ Of
IJ)OW fell.
Heavy rain on top of a day's
snowfall turned the New Yort
metropolitan area Into a 11Ulb
pond early today u widespread
power· outuea continued for a
fourth day ln Loni lalancl •ul>-,
urbl.
Gov. Huah Carey Hnt ~ Na·
tional Guardsmen to Lone
Jlland on Tuesday to help utlllb'
crews to restore power to
thousands of homes that have
been cold and dark alnce the
weekend. But a Lone Island
LlghUnl Co. spokesman 11ald.
"We never asked tor these
troops."
Rush-hour Train
Slated in February
A new n.h·hour train between
San Diego and Los Aneeles will
begin its run Feb. 14, Valentine's
Day. Amtrak announced today.
The train will leave San Dteeo
at 5:45 a.m. dally, arrivlni at
Union Station in Los Angeles al
8:20a.m.
On its return. ll will leave
Union Station at 4:30 p.m., •r·
riving In San Diego al 7:0S p.m.
Wbat Uleo did ut for •aa permu1101a from tti• W).itte
House to rent two huie-C-5A
Galaxy mllltary Jets to tt·&0S1.i
work n · and ulpm nt from
Cblcuo ana Ddn>lt Utltitles that on r.cl to the bel1---..c-•ou
Long latiad company. . .. ..
But wbtn the approval a.r-
rlvW, pUWD1 t.be cost oft.be ren·
t1l at $10,000 an hour. Lllco
scrapped~ idea.
arty today, IJlco reported
30,000 customen atUl witb<>ut
power, down fnun aboUt 100,000
reported out durtn& the
weekend.
P.,...P ... AJ
EDDIE •••
A11oclat.d Charitable Causes
!und-i'allina drt .
Kirby'• oraanlutlon sells
merchant-sponsored diacount-
tlcket book.I In the Saddleback
Valley tor charitable causes.
Kirby, who says h1a orianiiation
la non·proflt. bQ promlaed 20
percent ot tho proceeds to the Rua f'amlly.
Meanwhile, Eddie's father.
Octavio, a control s ys tems
enelneer laid oft hJ1 Fluor Q>m-
pany job shortly after bis son's
fall, ls Interviewing for Jobs of·
fered recenUy -at leaal one of
which was the direct result of a ·
Daily Pilot subscriber who read
of the famlly'1 pU«iht.
As tor F.ddie, he's taken 1 few
steps already on iep stittened
with braces and his body sup.
ported by parallel ban.
"He's spunky," a physical
therapist at Casa Colina said
this week. "He's really cute. We
juat love him." Then, because
Eddie w11 having a difficult
time popptne wheelies, she gave
him a hand, holding the back of
his wheelchair.
The train, called El Camino, is
being funded by Los Angeles
County and the California
Department of Transportation in
an ellort to relieve traffic on the
Santa Ana Freeway.
A spokesman for Amtrak said
today the precise schedule for
stops In San Clemente, San Juan
Capistrano, Santa Ana and
Fullerton won't be available for a week to 10 days.
F,....PageAl·
State to Administer
Hot Meal Pr:~gram , \
HOOVER •••
Warren Commission conclusion
that Lee Harvey Oswald bad
killed Kennedy and that he had
acted alone. Lane and Greaory
were attractlna attention to
their theories in speeches and
broadcut Interviews. The FBI
kept careful recorda of their
comments. ·
"We have long suspected that
Grecory ls demented," an FBI
official wrote at the time.
"Nevertheleu, the comments he baa made are utterly rldlcolous
and we should confront him and
tell him In no uncertain terms
that he better at.op puttlni out
such sutter taUc."
Another official wrote th1t be
saw "nothlna to be gained by
tbi1., approach and Hoover
agreed.
"I concur. He ls obvloully ln·
sane," the director scrawled on
the bottom of the pa1e.
Tb•· snemo also referred to
''the truh put out by tbe In·
famous Mark Lane. reportedly a
Communist sympatbher."
Scores ol mem01 ref erred to Lane In thole terms.
ROgers Recovers
I ' TORRANCE <Al>> -W•tem star Roy Roserl 11n•t up to nd~ lna bona Yet. but be baa taken
hla ftrlt ~p.t alnee uDder,olnc
open•h'eart 1ur1ery ••t
wHktnd. He waa dtacrlbed
TUOdQ a •'dofna fine•• at Lit.
tie Co~ ot Mary Hospital In Torr
State otflciala, not Oran1e
County governmeqt, will ad-
minister a bot meala pro1ram
for senior citizens, 1upervbora decided Tuesday.
After a roomful of senior
F,....PageAJ
IDCKS •••
But Diedrich'• contlnulnt
argument appears to be
strenithened today In the light
of tbe California Supreme
Court's recent deoialon not~ ln·
terfere with the ruling of
Superior Court Judge Philip E.
Schwab In the alleged campalp
fund vlolaUon cue.
J ud1e Schwab brou1bt the
state Attorney General'• office
into tbe cue after rulinl that
there wu an .. appearance of
prejudice" in t.be proaecutlan by
Hiclcl.
J udfe Schwab noted tbat
Hicks and Diedrich had re·
peatedly taniled over the yeara
on several lllua that llad come
before the County Board of
Supervtson.
Judie Schwab'• wriUell order
barrtng Hlcka from the trial on
the carnpalgn f'Und indictment
was att.ubir!d tO tbe mouon tMt
will be araued before Juaae
Flynn Jan.~.
cltr1A \Jld 1uperiltors they
Ilk• the federally subsidized pro-
gram as it 11, ttie board
resch1ded acUon that could have led to county actmlnlstraUon of
the prOIJ'•m.
In questlon wu a $1 muuocr-a·
year prosram which provides
lunches at community cenlen In
2S Oran1e County loc1Uon1.
The bulk of the lunches are
provided b)' the Feedback Foun-
dation'• TLC cTr-.portatlon. Lunch, Counaellnl) proeram
which eervea 1,220 meals a day.
ftv• dar a week. ·
That· prosram and tbe othon
are admlnl1tered by atete
authortU• wbo ~act dll'ectly
with varloul community aroups. 1f the C()UDb' became the con-
tra ct autborlty. the county
would becoine reaponalble for
aupervtllns and audlUns con·
tract..
Jobn Parbr; Feedback Foun·
datton president, told
aupervliOrl t,bey simply would
be addinc another layer. of
bureaucracy to an already-
1ucceuful pf'Oll'am lf the county
took over contract ad.m1.Dl.ltra·
Uon.
The Oranse County Senior
Cltben1 Council had recom-
ineaded that the eoun\1. ..U ad·
mlniltradon ol thOM 99}1tracta.
. ,.
l'tctlna ol tlae Flood
i
Camino Capistrano. Wallace bad aban·
doned the auto after it stalled out MOnday
evening.
'
Tilt 'Star' of Pageant
Laguna Shou.J to Re-create Eg'YPtian Arti/a£1A ;
If you didn't aet tickeu to see
Kin& Tut in Los Ancelcs, you've
still cot a chance to view the
treasures of Eeypt an the 43rd
annual 'Pageant of the Muten
this summer.
Festival director Don
Williamson unveiled plans for
the alx·week proaram at a meet.
ing of the board of directors and
s ~arr Tuesday niaht on the
festival irounds.
The Paceant of the Masters
uses Uve models to rt-create
works of art. And the hllhllabt
of the 1978 ahow. Williamson
aaid, will be dis plays of about a
dozen pieces from the Kini
Tulankbamen exhibit in Los
SW&p ProMsed
WASHINGTON <AP> - P
dent Carter'• now feder 1
bud.et is expected to propose SH mlll on ~ap of res arch
srama between the Envlronmen·
tat Protection Aeency •nd the
Department of Enern.
For a very limited
time ·-we welcome
you to the upholstery
event of the year!
Choose from a
superb selection of
frame styles.
An1eles.
Paeeant officials are colng to
try to get to the LA exhibit to
take more photographs of
Jewelry, furuit.ure and treasures
froJll the tomb display. di•·
covii'ed In 19'l2.
"We'd like to get a more ac·
curate portrayal of the
treasures," Wllllam1on saJd.
"We have nice brochures, but
they usually consist of Just one
view of each treasure. We'd like
to.have Photos from several dif·
ferent penpectlves."
For Instance, he said, a smaJl
eold ring, in which four human
fieurea a,ppear, is fairly obscure
tn tbe photoaraph festival of-
ficials now have.
Wllllamaon told board mem-
bers And 1uata that there wtU
be some repeat.I In tbe 1978
llbOw, · lncludina re-ere UoD of
the Tre•I Fountain and the Sc)'thlan comb. But he 1.-.... ",...
to add that the,,J?~;..4' ant b . • nidrt1 ~l~ dlff~t
worts ot art Plist U i\itare,
"and we're boUn LO ha ·• few repeat.I."
. I
He a d those dilpl~ don&
previously, will be added to and
improved lD the 1971 lhow. ·"
I',.... Page Al
MIDEAST •• ~
Then choose aaaln, from
literally hundreds of col·
ors and patterns! Shop
quickly. thou1h. while
these very special prices
remalnJn effect!
Children tn the Irvine Unified School District oon
rnoy be reaching Into space nd across the natJon, Jf a
program ~mg "NASA communications satellites wins
!Untllng by th~ federal National Institute of Ed~catlon. The dl5trlct seeks to use already orbiting earth
f sat~lites to bourrce a television signal back and fortn to
chool ~istricts in other parts of the country.
Buckminster Fuller, Marshall McLuh~n. Gov. Brown
and former Apollo astronaut Rusty Schweickart are
among the people who are excited by the obvious poten·
tial of this unique program. "
The cross-cwtural exchange, of students vlsltlna,
talking with and leamine about one another, plus a first-
hand grasp of the technology that makes it possible, is
more than worth the price of this ticket through the ether.
Funding of the program would be a small step for the
NIE, but what a giant leap for the children of Irvine, and
for children the nation over.
Plan Worth Cop~
1 Saddlcl>ack Area Coordinating Council <SACC> Presl·
dent Jim Bone's plan to cut back on unnecessary commit·
tees and wosted effort is a breath of fresh air, even
though his organization is only quasi-governmental.
An accountant, Bone was elected to office last week
by SACC's new executive board. He lm&nediately an·
nounced that he would trim down to a lean, aggressive or· ganizllUon and charged board members to submit ideas
for the process:
SACC is an umbrella organization of· Saddleback·
Valley homeowner associations and civic-minded in· dividuals. Its planning review board recommends-direc·
tion on projects and proposals scheduled for action by
county government.
Bone's proposal to trim 27 standing committees down
to 10 -or 15 at most -is a step worth heralding and one
that any bureaucracy-infested city govemmUlts and coUn:
ty agencies might well consider emulating on behalf of
the paying public, the beleaguered taxpayers.
Schools Need Voice
For the past several months. trustees in the Sad·
dleback Valley Unified School District have been com·
plaining about the costly effect or Jegtslation passed in
Sacramento. Recently, Supt. Richard Welte reviewed a number or
laws and court decisions which. he said, will cost the dis-
trict more than $1.5 million in out-of -pocket expenses and
staff time. " It's a hefty toll which can only come from the dll·
-t trict's budget. Trustees have reason to complain about J these costs but they must do more than talk about it during
their meetings. . As represent.a.lives of Saadleback Valley residents,
trustees must make theft voices heard in Sacramento.
Dr. Welte is considering one proposal -a coalition of
similar distmts ~tablislf~ prhnatily to lobby Jegisl s.
Other special Interest groups liave merged UC·
cessfully lo speak their piece. They've clearlY dem-
onstrated that there's P9Wer in numbers. Saddleback trustees should recognize this and not on·
ly join but take a leadership position in the lobbyine coati·
tion. It seems to be an erredive way or making their
volces heard in Sacramento.
• Oplnlons expreaeed 1n th ispace above l8f9 thoN of the Oalfy Pllot.
Othef views expr11sed on this PJl9• are thOM of tl'lolr authors end
ettlsts.. Reader comment Is nvlt ct; Address ifhe Dally Pilot, P.O.
Box 15e(), Coat• Mesa. CA 92&26.f,hont (714) 812-4321.
r
Gloomy
Gu
ASHlNCTON -Tbe
mulUb)Won·dollar ca1metlcs ln·
dustry ta frantl~ally tryinJ to
J>t!rauade mlWona of American
women tbat there 11 no cancer
rlak ln usl.ng th0to !µably ad·
vertl1ed hair dyes.
So frantically 11 the industry
Peddling th11 Pf9P•tand• line, in
fact, that tta
Wuliin1ton
lobby .ha•
ruabed out an
erroneous
claim and
aome auapect
atudiH.
At u ta
th finding by
the National
Cancer
lnatitut.e that a major ln1redlent 1n most Ut_r dyea, f:.M PD, hu
cauaed cancer in laboratory test
animals. The 1ovemment aclen·
Uata also discovered that some
hair dyes contain derivatives ot
benzldine; this, too, 11 a proven
carcinoaen.
THE C~CEll ln~tute issued
lta alafPllni findings to alert 33
million women who use hair
dye• to the pOtenUal danaer. A
warnin& WM about the only gov-
ernment acUon possible. The
Food and Drug Adminlltration
is powerles• to take any action
agahist bali' dyes because of a
atranae, s~clal exempUon pro-
vided the industry 40 years ago.
The Cosmetic, Toiletry and
Fr11rance Association, a sweet··
aoundln& name for a hard·no&ed
lobby, laW1ched an immediate
counterattack. On behalf of lta'
clients, the association ground
out a blanliet denial that hair
dyes are hazardous. Dyes with
the benZidine derivaUves were
:no l9nger being sold to tbe
publlc, the usoclation added
soothingly. Thia was qwckly proved false.·
Congreulonal lnvesticators
walked into a Washington drug
store and found them on the
shelves. Temporary hair dyes
made by Rowt Laboratories and
marketed. under alluridl brad
To the EdJtor~ t
From time to Ume jud1es are
crillclzed for sentences or other
decblons they may have made
where the decision or sentence
was mandaW'd by the applicable
statutes or appellat~ decisions.
Thlt ia Just what. ha3 bap~
In the cue involW>g the sen·
tenclng of Patrick Kearnv, the
so·called ••Trash B1g Kiiler:•
Letters concemlnc thlt subject have betri pU~U1h d ht various
newspapers.
The trial judge of our court
who· aentenced Mr. Kearney
gave him the maxlrDum .sen·
tence U11der the law that Histed
at the time the murders were
committed. 'lb 'judce could nOt
have elven the defendant th
death penalty or life imprison·
ment witbout the pOSalbillty of
parole on lhe pl as involved.
The ln lch provides 11uch
penaltl did not become effe(·
tlve until Aug.11, Um, net the
murd ra involv 4 htre oc·
curred. By ap~l te court de-daion, aucc s1ve lit a ences caonot be Im Cd fn multiple
murder cues.
SO E PEOPLE have 8sJcea
why aome other sentence sh<Nld
not have been lmpostd where
the defendant has committed
30 OT more murders.. Tho
court can sentence only for the
conviction lnvot~. and her
the sentence wa! u a ruull ot a
Pipelllie
Pianist Marks 'APproval
Anhivenary 'Mulled
• LOS ANG!!LES <AP>
-Tbe ·SoUth Coast Air
QuallL)" Man11ement
Dfttrlct Is to consider too
day whether· to approve
a $SOO million project
th t would br&n1 crude ·oil from Aluka to
About $6.8 million in donaUona bave been
made or pled«ed to the Huberi H. Bcuaplare1
Institute of Public Affairs to be built at the
Unaver1lty of Minnesota.
The University of Minnesota Foundation said
the total included a $1 million gift annowlced dur·
ing the weekend by the Japanese government.
Sponsors arc seeking a total of $20 million. •
Richard Honclsto. wbo cave up being sheriff
or San Francisco lo become police chief of
Cleveland, ls paying another
visit to San Francisco -to lake
a bride.
EUubetb Colton said she
and Hongisto will be married in
mid· February.
lt will be the lirst marriage
for her and the second. tor
ltonalsto, who divorced hi.a fmt
wife several years ago.
A graduate of Florida State
Univer1ity, Miss Colton la presi· MOMOtno
dent of the San Francisco Federated Young
Democrats. •
Two UCLA seniors and a Berkeley graduate
student have been Dominated by Uniyerslty oC
Califomla student presidents a1 flnaUats to
become the next student member of the UC Board
of Resent.a.
The Student Body Presidents' Council said the
nominees are Gte .. Smith, 22, a UCLA polJUcal
science major; Renee Turkell, 21, a UCLA En1U1h
major, and left Koon. 3S. a graduate atudent In
higher educaUon at UC Berkeley.
One of th• three will be recommended by a re·
aentl' committee tor confirmation by the board
next month to a one-year term begin.nine in July .
•
• Sen. 8. L Bayabw• defended blmtelt acatnst
' a Consraalonal Quarterly report Ulat he had the
1 eighth wont vot1n1 attendance
record in the Senate. But be ad·
1 mltted "Itwutemfic.••
l The 1l·year-old Calllornia • JUnlor senator. aaked about the
l report durln1 a new• con·
ference on bis lo.day trip to
Japan, aatd, "I did do better
than ellbt out ot 10 times when
votes came up. So UJe averace
' la ovtt 80 percent.... MAYAUWA
Th•ftcurea. he declared, .. do not t.tU ~ whole
story beeause senators bave so many duUea othtr
than VOCJ.Dt. especlaU1 dutJei tn behalf of con· 1Utuente."
Southern C.lifornla then
aend it by plpellne to
Texat and the Midwest.
On Tuesday, a ataff
report reeommended Af'WI,......
80TH RAPE VICTIM
Cerofyn Craven
MS. CRAVEN. WRO UVF.8 ALONE tn aoulh
Berkeley wtth her 6·year·old IOd Gabriel, aald the
pungent odor resemb1Jn1 iaec:hanic'• crease con· vlneed her that 1he waa aasawted by .. Stlilky."
More than 60 wolJ)en raped in the Berkeley
area ln the paat loUr yean bave d cribed a
almllar Odor on their usallant.
Surgeon Loses
Appeal in;
Mtdpractice
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The
Calllotnla Supreme Court bu over·
turned an appeal court ruJ.lGC' which
had reversed a~ million malpractice
award aaalnst Dr. John Nork. a
former Sacramento orthopedic tur·
aeon.
The unanimous decision Tueeday
by Justice. Mathew Tobrtner upheld a
Sacramento Superior Court ruling
which denied Nork's request to
withdraw his prior waiver of a jury
trial In the civlt suit.
It ordered the cue to the State
Court or Appeal ln Sacramento.
Albert Gonzales had filed the
malpractice and lraud suit against
Nork and Sacramento Mt!rcy
Hospital clairn.ing back surgery he
underwent ln 1967 was unnecessary.
performed incompetently, left him
unable to work and ultimately caused
cancer.
thou.ch, to a maJorJty of
Senate GoYermnentat Oraanliatlon.
Committee membefa. They sent to
the Senate ftoor a proposal to put on
the ballot a me-.ure to lower the drtnld~ ase from 21 to ~.
THE VO'tf.; WAI 1·2 Tuesday on
ACAS~. which pas.tied the Assembly
last aummer. If two-thirds bf the
Senate approve lt by Jan. 25, it wtll
go on the June 8 baUot. If the
leglilaUve approval comes after: :Ian.
AL UGH 8 NEVD MW -faee, Ma.
Craveo said abe noticed )\Is dark comple:xloe •hort·
ly belore he blindfolded her. And 1aJd the
would recocnli ht.a vokoe ll M heard It 8'aln.
She deterinlnecl that hia Mlrwu cut lD a abort
natural style, that be bad a atubbl• ct a beard &Del
that. bis blcePS were atron1.
Edison Granted
Rate lncrea$e
2S, it would ao on the Nov. 7 ballOt. LOS ANGELES <AP) _ For meet Southern
At the bearing, Capt. William Callfomia Edison Co. customen, tum•·• on tbe Oliver ol \he Hl1hw•y Patrol aaid h1s .... a1ency feared that lowering the lights and ustnc tho electric atove are more H·
d kln uJd in penslve today. rln 111 .,. wo result more The Calllornla Public UtillUtw Comamaloo youthful dnmlcen drtverg, He aa!d h1I deoartn>ent's atatbUcs Tuesday aranted tbe company aUtboritJ to lm·
indicate "that people under .,e 21 mediately booat. electric ratel 7.1 pereem u a
l d h semi·annuaJ cost a4)uatment. • rea Y ave access to alcohol The PUC said the incre11e w11 needed
throuch Ulegal means." Of 225,000 in· becaUJe the company'• COIU bave risen dunns tbe tdXlcaUOn-drlvinl arrests lut year in California, nearly 12,000 Involved 12 moot.hi eadlnc lut Aua. 31.
penons 20 years old or younger, be THE COMPANY RAD TO PAY MOaE
said. • because ot the drou1ht. which precluded purcbue
THE BILL'S SPONSOR, As· ol chuper hydroelectric power from tbe
semblyman Louis Papan, D-Daly Ci-Northwest, and the resulUD1 use Of btcber-prtCed
tv, said be reels a drlnkini .,. re-fuel oil to make up t.M den cit, the PUC aald. ductlon would reduce peer 1roup pre-The rate lncreaae, effectlve Tueld.ay, wlll not
aurea todoaomethlo1 llle1al be passed alona to "Ulellne" rates or the flnt aoo
"There waa a drlnkin1 driver kilowatt houu per month for domeatlc UH,
problem ln 1939 whtn I went to hlgh whichever la greater.
"chool." commented Sen. John Dollar amount ot the tnctease Js $70.t mlWon
Dunlap, J>.Napa. "One of the reasons for six month.I.
WH lt Wi.I a pretty exciting Uilhg to Residential service Will rise from-t!ie~reaent
do because it was a1alnat the law. J..4 cebts per"kllowatt hour to 11.8 tent. weltr. Ui
It'• a vety, important element in the new rate hike, and from 1.4cent.Ito1.7 ti for
motivational tact.or." other users.
Stadcs of shoes from
all our big ~mes
•
LADIES' SHOES
R.a. to $36 •••••••••••• Now s29o to SJ 690
••
DAILY
.......... le Income'
~ ... "JooBu¥ ch-
TBB PAMIL AS UMED to trow from three
"l'IOClS to five over thOM nlne years and to pro,resa from renUn; Ila Urlnt apace to ownlnt lll own house. ta ineome
wa111sumed to me to $42,600 ttom $17,700.
~be income Ogurea were ~ random choices. 1Dstea~1 Uiey rep~t. t.b maximum wa subject to SOclu
secarlty taxes projected ln then w lal ~urlt.r law.
r:rhe increase is a whopping 140 percent, or better than
10 percent a year -.fftclent )'OU ml ht aay to feed
dream a ol aucc ll that u ti •
• NOW mE Rt1 : A GOOD deal of lhe increase will reflect inflation ratb tbM lnci'eued ell-behlt; .and the
tax.burden will rise much faster than income. I
TQ co~puae the t.u, tho aubailk economist.6 applied the new SoClal 5ecurlty law. Then incol\)e taxe1 wen com·
puled by asaumwa Con re wOuJd enact a version of the
admlnlltratloa'a com tu~ b .
Spectncally, the)' amuned tM tax chan w0til4 lri·
volv& a different tl'eatmeDl ot tu emptions and a tedud-
Uon of two percentqe points per rate br1cket.
Opera Relaear•al.
Metropolitan Opera stars Beverly Sills and Sherm Milnes re-
hearse duet in Massenet's opera "Thais." Miss Sills, who recently
announced she will retire in 1980. sinn the title role in the opera
which has not been performed at the Metsince 1939.
Horses' Rights
Mulled i~ Troy
TROY, Mich . tAP) -If dogs can walk on
s1dewalka, why not horses? '
Thal ls the question being considered by the
Troy City Council.
City Manaaer Frank Gerstenecker said
curr<.>nt laws prohibit horses in parks or on private
property. but say nothing about sidewalks
James Myer~ want~ that changed He says
nC'1ghbors ride lhear horses on the !tidewalk on
front of his homl' to spite him nnd that the horses'
droppings create a health hazard
AnoaHtYATLAW
BANKRUPTCY $95
DIVORCE $95
Uneonteated
640.2507
PREPARATION OF
TAXUTUIMS
YMrl-4 ,_.....,
Martin I. Schneyer
Atlomey at Law
C.-a: c.., ,..., PIM<~, ....
~ .. ,, .. ~-~-·-Ol '-"t "-·-i ""°'-OI Ta. t.w l • t""4Cll ,,..,,,_. US T'' Court
• .., U'i &..Ot-C:0.,.1
•000 w.,...,,. ,, "" 1t 1}0 "-••S.ecn Ct.9~
133-1164 The d ty's Animal Control Board has opposed
the proposed law, noting that it ls leeal for dogs to ----------4...1 ~alk on sidewalks.
The city animal board says horseback riders
should be allowed to uve sidewalks because there
are no bridle pat.hi In Troy, some roads have no
shoulders and ll's dan1erous to ride in the streets.
C•ll &42-5671.
Put • few word•
to work for ou.
FLOWER! DLOom
and ffilNDJ CAN
TOQ _
ENROLL NOW FOR A JPRING
LEARNIN~ EXPERIENCE AT:
..
"BUI' WE KEPT TOINKJ 'G we would fi~d ~~:,-...,.-~~~~::.;; cavllizatlon around the next behd only to find
another bend In our way."
THE PAIR DIRECTED SEARCHERS to two Mohday night they lepl under a rock. Ttley ~~_. ... ..,....~~~O'f
companion., James Davis, 19, and Tom Raney, 20, had not eaten since Saturday, and Ucon had
whom they left below the mountain snow level injured his ankle.
somewhere 1n Taq~ltz Canyon. somewhere In Taquitz Canyon, Llcort and rn~i1'~T:1~~~M
Sherttrs Sit, Charles Robards •aid Davis and Wade left thelr two slower companions behind to
Raney were located by mld·momlne, and were 10 ahead and find help. They fin.Uy Umped into
rescued by private helicopter. Ttit two youths Palm Springs, and were tak'" to Desert Hospital ~~~
were "apparently ill tood condition," RobardS 1i~fo~r~o~b~crv~v~aatl~,on~a~n~d~t~o~h~av~e~Ll~cicoo~·1~an~lk~le;tr~•a~t~ed~.~~~~~~~~~~, aald.
The search for the four began Monday •veninc
after parenta of the girlfriend ot one biker called
the 1bertfr1 department when the «r®l> tailed to
return Sunday eveni.Dc.
THE FOVR LEl'T HOME Friday and drove to
Humber Park near the mountain resort or
Idylwlld. They be1an hlltine up Mt. San Jacinto
Saturday and pitched their tent at the top of the
10, 780-foot peak.
"But that niChl we got bit by a blluard that
knocked over the tent." Ucon •aid. "We left it and
tried to find our way out of the anow."
The tour apparenUy stumbled only a abort
distance before they collapsed with cold and huneer.
".JIM DAVIS STARTED throwtn1 up. Tbat'1
when we started to &et really scared." Wade a.aid.
Speed Read Class S~t
A rnpad-reading
course for students and
adults will begJn Mon·
day at the Orange Coast
YMCA
The Educational and
You won't find any of that sweet
stuff at Dr. -Flanzer's -he's a
dentist. But even thou~h Or.
Flanzer •S a family dentist, he
doesn't bar singles. They too cal)
have a complete range of dental
services. And take advantage of
Or. Flanzer's conviction tnat
rriodem dentistry doesn't have to
be expensive. Could you save
money having Or. Flanzer as y0or
dentist? You don't have to be
married to find out.
•