HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-01-19 - Orange Coast Pilot•
You Can~t Get
Analael• Bebt
Bus Hijackers
. Elude Police
•
ew
:
, . .;
"·
Jl'.ountaln V Hey Glty Cob
dlman Geor1e Stolt'• declalon
to run for a third term in the
March 7 etectlon bas apparently
fP.urred a hoet of bopetuls to
k the wide open post.
A total or 11 candidates. in·
cludln1 two lndmbctnt1, are
runnln1 few three cowscll aeata.
The 1eat1 held by Mayor
oger Stanton and Councilman . · Al Holllndcn are up for 1rabs > , bUt mo.t of the nln~ other can-
didates readlly admit the two in-
C,Hmbenta are atrona favorites to
C•. Win. H r brief glimpses al tho
cant'llda • why they are ruh· n}rif for !Offtce and what they
fee are milln ues:
Car Joe (Jal , u, •of 9769 ,. Emm~ Clrcle, 11 an executive .·, anlatant to Uie Lone Beach
, ma1or and city c:ouncU. He and
hla wife have lived In Fountain
Valtey1lnce1971.
Galindo Hid hls public ad· minhtraU09 ~xperience ~uauna ltlm
" tor the FoUft • . tatn Valley council post.
He holc!a a
, m ••ter•1
• de1ree ln
public ad·
ministration
from USC.
Galindo has o•uNoo·
• worked for the City of Loni
Beach for the past 2 1'2 years.
After his 1970 honorable dis·
charie from the Navy where he
was an officer for five years,
·:· Galindo worked in then Gov. :· Ronald Reagan's r~·election ~ campat1n and candidate Bill ~ Wenke'• drive for the Ot11t1e ~ County First Supervisorlal Dis-~ trictseat.
~ Galindo has also worked as a
~ field representative for now r•
~ tired Congressman Crail
·: Hosmer and u an execuUve as-. sistant to former Oranie County ~ Supervisor David Baker.
• Galindo said the main Issue In
;. the March council election ta
~· taxes. He said he hopes to find ~ ways to maintain city services
:: while keeping cost.I down. .. .. • : Pbtl lobmon, 33, of 17409 San·
:: ta Suzanna St., teaches third
;: arade at a Cypress elementary
:: acbool. He and h1I wile have.
:~ liYed in Fountaill Valley1 11Qce
:· May 191'1.
:: Orltlnatly frona Chlea o, ~ .loJtn U~edftl~~MIU"ltl;~ ~ :;
:: .. ;: .. ·: :: :: :: •. ;:
:· ..
F,....PageAJ ....
BUS ..•
main in her seat u her fellow
passenaers followed the com· mand. •
Passengers said it wasn't unW
the bus halted af the end'Of
Esperanza RoaCI: east of Im·
perial Hiahway 'that they were
told to plac• their cash and
valuables into a pillow case car-
ried by ono of the robbe~.
While police said the hijack
was well placned, some of the
victims reported the bandits
were something less than
thorough.
One woman, for example. said
the rln& and necklace &he wore
'Were of wore value thim the con·
tent• of her. purse that abe
dumped into the pillow case.
Those aboard the bus were
forced to recall what the two hi-
J•cken looked like from wtieD
the two meq boarded the bua at
the Grantl Hot.el a abort diitance
from the J)laneyJand.
Then, the two men wort no
mesks and apparently attracted
little attention Crom those
headed to the Los Ancelea
airport.
But a few blocks from the
hotel, the two men pulled skt
muka over. their flees and re-
moved the abOtgun from a wrap.
plng that apparenUy C&Vt DO
hint or what it contained.
From that point unu1 they ned
Into the oran1e grove the "Pair
were an command ~the bus, lta driver the 11 puaen1ers.
If ca~~· the hljackera r e a possl& 12 count!I l kJdftap-;
plnf as ~ as mUWple c~
of armed tobberr. •
RIDGECREST JAP.> -~
BapUat rhiniater was rccovertn1
in a boapltal today after:
rescuers battled tnow and bad
weather to teat:b him at the site
of the plane crash that killed his
wife, hospital offtcl&ls aay.
The aingle.enalne plane that
carried Eurene S. Royal and bis
wlf e. cnua. was finally spotted
in a wildenl area about .50
miles eat of here Wednesday
after a lcnsthy search.
Flvo enaines from th &JP•
moth Lakes Ftre Department had
initial difficult)' getUnc to the
structure because it la situated on steep hJll, Entel said.
Heavy snoWfall dufln1 the nl1ht
and parked cars at~o blocked the toad leadint to the con·
domlnlum, HUSinl a 24-mlnute
oUce re traclns a falnt trail
they h~pe will lead to two men
who 1'1Jll< au at~rt·bound
but with l aboei:d
shortly, afte lt let& the DI•·
n.,yland ll tel ln Anaheim
Wedneaday.
Before the 1bot1ua·toUn1, ald·
masked bandit.a made· tbelr
cetaway about 11 a.m. In a
soinewhat remote area of Santa
Ana Canyon, they had robbed
their hOltaJes of abOut $:5,000 in
c aah, Jewelry and other
valuables. ,
When Jut aeen the two bi·
jackera were da1hln1 into an
orani.e crove, apparently
headed to a eetaway ~·r they
had stashed near Esperanza
Road and Imperial Hichway just
outside Anaheim city Umlts.
Police from five a1encies
combed the area for bours
without llndins a trace of the
bandits. '
Today. Anaheim pollce said
their invesUgaUon tnto the hi·
jack robbery Is continuing but
admitted there were no new de·
velopments to report.
Neither the Airport Services
bus driver, s2.year·old James
Sturdy or Garden Grove, nor any
of the 11 passengers were lrl·
JUred during the flve·mtle hijack
Journey.
But the two hiJackers made all
but one of the passengers huddle
on the bus floor as they directed
Sturdy on the journey from just
a few blocks from the Dis·
neyland Hotel up into the Santa
Ana Canyon. .
Sturdy said the gunman who
Poked a pistol in~ his rtbl told
bim to, "Just keep drivine. I'll
tell YoP where to go."
Passengers reported they
were watched over by the
shotgun toting bandit who 1tood at the rear of the bua and forced
them to He in the aisle of tho
bus.
One passenger, an elderly
woman who police refused to identify, reportedly balked 1t
obeying the hJJacker's command
to "hit the deck."
And she was allowed to re·
main in her seat as her fellow
passengers followed the com·
mand.
Passencers aaidlt waan't untu
the bua halted at the end of
Esperanza ~oa41 eut of Im·
• perlal Hlshway that they were
• told to place their caab and
valuabl into a plUow c o car·
rfed l>Y Obt of
RAIN •••
more co"red wlth water, but
she said the two.day bteak ln the
raid• had ilven 1torm dri.lna a chance to clear. She 1ald tho water "u dralDlnl off f uter tbanu~
J.n Hunilnlfton Beach, some
plltl Of the Cfowntown area wen repotud flooded ililn. Water
Wal alto deep at the fnterseC:tfcm
ot Edirirer Aveauo and HarbOr'
Boulovlrd fn Fountain VaUey.
A ould·b ndlt I~ di nto n ll·nlltht
market ln a.ta Mesa lat•
Wedlleiday, drew a
ebroiQ• revolver. and,
Mtore he could announce
his lntenUona, was met by
a }>all of food apd iood•
thrown ~tnachine cun·Uke
fashion by at.Oto derk Paul
R.~ones. The would·be robber
fied the U-Totem market
at 2271 Fairview Road in a
• small. orange pickup
truck, Jones told police.
EYES SENATE SEAT
Fount n Vatter'• Scott
Scott Adds _
Hat to Ring
For Senate
Fountain Valley Clty Coun·
cllman George Scott announced
today he wltl leek the
Republican nominaUon for the
1tate senate aeat "beln" vacated ty Sen. Dennla Carpentel'.
Scott 11Jd he was "shocked"
by Republican Carpenter'• de·
claion not to run for re·electlon
in the 36tb Senatorial Diatrlct,
conatdertd a GOP 1trop1hold.
The 3eth Dlaulct focludes
moat Of eo8stal Oranse Cowity
from Seal Beach to San
Clemente, tbe 1~ad.dleback
Valle)', and a ipe>ruOQ of coastal
Sall Qlego Ccnurt1 that lnclud
Ot ads1do.i SC~ 45. hU served on the
Fountain Valley councll 1lnce
1M9 and was elecled mayor by
hi• peers In ms and 1974.
Tbe former presli!ent of the
Oran1e COunty Dlvlslon of the
California Lea1ue of Cltlea
(1974·78), Scoit be1an bla
Polltlcal career u a Fountain
Valle1 parka and recreatlon
coi;rimillloner in J.964, Scotc worked ai a junior and
hllb ecboOl ttacher ln Pismo
BHcb, Lawndale, Huntlnston
Beach and at Oringe County
Juveolle Hall between 1961 and
1974.
He now runs a Fountain
Valley tnsurance company.
ScOtt 11ld, 0 aovemme1\t hu erown away trOm the people It ls !uppoaed to serve... He added
that long·awalt.ed tu relief Ja a
major problem.
f'nlP,..eAI
COMPLEX.
-A ••11ped, eeaJed and de-
lt vered" letal document that
holds the developers to their
mutual plan.
-Tbe me of ~cUUODaJ use
permita for fllianclal nstltutlCIOs
or restaurants, "of Reuben'•
quality or better."
-No medical offtcea and an
archllectural review committee
to check plans.
-Ap 85-fe>CK setback from the
nearest homes and extensive
landscaping and berm• to
aeathlcally improve the develop..
ment.
Architect Kermit Dorlus
guessed that a maximum ot 20
separate bulldJ.qa would 10 on
the property.
Traffic impact.I remained a
key issue to some homeowners
and Arnet traffic consultant
Jack Greempan admitted that
the offices would 1enerate added
traffic.
He dJd, hOwever, note a so-
called "counter-now" in which
office employee would be arriv·
ln1 aa homeowners were leavin1
the area for work, and vice·
versa. The dnelopers have yet
to provide exact flsurea on the
trafftcincreue. .
At the close of the meeting,
both aides decided to contact
Mayor Hertzoa. who was phoned
at a meettna of the Costa Mesa
Historical Society.
After hearing the proposal.
she quipped, "It's my second
historical meeting of the night."
N. Stickler
\
Named·Chief
(.)/Boys Club
Newell SUclder of Nem>ort
Beach hu been elected preal·
dent of the Board of Directors ol
the Boys Club of tbe Harbor
Area.
The IS-year-old developer hu
been usoclated wtth the Boys
Club for nearly 20 yean, both u
a member Jn his youth and as a
member pf the ortaniiatton'a
·Board of Dlrecton for the past
five years.
He will becln bi• one.year
tern\ Friday, taking over for
former Costa Meu mayor.
Willard Jordan, wbo aervect u
pretldent for two years. •
Aleo to be lnatalled at
ceremonies at the Coeta Me1a
GoU and Countr:J Club are new
l'lnt vtce Preeldent RUSI lleck;
second Vice Pr&tdent Hall See·
ly; Secretary Willard Courtitey •
and Treasurer Erwin de
MocatOll,Yj.. •
All members or the ba.ard ~
directors have been elected r9r
tbree·year terms.
The board includes the new of·
ncera plus Robert Brteaa, H¥ry
Green, Roy Mccardle, Dan
Ro1en and RObt~ Weed.
A Whittler maMwbo told
police he fell asleep at the wheel
escaped major injuries early to-
day when hla car went off
Bristol Street. cra.tbtd through a
fence and di'oppecl 1$ feet into
the Delhi Flood Control Channel
inCostaMaa.
Police aald witnesses leavin
a nearby reataurant phoned
police ahortly after midni1ht
and aaid they heard croans com·
ine from the bottom of the cban·
nel.
Pollce and paramedic•
responded and •yotted the
crumpled remains o 24·year-old
Mark Steven Caril's Volkawa1en
lytng at the bottom of the chan·
nel.
The victim apparently 1uf·
fered a broken leg and was
traumatiaed by the acciaent,
police said, however be re·
matnedconaelous.
Carll was transpe>rted to Costa
a emorli.l Hospital •ber•
his condition wu listed as ''Ila·
ble" early tOday.
The c r'& crumpled 11ool in·
die ted that It may h ve landed
bottom·µp in the channel bed
befor.e ~:ove.r and 1toppln1
uprlgbt.,li>ollce said. Tb car wu
dest.roye(l.•
Police are uncertain how lon1
tho injured man spent in the
cb nnel or whrp tbe accident OC· cur~. 1b appal'ently were
no :witnesses to the accident, and
pollce uid the vkUm'a cries for
help may have aaved him from
not belni dl.scovered unUl morn.
ins.
a";!.-:r .. -:;::
..... +42-1112
Patrolman's Mesa Fwleral Draws 1,000 · ·
By MICHAEL PASKEVICH Oft ..... IY~.._Wff
' .
T he funeral procession
strdchod miles, Wednesday af.
ternoon u nearly 1,000 police or-
ftcers made their way to Costa
' .
The Orange Cowity Red
Cross ,Blood Center will re-
roaln opm tM next two Satarda19 and Sundays ha
on •tte• to rem~ a serious lllood sborta1e.
Hours on Jan. 21, 22. 28 and 29 will be 10 a.sa. to
3:30 p.m. at 60LN. Golden
Circle Drive.SantaAn1.
Anyone between 17 and
66 who is in 10ocl hMJth
and weicha at leut 110
pe>Wlda may doQate blood
every eight week.I. Ap-
pointments may be made
by calling 835-5381.
..
Mesa to pay tribute and s ay -----------------------'----------------goodbye to a man most knew on·
ly ln spirit.
A fellow officer, West Covina
patrolman Jay Jackson, died in
• shootout Saturday following
wbat should have been a routine
tramc stop. A Mission Viejo
man aouchti by police died In the
gun battle. \
.. •
'Up
8,080 Eeae .. tetf
A residmt of Tijuana'• La Mesa area poles his way through flooded streets on the top Of an old car. Hea~ rains and
Grwwth Hits U:.S. · Ta-,r~l~t
WASHINGTON' (AP) -The naucm•a economy flnlahecl 1m
vlrtual.11 on taraet With Cartel"
admtniatratlon foreca1h.
altboulbthe lncreue tn the &roH
national product ln the final quarter was the smallest gain of
the year, the iovernment report-
ed today. •
Growth 1D tho economy for the
entire Jeer Wit& an avera1e of 4.9
percent. jut under the •d·
mlnistratJon's tareet or s.1 P1U°!~ cent. But a dlfference Of 0.2 per-
cent la considered • nt r!dlreet
hit•• far a1 eccnomllta are con-
cerned, aince lorecaatinc 12
months Jn ahance ta conaidered
extremely difficult.
in the flrst quart.el" and 6.2 per· price _........ for 1977 u be re. centlntheiecOnd. a•arvo The GNP measures the v.iue leased by the Labor Department ::...-~ on Friday. of outpUt ot loodl &nQ smtces in The GNP-DMuured Inflation the economy aDd after dfSCC)Wlt. ins for Inflation, \t ta COAaldered rate.wu 1.tper.eentln 1978.
the most accurate barometer of tbenaUon'aeconomlcbealth. TB CO B&CE Depart-
After dllcOUn"·"• for all lnfla-meat Hld the 1)0 rate of
ot ..... arowtb In tbe economy ta the Oc-Uon rate • percnt durtng_ tbe tober-Deceml>er period was
year, the avera1e re.al arowuiot: ht n d to __.. ' the economJ lft 197'7 W•I 4.9 "'""r· c e 1 ... a i .uUCUOll ift the , -rate of accuQ2ulat.ioll DI lnven· cent. down from en •Yer•I• Ol 6 tori es by the nation •a bull.Dela• ,percent growth in 1978. The .ad· ·
mlnlstraUon is forecUUng GNP But 1tnce HI• were 1rtron1,
1rowtb ol 5 rcent 1n :19'8. rising 8.1 percent ln the period, it
i• probably that bualnetHS will THE NAnON'S toW GNP in • resume upandinl tbelr ta:aven-
1977 was $1,890.4 billion, an hr tortes lJl tbe early part of ms.
creaae ofS183.9 billion over 1918. • Thia ahould help ensure •trou
The GNP measure of infiatl_on economic crowth Jn tile ftrat part.
TUB GROWl'll IN GNP of 4.2 percent at an annual rate in the final thnJe months of the year
Wat down from S.1 percent in the
tblrd quarter. Tbe economy bad
expanded at a rate of 1.5 percent
of 6 percent measures _price oftbeyear.
~haoaea ~hroucbout tbe~.~~~~...-'!"-~------~----~~------~.-....,..._--....,......,---..;~----...... ...-_...., __ ..,...
economy, not just at the con ..
sumer level, where J)ricea tn-
creased at a faster clip durini
the year. The llnal consumer
to $£ 88 per• nOI• U ron
to904'
WE CAN HELP mu MAKE YOUR HOUSE A HOM£ •
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~'!fl·-~ A. resident of Fallbrook in northern San
D1eg? CQunty ma~cs a return home across ~aq~a <:reek, wtuch was flooded by rains
earlier this week. A wooden footbridge
was washed out. All evacuated residents
have returned home.
. '
THE C01'11Mls.510N received a ff;report Wedn day recom.
men:d.ln that PoJnt ConceP.Uon ana •ix Other co ital areas be
retained tor evaluation aa possi.
ble terminal sites.
Keith McKinney. pre ident of
We1tern LNG Terminal Aa·
sociatea, testllied Wednesday
that Point Conception was the
Sp!}t;~al ·~dmissions Loses .Job . l~reased at UC?
Director Polans~i Dropped
, SAN 1''RANCISCO <AP) The University of Calllornaa, which • I in1.ered mlnor1ties by ti1htening admissions standardl, now ls pro. Posing to open another door to them.
llOLLYWOOD (AP>-· Movie director Roman Polanski, un-
dergoln& psychiatric study at a state prison in a aex offense
case, has Jolt hla Job as director of the movie "Hurricane.··
Producer Dino De Laurentlls, wbo previously said he was
determined to keep Polanski Oil the film, "regreUully.. an·
nounced Wedriesday that be had been forced to drop the dire<:· tor. 'UC President David Saxon is asking the regents ~ay to increase
the apecJal admissions program, for students not meetini reiul r
admissions standards, from 4
jercent to 6 percent of the first· ( ' J
1ear chw startlne tn the fatt or SI' ATE 1979 -the same time the tighter
new standards take effect.
: That change could lead to the
adntisston or as many as 200
more minorities -a greater
number than the new regular
admissions standard is expected to exclude.
..... Bits B.-e
CARLSBAD CAP ) A
powerful homemade pipe bomb
blew ouL a window in the home
ol Ralph and Lillian SUmpson
and 11 piece of shrapnel ripped a
hole in a fence 40 feet away, of.
ftcials say.
The bomb was detonated
Wednesday by an extension cord
laid across the fence and plufted
i o a aocket in earby apart.
\ lhoucse la ry oom, iin·
v said ~ ·~ know thi wa intended t Jlman,," her,21-yeu-old~n.
s id Mrs. StimP.~n1 ddmg be
had been threatened twlce by an ~K.~VJff~tjiOi;i
Negotiations over tbe aaking
price of $14 million were contin·
uing between Prudential
representatives and Museum As·
sociates, a nonprofit corporaUon
that operates the museum, the
Los Angeles Times reported to-
day,
32 Parda .. Gra•tftl
SACRAMENTO <AP) ....! Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr . has
pal'doned another 32 ex-convicts
ID a Christmas gesture, omcials
report.
The pardonit w re gi~en .only
to those who have been out of prison for at least 10 years.
Ae~Dlft
CMl Betz, 57, veteran TV
. acfor and star of the "Judd
for the Defense' 1 series.
died Wednesday after a
lengthy bout wit!). cancer.
Last fall, 'Do Laurenllis told Polanslci'a jud1e: 'The only
two people wbo really know this picture are Roman Poluaki
and mYl6tt.''
In a 11tatesnent issued by De J.aurentlis' oflice here,
the producer dted "'escalating dally eost.s.beinc .incurred by a
crew a dy on location in Bora Bora, TabUl, combined with the
uncertainty of Mr. P6Jianski 's availability."
Fired State
Direpwr Now
A Co1111ultctnt
DAILY PILOT
'LOS ANGELES <AP> -The Standard Oal Co. of Ohio will have
to pay more than $100 mUUon to clean up SOuthern California air If it
wants to build the last link or a muaive 1y1tem bnn1ln1 crude oil
from the North Slope ol Alaska to the Midwest.
Sohio's proposed ti10lcer terminal and pipeline project wu ap·
proved by the South Coast Air Quality Management. District
Wednesday -rbut only if Sohio •ll"ffd to abide by riald antt.polh.llion requirements .
The $500 mlJllon proJect also muat be approved by the state Air
Resources Board and the federal Environmental Protection A1ency.
ASKED IF soruo WAS Wlu.JNG ro a ree. to the anti·
·pollution conditions, company spokeeman Robert Schaadt aald. "I
don't think we know the answer yet." But he added, "We are op-
tlmisticthattheseissueswillbewortttdout.''
Schaadt said the company expects by P' bruary to submit
specific proposals to control em.iasions in ~ area. After that, the
board will hold hearings to consider approval of Sohio's air cleanup proposals. J
• In defense of the cOstly pollution l'e&Ulationa. ll>S Anceles City
Councilman Marvin Br#Ude, a member ot the :AQMD, said: "Tbis
JWoject Is an enormous economic benefit to SOhlo. It may be that the
sh reholders of Sohio wlll benefit to the tune oUl billion."
.. •
• ~
•
Time for Seniors
To Use Tax Law
n-'l'hla rilonth eU&lblo'senior citliens are recelvlni U>
unt certUlca to H uaed lD postpo~ p~ tax
on owner-occupied homes under a law adopted 1>1 the
California Legislature Jut October. . S.tnce Jan. 81 'the dHdllne for ftllng appllcatlona for
poitponement of li11-?8 tu.ea, thoae who bave not
alieady established ace and income ellllbWty With the t
Fi&QchlSe Tax Board should do so immediately. This 1s a voluntary program and it's up to
homeowners to apply if they wt.ah to participate. Detailed
information may be obtained from the nearest state
:Francblae Tu: Board office, or by calling toll-free to
(800) 952-5253:
The lilw permits fall postponement ot property taxes
on some senior clUzens• personal residences.
But the taxes will become a lien against the property
and must be repaid to the state, along with interest at 7 per. cent, whenownershlplltransferredoroccupailon ceases.
Thia means the tax p09tponement could no\ be
extended, for example. to family members who inherit a •
home, or if the present owners are 0Wt1ed for health or other reuonstomovetootherquarten.
Participants may, if they wish, request postponement ·ot only part of their taxes. They also are entitled to pay
off the deferred taxes, plus Interest, at any time.
Homeowners who already have paid all or part of
their l!Tn-78 property tax may use the certificates to
claim a refund. Thev also mav be used to cover last
year's delinquent taxes without penalty, or earlier
delinquencies. for which penalties will be added to the
state lien. The tax postponement Jaw is designed to enable older Callfomians to continue living in 'their homes without a
property tax burden they no longer can afford •
Those wbo think they may qualify would do well to
apply for the certificates. Then decide, after considering
all the requirements, if they wish to participate in the
program.
A Gifted Speaker
President Carter, for all bis apparent honesty and
sincerity, is not what anyone would call a compelling
public speaker.
His softly spoken dissertations, in fact. have a
tendency to send listeners off to dreamland, or at least to
the pursuit of their own thoughts. . But it was revealed this week, under somewhat
unfortunate circumstances, that the Administration has a
quite remarkable voice in the person of Vice President
Walter Mondale. , Mondale's eulogy of Hubert Humphrey, dellverecl
during ceremonies in the Capitol Rotunda, was a amall
masterpiece of effective oratory.
His well-chosen words, crafted into beautiful phrases
and spoken with clarity and sincerity, stOod out amonc
all the many tributes offered during the days f ollowin1
Hwnphrey's death, including those of the president.
No doubt Mondale's personal attachment to the late
senator contributed to the creation and delivery of his
eulogy. But e\'en allowing for that, h1s gift for speaking
was clear,
It the Carter Admlidatration is looklnc for a
persuaslve spokesman. it may have o,ne right nut to the
Oval Otfice. 1 •
Wllat's 'Moderate'i
Efforts to provide "J!lqderate Income" bouslnr in
Oranae COunty seem to bO Involved in a losing filht'
against lnflaUon.
Xake the case of the City of Irvine. In 197•, moderate income was defined as a aross of
$8,000 to $12,000 a year, So the Irvine CitY. Council adopted
zonina specttyc!:J that 10 percent of the homes In the city's new W brid1e development be affordable by
people In that income group.
A ,year later, responding to iliflaUon, tbe council
revl19d tho upper income llmlt to $14,ISOO.
Now the U.S. Department of Housln1 and 'Urban Development has come up with a detlnltlon of moo rate
income that bu made it necessary to bOoSt'.'th pppor
level to almost dOuble that 8dopted ill 1974. HUD says that. ·~ooerate" Income js that f BIUria between 80 percent nnd 120 percent of median J'\OusehOld
income in an area.
Jn Or41111e county median income now 11 $18,600. So
.. moderate" income has become anything between
$14,800 and $22,a20. And a 0 moderate income" home that could not have
cost mo.re than $30,000 in 1974, now can •ell for up to
$5:5,800. -• • Op1nJona txptalMd Jn tM space bOve .,. thoH of the OaU1 Pilot.
Other ex~ on this page are thoee of t,,.lr autttote Ind
lil'tiltao Reedel' oomrMnt la lnvltod. Addrest Th 0 Uy PHot. P.O. eox 1&e0, Costa~ CA 82828. Phone (7t4) 842-4321.
WASBJNGTON -Mucb of
' what WU Cood about Hubert Humpbrf7 was espresaed at the
memOrle! IU'Yl m th• Capitol Jlotunda Jut SwidQ". Hubert. in de~th, brouaht evtrybody . toa uatn; even JUclWd 11.
Nfxon. wboD'.l Hubert never ~ 1t11matlled for be1q Sil exile. S.nnl membetl ot tbe 10· called natfonal pre11, 1n lo~
voice, 1IUeited • •
malJc.lous re. marks abo\lt
Nixon during
the .services,
calllnc him
Tricky J>lclc
and demean.·
iDI hts
motlvea for
comln1 to the
. ,.
services. A •
little of this crept Into tbe report·
iDI the next day. But people cloee to Humphrey,
people who went throun the
heartbreaklna· 1"8 cainpalp,
on heartna these reports just
shook their beads and Hid that Hubert would have wanted Nlx•
on here, tbat he and Nlxoo kept
in touch, and Hu!Mrt always
tried to reconcile everybody. "Anyone who makes remarks
about Nlxoc be1QI here," aald a
man clo1e $0 Humphrey.
.. doesn't bow what Hubert
Bumpbny ii all about.••
And IO for the flrat Ume Prat· denta carter. Ford and Nixon
got tocether, if only briefly and
under sad cJrcumatance1 -
meetinl in Senate Minority
Leader Howard Baker's offices
in the Capitol. Moment. before,
the three men were also wilh
Lady Bird Jobnaon, Betty Ford, Nelson and Happy Rockefeller,
Henry and Nancy Kissli\1er and
everybody asked about Pat Nix·
on's health.
Thurlday, J1nlW)' UJ, 1971
WO ! TllAT WAS m)' Uncle
Elmer Swensao be "(U thank·
ln1. Elmer had beeu around
Huhrt wben the Farmer-Labor
Party mer1ed with the Min-
nesota Democrats in 1944, which
.rue old RH.ff. the vehicle bo
needed to buUd a political
career.
Jn late summer, 1970, I went to
Minneaota to cover Hubert's
comeback campaien for tbe
Senate. No sooner had 1 aat
down to Interview him than be
put h1I hand on top of mlne and
PRESIDENTS, their aenlor •
aaalltanta and their wtvq are
usually at an a1e when health i•
a matter of larce concern, and
there 11 niucb uklbc about It.
Muriel HuD'lpbrey recently had
eurgery. Betty Ford Is not
1tron1. Happy Rockefeller aur·
Vived two breut operaUona. Pat
Nixon recovers slowly from a
• stroke. Nancy Klsslnaer had
half her stomach removed a few
years back. The very special
sathertna in Howard Baker's of·
flee tell Hubert'• ordeaJ.
Hubert brought them totether.
and the nation. too, not becauar be was some holy man, aome
Gandbl. Rather, Hubert'& ura
to do •ood wwe '° obvtOWt, •• were hl.t nan &1Ml earnest op.. • Umllm, that even nonbellevers were ~obody could dlt-
like llubert Humphrey.
He remembered people. All •
old·tlmer would come, remind·
lnC hlm ot an occasion of a
,.....,,
•Now's fhe tima to Luy doll.rs."
haU the membenbip Ol the »-
Mmbl)'. fllQnl.I to be tbe t
ancl l OCIGtb' to Win.
The tc!ea Isn't enetlY now.
Back fn tbe early 1950'• Scaator
Georee Miller. Jr •• then chairman of the DemocraUc State Central Committee, frustrat~ by lnabllltY of the '
;party to elect a 1overnor and by
belng in the mJJ'loritY ID both le&lal•t.lve liic>UHI, invoked the
same jllan. He wu successful
but lt tocik tho ~. OM by
one, Of 1pectal electlon• over a pertod of years to •aln Democratic control of the
Senate.
II
' 'j
' ..
. . ...
Ward & HarringtOn
FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY
Just right for fences
It's a must when digging holes for f enceposts.
And It comes In very handy If you're plant·
Ina bmeroot roaes or trees. Built to last
wfth tempered steel head and woOd handles.
Model •cA35.
POST HOLE DIGGER, ..
8.88 4 I}
,.
FloOr ltl
Not 1vall•bre 1t UM Orange ...
I did it miself!.
Now you can Install a beautiful Ari'ristrong floor
and take pride In saying 0 1 did It myself:• It's
easy and economical with Armstrong
Place •N Press tiles. Lots of exciting colors
and patterns. Each tit& Is 12"X12".
ARMSTRONG PLACE 'N PRESS nLE,
Reg. 43c sq. ft
33csq.'ft.
on
...
'
OM.Y 01' A1
,
t
Women's
Coats and Jackets
....
.
Assorted wraps,
hooded,. plaids· and
solids. Orig. $36. to $56.
. . . .
Qiana® I •
Blouses. shirts. peasant tunics, • blousons. Whites & pastels. Misses sizes.
Orig. $12. to $17.
Women's Sweaters
· Pullovers, car~lgans, vests,
cow Is. Broken sizes and colors,
In assorted patterns and solids.
Orig. $11 . to $22.
-' .
Now
30%ott
Women's ·oareer l:Jniforms
2 pc. pant uniform.s •••••••••..•.... Special 9.99
Mixable smock tops • : •••••••....... Special 6.99
Boys plain ~kete Jeans
Sizes s-1a·
Orig. $8. and $9.
Jeans ·
Infants
.,.._., S~M.L
Whlli.lllft"
Now
2.19
In our Sporting Goods D.e~t.
The best looks
on the slopes. ·
At the verv. best prices.
Men's sweater-100°/o conjugateo
acrylic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Orig. 29.99
Women' sweater-1000.k conjugated
ac(:Ylio • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Orig. 29.99
--
Vour choice 22.88
. . . . . . . .
•
I .
I J
• I t . ;
r.·
L•mp table (needs glass)
Door bookcase
Cocktail table
DINETTE FURNITURE
..
Limited q~antities
\
or warehouse Sold as is -check Items carefully beofre you
buy -No returns or exchanges.
~Dellvery available at ext;a ·charge •
Twin foundation (1 only)
Twin foundation (1 only)
Extra long twin aet (1 ~)
1mu._:..;""----..:.~1 · Twin foundation (1.onty)
Full foundation (1 only) · ·
Queen foundation (1 only)
9 cycle -under the
DI hwasher
Or . 349. Now 2~9.95
Rea an's record than that or
former Gov. Edinund G. "P t''
BrowD, State Peraonn l Board
records show.
TOE woaK 0 CB has
frown an averaic of z.a percent
1J1nually under Brown. com-
pared with asmual growth rates
of 5.1 "rcent w>der Brown'• ~ather and 1.5 perc nt under
Beagan.
Most of the bttiJ!I In 1977 took
Oelfr Piiie .......... SALE OF EQUIPMENT LEO TO CHINESE VISIT
John Saunder•, Right, and Manager CharUe Heizman
China Visitor Sees
Similarities to L4
B1WILUAMRODGE
Of .. DlllJ ....... ...,.
Whfie San Jutm Capistrano resident John Saunders noted atrikfnc
simllarit1111 between PekJnc and Lal Angeles durln& a recent Cbina tri~, he allo saw ireat dllf erences.
'Practically DO lndJvtduals ln Peking have ears," Saunders re·
called of b1I two-week mid-November sojourn. "The city ta Ioadecl
with bfc1cle1. There are four
mW!ou biCJdes lD Pektna. ••
EVEN WJ'l'll A prollferatlala
of self-propelled tramportatlop.
Saunders said, Peldq retalQa la
modern city atmosphere.
•'There is a lot of bulldlnl go-
ln1 on for bouslnf,u he ex•
plained. "Most buildl.Dgs are not
wbat you•d expect of classic
Cbinese architecture; they're
building high-rise apartments.••
Saunders• encounter with
modern Chinese culture -fthrouded in mystery before
Richard Nizon•e historic trip there In 1'72 -was prompted by
hi1 company'• sale of an
acoustic emlaaion ayatem to tho Chlnue. 'J.'he company, Endnco, II a
subaldlm7 ol ~ Dlcldnson
Co.
" TRB EQtJIPMENT measures ctunl IOund.Desa lD alrcraA
bodlea aa4 wtnp. . ~ey wrote us four yean qo expreastna a desire for informa-tion on our equipment," Sa
ders · esplained. "We aro the
acknowled1ed leader ta. this
rea 10 it was natu,.l to contaet us.''
And the correspapdence led t.o
a sale and, ev qtually, Sal.D'l·
ders• Cb.ina visit. .
the next two years.
"Their industrial anct
8frlcultura1 activities by our
atandardl are arebalc." bea1ood1narket." !ent said
China'• interest lD technoloa
hu increased l1nce tho IO-ellled
••Gang of Four" -a radical
croup including Mao Tse-tung's
widow -waa deposed.
....an' UTEULLY stifled
any kind of economic arowth in
China,'' Saunders said.. "'Now,
since Ml;M>'S cultural rewlutton.
the tradini cl>.aonela h&Te
openedup.0
All4 wlth tKe OpenlDj or more ~h1onels .,.,,._ China and tU
We1tern World, mor ~merlcans 11re tn"11ra1 to that C0UDt1'7. 'l'bat means people are
belna eacp:lled to uw cultaral Ideal. •
"Women appanntl1 have a
•err equal role with men ln macblile" and commerce Sn
CblJia," Saunder• aatd. "We
dealt with quite a women 111
our busmeu dealings ana Uiey were very confodcmt business
pe~ n.~."
SAUNDERS ALSO noted dtf· Cerenc~ in Cl)iMse food prices.
'"FOO<! ii very ine>epenslve in
China." be explained. "We had
~Ix and seven-course meils in
ur hotel for about $2 apetlOll.
''The WbOle thi~ actutlty de-
pends on hOw much ou want to
•P•nd," 'Saunders continued.
"You tell them how muoh you
want to spend and that d•·
termlnea how many co\lra )'OU
1et." t
By AMllE COOPE& ... ...., ...........
Public ichool.s are educaUni
more children than ever before
aa4 are dotni' lt better, Deputy
Superintendent Truman
Benedict told Caplatrano UDl.tled
School District trustees tb11
week, when he aubmltted his let·
ter of restsnauon.
And to tbote who yearn for the
food old days of education, the
veteran educator says they
dldn 't exist. People who th.lQ •
they did are looklns back at
yesteryear throuch rose-colored
1la11es.
BENEDICT BAS JIELD
education posiUOOJI for ~ years.
ran11n1 from elementary school
teacher to dl.strict auperinten· .
dent .with the unlfled diatrict IU1d
the San Clemente district that
preceded lt. .
The ~Jbr-old educator came
to Lu Palmu School In San
Clemente In 19'9 as a teacher.
He ta\llht there five years and
wu the school's principal two
years. He then was named
superintendent of the San
Clemente School District.
Nine years later, when the
Capistrano Unltled district was
estabUJhed, Benedict was first
named assiatant superintendent,
and then superintendent.
IN ms, Benedict followlnt an illness~ stepped down from the
cbJef ac:lmfnlttratot•1 poet and
was aamecl deputy auper:lnten~
dent.
Board membera hid their own
copiment1 about the 1cllool
cbltra real,IDaUoo. ,
"Al th• trustee a110Ciatid
with Mr. BeDecllct the !Oalest."
utd San Cl•mente board
mei;nber Geor1e White, 0 1 must
sa1ttt.at fer a Jhort 1u.r. ho au.re
does atanct tan... •
"""'~ ,..,, ....... •00tNO A Fl JOB'
• Truman Benedict
like some of these people who
talk about how 1reat aehooll
were when they were youn1 to
'~UISINTODLWER 11 oneol
only two ln the naUon lnatallod in
a police unlt;'' Sst. ~. 'J. J>eLuca
aald, pattlnf the $4,000 portable
t,Alectronlc alcohol·Jn·tireath
tester. Tha other la 1Dltalled In a
10 back and look at some of the work they did back then.••
NOT ONLY A&E more
children atteodlJl& school than
ever ... td Benedld. but
also they are ltaytni in 1chool
Joo,.er. ·
• As society chances, ao do the
schools," he said. "We are 1et-
tin1 a different umple or
children, and they come from
fa~Ulea which are chanitni. In
maoy !amities today, both
parents are forced to work, Just
to J?rovide a reuooable stan-
darel of llvina.
''There is increasing pressure
on public aeboola to provide af·
ter·•cbool and preschool ac·
tlvitla for cblldren of worJdnc parecta." ·
• "P&OGaESS IN ANY social
luUtutkla ts •low, bdt lOOJf how
far the .ed>oOla have come.'' he
said. ''Thtrteen )'ears qo, we
had no music proiram in Capistrano area acbools. Now
our mustc proiram ls al!)ooi the
best ln the &tato.
"JleU, 100 years a10 a lot of ~~~~.~iped their namn with
Advisory
Dismissal
A.-ssailed
Some members of a ciU advi.ory committee lash.eel
a1a1n.1t Newport· Mesa school ol·
fici•I• tbt. • ek, elal lnt
the ofOclala viola~ a 1t1te l~w
by dl1mluln1 tb• committee
from further raeareh Into IOCal
school closures.
"We never aald we want to
atop looking at an)'thlng,0 1ald
com.mltteo m~ber Ann
Beaupre, addins Wtt the dlltrict ·"is tylnl our handl" by c
the committee to worry G'n}y
about recommendatiou &ho
diatrict'• 1878-'19 bL!ClaeL
. TBBCO
React.inf to Ch~es that
district Tlotateid th"e Arnett I.
which requlrt:S cltliens ~inltt" recommendation& before
schools C81l bo clONd, 6aperu,.
tendent John Nicoll aald, 11M1
onlY comment lS ttiat they 414 a
'olna1nWeent job under pr•·
aure."
uwe did el(actly what Ute
Arnett 8Wftqulred.'' eountete<l
committee member Alvia
. .
Y2 ·oft
Brassieres
Panty Girdles
Girdles
Dfscuff 1d S¥a a .........
Halliday's Winter
Starts Today
OPENTHORSDAV EVENINf;~
1.
SWtATER ·
S~~E
Weatdtn Plaza Ontv tCMO IMne Bhld.; NIWPOl't hach
6IJe HcMw tO:OO am. to t :OO P.tn. Thin,;~~ p.m.
AMERICUS. Ga. (AP)
-Allen Carter, 89, flle president's uncle and
the oldest mernber or
the Carter family, died
Wedneiday. ffe was the mayor of Plains, Presi·
dent Cartcr).hotnetown. tor 28 years. ,
-......
' '
.
\ -·WE &SK YOU TO CONSIDER whetMr
paren will be able to save enough money on 1e·
duced fares to cover the cost or dental bllliJJn·
carred by the suear·coated cereal their children
ingest," Richardson oontin~.
A~trak spokuman Edward Edel said
JUcbarqton's fears itre exageerated and added that two of the three cereals involved jn the pro.
moUon -Raisin Bran and Kelloq'a Co 'Flakes
-are DOt sugar-coated.
TheJ.hird cereal tn the promotion is KelIO '
Frosted'Makes. .
,,,r. ..
"IT BOGGLES MY MTND that there's so UCh furw r a cereal ~P promotion,'• Edel
said In aa lnterview ... We're not jammlna
anythinf down anybody's throat."
s.ti&Jleback Shifts
Offiees, Services
Saddleback College's Admissions and Records
office is being moved to th flrst floor of the ool· '1ege ltbtary.
Since the move coincides with sprina semester.
registration, some services will temporarily be
conducted in Gt.her parts of the co1le1t, a~cordioe
to Associate Dean of Admission Bob BOsanko.
A could
year.
Amtrak, a private corporal'lion established by eons 19'71. h d to rely oo rovcrnmcnt
subsidies to break even. For the current)'ear. the
rail service aougbt ~ million, but he been una-
ble to eet that much from a reluctant Co~ess.
w.blcb bi.i come up With $S08 mlWon .
.., Divorce
• e~tcy • CtfmlNI •Will~e * J ncorporahon
.,.. Ac:cldent·lnJury
• Eviction
640.2507 STEP Thero are portable, plug-in
& mod•la tor4!ngle, cold rooms.
STEP There ere permanently 1nllalled
7 models for entire homo•.
STEP Simple to buy for yoor lndivldual a rooms, entire homee, apart·
ment1, etc. Moro than one mil·
lion have been sold;
INVENTORY CLEA~ANCE
MUST REDUCE STOCK
COST •.• NEAR COST
REDUGFIONS TO~%!
a.,.'70-f9'1JI•
539. $59
'69.
Slat:Jl .. 41 .... .,,s ....... 1.e11g
USE YOUR CREDIT CARD
AR&I CARDS ACCEPtE ..._....c._.,..,_. .... ,,_..
Vl$A
At t.ht end of lasl summer. Marin
reservoirs were only 18 percent full,
but aubltabtial rainfall tht past few
weeks hu brought 1tartlln1 relier
from ttitlob1parcbedspell.
An attemOoD GC rem-lnl1ctn1 with mem·
ber1 of El Toro••
plonetriDC Prothero
family will bO featUred
during a meet!M OI th•
Saddleback :Area HI•·
torleal Society on Suft·
day.
An)'one lntttested is J vited to the meeUnJ '-"·~~;rio.
:which Will be1ia et s ,.,~~~~-~~::4~~~~~~~~~==;==~~=~~~~~=~~re~~ p.m. ha the comnaunlty ...
room of the Peoples
deral Savings and
Lo n Bulldlne, El Toro.
The Prothero family
settled in El Toro near
ttie Allio Creek and
hat is now Muitlands
Boulevard fil 1900.
Refreshments will be
served durinf the meet-!nc. ·
Ol!INION
'SPUT
ZURICH. 5.-ttterland
<AP) -A public oplnlon·
survey of 1,000 S'ftiH
citizens bu found an
almo1t equal apllt
amons tbole lD favor or oppoetd to tbe buildlDe
of nuclear ~•er •t•·
tiOQI in Swftliilif 11.Dd. \
ChOkl, chairs. groeeflil new rct tgn1 That complement .ve«
.decor from tradttlonol to contemporary. Quality you con count
on lhowa Jn the fabrlca. Which Include nylon velvets. rayon velvets. poly .. ,., blenda. Jacquards and even qutlteds at no
•xtn:I cost. And quallty .consttuctton With hardwood tram ...
de1ux• Marhx cuahlonlng for superb comfort, exp nllY• d•
taUI of button tufting and lined skirts. DecoraHng MfVlc•, dellv·
ert and th• famoua RI wcmanty of qualtty at no extra cost.
Here are ftl• ohalrt you'll wont at a have-a.pair price I
, .,,.~ tt•·~· ""' • 'IC
FUNKY WINKE'RBEAN
CASEY
.. ,., ...... S&Mt__..
PLAN APPROVED
Br•dley Jacobs
.... • # It •
, I
.
Jacobs Wins 5 New Workers
Oranae County A11enor Bradley
Jacob hu won permiuion rrom tounty.
1upervt10ts to Implement a reorsaniza·
tlon plan tor bis department and to blre flve ntw appralaen.
Jacobi said tbo now pro1ram, which ~ffeu promottons to dtHrvlni
emplo7ea, will tott a mcimutn or
S273,000 when full)' implemented in'
1979·80.
JN ADDmON1 ~E said, tbe flve new
appralaen 1bOWG handle his depart·
ment'• lncreastn1 workload without hlr·
ins additional employees for the next 2~2 yeah.
Jacobs appeared before supervisors
th11 week for the second time with UliJ
request.
L11t month they asked that be first
review hla department requlrementl
with county personnel ofllcials ana
mor lhoi:ouahly j Ufy tho extra ex·
pe •: .
UP ERVISORS ntOMA JUI~ and
Laurence SChmtt atill were ~ eon·
vlnced th.ls Ume "1d voted 01alnst the
J'OO!l•nlzaUon plan.
Riley aaid that while tbe board c•nually aupporta reCJl'f anlzatiOI\ plant
that would tmprovo department effl ..
ciency. aupervllora 1enerally oppose
ptana that would increase COits.
J acob1, in •·written report to 1ui>0rviaon, said hta department cosl$
taxpayers leas than aimUar .depart·
\ .
mentl ift any other Callromla county.
e MCK T I Mac.)
la THOUGHTFUL
1ntheltJ4i\jQl{t)I
ANNUAL SALE I ~::l':ce . •
PUBLIC IUG.TIOI Stain~ll-·Glass
ESTATE JEWELRY & FINE PORCELAINS CHINA . (. Finest Glass Selecffon
JCoUnt y Rates .
' JuYenile Ball
. j. FeeB·~=~=~ges?
• Parenta or youngsters detained In Otan1e
County Juvenile institutions could be charged from
!about $30 to more than $50 a day for their •
hcounisten' care f. Currently, parents who can afford to pay are
~arged varying rc.ites depending on which of
~ven i.mUtutlons houses their youngatera.
BUT COUNTY SUPERVISORS have decided t°' set a standard fee to. apply lo all imUtut.iop.a aJ)d
toset a st,iuldard fee to apply to all institutions and
to chanee the criteria for settln& rates. · .
' Lut March supervisors scrapped a former
~S·a-day rate ror all juvenile ·instltut.iont an4
opte:d rates that would instead r~p fcoa.n\y
per1it.JPg C.s>SlS. -I • -• •
Aecordinj to a report by Auc:U~CGntrofier
it; Hetm. the,.countv's cost laat Jl&J' ran&ed from
low of $31 a da.,v _per child at Rancho Potrero in
rabuco-Canyon to a high of $112 a cblld per day
under a now-defunct rogram at McMillan School.
THE DAILY COST LAST year was $56 per
child at Juvenile Hall, S33 at Joplin Ranch, JS3 at
J,os Pinos Forestry Camp, $53 ~t ttle 1'outh
Guidance Center and $44 at t.he Albert Sitton
J!ome.
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich said what those
figures don't r_pflect ls the under use of some coun·
ty juvenile facllities.
Aak1ng parent' to pay the full cost, Supervisor
hillp Anthony continued, would In effect be
enallztng parents Cot a le11-than·full lnstltuUon.
DIEDRICH SUGGESTED il'HAT any n•w
ates •~Id be calculated aa t.houp the institutron
i ere •t Jeast 80 ~rcent filled.
. Supervisors Blso asked County Counsel Adrian !Kun to see tr it would be JeraJ lo set Gne stan·
;.danl rate lo apply to au county institutions, ralber
than fi&urini each rate '5eparately.
t
.. .
County superv1sonr want to find out what ma·
or airlines operating from Orange County plan to
do to meet noise standard! that will take effect'ln
1985.
Supervisors 'have asked offict•l• of Huihes
Alr-weatandAirCallfornlatoletthemJcnowwhether
,. they plen to modify existing Jet enclnes or replace
them with new, quieter eniioea.
Al&PORT OFFICIALS then are to evaluate ~ the Impact ef aircraft modlfleatlon to help
:--auperVllon PIM OJ\ ways to meet thti 1985 airport
:noite i'efalatlons.
• "lf the current level or Jet operations at
Oran11 County Airport la to be matntalned. con-
version to quieter aircraft ii apparenUJ the onlJ
eana that would enable compliance," Supervisor
hbm Riley .said in a Jetter to fellow board mem· :t>er1 ••
"And there is some question ••. as to whether
: quieter aircraft alone will ~nable compUance, •· be
said.
BRONZES,' RUG~ FURNITURE, SILVER, OILS, Et:. Jn 0 ge c~
1Yi Miiiion Qollara Wort h
~on't miss this jmi>orta~t sale!
Fine China, Crystal, Porcelains,. Bronzf!. European Furnituri, Olla; Et~. ,
; ~
Also. many fine pieces of antique amt contempomv.iewelry including11ne
watches, solitaire diamond rings, earrlngS, gold chains, clusttr diamond,
ruby, sapphire, and emerald rin9s. -.
SAU NtGHTS .. .
·Friday, Saturday, Sunday
Jnary 20, 21. 22
1:00 P.M ••
.. -.
INSPECTION
2:00 P.M. :a:OO P.M.
ind 7 ·8 P.M.
Sa I Nights.
TE AMS Bank AIT)trie9n:I • MauerCh gt • P~non•I cnecti; • CMh • Some ex~ "rmt CM be atr
Prop•rtY movid for co~IM¥• of u~ to:
&rcwptJr!(f;tr!!cries, ~td.
2542 West Coast Highway, Newport Beach, CA
(71 4) 646·2200 '
8fte up to IO% and
rncN'9 on our enura
lnftntOIY of NCTHW1t81 Mliny
~nlldwrtlMd
c!Hrance Item• In
every at0f'91
&ome~ltta.
and colOre may be
llrttlted -hurry for
bt1taeltctlon1!
Custom Windows
PoOI Table Flxhfts
Glens Etchings &
Eh;liecl Mln-orecl Walls ~ Fobricated' lnitdled
15°/o Dlscomtt
O. ....... WlllnlaM
Finished Items On Display
Avallebte For. sate
•
f)
"That wos very good, DOiiy, but that wasn't
the Pledge of Allegiance. t was o McDonald's
~ ~otnmerciol."
"Cot a problem'> Then write to Pat Dunn. Pat wiU
cut red tape, getting the aiuwera and action 1JOU ne~
to 1olve mequuu1 in government OJ'ld bunneu. Mail
11our queltion.t to Pat Dunn, At Your Sntnce, Orangt
Cocut Doil11 Pilot, P 0 . Boz 1'60, CMta MelG, CA
H626. A• many lettns a. pou1bl1 will be ~.
but phoMd mquinea or utters not mclut.IOlg thf
readtr'• luU oanw, addrtu and bulme14}iotir1' phoM
number cannot be canSllJered. Thu colamm appeora dai·
lJI ezcep Salurd4111." •
Old Spen B~lp Otlten SH
DEAR PAT: If I recall correctly you once
published a place where old prescription
eyeglasses could be donated to the needy. Could
you repeat this mfonnataon?
T.S., Costa Mesa
Dr. Lt-on Axelrod, 330 Park Ave., La1uaa
Beach, CalJf. 92651, welee>rne• donaUoa• (deUverecl
or malled> of prescrlpUoo 1Jasses for donatloD
to the Emenada Llons Club. The 1laHes tbea are
1tven to needy persou In Me:dco.
Do•age Lf..Ct• Ne Loteger £•"'
' , ,
~lug~out
· · destructive
·snails .
Attracts and kllla lluga and analts, Vlgoro•
Snail & Slug peJleta or meal. Big 2~-lb. box.
Reg. 1.39
get carrlell away
over threiholdi
Quality, tow-profUed extruded
elumlnum ttuethold• with replaceable vinyl h1Hrtt. In Alactoma only. Style IX. 36-fncn.;
By Jl.UCIA l'OUBDG OI .. o.lfJ HM lt.tt
Ml lame a flve:year-old cat
with huae eyes, • 1reat bl1
plume ad Yery Ions hair in
tawoy tOnolsesbell colon. 1f11r owner, Mlndy .Muter, 25, or
Ne90rt Beach, wu leaviJ:li for
France to study at the Unlveraity
of B'ordeaux arid couldn't lml&lne
llvill1 without her Melanie.
"She startea ib¥eStltatinS bow
she could take the ut with her, ..
said Mindy's motber,1 Evelyn
' Mlll~. fo~y of Newpart Beacb and now ol Hilla.
·What abt cqvered wu that
Jet '~t. ~privately owned travel
service for lncomln1 and O\lt-Solna
artim._i 1hipmeot1, would board
Melahle overnl•ht. take eare of
her, feed her and see that •he didn't lh1U tier plane to Paris.
"We took Melanie up to Jet Pet
and put her toys and little blanket
in tu cage with her. Mindy said
she seemed In 1reat health when
she arrived," recalled Mrs.
· Mlllu. ]tfiridy. a·graduate of Corona del
Mar High School. ii one of many
satta!led Oranae Coµnty cu1tomer1 of the animal
trantportatlOD llgency.
IBT PET, 1Whlch ls located on
an abandoned Nike mlaslle lite
'neat Los Anaeles International
Airport. leases the property fl"Olll
LAX and will be 10 yean old next
Au1ust.
The 011lfit 11 run by Frank and
Cathy Hasenauer. animal lovers
who hove been involved with
airlines and travel agencies in one
way or another for more than a quarter oC a century.
Whlle workln1 for tl\e airlines
years ago, Hasenauer recalled
"seeing animals coming throucb,
wltb nobody to take care or them
or wash them or feed thelll."
Tbey started out with cats and
do&• and eventually evolved into a
serv e for all klndl of WDlals -·
I bo doh. bo • -.U.-.' biet. cllll8rles. ... liooa. JJebru. f m~•~i.1 naha, bOoD9 and , f · you name1L -r 1· fi ·
-....-----· :6£ ....
""' iii F ,. D#UllP .....
TREY RAVE SPACE to board
,tiJst about any exotic animal in the
world ..;..'"Rilht now we have two sulfa crested.! cockatoos" -plu.'1
they pnmde cages for bi* and
cata. ams for dots and stables for
bor-Mf. Once they boarded u en-
tire dttas, and rodeo animals, re-
search animals and petuns zoos
have used Jet.Pet, be said.
• Petwi.se, they board and ship
mostly pooches and felines for
famlUea wbO are moving to this
area or relocatin& in another part
of the· country or even the world.
H .. enauer noted that military
familles frOm the United States
wbo are &olnc overseas "have
their pets shipped to us. then we
maintain them until we know that
tbe family hu arrived atlta desUna-·
tlon."
l\MONG THE SERVICES or-
rered at Jet Pet are pick up and
delivery to and from LAX and
many other cities in the U.S •
boarcllnl laclliUea, cleaning, feed-
in1, exerci1in1 and providing
sanitary care for animals in
t-ransit, and arraneing for
domestic and international 1hip-
pin1 docum;;i};Uon and health
CS. I' , Pase BZ>
In the Air
..
. ,,...
. • .....
..
. . . ~ "'
.....
~ ~ Preston end Minnie Newton, a 60-yesr-
~-~old couple who wearied of living with
,. right angles, outside their geodesic
dome home In Aptos.
: · ( __ H_o_r_o_s_e_~_p_e _ _,,,,~
. .. .. . . . . ' . . .
'\
Say Goo~ye to
Sqµ.are Homes
BJ BDL llARTIN
SAN FRANCJSCO CAP) -Folb
like Preston aiMt Mhmle Newton, a
60-fe.ar-old coiuple •bo weaned ot J1vtn• -.Ith ript ~les, are Slvlnf mlddle-dali rfJfpectablllty to the
once f ar.:out 1e6dtatc dome.
Once -sneered at by 1ome u too
freaJCy, the dome la flndln1 a new
audience amoni people over 40 wbo aee It aa sometbinf more
than a CO\Dltereullure 1ymbol.
"I abloluteb' don't 11.ke to walk
into a square houae anymore,''
11y1 Mn. Newton, who lives With
her buaband, a retired Armr col·
onel, on tho beach neat Aptbl til
Santa crui county IO'Uth of berc.
"There are too many comers."
The 1950I bralncbUd of tbeort1t.
Buckmtmttr Fuller, the dome ltl.ll
fit. beat in brushy, 'wood~ court· t.rY envin>rii, bUt It la 1radually
winning a new market, ac~ tobuUcten.
"Domes have bJen thou1bt ol u vacaUQSl laiomes, but OS peroeot ol
the domes we 1ell are for pri~
retldence1,'1 Hya Seott Hewett of
Cathedrallt.e Domes, the natJon'1 blgaeat producer of 1eode1lc
domes.
Hewett, 29, Barry NottoU, 30,
and Tate Miller. 29, are the young
men behind the firm, wh14b Is sell-
ine 175 domes a month and ex-
pects 1ales of nearly $5 million
this year1
Lont uaoclated with the youne. the dome la wtnntna fans a1D011g
older eouplea like the Newtons and
Rollie Gainey and h11 wife Ada
Marte, both near 50. of Wataon-ville.
"We alwar• wanted an :A·
frame • ., 1aya Mra. ·Galne1, an
army seraeant. "But when we aa,r
the dome wo li1d tbe hell With the A·h'arne. I wOuldn't llve lri ey
other k.liid ot tiOuH now."
Moat dOmo flrnul IUD -~au. ln small, one or two-bed.room,
cabin-like domes. But CaUiedralite
emphaalse1 three· and four-bedroom, two.bath bom11 up to '5
feet ln ~eter.
Tb• l1rDi bu sold about 7,000 domea al.Dee It waa founded In
!Ml, but sales have rocketed In
the put two year1, durtrig which
nearly S.000 domes have been aotd.
"MOllt o1 our cuatomen are sold when they walk into the dome
because of the openness, the airy
feelin1, the beauty that. is caU1ed ~¥ the geodealc shape," 1171
Jlewltt. ''People are Ured of Uvtne
tn 1quare hoUlei, of aee1n1 the
same old right an1les."
.. It'• really a neat way of Uv-
lnf ,'' MYI Kat.by Mable, wbo built
a dome with her husband tn Aptol. ·~Every room ~.\ue. The house cbanaes tta pe ~ depencllag
on the time ot day and the Ucbt· int."
l A dome can be Cheaper than a
conveJltlonal home ,because a ma·
jor pqrtlon ol tbe l.Dtertor and ex-
terior work often la done by the
homeowner without expen1lve
help from profes1ional contrac-
· lors.
Catbedrallte sella dome shells in
sizes ranging trom 26 to 45 feet in
diameter at prices up to $7,995
The catch? The price includes only
the dome.
T&e dome kit la made up of one·
half inch plywood, alued and stapled to Jdln·drled flr 1par1,
lormlof what 11 known aa a
trlaJitul-.r "apace frame... The
trianales ate bolted together to form the dome. Hewett estimates
the "roueb·in .. coctl -fowidatlOQ, dome shell, lnteiior wan;, aiding
ancl lllss .:.l tor th• owner·bullt dome to avera1e about $18,l>OO to '20,000, v• r
• ....... iijil! ¥ p.
. . . . ' . . ... .. ..
ERMABOMBECK/HOROSCOPE
Evt:ry coupJ iot yearJ
or so, some luventtr thlnkw he baa put
toceiher. a robot
houaeWfte that wtU elec· tronlcally cfo all the
chorea a woman &ea.
The laat one I ob·
served wu a 275-pound
lltUe number, bullt from
paru ol autos and •1t pllancea. that stoQd aix
feet tall. The •
tJlrlUed that lt w~ pR)o. tith1'at•l®amldl>uN r
1rammed to mfet the .. "Wouf.d you please put
, mailman and etnl)t)' tbo Uae computer on tb
1arba1e. phone! I have a ques-Wbatya wanta bet? In tioa ..
a couple of weekl It will "That ls not posslble ••
b ~ l • m P t Y 1 D g t h • •be Hld. "Computer1 do mba Iman .-itd meetlna . oot .anawer the phone
t o 1arba1e. No one Tiley are not human .. '
tella a computer what to "Tben perhaps . ou
do. Jhery~n~ •h~\a'd would have It write 1me know tb.tt by thia Uane. arid.uplain the bllllna,,
Do you retQem.bet ••eoau>uter1 are not
your first comput~r? proarammed to write M 1 n e w a 1 • 11 t t1 e let•-., h numJ>er at the 1,,c lJi ,'!"'n, • e Hid. Ci l tt 'II:> !"~ I tee. Could I drop by ac nna · ~or no •P· and have a discW111on?0 pareotreasonftcouabed "C up a bill for "2.l7. omputera do not re·
I called the comp~ eeive peopl~ and have
and a peraon answered ~~uaatcm. the phone who aald she Then perhaps you co\lld tell it I called."
Cllcb ~ "°" eoela w tdn.tttJav in tt.. Dollfl Pdo&Gld~ of iDOmn'• and .rote.
club mfttfno• and ~
/or tJur ~ wek -
Thlindall throtlQ'i W~ dou. ~ notfc•• to Club C~, Dolli/ PU.of, P.O.
Bor lS«J, Co.ta Meld, CA
92628. Be .ure to include
your name and phone
num~. Notket tnuat ~
tn out b®tU t100 wub 6i
advance. •
To request • pidu~.
writ• or coll the 1''eature1
D~m.nt, tu2·432l. Pac·
turea Qtl Umlted to ftmd·
rcdHrl opftl to the public.
• • .....
NN LANDERS I FURNISHINGS
Two Tastes Vs.
Wedded Bliss
By VIVIAN BROWN ..............
A lot of contention In marriage
comes from the conflictinc tastes
of two people, especially
newlyweds on the first lap or
wedded bliss, a young couple ex-
plained to their relatives at a re-
cent family gatherinc.
All the while they talked about
decorating plans before marriage
they weren't really listening, they
revealed
Now the questions fly .
How can I get ham to send his
dog back home" It seems the dog
has scratched the handsomely
finished noori. left hairs on a
beautiful bedspread and oc·
cas1onally nibbled on a chair leg
A typical male complaint in-
volves the bride's insistence that
the house be spotless all the time,
one youne husband aaid.
In another iruitance the groom
couldn't believe that a little sand
from his shoes on a while bedroom
rug could be auch a traumatic ex-
perience for his wife.
Balaocinc such unhappy ex-
periences against marriages that
have no such pro~lems, one couple
supplied answers which proved a
viable formula for happiness In
any event. it foiled the decorating
and other problems a couple might
have by making an efCort to settle
shaky issues before marriage
Herc's what ls su(Ufcsted.
Agree on colors in decorating
you both like. If one person hates
muddy blue, maroon, avocado and
the like. agreement must hinge on
a complete ban on the offendine
colors. The next step ls to agree on
colors that both like.
Shop together t.o pick the type of
!urni1hinp you want. If there is a
hassle over traditional or contem·
porary, try a mix of both for one solution.
Discuss pets. If one partner
loves cats, decide such things as
whether they are goinc to walk or
sleep on the bed -this can really
drive some partners up the walls.
ls it poesible to train the cat not
to get on the bed -or to train a
husband to put up with it?
In any event, both partners or a
marriace should be well acquaint-
ed with their respective mates'
pets before the ceremony. One
might as well g 'in since most pets
live out a hai ,y hfe in a few
years -and It 's to be hoped a
marriage will last much longer than that.
Another bone of contention may
be friendabips or the partner and
the oblieaUon t.o entertain them. If
one doesn't like the other·s
friends, it could lead to a serious
impasse In a succeuful marriase.
To prevent squabbles after mar·
riaee, one bride auuests that a
campalcn to get t.o know and like
her husband's friends paid otr
"I spent considerable time with
the eroom and his friends and
cultivated those that would be
compatible with our life-style, ..
she remarked. These new-found
friends would fit in with their en
tertaining, which is geared most of
the time t.o newlyweds and a mix-
ture of friends and business ac
quaintances of the groom ln an ef-
fort to further his business career.
And if the bride is a career
worn an, some effort should be
made to determine whether
housework and cooking will be
shared some of the time or
whatever. No matter how great the
love, overtax.int one individual can
cause little squabbles.
SotoftiftO Jor Sanglu coL~r """'lach Thu,,.
da11 fn t~ DoilJI Pilot Gnd
contcifna noticea of ac·
Uoitfea for ajngJ.1 for th•
/oUou>ing week -Fnda11
t/lrough Thurado11. Send
tfoUcea to Cher'Jll Romo,
Daily Pilot, P.O 80% 15'0,
Coatci Mela, 92611. B• .ure
to include uoor name, Cld-
dr111 ,and phone ni.im~r.
Notice• mu.tt bt in our
hand• two weekl fn ad vonu.
................... • ...,. • ' ' •• 0 • • • • ~ ................. ..,..~--................. _ ..... __ ~-· .. _.....""'"w---' . . .. . ., .
•
..,.. ...... T' .... • • • • • If " " ' • 'Y".. .,.,_..... ___ ,.._ ...... .... ----
•
~. Jel\uaty 10. 1078
DEAR ANN: My
h'l band died ten yun
a o. He didn't leave me
much mon y but I have
. a lovely hocne with
many beaullful antique
plecea which we collect·
eel over the years.
Latel)', rather than
buy wedding and
1raduation &lits for 1•ur 1nttque1 to pco~loandwehQPeshe
nlecea and ephews, whomev r yoa cbooae • on't do lt 11a1n and
1 've aivei them some of a D d by a ll nu a n • .burt otbera as 1he hu :~ ~nd d~usht!r~ab:th u:rUk~I~~ ~E~S us. -CANADA
mar4rl .. n<!:_~nd bof9ur1 leave 1oy itiater ad D A C.M.: Tlta&
graD Cuuw~n tow m brotben. Gitt. •re. at coutpy ft r e 1ho•ld
have 1lven aome of my people want t GIVE. bne ~-reported at :,n~iq1ue~. 1Env~r~tb~nf Betaa relaced does not o•ce for •••tble•l
I e 1 1 t 1 t h 0 u 1 h t aa&omaUcally qulll!y a bavlor. I rct y to
so, unhl my dau•hter penoa 81 • redpl IE out bttf Of t • ur IJIC aa!f and lnforsn round out I had 1tven DEAR ANN: About a her of tbla di iraceful some of my anUques to m o n th a I o , m y b .. of r l I the other relatives. She boyfriend nd J { are reua pro e 1 oaa
said a 1ood mother bolb 8> w re afraid we iuc~. A R A N N
would save everything micht ave VD. We LANDERS: I am 15
for her dauahter and finally Cot up the nerve years old _ a lirl who
crandchildren Now to eo t.o the emer1ency bu "hoof·ln·mouth" dis-
whenever ahe comea entrance of a local eaae. It seems I'm
over she checks t.o see if hospital and I~ teated. alwaya aayiJ)I the wronc anythine la miaaing. We were assured no one thl · 11 h I am ln my 60s, in need find out about tt. ne -eapecia Y w en
eood health, and not. They even made special I'm arou.nd a euy I die:
ready to die yet. I also arr'4ngen\ents 10 we Actually I'm •hy but
would IUce t.o leave a few cou d come back and in order to conr up my shyness I come on thine• t.o my sister and learn the reswta, thus awfully strong. Some or
brothers who are very de· avoidl~ a phone call to the things I pop out with
ar to me. When I men-our homes. Happily, the are pretty eross. When 1
ti on e d this to m y resulta were neeaUve. h e a r m y 1 e 1 r I · m
dau1hter, she said in A nurse who happened shocked. It's not me at
anger. ''They are not to be a good !riend of my all. Any sugaestlons for
nearly as .close as your boyfriend 11 mother a cure?_ A MOUTHY
own children and somehow found out· MOUSE IN BENTON grandchildren. I ·res~nt about our hospital visit. HARBOR
at!" .. . She told my boyfriend's DEAR MOUSE: Beine
My son has never s11d mother 'Yho confronted able to recoanue and
Club COlindar runt .ach
Wt>dr~adoy in lh• Dody
P.ilol Ond cont(!fnf nohces
o/ UlO'lntn'I and 1erufce
club ~liltgl ond euima
Jor the followfng week -
Thl4Tad0t/ through Wt'dne•·
day. Send nocacea to Clllb
Ctmndar, DailJI Pilot, Po
Bo.t J , Coato 'Mtui. CA
'2a5 Be aurt to mclude
MOUr name oAd phone
rwm,_,. N,,hces mutt bt'!
an our hdndt t&DO wetb m
Odoonce.
To r~ttt a picturt,
wnte or coll the Fftllurts
DeparlrMnt. 142-4321. '*-·
turea ore hm ted to fund·
raisera opt:n to the publt~.
Wedding ond engag•·
mmt onnounc11Mnt1 nm
on Sunday an the Daalfl
Pilol. Fotm1 OTI O&IOiloble
at·ciU f)ajly Pilot oflict• or
by colling tht' Features
Depart~.842-4321.
To civoid dfsappotnt·
mnt, proipectt~ bridt'I
are remindtd to how thnr
wedding atorlea, with a
black~·white glo.t111 of
the ~ or of the couplt.
to the Features Dt'pcirt·
mmt ~ wtelc ~fort the
IMddinQ, a word -only my him w1th1tpromptly.
daughter. Pleue advise Tbi11 bu resulted in a ;:::======;::::==========::::;-
me . I am -C 0 N -.ere at many problems
FUSED AND UPSET and I am beartalck.
DEAR C. AND U.: Pleaae let that 1011lpy
Don't let that aelllab girl Jady know that 1be did a
latlmldate you. Give Jot of damaee to several
Solo ·
1 "? . ' ? '1. • • , ••••
• <From Page BO
and sos, who take care of themselves and look
good, are more than a match for a woman in
her 20s and 30s.
""Especially if they have a good self-imace
. develop the assets they have and don't let
their age inhibit them from doing whatever they
think would be interestine to do; whether it's
golni to school, going to a bar or learnin1 to scuba dive."
Rocktnael said bistoric1lly our society has
judred men for what they do and women for
what they look like, which causes women who
reach middle age to say, "I don'~ look 1ood and I
am what I look like." That'• when communica-
tion breakdowns occur.
The solution? Do more tltln&S, expand )'our
activities and dale men ol :v rylng . new friends, become an lnleresUn person Cl
don't let society dictate to you.
And, Hid the lecturer, "Goin out alone will
enhance. the possiblllty of meeti.111 someone:
where cotnc out with a couple of 1irl!rlend1
mieht detract." .
Because there are more sinele women than
atncle men, he said the ''older woman'' rnay
have to work twice as hard to get what she
wanta -and has to learn that if she la as·
sertive, she must also be prepared to accept re-
jection. ,
"Any way you can meet another in-
teresting person is a good way -there are no
iood and bad ways to meet people . . .. A lot of
men are not prejudiced aeainst a woman ln her
40s and 509," he said with a 11mlle.
SOLO/ZING
ORANGE COAST SINGLES. Saturcta1
evenin1 dance at the American Ledon Hall jn
Santa Aha at 8:30 p.m. Saturd8,Y, Jan. 21. Ad·
mission, $1.50. For in!ormatlon, contact Jack
Scott at 847-0637. Age: over 39. . .
•
Ever been burned about
lnacurate television llatlngs In
your newspaper? Cool It, help
la on the way! Your Dally Piiot
brings you each day the most,
the beat, the moat complete
an~ most up-to-the·
commercial break listings
ever offered.
For TV Program News,
DAILY PILOT
642-4321
Ella Nor's
HALF-SIZ~ SHOP
,...mm
J .............. CllTA A
. '"'....,.,. ..... "'""'°' "'" . . .. .......... '""• &AMA IUW MAil . '"'-• ....
WINTER
SALE .,.. ...
W0Mlt4-S•ANoa'S
COWCTIOM ...........
50°/o OFF
BALBOA SKI CLUB. A trip t.o the Lalt Stop,
Tuesday, Jan. 31. A $4 charge for members and
cuests for cover and first drink. For informa-· • uon, cilll Bill Silliman at 6'2-4157. Now is ttie time to shop at
WOMEN GOING IT ALONE. Six.week
seminar be«ins at 7 p.m. Monday, Jan. 23, at
UC·lrvlne. Contact the Women's Opportunltlea Center at S3:M128.
PARENTS WITHOUT PARTN RS. IC:I·
month Dance for "'•ll slnele parenta at 9 p.m.
Friday, Jan. 20, at the Costa Men CountrY
Club. Danc!nt to the M~e Company. DOtlation 11
, $.l.50 /or members and $2.50 tor au ti. For ln·
formation, call PWP at lU8·S'781.
30.JO%ofl
DilllOO-
womans sportawear
and see our fine selection of
famous brand names
Coll~ian • LeRoy Knitwear
Loubella • Melissa lane
Vera • Aniac Fashions
tte Knit • Miss Elhette
DAlL. Y PILOT Thul'llday, Januaty 11, 1111
Senior Citizem'
Courses Of/ered
"',Couraes aimed at helping senior citizens handle their business pro·
w.erly: are bcin.i offered throueh Saddleback Collea•'• Emeritus natltute.
• , Advice on consumer responsiblllUes and riptl, credit and social
eecurJty will be available in a persooal busioeu coune offered from
· 9 to 11 a .m. Mondays in the
Laiuna Hills Presbyterian
, hurch. This course will be
Jttuaht by tax consultant Shirley
Leak In.
She also wall tench a course,
•<:iilled "Bustne!'is Vocabulary
You Cao Use," designed to help
J.he layman undera.tand modem
~husineas Jurgcm. ll w 111 be of-
fered from 11 it.m . to 1 pm
Monda)'s m the church.
.\DDITIOSAl.LY, ~s. Luskin,
Chasin's Buys
Four Stores
In California
C'offt•t'"1, a four unit group uf nit>n '~ ond womt>n''I !'lton•s, has
Ileen "urchast·d ror a n un
c 1sdoi.c<J cimounl of <:..sh from
. CJ uctl. Pealxxh & C"o . Inc., a
;)l•w York·ba'l'd .1pp.11 el far m,
h> t'h:.c;in's Jnt•. J Co!it<.1 .!\1csa
fll l'rt 's :-.ton '.
Chas m 's 111 l':;ad t'nl ll 11ly
Chas in s a11J nu m.111:.ige mcnt
<'hungt..'S are l'onlnnplalcd. Ed
Lopes. cxcl'Ulavc \lt:t• prc•sadent
of Coffee's, \\.Ill continue in
c·barge of ~lore opt:r:.itaon:;.
;\ff:Rl.E R. Gl~SBERG, prc·s·
idenl or Coffee's, rctar<·d an
N'oHmlK'r dut• to 111 health hut
"all rontanue an an a d visor y
C'Jpal'lty
'l'hc l'nfflot• 0 1 g.in1rnt 1on, with
..... ll-~ c· .. l11nal1·d al sr. m1lhon,
\\ ,,,., st.tr1l'<I by the late Jlcirr y
1 'offl'I' 111 the early JOOOs and "'as
pt11 ch.1~t·d by Cluett, P<'ah<idy an
'l ~fi l '-"hl'n it had two stores in
·f•'n •.,no and one m Bakersfield. A
fou rth unit was added in 1975 at
\'1)4;11ia.
Chas ins Inc. has operated
m en's doth1ng stores for three
~··nt•raUon~.
The purrhas c <'ompletes
nuett's program of divesting
llself of West Coast stores, with
prt•vious sales of Delimonds of
1.os J\ngelci. ancl Lyons of San
l>IC'J:O.
Western Cuts
'Florida Fare ·
I.OS ANGELES (AP) -Sav·
in i.:-; of up to 42 percent of the re-
~ular roWld·tnp fare will begin
Monday on routes flown by
•Western Airlines to :Florida
polntA.
"•A Western spokestnan said ~JJe~day tho new fare1 will be of·
•it'red between Mlaml·Ft.
Lauderdale-Hollywood and Los
~geles, San Diego, San Fran· .,•laeo, Sacramento, Portland,
'Reno.~ Se at t 1 e ·Tacoma,
Anchore e, Honolulu and Van-
t:ouver.
• "'Undl'r the new fare1, whlch re-
,quire ticketa to be purcha~ 30
days in advar:ice tor a ltay of
·J>etween seven and 45 daya, the
01 Anfelea-Miamt offpeak,
coach-c ass fare for mihta
tween Monday mornlns and
riday morning would be~.
compared v.ith the reiular fare or $408.
a eraduate of the Columbia
University School of Buainels,
will teach a courH on "Un-d erstandine that Corporate
Statement" from 1:30 to 3:JO •
p.m . Mondays in the Bas:itiat
Church, Laguna Hilla.
Each of these couraea will
begm Jan. 23.
El Toro attorney David Brown
"all teach a course on wills and
probate on Tuesdays, belinninf
J an. 31, from 4 to 6 p.m. in the
San Clemente Community
Clubhouse.
TWO COURSES CALLED
• Stock Market: A Fwidamental
Analysia" will be tau1bt by Bill
O'Neal, a stock and commodity
specialist. One courae will be of·
fered Tuesdays, beginninl Jan.
24, aod the other will be liven
Thursdays, beginning Jan. 26.
Hoth will be offered from 3 to 5
p.m . in the Baptist Church,
Laguna Hills.
Ronald Gable, a financial
pla nner, will dlscu11s inve11tment
t·oordanalion JO a six week
course from 9:30 to 11:30 a .m.
Tu~sdays, beginning Jan. 24. at
the Methodist Church, Laeuna
JI 1 lls.
Broun to Deny
Exemptwn for
Poioor Plant?
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov.
Ed mund Brown Jr. will refuse to
2.pprove an exemption from
state nuclear safety laws for the
proposed Sundesert plant if the
stale Energy Commas!.ion rec·
ommends against an exemp·
tion, accordin& to an aide.
A bill to exempt the proposed
San Diego Gas & Electric Co.
nuclear plant from the state's
current moratorium on new
nuclear plants was approved by
the Senate Public Utilities.
Transit and Energy Committee
on a6-2voteTuesday.
BUT GRAY DAVIS. Brown's
chief of staff, satd the
Democratic eovernor would op. po.e such an exemption unless
the Energy Commission recom·
mended one at ita hearing Jan.
25.
Any bill aeekinf an exemption
for Sundesert after an unfavora·
ble commission recommenda-
tion would need Brown's
signature.
If the commission approves an
exemption, the Leaillature
would oaly have to paaa a resolu·
lion. which would not neeil
Brown'• aipature to take ettee~.
.. THE GOVER NO& f ou1ht
bard for the nuclear ailleguar'd
·bills, .. Davia 11id In an In·
tervlew. "He t.hiolu1 the burden
is on abYone 1eeklnf an exemp-
tion to make a clear and con-
vincing cue. ..His present lotonUon 11 to re·
view the EndCY Com111l11lon rc-
port. Unleu tbe Enerl)•
Commlsslon maku a clear and
convlnclng case that an exemJ>-
tion i1 warranted. he will not
•upport one."
Davia also aald Brown la op-
posed to le&lalation that would
~al the nuclear rety la ...
Blue Iflondag
Hot off the press and ready for President Carter's pre-
s entation to Congress Monday morning is the projected
n ational budget for 1979. James T. Mcintyre. director-
dcsignate or the Office of Management and Budget,
holds a copy while John Boyle, the public printer, waits
in the background.
Policy Rate
Bias Assailed
Before Senate
W ASHINOTON (AP) -The
chairman of a Senate panel ln-
ves ti gating auto insurance
wants Congress to consider ban-
ning rate diacrimination based
on residence, aee or private lives of pollcyholden, saytn1 the
states have not done the job.
Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, D·
Ohio, made the comment during
the heariJl1s lnto insurance in-
dustry practices.
"IN THE MAIN, the' States
have not provided very effective
regulation ot the wurance iri-
dustry." Metzenbaum satd.
Jle said his Senate judiciary
subcommittee's investigation
alre dy has tunted up Insurance
company tuldelinea that either
prohibit or severely limit cov-
erage to divoTcees, single peo. ·
pJe. cooks, longshoremen, mual·
clal\$, professional athletes and
mllltary personnel.
Younc people, eapeclally
males, pay hlaher r.t.es even
lhoush a study by tho NaUonal
Assoeiatlon of Insurance Com·
milslonera shows that 89 percent
of male driven under 25 have
never flied a Claim.
ltnesa .. have deacrltied aha~ iiicreases in tbe cost d
their coverage based solely oa
where they live, their marital
status or a,e.
tAPITOUZE
WITH
, CAPITOL
2 'l'ax Courses
Op,enNext Week
-......
• •
Supermarket Pays
·26c for Each Check
WASHINGTON <AP) -1t co.ti a Cood tore about 2G t ti to ac-
upt cl\eck, whkh 11 the wq.,~ pcrcent of all groc~;.J>\lrchases
aro made, an w itU4Y by th FooG Marketa \ln1tltu 1:abOW1.
That «Nit p.._umabl,y la considered wb n food pii u. aet,
although the study did not raise that point.
The study by the food chains• ..,....-------...... --
trade 111oclati0n Jllao showed cbtckl worked out to an addi·
that. cc.trary 10 fftlmat Of· Uonal 1.8 centl per cb ck ac·
fered by bankut, th cost ot cepted, the .tud1 determlued. "bad chec~a" is relatively low
-about a nickel for every check WHEN JHE COSTS of Juuing
accepted at the ch -out stand. and validatin1 cbeck·cHhint
Tffli STtJDY A "P omPWd by talk of introducing. com·
puterlzed :systems in
supermarkets ln which con-
aumera would pay for their
purchases with a card that
would transfer funds directly
from their bank account tO the
market'•·
One advantaie of such a
sy1tem, proponentl ••1, would
be a reduction 1D supermarket
coats for handlloJ checlta and
wrltina off bad ones.
Tlm~ M. Hammonds, tho
Institute 1 research director,
noted, however, that most labor
costs would be tho tame or
possibly higher with an all·cash
or electronic-funda-transfer
system.
THE SURVEY OF 2,48' stores
·with total 1976 ulea of s12
billion, or 10 percent of national
supermarket salea. found that
each store wrote off as wicollee·
table an avera1e of 1.S checks a
week out ot the 1. 70'1 it accepted.
An averaae of 17 checlca 'a
week were retumed to each
store marked • 'ln1ufflclent
funds," but, tbe report aaid.
"moat of the checks will be col-
lected on 1ublequent redeposlt."
Th~ averate uncollectable
check was written for $38.52,
which worked out to 3.4 centl
per check accepted. The cost of
trying to collect on bounced
Over The Counter
MASO Ulffngs
courtes,Y card , wacoa tor tbolo
handlia1 ch ck 1 processing them and some bank fees were
cranked in, the bill for accepting
each check came lo 25.9 cents.
the &tudy said.
"Labor coatl 1re the rnl,ior
factor in the cost of check accep.
lance.'' with A percent of the
total aast1oed to wacea, the
1tudy 1ald. ·
The storee in the aample bad
avera10 weekly aalea ,tolallng
$93,000, compared with the ln·
dustryWide avera1e of S67.ooo.
Labor Policy
To Be Studied
A forum on the Carter ad-
mlnlstraUon'a labor P<>llcy will
be held Tuesday in Sheraton
Newport Hotel,
The forum, sponsored by the
NewpOi't HarbOr Area Chamber
of ~ommerce, will be1LD wU.h
continental breakfast •t 8 a.m.
and nm unW 11:4' a.m. C05t ia $20 •
si>euen iiUl be :r. Anl&ny
Me11lna of the labor law section
of the Americ~ Bar Aesociation
and Step~en E. Tallent, a
member or Uie labor relation$
law section of the ABA.
Information ls available at
64'·8211.
NYSE C-OMPOSITE
.,•-TT'1r_..,..,,.., _______ ,..,_,.....,, . ._~·-w,..,. 4 +•w~
TRANSACTIONS
1DAllY PILOT
1l1ur.say, Janu.,., t , 1178 I /N CWLY Pll.OT
Good Clioice
Whiskey Sales
Outpace Trmns ,
BJ ILTON. owm
Which WC>Wd YoU rather do -tell 1cotch whiskey ~
run a railroad?
That w n't precisely the war tbe road lorttc! ID 1970
for Ben Heineman, a Chica10 lawyer who bHd d
Northwest lndi.lltrlea, but lt'a probably a fair ctiptlOD ot tbe alt.emaUves he DQ.Sed fw himself. He could bave bad
both tho nllro&d and tho lcotch wblakey. U1 doctded to drop one, tat tho other.
80 NOaTBWEST INDVSTaJEI SOLD ott lta r:atlto«I aaaets, UM roos\ lmpOrtant ot whkb wu th waube
Road, and ac;qulred full control of1luckln1ham Cort>.. Im· porter Of CUtty Sark 1cotch. ·
.Jt'I already clear, aevea ,..,.. later, that Heineman
made the rlaht move. Tho Mllwaukee Road baa Juste"·
tered bankruptcy proceedlnp. Northwest Industries Ii ap.
proachlna the ii bllUon aat l•vel -and matins pl of money on those ul .
Northwest took Its name from th Cblc11to & North Western RaU,.ay, a drinl Gper&UOG that Heineman toOt
over in 1956. Ho created . NortbWat Jndustrlea In 1111 by
mertlhl h1I railroad ordoertlea, wblcb by then Included tbe Mllwauk Roa4, · -,
with the PhllldeJp.bla la
Rtad!ni Corp., a bold·
in1 com_panr for a
clutcb ct ft.rml, the bll·
feat OI "'1f cb WU Lone Stu Steel , ln JJIGI, Heln~man
Money
Tree
mad• a auon1 bSd to<acqulre B. I'. Goodrich but th• b~· ness and bantins. oetRlilhmenta, ~ th Ju.aUco Depart
ment, teamed up to block tb takeover. That waa \lft•
f onunate for Ooodnch atnce Hefnfjrnan la adept at m1ktri1 money, a c:apabillt.)i Utat a completely fo.relp to
OoOdrich.
Whal Heinemu tried to ~ up t.bt tire maltei, bO
ran a .tompaoy that ••• e&thln1 Sn million, wbllo
GoOdricb may havo •.Purred Ben Hein man to demonstr.{e '
what be could do at tbo belni ot a k:~omerate. He dld un·
load tho railroad lD 19'10, buy Bue am lD 1971, General
Battery lD 1'18 and MJCl'OClol in 1976.
NO.t:mwar INDt18TUB8 MAY Nor mean much to 1ou but t.be products made by lta constituent eompanlei are fainlllar housebald um•. In addltloci to Cutty-Sark.
• tbe No. a eeotcb alkr JU, tho lineup lncludet Mouton
Cadet. larsest ad.lln1 brand of Frimch wino in the United
Statea: FnJlt Of the Loosn ud BVD underwear; Acme. Dini~ and Dan P bootl.
Jn Union Underwear, Northwest owna the world'• Jarceat producer of men'a tend rwaar. ln Acme Boot It
owns the world'• larsest producer of western and cuual bootl.
The lar1est star added to thla flrmament lt tbe Coe.~
Cola Bottlln• Co., of Los Anaelea, which Heinenia.a picked
up for $200 mllllon. It will brln1 ne~ly *20() mlWoo ot •ala
Into tbe Nortbweat eol\lnm lo bottled watt~ <Arrowhead) as wellu ~ drtllti. • • With acotcb in4 COke anc! llciota and underwear. wi.
Deeds a rallri>ad-O'J' a Ure meker tar th.at ma ?
Stock Rally Wanes
OVer Money Supply .
Meal Sc~lu Did
NEW VOftl( (A'1
U.LaS
-==~~ .. ~~! .. ~.~-~I =v'"""" ················· tlll ... ••••••••••••••••••••• • Ill it .................... . I ,. . .. , ................ . ~"-................ 2 _. ..................... ...... .................. . ..................... _ '
I
J
1
1 NEW 'YORK CAP> -SJu11ing
• third baseman Eddie Mathews,
•one of baseball's ereatest home
run bitters, was elected to the
Hall of Fame today. ,
The ~year-old Mathews, tied
with Hall of Famer Ernie Banks
!or ninth place on the all·tfme
borne run Uat with 512, was
selected by the Baseball Writers
Association of America.
In order to gain admittance •. 'Mathews needed to receive at
least 75 percent of the votes by
members or the BBWAA. He col-
. . . . ' .
I
..
·'I'm still iri a state of shock,"
said Mathews, who was the &7th
player elected by the writers
since the first year of voting in
1936.
Mathews had a career battinc
averate ot .271 and waa a •tron1
candidate in his ftrst year on tho
ballot, 1974, when he collected 118
votes. After that, he pulled 148,
189 and239lastyear.
Following Slaughter were ou.t·
....
•
DARIN BOWEN (33) CHASES THE BAL~ GARRITY (25), STEVE DAVIS (41), JEFF TUTI'ON (45) STAND BY.
FV Wins at the Buzzer, ,56-54
"'·
Reiff a Dramatic §hai De/eau Ediaon in Overtime
By GtENN WHITE
Of II• o.lly l'f4e4 ll•lf Tame was ticking away as
the clock worked its way
toward :00 in the overtime
period of Wednesday ni1ht's
Fountain Valley·Ed1$on <Hunt·
ington Beach) Sunset Leaeue
ba$ketball game, played before
2,ISS fanis.
Fountain Valley's Barons had
possessloo and were workinf for
a shot as close to tbe end o the
period as possible.
, Ten seconds remained as they
~paa!led the ball aroul)d the vislt-
tn1 Chargers' defense. It figured
that Barons scoring whiz Roger
.rltolmes would probably take the
shot that would break a 54·54
deadlock or send the duet into a
second extra session.
i It didn't work that way,
however. The ball came to
Charlie Reiff, who ha4 worked
his way open. The •hOt left b.iS
hands with :02 on the clock.
Jt swished throush the net
.with :oo remaining and coach
Dave Brown's forces had
ibaued a ~-M triumph.
o The victory leCt the
alone atop the league standings
and left F.dison tied for second
plfce with Huntington Beach Hig~ 'E .. on, it \urned out, had its
Cina gasp at winning when one
oC its ironmen stepped to the
free throw llr\e with 1: 58 to go in
reguJalion and the score tied at. 54, •
It was a one-and-one situation.
But the shooter missed and the
Barons rebounded. / Edison never got the ball again.
Fountain Valley held the ball for one last shot and Holme.!!
took a 16-footer with a second left but wu off target.
Then the Barons lot the tip to begin overtime an again they
worked the delay, puttirle their hopes on one last shot:
Thia lime 1t worked.
Edlson bad gotten off to a
paralyzing start, tumln1 the ball
over 10 times in the firat quarter
and. having 10 fouls assessed
against it as opposed to no
turnovers and two foula on the Barons.
¥et the Charters or coach t?On
Leavey got it together after that
and they did It with a swarmine
delense, one which plaaued
shooters to the Point where the
Barons made good on only 30
percent of their tirst half shots.
Meanie, the Chargers were
hitting SS percent clice from the fieta . the Jiall.
They h' surged to•a 30-23 ad-
vantage when the first of two
crippling things happened to
them.
And it was perhaps t)ie most
damaging since it gave Fountain
Valley five polbts.
Edison had Just substnuted ~
the only time in the game all 4>f,
its starters weren't on the floor.
The reserve was charged wltb a
foul shortly after tie came in.
When the foul was called be
allegedly told officrial Speedy
Castillo, "no way was that a
foul."
Castillo charged Edison with a
technical foul for the remark,
which Castlllo later said con·
tained no prolanlty.
Fountiun Valley took advan·
tag~ of the opportunl(y as Mike
Jaraelaky poe>ped in two tre•
ICCC Hosts Tourney
Mathews established several
records for a third baseman dur·
ina bis 11·y_ear career wbich
beaan W,i1b the Bravea in Boston
in 1952. He holds the mark for
most .iames (2,181). most assists
(4,322), most chances (8,371>,
and mott home tuN tn a sea.son
by a third baseman (47 in 1~).
To &Corne
LA Coach?
WASHINGTON <AP) -
Georae Allen, wboae phUosophy
or u!ftnc agtag veterans pro-
duced five playoff b(trths in the
last seven years, ha!} been ti.red
as coach and general manaaer ot lhe WashlnltOn Redskins by
team president Edward Bennett Williams.
Sparts eaitor George Solomon
of the Washington Post, in a
copyrighted article, and former
Redskins quarterback SQnny '
Jurgensen, now a sportscaster
for television station WTOP-tv,
confirmed the firinc in in·
tervlews Wednesday with ·Williams.
WllUams reportedly was at a
• tneetlng We<lbesday ni1ht and
was not available for comment.
Allen also was unavailable.
A Rtdskins spokesman said
Williams attended funeral
services earlier in the evening
for Redskins controller Chester
Minter but did not mention the firing. .
Williams called a news con-
ference at Redskin& Park last
July 14 to announce that the
Redskin$ and Allen had agreed
to a new four-year contract al-
legedly calling for an annual
salary of $2SO,OOO.
Allen did not attend the news
conference because of a death in
his family but he said, through a
statement read by his son, that
he was glad the agreement was
reached.
However. AIJ~n never .slened
the contract ~caui;e, he &aid,
there were fecal technicalities
that needed to tie straightened
out. The major hitch in Allen
5igning the new contract, ae-
e or ding to repo~ts, was
Williams' desire to have more
say in the team's financial mat-
ters and personnel.
·•J thought we reached an
aereement," Williama told the
Post. "Last Saturday was six
months since we made the an-
nouncement -with his approval ._and n6thlng happened.
0\ ,,
'!> •
11r
KETBAU. / WRE$JLING I MISCEL. •
Witli
S.Cond place ln the CentW')'
Lea ue buketbtll race u at
stak tonlnt Wlien E1taneia
<Coe a Men> ffllh'a or -fenaive·mlnded Easies try to
fiaure out the 5UnJy defenee of
TUJtin Hilb'• 1crappy Tlllen. Oametlmo117.
Both teama are 4·1 In leaauo
acUon, havtn1 Jott only Lo s.o El
Modena (Oran1e>. Estancia'•
eam ln tho flnt 1ame of e Hllallf a '16-74 double over-
me verdiet. Tultlll lost Tuesday
nltbt, &3-58.
Howenr. coach Gary Laraon
thlnk1 tbe nllers could be .lo the
4rlver'a Hat if they h dn't
missed ~ uncontated 1•19PI in tht fou:rth quarter. Tu.Un wu tour for 20 trOm the field In the
final frame.
The 1malleat team in tile
lea1ue, Tuat1n bu man11ed to
out-rebound every foe w1th a
front line that la composed f)f H Jer~ I.anon, 6-3 Ken Cameron
and a.a Mike Robwon. Tbo
TUlert have allowed Ju.at a
Top · Wrestlers at FV
Five Counties Meet Launcliea Friday
Swim. Tryouts ._BB Youth
CV Nabs
86.47 Win
OverV'aqs
BYlAVltENB KEYS .... ~ .......... Capistrano Valley Hilh'1 Bob Charle.~ in a. potata u he and bl1 Cou1ara teammates
aanied up oa the vWUn1 Imne
Vaqueroa, 86·47, In freelance
baeketball acttbn Wedne1day night.
Cbarl«1, who maintained h11
24-Polnt 1ame aver11e. lllt from
every coaoei•able an1le, and the
Cougan extended t\Jelr record
to 12·5.
The Cougan, 1b0otin1 from
the blp, could do no wrons and
raced put the Vaquero1 early In
the ••enini. Irvine, way ln over its helld, wu ~cored JI.I in
the .flnt quarter.
Charles pfcbd up 10 POlJltl ln
tbe f1rit b~ mo.Uy (rom the outllde, anct was credited w1tb
ae.etal key uata~
The mace anraslvo Couiars
were 1ett.1.n1 some llrie 1bootinc
ltom 5·t Bill Sk.UH and sopbomoro· forward Blll
Strlckland. And by halrtlme, Capistrano Valley led 50·20 and 1
it looked u thWah tt would b8 a
Joni DJghtfCI' the Vaqu6roe,
The Cou1an cot aome lood defensive p,lay from forward
Cb uck 0 Halloran, Mike
Dunivan and ff~hman forward
Cam Bryant. Robin Charles also
was a defensive atandout and contributed 12 points.
O'Halloran, Skiles and Bryant
a.Dy ........... .,..,, .......
JIM WEISS (54), JIM RUDY (43) BACK ANDY ODDEN (23).
each had 10 pointi.
. It all appeared. i>retty 1rim. for Jnine, bat It wu a much-
lmproved team that came back
in tb.e third period. Sbowint a lot
more .PQbo •nd 1punk, the Va·
queroe tot IOme IOocl MOotln
from Andy Odd Jl ad . Jim Rudy.
Taklnt advanhte of a
momentary Japee ln.tbe Couiara offense, Irvin out .. cored CV, 11-12, lntbethirdperiod.
Odden WU tho letdlftl Irvhae
.scorer wttb 1' points. Cent.er
Dan Monteverde and Rudy each
contributed 12 to tho caUJe.
The Cou1ars coMeded on 10
of 18 frH throw with Bob
Charles account1n1 for: 1lx.
tnllltMr> c..tc.vau.., ....... """" ~ ' ' t • 14 tt.CMrt.. ' o 1 n 'IW, S t t 1t a, Olltt• t 6 UA Moft~ I t t 11 ,._... t I I 4 w.i.. I t I 7 O'Htller• S 0 0 10
Mlltw t o 1 t atv111t s o 1 1t
Jeyco I I t o Mlllff I O I 10 ..._... t e I I 0...Yllt J I I a
.-.Ce t I I t •. llltl:ld•• • t • •111e •• t 0
Ceflllla 0 0 t 0 ,..... . '"" ,...,, ... ,, . ............... ..
• 11 " ...... »" 11,.....
~ucs Roll, 79-56;
Giirl Sllare of Lead
I ;
' (j
I
\..
~. . .. .. ..... . . . • • . .. ... ...... .. .
ThutM!ay, Januat'f 1t, 1171
t" DoJng
Outdoors
JIM NIEMIEC
The SoUt.hem Calllonala waterfowl bWltiDJ
•eason came to a cloee lut weekend, wtth thll year bc!,nl comld.erecl b7 mo.t duck and gooee
bunten above averaee. The wt few week• of the eaoo, that 1tartecl out wlth a~...,. llave b.en
hurt by bea'1' rala, but duclr hunt.I· are bappy
aiooaUH thll will help buUd tbe bird pOpUJatloa for
yun te c:om.. Du« pcmd.t uwn4 M~ bave been slow
lhll put mcmtla end 1t .._..t appear u it any
aoocl ISPril sh•*'ea will develop Wot• the seuon
enc!J. Gary M;.,. of Newiwt Buda, wbo ebooU •t Salton Sea and pt, Mueu clubt, repcwta huntlnc
Is slow at llfttCU and fair at the aea.
Omer Lons of Newport re~ that IPJ11 msooUng 11 fantutic at hil club OD the north d4 fl,
the Salion Sea with llmlta belnJ common for ...
et1. Hm~ at Wister has been 1ood for ducu and AOW~eeM on Weclneada71 and Saturday1, but a· tr•• alow on Sundays. Duck hmtma bu plc:Qd
up at x.n Refu1e near W&HO for unattached
Jn.mt.en lbace the flnt of the year, but bat very
limited buntiq fm-anyone wilhlne to make the
f oar·boar chin from Orant• Count)'.
San Dies• lake huntlne for tbo9e wbo do not belon1 to a club or can not 1et edvuce reaerva·
tion• at a ltate <:tr federal tefugo bu been fair with
a number ol dlvtn1 ducks beinl baned by small
groups °' huntftll. The most common duck found
iD the amne bac 11 a ruddy duck, but 10me patient
hunters are brtna1n1 down 1prt1. mallards and
caovaabackl. Most of the huntlnc on these larae
lakes is pus shooting where heavy loads are
necessary to knock the fast fiyin1 duck out of the
sky.
TheN are only two kinds ot aeeae that can be
brouabt down by Southern California hunters.
Snow leeM will be in aeaaon throuah SWJday and
the aeagoln1 brunt &001e will be in season 'until
i.~eb. 22.
Huntaw and their famntes who would like to
get a good view of our mierat.in1 waterfowl as they
paaa over Oran1e County should make plans to 10
on one ti. tho guided tours of upper Newport
Harbor. The tours are sponsored by the Friends of
Newport Bay aDI$ are uaually held on 8aturda11.
For more Information on the free toun phone
Barbara Jobnsoo of Friends of Newport Bay at
879·8641.
Sllort Yello1DtaH Bltf!
A abort yellowtaU bite II oll ud oa at San
Dfe10. DependlnJ on tbe weather, fllblaC eaaibe
r~d bet or Ice cold for tbe 1m11l pa11e11pr loads
fl1blnC out of the San Dleco landlnp. Newport and
Dana sporUlaber.. a,.. eoncentratlDC on rock nib
with Jlmlt• belnl common. Bay, Hrf and pier
fl11hln1 11 on the 1low aide due mo.tty to a lack ot'
an1t~r1 and the poor weather condltlon1.
Baja Flahlng Goofi
:F1~hing from Hancho Buena Vista resort south
to uround the cape 1s good for most all biC eame
fish. A great tuna bile has developed above the
Tuna Hole, a i.hort 30 mmutes off lbe coast from
Rancho Buena Vi.ata. while aneJers beadi.DJ out in-
to the Sea of Cortez are letUng act.ion on some
striped marlin, blues an black, an occulonal
sail.fllh, dolphin. roosters. some wahoo and a
variety of smaller fish. Marlin and dolphin action
is reported &ood at the cape.
Frnla Water An9Un9 SlotD•
CIF~
•
Dolan Sparks
Mesa Victory ·
Co1ta Men JOgh l)r vatled over Lakewood
and Anabelm lo a trl-
a w l m meet at Cotta
Me1a Wednelday, while
Jrvfne Hllh openod lta
HHOD With a 80°'78
triumph over host
Kacnolla Hlah of
Anaheim. Cotta Meta tallied '70
polnta to IA.kewood'I S4
and Anaheim •1 31
beblnd tho double vic-
tory performance of
Bobby Dolan. He won
the 200 free1tyle in
1:47.S and the 500 free in
4:54.4.
lrYlne nipped
Ma1n0Ua u freabman
Blair Mtll"PtiY sizzled to
victor!• ln the 100 but-
terny (:ie.5) and the 500
free1tyle (4:58.3). Each
ll a Cli' qual1lytn1 Ume.
ml• c.toli=....
:lot "'"'"' ,.,.,_ ••• ,,,. ... , . ". 200 fr-1. ~CM) l1MA: 1. Mffit CM) t:S1.I; t . ~ (I)
2.11.t.
200 ............ I ~M CO 2:16 2; 7
Cllet..,. (M) t .... ). ~ .. '"'' , '°' '° ''"-·· -.... (I) ,. •: '· Llefltm.., CMl?U;J Oii._ Cit 1H I .. fly-1, •IWPflY CU .W.S; 2,
Mur,..y IM) •·•.o; J. afWln '"'' , •..
100 fr .. -1. McCAlrmKll Ill MI. L
0111 .. 11)1004;3 ~(1)1:fU
-,,__. • ~'I Cl) 4:tt":f ' ~ IMI Mtlme, *· • .._.;.,·,
IMl ... '11N • •• N<tl-1. lltl J .... <Ml ...-
-CM> 1.MM; a. McCenlll<ll Ill 111 .. ,. _.... ...... &. ..... 1111:11.1, z.
$9<9911t Cl) t1U-': a. 0.-0 tM) .. " •.
-frtt ,....,_.., ~··· ,.. """· "' .. ... '"'' ..... .., ...... 1.
Prep Basketball
lwrM# V#tlty CktH YW .... _...._, ... ff
OUM Vltw tc•~a.1-IU U,
NHll .......... '· 8«Nntltr '· /IJt.. dr•dt tt, He" Metrl111 t, l<twt' 10. "ldlutfl t), HMlflei I .
Halltlmt: °'"" Vltw, '1·11
"•Y•llef .. ,a ..... 41
11-'Ml'I K .... ftl Hint I, Ocleit" I,
Herktr t, M<Oell•" JJ. 0111m I, Lollllen 2
""' Valley .c•l"9 lltul..,d •. Stell I, Har1-4, c-... n . HIAlllel'd
t llaml'91 4, Fi-JO, ,...,...,..Illa 2,
Co911em 2.
Htlftlme lldiMn »>•
... _,.,.......,." ... " Cdlt0"•••tllo11t a. l'rtnk 2,
J.aclllOft 22, ._ t.t, WWNf "· WMdttl 7, Vooitl\llnll 11. '
N .... ,.n...._...,,_,, 4, ... llltl 12, .,,.,,,trt n. cramm 1i, Ltlllt 1•,
Cl•clo' Httltllnt~ ll•tt
OU.. View lt1, ._.. Alaml .. n
O<t11t V-_1,..-udlftr •·
Sm•ll n. lrKDIM 1', YNJJ •· No n .
Sl-11 1J, OlllWIWW 2. i..llllntld 11,
SttllMM 2. 0-4, e..-2
Httfllme. Oc.eM View, JM2.
Mff .......... ,,_.., ..
Ma,l•t 1ctrl1tt-Mtr-•lltlt 12.
"''"'" 11. lttw•rt Jt, '"'"" •• ar..,Ht•,........, •.
""'""'-' WlltlWl..ur, p.tt.
.,...,.......,._.. ___ ... .,._ ......... ,_ ........ ___ .. ,....,_..., __
OUTDOORS I SWIMMING I MISCELLANY
College
Cage Stanflings
Los Al.
Racing
Entries
THE HA
1'11 "' 11• Ut Ht ,..,
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"TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS ·
Cinderella?
Bonnie Franklin, star of TV's One Day
at a Time, will play Cinderella, a
mechanical mannequin in a department
store, on Captain Kangaroo, Friday at 8
a .m. on CBS, Cb~nel 2.
Cha11.wl Ll•f f~g•
• KNXT (CBS) Lo• Angeles 8 KNBC \NBC) Loa Angeles e KTLA ( nd.) Los Angeles
KABC· TV (ABC) Los Angeles
(I) KFMB (CBS) Sen Diego G KHJ· TV (Ind ) Los Angeles CII KCST (ABC) San Diego
I KTTV (Ind) LOI Angel••
KCOP·TV (Ind.) Los Angeles
• KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles
• KOCE·TV (PBS) Hunllngton Beach
~ -Pop Singer
·Leaves
·His Mark·
SEATl'LE (AP> -Singer and
recordlnt artist Nell Diamond
and his young son, J esse, left
their marks in Seattle Tuesday
outside a University District re·
cord store.
They both squashed tbelr
p a lma Into wet cement ala
Grauman'• Chinese Theater in
Hollywood for the future edifica·
tlon of curiosity aeeken outside
the Peaches record and tape em-
porium.
"Thank you very much, ..
Diamond Hid to 175-to-200 fans
who Jammed the store and
atorefroot, seeking a clasp of his
hand, a 1Jenature on a acrap ol
paper or a closer •qulot at the
alar.
He wore a white, collarlta
peauot shirt, jeans , brown
boot•. a tweed-and-leather
jac"ket, tinted 1lauea, a 1U1ht
paunch and the disoriented aJr
of a man who Juat cot up.
Dlamorid performed to sellout
crowds Monday and Tuesday
nl1hta at the Coliseum.
The Unlventty I>htrlct
Peaches Is becomin. qultt the
placo for alneert to aUck their
hand1 in cem nt. The DoobM
Brotbm Ud D011.Y. Parton got dlrty tMn before OlamoncS.
;
lnfllnt on the bedt ... ,.
• MOVla * * * "'-ivtla" (1NI)
Jule avtllle, Oeoroe c.
Soon. A mM19d WOl'llln t• In low with en Older man deeplte ttie prot.m
fl/I her tatMr. (2 In.)
• 0 W!LCOMI MCK.
Kana •
"EpMri'1 'tann hpet""
~··· plan for • ~ "" ..,. bedtflree when
Mr. Kotw ...,_.. • --llerlly betwee11 the .,.,. .• Wm .,..,., ...
-... &1°"""9d ,.,.., 10,..,.. .....
I .IOQR'a Wl.D
CAIQ. MMNET'I' NIO.....,.
Guellt """ ....... .MCMI ** ''llqt llMGI Y04/,. 0.•d" (1111) Tony Rand.It,..,.._ e.roer. An
American In MOIOCCO
becomea entangled ~ ttie
meonlnellona of 1plff
plottlflg tgalnat the United
Nattone. (2 NI.)
• OHCI Ul'OH A.
pt.AMIC
''Wlwt Katy Old" CMat·
ma II dlamal fof Katy,
Yltlo 11 ltlll oonllnad to bad ••
ir~
"lymbloala" Membef-1 °'
~ ..... c-.
patty ll4ll'fonll • ......
~ ponreye ...
. Nlatlaft.llhlp ~ man
end UdltldOgY.
l:I08 NH
"'Tfll Dolllf MIM.ln-tilerttltldll'IO" ,hll ,tan
beOOrMe an in.tent rn1o
~ WI*! Htw Yens
cut·~---. enlnoon'eot ~d-*
tor • a llM1llll ow sum ot
f!'IO!'.llY. • BAllmT'MLL
AtlilNI AollCln WI. ...
FrMClaoo
• TMITMC:-. OClr•a.w •CMTWfl-™ D4Y
An ..,..llODI\ fl/I ... -w-" of the c.w...,....
tretlon, with apeclel
~on...,..lhe
llfnltallol 18 In power and
~"'""~ ..... hlgheeC oflloe .. ~-• OYalMY ..... ....,.. ._.of redul>-.... ~,.,.
2: diet !Niie; telada.
... MNtA9Y JOHii J." . .'• UllderccMf role to trap N t11'NM ICOOtllplloa
~ lft UlllON9d robbery,
~ ~ rnGfl dtrn-cut ~ ha ,... for the
~,,.,...
()) HAWAII AVe-0
~ .. oonfoun<*S
when • iwpectad Jepe.
.... MWloln bulllllll-man, WIO .....,,. w h8'M the.....,.., Of. Mint, ..
aubieOfed to • --of bombing•.
D .w.tl!IAT11
"An Ho11r Before
Mtdnlgflt.. .,..,.., Nflled
by the noctumll ICtMtlal
d .,. ml1nlotM a-nata, ..._.. .............
elcoholto.
•o~uua "'Appenclldtll" OllMt«
.,.. the~ room
_....~Yam.
._.. OWi tnd .. "**'to
tM hoepttaf,
• MlfW °""'"' ~ The 8yNwa. P-.il
~ M.G.1<91y, Toni
Beall,AonMlllr.
• IPtaAL.
"Only Than Aegall My
l!)w" A documenWy dlt·
tty1no the pattod 1n4-
1'30 on ffandl s*ntlno
from hlltOl'to tandmll1l;a
Md muNUIM In Plf'll. G IMAQ£8 OI AGING "No"-'-To Old Aet" Fiim ..,.,.,._ from 'Thi
FIMI 'roud o.yt Of ~
wunw• P"-tnet °"'Y old .,.. llMW ,.,,,... Cild ...
HOG Ill cwmA
OOUNTR'f
TUBE TOPPERS
8 8 D 6:00 -State of the Union
Address. President Carter lays down hit
goala for 1978 at House-Senate Seaaion.
KTLA 8:00 -''PetullJ." Julie Christle plays a woman who leaves her
husband (Richard Chamberlain> for an
older man (George C. Scott) In this 1968 movie.
KCET 9 8:30 -Carter's 36Sth Day .
This apecl&f f ocuaes on the first year of
the Carter admlnlstraUon, and on power
and authority In the White HOuse.
CBS 811:00-''KUldoier ... An UD·
manned earth-movinc machine is the
villain In this 1914 TV movie with Clint
Walker.
"A•d A.rmetrong. ~"ONef~ ...
Cutu. '° 11.ip wltti • --flt '° aid ~ "8d """"'°"O. Wit.ti ~
hoapltal blla, then Cul111
dlloo¥er9 that Aid haa tie.I~ ...
.. • po11o9 om-. cu.iv 111
.,rMmf)ted fot "'nle .... .
al Che Union .......... ')
10:00 G DROWNING
THE DAOUGm'
()) IARNA.IY JONI.I
• CUllM'll
"The Cla.. 811uty''
Da1plt1 her mother'•
(~ "9ndl) atnbltlona
IOf her, W~ lpattta
(Lindi P\lft), the clMI
belUty, "*" ..... COid
Ind Mlof ~ towwda
"*" I a1':oo POIOt
(Mey be Pl...... fOf
"TM 8'* ttl IN lMlon r==--'TMIATM
"I, ~ l'ool'• l.a.lck"
Clllldll'8 prO¥M '° bl • 8ollMat nilhlf' ._.. an
ldloe. ........,. .. re60n
~ .... lfldP1 ... ty. Cl 800CM MADI ..
OUNAH'f W"M0••• Newt
11:00. 088 LAT8 MOVll ··~ "l<llld°'*"' (1174) Ollnt Walklf', J_,,. WaJn.
wright. Six "*1'llMrl Of •
oon1tructlon orew ftnd "'* llveil In,._.~ wfllfl I giant UNNlwled -'ho mowtno meatllne goee on
1N l'MllMIO&· (R) a e ()) CII Niwa e LOW. AMINOAN
MOANINQ 12:00e 1WJUQHT ZONI
ONpwy W..'a wle la
~wtMrl---Nm ,..,, ~..,... ... Illa
By 'IAY 88All8111T
LOS ANGELES (AP) -It's a mind-duster to
sit wlth Wonder Woman, expectin1 the usual
Hollywood babble, but hearln1 lnatead
knowledaeable talk or Ja11 and even a brief rendl·
lion or "Cloudburst ...
That'• a tune recorded yean aio by the famed
jazz vocal trlo of Lambert, Hendricks & Ross.
About Annie Roes, one of tho trlo, Lynda Carter.
also known aa Wonder Woman, bad th.la to aay:
"God, what a voice. She muR have bad, wbat,
41h octaves? And what tlmlnt and phraslna. She
was Just llicrtdtble."
·--
,, ....... ,. D•u•••e ,. • .,an.
MOANING
... **\t "Htnnalt Lee" c1'Nl MMOo1111c1 eenr. .NllMt ON. A ~
Ullr .. ,.... "'-*"*' IOfllrtdd .. ltOINo
.......,. Mtlll"O °" .,,..,
fM11. (1 1w .. IO lftln.)
-· •••• "Oii Me Med-'1 (1tU) ltfiel
............ DoN*f O'OMo
w.A.~gean....._
................... l'lltlolW --~~~· 8""Cll'li"I.)
AFTERNOON u.o••••"Y .. ~lM Onea" (1H7) H•11ry ,..,..,_........_A
~ ... .......
...... out Of .... Cl ......
20nWt.) I ... ··~"&.AM Aft'llt1Qn ltyte" (1tl8) Dolt~.
MW'fc)lte l.ord. A Ql,Wtet of
ltllU llwoMno loll9 1114
rorwtlo lnvoMlneMe ..
~· (1 tit., to tlliftJ a:to•••"WholltMll**
O&NI•?" (1116) Sftem
JJtnbllllt Jr., Wdl ,,,..
floloe Ct.,ipt '° ---.. ...,..., or.~
ddtil1.._.~ ... blfld~ln·~ ..._ (1 hr.,IOmln.)
Thursday, JanuatY 19, 1971
Orana• Coa1t Coller• and th
"J;a1una Moulton Playbouae have
Olned forces to 11Jllte 10me arrest1nf
beatncal nreworks with their pro.
dueUon of Peter Shaffer'• powerful nd cerebrally compellln1 play,
Intermission
. Tom Tttu9,.
•'E"u"•."
"& .... fanatic mother with little variation or John Ferzacca'1 handsomely mood,tendinitowardmonotoot. mounted conception, transplanted
lrom the OCC ataao to a ~week Alexandria )(andarlno la
Slot In the wcuna aeuon, ii a 1pten. well cast as the stableman'• da\.llhter
d treatment of this somewhat coo-who seduces Newlin and unwittlnllY
lved coafllct between inu.a,n,ible op-prompt& bis breakdown. And Scott
posite1-worsh!pfw pualon va. rec· Utley does a maplificent job ln the
llnented rationale-and ooe which guise of. the borae worahipped by
stands •bouldw to shoaUler with the Newlin; his equine bearln1 is rich In 1\.'ersion sta1ed la.st year by South authenticity. Coast Repertory.
The OCC·Laguna production of
1N THE OCC·LAGUNA rendition, it .. Equus" demonstrates the lofty
Js the troubled psychiatrist, superbly lnels attainable by the non·
interpreted by Walt Douglu, wbo professional theater. It continues a......o...;....-...;;..;....i::....,,..--~4..;
•
commands the ata.ce. even tboulb his Tuesdays through Saturdays unUI ,0 _ •· , B fa1 d If blner turmoil remalna difficult to ra· Feb. 4 at the llloulton, 606 Laguna .... e ... :g e •• ..,ClnterG
tionalize. Douglas brines bis CanyonRoad,LaeunaBeacb.
character out of the ivory tower ot · * Sylvester Stallone, writer and star of the Oscar-winning movie
verbosity and shows us the heart and CALLBOARD -Tbe La1una "Rocky," is adding another occupation to his list -directinJ. ots oft.be man in a most exceptional Moulton Playhouse will hold auditions Stallone is the director of the new movie "Paradl!e Alley," in performance. for the revival of "Charley's Aunt" which he also stars.
Sunday atll a.m. and Monday at 7:30 -----------------------------Constructing his characterization p.m ..••• Lee Shallat of South Coast
loer by Ja.yef, from the emotionally Repertory ia dlrectln1 the farcical
lti1ulated intellectual to the ex· comedy, which calls for a cast of alx
tftement-starved voyeur, Douelas de· men and four women ..•. the ahow
liNers a finely etched performance opens April 18 at the playhouse, 608
Which accomplishes the dlllicult task Laguna Canyon Road. La1uoa
oteainiJlg and' holding empath)'. Beach ....
·David .Newlin as the crated' Also auditioning Sunday and Mon·
stableboy whose blinding of horses day is "The Rainmaker" at the San Cleoiente Community Theater, 202 has led to his confinement impresses, Avenida Cabrillo, at 6: 30 both eve·
though to a slightly lesser decree. · dir R d Cobb ·n be Newlin is highly convincing in bJs mo-•rungs. · · ector an Y WI
ments of fervent pleasure and pain, looking for a cut of six men and one
but bis intensity wavers through the woman for the drama, which opens
d •• r th fl • March16 .••• more mun ane momen ... o e rs,. A thtrd set of tryout& on the same
act. dates 1a schedwed by the Fountain
AS THE MAGISTRATE and sound· Valley, Community Theater for the
ing board for Douglas' Indecision, play .. UWe Women," to be direded
Charlotte Kreutz gives a solid by Pamela Busan.sky •••• children
portrayal, strong and sympathetic. 11 and older will be sought at the read·
Stan Throneberry is excellent u the ines, Sunday at 1:30 and Monday at
boy'a overbearina father, While 7:80 in the FOWltain Valley Cotnmunl·
Music Adviser Nanied
CINCINNATI (AP) -The Cincin·
natl Symphony has named conductor
Walter Su.s.skind as its music adviaer
for the 1978-79 season.
. Susakind conducted 14 concerts last
season with the London
Philharmonic and appeared as eut&t
conductor of the Orcheatre de Paris,
the Royal Philharmonic, the BBC
Symphony, the Royal Danhh
Orchestra and the orchestras of Oslo
and Bercen.
The Cincinnati Symphony current-
ly ii searchina for a music direct.or
to replace Thomas Schippers, who
died Int month of Juna cancer at 8'e 47. •
As the rnii!tc dvlser, SuaSklnd will
conduct eitht pairs of subscription concerts, will direct a week-Jong
artist tour of the area, and Will serve
as primary artilUc adviser on aucU·
tiona, repertoire and 1uest artists.
Susakind has terved aa music
director of tbe Scottiab National
Orcbeltra, the Victoria Sympboliy ID
Melbourne, Australia, the Toronto
Symphony and the St. .LoUil S)'l'Q· pbony, wbichbeleCJfrom1968-75. . .
Marsha De Land plays hi1 reliiious tyCenter,10200SlaterAve .••• -==~-::-=~==-=~~----:-~=-~--=---------=-_;_::-.==;;;;:;:::::;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;::;:::::;;;;:::;;;;;;;;;;;:::;;:;
fn 1171 they CfOIHd
the Roclcl•a ••• With hope
· 1nd courtg• they clung
to th•lr dre1m •• ;
DAll.Y PILOT
- - - -
/
/'/ ~ ----
OPEN FOR: BUSINESS
HEW'71
TOYOTA COROLLA
SllUFTIACk7
5 _.., AMIJM ,..,. 1.00. -·
d•IC. Dta1re1. 1••••• '"•• Ser. ITUI .. ~
2 YEAR OR
24,000 MIL!
SERVICE
POUCY •••
WE HAVE
)
r
•
aMeYI
Rat Chaser
Sales ·Boom?
l'nm AP DllNt
Bob Browa. inventor Of U.. ••AJ:Qtto" IOftic rat
repellent devt~. 1ay1 tbe C\tl'Nftt model ts effec·
Uve In npetlln1 rodents despite N.m of two earlier
model• by the federal Environmental ProteeUoa
Atency.
Furthermore, business ls boomlnf followtnf
publlabed reportl of the lnvent.loa. Btown aaid 1n a
telepbooe interview.
"There've been people uk1D1 about fllinlnl
n1bt.a to make a movie, .. be aald.
Accordlnc to clalml by the inventor. the 4•
ice, a small box. drlv• o« rats by ovtrloacllnc
tbelr aemory 1Y•tem1 with IOWld fr.,quenclu Gf
50,000 cycles. far mon Utan the human ear ean aenae. •
An 80-year·old IPQrts promoter who sued the
• city art.er bia wile waa killed by youn1 thues
agreed to a aeltlement In wblcb Detroit will
finance a $1 mUlion atbleUca pro1ram to aet
almilar youths "off the
the sportl pa1e." W>E'Q1DW r front pa1e1 .•• and onto( ... ---------..)
The out·of·court Tlj Ti:lj
a1reement, expected to
be approved by the City
Council, came In a suit filed afalmt the city by
Leo Salakln, who was beat.en unconacloua with a
crowbar. His wife, Pearl, was stabbed to death 1n
the same attack ln their home. City offlclaJa said the proposed settlement,
which they describe as unprecedented, c~led for
the establishment of a foundaUon to promote
•mateur athletics in Detroit. · •
First lady RoHlya• Carter 11 nyln• to
Hartford, Conn., on Tuesday to ireet '25 laraelia
arriving as part of Prealdea&
Carter'• Friendship Force ex·
change pro1ram and to say
1oodbye to Americana dopart-
inl for Tel AVlv.
Her son QJp and daQtbW'·
ln·law C.... will accom~y
Connecticut Gov. Ella Grauo
and a group or Connecticut resl·
dents making the return trip to
Iara el. ..
When a racial brawl erupted In the yard at San
Quentin prison, Warden Georfe luaou deddecl to
10 himself to ltnd out what was 1ol.na Oil.
Black Muslim aecretary MUtoa Earl, lm·
prisoned since 1970 for a Solano County murder,
asked to talk to the warden.
When Earl wu brouaht over, he took a swing
at the warden, prtson •Pokesman BUI Merkle aaid.
"He took a Sunday punch and hit the warden
right jn the jaw," aakl Mtrkle.
PUBUC NOTICE Pt1BUC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
IU .. UICllt COU"' OJI TM• tTAT• Of' CAU,..MIA ~ TMICOUNTY ..........
•• .
"
.... , ........... ·~
• ••
•
. ... ... . .. ..
• • • " f •
' ... ._. ....
J'lJBUC NOTIC&
PVBUC NOTICE
11 · 1--------~--1 STAT•MIHT 0' .uAHOONMUIT
Ol'UHOP
PUBUC NOTICE l'ICTIT10U$ IUSIHISS HAMI I TM tolio.\fte --..... .Wn· ----------clonfll tlle ..... Ult Jie:liti-....., ..... •tt11 ,..,,,.
NOflCS TO~IOITOllS AM 8110$1 A OR A 0.1\N IC
IUl'IRIOlllCOURTO,T'41 (;llOC!RY, .lMllllOSIA TOW
ITATa OP C.Al.ll'OtlHIA "At FOOOS AAjlf'ROSIA Of«MHICS Mlt• THI COUNTY OP ORAN'~I IROSIA TOO. 1.-.,_. • .,,, Cott.II
.......... ~M,CA
Ill ltt. Mlll•r of I~ Etl•t• ol Tiie l'l~lllio... SW,,.n NMY!e rt
'THOMAS C. HAUlllT, .... THOS. (. MlrM to t110W ""K llled l1t 0r .....
HAURIT. •n• .. THOMAS CoUlllY..,.•2'-a Cll.ESTINI <HAURl!T •nd TOM WerllY M. ,<>$~. 2201 8 C<wl·
HAUIU!Tt o.cNM. yon, CottaMeM,CAt2'27
NoU<t "._...., tl"9n tct creclllon J1111a11 A. H•r•anel••· o• .,.v11111 <lall'N ...,,,., the Mtld CIK•· lnMIClwev. Golla Mtu. CA nu1
ct.Ill •• fl ..... cl81mt 111 .. Office If Thlt IKNMU ..... -u<led by • Ille cl9f'll of tht ..._Id £_.I or 10 ""'ral ~nNp
Pl'••nt 111em .. , .. .,.,..,....., e1 the wan.,. M:. '°"""" Offlee of JOSe~ C. OIEOI, Virtue Thit 1IM-t -fl~ ,.,., the
and !i<lleck, Inc., 210 ,.._.I C...le< Cou111y CJ-of Oren~ <Aunt• NI Ori••, I' O. a.. 2950, -.,...t lie.ch, J•nuarv 17, IUI
CA t2..0, wtlktl IMe.r office It the "'47nt
•lac:• of 11ue1 .... 1 Gf ttw lllldt<•'9"ff '" Publllhtd Or-coau o.i1v PllOI,
•II m•llets -'allll"I lo Mid *'"'''· Ja" It, 16. FM 2. '· 1911 Suell clelm1 wllll Ill• nacuury ,,_ ... ,.,..,... .. filed w _, .... ,
alorHalf W1tN11 f9ur ,_,"" 111er Ille
fl"t publkM .... of IN• llOlka
DatM JM. l. '91'1 • MAllJOltll M. HAVlll!T
1!..cvtrlaof!Nwill
otMllddKNtftt
VlllT\11 ... IQt.ar, INC,
Ut H_,.,. 0-W Orlw
PO .... NI H..,.n a.di, CA t2tM
Ttl: ....... l'vtll._ Q>-C.0.tl O•K• l'llOI
J•n s. n. "· ~. 1t11
PUBUC NOTICE
PtJBUC NOTlCE
", .. ,.
SUl'llllOll GOUln' 0, YMI
IT A T9 OI' CAU#Ollll I A Pott
TMI COUlfTYO,OllAllOI
lt0.AD1SN1
diau. In Ille Metter of.,. Adep4icwt ,.., ..
!Ion ol Al.fflllO WAYNI! GAfll,IA,
Adotltlnt .........
THI PllOf'I.£ OI' Tl4E 5TA'TE 01>
CAl.lfOfllHIA:
TO: EOWAllO OEIROCl!ICY
By Order al 11111 Court. YOOI ere
11ereby ell.ad to •PIMM btlort ti..
IUOQe prHldlnt In ~""'"'I 12 Of
,----------thl& Court on MMCfl 17, lttl, at• 4J
Cl'·,_
l'ICTITIOUll\ISIHUS
MAMl ITATIMINT
lllt lollOWl"9 PK'°" ii doing OU•I "''' ., ANCHOR ROOM, 1S.1 Ntwoort
81Vd, Cott• Mau, Calllorf\IA t,.17
H1tfell C«Pot•llon. U11llml1H, II
Calllor11le Corp0r1llon, Ill Wul Orangtlllorpe U11lt 0 , Plac:ef\lle,
Qillornl•
r1111 bullnet• fl conoucteo t• a cw
.aratl011 HARllAH CORP Unllmll..i
AA~ Herr6", Pret14tnt
• m., ,...., enll ttwra lo -cauta, 11 •"Y you "-· why lhe Ptilltlon Of OELIA UM.A.YAN GARCIA -uld 11<14
be 9r•nled. ~NI why ELOIOA TARIN
GARCIA S/llVld llOI be c!Klen<I Ir•
1rom your <'"'°"¥ Ind ~onlNll and
why lht ~ICWI p<>lltloft of Al.FJUO
WAYNE GARCIA~ nOt Ila Qfant "' "'""°"' .,,_ <-•·
O•IM W~u3!t!~7 "JOHN, Cler•
Calllttlnt I(, N~-. c.tlutY
Plll>ll•llM Q>~ Coas\ Oalty Pl~.
Jan It, 2'. f.O. 2, •. 1'71 , ... ,.
'Thi,, .. .,.,....,. .Wt-• I• .... fllecl -----------...... 11\e Gtul>IY C'-'11 of Or.-.qe Clu11 PUBUC NOTICE ,, °" JNllWY ••• ltlt
" " 0 , I 111 0 N A I. I I c • 0 w ---,-.CT-ITIOU--.-.-u-.. -.. -c-u __ , ~:~=·TUii 4,.., MAMCSTAT&MIHT seeu Au, CA t21tl ,,,. ,.,~.,...,, 11dtof'9bu••nan
lh<,...Mo.7 ... 11-MO ••
1'·11371
"111111•"" Or ... (Qf•I 011ly Pllet ~ 1t,1t,F•t.t ,tm
PUBLIC ~OTICE
·6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
D
A
I
L y
••• ···•1t•"'•~ ........... , •• ,, ... .,., ..... ·-··-... ' ' .. "' .
,.......,..1Noflct:
All real Mtlte advertised
1n th11 newap•per 11 1uh·
)ect tD the Pederal l<'a1r
Hou1ln1 Act of J 1118
wblcb makes •~ lllegal to
advertlt "any pre· fer~f'. hmltat1on, or
ducrlqunaUon tlased on
race. col«. reli1ao11, •u. ar n11tJona1 onsin, or an
intention lo make an)'
wch preferencf', litn1t
tlOft, OI' d11cri tninauon "
Thla newspaper wlll nol ~~=~~!!!!~~= knowinflY accept any ::
adnr:t1slng for r&al
•late wltich a fn \'Iola
lion olthc law.
Hoa"forSde · .......................
•••••••••••••••••••••••
DU,UX
3 bedroom unt1 1.
SlOS,000 Pride of
ownership. Bxcellt.'nt
Costa Ml.'u loc:at1on
Owm:r analOU~
642·5061
Century 21 _Crocker
REAL ESTATE
SALES
Bal~,!a!\C!J!l!llY
673•8700
~--
UDOJSLE
&MUCHMUCH
MOR!
3 Oft & 3 BA churmer
v.ith 2 patios, Uled foun ·
t.un Great parluna. & 11
11l0p topnvate beach. All
lor$2A.OOO. '
JACOIS REALTY
67~670
SNvrng Co-;ta Mesa Irvine
Huntingto11 Bt>ach-Newporl Beach --
A prime opportP,.nily with an
outstandil'ig real eatal~ organization + high earnings! Experience is a
must. Prestigious location. All
applications held in strictest
confidence. Please reply to Ad #68,
Daily Pilot, P .O. Box 1560, Costa
Mesa, CA 92626
TIOH COUNTS •••
... you•u ov Uli nearly new home,
ju t ~ houses removed from Ocean
'Blvd. in Cdll. It's an exceptionally n> cw Jl!n land style 3 bdrm. &
-lformnl <tining rm., also brkfst. area.
There's a cozy frplc. &i all rooms have
cathedral ceilings. lt's fun to sit on
your J)atlo & view the blue Pacific.
WiU. the b!outfful sailboats ~as:.ing
tiy. Only $289,500.
I &ueu 11 I 002 &-.r.. I 001 ..............................................
-
LUSKWHEALTY ~
a Jnh11 /) /.1n·k & S1111 Cn
2515 E Cocnt Hw1 Corono dcl Mar
----
1002
..... Oftn.Mntf
MUST EE TO AP· -Pnt~ClATEt Complete!)
ri:decorated and rt·
modcled'4 bedrm hom~.
J\ttchcn like new,~ comp:ictor, "'ater 10f·
loner " in\cr0 coln • tcun, jusuo mcmtioif •
fo"Yr 1pecl•l leatur .
Aslclna a!M.200. To ace
thlt v~·t'Y -.ttrachve
home, call~6·5880
~·HERITAGE
.... REALTORS
SURPRISE! ,
You <'an buy a 1200 aq. ft.
Bayside Vlllage mobU~
home COi' only 144,500 and
U ve nur tho bay 111 a
beautJrut park-like Ht·
tm1. with pool. jacunl &
boat 11llp all available.
And. don't think this 11 an
old traMr. it 11111 'H 2
Bdrms., 2 b , blt·I •
carpets. p nellng, on J& on. Seo today & yC}U Y.ill be~sed
61M400
HA OR
01 H
J>.rc:stige homo 4 BR, •~ bath.it, formal
dmmg room, 2 p tioa on ov raized
corner lot. Designed !or !amity Jiving· & entertainlDg. $375,000.
Newly remodeled 4 bdrm. den 4,
baths, living rm wjcathedral ceiun1.
Lge. master bdrm auite. S3U,9;i(> •
., 11$ CAMJOH
4 BR, f am rm, 3 baths. Beautifully ~ d~corated Broad moor Plan 3 w patio
, ~1ew1 from e ch room. $325,000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
).l I B11v~1de 011v1• N ~ ol~ t>lt>I
••••"' 1002 a, .. ,., 1002 . . ............................................ .
VllW
4PLU
ipacioua uruta w/btn in· teriora. Low mala·
teaance. Blt·ln •P·
j)Mancea. Redwood ••· Urior & attractJve cedar
interiors. Ocean VIEW
fromaunlta. Mf.m1.
~ Walker C l t!t!
TEHuro1t
TEHDOWH7
Real Estate Valut-~
average lO'ro gain per
"ear, dollars seem t.o lose
\hat much. Which shoold
you own?
Curr Whit~ lkall~r
I~ I Newpor! Olva N ll
(71416fS·46JO
•OJ.a.LOO•
THE REAL
£STA1ERS
FORESl E
O LSON
•' ... '.
~
H)~1f:~T F-
OLS ON . .
LAO UNA B~CH 07'3331
I044
M.,_Vlefo 10'7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• N~ 3 Br Cordova, corner
lot, near lake. A/rood &
pnnw upfraides. $68,950
496·7384 or *·8723
Wllelc"ln
•tAI l\IAH
KEN ORITllNGHAM
llf.Al TOFI
Ctl5484Ul
The Bluffs
Owner mOtlvet~. have
IT'S IM
MIWPOltT HACH
001e to the Back Bay. 4
BR, 3 BA rondo. ll ba1 It all lncluchng Ule tl1ht
price. Sll8,500. v
ron1·r,;T .-
OLSON
~-
M ........... ...
640-5317
REDUCED $1500-
HELPl AJIDCllt new z BR. 1 ~
I IJrlw)r \'1l·W l\null l ondo
2 llr. !ll'n II bu. cJ1nin,,:,
II\ 11111. rou1110 klll'h\:n,
I r p I . J• o o I . l t• n n I s .
Sti(lO mo t:all !l73 1342 or
7~J.12ti5 CV81Wknds
'Urn 2Hr Apt. Yearly
L.:t• sundeck, close tc
rvervthing $345. 673-0236
112 Seashore. Vac. 2 Br,
wlnll•r or yrly. Gar, DW ,
nwly dee S.12·1714
2Br condo. S.1115/tno. Call BR Avail unUl June 15.
!IS, M839M after 6l'M $300 mo lncludea ut.U.
64~ Agt.676-1842.
J,100 SANDS. Acrou•--------
from tennis/pool, steps
to bch. 3Br. 2ba hae. $625
:>rly. 673 2493 BACHELOR APT.
ALL UTILS PDI
NEW 3Br 2ba w/lux up 100' from the ocean.
• 1rades, 2 cur encl !(Ir. Semi furnished. Avail
$500/mo wintcr673 2493 now! 201 E. Balboa Blvd.
.,
Yrly $250 per mo. NO
SanCetntnt• 127' FEE. Call· Sue at
••••••••••••••••••••••• 5:18·77<n anyUme
New 3 Br 2 81 twnhlle,
w/Vlew. Nr ocean, fplc, aitifuJ Promontory Pt.
dbl 1ar, tennis II pool. sublet. 2 brm 2 ba, vlew,
~ 714·~ 1268 apa. lennla etc. Pet OK.
Avail 2/1. $7&0 mo.
HouHt hmllhed or fW0.60llO eves.
Unfuniilahed llOO ······················· ~· l br, nu pnt, crta, 1tv, frpl ~tlted
$250, 111t/la1t le $100 •••••• .. •••••••••••••••
Adlta, no pets, Art e. G__... 3102 6'2~15 •••••••••••••••••••••••
STUDIO
WHKLYRA11S
Jl\IU Klteflen •TV IJ~111 IJ UUllUet
CLOSE TOOCKAN'
hlMohl
ll•d.CM as1l
' ' .. .
IALIOA
Bayfronl f.,t food. Net t-'4--------1 s:.o,ooo, yr. Inc:~•· Seashot• Real Yitatt,
8'15-*<I.
l•
AVON
~ leglllMow
PorAVOM
llPUSEMrATIYIS
Best Umo to esubllab
customen. Jni.r.tedT
Call ~7061 « z.mth
7·W9
Beb11ltter. Greatl:t rt·
duced h:ot for mocfaon 2 br Cum apt. on Bal lalud
Sn mrcb (Ott babyaltUq 5
Yr okt ftrl. 87Wl9 Aft
$ ·aopm Ott wknd.
Bab)'alUer needed 3-4 day
per wk, 4 hr• per day. 1
inf ant. 675-7296
v-,. • "' . . ' ... .... Iii .. • ..... ~ . ... ..,.... ... ... . . .
OIDBUIS
Xlnt bc!neft1a lncludlnr
tick IH•t. Bayview
Conv., 2QS.'I '11lurln Ave,
CM&U-SSOS.
PART TIME
At•ocl at1011 netd• •• • ocrlat• tn npandlnr
PBX OPERATORS
All& laC • shQrt tum ... 1nment11. Holiday & vac pq. HoepitalbaUon
avaJI.
Title Vl Ellslbility Required Throu1b
EDD Office
Costa Mesa (714) MS-0808
Lq\lfla Beach <710 497·3575
San Juan Capistrano "9e·3514
lnduatrlal oft•
quallr1ed man to handle To operate inJection acqws1llon & markelln& ~ldlne machine• & olprol)t'rty in Oran&e Co .
':1"1m 1mall plastic part.<11 ~tui1t be ex per"d. ~nd
l l>IW Jhift. Exper. prt'C'd re&ume : PO Box 1~5. Will train. Santa Ana ca 027Q5 . ... ~TACOSWITCH IMC -~--· ~---1
'l.UIBakerCoata Men Real Estate Sale:>
549°3041
:Equal Oppor Employer
PRE-SCHOOL
rRESSER
r.AAT0TIME
For Men's Clotbini
Store In
Jo'asblon Island.
Prefer Man.
AT EASE
Call Tailor Shop Mar.
644-5070
Wftelc-.11
111 Al I \I Al I
RECEPT80MIST
SALES PERSON
Part-time, hrl nexlble.
salary + comm. Ideal
worklni conds, modern health & racquetball
Cac1L Bus ofc. 752-0565
P/lime Been out of the SALES-Top e"per party
wotlc force !or awhile &
1
I T' Iii ' ' 9 -• .._ • • ... • • e ·······
TYPISTS
t·Recept. 1 girl of.
flce ln Newport. Mon -Fri ~!!!l!!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
SHlrrlHG CLERK ~~M or l •l ,PM.
Experience required.1-----...;._---1
xJnt pay & benefits. Com·
pctent person needed for
fast growing company
Send r~sume to Heads
Up 3201 W. MacArthur
Blvd .. SantaAna! __
. . ' . ... ...
i • ' •
LAST CHAHCll II ft. Uatfll te
Spca11lsber. 1 OW1* • ID
---------• mint cmditfoo •loaded! ~t.om lnterior. pilot. A.D.F. V,H.I'., 1Wllos,
outrls&•ra, AC/DC natural su retn1eratlon
" cootins. • blmllll lop w/eaclo•ure, new Cbry1ler manifolds,
riMl'll fs elbOwt plUI H•
tra fuel. Call Dale at
4.91-2708.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Ski Boat 1$' flbcrAla111. 65
HP Mucury, trlr, 'ttra!I
S7SO. 842·97'93
....................... c:ca., .... stA•/ ..... 9120 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Aluminum Camper Shell, ratt a· bed. S150
754 .7779
CBaeOTHONDA '76
Call &45 58&4
• i
BARWICK r TSUN
' ' I ' I I ~ I ' I
R 11.1J7S ,.tJ.]'l71J
COSTA MESA
DATSUN
f . . .
Tl'IUl'ldey. Januory 19. 1911
'75 Datna Lonabed, MB Caulk ~L. 1972,
AM /Flt a tuck, xlnt r«I, 2 top9, '12.~. No c o n d . S 2 I t S • ~ al I 1 a t l I p M · HUGBSEL£C110N
484.(I039;494 OUT _n_4_~.;,,._.;.;;.;,..;;..l _, __ _
T6 Dat1un R?ld. Xlnt MG 9742 rond. wlder warr. 20,000 rru. Mu&t sell· 82800 bit ••••••·•~•••••••••••••• otr. 957.1u.J "TSMG 1rt1d1et. IL1ntcond ..
.. -.a..:: ..
MISSION VII JO IMl''>AI ~ . -.. . .. . . ---... .
8JI 1•:8 40S 11011
DAILY PILOT
-
I l
* Thur1da • J1nu 1t. 1971
1971 FIREllRD FORMULA •SUGGESTED RETAIL $7391.
11sc•11 s1000
~with
• F~ /(Jr Conditioning
• Power Steering
• Power Brakes
• Automatic T raos.
• Power Windows BOB LONGPRFS SALE PRICE
• Tilt Wheel
• Rally II Wheels
• CustcmTrim
• Formula Appe«once Package
• fjoo•
56391
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
FULLY EQUIPPED GRAND PRIX LJ
l'ESI' DRIVE l'ODA Y RI' DRIVE .NOW
THIS IS YOUR SPECIAL CHANCE TO DRIVE TiHE ALL NEW '78 P0NTIAC MID-SIZES NOW
176AMC SPORTAIOUT
& eyl auto trans • factory air conditioning. PoWtr
steenno. stereo tape radio. reek. tilt steenno Lie.
#888NZI
s4271
'76 POMTtAC GRAND PlllX SJ
v..a auto. traos , factory air. conditioning, power
steering. rlld10, landau top Lie. t248NIK.
'77 CH!VY MON'IA
4 cyl .. auto trans . factory air conditioning, p0wer
ateertno ... ~10, landau top, Lie t007SAZ.
s3971
•,Factory alrcond. • Luooaoe rid<
• Automatic trans.
• Power steering
• Power brakes
• Raltye wheels
• Tilt atrg. wheel
$3195 .
Suppltmtnt to the Piiot Advertiser, Jenu•!Y 11, 1'71! O•llv Pl!ot end Los Ano•IH TlmH, J1nu1ry 1_9, 1978.
I
,
,..
2
Year 'Sees
Exp.ansioti '
By WERNER ESCHER
Fashionwear
Showcased
At Bullock's
ullock'1 bu offered fine QUaUt.y IUbfonwear and home accessorles
alliee 1m m South Co.!st Plua.
~ I\
.,.·~' ..... . J' ·c.
,
<:HOOU fROM SPlCW. VALUD
f~M OUR l00$l OIAMOHD OIPT.
0460
--·
'
..... .. ·-
May Company, Pioneer at
~laza, Completes Facelift
87 ROBOT AYEJt8 Kay Co. 6oath CoUt PJua 1W
recent11 11nder1on• tb• lilraeat
reJ:Qodelfna pfoject Of 1111 Ma) Co.·
1tqre. accordlna to 1eneral
maaa1• Crowe. Th• le-moat remOd liAI jo~
attected ill are11 of the atcre ud w 1 eompleted Jaat June.
CoHtractlon of the thlrd level
re tauraDt WH finlahed laat
November.
D lped by Tosh Yamublto, a
fir located tn Loi Aniel•, the
1t 11 complementtA with modern
. metallic fumlahiilgs, metal celllnp,
Ch es• arc tec:ture and eve a mural in tbe cosmetic department.
· 'Tbb Kay Co. location
rec: more vislton from oat of
the .,... than any other at.ore tn the
cb in," 1ay1 Crowe. "TheJ
es ~ke tho Chlnese influence
an murals:• -
e allo not that the 1tore wu 1Q
of mocklriiliaUOD.
''The store was 11-years old when th• reD:iOdellnf WU •tarted, IO It wasa•t an Old bWldlna butt.be mall
bas ll'OWll eo fut lD the lut few )'eUT that we aaw a need for J.t.;.. •
A few of tbe departments th.It wen eo.lar&ed by the remodtiUn1 were women'• accessories, .. ,..
CO wear" and men'•·
Many of the clotbea now ta
f ashlon, 1ay1 Crowe, are natural
and soft llben, not rl.114.
Silk and cotton bJendl are popular
in natural colon tncludina belt•.
tan and other aoft~es .
a1 Co. atarled in Callfonda 1D
lJ2S wlieo the1 boulht Hambureer'a
department 1tou where tbe
exlltiDI downtown (L.A.) atare 11.
located. .•
Tbe chain now hu arown to 21 full line. department 1toril aDil two small specialty •
&tOre boun are from 10 e:m.''10
t:SO p.oi. MOnday tbl'Oujb ~. unw 1 p.m. Saturaay and 11 a.m. to
8 p.m. on SUnday.
Amato'• Esp~ Cafe Li the ttm
orl1lnal espresso caf e in Oranae
Ceunty, aceordlng to owner Fr
Amato.
COlledori will :find a...icse variety
flt Umtted edltJon platea, cfyatal and
ffPPtJ' ....S brus decorailve pieces •t Gratton Street accordlns to ow r Olcai' :&urlin
---
Mliter Ettfot•1 f ••hlon er••·
Iona .. .,om by Sue Avalo1
and Helen Gc*tano.
canv(ls .
P<Q-stretched and t>oards
ctVafa, pr•stretched, from 3y," x 4~l' up
tct167 x 20", 8 sizes, reg. 1.39 to 4.65,
S~E 1.09 to 3.69 canvas boa~ GrUinbacher brand,
packages 'ol 3, frOm 9" IC 12" to 18'' k 24", !; sfzes, reg. 1.85 to ~.80,
SAL:E 1.49 to 4.59
drawing table, alf wood, durable hardwooa table 11 adjust~e for both
het0ht and angle.
24'1")( 36" table top.
reg. 60.00, SALE 44.99 31" x42" tabletop,
reg . es.oo, SALE 47 .99
e11tl, wood. aorld center post, ateel rachet. 7W' high, fOkb flat for.1torage,
large tray Wfth bUiJt-tn palette hblder plus
extra <Neralz. tray, adlustable canvas
holdor. reg. 40.96 SALE 31.99
, , l __ , .. I SPEOl!.!l(OIOR
~ --····-·
6
Altefatlons,
··New Suits
Tailor Made
By ROBERT AYEas
International fill or and E~
pean craftsmanship ineet a.ad mix at
House of Tailoring ln South Coast
.Plaza.
• Located on the Carousel Court,
the shop cuatom makes suit.a for
men and women, althou1h thcr bulk
of the work ls in alterations.
Most come for alterations . .;.
because they have lost weight.
"Men or women who lose ten
pounds find that their clothes all
need to be remade lo give proper
lit," says Charlie Zwieback, owner
of House of Ta1lortn1 with Natan
Ceron
Zwieback tint came to the U.S. al
ace 17, eacaplnc from an •P·
proaching Natl army.
After he arrived, the U.S. entered
the World War II and Zwieback en·
tered the U.S. Army.
"The pay wasn't 1ood," he re-
called, "and many of the men were
gettlne money from home. I was on
my own, so I found that I could ea"l
extra money dolq tallorln1."
Alter openln& bis fint taUortnc
shop In Holyoke, Mass., he moved
to California and now has five abops
with the House of TaHortnc name.
"When I came to America, I
found that most taUor shops were
~ ........... 0.-..........
(f' rh1 ;folio ·
SOUTH COAST
PLAZA
STUARDS
(ff/ !lli!$Dlla
South Cooit Plmd'• ~ Men. StOre
540-7162 .. -* flOtf\ I ~·
modernize the tiusineu. J ad·
verilled and hired other tallon to
help , and made sure they were well
trained, not only to do tallortnc but
to handle customers.
"There is no place 1n the world
where customers are better treat·
ed," he says, Ulan in America.
"We In America, •~ the muten
-there ta more courtesy here • Cuatomen demand and receive bet·
ter treatment. Amerlcal\S are the
top business people tn the world,"
Zwieback notes with pride
• ;t
At a tlmt when almost all ftnt
qaaUt1 1boea are imported,
Johutob and Murphy men'1 lboel
are American made and of the fblelt quality leather and eomtruc·
ttoQ. acCclr'dlni to Jay Conley, uatl·
tQ.t manacer of the comp1DJ'• Soutb Cout Plua 1tore.
1obnaton and Murphy mu ..
tra41Uanal American me&ll' drell aboll a well u Aftel' Houn brand cUualitJla.
"Our lhOea are bown u the pze.
1li1entt.al lbOe because almost 8Vf/r/
prllldent trom Millard Flllmore to
Gerald Ford hu worn them,•• H1I Ccmle1.
Oil• '11 the 1tore'1 most popvl.r moclela 11 a patent leather wlQal:lp •
wWa lr1dslrtn uppers. "saddle •· forda and penny loafen an Id.Una well allo, •' 11)'1 Coilley. ~
•• Store mana1er Dick Rado!Dakl ~ i>olnted out that Jobnaton and
Murp)17 atvee close attenUon to Its·
lq, ~owtni the shoe to be fitted to
: the entire foot, rather than Just to
. , tbeheeL
~ · Tb• ·~·· sales pereonnel are • 1peclatlJ" trained ln tbls flttma tecbnlQue, he aay1 .
.. , "" Tw quallty Italian kidskin and. French calfskin aa well u fine ctomutlc leathers are used at the
company'• Naahvllle, Tenneuee manufactiJrlna faclllty.
~ J•bn1ton and Murphy also f eaturu a line of fine leather
Jackett, bap, briefcases, belta and
wallet.I. •
The ltor1'1 aeml-annual aale ls currently In proeresa, with p.rte•
marted dOwn on dilconUnued atyl• aome current tyles.
tlJlen who appreciate the comfcrt
that quallty and fine workmW.19
CUl 11ve w1ll come back a1&1n 11ata," aays Radomski .
From P.ageTw'
BULLOCKS ...
Treat yourself
to the lbok of silK.
1
8
Jewels by
Joseph Has
All Services
"We are one of tht larMtst
jewelry relailera in Sout6ern
Callfornia," aay1 dealrner Bob
Laidlaw of Jewell by Joseph. , "On the premises we have a tem lab, 2 eemolo&lall, a full·tlme de·
sl1ner, 1lx jewelers and a
watchmaker -25 employen ID all, II
Located on the lower level of
South Coast Plaza near May Co.
alnce the mall openln1, th• 1tore
eaten to a large market, aay1
Laidlaw. · "Jewelry pieces ranee from $U
on up to some custom work for
"°'0000 or more Mre." Pendant•, earrtn11, braceletl,
rln11 and neck chaim are available
as are .watches by Seiko, Baum• Merel~. Loncinea, Citlstn and
Wittnauer.
diae, Laidlaw notes that custom de-
1lined Jewelry plecea are also
Popular.
"I've made everythlnt from
mother's rinas to five carat
diamond rinp," he says.
"People don't have to co
any1"ber• else when they are ln
the market for Jewelry.'' says
Laidlaw. "We are like a depart·
ment store of jewelry."
Distinctive Styles at Patouche
He · also 1ttesses that Jewell by
Joseph la a customer oriented atore
and prides illelf on ill reputation of
pleasina the customer.
"Our maln coal is to make the customer happy by 1lvlnc him what .
he wants." Althoueh the shop does a larae
bu1lness ln sellln1 their merchan·
'Patouche refle<:tl the unconven· tional In women'• fa1hl9111 Ind dla·
Unctlve domestic and Imported de-
11,01, accordinl to Mary Lou
Yeager, admlnlstratlve ust.stant.
The ahOp features a full ran1e Of
cuual and dressy wear with a lar&t
selection of junior sizes.
Long sleeve button trout blouses
and blc tops ere by LOl'C!n, With silk
Over 2,000 botta from our regular ttock
tncludea: wool·1ued•·•1lpearkelour·
d nlnHnt rk>Cll·poly•lt•r (diapea Ilk•
a dr•am) -wool gabardlne·t•ff•t•
plalda-trtgger prfnta-polyeater crts:>•
and m•nv more. Muat H• to bel .. vel
Ont Stop Sewing Ceftter
1t«Cte~
SOUTH COAST PLAZA ......., ...... _,...,. ....
blouses by Carol Hom, Mimi P'ayil
an4Kenar. ,
Pants are by St. Raymond, Carol
Horn and Chemin de Fer. Dreuee
and skirts by Mimi Fayzi and Carol
Hom a.re also on hruid.
AccaaorieS at Patouche lnelude
ahoea by Elditas as well u belt.a
and U ·karat chains, charms,
bracelet.I, ankl ti and rinp,
I
I. gr»n'a n w South Coaat Plua
atore ii "man)' is-mall bouUqu un8er one roor.• In Ul wo.rd of store
mana•er Karen P.hr}.n1e~. TJle wom~n·a fashion bOuUq .. e features dreaaes, coata and swts by
1ucb deataners a <>scar de Y Rt:nta
Georilo St ~Angelo, J4'11n LoUlS and
Albert Nipon. The deatrner 1port1wear ahop offen Ralpb Lauren, Calvin Klein, Cacharel and
Yns St. Laurent fa blooa. Mens' clothin& include$ White Llnt
Fila tennil and active wear as weU as
1wt1 and sportl clothes by Jtaf ael.
Sulla ln Amer.lean and Eu~anatyl·
lD1•r offettidunderJ. agnin'1own
label.
I. Ma~·· &ill boutique bas dee·
oratlve accessories such u Bae·
carat cry1tal, silverware, cblila ind
courmet cook.inc and servtn1P1eces .•
Contemporary fasbioo tnmda bl costume jew try are on diSplay ki the
jewelry bouUque, lncludinc deslcns
ualn11eaahellJ, rope and crystal.
Fine Jewelry emphasll'es Henry Franklln and Barthofomew deslp
ln neeklacea, pendantl and earn.n;a
ofpearll,Jadeandcoral. Fine sold and diamond pieces are
(See I. MAONIN, p•ge 21)
•
Bak Outdoor
Portraits
Please l\Aany
Scenic outdoor portraits are
speclaltlea al BaJc Studios in South Coast Plaza.
"People really like this type of
portrait shot," says Albert Bak,
owner. "Most of our customen
want a picture that fs reall.sUc -
with the ocean or 1reenery in the backround.!'
Located in the new Bullock's wing
on the lower level, Bak Studios
shoots commercial portraits,
weddinpi and almost any group or
lndlvldua occasion.
The Cirm has operated in the
mid west for 35 year1 and bas been In
South Coast Plaza ror the past eight year1.
Bak Studios also performs
pu&port photo 1ervice in black and wbJto or color and usually wtllle you
wait; says Bak.
"All Bak portraits are printed on
Florentine fanvas so they look like paiAtinas.
"Most ol our shots are custom,
h ndcrarted prints that are
Processed in our own lab," 8ays
• Bak. "The portrait you 14t1 ls tbe
corrected print -the finest you can
purcbaae . We strive for
exccllcnce1"
Seven lo 10 days are needed
for proofa and another two and one·
half to three weeks after the proof ls
chosen before one receives his pint.
'fhe atudlo It open from 10 a.m. to
9 p.m. Mon<fay through FridAy and
UI 8 p.m. on Saturday.
Call 549 2103 for n pJ)Olntmcnt.
10 I '
For Gourinet.
M,als Try
Best Tools
Gourmet cooldnl entbuslutl wU1
find a virtual treuurehouseollm~ mentl to make tbelr cU11.nU7 efforts
11ucce11ful at W1Wam1-Sono1111, South Coast Plau. ·
UI
•ALL
'S
.. , ..
~ 5'2
ENGAGEMENT.A t/mc when you'r,e sure you knowo ree/'IJ!I
no one else has ever felt. Th time for: a fine diamond from
/. Herber/ Holl ••• The place for those who know what love Ts.
• SOU'1H 00AST PlAZA • ~y SQUARE • QEM)Alf GAU:ERIA •
WESTMINSTER MAU. • fOX HUS w.l1 • PA.WJENA • PUENTE HUS MAll
• SANTA MITA FASHK>N PARK • \WXllAN> HlU PRONINADE •
SANTA NfA f ~Cit SQUARE •1ilb MAU. • HAWJHORNE PlAfA
. '
11
12
•
Teddies to Bells
GlfJ Variety at Great _Things
BJ VJCJ'Oa COOK
If a Teddy.bear named Raoul who doea Ed Sullivan lmpreaalooa or
lar1e sand cast bells by ~
architect/ pbiJOIOpber Paolo Sc>leri
catch your fancy, Great Thinp in
South Cout Plaza'• Jewel Court
may be your kind of shop.
Conceived and owned by Aapen,
Colorado architect Tom Welll, the
store features functional &lft items
that are also examples of fine de·
sl1n.
"We believe in the, philosophy of
form followlna function", says store
maoaaer Mary Ann Thomas.
With that lo mind the store ls cur·
rently dilplaying:
-"Kilim" ru11 of wool and nu
from Poland
-Simply desiped aterlln1 allver
jewelry from Scandinavia and
CIDNESE INFLtJENCE
Grapble d Jener Laurel Bui'eh'a
Cblneae-lllfl ed jewelr)' ]Jlecea.
The Jew~ Incorporates Chinese
button1, net.Suite carvings lind traa·
menta of haJr ornaments, acc0r4lnl
to Ma. Tbomas.
--She H.YS SoJerl'• bronze bells
are sand cut by his 1tudenta aDcl
use various ox.Idea to 1lve a peen
or reddlab paUna, determined by
the alr temperature on th• day they
were cast.
A portico of the profit from sale of
the belll ioes for the support
Soleri'• ArcosanU project, a city o!
ruturiltlc arehltedure under eoa.·
atructlcm In the Arizona desert.
Great 7hinp also sella •\Molu ..
by the C\uta Indiana ot Panama'•
San Blu Jslandl. Theae are wall
hao1Jnp of a reverse appllque
1tltchery technique uatn1 overlaP:
ping layers of as many u elaht or
oine cloths of different colon.
INDIAN THEMES
Mola designs lncorporate eontem•
porary tecbnoloaical motifs with
the animtstlc deslaru of the lndlan
culture, acco.fdin1 to Ms. 'J'bOmu,
•'One piece ls a picture of the ~pollo
moon &bot combined with lnd1111
sea and air &Oda," she aat1.
lnclUded Jo the store' offertnp
are ~ on wh t Ms Tbomu
terms '' ood d igns of thought."'
This c~pmea llth s on G t It
therapy, 1Jlddb, archltecture and
the noteboOks of Paolo Solen.
••we try to add a humanlstJc ele-
ment to our approach also,•\ she
say1 °aJan1 With decor that lmpattl
a total aenaUal experience.'•
..,
woven Tefl}' and
Terry Knits, with
their special Ught,
.. soft textures
comfort you In .J
style! Come
in and see
our exciting
NEW ARRNALS .
..4.nd •••
RightfJOW
we 're having a
Clearance Sale
• Mens• and w:>mens'
jumps_ults, cover-ups,
pants & t()f)8, snd
hoStess gowns are priced
to 50°0 SAVINGS! I
SOMETHIHG HOT ........
-Demit.us of hnety toasted hlllan 1 Cott o. ...... ~ c.,,.u.
-A large CuP or Espresso w th en eQu amount of hOt rich m k. c'!l , .. ..,.
-1peclai blend of Ese>r • Chocd te. Wh P cream. milk nd brandy flavor.
Cafftl.&t -113 espresso 2/3
CIMCMC...
-Hol Chooolate .,,.
SOM"*""' Cet.D IC_. .....
lc .. C .... ...... , ..
..... c ....
6 eY ...
'.211' .. ':::r .........
...... s..111 :::.=:'
SOUPS Olt SALADS
-.~ •'
pat es
__ .. ._.,....._....._ ---...
I
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•
ALL IN ONE FABmON PLACE:
TRB ACl1VIST -fashloa.s t(r the
acttn woman and all her 1portlna needs.
CBANINS -unique men'• and women's sportswear and fuhlon
Jeans.
THE GAP -caters to every
member of the famlly. No matter
how old or what alze. they can ftt
you In some treat lookln1 c:uual
wear.
• GENE'S -ftne mlasey and Junior ready-to-wear fublons, lncludinl a
complete selection of bridal
fublom.
HOUIS or TE••Y -terryclOth, clothlDa fOI' the enUre family aDd
NANCY CUIG -caters to the youn1 woman of today with toCSl)''I
fuhtom.
PATOUCBS -everytl\lbl ~or
every occallori In Junior aD4" con·
temparary women's clo\hlili •
JEWKLS BY JOSEPH -UJummat·
Int· dlai:Dcocb and 1em1tooet, ftne
watches and watch repair. r'lnl
mounUnp and custom, work avalla· bJe. •
A\L IN ONE PIC'l"l1&E:
BAK STUDIOS -a quality pboto..
1rapblc 1tudto 1peclall1Jn1 in
portraits. weddln11 J>UIJ)Orts, ID· cludin1 a rme aeleCUon of framea.
SOUTH COAST PL4ZA
IJJlll'lllll•C.-W..•1411111 .......... , ................
SW
lnclu
ere a
ChOIC
butter
HIS:
CallfaFnia .,
experience abthentlc Italian
eapre110 amld a peaceful outdoor .
cafe •ettll1t.
BIC&:OaY A&MS -oa• of America'• le~ chee,e storea, •
with 121 dlffereat cheeses to ielect
from and a delldom Ofterln1 ol beef
1Uck and specialty foods.
LINDBEllG'S -a nst selection of
foods, vltamln1, minerals, ~alnl and teu. A ftult bar for a qutck
pick-me-up, or a restaurant for a
meal of all natural foods. •
: I I ~ ." 1 :
WIFIATUUFA LY
DIMIMCi AT ITS llST ,
et vegelable. gravy.
y whipped pot1tot1.
of veoetlble. roll a
G&AFTON l'r&Et:'r -a welcome
rem lnder ol Old• World craftamamhip. Offering the Oneat
cey1tal, c:hlna and accessories tri>m
Ireland. Brttalri and the Contmmt,
WILLIAMS-SONOMA -dedlc;ief'
ALLINONI! BYEGIASS PL&tB:
QUB CIABSIQtJB -cJuses ..
fl to perfeetlon by cosmetic optl· •
clana, and oa.e of the lu1eat uaort•
• ment1 of dlltlnctlve faablon
eyewear available in the worl~
ALL JN ONE SMOKE SBOP:
LAWBENCE PIPE SHOPPE -net
IJ a larse 1elecUoa of qaallty
pJpe• and hleh &rade clean. but
orl&inal cast Dletal sculptures, ex·
clualve Swl11 music boxes and
bandcrat'tfd chess seta.
ALL IN ONE srrrca:
OOJ; OBTWS
..
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Butternlp, a mild cheese wltb a pl~
quant ~tels the .. cheese otthe
week" at Hlck()I')' Farms, accorOlnc to owner Bill TbomptOD.
Butkn\lp · ll Qne Of 128 natural
cheeses on "-nd at the apeclalty foods abop, located near tbe Carousel
Court, lower level.
Alon With crackers, snack ltems,
cake aM Imported candJa, tbe st.ore
ll well·known for lU beef stick, an all-
beefaummer nusa1e.
''Our dft p&cb Ott cbeeseeombina-Uona ana cheese and smoked uusace
aelecU.. are very popular it.ems
too," ••'lbompaoa.
Theliftpacbareavallableln
ran11.D1 In prlce from SS to $40 and
can be malled ~ wltb de-
llveri paran~ ''TbieJ mite ex-
cellent bllthdar. hostesa or boo
vo1ace liftll," heaays.
Allo featured at Wckory Farms b
a lar1e variety of teu, both lo bulk
and tia~ Included are tlie popaiar
En1lllh Breatfaat, KJo1 Richard'•
Blend and Eul Grey brandl, u well
aaberbt.u.
BurlwoOd chHt with ao1d lntey.
3 tunes: Glvotte by L.ouls XIII. MlnUll Ind._ Magic Fha ~ Monrt.nnoee. ,
Pl no midi trom Ollve ~
plays n. H.,,, Wanderwr. • note.
Danc1na dolls •• costtmecl • for an 1llllt c.nturY tonMI bin. T.h•Y ~ to a Gavotte by
Lo•lt >OU .... • l"hMll 1W MOIMt•note
u.r ...... -., .... ~ ....
._.c.e.._.c..-.....,c..tiPI ll't•-.nn
-: ... , "' ' ' .,
' • t ,. ~ • I ' . -f . I"'
Ir ' . .
The Brus BOot ID South
Plazp hu reduced ill enUre stock d
women'• tho .. and boota JO percent, accordln• to as1l1tant
manaaer John Canon. • .. w. are expect1n1 to be nooded
with new atyta tn the 1pi'1n1 and
therefore try to move out our
1hoea,'1 11y1 Careoo. Jieveral styles of men'• footwear
are .J:l.ao on .. le for half price, he
added.
Located tn the lower level of the
mall In tbe new Bullock'• wtn• Ult at.ore carries a Jarae selection of
hiSb Quality footwear. ¥en'a shoe prices ranae from $1&0
to S200 while wome.n•1 shoes rans•
ln price from S50 to SZSO
" Oil of our aboea and boot.I that
we carry ore m eapecl u1 for
Bra11 Boot and out of -OM
. finest leather a ell 111 aov
1boc 1tyles of lizard nd 1n ke
akin," he Hid.
Carton note Lhnt ille.. pcrtd
toe ls "ln" ror m n nd mcn'a
shoe , ond h l\dd lh l bOtti th
•HAIN•
SAFFLOWER
OIL
PUREOOLD
PRESSED
NO PRESERVATIVE
(REG 2 $})
WIAUO~
-
•O /
(REG 2 79)
SALE 1.89 ..
.. ISM PIODUCI
JAN 8 18.18
I-
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·-
Cameo Shoe atore i• a little cllf· ferent than moel shoe stores lo SC>utb Cout Plaaa, accordln to
OWDCl Leo Rubenllein.
"\f e carry abes tour to U in
widths AAA to D to aceommodat.e people who can't find aboes
anywhere else," he aald.
"Eltht yearw aio when I opened
· the tore, I decided to carry •
wld r variety ot 1hoe allel than
moei a tores ln the mall."
Thia technique must have p&ld off
as Cameo Shoes had the hlibest rat·
Ing of any shoe at«e In South Coast
Plua fqr the lul quarter, accord·
liil to Rubenstein.
WILLIAM&SONOMA
3333 M ~ &rtet • South COUt PW1
Col'tl Mita • 75M t&e
San Francisco • Palo AltO • 8""'11 ... • Cotta~
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"We are a one-atop aewlna center," aaya Sagbtr Aslam,
president of Golden Needle l"abrtcs in South Coast Plaza.
Located near Sean on the lower level of the mall acrou from
Woolworth'•, the store carries a
lar1e assortment of material,
thread.a, ribbons, needlee aild briClal
laces for the 1eam1tress or Wlor -
whether he be an amateur OT professional.
"We carry all the trimmlnp and
laces that add the finlsbina touch to
a dre11 and really make tbe drea,"
he added," lncluclin1 fiowera and feathers."
Golden Needle Fabrica bas been open In South Coast Plaza fot two
years and la not a chaJn store, explains Allam.
Ile feels ~at there are tOo many cbaln storw ar&und ·aad mucll O!
the personal, lndlvlduall%ect UiTice
bu beco lost.
"'I believe In 1lVin1 the customer
old f11bioned service with the
expertise of a small apeclalty abop!'
Custom made draperies and
comforters are available u are
bridal headpieces.
•
"If a customer can't find
1omethln1 he wants in our store, we
will custom order it for him." Aslam spent several years as one
of the buyeu for Broadway
Department &ores nd bu made
Complete Line of
Commercial Md
Social stationery
from office to
home
14W026
. ,. ... --...
IF YOU'¥E LOS~
WEIGHT, REF11·1'ING
IS OUR SPECiAt
SOIJTB COAST PL~ZA
P•••e5408491
Mon.-Fri. 9 A.~ . 9 .M.
Sat. 9 A.M. • 6 P.M .
from page I
OFF
"DRESSES (LONG AND SHORT),
DRESS PANTS, JEANS, BLOUSES,
TO:PS, HIRTS, SKIRTS, PANT AND
SKIRT SUITS, COORDINATES,
SWEATERS, ACCESSORIES ANO
JEWELRY. Al:L FROM REGULAR
srocK, ANO ALL :£URRENT WINTER
FASHIONS."
LOWER BULLOCKS MALL
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
556-1495
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s•r
China, Sliver,
Al ~ewelers
-.
The Gap in South Coast au {s
not Just • LevJ ltore.
"We are casual, fasblon-
orlented store ortermc the latest
trends," aays store manager Karen Rlnehpt. · . •
In addition to Levis, tbe store car-
rlea • full line of Brittariln and Gap
clothlne l,o_r men.,.-.women and
children alont with PenUmento
sportawear for f als.
The Gap wu founded In • by
Don Fllber In San Francll~ who
saw the need to expand Levi ln that
aru, eay1 Ma. Ririehart
Hls llhlt store opened wltb an 1n·
ventory of Levis and recorda\..~
the pant.a became so popular ~uun
the records bad to be moved' out tO expand the Levi department.
In Jess than 10 ycnra, the Ga,p bas
or
2-3!12 x 5
COior P.ortraits
$5.98.
12yn.
/
Special Now, c01111nu1o,g .._ ,.. n
BAK STUDIO
SOU1M COAST ft.Al.A
GI nc • Wlhon·lonea ano Red1form, ays Fors~e. as ell u ·pens from P rker.. Cros , and SCbenffer.
S veraJ rt U11es available at e
store are Chartpak Pentel, Grum·
b chC1', PickettandStrathmore.
"W Gl&o carry lrnported iewetry
from aitna and mall kitchen ap
pll nc , " be saJO.
Store hours arcJrom 10 a.m. to I
p m. MonOay through ..Frid~. until
6 p.m. i0n Saturday and noon to 8 p m. on Sunaay.
....... , ....
0,..hlwlM"
W.'IN · ......
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26
Stationers
Century Statlonen cartles a full
rao1• of eoclal and commercial sta· .
Uonery, art and draftlng supplies
and an especially fast a~cial order
service, accordina to Gary .iMcbols,
1tore manager.
..
#
d tcoUtses;soir-se
william ernest bro
ne mationery and invltZltlon
~uth coast plaza
~ maa, cnlllomla 9!616
('714) 1540-2165
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-
hop dally 10 to 9.SO at rday 10 to 7 sunday 11 to6,
3333 b ttol st ~9321
1"'A"V'CO
I
I
11 Seek
~Yalley
Positions
NEW tllil €hoice:·
W ASHJNGTON <AP) -The
Carter administration is tumlrll for the second time to • veteran
federal judge lo b~ome FBI
director. '.But the new cbolce.
William H. Webster-of St. Louis.
brtnp a markedly differ
Wodifl{l
Qf RoiUIJ
~&ported
Flooded and tlOHd~ff street.
continued to frustrate Oruao
Coast motorisll u the latest In a
aeries of atorml poured water
over the coast a1aln today.
Pacific Coast W1hwa1 in San
Clemente remalnecl:closed from \. Aventda Plco to Camino
Capl~ono due Co mudllidu. ·.~ :1Ut that'a QI dOwn
f n the mtic:Wldes P.~l; 1 poutble to pld: up," aid
public worn einployee. "Tbo
crews are workin1 ~ fast as
they can to keep ab a4 ot the
storm." Laguna~Caft1'Qll Rota )1et.,...
Lacuna Biaeb and EJ Toro wu
closed off at tnldmotntne due to
flooding. Del l(>blsp0 Street into
the Dana Point Harbor wu nar-
rowed from tour lanea to two because of mudalldes. Irvine streets that have been
nooded at ttrnes all month were
once piore clQJed. Included wue
sectiona df Harnrd Avenue,
Sand Canyon Avenue, Barranca
Road, TUrtle lloct Drlve, CUiver
Drive, Jeffrey Road and Bonita
Canyon Drive.
A cos\a Mesa public works
employee reported that
downtown atl'eeta were once
more covered with water, but
she said the two-dq l>re•k in tlw
rains had jt"VeD stonrl drains a
chance to clear. Site said the
water was dra1n1n1 off faster
than usual,
In Huntington Beach, some
parts of the downtown area were
reported fiooded afaln. Water
was also deep at the lntenection
of Ed1D1er Avenue and Harbor Boulevard 1n Fouiltaln Valley.
Huntlnarton Beacb Fire
Department representatives w1ll
em bark on a aeries of fire safety
preaentatton1 tonight ln the
western part of the city,
Fire In1pector Larry
1 Manhbum Nld tomlht'1 meet-~ lag will be tl d 1:30 at tbe clubbOQM ot the Beaebwallc do-
• velopmat at GGldelL West Street
MU P-1.mAv.aue.
al4
•
I',.... Page Al
BUS ..•
.... ... . -· .. .. ,J -
)
•
~s is
All Item are floor samples
soile , damaged or nlcf<ed.
LIVtNG ROOM FURNITURl:
.
Vlnyf 1wlvel rocker
Love Mat
Sofa
Cocktell tebl•• (3 only)
Vlnyl club chair (1 only)
Sw1v,1 rocker (1 only)
Club ~heir (1 only)
Recliner (1 only)
Spfa (1 o~) ~ ·
ured)
BEDROOM FURNITURE
orig. 199.00 now 114.00
Twin foundation (1 only)
Twin foundation (1 only)
, Extre long twin aet (1 only)
Twin foundation (1 only) .
Full foundation (1 only)
~§:~iiiii~~ Queen foundation (1 onty)
King ••t (1 only)
·orig. 60.00 now
orig. 47.00 now
orig. 94.00 now
orig. :100.00 now
orlg.1169.00 now
orig. 74.00 now
orlg.129.95 now
Orlg.11.00 now
olrg. 119.95 now
orig. 71.00 now
orig. 74.95 now
orig. 94.95 now
orig. 54.95 now
orig. 49.95 now
orig. 54.95 now
orig. 55.00 now
35.00
25.00
53.00
44.00
63.00
30.00
80.00
8.00
55.00
33.00
59.00
89.00
39.00
39.00
39.00
9 cycle -under the ounter
· Dishwasher .
9. Now 249.95
12''x36''
,
I -
....
' -
..
KWIKKOVER
SHELF PAPER
Flnt you ecne on the
ahel"fing and then we make
lt .o you can .cne on the
cOTe.r, too. (Ha.ewe
forgotten anything?)
REGULAR ~
PATTERNS •••••••••• 29~.
~~=~ .... 77b ..
AJAX
CABINET
HINGES
...
6"xr ••••• 2~·
3"'x4" ••••• 1 •• l"xlO".' •••• 27'
•"x5 ........ '·~ urxlr ••••• s .. xr ..... 19' 12"'x1C-••• 67'
A IPokesman ror the Irvine
.tc>mpany responded Wednesday
to crltlcism from local environ·
jhental writer Wesley Marx the&.
•lnstorm street floodlnc was
auaed by poorly desicned flood
trot.
Marx told the City Council
Tuesday that "an inadequately ae1lgned interim flood channel ••
wa1 more to blame than
"Mother Nature" for 1he flood·
big which continued today to vex
motoriJta.
The channel, the San Joaquin,
is an Irvine Company-built proJ·
ect to temporarily divert waters which normally "Would
drain through tbe San Dieao
Creek Channel.
The San Die10 Creek
watercourse WU closied off In
1976 foe realignment work and
greenbelt-type improvement.t
through the housing community
or w oodbridge.
Work la acheduled to com·
pleted, &CCOl'dlnl to the Irvine
Company, by next fall. Orlalnill
schedules called for finiahin_c the
project by lut May.
.Durins the lint. 19Te·1977.
"rainy season" durlnl whlch the temporary diversion channel
w11 1n use, SoUthern Calllomia
waa lo the middle or an ex·
ten•l•• drou ht: the channel capacity was never tested.
,,Thia year, bowever, the rains
·35· Hike Asked,
f'acTel Seeks Largest Increase
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Pacific Telephone Company
filed tOday for the laraest rate
hike in California history, a $411
inllllon annual boost that would
raise the average resldentl&l
one bill by "·20 per month.
Jf approved by the CallfornJa
Public UtlliUes Comml11lon, the
P,~one company said the ln·
creues art expected to raise the
1
1 monthly bill of the typical res-
ldential customer from $U.15 to
8.SS.
The iricreases would become
I
elftctlve in 1979 and affect
rtually all Pacific Teleohone
service except the basic lOW·cost
lifeline servtce .od local calls
from coin pay telephones.
· Flat rate residential service
would increase from $5. 70 to $1
with DO limit OD Calla.
Besides basic rates, there
would be hikes far aervu:e con·
necllons and a variet1 of other
services.
Char1es tor residential
customers with measured tlme
anvice would co up ttom $3.75
to $4.lS. 'the ayatem allows a
maxtmum of 60 local calls.
equivalent"to 300 minutes. Sueh
customers would continu. to pay
five cent.a per five.minute lncre·
ments for calla above the max•
lmum.
There would be no change in
the .basic lifeline rate of $2.50
with a maximum . of 30 Un·
measured calls. However. these
customers would pay more ror
additional calls which now cost
flve ceDt.a each. 'Ille fim 10 callJ
at>ove the maximom would be
bllled at 10 cent.I each and for
anything over 40 the cost would
be 15 cents a call. The business nat rate would
go from $1 to $8. 70 a month.
<See PHONE, Pase I)
'
'
Irvine Fraud
Suspect Jailed
An Irvine man, whose land
fraud trial was scheduled lo ~ open today ln Phoenax, bas br-en
jailed there by a Judie who
claims the defendant violated
• the terms of an aareement
which hu allowed hlm to re-
main free pending his trial.
Clyde DiMell, 57, of 9 Wander-
e ini RUJ, was ordered Jailed for
r1 lhe duration of his criminal trial ~ by M arlcopa County Superior
Court Judge A. Melvin
McDonald.
Mc Donald made the ruling
' Wednesday at lhe conclusion of
1ury selection in the $5.5 million
land fraud trial of Dlnnell and
, Ken Duffy of 1870 Park Newport,
1 Newport Beach.
The two men wtte amc>nl 15
people-includln.c Dinnell's son Anthony and Duffy's wife Mary
Jo -indicted in September of .
' 1976 for their part in the opera.
t lion or a land firm known 85
Com blned Equity Assurance
wh1c h sold property at a
northeastern Arizona develop-
ment, Conch(>Lakea Land.
The felony Indictments alleged
that the members of the firm
grossly misrepresented the land
and that they also iltegally .sold
mortgages to the lots they had
already sold
Dmnell was lhe 1ubJe<:t of a
week-lone pre·lrlal hearing re·
quested by prosecutors from lhe
slate Attorney Gene.1l's office
who claimed he lied wben he
told the court last February that
he was too broke to afford a lawyer.
Proaecuton pointed out that
Dlnnell b~ launched a modla campalp In southern CaUforni•
to hype frozen sandwiches that
he and his son were marketln1
on a Mafia mour.
Judie McDonald, in orderin•
DinneJI jailed noted that be had
"wilUully" failed to comply wilh
an order stemmlna from that
February hearing to pay $500 a
month tow.ll'd the cost of h1a
court.appointed lawyer.
The judge further declared
that Dinnell 's business dealinas
and media campaiin was mis·
leadlne and unfair and constitut-
ed a violation or lhe February
court order allowing him to 10
free wilhout posting bail.
DinneU, in addition to the land
fraud cbarcea, races federal mall
fraud charges in connection with
another Arbona land fraud
acbeme and is c"""ntJy free
pending ap_peal on convlcUon of
income tax evasion last •Prinl In
Phoenix.
In addition, Dlnnell faces a
variety ot ct vii compla.lnts !Ued ln
Arizona.
H1s son, of 18732 Pasco Cortez,
Irvine, began servtn1 a ~e to
four year aen~ce II\ A.Hzona
st.ate /rt.on on Dec. 27. He re.
ctelve the sentence after plfad·
inc 1uUty to four felony collnts
stemmin1 ft'Qm tlte aame lud
fraud case for. whlcti bil lalber
and Duffy are beln• tried. •
F,....PllfleAI
COMP ANY DEFENSE. • •
pany, agricultural fields already
were sopping from a 1.98·inch
rainfall Dec. 29, and 0. 78 Inches
Dec. 26.
Since Jan. 5, an additional 6.3
inches were recorded, through 8
'a . m. today. Since Dec. 26, when
the Irvine Company says lheir
fields began to become saturat-
ed, unable to hold any more
water, 10.53 inches of rain fell, ·
CAgain through 8 a.m. today.
lrvme Company spokesman
Jerry Collins, who was ques-
tioned Wednesday about the
_rtood problem• and apparent.
construction delay1 in lhe San
Diego Creek Channel improve-
ment.I, gave lhe followin1 state-
ment !
Debate Stalls
Relief Effort
belt awale -aomethln• that
would be more attracUve and
more useful to the commwtlty.
"A project like that obviously
takes J~r to dulgn, to get ap.
proved and to build.
"This permanent channel,
which we're financing, has the
capacity to handle a 100.year
storm.
"The diversionary wasb-f'e·
qulrement to build the 100.year
·flood control channel-w1lS
designed for normal rainfaU.
"But we've not had a normal
rainfall, so there have been
some major problems, which we
are correctiqa as qUlckly as
possible.
"Meanwhile, we're eratified
lhat Irvine's developed areas,
where therft are homea. are
holdf DI up t Wi weU, unlJte a
Joi of other 8l"QI lit the state." The Irvine Poll Department
reported that street.I flooded and
closed today because of the .
latest 0.62 inches or rain in·
eluded:
-Culver Drfve, from Main
Street to Barranca Road, and
from Campus Drive to Bonita
Canyon Dri~e. The rain washout
near .Sarranca RO'ld wU keep that
section of Culver closed aUebt30
days, accordinf to newest re·
POrtl.
The Irvine Company bad pte-
dicted the ~ 1rould. be l)UH•
ble by this week; Sunday•a
ratns. however, wuhed out the
repatn.
-Bonita Canyon Drlve, trorn
MacArth\U' Avenue to Campm
Drtve.
-Rtdgelil:le, -from Unlventt.Y
Dri•e to Turtle Rock Drtv .
-Turtle ~k Ddv • from
Starcrest Drive to Sl rra a Road.
--JeffN,-JloJla. from the
Dl 10 ~ay to h"VlM Drive.
-Batninca llO d, from J • lrer Ro d to Sancl C nyoll Avenue.
~anes cmyoo Avenue. from
Barranca Road lo lrvln Cent.tr
Drive.
-HU:vard Avenue, from Mein
Street to Warner .Avenuo. Thia
road prtmartlj was closact to
dive.rt tr.ma on a Main Street.
Jamboree BOule.ord·Bai'ranca Road 'detour.
Scott Adds
Hat. If' Ring
For Senate .
Fountain Valley CJty Coun-
cilman Geor1e Scott ennoqnced
today he will 1eek the
Republican nomtnati9n for the
state 1enate seat beln.c vacated by ~n. Dennis Carpenter,
Scott &aid he was "•hocked .. by, .Republlean Carpen~& d~
cialon not to run lor re-eJecUon in the 38th Seqatortal 1>18trict.
con1lden:d a GOP1tron1hold.
The 36th Dlatrlct fo,f)UCles
rnoat of eoastal Oran&• .C9\lfltY h~oJn' Seal Beach \o San
Clemente, the SJ~dleback Valley, and 1 portion of icoutal
San Die10 Couaty that lnel~
Oceanside.
Scott, '5, bu served on the
Fountain VaUey council 1lnee
1969 and was elected mayor by ht. peen In 1973 and 1974.
The former president of the
Orange County Dlvt.iou of the
California Leasue of Cities
0974-76), Scott began his
political career as a Fountain
Valley parks and recreation
commissioner In 1964.
Scott worked as a junior and
high school teacher in Pismo
Beach, Lawndale, HonUngton
Beach and at Oran1e County
Juvenile Hall between 1961 and 1974.
He now runs a Fountain
Valley Insurance company.
Scott said, "government has
1rown away trom the people lt b
auppoaed ui serve.•• He added
that long-a,falted tax relief ls a
major problem.
He critlclUld state omclals i
mandatlnt local program•
without CUndJng lhem and for
"over-regulaUon" of the bull·
neas community.
Four olher hopefuls will be
challenglne Scott !or the 36lh 00-
lrict GOP nod in the June
primary.
~--· -·
..
lrvJne atreet5 lhat have been
fiooded at time1 an month were
on~e more clOled. Included were
aetUons of H~ard AVeftMC,
Sand Canyon Avanu Barranca
Road, Turtle Rock Drive, Culver
Drive, Jeffrey Road and Bonita Canyon Drive.
P,...PapAI
SNOW •••
the lower Mlsalaalppl Valley lnto
the lower Oblo V&lley.
School closures to Teua due
to snow were reported u far
south u Houston. which 11 about
SO mllet from tbe Gulf COaat. Most schOOla were shut down in
the Dallas-Fort Worth area
which had two Inches of •now.
Arltansu wu blanketed by
1now tbla mornJn1 and lhe
weather service said as much u
six lncbes might faU during the
day. Moat schools and many
buaineaaes and lnduatrll!S
closed. In Harrison, 10 inches of
snow topped tee that accumwat·
ed the past several days.
F,....PageAJ
HOUSING.· ••
or advisory. •
The Plannlnf Commission
wanted to know the same thine.
and asked for council direction
about how to treat the UCO
guideline..
Councilwomen Mary Ann
Galdo and Gabrielle Pryor Hid
the commJsaiooens •hould be in·
strucled to treat the cuidelinf;.S
as thou•ta they wefe mandatory.
"l'ilese are thlnp we're prob-'
abJy eoina to be dolnc Jn Irvine
anyway/' Mrs. Galdo said. "We
don't Mve to bave t.be state tell ua what to dO."
But Mayor Bill Vardoulls and
CouncUmaQ David SUia pre-
ferred to do nothblc. at leaat \ID·
tU the ~slature has finished
its 1ay an the guidelines.
Deaplt.e Mrs. Gaido'a precau-
tionary, •'Those wbo are most
concerned today with low~t
hou1lng are thoae wboae
mansions are 10101 to be
groateat in the. next Ute,"
Vardoulia and Silla wer un·
moved.
'f Tbe Anoel•&ed Press
A oew ltorm ayatem pushe'd
Into the Misslsslppl and Ohlo
valleya today, caualng at least
ll.s weather-related deaths and
makin1 ro~uls hazardous with
freezing rain and aoow. Cities as
tar aouth as Houston had 1now.
One m·an waa Jd~ed in
Alabama tbia mornin1 in the
collision of a tractor-trailer
tn:ack and a pickup &nd another
died in a motorcycle craah. ln
aysville. near Huntaville,
Raymond ThomJson and his
three chlldren di8d In a bll.ze
that fire omeiill1 blamed a
.;oheater in the chlldten'a room.
Weather offlclals said freezln1
· rain over the northern part of
Alabama was expected to
change to SQPW with an ac·
cumulation of up to two inches
forecast.
Meanwhile, the National
Weather Service issued heavy
snow warnings for Oblo, atre&dy
battered for two weeks with ex·
treme cold and anow. •
The new storm wb cent~
I
DlllY ............ ..,..,~
BACKYARD WALKWAY LOST ITS FOOTING AT CAPISTRANO 8EACH RESIDENCE '
Home Above Paclftc Catt Highway Set on Steel, Concrete Cal1aona
to snow were reported u far
outh u Houston, whkh ls bout '° mll from the Gulf Co t. Most schoo'b w r hut down ln
the Dallaa·Fort Worth area
wblcb h4d twolnch of now.
ArkaM was bl nk ted by
anow tbla mornlnf nd the
weather le?Vice sald as muCh as
she lncbes mlibt fall dwinl t.be day. MOit schools and many
bulineuea and lndustrlu
closed. Jn'Harrison, 10 inches of
1now ~ped ice that eumul •
"4 the past several days.
MempJtta, Tenn .. had an liicb
of 1now and schools were cloeed
for the sixth strai,bt. day
because ot allppery roadl.
The National Weather Service
~sled a travders' advisory for
the at te ot·Tennessee, aayln&
road conditions would worsen.
Forecuten 1J,ld lbe.re would be
accumulations of up to three
inches Jrom &he Cumberlands
• ' TEN C!:ENTS'
w t, unt~ t
orJ'rld •
Up to eldtt inc of now was
forecast for some areas of Ken·
tucky today, wb.lc:b was burled
In a root of snow earllw in the
weet.
Sub·freennl temperat.uN:s ex-tended Into southern Texu and
eaat ~ nortbem Alabama
and Georgaa early ~ay. Kin·
nesota, Nebraska and Montana
reported readin s below &ero
and North D at had reaainas
from 20t03000IOW&ero.
lnspeet~rs Out
2 Laguna ·candiiJli,tes Win Case ·
0BJ STEVE MITCHELL •• ...., ...... IUH
ComplalntS from two La1Wla
Beach City Council capdldatel
Wednesday night. means two
council-appointed planning com·
missioners will not serve as
precinct vOUng 1Dlp9cl.ort dur-1 n e municipal elections on
.March 7.
Candidate Howard Dawson
told City Council member• Wed.Desday Jlilflt that be ques·
tlona the proprlety of havtn1
councll-appolnted clty
employees act 8'I voting lnspec:·
tors in the council eltttloDJ.
Planninc Cominl11ioners
Belinda Blacketer and Betty
Fruman were .lhirett by Clty
Clerk Verna ROllingor to seiwe
aa votliii& ~ t two ol the
1• preclnci.I s t up for tho March
eteeuon.
Candidate K Uy H. Boyd also contested the appointment of tho
two commlaalooen u paid poll
ina~tors. ··she <th not b ve by
.. p~ l_nsj~~Qtl
lD a te~JePbOllie lrltel'\'leYt
Boyd aiao objected o
Villa1e Laguna and Laguna
Greenbelt officers aervJnc as
poll inspectors, cbargin& the city
clerk, a Village "acuna
member, with "seemlne to have
stacked the precincts with her
peopl ...
But Mn. Rollinger denies any
blu in favorin~ Village i.uuna
people or the two commlsS10rters
for th• posts.
.. 1 felt "it was appropriate to
fill the positions With the ~t
quallfed people. and I selected
them <Blacketer and Freeman>
because they are capable, not
because they happen to be plan·
nine commissioners.
Shd said the state election
code HYI the only requirement
!or election boal'd officers ls tbat
they be ~&lJtered cllf voters.
But several counCil members
e1ree4 the appc>intmentl cnate
prob1-ms.
C ouncltwom an Phyllis
Sweeney said, ~·1 tblnk that
perb aps appointed city
employees abouJdft•t 1erve <as
inspectors).
.. I'm not caatlb1 any dou'bt on
the integrity ot th e two <t8!;
nera) but the question bas
raised," Ibo said .
But councilwoman Sally
Bellerue was adamant ill her
1upport ol \he two appointments.
••Just because aomeone 11 a
plannln1 commllaloner. doesn't
mean they are biased," 1he eald.
Dawson Nld today he ~u not
quesUonin1 tho honesty of th&
two comml11ionera, .. 1 was
queatloQina Mra. Bellerue•s
judgment. Betty Freeman TIU
Sally's campaicn manager In
the 'aat election.'' /
<&ee POLLS, Pa1e A2
EYES SENATE SEAT
Fountain Valley'a Scott
s ...
th noor .. th y d1
turdy on th urn y tr
a t w blot'ks from tb DJs·
n yland Hotel up lnto th Santa
Ana Canyon
Sturdy said the 1unman who
poked a pistol into hia ribs told •
him to, "ltl.st keep drivin1. 1'11
ten you where to go."
Passengers reported they
were watched over by the
shotgun totin& b.tndlt. who stood
'at the rear of the bus and forced
them to lie in the alslo of the
bus.
One passenger, an elderly
woman who police refused to
identify, reportedly baJked at
obeying the hljacker'• command
to "hit the deck."
And ahe waa snowed to re·
rnain in her seat as her fellow
passengers folJowed the com·
mand.
Scott Adds
Hat to Ring
ForSeria,te
Passengers said at wasn't until
the bua halted at the end of
Esperanza Road east or Im·
perial Highway that they were
told to place their cash and
valuables into a pfflow case car·
ried by one of the robbers.
Oaffy,.. ..... VETERINARIAN GLENN CRAFT NOURISHES PATIENT
Alllng Se•I Found fn Sen Clemente Rec:overtng
Fountaln Valley Caty Coun·
c1lm1n George Scott announced today he will seek the
Republican nomination for the
state senate seat bcina vacated b~ Sen. DennisCarpcnt9r.
Scott said he waa ''shocked"
by Republican Carpenter's de-
cision not to run for re election
an the 36th Senatorial District,
considered a GOP stronehold.
The 36th Dis trict includes
most of coastal Orange County
from Seal 8each lo San
Clemente, the Saddleback
Valley, and a portion or coastal
San Diego County that includes
Oceanside.
Scott, .CS, has served on the
Fountain Valley council aince
1969 •nd wu elected mayor by
his peen in 1973 and 197-4.
The former president or the
Orange County Division or the
California Leaeue of Cities
0974-76), Scott beean his
political career as a Fountain
Valley parks and recreation
commissioner In 1964.
Scott worked as a junior and
high school teacher ln Pismo
Beach, Lawndale, Huntin•ton
Beactl and al Orange County
Juvenlle Hall between 1961 and
1974
He now runs n Fountain Valley insurance company.
Scott said, "government has
grown away from tho ~ople it.ls
• aupP,OSed to se"e... He added
that lona·awaited tax reUef ia a major problem. .
He criticized state officials for
mandat1n1 local procram1
Without = rand for • ·over·r attoa'' of tho busi·
ness community.
Four otber hopefuls will be
challendnc Scott for the 36th Dis·
lrlct GOP nod in the June
primary. '
Former American lndepen·
dent Party presidential can.
dldate John Schmitz of Corona
del Mar, Huntlneton Beach bual·
nessman Steve Holden, public
relationJ man GU Fer1u1on or
Irvine, and Costa Mesa cook
Joel Bender •lready have said
they wUI seek the JtepubUcan
nomination in the Mltl Senate
Dlltriet.
LB Candidate
. .:•,~~ --• ''I( • • , ... JI . ... .... ·-'\ ·~, ' ...
·-~ . " 1~ .T. ·-. -.t,. _ ...
While police uld the hl}ack
was well planned, some of the
victims reported the bandits
were somethin1 less than
thorough.
One woman, for example, said
the ring and necklace she wore
were of more value than the con·
tents of her purse that she dumped into the pillow case.
Those aboard the bus were
forced to recall what the two hi·
jackers Joo)ced like from when
the two men boarded the bus at
the Grand Hotel a short distance
from the Disneyland.
Then, the two men wore no
masks and apparently attracted
Jittle attention from those
headed to the Los An1etes airport.
But a few blocks from the
hotel, the two men puJled'ski
masks over their faces and re-
moved the shotgun from a' wrap-
ping that apparently save no
hlnt of what it contained.
From that point until they fled
into the orange grove the paJr
were in command of the bus, ill
driver and the 11 passengers.
If captured, the hijackers face
a possible 12 counts of kidnap·
ping as well as multiple counts
of armed robbery.
E',.._ Pqe Al
PISTOL •..
tion ot the Sex Pistol•' tour or Brazil. acheduled to atnt this
week. ·
Rotten, the splkey-hatnd lead
1l111er or the eroup, had tailed
American tans "boring"
because they were not violent
enou1b during the group's tour
or the United Stat•. The yres-eoce or poUce at many o the
Sex Pistols' American concerts
resulted in toned-down
performances by the best known ot the punk eroups.
A London newspaper, The
Sun, quoted Rotten as Hying: •·we biaven't liad any rowa. We
just •• down and •treed that
the end had come • • •
•
Most of tbt' Sta nfm I have
either pneumonia or lung
worms, she said. Like the
hospital's current patient, these
animals are typically treated wJth anUblot.ica.
Dr. Diefenbach has a good
record or survival amon1 his seal
pall en ta, sald Craft, who works at
a Santa Ana veterinary hospital
affiliate ot the San Clemente
hospital whenhelsn'tft111nelnfor
Dldenbach.
When he loses a s~a1, Dlefen·
back performs a post-mortem
on the animal, hoplnf to 11th~
additional lmowledce whkh will
help save seals in the future, Craft aaid.
Seals that respond to treat·
ment and recover are returned
to the beach. A colony of seals la
est a bllshed on rocks located
within viewing distance of the
San Clemente piel'.
"It isn't uncommon for a seal
to show up <>n area beaches,"
said Craft. "They are dan1erous
animals, though, and will bite,
so beach visitors should not •t>·
proach them. It ii best to con-
tact llfeguarda, who are tr~ned
to deal ~th aeals and other sea anlmala.'
Police Scout
Meeting Set
In Clemente
Laguna Schedules
-Odilil,iildtes Forum
• MEMPHIS, Tenn. <AP> -; Two duck hunters, one an
Episcopal prleat, saved three
en from drownJn1 ln the friaid Mlnlsafppl, then prayed over
j.belr decision to leave two
Others to the rtver.
Bill Maxwell and the Rev.
Geor1e Hart bad lowed three
survivors of a boalin1 accident
to a bank Wednesday and were
JOlnC back for the other two.
Bus jack
.. 'Trail'
~·~raced ~ ' •
"Wt didn't have cn.ach llaht
left and it was eetttns colder,"
said Hart. pastor of Immanuel
Ept1copat Cburcb In Ripley,
Tenn. "We made a detllloo at
that tltne to leave the two dead
men ln the river and save the ~hree on the bank.
"It wu the hardest decision
I've ever bad to make. I'm &oin&
over to BiD MaxweJJ's lonl&bt
and have sorne prayers."
Hart, 36, and Maxwell, 30,
were rotumini from duck hunt·
tne on the river near AahPQrt,
bout 50 miles upriver frorn
Memphl&. wh n they aaw five
red objects 11b0ut 200 yards from
the bank.
"At ant I thought lt was a red
plastic buoy that bad bust~
up," Hart aaid in a Jelephone in·
terview Wednesday n11bt.
"The1 were men wearin& red
Flooding_
()/Roads
Reported
WATER PUYS
DIRrY TRICK
life Jackett ...
He aslCed one man· how long
they had been In the dver and
was told only, "Too Ion«"
Hart and axwell made three
trips in their 18·foot, flat·
bottomed boat to tow the IW'·
vivors to the bill.
''We couldn't put them in our
boat because they wei&hed too
much," he said.
Hart aaid he had seen a huce
'Pistols'
I e
,J.ast Shot
t N&W YORK (AP) -J~
Rotten, known to vomit on 1ta1e
and squirt beer at fant while
perf ormU>g wiih tho BrlU•b punk rock ero~p the Sex Pi.toll,·~ he'll ht dOioc tboM
th.Inga aloDe from now on.
"As far u I'm concerned, the ~ band doesn't exiJt at the mo-ment. That's about alt I can
say," Rotten said eariy today In
telephone lntentew.
Rotten said the group will not
perform .. in the orialnial
format.''
"It means I'm carrytnc on and
the rest are quittJnlf," 1aid Rot-
'ten, 21, after be left tho rest or
the group in Los An1elea.
The apparent break·up could
explain a last-minute eancella-
.' ti on of the Sex Pistols• tour of
Brazil, scheduled to start this
week.
Rotten, the spitey·balred lead
singer of the group, bad calJ~
A merlcan fan a .. bortne'
because they were not Yiolent
enough during the group's tour
oi the United States. The pres·
ence of police at many of the
Sex Pistols' American concerts
resulted tn toned·down
performances by the best known
of the punk groups.
A London newspaper, The
Sun, quoted Rotten u saying:
"We haven't bad an)' rows. We
Just sat down and agreed that the end had come •••
"We have aooo aa far u we could IO· Everyone wu trying
to turn us into a big band group,
and I bated that."
The breakup comes at the
height of the Sex Pistols'
popularity, including their first
American album, .. Never Mlnd
the Bollocks, Here Come the Sex
Pistols."
Rock Figure
Hospitalized
Mall Stores
Spotlighted
An l:ptroductlan to tbe ato.ru
that make up South Cout Plua
is ln a 28·pa1e ma111ln1 1n
toda1'1 Dai11 Pilot.
lCverJthlhl from 1ourmet eookwear and meat and e!Meee
food pacts to shoes, ean be
found tn Oran1e County's
larceat 11\oppln1 mall, South CoutPlua.
Look into the 1pedaJ South
Coast plaza mafQifte for the
man1 specialty ahopa and deo
partment stores reviewed lD
toda7•a Dail.Y Pl.lot.
EYES SENATE SEAT
Fountain Valley'• Scott
ScottAtUis
Hat to Ring
For Senate
Fountain Valley City Cowi-
cllman George Scott announced
today be will seek tbe Republican nomination for the
s> fl
to c\ to v Juab
rled by of tbe robbers.
While POUce aid tb hlJact
was well pttinntld. eom of tho
vlctlm1 reported the bandits
were 1ometbln1 leaa than thorouJh,.
One woman, for ample, uid
the tliDg a necklac• ebe wore
were of more val\ie tban tho COO·
tents of her purse that the
dumped into th pillow ease.
Those aboard the bus were
forced to recall what the two hi· jacken looked like fro when
the two men boarded th bus at
the Grand Hotel a cllltuco uom the Dbueyland.
Then, the two men wore DO
masks and apparently •ttncted
little attentlon ·from those
headed to the I..01 An1eles airport. .
But a few blocu from the
hotel. the two men pulled ski
masks over their faces and re-
moved the •hoteun ~ a wrap. ping that apparently · 1ave no
hint of what it contaln.ed.
From that polot. unW they fled into the orange · cron tbe pair
were in command of tbe bua, ita
driver and the 11 paaseniere.
If captured, the blJacken face a possible 12 C01Ultl ot kidnap.
ping aa well u mulUple counts
of armed robber)'.
state senate seat being vacated f
bySen.DennisC.,-penter. J M h
Scott said be was "shocked" e88ee orp Y by Republican Carpenter's de·
ciaion not to run for re-etecUon Di p •
in the 36th Senatorial District, es,• ftV&te consideredaGOPstrongbold. · .
The 36tb District includes F al Slated most of coastal Orange County IJDer
from Seal Beach to San Clt1mente, tbe Saddlebaclc
Valley, and • portion of coutal
San Diei<» County that lncludea
Ocean.sldo. -Scott. 45, bu served on the
Fountain Valley council 1lnco
1169 and was elected mayor by
hi• peers In 1973 and 19'7';
The Conner prealdent of the
Oranse County Division of the
Call!ornia Leasue of Cltles
(l-974·76), Scott began hlJ
political career as a Fountain
Valley parks and recreation
commiaaloner In UM.
Scott worked as a ju.nlor and
high school teacher in Pismo
Beach. Lawndale, Huotlneton
Beach and at Orange County
Juveoile Hall between 1961 and mt. .
Ho now runs a Fountain
Valley insurance company.
Scott said, "rovernment hu
ll'OWD awv from the people lt 11
•\IPPGISed erve." "He added
thaf 1cma· tu relief'• a major mri!Hin.
He erlUdied ttate offtctall for
mandatln1 local pro1ram1
wit.bout fUDdfn8 them ai:ld for
"over·re8\Witloa" of the bust·
ness commuDlty. .
Four other bo'Detuls will be
cballenlinl Scott lor'tho Mth Dia·
trlct GOP nod ln the June
primary.
Former American Indepen·
dent Party .t,r.:!\d•ntla\ can· dldate John ts of Corotla
del Mar, Hunttnston .Beach bull·
ne11man Stcrve Holdn, publla
relatfom man GU l'er~ ot Irvlne, 8ncl Coata Mesa cook
Joel Bender already have said
they will seek the RepabUcan
nomlnatkm 1D tho astb Stoato Diltrld.
Private tunerel lervlca have
been ICbedulecl for Jtaee Jay
Murphy, IOD&tlmo Ba.Ibo& Nii·
dent, who, wlth Iler late
bu1band. Robert. once owned
the BamboO ROom and tbe Ren-
dezvoutBallroom.
Mn. Muq>by died Wednad.ay
at a Harbor Area convalescent
bo1pltal Jutt before her 83rd
blrtbday.
Mrs. Murphy came to Balboa
ln 1937 with her buaband wbeA
they bouiflt Bill'• Cotfee Sbop.
The next year they built the
Bamboo Boom wblcb stood near
the comer of Main Street and
Balboa Boulevard where the
parking Jot for Dlllman's
restaurant is located.
In lfHO, tho Murpbys bought
tho famoua ballroom a block.
away which they kept until um.
Mr. Murphy died in 1952 an4
Mrs. Murphy later sold the Bamboo~m.
Kr. M\i'phy WU a f~
member Of the N~rt Hltbor
Elkl Lod&o and be and Illa Wife
were both early membera of the Balboa '1Ba1 Qub.
SF to Start
Gay Services?
SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -San
Franclsc:o 11upervSaora may be
ready to hire two IAY mental
health worker1, one of w~m
woQid aerve u a "coo.rdhlator of
service." for the cl~'•
• bonaqaal population. edn~. the aujVVlsOra•
finance coD)rQlttee approved tho
hlrtna after Dr. WUllam
Goldman, t.be clty'1 1Ueldal
bealtb dlrictOr, recoma:aeDdlcl th~.mov
N ewpori Beach fir men and a city
workman aurvoy the mess created at the
intersection of MacArthur Boulevard and
Pacific Coast Highway about l:;lO p.m.
~imMan
Faces Newport
Kidnap Rap
An Anabelm man ta ha custody
Jn Newport Beach today after he
alle1edly trled to abduct a
woman who wu walkin1 to her central Newport home early tbla
momlng.
Polloe boOted Fred Castro, M,
of 310 Palals road, Anaheim on
suspicion of attempted kJdnap-
Pinl for his alleged part h1 tho 2 a.m. lnci&!Pt. HlJ Jl•)'eat.IOld intended vie·
tlm told olfleera •b• WU Walk·
ine home when Cuti"O pulled up
next to her 1n h1a ear and mo-
tioned Wltb a sun for her to cet
in. Police aa1d CUtro 11 a du!
niute.
The woman fied loto ber bome
and w8*ebed as C.utro parted
hia car and walked Into the
nearby Stag bar.
Police called to tbe 1cene1 aald
they f O\D'ld Cutro w•lkln1 from
tbe bar, beaded ln the direction
of tbe woman's home.
Al
RACE •••
Mra. Kuehn.1 lixth dlltrlct takes
in old Corona del Mar and Irrine
Terrace.
ThoH who have taken out
nominaUoo papers are:
-i'lut Dl1trle&: Donald
Strauts, 101 Via. Venezia, Jell
Brleey, 440 6"llle Ave., Balboa.
nd John W. TUdt • 8lJ E. Bay
Ave .. Balboa.
__,.,r.,.,_ UllRD..:t: Eveb'D Hart,
48$ Redlands Av ,, n4 Jefr
Oould, 183116tb St.
-P attb Dldrlct: J ekle
Heatber.1500 Dorothy Lail , aDd
Paul IL Caldnll. Wt RuUancl
Road.
-81xtll Dlltrlet: L ellle
Kuebn, 1831 s adrift Drive,
Corona de1 ar: Padl Hummeti
416 HeUotJ"Ope Ave-. CO de
Mar 8Dd Dam l J, Ryan, I05
Poppy Ave., C«Ona ael Mar.
FUin1 in the alxtb di1triet
cloaea Feb. 2. In the other lhnile.
becaute no lncunibent wJll be
running, tllln1 reml.inl open un·
tll .Feb. 7.
~-;:r .. -z::
Phone 642·8112
- -~ -----=----=---~ --
! .. BJ Ttie Altocl1ted Pre •
}. new storm 1y1tem pushed Imo tho' Ml11lulppl and Ohio
valley• today, eausin1 at Jeut.
Jlj wcather0related deaths And
iklnC roadl huardous with
zln& _raln aad IDOW. CJlies ..
far south u Houston had snow.
(>ne man wu killed ln
abama t.hia mornln1 In the
oOtUalon or a tractor-traller ek and a plckUp and another
iSiiid in a motorcycle crash. IA
1y1vllle, near Huntlvllle,
ymond Thomp on and bla
Saddleback Valley Unified
Scbool Dtatrlct trustees prom· i•H Wednesday to Individual· I l)'. protest the 1rantin1 or liquor
U~f nlea for businesses across
th• atreet from their new
Laauna HJlla m1h School.
The trustees alao asked
~perintendent Richard Welte to
make a similar protest to the J>.uilnelMJS planned as part of a ~opplnt cent.er at the. corner of
* * *
Allcla Parkway and Pano d8
Valencia.
Their action came after Marie
Howell, the student board
member, labeled drink.Int u "a
rapidly rrowtns and devastaUn1
problem amoac the youth of this
valley."
After ciUng state and CO\Dlty
1taU1tlc1 on the problem,
Howell, a Mission Viejo mah
School student, sald bl.a own IW'•
ci1lons reforming th late•s
mental anct penal lnatltutlom
and 1uaranteclng tbe cJril,l'lgh:ti
of black.I llnd the )>®r.
Webster, a l!ltcult Judge,
seems to have made few U w
enemlee and till court declllons
have rarely broken new tr'OUrid
In nearly'tk decade or public life •
.. Bill ~ never been one who
would hit the newspaper• by be·
Inc a showboat," said lonner
bug est
Phone
The Saddleback Area Co·
qrdinating Council's plannln• ro-
vtew board approved the coun·
ty'a en'flionmental impact re-
port <EIR> for tile propoaed
Allao Creek Corridor Wednesday
nicbt in El Toro.
SACC iJ one of approximately
150 aaenclea and peopl' offered
an opportunJty by the count)' to
review the corridor plan before
it is eventually CONlderect for l apyroval by the plannJ.na com· m asion and board or
supervisors.
The plan and. Ill EIRI deals
with Aliso Cree~·· entire
watershed from Coot•s Comer
19 miles downstream to the
ocean at Allilo Beach in Soath Lacuna.
Respodse to the plan,Pl'OJ)Oled
to offer a network ot bicycle,
walkine and horseback trails,
parks and open apace la due In
the county environmental
management ll&ency <EMA) by
Jan. 24.
However, an EMA spokesman·
said early today that bis or·
ganization expects the response
deadline to be moved to Feb. S.
The plan, ill EIR and public
comments are to be forwarded
along with staff proposals tot.be
county pUannior ~ommJ111lon
sometlme Jatec-1n February, the
spokesman said. Final approval
rests with the board of
supervisors followlnc recom-
mendatldna by the plannlna
commlJaJon.
SACC and UC Irvine formed a
study team in 1973 to 1tudy the
Aliso Creek Corridor. The study team's Peport "Allao Creek-
Forest to the Sea" proposed the
first overall recreation eorrldor
plan used as an interim CUlde
for review of development pro-
posals in and alona the creek.
BUS •••
Passencers reported they
were watched over by the
shotaun toting bandit who stood
at the rear ot the bus an4 forced
them to lie in tho aisle of the
bus.
One passenter, an elderly
wornan who police refused to
identify. re:Eedly balked at obeirlng the aclter•1 eommand to .rblt the d ...
And abe wu allowed to re. mm in her seat as her fellow
passengers followed thi com· mand,
Pasaaigen aatd lC Wdlltt unttt
the b\11 \batted at tbt act ot
Baperama Road eaat of Im·
penal W(hway tbat they nnr
told to place thetr ca1h and
valuabl• Into a pillow cue car•
ried by OM of the robben.
While J)Oltce said the J'llJaCk
was wett plaMed, some of the
victims reported the bandits
were sortletblnf lt!u than
thorough. ·
One woman. for example, sald
the ring and necklace she wore
were of more value than the con·
tents of ber purse that 1he
dumped Into the pillow cue.
Those ati0ar4 the bus were
forced to nc•ll what the two hl·
jaeten IOc*id like trom when
the two to.cl\ bOINed the bus at
the Grand Hotel a shot'$ diatance
frotD the Dimeyland.
Then• the two men wore no
masts an4 apparently atttActecl
little attention from thoae
headed: to th• Loa Aiitele• alrport,4
F,.._PflfleAl
Jon.'' he Jaid. Ko~ said action a1a1nst the
teacbert• union should not
roO•ct on ita members, the
teacher• for whom he J:lOlds ·~eraonal high regard.'' Mn. Young also spoke In au~
port of the teachers. "However,
I am not supportive of the un-
ionlam that bas gained control of
our teachers and exploltec1
them. Our differences could
have been resolved without a
strike. except for ambitiou~ un-
ion leadership, .. she argued.
"I must be either the most perauaaive man ill the world or
the teachers are the bi1&est
fools you'Ve ever seen," replied
Bill Mecham, SVEA presldeiit.
Arcul.n• that teachers woUld
Dot ,have joined &be attlke
Without ''just cause,,. Mecham
said a suit against the associa-
tion wou.ld be aeainst the
teachers because they are the
DSIOClation.
Expressing concern that con·
tinued consideration of a suit
would lead to the bitter feelings
which exiJt.ed between teachers
and trustees last year. Trustee
Georae Henry argued that the
atrllce should be left as a dead is-sue. ••u you can tell me what good
lt (a lawsuit) will do for educa·
Uon, l '11 join you," he said.
F,...P-.eAI
SCOTr •••
major problem.
He criticized state officlalJ for•
mandating local programs
without funding them and !or
"over·reiulation" o! .tho busi·
nesa communitv. •
C'A>onty. Views
Fair Weafb.er ,.
For Weekend
Rain ~at drenched Orange
County yet a1aln today shOuld
be dlmlniab~ on Friday and
nuy aive ""8.Y to clear weather
this weekend, the National
Weather Service laid today_
Roaer Hlll of the weather
service said the forecast it for 10
percent chance of showers on
Friday and !air weather over
the weekend.
However. he added. "We're
watching somelhinl that rili&ht
mak problems for us on Salm'·
day. something might be ~m
ing in, ao we're checkmt it out."
The latest downpour con Ued
to swell rainfall totals iii the
county, with many reetons hav·
ing received twice a.a much as
last year at this time, and sUCht·
ly more than twice aa much as
the county's avera1~ tor thil
dale.
Huntington Beach bad re.
corded the heaviest ralnf8ll by
this momtng. with • 24·bour
total of .94 fnebes t111lled by
rainwat.A:her J. Shermoa Denny.
Total for the ae.apn la 12.&a, up
from,8.52 lnches laat year.
The storm appeared to be
movtng slowly down the cc>ast.
By this morning, Onm1e Coast
Collea• in Costa Mesa bad re-
ceived .76 lnchel. ~· Beacb .43 inches, and Laguna ~lcuel
.2S inches;
The hl&heat season total in the
county conUnuea to be
mcaaurilcl at SaDUago Ped on
Saddleback Mountain. Its 24-
hour tOtal WH • .o laches, for a
season sum ol 30.Z inches. 1,,ast
year at W. Ume it had receiVed
l4.(lncbes •
* * *
Howell also asked tb t
trueteea oppose proposed
Ie•l1lailon wblcb would allow
lt·1ear·old1 to purehaee aC)d ~onau ~hol, reVlew a p
vtous al ror a course atudy In e area of alcohol and
drug abuse. sponsor adult
education classes on the prob·
lem1 of the heavy drinker and
cooperJte wtth community aaen·
ciet deWln1 With the Problem.
"We didn't have mucb light Jett and it was getUng colder;•
said Hart, pastor of Immanuel
Eplacopal Church in Ripley,
Tenn, 0 We made a declitoci al
that time to leave the two dead.
men ln the river and aave the
~an the bank.
"It was the hardest decision
I've enr bad to mate. lt-za eoms
over to Bill Maxwell'' tonJght
and bave eome J)f81etr. •• ~ .
• •
s
Whiskey S es
Outpace Trains
NOtJBWl&I' INDVSTalES MAY NOT tnoaa muc to 100 but tlM products made bJ lta eonaUt t companl are famllW' bousebold names. IA edditloD to euuy· Saft,
the No. 2 ICOteb wr JU. tho lineup lncludes Mouton
Cadtt, lariat aeWn1 brand ol Frecch wm In tho Ulllwel
State : Fruit ot tho Loom and BVD underwear; Acme. Dlqo and Dan POil bootl.
In Unioil Underwear. Northwest owm tho world's
largest producer of men'• underw ar. In Acme Boot, It owna the world'• iarcut producer of western d c:uuU
boots.
The largest .tar added to th.LI firmament tho Cota· Cola Bottlinf Co., of Loi Angeles. wbich H lnemu Plclt
up for P>O mllllon. 1t wlD brins=~~ $3C)O million ot aal 1nto tbe Nortbwett c:o1Umn ID water <Mrowbe ) u well u IOft drtnb. •
With lcotd:l and COile imd boota and anderwnr. w'bO needs a ra1lroa4 -•a t1ro tilakcr for that ma~r?
Tbe apecu.lat!On that haracteiiied .southern Ca !onfl l es actirity In recenr. It ••no problem0 '!ft
today's market. a real te czecutlre of United Calllomta B&nk a.ya.
Teatllyilii before a con home own lp ta
force b ID toai Beac , Letahtcm B. Tuck, enlor Vice prealdeat IJ1 chart• of UCB'a nw estato l dlq, sald.
"The •peculaUv• .lplW'•• WU • WDJI011ll')' •ben'atlon .. and the ooco-ln-a·Uletlme pbeftornenon" result from a
combinlltl<ID ol cJ.ttwn1tances which we will Probabli nenr eQert ac ln."
D!ICl.IBINO SVCR SPECVLA'nON u th• 0 1eourra of an oiderty real estate market," Tue~ 1atd l])ftulatlcm started ln 19'76 but went largely unreco~ unUP'h0'1le11 •
werereadyfordeUveryln197'7." · .
Lenders and bWlden toOt remedial action -Umltlnt
loan1 to owner-occupants u IOOll aa the extent of the
apecutatlve ~enomenon became knoWn, ho aild.
He wed t.b con1telllclW panel, a sub-unit ot UJe
House Bant1D1 Committee, to atlmulate tho bo\lllftl ~· duat.ry bY tabtrollinl and redlldna inflatloft ... When houS·
1n1 ii concemed, lnllaUon meea few r aDd few r houleS can be pun:hued for m01'9 end more dollan;• Wd. • "ltortPBe ftinda have iboln more than adequate COt two. 1ean;•,e truct aald. 0 And hOm all appearances th.;
1hould be ample for 1t78. The OQly tbnat ta th lnte?ut
rate oo attractive 1ovemmental lssu which, if blah
enouah. woUld cauae wfthclrawals from thM aa ac. counts.••
GE Credit Office
Tell8 Move to FV
•
SJ!.Drts ..
•
OT
"
----
----------
Mathews·Elected to Ball of Fa1ne
NEW YORK <AP> -Slu111n
·rd basem n Eddie th ws,
'one of baseball' roatut home
run bitten, wu elected to e
Hall of Fame today. •
The 4&-year-oJd .Mathew1, tied
wlth Hall of Famer Ernie Banb
for nlnth place on the all·tlme
home run U1t with 512, was
.elected by the Baseball Writers
Association of America.
In order to tain admittance,
'.Mathews nf'edcd to receive at
lea1t 15 percent of tht votes br.
members of tho BBWAA. He co·
I cted30lotthembanot1 t. ,
ath • who s~t q\ost of
his major lea1ue carttr with th
Braves, in Bosic.. and AllUlta
before windln1 up with tbe
Detroit Ti1era, had finl1bed
second ln the Hall or Fame
b Uotlng last year. when Banks
wae the only player elected by
the writers.
Tbls time, Mathews was the
only player to be selected to the
Hall at COoperStown, N . Y.
Outfielder Enos Slauchter
finished attond in the ballotin1,
24 ehort of the 285 heedod ror elec·
tion.
"I'm still in 1tate of shock,"
11id M th~•. who wu tht 51th
player elected by the writers
since the flnt year of votin• bl
li36.
Ma thews bad a career batUnt
avera1e of .271 and was a atrOnc
candidate in hi1 first year on tho
ballot, 19'74, wh~ he collected 118
votes. After that, he pulled 1411.
189 and 239 last year.
Pollo...tng Slauchter were out·
fielder Duke Snld r , who re·
celved 25' vol , the late Gil
Hodses, with 22 , and pltch r
Don Drysdale, who h d 219:
The)' were th only players to
rec lvemoreth n200votes.
lrJ a thews became the fifth
third b cman elected to th Han
of Fame, but only the GCOnd
selected by the welters. Pie
Traynor .tso was cbos n by the
writers, while Home Run..:Bak r,
Jim my Colllna and Fred
'LinC!strom w Jnnalloo by the
vt'terans• c:omm{ttc •
DARIN BOWEN (33) CHASES THI BAL~ GARRITY (25), STEVE DAVIS (41), JEFF TUTTON (45) TANO IY.
FV Wins at the Buzzer, 56-54
Rei/f's Dramatic ~t Defe~ Edison in Overtime
By GLENN WHITE
Of U• CMilf l'li.4 Staff
Time was tlckln1 tt way as
the cloc k worked its way
toward '.00 in the overtime
'period or Wednesday night's
Fountain Valley-Edison (Hunt-.
ington Beach) Sun1et Leacue
basketball game, played before
2,166 fans.
Fountain Valley's Barons had
wssession and were worklnf for a •hot aa close to tho end o the
period as possible.
.. Ten seconds. remained 11 they
~passed the ball around the visit·
ring Chargera' dtlenae. It fi1ured
that Barons 11corin9 whit Roger ~Holmes would. prob bly t ke the ~hot that wolild break a $4·5'
deadlock or send th duel Into
'
econd extra session.
It didn't work that way,
however. 1he ball e me to
Charlie Reifr, Who had worked
Is way open. The hot lef\ his
h nd1 with :02 on the clock.
Jt 1wishd tbrou h the 'net
"ith :00 r m nlng and co ch
Dave Brown's forces had
bagged a 56-M triumph.
The 'ijetofY I ft tb Baront
alone atop the lea1ue stanclincs
and left Edison tied tor second
place with Huntin1ton Beach
Hi1~· 'E on, it turned out, had its
fina 1asp at winning when one
of its ironmen stepped to the
rree throw line with 1: 59 to 10 In
reaulatlon and the aco,re tied al
54. "
It wu a one·and-one situaUon.
But the 1hooter missed and the
Barons rebounded.
Edison Dever got the ball again.
Fountain Valley held the ball tor ono Jut shot and Holmes
took a 18-footer :with a 1econd
left but was off tariet.
ll'hen the Barons sot the tip to
begin overtime and a1aln they
worked the delay, putUns their
hopes on one last sbot.
This time it worked.
Edison had Cotten orr to a
paralytln1 start, turning the b 11
over 10 times in the first quarter
na havln& 10 fouls HleASed
against it as opposed to no
turnovers and two fouls on the
Barons. • Yet the Char er1 of coach Don
Leavey sot it to1ether after that ·
and they did it with a swarmlng
delense, one which plagued
shooters to tho point where the
Barons made good on only 30
percent or their first half shoti.
Meanile, the Charsers were hitttna 55 percent clip from
the rtel .tho half.
They h Ci 1urged to a 30-23 ad·
vantage when tho first of two
crippUns things happened to them.
And It was perhaps the most
damacin1 since It eave Fountain Valley fJve points.
Edison had Ju.t substituted -
the only time in the came 811 Of
ill startera weren't on tbe noor.
The reserve was charted with a
toul 1hortly after he came In.
When the foul was called he
alle1edly told offlcial Spe y
Castillo, "no way wa1 that a
foul."
CasUUo charged Edison with a
technical foul tor the remark,
which Castillo later aaid con-
t lned noproranity.
1-'ounuun Valley took advan·
tace ot the ~portunity •• Mike
Isr el&k)' popped jn two free
ICCC Hosts Touniey
Fired Allen
To BeC01ne
LA Coach?
WASHJNGl'ON tAP> -Georce Allen. who(;e phllOSOpby
or using aging "el rans pro•
duced five playoff berths ln the
last Se\'en yenrs, hos been fired ns coach and eneral manaaer
or the Washineton Redskna by
team pr<l$ldcnt Edward Bennett
Wllllams.
Sports edator George SOiomon or the Washington PQst, ln a
copyrighted .trtlcle, ~d former
Redskin• quarterback Sonny
Jur1ensen, now a sporucaster
for telcvblon taUon WTOP·TV.
confirmed the, firln in in·
tervi ws Wedn sday wltb mt ams.
• Williams reportedly was at a
meeting Wednesday night and
was not available for comment.
Allen alSO was Wl&vailable.
A Redskins s)>Okesman said
W'lliam1 attend4td funer I
eervlc earlier in 'lhe evenlna
for Redskins controller Chester
Minter but did not mention the
fl ring.
WllUama called a news con·
terence at Redskins Park last
July 14 to announce that the
Redskins and Allen bad agreed
lo a new four-ye1&r contract al·
lcigedly c lUng ror an annual
aalary of *250,00Q.
Allen did not attend the new1
conference because of'a death in
hi• f1miijr but he aid, through a
statement read by his son, th t
he was glad the aareement wu
reached.
Ho ever, Allen nev t signed
the contract becau • he id,
thcr re l gal tecbnlcaUli
that needed to be atr igbtened
out. :!'he major hitch ln A\len
a1gnin the new contract, ac·
cordlna to reports, wa5
Williams' desire to have mor
say in the team's financial mat·
ters and~nnel.
''I thoueht we reached an
agreement," WUUams told the
Post. "La.at Saturday WIS SIX
months Slm:c we made the an·
nouncement ..!. With his approval
-and riothing hapJ>e?:lCd,