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1978-01-25 - Orange Coast Pilot
• 'Dream. Goes On' In Crash 0pens 'Scofl arotiM the tOOrld dU be Cooking tor .o flrlclJt moonm rdcM toftidll toM1k t"M11 Cf~ Bvms Nk!1d in '8bft6r 61 f.IO'I ,Robm 81&1U• blrlhCf011. li(q. A7 • l•lle'x • .. , "' ~ . U.S. Tracked . Russ Spyeraft w ASHINGTON (AP) -The dlleovery Jut month that. Soviet satellite wu malfuncUonin1 and likely to cruh -aomewhere - Ht off weeu of tense, aecretlvo watt.mi by diplomata ud ldm- Uata. The nuclear.powered spy satellite crashed Tuelday near Great Slave Lake In tar northwest Canada afttt plunliDI tbrouO the at.. motphere u a 1trealdn1;d1aintelf&l,ln1 fireball - BlJT 'JUE END 01' COSMOS 95f be1an late tut year When computers at the North American A.Lr t>efeme COmmand Ill Colorado, which keeps tabs on ,,548 manmado obJecta lll apeH, sianaled that the Russian aatelllte wu alo\lri.q down and dropplq. For weeks, radar tracked the satellite'• deterlotatlna orblta while Carter adminlatration offtclab waited for the &Meta to of· flcially Worm them that the aateWte was comJna down. Finally, national security adviaer Zblpllew Brzeztmti cal.19d in Soviet Ambusador Aoatoly Dobrynln on Jan. 12 to eJq>NU American concern about the poalbilit7 of radloactlve debda fall· ing tn populated areu. B8ZEZINSKJ SAID TUFSDAY THE Soviets were "com,... ly cooperative" after the U.S. broached the aubject of the satelllte. and for almost two weeks the two countries exchan&ed lnformat&oG ' about the satellite. The chief concern was the nuclear reactor, which senerat.ed power tor the satellite's radar, intended to keep track of U.S. Navy hips and submarines. The reactor wu supposed to separate after the satellite's useful life was over, to be jettlson.cl lnto a blib, aafe orbit that would k.eep it circlln1 tn space for bu.ndrMI of yean. · But the reactor Oil ColmOI 8M failed to HParat.e upon order Jatc in December. ON JAN. 11, DOBaYNIN INFOKllED the White House that its greatest fear wu unfounded. The enriched uranium In the .satellite could not reach a critical mus and explode, be aaid. But that left the admlnistraUon with several problems. The main worry wu that the nuclear material ml&ht survive re-entry and either bit the ground OT dialntearate and spread throuah the atmosphere. State Department spoketWOman Jill Scbuker aaid the uranium wu considered potenUally lethal ii anyone were aposed directly or for • proloo1ed period. The second problem wu tryi.Q& to determine when tho satellite was 101.n& to fall. Tbe tblrd wu ~ wbat pncau• lions to take. THE P08smu; IMPACI' OBA covered mueb oltbe WCJl'ld. The sateWte orbit wu deslped to nry each dreult IO it would pass over every major landmau, lnclUd.lne all areu of tbe Um~ Slates. About the only areu lt did not coftl" were Antuctlca, m01t of Greenland and the extreme northern parts of Canada, tbe SoYl Union and Scandlnavla. And, the satellite'• deterloratlne condition made lt lmpoqlble to predict exacUy when the device would come down. Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau, explalnln& his reuon for not wamln& the Canadian people about the threat. aald that an boUr before the satellite hit, .. it wu stlll poealble itmljbtbave landed ln the southern hemlapbere rather than t.U northern hemisphere. • .Obviousl7 we did DOt want to alert nery square Inch ofterritoryinCanadathataomethln&mlPtland.'' MS SCUVUB SAID THE Cartel' admlnlstraUola did not ln- lorm either the public or local omc1111 about the lltuatlelil beCauao of th~~~=~tee did DGtify other eou.ntries that ml&M'be a(· rected, however, tncludln1 Japan, Australia, New Zealand and mem hers ot the North Atlantic Treaty Or1anl&atloo. ........ 11_ And teams of d~mlnatlon expert.I were put qn ......,..,,,. around ihe country, prepared to recover any radfoactlve wastes that mi&ht fall in U.S. territory. ..:_..,. At 3:53 a.m. PST, the aatelllte wu tu.mblinf 09G' the PSQ.11C Ocean when lt bJt the atmosphere. It broke apart. lta piece• ~ ang red ns they streaked acrou the predawn sty trailed by l"'CIU streamers. * * * • The fifth winter snowstorm of the month has left the Grand Canyon lo Arizona with BOVANCASE. seven clients ls now .. tainted. .. They rgue that the panel 1bould not bo alJowed to .gain eon Ider evidence st mmln from the killiba ot BOvazi last October22. Bovan wu shot outalde the El R ncbito Restaurant In Newport • . ach alt.er belna confronted by what police e was a trio of .. btred suns" Imported rrom the Bait Coast. Earlier, Grand Jury evidence Included tho alleeed confession of Jerry Peter Flori, 41, of HWJt- ln gton Bel.ch who, the proeecu· lion clalrn1, admitted that be shot Bovan nine Um•• In a reprisal planned by ~rators Of Prasa..i.m Distributon Inc .. a Newport Beac:h investment firm. The Cr8nd Jury wu told that Flori, A.OthOny "Little Tony" Marone Jr., 23, and Raymond Steven ~. 28, all of Hunt· ineton Beach, were elven the contrac:t dn Bo'lan after the vie· tim pJinned tho Ind.napping of Prasadam prlftclpal Alexander Kulik, 28, of Newport Beach. Fiori remains held in the F,....PageAI SEK ••• Ford Flays Ta:x:Pro~am SAN DIEGO <AP) -In hls sharpest attack on Jimmy Carter since Jeavlna offlee, forpter ~resiit nt eratcl· .a. Foi'cl rtltldaed tbe AdmlnWra· tion '• defale et. a 1t could ''leftftl.Y n•· Uonal security of tho United Stat.ca... • .. -........ PHOTO OF TYPICAL SOVIET COSMOS SPY SATELUTI! Craft Like Thi• Fen From Orbit Over Canada Valley Teen Dies ·'As Car Hits Truck Kimberly :Ann Groft, 18, ot 178GZ Toiyabe Circle. "1~.cmll\Wllll ·. Valley, was killed Tuelday al· ternoon when the car abe was driving crashed into the nar end of a natbed uuck tall on the San Die o F w y lD C0&ta MeH. According to a Callfornla Highway Patrol report, Miss Groff was drMnc north on the freeway near Harbor Boulevard when her 1978 model auto s lam med i nto the diaabled truck. , The truck driven by a Loar Beach teen·acer had 1t&Jled in th l'i • ni~r lane and, ~ tit' avy t.famc. tbe young driver as unable to tuide it oft the roadway. · 'l'be CHP rt ind.lea tho vicUm appa.ren.U att mpted to stop her auto when abe spotted the stalJtii truck. Howeve1', the car skidded and crashed under the truck's natbed. The victim was dead at the 1cene of the 12:45 p.m. freeway accident, the coroner'• report said. Jarvis Initiative . " ' 'lhreat ·to School?· Methods Of Death Mulled? • A doctor accused of 1tran•Unc · a newborn infant lo death 1n the nursery at Westmilllter Com· munity Hospital contemplated several other forms of murder before he flnallJ throttled tbe baby, an Oran1e Count1 Superior Court jury WU told to- day. • Deputy District Attorney Robert Chatterton told the panel in bl• openin& statement that Dr. William Baxter Wad- dill, 44, at one tlme auuested to another physician that the infant be Immersed in a bucket of water arid ~wned . ldenijfyin1 the ptiyalcian aa Dr. Ronald Comelaon. Chat· terton said Comellon will teltlfy that Waddill also 1u&1ested flll. ln1 a nursery sink with water and drownln& the child. Chatterton sald bis key wit· ness will also testify that Wad· dlll aaked for insulin and potassium chloride with tbe stat· ed lntention of endlna the ehild'1 life wltb an lQJection of ch'UO. Chatterton Bild prosecution witnesses, amon them bolpttal nurses, wUl r1:.~ Waddlll f @Wf~Of nursery last MarCb 2 when be re. allzedth ~ had to abort alive altbou b avtng dlfficultJ ID breathlng. Jte Hid wttnesaes will testify that Waddill halted resuscitation efforta on the baby girl and on at leaet four occasions waa seen to clamp bis hands around the child'• neck and atueeze. The prosecutor Hid Cornelson will teatlfy that Waddill told blm "this child can't live." Chatterton told the jury tbat CotnellOtl wlll till thein that Waddill predicted law1utt1 and dlfflculUea With the medical pro. fe11lon'• covernlna authorities if the chUd be bad tried to abort. • aurvlved. CorMllOD will testUy. Chat· terton &Old the jury, that he re- peatedly warned Waddill to ltQ away from the baby and told the def en a ant that the c:blld may well die within the next few houri from dlfflcultles created by the premature blrth. Chatterton •aid Cornelson waa In ;n brby nursery auen<nnc anoth r ~nf nt patient when W ddiU came to him and tOld CS DOCl"O , P11 AZ> 'Reereational 8ex' OK Jiiilge Says Oomtitution Prot,ecta Proltitules ' I CAN'T bell , 100 percent lmprovem nt, • d a • ho adds he now h a tou1h time dec:ldhit Whlcb part or the campus ls cleanest. Point tallie. are kept and the clus that does the best for the week 1eta possession of a "golden hog" trophy for the lollowtng week. SCHOOL OFnCIALS say the competi· Uon will last until the end of the 1chool year, with the HOG Petrol achieVin& the hiabest number of point.a cettinc a chance to "pta out" on tree ice cream. commi.saioo adopted, said teat.a to demonstrate storace methods ould be made by tbe mld·1880s. But be said tboSe tests could fall. •'.,Federal autboriti keep &iv· in« ~ talk.I instead ol aclen· tiflc evidence,'• aald Com- miNloner: Ronald Doctor, who voted for tbe report. The comml11lon has been asked, bOwever, to recommena an exemPtlon from the 1976 ta for the proposed Sundeser.t nuclear plant ln the Mojav Desert. It was scheduled. to vote on the request later in the day. 1 Three commercial nuclear re- actor 1 are operatlna i~ Caltlomla and four more are n artn1 completion. The 19'7G lawa do not apply lo them. - GOES TO TRIAL AccuHd Doctor Waddill F,....PqeAJ DOCTOR •.. him that the baby clrl had died. Cornelson will testify, he said, that he immediately went to the c:rlb and saw heavy brulalnc around the dead baby's neck. The prosecutor aald Cornelson wm testify that his conscience l)ecame troubled durlns the days immediately followlnc the baby's death and that be finally told his story to Westminster police. TONIGHT COAST COMMUNITY COLLEGE BOARD -Reeular meeting, 1370 Adams, 8 p.m. OCC LECTURE -"Am~rlcan f'olk Art," Fine Art.a 119, 7:30 pm "A DOLL'S HOUSE" -South Coai;t Repertory Theater Tuesday Sunday through Feb. 19. 8 om THURSD-'Y, J-'N. ZS , OCC LECTURE -"Middle ,EsHnce, Second Identity Crisis," Fine Arts 119, 7:30 p.m. i ERA Deadline 1 Move Sought . CHICAGO <A P ) -Gov. James Thompson wants Congress to extend the deadllne for passage of the proposed Equal Rights Amendment by seven years. ~ In a letter sent Tue,day to the Illinois conereaslonal deleea· hon. Thompson said extension of the Mar1:h 22, 1979, deadline is needed to "make some legislators realize that the lsaue of ERA ratification will not vanish alter one or two more scss Iona." The amendment needs ap· prov al by three more atates before it. becomM law, and Jl. linois is one of the states that has not approved it. A blll pend· ln1 In Con1rcn would extend the dtadllne until 1888. YELLOWKNIFE, Northw t checked the street• of tbla Territorlet <AP> -The aerial nearby town with gelser eoun- search for radiation contamina· teu and .. tbt reauJts were lion from a fallen Soviet •PY iero," Hid Ca,pt. John LYM, the sat.ellit.e bu been expanded Into •roup's leader. U .s. territory nottb of Chlcaao. In w German1;. Prof Canadian otnciala aald today. Htln1 Kamlmld, director CJf a Maj. GeOrae Huwell, Defense prlvate imtltute tor apace "° Department spokesman ln Ot· aearch at Bocbum, aald the tawa, 1treued it wu only a pre· flamln1 orl>Jter must .bave left a cautionary measure. radiation cloUd &Omt aoo mll• He said the sweeps by 1peelal· Joni at an altl(ute of 30 to 40 ly equipped planes taktna air mllea in the atm<11ptiere, thOulh samples were broadened to in-•O far It hu escaped detecUon. elude a weer area of Canada Aakid why be thoupt suen a and part of the northem United cloud may bave formed, States -between James BaJ Kaml111kl -a 1cteutlst often and Lake Superior and between quoted in tbo German preu on Lake Superior and Lake space matters -aald: "With Mlcbisan. every re-enterinl of a aat.nite Haswell said that the U.S. and and consequent dlllnt~tion, Canadian planea have detected tonlUd cloud.I bave developed no radiation. The nuclear· and wlll always develop. That ls powered satellite dlstnte1ratecl simply pby~." over northwest Canada early The 1urvelllance planes were Tuesday. followinl a ~mlle fil1bt path. The search for possible debris Takln1 part ln the aearcb were a from the satellite, which carried biJh·flyln1 U.S. U ·2 recon· 100 pound.a of enriched uranium nal11ance plane, a U .S, Boeinl 2351 and for possible radiaUon ·rm and live Canadian armed contamination was concentrated forcea mllitary planes. over an unpopulated re1ion eut A team of U.S. experts ln of Great Slave Lake ln the radiation detection and cleanup Northwest Territories. were nown from the Ne~ada A Canadian arme,d forces Nuclear Test Site near Laa "nuclear response team" Ve1as to mount apeelal semen * * * * * * F,.... P,.,,e'4J CRASH ANTICIPATED. • • about the satellite. The chief concern was th.9 nuclear react«, wbJch 1aerated power for the aateWte'1 radar, lnteaded to keep track ot U.S. Navy ships and submarinet. The reactor wu auppciMd to ..,.,.-. after the satellite's useful Ure wu over, to be Jettlao1led Into a hllh. aafe orbit that would keep lt clrclln1 ln apace for bundnda of yeara. But the reactor on Coamot 954 failed to MS>ltate upOO order late in December. ON JAN. It, ooaaYNJN IN.rGUIED the White House that its areateat fear waa unfounded. Tbe enrtcbed urahlum ln the satelllte could not reach a critical mus and explode, be said. But that left the admlnlatraUon with several problems. The main worry wu that the nuclear material ml&ht •urvive re .. ntry and either hlt the ground or d!slnteirate and spread throup the atmosphere. State Department spokeswoman JUI Schulcer aald the uranium was considered potentially let.bat lf anyone were exposed directly or for a prolon1ed period. The second problem wu teyln1 to dttermtnt where the satellite was 101n1 to rail. The third wu determtnln1 wbat precau· tions to take. THE POSSIBLE IMPACT AREA covered mUch of the world. The satelllte orbf t wa1 deaiped to vary each circuit ao lt would pass over every major landmus, lncludlnl all areu of the United States. About the only areu lt did not covtr were Antarc:t.lca, mos~ of Greenland and the extreme northern partl of Caaada, t.b9 Sovte< Union and Scandinavia. And, the satellite'• deterioraUn1 condlUon made it impoaible to predlct exacUy when the device would comt d6WD. Canadian Prime Minllter Piette Elliott Tn.u!Hu, explalnlng his reason for not warnln1 the Canadian people about tbe threat, aald that an hour before the 11tellltehlt, "It wu aUU pouible ttmlsht have landed in the southern hemlapbere rather than the northern hetnisphere ... Obvioualy t.-e did not want to alert every square lnch or territory in Canada that aomttbinl ml1bt1and." MS. SCllUKER SAID '"'E Carter admlnlltraUon dld not in· form either the public or local official• about the alluiUC>n because of the uncertainty. Th' United Stat.es did notify other countriH tbat ml•ht be af· Cected, however, lnclud!ns Japan. Australia, New Zealand and members ol the North AUanUc Treaty Orsanlntlon. And, teams or decontamlnaUon HPtrtl were put on 1tandby around the country, prepared to recover any r'dloacUve wutet thal might Call In U.S. territory. • At 3:53 a.m. PST, the HtelUte wu tumbUn1 over the Pacific Ocean when it hit the atmosphere. It broke apart, lta piece• 11ow- ln1 red u they streaked acrou the predawn 1ky trail by red streamers. • Berthed Mojo Reeov~rs · BalbOa Rest Earned in Battle With, W avea aooct ahape and will be back 1n aervlce wtthln 1\x ween wben we plan a charter cruise to Mexico." Catton 1ald the dam11e to the ve11el wu incurred when It was hJt by a couple of wavea about 300 yard• out of Morro Bay, On bOatd wtre actor Qeor e C. Scott, bt1 -u and four crewmen. No one wa1 aenously injured. "Jult a few cut.a and b from b n• thrown bout th on ·tho planea and aid in the •atarch. The center of the search la about 3• mUet eaat of the eaatern Up of G1tat Slave Lake and about 200 miles ... t of ,YeUowkntfe, a community of 8,000 about 850 rnlles north ol tho U.S. border. ln lloecow, Canadian Chara• D'Affalrtt Alan P. McLain• met today with offlclats at the Soviet Forel1n M!nlatry to obtain more information about the fallen aatelllt.e. McLaino Hid tho So- vleta were "very forthcomlns" and offered to help locate any dtbrl.a from tho craft. Canada•• external aflalra minister, Don Jamieson, aald he would puruse with the Soviet.I "the queaUon of llnanclal Uablli· ty for any costa of search or any other acUvlUea that ~•Y be re· quired." RamomBid Not Met PARIS (AP> -The French aovemment faUed to comply today with a de· mand for the reteue of lmprlaoned revolu · Uonarla in excbanse for the kidnapped ln· duatrlaliat Baron Edouard-Jean Empain. Olllcial.a aald because of confllcllne rne11a1u purportlnl to come Crom the kidnappers, they doubted the authenticity of the threat to execute Em· pain if the prilonen were not freed. Police aaJd the kldftlp· pera had not contacted the family of the 40-year-old head of the Emfaln· Schnelder lnduatrla em- pire, who was abducted by five muked men Monday aa he was leavlna hl11 home. SA Valley Irrigation Firm Bought The 100-year-old Santa Ana Valley Irrigation Co. <SA VI > h:.is been purchased by • trio or Sacramento-area investment firm•, accordin1 to an an .nou,ncement made Tuesday in Sacramento. • Daniel !>toter, pre1ldent of In tercoaat Investments. Inc. batd hia llrm waa Joined by Randolph Parkar Inc., and Hard Corp. in the S9.8 million purchase. The irrlaatlon company was founded In 1877 to 1upply waler for a1riculture In central Or1n11 County. ln 1'74, the firm turned to real estate when agriculture ln the area was replaced by d vell)J)ment. Amon1 SAVI'• holdlna• are Riverside International Raceway. lrvlnt Hosl Motor Hotel, Green River Golf Course and tho 800-acre Weir Ranch . All' FILLS tiU AND' EAT Murfel HUll\Phrey Mrs,HHH Will Fill HU Chair MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -Muriel Buck'• boyfriend wrote her in 1935 of his dream• that the two mlaht someday .. work tor bluer thlnll" and ••probably be ln 1overnmen\ p0Utlc1 or service." Today ahe picked up thoto dreams of lbe bOyfriend sbe later married, Huber\ Hum· phrey, ~d aareed to nu h U.S. Senate aeat. , Hum~Y died of cancer two weeks qo. Mn. Humphn1, ss. waa apl)Olnt d by Minn sota Gov. Rudy Perplch to •er.• UDUJ a apeclal elecUon in NoHmber. • Mrs. Humphrey llvtd and campat1ned by Humphrey'• aide for •1 yeart followtna their marrla1e Sept. 3, 1938. At the tlme of thetr weddlne, she wu a colleae coed, he a pbarmacllt, ln Huron,S.D. In that 1935 letter, the youn1 Humphrey aaked Murltl to always encourage him. to be hls inspirational force and •'never let me aet lazy or discouraeed." Mrs. Humphrey mahaled what had been asked of her as Humphrey became mayor of Mtnneapolia, a U.S. aenator, vice president and three-Ume aspirant for president. Even Humphrey's crlUcs saw the late. senator, the "happy warrior" and exponent or ''th• pollt.lct of joy" aa buoyant, optlmlaUc and rarely discoura1ed. When Humphrey ran unsuc- cessfully for mayor in 1M3, hia voung wife rang doorbells in the campaign. Her Ont real ptunae into heavy politicking came dur· mr. a successful mayor cam· p.11~n two years later. f'rotaPageAJ BGDGET .•. Le'gislature can answer · that, and I'm not ao sure about. the Leaislature. ' Nicoll admitted that "'J)OllU· clans are scurryln1'' In Sacramento. However, be wu not optlmlatlc about an alternatlve tax reform blll before t.t\e Jtme vote. • l But the detendanti• obvious Joy at What tMy thou1ht would be freedom wu bOr't·ltved. • All HY rearrested Cft the tame Char bef01'9 Uaey could leave the courtroom. Judie J<Mcland't rulln• ap. .peare4 to cr1Uclze DooUty Dtt-trlct Attotney Dav a Carter for hJ1 handlln• of the evld ne. pn>· unted tO the Grand Juey. Fairview P~a ToTrimBed8 To Be Weighed An application by Fatrview State Hospltal otnclala to CIOM 130 beda l.nd reclaulfy 238 beds will bO the 1ubject of a '1:30 meetlnt tonllht by lhe Oranae County Healtfi Planntns Council {OCH PC). . The meetln1, conducted bf the council'• Htalth Faclltttea Review Committee. wlll be at the Costa Mesa City Council Chambers, 77 F'alr Drive. The health cou.ncll'• staff hu recomrnendod approval of the application with the condition that the State Department of Finance conduct an audit of tho hospital. PubUc comment will be IO&Ubt • at tonl1ht'1 meetlnr and the committee ll apected to make a r c~m at\on. ThefwlcoundlwUlconslder that recommendation at a meet· int n,ext Tueaday, and a final M- clalon i• expected from atate health authorltlta lo early sprint. OCHPCoiftclals aald. Fairview ofOclall have uked to close 48 acute psychlatrlc bed• and 84 skUled nunln1 beds, loavin1 tbe hospital with a tlcenaed capacity of 1,691, ac· cordin1 to OCHPC rep0rta. In addltlon, hospital autboriUea •eek recluslficaUM ot 218 sklllid nursing bed• to ln- ter m edlate care bed1 which would reduce the start req_ulre· menta, OCHPC officlall utd. T~e btatth planntn1 council ls . a •overnment·flnanced or- 1aniutlon wblcb bu been 1ranted revtew authority over Or ans• County medical Cadlitles. S-Wilidle Scheme Reported Pplice are nlerting Orange CO' st residents. especially e!lderly women. to beware of a phony bank employee who they believe is tryine to bilk people , out of thcir savings. Detective Bob Brockie of the Newport Beach Pollce. Depart- ment, said he has received three reports from older women who did nolfallforthc con eame. ''We're not really sure how il all works in the end," he said, "'because these people fortunate- ly didn't buy the guy's story. We're pretty certain that be plans to get their money:• Brockie said the women told him they were called at about noon by the man who Identified himself as an employee of the banks wllere the women had ac- <:ounh. The mun told the women thul he was checking out a computer error and asked for their ac· count number and the amount of ,money the women had in the ac·· ~ouats. At this point, he ~uggested meeting them <tt the bank, Brockie said Fortunately for the three women who were contacted, all became susp1c1ou~ and called the bank back to check on the t•mploycc The banks reported they had never heard of the man. Brockie suggested that anyone who gets a cull from someone claiming to be a bank. employee and asking for information about their accounts, contact the bank and then the police. ··we'd hke to stop this auy before he cleans out someone's life savings,'· th~ detective said. South County Park Projects Win Approval ' rn no . T reporter td only Sberift John Carpenter ond tho lleuten· ant ho ata1ed tho arrest koew their identities. Th Jtul n' l>eha1ior indicated th y bad nOt been warned of the Judge's.ruse, said Rankin. "One of the clerks who handed out jail clothlni directed JOme ruther obf;('cnc .remarJc.s towlld the Judse when be dldtl't fold his socks rl ht, .. Rankin .said. "Another indication that they --..r.-..-_,~., A,.Wl,..,..... LIFE GOES ON IN SNOW·COVERED OSWEGO, N.Y. 'Beat Equipment Money Cen Buy• Hendlea It Snow What?~, . Oswego Never Undone OSW£GO. N.Y. <AP1 About 14 inches of snow shut down New York City last week. Oswego r~lved 67 inches -and it was business as usual for the upstate city. <Related item, Page B6.) .. I have never seen a storm yet where we were done in. We have the best equipment money can bu,y." says Avery Johnson,' director of the 90-mem ber public works crew. THE SNOWBANKS OFTEN REACH ei1ht feet. The city dumps tt back into Lake Ontario. The 200-mile Ion.; lake is responsible for the "snowbelt" east of Oswego, and winter for the 20,000 residents is a constant battle. But the city almost alway:; wins "lt's important to stay ahead of It," says Johnson. whose workers go on J..2..bour shifts with 23 pieces of heavy winter t•quipment at the first hint of snow. SO FAR OSWEGO'S SNOWFALL is ahead of last year's 243-inch total accumulation, with J:i0.9 inches recorded. City streets were kept open last week when three snowstorms struck the Northeast, Johnson said. The eight.foot drifts made them narrow, but they were open to traffic. Service stations, supermarkets and hardware stores report· ed. mcreased business due to the storms. Supermarket manager Bob Brown bad a good week. ··Nobody wants to be snowbound without ,teer.'' Three Injured Marines Probing 'Barracks Brawl' Three white Marines have been injured in a barracks brawl with three black Marines at Marine Corps Helicopter Air Station, Tu$tin, but base officials said the incident apparently was not racially motivated. Mllltary police said the fight broke out early Tuesday after the whites went to a nearby bar· racks to complain about loud music being played by the blacks. e Oount North Central Bid By KATHY CLANCY Of 1111 °"" ,... .... North Central Airlines won't be flying into <>range County Airport for tho preaent. the CMl Aeronautics Board <CAB) bas ruled. County Counsel Adrian Kuyper, 1n a report to the Coun· ty Board of Supervi.so~, 1ald the CAB dropped the airune'a re- quest to fly from Minneapolis-St. Paul via Lu Vegu and Phoenix into Oranae County. And 1n ao doins, Kuy~ said, the CAB cited opposition from both county aupervilon and the City of Newport Beach. ··we are a1IO concerned with the substantial civic opposition to the autboriutlon of an Addi· tional carrier at the Oranae County Airport." the CAB aoid. "It appears that even 1t a new carrier is authorized • • • it may not be able to operate at leut unt.11 the county•a many enViron- mental problems are resolved," the board wrote. Supervisors in June agreed to intervene in the airlines' •P· plication for Orange County service. Board Cbal'rman Thomaa Riley, at the time, said the new routes would violate county policy that limits the airport to Tbe James lrvuto Foundation has aw8rded a '$2 mllllon crant to the Univenit~ of SOulhem California's scboOl or urban and reelonal planning. short·baul flights or TIO more than 500 miles. He a1sO aaid the application 'WH coming a)t a time when supen110rs have yet to re10lve airport noise problems and their impact ()ft surroundhlg homes. Kuyper said the CAB will con- sider OraDae Co"'1t.Y Airport in upcoming appllcatiOD.S from two alrllnes for so-called •-no frills," lower-fare routes be~n here and Las Veaas, Beno and Palm Sprints. 'But Hugh Airwest op~es iocluding Oranao county. con- tending tbere is no need for ddl· tional SCl'Yice on its routes to Nevada locations. Jn addition. Hughes officials note. lease restructions at the airport prohibit increasl~& ervlce anyway. Supervlsor'S last month asked Kuyper to intervene m the low fare proceedinp. not to oppo&e low farw but to restate tbe «*D· ty•s opposition to increase« fll&bta OI' added jet nol.se. Kuyper eald bo would be suti- mittinf airport data to the CU Both Air California and Western Airlines have asked that Orange County be included in their appllcatiOD$, Kuyper wrote. in connection wilb tho pro- ceedin • <' eoast (;hilly ( I .- &it Wanner Weather Ahead; <?range Coast residents shivered Tu day niaht in the areas coldest 24:bour period ao far this Winter, but warmer weather is ahead, a National Weather Service spokesman aald today. TEllPEDTO&ES dipped as low u 40 de1rees on parts or the coast, as low as 36 degrees inland and to 32 dearees at NortonAii'ForceBaseiilSanBernardlnoCounty. . The cold was blamed on tho absence of a cloud layer like the one that kept the coast somewhat wanner durinc recent rains: The spokesman said clouds tend to bold Jn the heat. wbfoh is now escaping tbrouah. the clear skies. ''WE'RE ON a warminr trend now thouah.~' be said, cilia& ttie breakup Of a blah pressure .system over Nevada and &outbem Califomia. · However. no storms are· in the offin&, the ~pokesman said. • \ • \ 1 It is the taraost amgle arant ln the foundatlon'a history. Tht !oundatlon bad pteviqualy en- dowed the James Irvlne CbaJr in An elderly JfUntiriaton Beach Urban and Jtealonal Plannl~ at :man doinl' volunteer worll: as a use. state hunter safety instructor A apokeswqrnan for the foun· / has bttn ebareed, convicted, dat(on declloed to revear the fined nd flred for selllna atu- reason for granUns the Jar1e dents certificates oC:coursc com- .sum, uy1na the foundation pletlon. Hunter Safety Instruction pi'o- aram director Capt. Gree Laret said investigators probint 1 civilian buritlng .safety teachers deterroln«l Chamness was aell· lng traduatlon certlfJcates for $10 each. ooard'• diseu11fons are conflden· , tial. Willard L. Chamness. '73, USC officials have aaid they will use the fundll to establish a prosram or aCholarib!pl. wnt· iog f ello~sblps • ..atudtn\ 'ln· tera hipe Jn Sacramento a8d • Wasbtn&ton and rt1eat"Ch d development. Part of the crant will be used as matchlng fdli!s to co qe additional dOnattona to th pro- pleaded guilty in Centi' al Or~e County .Judlcl.81 Diltt1ct Cciurt and was llned $315 for tho misde· meanor crimiilalOffens . The volunteers who teach hunter isafety as a public · aareauird m~ charge $10 to $15 per puP.11 Jf they talco them to a rifle range requlrlng a user fee. or provide their own course Clue tiOIU111naterials. f De t.Of Flib. and Game 4 foveauaaton rt Chamness ~ and two othetS also charged and convicted of usillg tho program for personal profit weren't mak· in1 auch a personal costoutl(l)'. WILD llUJB YONDS88: Cur· rent news clearlJ 1uaat1 that the vtaatlone 1urroundln1 operations at Onn1• County Airport have not vanlsMd with the otd year lO'T1. Problem• at the county aerodrome aUck with ua lib flypaper. Jet DOiM contloues to pique residents 11-.1n1 beneath the airport flisht patterm. Lact of parldnc at the county alntrip out by MacArthur Boulevard is a c:ont.bndq ln1tant tor tboee Who use the place. And for commuten and other motorlstl, cenerat traltlc coo-1utJon ln the entire airport area j s a hair-puller on a daily baala. YET TOE NEWB dispatches 3une1t that the preuure atays on in 1978 for increased pro- vision• for air travel amonc Oran1e Count.lan.a. Aa pftldicted, for example, air paueoaen anivtn• and depart-ing from Oranae County Airport topped the two mllllon mark "last year. 'lbat wu u 11 percent In· c:reHe wbm compared to the air travel volume from the county •trip In 1979. Addltlooally, people trying to park around the pi.ce lncreuect by some 5,000 vehicles lut year and toonqe for aerial handling or frel&bt wu up almolt 10 per- cent. Meanwhile, Oran1e County ROvernment ta pUlbina oa one front to put in improvemeata which, at a recent plann.tni com- mission session, were charac- t erized es beinc for "aafety purposes." MEANWHILE FURTHER, Newport Beach city officials a ren't buyln1 it. Newport seems to be In a position of opposing a ny new work on anything out at the county airstrip on eround.s that lmprovementa will mean more use of the airport. Thus Newport city govern- m ent ls puttina up a quart.er of a milllon doJlan or Its own tax· payers' cash ln the city's conUn- uing battle qalost the airport. There fa an Irony here for the , Newport taxpayers. They are taxed by county eovernment on • the one hand to pay tor work done at the airport and taxed by the city on the other hand. to fi1ht a1alnst the airport. It just toes to abow thtt re- 1ardleu of what happens, you can figure it will be the tax· payers who eeta squeezed In the middle. They fix it so the tax- . payer ~nda up flthtllli himself • watb hb own bucks. You're your own &randpa. At for county 1overnment's tole, there Hema to remain the lmee·Jerk reaction up there of • c1llln1 for aUll more 1tudle1 of · lites for a new super airport. 'EMBATl1..ED 8VPE8VIS01t alph Diedrich may have put • :pointed nnaer on that. one just thll week wbell be told airport • 1tucty advocate. that we'•• belliD studied out OD the IAue. Kost ot alta proposed for study, he ·:aucseated. 1ia.e alreadr been died a muJtlpllclty o times etlmtaaed. • • Al for !DOit ol us, we can just att1d1 atatl1tlc1 for uwe of Oru1e County Airport. Cbancea are 1ood they'll be up a1ala. 1D J.0'11. ' Gt1nnum. Gives up Tuv Hostages Swapped for Airplane WINNEMUCCA. Nn. <AP) -A aunman wbo 1wappecl two host.aies for u alrplan theft holed up in an airport trailer with the pilot surrendered early "'417, e1rJ>ort Clfflclall aaid. • He aurrendered . Everythlna'1 okay. There were no problema ... Hid a apOkesmaa for the Winnemucca Air Suvtc • ••No 1bota were fired. Tbat•a all J ltnow.0 Winnemucca pol.lee had ur- rouaded the tnller and negotiat.. ed the surrmder ol the sunm • who had ldentlfte4 blnuelf in • phone converaatJcn with Tbe Al· aoclated Pren as Harold LYDD Starry, zr. or Mantnc. Idaho. STADY WAS flown out of a 1mall Jdabo airport Tuuday nt1ht after alle1edly taktnr the pilot hostage ln excban1e for re.leas.ma two earlier boltaaes. one a deputy aherlff. . After the aiQ81e-en11De Celsna 205 landed at the Winnemucca !dualclpal Airport. almost 200 mllea away, Starry and the pilot moved to a trailer nearby. 'Wm not Wtf for a mDUon &lien, no. bl1 ~ • .Jut llve me a plaQe ride, Jet me jump out Ith a parachute somewhere and J'll be happy," Stan')' bad told tho AP ln a phone Interview from the trailer. "I don't want to bu.rt ooboa)-. l WOD't N7 l WOO~, but J don't want to hurt noboidj,•• statty aald.. BE &\ID BE WU OCl probation for breaklq lntO a aecond·hand •tore and laad jumj)ed ball a few monthl 110 on a dnmun driv· tn1 charge. He said be toot the deputy 1her1ff aad a clerk boetaae becaUIO ho wa atrald the de~ would flQd tbo IWl .be wa1c:~c. Deputy John Prescott bacl taken Starr1 off a Boise .. Winnemucca sta1es bus because he wu lntcndcated and caual.q trouble, ~ autboritlet 1ald. Tile pilot, ident.Wec$ u Qwlea Rutflnf, and tho plane wer. of. f ered to Starry by Ow)'bee Coun· ty Sherill '11.m NeWetoo In ex· cban1e for releuo of P.tOl«:Ott Despite Sethaeks Israelis Support Begi,n's Position Man, Wife Murdered WithBoinb BARCELONA, $pita <AP) -Three m and a woman tapect a bomb to the c:belt Of fonnft' Barcebla MQor JoeqW. Viola Sauret tn bll bedroom WI mom- 1n1. &Del the bomb Wat off pre- maturely, ~ blm Qd hla wtle lmmedlatel.1, pqllce •aid. Spanlib newa ••end• 1afc! Viola Sauret'• head wu blOWD off. THE m.f.INQ WU almciat Identical to that 10 mont.119 qo of Barcelona IDduatrtallat JOM Maria Bulto. He WU 'lowD up when he trted to remove a bomb futened to hla ei.t 1>1 three men and a womu wbo de-manded ta.I mlllloa. Bult.o'& JERUSALEM (AP) -Prime Klolater Kaacbem Bqbs~ accused tillers ,.... rele•ecl pears to have the 1upport of a IOll~m b' ot the mull • from pt1IOll under • ..-.I am;. duplte the Mtbacb to lhe Israeli· u peace ~otlattom. neaTthy • • .... t-o-'itt forcecl• The Iarael lmtltute of Appllod Baearch. tn a 1uney e 10-... • o taken just before the ne10Uatloos broke down 1ut week. reported their way into the ~ye~ overwhelmla• approval of Be1in'111neompromltlq ltand qalmt. Sauret'• downtown Barcelona El)'ptiaa Presldent Anwar s.dat't two chief demandl. apartment by overpowtrlDa the Sevent.y-oae percent oppoNd Israeli withdrawal from all ter-maid abortly after t Lm. 'lbe7 ritory occupied In the 1967 war. And tl percent opposed creatiOD ot ~ped ~ ~b ~ •= a Palestinian state 1n the occupied Wett Bank ot the Jordan IUver th": i:,mb apparently weni off and the Gaza Strip. while they were atlll ill tbe Carter, Bell ~red' "' WASHINGTON <AP) -With President Carter.and Attorney apartment. TREY ESQJtED ln the ruab· hour trafflc, leavln1 a trail of bloody footprints. WUdHle Friend French actress Brllftte Bardot. center, arrived Tuesd11 at the C'AUncll of Europe in Strubcnir1. France accom· panted by Yugoslav painter Mlroelav Brozek, dgbt, and unidentified friends. Miss Bardot la champl9Dlna the protection of baby aeala at a wildlife sympoelwn belnj held thisweet. • NJ Prison Escapee Nabbed in Florida ·TARPON SPIUNGS, J'la. (AP) -A prilcm escapee who set blmaell up •a Bolton eommod.ltJ• brotw and then fled durlni an lnTesUptiQll ot b1a flnandal dealiDp WU arrested here todq, the FBI reported •• Alaa Abnhllms. IZ. •br> beaded a commodithe firm under the name ol lam• A. Carr. wu tatm into cuatodJ by •Senti on New Yort Qt)' cbariea of Yiolatluprobatlon from a 19'13 convie· Uon tnvolvinl atolen property, talcf PbllJ.l» A. McNltt, 1pedal FBI aaent bl Tampa. • Abraham.I, who WU amisted llt a l'elOl't Mir ~ flCeC! • heariq later today before a U.S. mallatrat.e. BIS ATl'ORNEY. F. Lee Ballq, flew to l'loric1a from MutacbUICIUa In bi• own Pian• belon daWll todQ", lald BalleY• buaineu mmapr, Wa111e Smltb. General Griffin Bell promptly cleared of any wronadolng, the JU1Uce Departmct I• looklq Into whether a concreuman ob-structed Justice in preulna for David W. Manton'• fJ.rlng u U.S. attorney in Philadelphia. Hl&h·rankin1 department officiai. said Tuesday that in- vestigators are trylnc to determine whether Rep. JOlhua Eilbert. D-Pa., me. bewu under ln\'..Ueauon by Marat.Ou when he uked Carter lut.Nov. 4 to expedite the ouster or the prosecutor. Police tald Viola SauNt'1 hand• were Intact. an Indication he did not try to remove the bomb. They refused to 11y 11 tho killers• note contained a ramom demand. The attack came one day after lhe first anniversary of the 1Jay· me of five Commun.lit lawyers in Madrid by rlcbtlats. But police decllned to 11y If they believed there was a connectJoo. The FBI aald Abrahams, who oftend no l"tltatance, wu ref·• lstered at the resort u James Barrett of Providcce, l\.L A&enta.( 1ald he rudUy admitted llil ldeDUty .Wben ther questioned blm.~ Other names Abrahams bu used reported.ly include Alan Albert Cayne and Alu Albert Layne. .: Tho offtclala, who asked ( J not to be l~tJlled. also said IN SHORT :::in. =tB!Y~~'::. .., _________ ·-~-ordinate. tn the Justice Department Jcocw clUrln& the Umo Manton'• remOYal was in the worb. Miiier JY...inati.. N~•r1 WASHINGTON <AP) -A Senate Inquiry into a $500 million helicopter sale to Iran by a dlvi•toa of Textron Joe. atands u at lea1t a tempararr obltacle to Senate coallnDaUon of Textron Chairman G. Wllllam Miller to bead the Federal Rae"•· However, both the cbatrman and ranJdnf. Republican member of the Senate Ba.nkiJ11 Committee 111 Mlller a DdtnlDaUon 11 not in jeopardy. Sen. wnuam ~ l).WJi •• the committee chairman who quntloned .MWer'• quaJtflMUons for Use Job._ a.Sd the panel likely will vote on the nomtnati~ next Jlt ~la KWet, .. You are eo- inl to be our next chairman ot the Federal J\eArve Board, In all likelihood." AGENTS SAID they cooectrated tbelr search Ill Florida aft it was learned that a car wu rented there IA tbe ume of an employee~ Can"• Boltooofflc.. Aleda 'CUWUfttai'Ded about nine days later to the Herta a1ene1 ln Tampa. This Valentf ne•e Day send your love a greetln8 all the world can share with a ally Pilot Heart of Love. It's easy, compose your personalized greeting and we'll set Y.OUr. message In type to flt the boraer of your choice or your hand written thoughts may • FloodS Due in Southeast ppear In Ula bOrder you select. BOrdere come In the 3 sfzes as shown below: $15, $10 af'd a ~iaf chit~'• size for $2. (You must be und r 12 to qualify for the Jlttlest greeUng.) If you wish to create your own decorated greeUng. use a black pen and draw your n to flt one of the ott d lln .. heart •• -""' ........ below. I SaiWr Sets ·Sofu ~ Trip SAN DIEGO CAP> -Seven yean after John !'alrfu and Srhta Cook became the flrlt to cross tbe Pad.Ile bf 10Wboat. tbe 35-foot Britannia II ii back. Thll time. San Dl* ullor Pat Satterlee wD1 attempt the 8.000.mUe voyap to Australia alone lA tile famous boat. Falrfu and 11111 Coot made their record ""' lD U'71·'12. But Satterlee plant to leave March ll and if be mabl tt. lt will be the flnt 11n1le-b1Ddect row acroa the PacUlc. FA!JlWil AlllllVED BEBE TUESDAY tll the Britannia U. Hll lut visit was in 1971 after M be1an tbe two-pel"IOD row in the sturdy craft. He aqs he wu cllqlna to It for dear life. •'The Brltaniila lost ber rudder and we were blown rlabt past San Dteto ln one storm after 5Fad&ties 280 Hospital . Beds Nixed SACILUIENTO CAP) -state offlclall 1a1 the federal peram..t Is PNJG ... ...., blow ftlr CaUfomia•a mental hospital ,ayatem: The d•· certiflcatm:l o( 2*> beds al fl•• Mepttals. State Health DepartmeDt 1poteeman Peter Wel11er said Tue1day the action will coat Callfomia MSQ,000 a month in federal aid, atartln& 1n late FebruU)'. ( SI'ATE All eale ltema 1lmlted to stock OD hand through 2/5/78 BankAm8'c:md/M81tacharge. BobHo;r. Auunleili , s300 -I ' ::Name Confusion Directors of the Costa Mesa County Water District are considering a name change for the district. At first glance, one can see their Point. The water district is a separate public agency with no formal ties either to the city or the county. Of course, many local residents remember the flap over the now- dead plan to consolidate the district with the city. It is doubtful that" the controversy is an lQlderl~in reason for the district's potential push for b O'l ;in• dependent identity. 1t•s more likely a desire to ebd o of confusion. Some of the new names suggested to date; such as "Estancia 'or "Fair\'iew" water district would more ful- ly reflect the city's history. A simple plan to eliminate two words and leave the district as the ''Mesa Water Dis- trict," is also beine considered. • Grunted. the name change plan is still onlY, a pre· liminary proposal. but the district has yet to 'Come up with any cost figures involved in a name cha'hge. If the cost is reasonabte,if the move is legal and the procedure simple, there's no reason not to change it simplicity's sake. _____ _. ................. ________ _ wishing to circulate a ~ltion can caJl one of the rollowln1 numbers in. Oranse County between 10 a.m. and s p.m: 671·2533, 8944016 Or836-9218. PEGGY MOORE Votl .. Plu \ could not believe what I was reading. So great was my dls- belleC, that I weot back and r · read tho article lhat recenU)'. ap- peartd in th~ Pilot. WliQt I read was an out-and~ attack on Mom, ap- ple pie, arid the American way of life. ~d Duck had been bannedJ'.ill. ',~elsinkl, Finlaridl Just beCause the duck chose to remaln unrnarried, just because be took it upon himself to raise ~ree hnnnless, well behneCI nephews, the Finns chose to clll him unnatural! Unnat.iaal? Do you know what the Finns have? The Finns bav TROLLS, that's what the Finns have. You want to talk about un· natural, let's talk about those Trolls. Lurkine atiout, under those btidg , doing heaven only knows What with their free time, probably waiting for unw O' ladie• ig sldrts to pass overhead. Unnatural, ineh~ea. ., IN IUY ADffi the agitation of Kini Khaleel OfS udl Aratila WU even more intense. Tbus, durini tho trl,p, Mr. Carter •treed to perauad SOmall to seek a eeue-tJre in Oie ar With Ethiopia. The U.S. would then put heavy pressure on Moscow to compel Ethlopla to accept that offer. Next would come a demand led by m~or Afncan states -EJ)'pt, Sudan and posalbly Kenya -for SoViet withdrawal from .Ethiopia. Many hard problems are posed by the European-Irani.an· Saudi plan to put a atop to tree-wheellns Soviet lntervenUoa In Ethiopia. Tbe Sbab, despite heavy inveslinent in American arms, cannot le&ally permit their use by a third cOW\tJ'>'. The same is'-f!U8 Of Saudi .Arabi~'° fearful Ul mlrt1 SoViet \n,volve- ment actOl5S the Red 5e1. that it now l ~ at least two dlvtslons on lts southern Bed Sea coast. These cav•ats aside, Mr. Carter came home with a loud and clear mesaace from thls na- UOn's most formidable Mends. Whether that message struck home, as some of these natioru1 bell•ve, wUl not be known for several weeks. What ls clear now is that without U.S. leadership, the pressures on the . bOrn of Africa and everywhere else will contiDuo tn one dJiec. tion. For the non-Commuuist. world, that dlrec~on b down.· rudeness. and/or annoyance ll having to listen to my situation. I would not have bad to sub- ject myself to this if my pboDe had been repaired correctly the firat time. lt seems to me the of. fices of Pactnc Telephone ba\'e abandoned common courtesy in favor of smuaness •nd the already worn phtase, "Becauie · of the recent rainstorms." MARY B. BAVRY To the Editor; The federal government perai ts in deficit spending. There needJi to be a restraint placed on the federal govern• meot to require a balanced budset. Deflc.'lt spending results ln in· (.la lion and '8 :weakened economy. Our own state re- qulrea a balanced budget, I believe. Why not the federal eov- emment alto? Our elected federal represen- tatives are not coing to restrain themselves voluntarily or they would have done so l»Y now. we need a lederat cooatttutlonal umendment requiring a balanced federal government. BIE, AS £ 18 tely called toillcbt by aft.er speaker llv n1 the tr lUOnal toast, was the Sha1'eapeare of Scollalld, the wootn1, w~nchlna, sardonic, aentlmental, often drun"en ilrid alway• repentant home<lonn1 poet wtto died at 37 {.('om a beart eondltlon aaaravated by hls atrinity for the "barley·biie, •• the naUonal dram dl1tn1ec1 in the l1lands and hiehlanda. That waa Qearty 200 years aao. • He left behlnd fome of the loveUest linc.s ever written: "My love la like a red, red rose," "John Anderson. My Jo," "Bonnie Wee Thine." "Mary Morison," "My Heart's in the Hl&blaods," Charlie, He's My Darllna," "A Man's A Man for That," "Auld Lang Syne." And some or the wittiest: "To a Mouse," To a Louse," "Lines Written on a Banknote," ••stanzas on Naething" and •'Address to the Toothache " AL~O SOME OF the most incomprehensible, written as they were in the even then obscure 18th century Ayrshire dialect, which will not deter modern Scots saluting the bard on his birthday from nodding their beads knowingly or in seeming, pretended understanding, and laug'hing m all the right places when "Tom O'Shanter," Burns' best work. is read aloud or recited from the podium. "WHAT TQE lES'I' or the world tbtows away, the Scot.a aavor." claimed ort~ detractor. Another called it "boiled C!aitrated bagpipe.'' But to the ~ourft'let born beyond Hadrian s wall, above the banks or t~ Tweed, in th bonnie bens, braes and &lens and lochs of Scotland, hania is a steaming daub or heaven. The Bagpipe also Is an acquire<}Aaste, if not hereditary. •'The ~t that can be 11.id for it, in addition to everytbln1 else,'' allowed Oscar Wild , .. is that it doesn't smell." BUT THEN WILDE w u Irishman living in England who died without hearine the band of the Royal ScUs Guards ~u out "Amuiq Grace" on their pipes. After the hauts is piped in, the clan chi~f or. dinner chairmanjntou~ nediction. written by Bums, liailing the haggis as the "Gr~t Chieftain O' the Pllddill' race. • Then if a br.oad sword Isn't bandy, he llrts the hem of his kilt, reaches into his right sock just •bove the nash or garter: and pulls out hl• sginn dubh, a wee dirk used for hacking up a haunch or venlaon or a rival clansman. The Jml!e U thrust into the maw of the haggie, and the juices come gushing forth in a cloud or steam. Il 's all about ~ Lowland laddie, hke Burns himself. leavln1 the pub after a sip too m1.ny, headlns home to his shrewish wlle aboard his aray mare Meg a.Pd runnln' into even worse trouble than Macbeth HAGGIS INVARIABLY is .,.wUh aom witches on th8 lao1t.b. ..,..served with " auid tties: -bdbecl turill~ and mashed ENJOYJN<i Nlcht to apud : bannock -n oatmeal the fullest requires a lot or pancake with the flavor or old ...................... .... -. ... ~--------- 0 EW ER ON BURNS 1ucht aomeone will do the sword dance, 'Wtilch is the way Scots pare their toenails, and the biJblaod rune. whtcb terrified the Jood burgers of Carlisle when Hiahland rectmenta invaded across the border, and the Gay Gordons, which is not a 1roup anathema to Anita Bryant but the danc i>r a realment raiae4 by a merry duchess who gave each.l'ecruit a euinea and a ltiH. Near breakfast or after, the ntchl will end with a wee deoch an' doria, the last wee dram of 1olden elixirs with names like .. Stae's Breath," "Duggan's. Dew'' and "Doctor's pr 1crtption." And, or course the 1lnglng or "Auld Lang yne.'' l.lotler Held In Slayh;tg of Fiv.e People ~ HADDINGTON: Scotland CAP) -Ttie butler of a wealthy former legislator whose body and four others were found in the bleak Scott..l.sh Hl&hJand.s ap- peared ln court and police said be wlU race char1es in the bizarre series of kllllngs. The dead include former member or Parliament Walter Scott-Elliot, 82; bis wife Dorothy, 60; the butler's brother, and the Scott·Elllota: cook, who was the brother's common-law wife. The Scott· Elllota disappeared .J)c(c. 13 alter their antique-fllled nondon apartment was ransacked. Youth ---_______ ,ii"r ....• -... Six Orani• County prOJeeu .,. amoec oe 1 ~e ay and bllbwu lmpl"OVelDdtl •P1110Hd bJ Callfarnla J1l~w~ Com•'ulm last WMk at lta final meetinl. The commission, which wlll be replaced b1 a new and more J>C)Wel'ful commlulOD, approved these projects ln Oranae County: -425.•AS'J'liESTATEtflSllA&Bof a$80,000 project &O construct five bus steps and modify · Jienala on Coast Hipway ln Newport Beach and · Jluntlnston Beach. • '-$28,000, the state'• ahu. ~ a $59,000 project 'to modJfy tramc atgnall ud 11.fetJ ll&btlnl oa ·~ui lllibway ln Seal Buda from SUI Belda Boulevard to 12th su.t and Balboa Drift. • ' Bay Tour. Set by Audubon EqW,pIDent OK'd For Honor Fann DAILY Pll.G: .. Gla11ow Sberifrs Court. >1 baw never taken do_pe ·~in my llf e ... telWled P k, of St. Lou1a. o. ·•1 don'tewoamoke.•• .. I believe you,·• ald berUf Brian Kearney ... Not gulllJ .'' I ~ BRECK SHAMPOO -· Assorted Formulas "COMET" CLEANSER Super stain r,,.,..~ remover! •!WJ BONUS SIZE to Minute Tepee • for the Price of 3 li=;;;;:=:~Wlth FREI! Storage Racki LYSOL DEODORIZING CLEANER 40 oz. 1.39 Softens hands while you do dishes 48 oz. Stresstabs 600 HIGH POTENCY. STRESS FORMULA VITAMINS ENTER 1978 LARGE SIZE SWEEPSTAKES FREE '·!. lltlt·\' ·:[J\'I' .• r1:1 l•; 11' 11 • ,'..,·,'•I ,\,• ',:., !'f, ,. 'fi,i·f COLGATE TOOTHPASTE 11 oz. 88t. CURITY SUPER SOFT PUFFS Soft, Finl, & AhoMnl KING SIZE lOO's REGULAR SIZE Z60's DISPOSABLE ~.:: DIAPiERS ~~~ ~B\· • D11U111 60'1 .. ~ • E1tt111 AbsortleQt Daytime ~'s • Oveml&fll ca•s 3 I I • Jfdd}lf CO's PAK a • oz. BOTTLE 3.99 YANOUNDA DllltN e. VAN OLl~OA. lllG$ed ., ... .hnl.llrv n. tt11 0e1-e1 vf MM> V41N Ollncll, i.r~ ot • MYrUe 6fllll'ft•ll ef $e41tl1e, twj~lll\4 .. M.-9' Qr ttlell lwlel nuy ~ •· "" 11t 10:11 , 41l tt. HICtlolM QlltlollC CltWdl, l. Ufta Hiiis, Ce. E.1tl•m1tmenl yrao• M•u••••um, S••lll•, tllncton. O'Gennor ~ Hlllt ~ry--ten. I: ~ •••CMG" : •101to• J, 1iu1tCHOf'I', ... 11. "ttlelent of HuntlnotM .. ""· Co 'fl4Hd away 811 Jalluary 24, 1'7•• SUtvlv.t 1ty 1111 wit• fwllelte IClrclllft, ..i•""ter o.tor• Cronlft, '°" IEdwerd ..Cl(l:hOff, """ ... ~,.,,. c:Npel "Mijj,lu1 Wiii M 11114 Oii TllurMlllY et :),., ,,M. e\ w.tlml"'W Memorltc i-"lfk MOf'tlNf'Y, prlv•t• ln141r'!Ml't. ll'""lly •IJ99e•ts don•tlon1 to IN> r,,t.M•rlc•n Heert '"'°'latlo.,. r.¥ tmlMler Memorial Parll Mortuery di )Ctwt. f M•HOINHALL .Alt l'~YN ANNE MENDENHALL, r•Slelenl of Hunllno•on .. ac;h, C•• 1'•Md •••Y on J1m9ry t2, 1'11 In t.0119 e .. cl\. Survlwd by lllr llu .. ncl "'°"' Me,....,,..11,.., evron It. Mtn ""''""• deuQl'lltrl Mllll A, •nd Ml(Mlle IC. MendmNll W mo11Wr .. 411.., RNN of HUllll"l*t .. IKll, Ce, iMfYICH will be lllld l'rldey J•nuer'I' ")11 M11 et 2 '"' et Pe<lflc V .. w '<ll•A•I, ,1$00 "•clfk View Or,. H .. wport .. ecll, C., P•cill' View Monuery dlrectora. GARMON WILLIAM I', OARMOff, reMdent of toron• del ,,..,,, Ce P•tMt ,.,y en J•nuery 21, 1'11 In L..-9"<11, Ce. Survived by 1111 wile Merlorlt. d•U9hlers, ""9Qy L. Oout""'•l141 Of 8reul '"" Ptlrl<I• A, •lecll 9' Sent• AM, Ce Mln Robert W. 0.""°" ef C.oron• del Mer, C., ltrolhef' LM I'. v•rmoll, Jr of Al'UllWI w>d flltMr Lff F. Ger..-Of IC-. lervlu1 -•• IWlld -..cley .t Ille Newport H.,ltOr Lwttwr111 Olurcll, officlet1119 '"'' P11tor Aootr .. ro.. Interment wes In l"«lflc v-twVmerltl "9f11. Pee Ille V-Mor1uerY dlrwtora. •IAL \IHAHESSA CALANTAS IUAL. r•· .. csent of Colt• Mesi, c.. PHMd ••o on Jenuery 11, lt11. ~1¥eel 11¥ Ill< P•ren11 Adrl-• lllHlltU! ••••· F 1111erel MrVl<ec WtclntodaY Jenu.1ry H, 1'11 el 2:00 PM. 11 Smllll Tulhlll l emb WHl<lllf Chepel, 07 C. 17111 SI , (Oii• Mt ... Ce. with Or. OoMld \lureoeon of '"''"' offlcl"lflo, lnte" mt11t wlll be llt El Toro c.met1rv. t:I Toro, C•. StrMlll TUthlll Limit Cotti Mt .. Mortlollry Olr«IOn • ......-. 0•1HT WILLIAM GIUSET, rtlld•nl of Olendlle, ce. P11Md _..,on Jenu.try 22. lt11 •t llW-O-Of '1. e.iov.ct fatMr of Wiima Har-ot LOI Aflltlff, Ce , Elmer OrlMI of S...11 #It'll, Ce • Amy 8•111 of E!ll,.bttllt-n, K•11· t uclly, Oorll Howtnstelll of S. .. AMdtlll, Ce., Lll'f SolllwM If LOI • AflOtlel, GI end L--1Cr141dle of 8ellw•, Wnhlnvton. Alie 1Uf\11vH try H 1rend<lllldr1n •11d It trt•I· .,.,.Nl*tft. Ntr. OrlMt - -fllf IN or191N1 Orant1 c-ty .i-ra, hevlnt •n1wd HI 1"7. Aho WI .. rly P•on•r 1.,,._.11\0r-.. c-ty 1w.c. 1'21. 0UT1ft8 World W« II ............ tw the U.S. OiSlrKt c-t. ,,.,, e.n- 111nt. c;-.ie •en lntffP'9ler •the Pr1Wlf'tr1 of Wer Work PrGlf'-. His •a•I larml11t ...., -In ltlYWSld9 C.OUlllY Ill lt1S. f'-rel ~ """ be ,,.,. 011 Friday JellUlry 27, 1971 et 11 00 A . M. 11C SmUl'I Tutl'llll Le1T11t sen.. I• Ane Cllepel et Sii N, 8roedwey SMI- ie An• Ce. with 11'1• ltl'lf, Htnll v1oeveno of the s. Hollyweod Pr .. bvterlen Olut<h Offklellng ''*"" mtnt Wiii bt at TM Goed Shetlllerd t.lfnttery In l.M A19ln, GI. l'rloftU wllO wllll to _..., thtlr rttMCtt 1nev < •11 at lmllh Tutl'lllf LlfllO lellle Ma °""' °" Thlwldey ,,_,.,:al, tflt Iron\ 6100 \o t !OO P.M. Smith Tulhllt Lamb k~ Anti MMtuerv dlredon. S0·41SI, MKll•H KATHL81N HELM IOIJIJCU, .... µ Otftt o1 0r-.. ca. ,....,. _ • .,.,. Jellulr'f 21, T'7a llt fflO ... ot 72, I.Iv• 1n1 •hter ef •11n<M l'Ikd•lll ol Ore11at, C.., Mn. Verna 0..., ot VeK-, H-41 .... INa. ~rot White of S.11le Ane, C., l'Ullil,.I ..nlcel WedM ..... ,,_., 2S, 1'7' et II ~00 A.M. et Somllll Tullllll LllM S.nt• AM OMptt, Sii N, 8t'Mdwer, Se1tt• An•, c.. """" lttw. Larry 8jer1&1Ylld «TM""'""" MeViod!U Oollrdl, $MCI Afll -'liaetllleo lldtf• "*'' wUI .. et """"'-*""'''' l"M'I&, ..... ,,,.., Ca. inlllll 'T I ~..-.,,,..~~. ,S,C,'4111. Coast C:ollege SBilors Score TEltltY CLAPP, WITH Lyn Olinger as crew. skippered her Udo·l4 to a win in the firlt annual Women's Regatta. Jn !our tightly !oqht races Clapp arid Olinger scored elOit points to edt OCC by one JJQjnt, USC had 10 ucl UCLA 13. Satllilc a Shields ln the Reinhart Freshman Trophy &triea. Golden Weat•a team of Mark Daniels, Chria Raab and Steve Salmond -all from HuritlrigtOu Beach -flniabed second. In the Grant Trophy Series -another bields Class race -Golden Weat. placed fifth ~1'ind USC, UCI. OCC and UC Santa Barbara. Ghost Bucks Wind, Takes F errninRace Yacht raceri who .ieer tbeir ta in the vicinity ol Point Fermin, of Los Angeles Harbor, USUally come back to the clubhouse talk· mg about1he force "of the westerly. Not so Sunday when 52 boat. in four classes turned out for the Lone Beach Yacht Club'• annual Point Fermin In'Vilatlonal to be treeted by a li ht easterly brc:eie th•t carried them aro1.md th course tn f<?J arid haze which limited visibility to about two IJllles. . The handicap winner in the lnternaUonil Off· shore Rule cla.sa wu Gbost, skippered by Al Berg of the Windjammers Yacht Club. OUier 'Winners were: PHRF·A-Mlatreu,. Ill, Steve Washburn, UCJSA; PHRF-B-Cavi·Yacbt, &b Alberti, Hunt• angton Harbour Yacht Club; Ca1·20·Lulul Lee Bartkowski, Cabrlllo Be'1~h Yacht Club. No ise L evel Curbs On Mo torboats Set Maximum nolSe levels fer certain motorboats operatiug on the state's inland waterw.aya have been restricted· further as of the flrlt of this yenr, accordiiig to a reminder from MartJ Mercado, dlrector of the Department of Nav1.1ation and Ocean Development (DNOD ). Engines manufactured on or after Jan. 1 of tbia year must not exceed a no1le level of 82 dbA measured at 50 feet. The new restriction ls part of a law enacted In 1973 which Mt a tlrnetable for re· duclng the exhaust noise from motorboats. Lido Isle Club Hosts Race Ticket Nixed For Govenwr .. lt"'ormer Attorney General John N. Ml&cbell underwent more than three hours of surgery in W ashingtori for repair of an artery in his abdomen . Dr. Cbarlea Hafaagel, chairman of the Department OI Surgery at Georgetown Universlty Hospital who performed the ~ration, hid Mitchell came out of it in ood condition. • MtTCHILL The 64·year-old MitcbeU ect.ered the hospital on Sunday. He was !urlou&bed from bis Watergate cover-up prison term for. a replacement of bla arthritic nglit hip. But doctort discovered 'Jn pre. operative examinations that Mltchell bad an aontc aneurism in the abdomen. Y.,_OU A NO"EW E.. V"'4 ot..INOA.. ~ ., Oft ~ tJ. 1'71. e.tO#d el~ V• Qlnda. twvtlltr., • Myrtle MllPIM" ot s .. ttl•. !fioton. .... ., Olrllt ..,.., ,....., J-v a. tm et t0 • •• , ... Hldlol• c:a ..... ic Olwch, •11• Hiiie, ca. E11tem11111e11& yre•f MeuHleum, Seattle. l!'lf!Oll. O'CMMr ~ Hiiis ry*9dors. L •••OtOf'fl .IORO J, Kl•CHOI',., ate &1. fe11t ef H4111t1991Dll eM<ft. Ca " Md ••IY ... <IM!UMY 2•, ma. IWlll lly Ills wife hetlellt Kk'dlflt, .... Et., Oelar• Cnftll\, Ml\ Edw•• «I Mff, tlllW Of MdcMdrtn. CMINI 'M ICH 'Wiii lie htld Oii 'T'llundey •t ~!: "·"" ., Waeml,...,. Merfletfel II #l'Ort-y, fl'IY•t• ln .. rm.nt. lly •utOHh fon•llOflt to tN •er1c111 Heert Auocl•tlon. I "'t"''"'"' Memcirl•I P•rll Mortuary 11l~ora. M•NDINHALL !JARl1"\'N ANNE MEHOl!NHALL, , .. IMlll ol Huntlftillon 11«1cn. C•· ,.,.,... 1wey on Jen .. ,., 22, 1'11 1,, L°*9 8HCll. SW'•IWCI 11¥ lltr l\tnbtnd «•t' ~nderohell, Mn eYl'Oll •• Mel\-tlell 11111, d1u9httrl Miii• A. end .Ml(helll It. ~II .,,_ mothof' .... ell R-of ttunt"'9ton IM<h, Ce. -S.fVICOI wlll lie htld frklr( Jen ... r'( .,, , M11 11 2 flM a\ l'eclllc Vl•w •<111a•I, HOO Plclflc Vl•w Or., Newport .. •ch, c.. Petll•t VI•• Mortuery dl...aors. OAllMOtf WILLIAM ... OARMOtf, rHldt"t of '°'°"" *' Mlllr, c. ........... ., .,. Jenuerv 21, ltll In L...-llNCll, c.. Svrvll1ed by 1111 Wiit M•rJorlt. deutllllrt, P9911Y L. Ooulllw•ll• of 8t11lll llMI PalrkMI A.. •1«11 of Senta Ana. ca. son A-rt w. eoam-ot (.orOf\41 del #Mr, C.., bt-Lao f'. (,er.non, Jr. ol NUl>WI a.Id tether LH F, Gvmon of IC-. Servltn -•• htlcl --.O.y tt the Newport HertlOr LlltlltrM OllWcll, ott1clat1119 '*" PHtor Rooer lier• Interment WH In Ptelllc V-,,_..,_I .. Plf1I, ,.tellle View MOl'111ary dlr«ttn.. ••AL . VHANISSA CAl.ANTAS RIAL. re• 'ldtnl Of COiia MeM, C:.. PatlOd -•\I' on Jer>Ulry 21. 1'71. Sunllvod W ,,., p•rtnt1 Adrl-&. lllabelll ltHI F-ral fllnlc• Wedrwtde\I' Jlft1N1rY U, 1'71 tt 1;00 PM. tt Smith T11lhlll 1..1mb WtstcllH Ctllptl, '211. 11111 St , Co1ta Mese, C•. wllll Or. Donald Stureeeon of lr'lllM tfflc1111n9. Inter· ment wlll be Ill El Toro C»mtterv. El Toro, Ca. Smith Tutlllll Limit Colt• Mew MortUW\I' cllroclort. ...-. OlllSIT WILLIAM ORISET, re1ldtnt ol Olendllt, Cl, P1u.s ... , on Jenuary ~. 1'711111• eoe of t1. 8el0Wcl fl1htr of Wiim• Herper of '-" Anvtlu, C• , £1mtr Grlaot of s.nta Merl•, Cl • Amy 9eltl of [llrellttlltown, IC111 tucky, Dorla How•n•teln ot ~. P&Mdellll, Ca, 1..ll'f Sulll11111 of Lot AnQllllet, Cl. 9flCI L--Krlddt• Of hll"llt, w..,,.,.ion . Alse --..1\'ff-., t1 1ra11dclllldr•n •n• a tr•••· ..-PlklllNrM.. Mt. Orillt - -., tl.•1 er1t1M1 Or..,.e Couolty pl-n. i..v1ne 1f'l'lwd In '"'· Alto.,. Mrlr p-r ferl!WI' Ill Orlllllt c-t'f tlflee 1m. ovr1,. Wortd war 11 "'wenH '°'Ille U.S. Olll.rle'l court, ""1 a.n- 111nt. OOOrtl• .. 1111 1,,,.,.,,.. ....... tM Prl-rt of War WOf1l """'lfn· Hit •••t larmlne -done In AlllW'll• County In tfU. funeral NfYICOS "111 .,.. held on ''*" Ja_,., n. 1'7' at 11 00 A M. 111 SmlU. TUllllll L.elM S- I• Ana Chatltl •I Sii H. Broactw•Y San· •• A111 ca. with tile ••v. Hef'll V19eveno ot Ill• s. Hollywtod Prubyterlen Churcll Oftlclat1119. I 1*F• rnent wlll bl at Thi Good Slltptlerd Ctm•ltrY In Liii A"lltfet, Cl, ,.,..,.._ wllO wltll to ,_., tlltlr retPl(ts cn•Y <ell et Sml8' Tulftlll LM!ll» leM.fl AM C!Wlptl tft Tllundll'f Januery a., tt71 ff'MI 1:00 to t :OO fl.M. SmlUI Tlltlllll L•mtt II"'-~"""".,.,., dlrtao". S47·~•at. toUt•H IC.ATHLaaN HILM IOVI•••· .... ~ dtllt .. Or..,.., ea. ....... _, .,. Jenuarr 21, 1'71 •t tllt ... ot 12. I.I•· lftt lllltr ef lll"Che Ekdefll of Or•"9t, Q., Mra. Ver111 o.etr el VOlctM, "-ii ..... MtlO .._,It Whitt •f .. ,,,. An•. c.. l'UMr•I .wrw1«t W......, ~ 1J, 1'71 •I 11 :00 A M. et Snlltll 1'11tf11U Uinll Sllllta Alll 0\11111, 511 N. at'Mdway, Sallta Ane, c.. wllll •••· Lerry IJotllWICI "',,. llPUrotOft ~'" owc11. tent• Me ll'lldllllllt• toett· l'llllflt Will bl • ~.irt\1-MllMrl•I Park, litllll loM, et. lmltll T It Lem• ..,,._AM MertlllfY Mrtc'°'7. M1.ftJ1, • ----~~ -:t1t...._ ~ ,,. --~-----.. ~-.... ~"' --==----=----- Coast College Sailors Score TERltY CLAPP, WITH Lyn Olinaer as crew, skippered her IJdo-14 to a wiD in th first. annual Women's Regatta. Jn four til)ltly foaaht races Clapp and Ollncer scored ei&ht point.a to edte OCC by one point. USC had 10 ud UCLA 13. $alllQg a Shields in the Reinhart Freshman Trophy Serles, Golden West's team of Mark Daniels, Chri8 Raab and Steve Salmond -all from Huntirigton Beach -finished second. In the Grant Trophy Series -another Shields Class race -Golden West. placed fifth bthind USC, UCI, OCC and UC Santa Barbara. Gho st Bucks T akesF erminRace Yacht racers who steer t.belr boats in the vicinity of P<ililt Fermin, M"est. ot Los Angelu Harbor, usually come back to the clubhouse talk· ina about the force of the westerly. Not so Slinday when~ boats in four clasHs turned out for the Long Beach Yacht Club's annual Point Fermin Invitational to be greeted by a U1ht easterly breeze that carried them around th course in !OJ and haze which limited vislbillty to about two iniles. The handicap winner 10 the International Off- shore Rule class was Ghost, skippered by Al Berg of the Windjammers Yacht Club. Other winners were: PHRF-A-Mistreas .. UI, St.eve Washburn, UCISA; PHRF·B-Cavi·Yacbt, Bob Alberta, Hunt ington Harbour Yacht Club; Cal-20-Lulu, Lee Bartkowski, Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club. Noise L evel Curbs On Motorboats Set Maximum noise levels f« certain motorboats oporatin1 on the state's inland waterways have been restrictecUurther as of the first. of this year. according to a reminder from Marty Mercado. director of the Department of Navigation and Ocean DeVelopment CD NOD). Engines manufactured on or after Jan. 1 of this year must not exceed a noise level of 82 dbA measured at 50 feet. The new ratricUoo is part of a law enacted in 1973 which aet a timetable for re· duclng the exhaust noise from motorboats. THE NEW REGULATION applies to persons selUnc or offering for sale motorboat enetnes •t re· tall. "Boat owners, however. are also rtsl)(>ns1ble for seeing that their engines have been mufOed to meet acceP:table limits," sald Mt>rcado. Local law enforcement oftlclall throu1bout the state will be lseuing cl'tatloMfto violators. Boats exceed~ the 82 dbA limit are subject to a $50 fine, five days in jail or both tor eacli Ti.olation • reeLepl Aid Offered Ticket Nixed For Governor JI .... Beote11 F,_p St•I,_, DEAR PAT: We bad Don Martin Moving & Storage handle our move last October. We were cbaraed $38 for boxes and were told most of this cost would be refunded dependln1 on how many boxes were used. It took two weeu of calll to set the boxes picked up, and I still have not received a r•fund. M.M., Costa Men A YS eonladed the movlaf firm 1ev•ral Ume1 re1ardla1 your request or a refaad. It• spolleswomu said tbat a mlauaderstUcllaS laad • ecc.rred and only 50 perceld of your laJU&I cost wa1 reftmdable. Altboagb a refuel ea.eek Wat pro-•lsed, you report It bas not been received. You aow laav• contacted to tbe Public UfWtlea Co111· mll1loo aod your complaint Is belnc processed tiy tbls l&a&e re&ulatory a&eDC)'. Amonusted Marhet'• a ll4!a1Jt11 DEAR PAT: A Jot or buineas firms have an as· aortment of food and beverage vendln1 machines tn their lunch rooms. My company bu several and the selection provided la adequate. I wonder if anyone has ever thought of vendlnt m1chlnes for aupermarkets; in other words, automated 1upermarkets? G.L, Fountain Valley The Japuese 1overnment apeat five yean de- nlopla1 thll very thla&, and a partially aatemat- ed tapel'18arket now ls lD operaUoa. The market lau tT ftlMliDC maeblaes, 10me refrtcerated, db· playlac ,, ... faat·movla1 food lte•• fro IOap to aau11• and edible aeaweed. All are Uaked to a eempater. Wbea cnatomera lnlert mapetlc cards l8to &be madllaes ucl puelt MleetOr 1.t&clau, tM amputer record.I the sale and releasa door locka. Parclaues are removed by band, plaeed In abop· pta1 cans and checked out bJ compater wltll tbe aid of &be masne&lc card. Reatocld•I of the ••cbln also ls done by compa&er. Plau call IOI' 111 ... stores to be automated wltbln the ae•t fiye '° HveD years. Aatomated Hpermarket price• rm 5 to a percent below t.bose of re&alar •arlleta. Gas rop.ol( ,,. •• , ···~tl DEAR PAT: Now that mOlt people fill tbelr• own 1u tankl, l'd Ille to tmc1 OU\ at lt'I a waai. ot mooey to "top off" the tank. rve bMD told that ftllln1 tho tank to the brim 11 not a JOC>d tdea 'because the au tends to apW ovu wheo the car'• ~ hu been runnma.·11 th1I tnae? . R. K, HUlitln~ Beadl lt'I trae. Topped off IU W!U do 1plU Her w ea· rl1laC ea1lae te•perat•re eau1e1 tile psoUDe to apand. Tbe Amerteu A A• Hdattoe. e American Las Auoclattoe uad federal •*eadet VI• 1tlf•Ml'H drtnn aad auoU:De ..u. aueDGu&a co rerralD from &opptac ill 111.&anb. It Jau beea Htlmatecl that WI prac- Uee wastes u macb H 4t mUlloa l•IJ•• of ptolble ~ 7ear. Alto raw I • tam• an udu~uezba emllliolll. B..U. ,..,..,_, E.;tetm T•-t Xour tQ E~lQre San Juan Cr.eek a.... ..... ,., '°" .....,. ...... '°" ..... tow .......... ,,.., ..... an•• OAllYPftOT. . ......... . .......... ~ ......... ~---·---· --~~ HAM '"So Good ••• ft WAI ........ ,.'111 .......... W•• ._.. c:a-fe11ry0.-..._ MAM SANDWICH or HAM & CHIESll s,.cw11111w ... HAM SALQ'ONDWICH .............. 7 5 • • Ready to Serie with Honey 'n Splee Glaze • Splral Sliced for euy l«Vinl • We Pack••• and Ship from Cout to Cout .... -..'1cw4 • Full Service Dellcateaen • Imported CheeHS ...... c-.. "AJfAJl(.111 cmwa DR MU PIUl'SPatNGS . NOW IN lMSE 1'lle Yllew~"""' J700 .. C..t Hwy. 7flU Hwy. i I. LA HABRA T..,.-1...._ IUJS.•• .... tf (114)113·• lita.clleMkt. OP&IM '401Ci.Ir~.. Jr.riL--r.•1 ~~,H~=e ... ~~ " . * !hebed *•* schedule Im and the blLfen fleet of wldi&odlea. United gives you more nonstop t118hts a.nd more big, comfortable wide bodies oo the East t.ha.n a.ny other airline. Includ.lng the only 747's w Chica&o. And no'bc>ey otrers you connections oo more Midwest a.n.d Eastern . cities than United. f * AWarcl-winnfn« !V. 1i * On most of our * ~to tlle EaBt. you1l OAJoy exclusive ~hHghts tromABC's 1d8 World of Sport.a" or CBS•s "60 Minutes~ • OH GOD!. can Dr. Aanzer pertrOm ri'IJraalei? t tits WOrt< divine? Ftrid out tor yourself. And ask about down·to-e rth fees while you marvel at the way your: d ntat Insurance might ccwer the total co~t of Dr. Flanzer'a aervlcea. ~·* DeUcloUs JDMll. ~.:Li Decide!oryoursel!. ~ United's 4-Sta.r 8erv1ce gives you a choloe ot del.1o1ous entrees like sea.food~ or qui.Che. ~-'· - 7:46 a.:.m. (747) 8:00 a.m. iOnt.arlo) 10:20~ l)C.;10). 10:30~ C>nt.8rlo) l:lOp.m.; 00.10) 4:16p.m. 10) 12:16 a..m. 747) tNJgbt Ooach) l:3ep;m. l:38p.m. 4d0p.m. 4:18p.m. '1;08p.m. 9:68p.m. 5:68a.m. 1 -·- 'Renal.do and Clar.a.' Lo¥ But Beautiful, Too YLI •O ................... I lt'I bard to know t at to ..-, about Bob l>)'laD'• new tum. •'Renaldo ud Clara." whlch opeu In New Yo!kt IM An&elea and llJDDeapoUs mat,)'. . It'1 loaf .:_ tbree boun ud 52 ininutea -and 11 oft.xi 1elf- 1lndul1mt, pretaUous, and ex- tremely eonfuslnl. IT ALSO 18 ftlled with 10me beautiful vi1aal ima1es, ex-cellent concert footaae and an almost conUnual sense of u. JU1too. You're never qulto sure that yoa aaw what )'Oa. dWit 1'* aw. ' .. Renaldo and Clara•• is by no means a "rock rum·· (concert "documentaries" like "LMl• and Gentlemem, th• JlolllD tone.," .. W~k" or •·11~ leJ'e7 Pq>•), 1MJl" CJD ft be COID• pared to 81)7 IDO'fle made by, or, :wltb, coatemJ>Ol'ar)' musicians ( .. Performance,•• •"Tbe MaD Who Pell to Earth"). When the Rolllnf Thunder Revue toured tb.l.I country two ye.rs ago, Bob Dylu performed onata1e each nlpt surrounded by mllU' friends and coUea,uee: people he'd been uaoclated with throucta the yea.rs like .Joan· Baez, Bob Neuwirth, David Blue, Allen Glnsberg and more. DYLAN OFTEN SANG wear- ing a mask. and since it was known that be wu mtJklnf a .movie, speculatlm wu that the mask wes for the moTie. . But at that time, no omt really knew jtat what kind of film they were maldag Oncludinl many ol the ~e in It), or Just how crucial that mask was to. this fiJm. It is obrious that Dylan has not attempted a simple project. . "Renaldo and Clara" is an a m bilious, mysterious film, made by a mylterious, elusive artist, which aome will f1Dd a ·work of art. beautiful and "im-portant." Others may not have a clue as to what la really happen- ' mg here. WITH A GREAT deal or t'inematlc s leight of hsnd,· ......... MOVIE MAKER Bob Dylea Dylan's movie -which he ••wrote.. (much of it la lm- provlaecl), directed, atart ln and produced -took couraae. With-out doubt, be tried somethlni differedt. There ls a ustcry•• here that ls vaguely connected to the Rolling Thunder Revue tour. The characters chaqe: there 11 Bob Dylan who pl.,. Renaldo, Sara Dylan who ii' Clara, Joell Baez as ''The Woman in White .. (who ia also Sara Dylan, not unllk.e the comtaDtly eh8Jl&lq WOIDID tn Bwnael'• .. Tbat Obeeure ot.-Jttt of Desire''), and there is Ronme Hawkins who plays "Bob Dylan." David Blue acts u a sort of narrator throutrbout tbe film, talking abou~ T'Bob Dylan's'' early Greenwich Vlllaae days. OUTSTANDING SCENES in· elude members of the-Rolling Thunder Revue with an American Indian tribe, Dylan and Allen Gtnaberg vl.sltlnl Jack Kerouac'• grave, ·/Jlen Gimbers reading "Kaddish" (Introduced l , Palm Springs Parish ~~~~~~~~~- ~Tops In Pops(ij HE MYS LITl'LE, aa be does thrbulbout the fllm, except tO anawer, "111 tell you the ~·· aDd ~ "Do I love her tbe way I lOYe JOU? No." In that aeene with l>)'lan, Baea and Sara, tbe womm Jau1b to e a c h o t h e r t h a t ·h e <Drlali/Renaldo> ''hu Dfter 11.en me a stralpt answer ID all the ~ears that rve lmoWll him." When· uked what bis film is about. Dylan aald: ·~·11 ftlm is about ldelitity, every '1 lden- tity. It'• about naked eoaUoo of the tnnU aelf again.at tbe out- er self. Alienation taken to the extreme. And it's about lntesri· ty. Integrity is a facet of hones- ty. It has to do with knowin& youraeU." Once again, Dylan ne•er real· ly selves you a •tralaht answer. . l)irector Designs ·Site • .. ---~~-=--- . Agency Ready . ' F o.r Bigfoot CHARLEY BROWN'S TWILIGHT PRIME RIB DINNER ATAN EYE·O~G $5.951 Start Wlth a marvelous soup du jour or a magnificent tossed green salad. Then enjoy our normal portion of Prime Rib, the King of Beef. plus a piping hot baked potato with all the trimmings. Served with sourdough bread and butter. Then complete your meal with coffee or tea and, believe It or not, a s~ce of "Mother's" cheese cake. EvefYlhlng for only $5.95. Monday·Saturday frc>m 5 to 7:00 PM-Sunday from 4 to 6:00 PM. Charley Browns 16160 Beach Blvd., Huatln~ Beach (714) 842-6602 , SAN DIEGO CA days wfll end Catholics work on the project. Approval was given by the Most Rev. Leo T. Maher, bishop of the San Diego Diocese in wblcb Laquinta lies. stone church." Today film figures such as ~~~-:--::-::===::::::=:::::=:=:::::=:::=========:::::=:::::::::::;==::=;:=::;:~::;:-::~:-;-~nl.ll'n must meet for m In a shop- ping center bank in Laqulnta, a · community 11 miles aoutheut of Palm Springs, Italia tum director Franco Zefflrelll aaya ll'OUDd may be broken in SeptembtW' for a real cburcb aervinl the pariah of St. Francia of Aaal1l at lndlan Wells. THE PllELDDNAJlY sketch of the bui1dln8 recreating the 13th·centurJ San Damiano tn As-. siat, Italy, wu di'awn by 7.ef. firelll, wbo bolds a decree 1n architec:t.Ure from the UOlvenlty of Florence. Stone muons from Jtal1 and set •••II••~• emplo}'ed b1 1.dlrelll pla tO With Zeffirelli and Bishop Maher was the Rev. Raymond Bluett, pastor of St. Francis. THE TWO MET and began dreaming of the church a decade ago during filming of "Brother Sun, Sister Moon," a movie about the life of St. Francis de AsaiaJ. Zeffirelli said he and tbe priest, a consultant on that fllm. "4would loot up at the church . buni for the picture • • • It was .a beautiful we vowed to make a little churcb like that 'So111eWbln :AmCrtea. a "livtn.c l famed director Frank Capra are among those who sit on folded chairs in a Crocker Bank branch used for Fathe r Bluett's services. IN AN INTERVIEW Zeffirelli noted that "only in America could they say mass in the bank.'• "A llWe money" baa been ac- cumulated for the construction, he said, and the new church in the Southern California desert ••wm be my masterpiece of re- construction," said Zeffirelli, "because everything will be perfect -as if an !:Jel had flown here from Italy placed ltdown." from the beach in Orange County •• ~ 'fot1H•ly ~APX ~ Come on up to Sound Wave ~08 and en-San Clemente. All to the accomp1niment joy the best of the bright, beautiful music of the refreshing sounds of the a!~ you've heard on K·BIG, KJOJ or KAPX. plus the mellow sou~ of KNX..fM. To- day's adult music I A NEW BLEND on th& most powerful station in Orange County, K·WAVE with 28,500 watts froA1 New space-age equipment enhances • the listenabllltY and eJdende the effective range of the station. Help us test the new coverag .~ --~ II ··-·--······· _._ ........ _ . -- •1 oa. STEINCaOUN Dear Dr. l&d.aerolm: I consider that tranquilizers are nothinl bUt "dope." My doctor bu prescribed a dozm tranqulllzer pllla but I didn't set them filled. My family says that I am stub· born. But I can't help feelinc u I do. If I were to swallow a tran· qu.lllzer I'd feel as lf I were amok- lni marihuana-or worse. MEANWHILE, l'M very .~..-.---.:aa ..... --.J nervous. I am unable to aleep more than four hours. It all start· ed after attendinl my fatber'a funeral. The rest of the family .,, • .. "J• b q n REDUCED PRICE! LIQUOR I SPECIAL 750 Ml 2S.4-0I. FANTASTIC PURCHASE SAVI ova 61% REG. 49• 19! 9 VOLT TRANSISTOR RADIO BA nERIES ,__.......,..., ...... Wednesday. January 25, 111'1 Te~porary Crateh DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE aoon have tot ke hl5 advlce1 What do you thlnk about tran· quiUzera! Are they danaerous? Cu they be helpful!~ Mra. H. COMMENT: Aak me what I think abOut crutches. I'll aay I hate to aee peopl utln1 them, But how else can they ••t around? Shall iv• •en c tile man With a broken leg to .bed or to a ro .. l . '., ........... .,,....,._..._.. .............. .,_. ....... _._.. ............................ ~ ...... -·· . I i Fans Expect Too Much, Say.-s West~ INGLEWOOD CAP) - lCueem Abdul.Jabbar, the Na- tional Basketball Association's · most vah1ab)e player live times, played his lint tame Tuesday j nt1bt since It was announced tbat he wu not chosen to play in thla year'• NBA All-Star Game. t Coincidence or not, Abdul· Jabbar 1ave an all-star ·performance, to 1ay tbe least. The Los AD1eles center scored 39 potnta, erabbed a aeuon-high .. 20 rebOtmda and waa credited witb four blocked •boll in lead- inl the Lakers to an easy 117-102 victor,-over the Philadelphia '16ers. , The victory was the fourth in a • row for tbe Lakers, who are now 11 21-24. The Atlantic Division· lead.ins · 76en dropped to 30-13 but atill have the second-best rec-.. ()rd in the NBA. ''Kareem's mlasln1 the ' amount ol time that be did pro- bably COit him a spot on tbta all· ·star team,,. said Los Anselu coach Jen-y w-. referriDlJ to •bdut-Jabbar'a beinl sidelined for over a month at the be1in· nins of the 1ea110n With a broken hand. West Cra~n wu the favorite, wlth two players over &·foot & and a 3-0 record in the 3·A Coastal Conference. But CoWe'a team bad used slowdown tactics u.n.successlully in two previous games and the coach lieured be mi1ht pull off an upset. So be ordered a freeze. West Craven coach Bill Cutts did the same. "l wanted to out· fox the fox," Cutts said. At halftime, the score was 5·2, Wesl Craven leading. Wtdn«ld¥f, . . ••we didn't even go to the · locker room at halftime.'' Collie sa\d. "What could I tell the boya? They know how to bold on to the ball. Heck, I let them •ttf out on th court and haOl. '\.'fbe West Cravens fans -wero eMna me a hard time, bUt ~ wu kind of enjoylne It. One lady cam up and ottered me sorne popcom. She aaJd, 'You mlfht as well eat popcam, since you aren't dOttif any coaching_':· There wa.s no scoring in the .. .... • "ff• wW relish the time of( but }1m av.re 1t bothen blm,'' con· tinued West. "People expect too much cit hlm same in and 1ame ·.;:;...;,,--~.....___._.,.... -..... ~lllliiii:;i._~:....,..1-4J~ .... !....~~.:;,......H~ Out. I ''Kareem ls the key to our "team, we rise and fall with bls performance. When he comes to play, we are outatandlnt .'' Abdul·Jabbar came to play Tuesda1 night u a sellout crowd of 17 ,505 at the Forum looked on. Ten of his rebOuncla came in the flrat quarter. helplne the Luers move out to a 32·20 lead. The 7&era were never really in the •ame after that. PHILAOIL'"IA (1011 -lrtt111 U , Ml• f, .,.,.._I, .. ....., •, ~r• 16, ClllllM IS, McOINn 11, Oawkl• tt. 8ryMt 4. CRtlllllt I, "'"""""" 1Mi. Tet"911...,.I«&. -I.OS AHOll.IS om~ bMtt.,y 1f, ~ 10. Adb<ll..U.. It, Nt.i ft, k*t 10, CMf' 10, HllCllM 1' "'4llldl 7, MllrM lllr 4. Tec.e. • ~2' 111. • ' ..... ,.,..... ~ • tt,.;.10t .... Alifttll u • 'it ~\17 htlllld ......... -. """ -·~· .... •• !2, L• ~lft ao. "t1d1t1lpil....,.,.,.lledtllllll• ~ ~. f'tllltllel ........... ,. coactl #MMallM.~7- KiDg T.acliles Kruger in LA· ........... HOCKEY AU·STAA BILL CLEMENT CRASHES INTO SIDE OF THE GOAL:, ESCAPES INJURY ••• Planned for '79 Basketball Classic May Lure 50,(J(J{J A basketball spectacular looms next year. Al~ the final a11eement is pendipg. it appear• that JrUchl,t-. ~ Notre Dame will collide at the Silverdome ln Pon- t.lac. ..Micl)ican coach Johnny Orr told this writer that be e~ts a crowd that-could number 50,000. More conservative university· or.· .'P . . :I . Won't Coach Fut11re ·to Be a ·? . ' •. UC f..W. tnl OlfMfl ,, ft "' • /N9111t• 1'. , ..... 1 2 I• 9oldeft I 4 J 4 TOl41S s 1 , " J 0 • • 2 1 • s ' • 2 .. aatn . -.. ..., ........... ...,&.-- WHO'LL GET IT? -Jeff Olsen of Dana Hills hu the ball dancing off his fingers while Laguna Beach's Mike Moore trlea vainly to reach for it. In background is Mike Samuels (32). Capo, Mater Dei, ·Diablos Collect ~ans In 62-60 Cage Win Oilers, Edison Collide El Toro C<;igen Rally, But Fall Sli01i 1 DAW cvf.INING ... _, ...... • ,..,. o:irona del 1112' 1aW tbl tw. bllCllad.; Whatenr the eue. the ..... leadln1 SN · KJDil buketl>all team bid trouble~ ••81 a foe for tile lourthc ttrailht I: TuMdJY ~t. The Sia beat vljtttDC El Toro 51-41. bul it wun't~. El Taro wu bailed undel' a U.pobd defktt balftim• ml 87-48 Smasher Uni Does It Again: Staggen Tritom BJ BUIS CASTILLO ... ..., ....... 'nlere'• IQID~ about pl• ID• Saa Clemente Hip that brln11 out tile be1t In tbe Unher1lt1 Blab <Irvine) ba1ketball team. And then'• 1ometbln1 about pla1lell Unl•enlt;y that brlnp out tbe worst IDSan Clemente. Before a paltry crowd ol HS TUeldar nlSh~ Unlver1lu UP98t Y11lUn1 SU Clemente for tbe aecontf time tht. aeuon, thla tlme to the tune of 6'1"'8. The a. mapped a alx·aame. South Coast 1Aa1ue wlnnlnC streak for San Clemente. Ironically, it started after a ee.5& loss to University atbome. But more lmportanUy, tbelct- back dealt a crippllnl blow to the Tritona' title. hopes. Four days after putting themselves bac k in the running for the lea1ue champlonablp wltb perbap1 their finest came of the season, a 38·34 vlctorJ over 'Corona del Mar, the Tri tons took them1elve1 out of lt with one ot their poQrOlt eflorta. WUh five 1am11 remalalnC, Su Clemente la.., In leape, two 1am11 beblndCoronadelMar. Unlvenit.Y, a team 1\lffertnc throulh a roller-coaster IUlllllll, •u cfeftntteb' up for um lamA After a IJow atan. UM TroJan.t CaDDed lb of nine lhoU In the HCOad ~ to take a »25 halNme 1984 and atcded It to 1' pollitl tD t.be tb1rd . quarter •• SllD Clemente COU14 Mem- lnalJ do pbln' $t. ·!>On Baal07 WU the bla PD for tbe TroJam iD pmocf two, scortn• c 10 ot bll 1' polnta. And when SU aem te made a late nm, Jlmt Stold ktpt Ua.1Yeni· tr tD ttoDt WUh a U.~t foartb quarter. In the d1iUtroul thlrct frame. San CJeinente turDed tbe ball over oaJtl ftm fOUl' ~ 1nl11ed. Iii ant three •boa --a-:-• .,., (11)~-- WMI 1118 flll.w alltf S..,.... 2 0 I 4 tc'*M 4 t I I .._. •101 Tiii• ttll .... .......... ~ • • t. c.-····~ 7••• °'*'" ,.,, ...... ''"' ...... •211....,. •••• KW. 4 0 11 ....... •Ill ~ ••••Mere .,,., T1le\IW 1 I 1 I ~Ill •• 1. Telllt 11 • It a TtC.dl • '7 M '1 Katella Still No. I . KaWla m,b o1 Ali m eOQe Valencia Hl1h of Oran1e tlDuea itl relp u tbe No. 1 (form•1Y No. 'l), wb1ch bi to ranked ba•t•tball team in Brea on TueldaJ. Oraap °*8t1 ind S.nlte mp Tonlabt fourth•HDkid El <Anabelm) ls atW No. 2, but Modena bosta 1eva~Qaked eaeh ol tbe other top 10 teiaail E1tancla (7 p.m.) and ruth· . baH ll».dl1ed Uound.. • ranked Edi.Ion II at home to Fowstaln Vallej movta tram loth·ranted ~ Beacbt fourth to third aftel' two .SC-POI Team reoor4 ,.,: m1~ ..us::) 1u.: 1. ~tella (1s-1> • f • ~ Sen1 (lJ.a) &O split, Jumpe from No. t to a. Fountain Valley (l.M) 46 E•tUda llisb of Colta Keu ~ El Modena (W) a alto made a leap, IZl°"1DI ft'Om 5. Ecllson (J.t.5) .a No. 10 to No. 'I wlth thtee & Cuyoo (lJ-4) rr atralsbt Yictories. ~ 7. Eatancta (11-t) 25 of the top 10 were Carob• aet L Brn (lM) 19 Mar. (form.iJ No, I), whJ b1 I. IMAJilllOi (144) 11 to San CemeDte PrtcSQ, and 10. B~ Beach (IN) I ...:.=:;:." ~ACIAA COWAll PllCI .AM»9&1Mm'. •A...,4'DI; 11w .... 1 ..... • l9"tW .. c:.111-TY CfttlluJ ... ,._ ...... . • , . ...,. .... n•84S00 .,. ........ ""''" MIORll1W_..._.._C9ITllTIOI ADYAICED YlllO mcl COMMUHICATIOMS nt ...... c.. .... ...... ..,. .......... .._ ..... 7 l ISCELLANY CIF Rankings Verbum Del Hich bool ot Loi Atitelea ti.e tOp ~ la tho ~A CJP bmbttiall rat· p wltb • 17·1 nc:ord •Dd tho onl1 Oran10 Coast area te•m in tbe top 10 poll II Huntlniton Valley Cbrlttlan (Newport JJ.each) ln the. amall acbool1dM.slon. Fountaln VaHey•1 Barons (4·A), Corona del Mar and Estancia <3-A) are llJted •1J>On1 the others pJnlnC votes. Tbe Barons bold the No. 1 spot ln wreatlln1 In the coaches poll alter wtnnini the presti1lou1 Five Counties tourna· ment last weekend, moving up from third a week ago. In tbe &iris field hockey poll, Unlveraity (Irvine), Corona del Mar and F.dison (Hunt· ineton Beach) are 4-5-6 in the coaches poll. ............ ~~,_.. '· v .. ...,,.,. o.I 01-1) ........ 2. Crew.ente ,,,,_.1.., (17-21 s. ... .-(1.H) •· V~IW• (17·1) 5. 1.8 l"Oly I 1>41 6, IC1lette IM,.I) T. MomlllfSldt <~U t . MvtrCIM) t , (Ol'l'lplOll (l,f.,, 10. •-116-SI .......... " '· 0-....., (17'41 2. oe ... n<IUI J. Horth llllv.) 114-tl •· LHA ....... (IWI 5. Let Attol (I~) 6. 111 ... "ide "'°'Y ll>JI 1. Uplend tls-41 I. Covlne ll>ll Soccer Results ".., ••t-lt (1) .... ti)~ .. ll•ltllCl• KWll't .......... . H•lllll'l'le: 1-1. OC-Vltw 141 WI ........ HO 120 10. .. ., 64 ff •S " IS ,,, tn 111 '° 71 ., u 21 Oteen view KOtl11t: HU119t•I• >. O.wl. Helftlme: ~View,,~. ANNI"' m m c:.,1-Y•ll•'f CY HOrlno. L••ndtno11. M 110 ...... 0. Htlltlme: ANlfltlm, u. Matw Del Ill ttl c-.,... Mahr Otl tcorlno: II.him 4, <.onrelt1 2, OleM, Jo~. Helftlme: Met« Del, U U"'ffnlty IJI UI IM~· Unlverolty acorlnt. C.Olllonon J, w111i., H-1!1ge, S-Clemente ll(or 1111 ,..,,., • IWnt« HalltkM• 2 2 ~ Q) Cll •t Tere C41M ~ Devy, Wllgllef', El Tore K«ln1r. HemteNt.9. H1tfllme: I I. ... ........._u1u·1 .... Y....., Wettmln$W Korl119: A....-rt, IEnlntlM, Trlcell. 'v acerln1: Y•"9 Htlfllme: WintmlMIW, 2-1. 0... """ "'' ttl L...-9Ncll 0•"• Hiiia l(orlng: "'•rde, ""-· •ltfWI•. Hemi-:M. •"-~(I) ....... 9Ncll H8 scorlnt: ~II, T ... I,_,,, EdlMll llUl'lnt: ..,_a, W•ter, Mel-•vlch. HtlllWN: IEcllMll,~I. .. ...,...u11t1~ New•ort acerlng: "•II• i. ~lwrtn•n. HtlltltM Newpor1, M. ... Yenlty •tt-1e .. 1mc,_.. MelHl,,,.1 M.. oc-YIN CO ltl Sttltl ... Owell Vlew-1"111 lltnfleld. H•llllme: ec.. v1-. 1 ... ....... 11) ttl IMN Hellll-: ..... IN; t4. ......... e> •> •> C.,. V•lltf ...., ... o>•>c..- M11•r Del •cer1111: McOoneld, Y-1, Mllll""°", Htlfll-1 Meter Del,, ... .. ....,. en w1 MeNe New,erl tcertn1: "•"• t, Pl~tty. , Mert11e 1c•rt,.1: f'reyen 2, V ... IMfttl, ~11. ...iftlfM:~.>I, u.t......,., '4> at ... ~ Uflhrttllty-Ollwet t , Prtllti, Wllttal. IG tcef1ft1; ....... u,.. ....... HllflN:~.14. tame1•1T- Ufil19t .... 1-... NelllllMIM. ....... Vlete ,,, .. , CilO ........ ""'" -lftt: Le•U-. Htlftlmt: NN, ,.._ ........ Vllllle Cll •1 ...... MY tc.«Me •r._ I, ... Ar • ...,,..,,...._ Girls' Sports ......... Yenlly HIMf ...... Wl CJt) UWll- HYnll,.tlo11 •••ch-Doyle 17 Wa'-11 S, s..r.... II, Loc-t 10 lloDtrM>l'I, He1111rne: Ha. J2.n. ,,.,, ... (II) (M) ..... Or ..... 1rv1 ... -0ov1ne l, ~ 2, OU.. men 1. f'rlend 2, LM •. P•tdltl I Whlte2. He11t1me' eo . ..,, Or .... 141) ~I UfmM BeK• LOQUM 8Mch KMlll0-"*°'9rlMll 1>. w .. 1own1 •. P9V1_, 1, w.uei t. frlllM>n U, Hedley 2. He1111me. »-n 11t. ln-te l~I C•> It--' E:•te11cl• tcerlno: f'r•ncy I, Hym" •, ~ U, J•mlliOll S, Mc NemM 2. CMrldo I, Ool'lloen I, Fe•ly•, Fr_t ..... Newporl H01110r Korlno· ~lh<art 6, Ecllter._ii a,~ 2, Wolle 21, Horn•. lllltll •. Helftlrnt E11Mcle, 2'-11. ''•· Yelley 1711 lttl Uill¥WW!ty f'll\. Valley ac.w1<19: 81 ...... 11, Jiii 81Ull'I J, Lollgleflow 2, .. 111111 10, w-I, Hevlkin II, .. llor a. Ar"'°"' •. S.IMIU"9 10. Vnlverslt., scoth•o: Smith U , Gordol'I 1, ~ '· Sllftfl'IOM J. Helttlme: f'V, •S lrvlM (U) OSI~ lrvlne-rl-6, GM J, L .. 2 Petc ... l l ,Medl1Dft2. Hell time Irvine. 6-4 ,.1 ...... IUI tit) IMlw lrvlM· Devine 2, Ot......, •. O..cl- m..i 2, P'etc:i.t '. Helltlmt 'uMrlon. 1'-1 .--ven11y Mwit.-... m1 cm u .,,_ Hunllnot., !Mech-Town....., i. Orte .. 2. Krem I, Brootu 11. Sl>er'J • Hellllrne: H8, IU "~ t•l ll) ,,,,, ... trvlne-Keuclllk 4, Norm•n 2, llollertt 2. H•lltlme• FllllerlOfl, 11-0 "L Y.nty tf,, (141 VNvenlty Fii\. Vtll..,-Arrnour I, lolln 17, Devi• J, Diiien S. HlM s, MelCH '· Porte 2, Sc~r 10, Joyce •. Metoenim a. U11tnrslty-Ch•nc• S, Col• 2. Trehkl• 2, Mlllor 4, Griffith 1. Helltlrnt: r:Y, ~. UlllM lliMCtl 141) CJSI Or ... L•VUN llN<h tc0tl!19-«0lltrt-t, Teytor It, H....,._ t, JollMon u. 1.--2, Corcovo!Ol I, Sessin I. ,,.,._ "" (JI) ............. lnrlM-£1111 I, Gj'611 10, ICaichlt 2, NermWI 4. --.ns 2. Hellllme IMftt, 12 ... ............. Ye""Y U•lw..wtp Q) U>..,.. Oftvo U11I Korlftl' Gold 2. ~. Hellllmt: Ul'llwt .... ty,M. M ....... QICUMIHtu ..... ,.,t KOtlftf: Mel'lt90rntry, Dr .. enu.M«1n1-111o: tldlm. HellUme: MenM, 1.0. H9'1l. a.di•> , .. , •• ··-(Penetrlllen ....... t._.: H8) SA y...., Q) (1) l'*-<lt llllMtCI• scorlflt: llwlcht<I. O..H ... Hellttrne: SA V..,..,, 1 ... ,_..,Ytnlty IA VelW/ Ill (1) lflitACl.I l'tlll&cle k0r"'9: ..... cet . H•lfll!M1M . :__~-----......... -..~ --=-. -----~ ' ---· - ................ ....... ' o.n .. "''" , ... , ....... STU PATTISON GOES FOR BALL. LAGUNANS ... ConUnued from 82 Dolphins within rour, taking advantage of a momentary lapse in the Laguna offense. The Artists made only four points tn the last three minute:. or play. Laguna 's Terry Hauaht contributed 10 points to the winnina cause and had numerous Barron's 23 Paces SCC RIVERSil>E-David Barron, Wlth 23 points (10-of-17 from the field), nine rebounds, eiaht o&· slats and three steals, led the Southern California College Vanguarda to a 79.75 col lege basketball victory over host Cal Baptis t Tuesday night The loters rallied to 67-all with 3:42 lert, but Paul Anderson's two buckets put sec back in command. key assists . Jim Richardson accounted for nine Laguna points, and left the game mid way through the fourth quarter with an inJured right root Chris Goller was the Dana Hilb leading scorer with 14 and was credited with nme re- bounds. Mike Samuels and Jeffers each bad 13 points, and Samuels had seven rebounds i......,. llMdo ('21 ,, " .. • LIPM>l'I I • l • Heutht s • , 10 C.lde,...,.,od 1 0 4 • Smith 10 s 3 25 llKh•rll'IOl'I l 3 2 ' Welltl Moote • EftQtn Tote" Jell en Smyth s.m ... 11 Oolltr . ..... Andrt"' ThOtnton Toteta I 0 J J 0 0 I 0 I 0 I , 2S 12 2J ., 0.MHlllo C .. I .• " "' .., , J s u 1 1 I 6 , 3 , u 1 0 , ,. 0 0 l 0 • l • , l ' ,, 1• II tO k-1111'~ L99Vl'll 11 .. c11 II 12 10 11 •2 Dene Hiii• 16 11 I) u ...0 ,_,.._.....,.. ...... 1171 A LT A L 0 M A -,.":=-r.'• Saddleback College """ ""''_,,_,we. 1 ,._ figurestohavelltUetrou· .. ft & • Oellftl111 ~ ble toniaht (8) here when ~:;: :=-..:;-1tt the Gaucbola duel wtni ... ..,,... tie~> m Chalfe1 Collece ln Ml•· ::.=;;.•~ «r!....> ~:: ton Conference basket· OflMf'lt .... ~> 1n balJpla)'. :~:.:,.~> !: Saddleback, 10.2for the o. c..11111 ~ "' season and a.:1 in Mission "9ef'r•-,~, 1n _...._ action, carries a lOC, T per 11co"° •&cc -:ot"'*· , game SC«i"Jl averlCO in· .,..,, et• fUltu. Cl• mh•t· Purw to the tilt. Tho Gauchos :~~J::m~ m are acorin« at a UT.5clip Her .. 101Mon> • m iJ:acooferenceplay u~.,. .. ,,.~,, 1tt ' Sltel!A(lt ... I 1tt Cliaffey. on tho otb r :JetteweY ow lCNtt ... , 1tt hand, hu dropped Ill flkl.I• "IN CtWU "' four conference 1ame1 ""'u ucm _ ...... ..., by an average of 23 -. & •·""' ... a.--. CWtav.o. Points. The Pantbera are ~~.:!: ~ IW'ke ...-o;" 0-15fortheaeason. IM'•tt.t IAMln. 1n Jn anocbcr key circuit MWM~«,_,, 1tt tilt toniaht, Riverside :':.~·:.:=,,., ~:: (4-0) hosts Palomar L.ii.OolonM '"'"*' 11• (" 0) #IVAM .. IAlll9ftl Ot "" • TlteO Cl-CCMl'IA9) llt °""" 11\.t• S\9111 M<atretl'I #Iller l.lev IC11'911t ••<Oft Ptlttf.oft Helm AMrllHlll Ven4e••• Miiie Hiii lttJeY Me IKlllCIHI 1ft jUl!eY-""""(~) tit - Ht "' ·1n ttt 1n '" Ut tit ""'" ·~ -m ,.,._, a yffr oto• • u,. oe1n11111. ,..,,.. u.100. Cltlml111 Pt1c• St.GOO. W111nl•' Wm tv...-1 lit 8tltlt #-eln la.it.ti 11t JIMl'f'• M1n 04lelldlf'nu1> I It Cllrl• Ttyltr (OtiemM) llt Rm tiers Roll83-S5 Wrestli~ Report ·over Time (Rtuthl tt7 SANTA MONJCA- Golden West Colleae'• Rusllera abelled boat Santa Monica. Colle.e, U-55, tn Southern California Conference basketball action Tues· day night. Jc-.ui... ......... tall""""'~" 111-w°"' tLll-Wfertell. U6-D'E<CltU ILll dK Sliney 1"- 11•-Treje (GI -'1 !orlelt. 14?~ 101-lllf IWMll. UO-Allllroell 10) pllwoM l'.tley 1.21 ISl-Lete IGI dK lll"lit ~ '67~,,,_ fGlpi~ 111(.e)·et t'1 -~ IGI tied o.r-10.10, 1 tO-ltotll 10) dK °""'911 I U . H•l-51 ....... (L8l-111Tferle1t. Mt IAC !Sii (Ill OrMtt C.tt I It -8roetiena IOI dK f'rlle IO..$, 12•-Lemelle (Ml -"°''°" IH. 1>4-S.nol• IMldK PflllllPSJ.1. 142 -Wellee.t IMl-WlorltlL 150-1.,nto 101 dK M'fflCll U lst-Oevh IMI -llY lort9't. 167-lloblllMn <Ml -.., ftrltll 177-llulr IMl-l>Y'9rlelt. l'°-8•11_.tl>y IOI pinned MllrPllY 1 °' HWI.._ meldl lleld Hftllk- Y•""'f •11~ 1a11 ca1 IA ve11., •1 Phtm (El plmed Olien• 2: 52. IOS -Wlnttra l&I pl!Wlecl Pure• I 0. 11• ·llwtMll ISi pl"'*' Sllfftlen J s• U2-Tllotnet ISi pl,.,.ed Flynrt l .... 12'-0uert• ISi ~ i.-rv H , us-•1i.o, 1u dK T•.,.., M uo-St......, ts>"'""" H..cu" "hler J •7 14'-Heetl\ (fl dK T.,,..... 6-1 15'-hefw (fl plnNCI Stier• S 02 1'7-lloll• <El clK Lamtre 7.0 111-Petr" IEI plrinff Mlm• l ~ii-celllt ts( dK I.Monro J.4 Hwl-S-IEI clK CMlte IM J..,.._VenKy lat-It U.I ()0 SA Ytli.J •1-11 ... 11111 -.., forlotlt. 10S-H_. ISi ......... een-ptan I JS ll4-Mlll.,. lfl -w lorlllll, 112-Lar .. lSl dK Len* 17-4 12'-Went till dK 0..WI 1).1. US-J-CE! dK IClm 2· I 1..0-Hol-l'I ponned Cornukt •·SJ 147-Whllle CSlpl ...... C-2 1', 1H-v•n0orten IEI won b'f lorltiL t'7 ""'"" (If) -by lorltlt. 111-WllD•<ll ti> •Inned PlllllPl<llUC:lt l.01. t•S-Lyon IEI -by wtell. Hwl-Merttou 1•1 -..., 1or111t. ,~ .... lat-It CJU Cal SA Yallet 97-tolflet II! I dee MNlne 4 2 105-,__.. !SI plnntel Merllnel 2 40 I U Mertl"91 Ill tlecl MO<TIH-4 122 H •v•IO ($1 dee ~trY •~. 12• ·Shum ISi elk AdllM t I. l>S-Gtlberl Ill clK Whitt 7-6, 140~•1«Mlt W -Wlllltm& IE)-9Yftrteil IU-HuOtllP•lll•• 1e1 won Dy lorl9't. 1'7-Sll.tler !El -w tortell. 111-H..,l•Y CS) plllntd SltpllUI 0,lt ttJ-Wl~I IElW01111Ylor .. 1t. ""· .,,_.., wu-1 "' Git TwlM (Hert) Ut Nell..,. Time ( .. tOllllei4) 1.n llotel 'M• IOerl-> 11t •••Y etwe "-• IGtrclllle) tit Todd Zirbel led the at· tack witb 21 polnta and 11 rebo\mds, while Dave Stricklin put a defensive net around Santa m Monica's Matt Jordan tn and held him to 10 !~ poiats. tar off his m normal pace of 24.0 :~ polota per 1ame. Pro Scores ................... "-latlN Ntw v.-... ~ sc.ttt7 c ....... ...., •. INl-'2 Oelroll 161, WMN ........ IOI Chlctoo IJI, 0.-114 New 0"-'t .. , llollon ti Porllfftd 120,IC-•Clly'1 L.o•All9tl•ll1,Pt1tloldll""•I02 .......... 1 .. ft ,. .. seMen • • • ,. Clltmlllla 10 • t Jt • ll111ef • J 2 JI $1rldllln 1 O t t RMftH .a 2 » It Poltla 4 o 2 a Leech t010 Ftetc. ... r I 2 I 4 GI-t 1 2 t Toltl• 1' t IS IJ HetlUme: GWC. aua. Los Ala•itoa Race Results fltrT..,..y (Worlll) l«I UO JOO 0-, Tl'odt SI.-Theft 01...,.. IO'Neerl J.. 160 "llST llAC9 --Y•"'* I ¥Mr MS ICtlly IC.dual S .. oldt, Clelml,.., """9~,tOO Tlrnt -21 tt G<tlMOtlll AIM rell -HarumY1191tW, f'tHdy9 IWetllll 1l.ID 16.<IO to 60 Trvdlle, TNy e Prince, llrlQlnllM, LwOy 7S t ..... lllldl IUO 1 .0 "•le Me....,., 0...... 0erwtr Aprll Fool• JoQ (l(nl"") • • Scr.C<hed -Uy• P11cll Tlrnt-22.47 IJ aucte l •U .. Mt & P·T ..... Al• ,.., -~ o.tltlN, Jets DI_..., ..... .,, .. Oetlr.. II_._, Lii Amtkll, 'ldlle •ox,, Vl•CAlno, ic-tl!Cr-llUOMTM llACa -ut Jef'lllL J Ho KrelOIH YM• •l<H ..... Al--· l'unie u ·->Gel--• & 1-LltCQ .... 7J, l'tll Sta.a • .JeD'i Jet IC.rde .. I SICOND ltACI' -2!0 yard•. I Mike's Jet (Hortl Y••• .. .n. c1 .. mlng. For maldena. l(htl Gitt !Tr....,., PvrM Sl,900 Time -22 tS A.oo J 111 uo •• 4to uo NaUQhlY a.rt AIM re11 -GM<'oe-........ Hale, IPerMrl II IO s «I • :ro One .. , ... o.,. 11_., lloelrel Jfll• PaclllC cw.-.1 •.20 3 .0 He Kret~ Direct ThOUflll <W•'°"I • :10 Time -"·" HIHTM uca -S!O Y•nlt. I Y••• AllO ••n -QMendSptecl't, Bio M oldli & u,. 5terter ...... MIU. l'llf'M Gele Tru, Flow Lllllt JUll, 11'1'1• '2,200 SeYtflnt~ ~.., IClridly lier No KriMChtt IMYl"l t.AO '·'° '.0 8UJ1le Girt CTr_,,..> J0.00 12.20 TMlllD llACI -l7t 'l'•rdl. I YNr He'• t Trll IAdetr) I IO OIM .. YCI. CJtlmlno. ........ '2. too Tlmt -JOA Oollmlll Ptloebt AIM ,.,,. -Ac.kl• 5-rer, L.eo'1 fTteasvrel 7.lO Oii J.AO llelly, Lllldeltlly, Mo\t "9ytl, Zlp•1 Cuilom TtllOtff 1~111 '60 '00 Son. llo.y Joy, Mevtcw11or1 Giddy'• Roelle! l"OUOhl I .O Screlclled -Wllld Je,,_r, Tiny Time -49.1' Nolw, 011 TWI ... Aiuf'9 Tt'I Niece AIM nn -AetMn't ,,,...,., Gold u •Hda Mllndly II« a l•hJdt ~lty, Mr TIOltf' llecktt, 810 Wt, Girl, f'el411S61t .. 11111• 8•rred Umll, ""· llrl._.,, Altenca-. _,,a Hlwtllen I.it S<r•lched -Away SM Goe•, Hall ... Tlmt, .Jutlot'a -· 'Tis Toutft ., ••Kta...,.,. ......... ,. Basketball C:.tt. T ..... f'.W J1S7M le Ctl;f Cel .... '"' rt " Jlf .., ....... 10 J • 2l ........ _ , 2 l 12 w~,.., 2 o s ' Prep Basketball POUllTN ltAU -a yerO.. J , .. , eld• t.. llP· Cl•lmtnw. l'vrH liOOO ... 11Nfllua !Tree.Ml llM 4 • JM O<een Arms l~l •-» J . .O Welt!Wlll• l l 2 t AcMm\ 4 1 o • ....al1IM4 2 , 0 • M<P.HI • 7 J U Cleyt.., o t t 7 Tole" lO 19 " 1't Hettt!Mt: IC(. «>-t7. _....,."""' CfM I•> (6'1 a1 T- U Tero 1cOf'l"9-0rlJtln il, M< .. •Odtn 2, Wiiton 21, Hu• •• Cerl1Kd2,Boull"' 7·Gl*4. Cweolt ... MM ICOrt"l-'<el~ S. ,_, •. ICl'*'1 t7, Shotltn tt,Mel., ,, McCorUll t, Devi• 10, Giiroy t, ~Ith• Alure ON (#yl•I I.JO Tlrnt -11.1' AIN;Tell -Yerty, .. IW ClllU, Tllrl'a "°"' P'Mll, Mee'• 111 lier ScretcllM-Andy'I ltey1t H•lttlMt: MY, M ~Cl)Ql,__V•lley '"IC.,..,., Ofljlelftll•e, Horry, H•llll!Nl l'V,M .,... en Jo ...... MM• • .._ Ctl CU.I CO ...... 8-cll Cage Standings HtlflllM: CclM, 4'-21 Ml•I .. Vie.le C.UI "1> o.&a Mete Mlulcin Yltlo-Huffm•11 I 1. ••nedl• 1. HatntM n, ftvhl~ '· khmlclt 1', Hoed t, \/ellLltfdt 4, llt'tnbaUl'l'I t, A.dims t. Surnmt" 1 • ... ~-· c.MfWM, ... _ earlflt: .. ~,..,.. ..... ,.,,., .... , .. 111tne ,.,. ~II ~'(Mlltt. TrOJ ""',,.."' M..,,.il• ... _ WHltfft C.&I•~ '-t..llltl,T~ '· a. t.v• 4, 6-r s, Lo,.. f, Ooft'lll\lc ft.A 4, Htrrl1 t, l.•<k•Y 4, lollttr I , dt Trlgllo 7, ::: H•illlmtl Ml/,~. 4'7 ... , "' Stl sn • .. PVBUC NOTICE f11cnnous -u11••• NAMa STATaMmHT T ... tellewlttt .. r..,. I• .. 1 ... .....,,.. .. : II( AT!90A•O Sl'!CtAl,1$TS, •• "'· ·--· s.til Me, Cl. ft"2 All T_,., I .. Cllwrt &0 v-Huya, Ce. t1•t Tllla~b~- lfl4lltvi.uel. AlfT- Tllls at•-' •• flltid wlltl ttw ~nly Clorll et Clrafltl CeuMy •n J•nuery •· 1'11. "''* '°""" ..... Or .... C-U Delly Piiot J•n. II, 1e, ts, FtO. t, lt11 JO.II PUBUC NoTJCE lttt" NOTICC TO CllaDtTOltS SU' a lttOll COU ltT OP 1" It ITAT• OP CALll'CHINIA flOtll TH a COUtfTY Of' OllAMla ... A<tJIM '" th• Metltf of Ille £at•I• or EltNl!ST ALBE•T WILLIAMS. OtceeMd. Molle• 11 • ..., o<-10 creditor~ htvlllQ ci.lme •telnil thl u4d -.c .. RM 10 file MICI Cl.tifM Ill Ule oftl(e f/I .. Cleftl of IN ....... <-1 or to ' sw-t tllflft to tN ...,.. ..... el tM 111"9 of lllOWLAHD H. OltAHAM, '24 I!. Melll St., AIMmbr .. Cl., wtlt<h IM· •• lflk• l•tlle ..... ef bl&lllOUef"'"' .,,...,.lfned "'alt meuen -'_,.. lo Wid ••!tie. S«ll cloimt wit" IM -. _,.,. ""-' IM filed or IM'tMflltlll es olore.eld within lovr _.,. efwr U. llrot Plll!Clc.atlaft of \lll•n•Uu. Dalecl Jen. 1 .. "11. NORMAN WILLIAMS f llt<utor ef l!W Wtll • Of~ddfoc llOWL.ANO H OltAHAM ,._, ....... ma.Mtt..M.. ........ .,., CA ""1 1'"4>fl1htd Or-(OeJt Delly Piiot, Jtn. ti, 2S, P'tb. I, I, lf1t PUBLIC NOTICE PICTtTIOUS •VSINUS NAM•STATaM•NT The fol IOWl"9 persons are dol ng b<nl ... uel OIAMOHO VIEW VIL.LAG£, 11n1 trvlne 8f'Ulev•rd, Svlt• •. TUM•"· C.lllOf'llle.._, Tiit Johll Merlln Compeny IA Ctlllornl• (Mpor.Cfenl. 4101 Westef'ly l'l•u, Suite IOI, Newport 8eec~. C.lttornl• ""° Criterion O.volOllf"..,t, ll'IC. IA Celllornl• Corllor•IOlll, 177tt lrY•n• 8ovl•••rd, s.Mle •. Twslln, C.lllemle ,,.., n 11 bU•lllffl t1 conclvcted by • Qelltrtl "'11!e"IWC1. T11e .-Mettln ~ny Jofln T. INrll ... ""-ldtfll Th•I •IMllfNflt -flied w lU. -CA>unty Clerlt f//I Orenoe Covftty e11 Jtl'I. •s. ""· "9111 l'UOll•htd Or-. Cootl Delly Piiot Ja" II, 2S, r:.1> 1, I, "71 l,._7' PUBUC NOTICE "CTITIOUS IVSIHUS NAMI STATllMaNT TM followtng per-11 c19ing bur.I· -~= CRYSTAL CANYON, 1'1tt 5-ftt• Mtrlel'la S4, Founl4Mn V•lltY. C.111 t'270I JtmH Oerord Llpot, lt1't Mt• MerllM SI., ,_, .. n V•tlt1, C.111 . n1oa ThOm .. H. Colwed Jr, •11 ,.._cin Sl ... OVl'lte1nve11ev,c.t1t.tt10t Thia t1u.iMH I• conoucttlll tly • ll"'ltM pertMnlltp, J-0.UllM 1'1111 ·~ ..... ,., .. wttfl the °"""" Ollr1l •Or .. ~ Of', .... n,1m. "" .. ............ ()> ... OeNt IMllY ~let J911t1,u. ... ,,.,,... ,...,. PVBUC NOTICE• .. . . . -----··--.............. . .. """' .... ... ... iJL .. ............ A STEP TOWARD STARTING A SERIOUS BUSINESS Watkin• Displays Broad Ax for Woodworkers B,y .JOUNCVNNIPF u ...... ...,,. A temxJUS structure &.bat must carry· an eDOTm0\19 welaht un. derllnee th lraglllf.1 of the acl· mlnlatration'a voluntary anu. infiation proenm. Two brief SeiJ , both from the econom c meaa e of the pi. 1ldent.demonatrai. PQiD.t. TBE Fl&IT 8TATB8 the problem: •·uGlcsa we 1a1.D better control over the SnflaU0r1 rate. the pro1pecta IOI' re1alnln1 a tul· ly employed ecoooJD.Y wW be aerioua~ reduc~·· The aecood is the approach to aolvinc it: "I amt.Mr lore a_sldn the butlne11 • com munlty and American workers to participate in a voluntary program to decelerate the rate of price and wqe ln· crease." The deep cu"""" tangled roots of lnnatlon are to be ripped up by a civilian army of volunteen, utlnC blunted io&tru· ments and taking lnatructiona from a general with no authortt,y lO compel comr.Uance. The general a staff will bave to Haven for LastiDg Goods Store Sells to Workers Wlw Accent Quality CllICAGO CAP ) --Frog Tool Ltd., on the surface, is just another shop that s ells woodworker's tools. But to Richard Watkins and the would· be carvers who haunt his store, it's a haven from the "throw away society," -a place to create s omething lasting and worthwhile. Watkins. a physicist·turned· cabinetmaker. sells maybe 10,000 \foodworlung and carving tools. one of the widest selections in the country. lie also oHers mstruc· lion an cabmetmaking, woodcarv· mg and woodworking. ALONG WITH THE anstruc· taon, Walluns preaches the gospel of quality, not quantity. "Most Americans want quanti· ty, not quality, if given a choice,'' • he lamented in a recent interview. ·"They like big pieces of furniture not well-crafted pieces. They lake loud music, not fin~ music." Yet business at Watkins' North· Side shop has been brisk. 5th Office Opens Realty Network, Newport Beach, has opened its fifth Orange County .office at 2120 South Main St .. Santa Ana. Henry Molinar has been appoint· ed associate director. 'Tlals ls la•., •II tlal11g• •tart. Peep~ just don't tlaroto a •teltdl. •••• • '"There are some people who have become disgusted with the tripe they he~r on television and radio. Some don't want to be treated like cattle any more,'' he said, explaining why people - from lawyers and corporate ex· ecutaves to cab drivers are workangmwood. WA TKINSSWITCnED careers about lOyears ago. But he was go· ing broke because consumers didn't want handmade cabinets and furniture. Instead, he found a need for sup. plying the few woodworkine en- thusiasts and professionals with rare hand-made tools. To find some of them, he tours Europe, buying tools from fac- tories in small towns and villages where the skills of forging and grinding rtne workmen's matel"ials are passed from father to son. HE SCOURS EUROPE once a yeador the finest chisels, mallets und ~rfectly shaped woodcarv- ing implements. He travels to Germany, Austria, France, England, Belgium and the Netherland11. His Jove for the craft la payin1 off, he aa.ld. beeauaepeople "want to find 10tDeWo1 that m•t used up and forgotten. . "I get all kinds of people here. One guy owns one of the lar1est .auto dealerablps in the city. One time be said to me, 'You know, I'm in business. I think only about dollars and centa. "BUT SOMETIMES I just sit and think about what piece I'm working on and suddenly I'm back down In my shop. And I feel great! '"Watk.Jnsrecounted. He acknowledged that probably the great number of beginners who buy tools or take classes are merely caupt up in the pauing fad -"gettingbacktobasics." And once that notion irritated Watkins. ..BUT rr DOESN'T bother me any more. Isaytomyaelt, 'Thalls how all tbinas start. People just don't throw aawit.ch. They go into things by dearees. And maybe lt's just one more step toward start· ing a serious business. "And," ho added, "there are a few young cabinetmakers in this country who are keeping the heritage of craftsmanablp alive. And that's worthwhile. Because m the craft you see man's finest efforts put into a two or three· dimensional form. He has put himself ln it. It ts not replaceable, not produced by machine. It represents a whole history or culture." PREP ARA TIOM OF TAXRETURHS y-a....i , ........ M1rt1n I. Schneyer Attorney at LBW "**"'*' C~f\ecl PUt1Mo ~, .... lil8A lfldion) ~woti.-IT-IMl ,.,..,._Of Taa 1..- Mervyn's to Merge With Dayton Htids.on L'--.....,,. ua rea Court • -us..,.,_ eo...t I ... • .&000-•""Yl'I ..... no ~ .. -.CA..eo 131-1164 CAPITOLIZE . WITH CAPITOL ( TAKING J _ STOCK _ 5 I Witlwut Restraint, Can Carter Plan Jl?arlt? apread ltaelf thin. The roo are ••au over tho pta~." 1ald Charles khultse. And lttbe1rowth cannot be •topped tbCA the enUte Carter economic proar•Dl ls un- dermined. A Pa Ml11M 18 put on r traint, but r tralnt la tho quality J kiDC in an economic IOd ty )'OU )11 )'OUr Hills, your ooess. your aemcea for th hiCbestpri obtainable. The Cart.er Schultze, it chief economic Blrategtst, must sell the Idea to labor and business. both of which seem to have a conaenltal dl1Uke for takln1 advlce from Washlaaton. Early lndlcaUona are that the selll.ria Job, on which nothin1 leas than tho auceessful operaUoa ot the Carter admtntatraUon d• pends, will require theakilla of tho Hitsman who sold lceboxea to\ Esklmot. .. THIS P&OGBA•," aald Carter, ••11 baaed an the lnltJal pretumptlon that prices and wa1e1 In each Industry abowd rile 11mlficant1y Iese than In Jt78 than tliey did on averaae durtna the past twoyean.' '. If that were the uniform eoal, then aompllance mlabt be meuured. But there ue excep. tJona, many ol them, and that means tbey warrant 1peclal h'1!dlin1. At &.be president said, "In- dustries and worken wlth far dll- ferenthlltoiies andcu.rrentlitua· tions wUI not be &$keel to fit within the constraints of 1ln1le numerical guideline." FOK EXAMPLE. WHE.&Epro- fit margins have Wen seriously squeezed,orwberewa1esarela1- giog seriously, deceleration in 1978 would be less than for other ( NEWSANALYSIS ) fif'm• or groups of workers. the p ldentaald. "Jn eeptional cases, .. be con· tinu~. ''doeeler•Uoo may not be posslblo at all. Conversely, tlrms or 1r0\IP1 th t have done ext4'p· ttonally well in tbe recent past maybeapectedtodomore." Tho e determinations, which cannot be made without special 1tudlee ot the specific aituaUom, wlll be maAo without any Increase TH a.E AlllS , t1' ore, a matter ol credibility. Ho• can this bedMe? And lflteu be done, can It be don lnthesplritoholun· tceri m that is the kayatone oltbe anU·lnfW.Uun structure! The bcnefltaolalower rrowthof prices end w e. would be broad· ly shared, the preaident aald tn bis message. "What ia needed is a joint eUOC'l," he explained, to makeevecyonebetterort. That sequlres volunteers v.-bo are not certain that in de~ne tbcmselvea ttiey wall. simultaneously, serve themselves. Exxon Earnings Dollar's Weakness I . . Blamed for Drop NEW YORK (AP> -Exxon Corp., the world's laraest lndUllrial firm, ~rted Its second decline In annual earnings in the pa.st 10 Y ars. Tbe firm cited the recent weakness or the U .s. dollar as a prime reuoa. hxoa. With operations In more t.han 10 countries, said Tuesday that lta ..Umated net income for lJ'T1 wu $2.41 billlon, or $5.38 a changes. In 1915, the firm share. down 8.7 percent from earned $215 million the aame 1918 profit of $2.M billlon, or way. $5.to a •hare. For the fourth quarter, l!:x· Company officials satd the on 's net income was $5S5 decline wu due to foreltn ex-mlJUon, or $1.24 a share, down chan10 losses of $285 million in 18.5 percent from $681 mllllon, 1977. or $1.52 a share, the year before. THE DOLLAa•s decline was cauaed mainly, •nd ironically for Exxon, by the nation'• COD· Unuln& dependence on and pay· men ts forforelcn oil. In 1978, Exxon earned $60 million when the dollar strengthened on forel&n ex- Over 1"he Counter MASO UstiMJS Revenues for 1971 came to $$8.01 blllion, compared with $52.58 billion in 1976. The last time Exxon reported a decline in annual earninca was in 1974, when earninas dropped to $2.5 billion from the Arab oil em barco-loflaled level of $3 billion in m4. MUTUAL FUNDS lll(Ofl'I f 74 N ere '" H Horlr 1 .. T•fre "11 Ht _ ... -........ ___ .... _. __________ .,. ............ e -I ·-----------~ ............ ~ -.. .... Wedl'Qday. January 25, 1t71 Tops Wss List Early ln 1977 th company reported thal th " vera1 Ftaoklln Mint collect.or bu apent som $880 on company productl to date" end that 180.000 ol these cotledore "bav purchUed 10 or mor pro,raun.a repre.sentlnt abOut '3.700 in averaae total purchases." Chari L . Andes, chairman of Franklin Miot, drew the moral for harehol rs: "The success we have achleved r In· Money Tree forces our conrideac _ that we have only befUa to tap the enormous worldwulo market for our Juxuey ~roducta." It's a confidence that wa badly misplaced. l'ranltUA Mint's sales, whict\ were doubllDI every two years, 1tuck in 1977. despite an d•ertisina and promOtJon budaet of more than $!50 mllllon, Tb final fi re ta expected to be about, or a UWe Wtd r, $308 mUl.ion posted for mt. TJIE EYVECT ON EARNING wu cat.utrophjc. • 1976, Franklin Ml.ht ne.t.tect $24.7 millloo, up trom ::i mUHon in 1972. lo 1m. the earnines were well below $10 mlllion. What happened! People did not respond to Franklin Mint offeririis the way they did to the pm. And since tM company was geared up for .volume, there wu litUe it could do to reduce cotts. · Customers may have become disUlusioned by atoriea that dl.adoaecl that the tNIUon value of the 1Deta1J used io 1ta producta "seldom &mounta to moNS tblll I fourth of' their rC'lall price." And they may have bqun to wonder how tb products could be "collcctor:'a Item•" whtn they are turned out by the thousand.I. AN ARTICLE IN FORBES maaulne Hid most of the Franklin Mint products fetch between 20 and '° )>ercent ot •their oritinal prtce when resold. An article in Advert! lng Age quoted a philatelic ex~rt: "lt sounds Incredible, bu\ they're aelllng stamp sets worth ~cents for $2.80." , It •bould be noted that the company nevCl' promiaotl It.a articles would Increase in valu . It said; "The predomin1nt reaaon collectors purchase Franklin Mint prOducts is, ctulte simply, nJoyment. Collectors derive a e.nse of ~rsonal aatlJfacUon, pleNure or achievement from our producta. Collect.ln& 11 fun, and Co(. lector1canaharethelrappreelatlonofbeautyotthelrrespect forblstor)' wi\h others throuabthecollectlbles wo produce.•• proch.1ce." Wall Street's perception of Franklin lnt u a beauutul company dimmed in 1977. The company entered the year With its shares tradi.Dt at $29.50. It emeried tell· ing at'8.37. Market Ekes Gains NEW YORK <AP> -The ttock market climbed e1utloualy today, 1b0wlri1 I~ of bar1ain bunUni on selective luues and improvement amona auch bulc ln· duatrte& u steel and oil. Dolf'lonf!•A~ragn .... y~~lf"I~~.-... nocn • ''"' crnr,. ~" ri1.f, ~. r1 ,. Tr" 2IO 41 21l.• *11 tfi U+ 1.17 1$ Ull !OS.IS Mii.Ai .OS 4 m -t. 11 6S St11 UO.?• zn lt 2" I 2 .U)n+• Indus ...................... f • Tr• •••••••••••·••·••••••• , UUl1 •••••••••••••••••••••• '• ., "" ······················· '"*· New YOIU( CA .. , SA&.l:S ~ r::~ .. ~~! .. :~~.~ifi ... ~ ,rtWftu• -••••••·•••••··•·· 1 ~ ........................ . -.ft .................... , •• 1 ,,.. YMr ........ : ......... ., • .,, t1 ~T .. rtlrt .... ., ......... ,, t1 tat.ct .. .,.. ..••••.•••.• ' to=················· ttl6... . ........... , .... . WMATAllllUOIO ,.IW VOAIC CA.-1 .,-__-.-::..._=-. -• ------=---,-,.___ • ------""'.O_ .. . . . ........ ·-.... ·-. • T.elev· • WR • ....... ••p:IMt .............. "' ....... Hollpllet per-on- ftll IM .. perllNdlcs, • f:IOYm •• ,. "Olb« .... (1974) <Mo Vo.g, Chettle °'811-. A womM wllh MOOnd • cr.191 ptoblelM for ,_ llulMnd Md .... WOIMd lw. (I hn.) I THIMNlt IUNCH THI 9'00eCIU OUtllde PfHMH' .. ere tuming one of Ille belt co,e Oii itie ._. ~to .,. ~~ l::COOWAHY NOULATIONI: IT1fUNO Oii ITMUDf<I? 8en1tor fdward M. ~ dleWmen end PAllldlnt Of M-..tcln Ai#· .,.. ~ v. CMey; tof· mer OA8 Chllrmen John ~~~ ~end dlllf _,.. tllle ~ fdwln I. Colo6- ny Ind 8oultlwelt MrtlnM ptllldent lam If' MUM det»t• llrh ~ The Good Guys John Wayne and Ben Johnson star as drifters who help recover a stolen &old shipment in the movie "The Train Rob- bers" tonight at 9 on CBS, Channel 2. I MONtwa l::IO MOYW *** ''Peu1g• To M ....... " (Plf't 2) (1944) Maloy end ..... ..rm tor en ~ ber girt who can Nip to clelf' en ofllcef of • bledcmall dlarge. fJI) MACNEIL/ l!HRER REPORT Humtlht9Y 8oglf'l, Cleucle Reine. fecaPff• from o.vll'• ltllllCI •ttll'llOl 10 flOht 01e Nall a1ong wt1n the Frend! Free IOIOIL (1 hr.) e.l) AMERICA'S WINOS ()) TO TIU. THa T"'1TH 7:30 8 WHEN HAVOC I KWITCHEO ~l!MY Jane Wyett; adul1 educ. tlon; gener11 edUC811onel deY9k>pment , ... CJ) C81NEWS 9 MEIWGNf'flN Gu11t1e Arthur Oodfiwy. Joyoe 0. Witt, Kaye 8ellerd, luthur end Ktlllryn Murray, LH Brown. 7'.()(10 N8CN£W8 Q UAMCLUa G A8CHEWS ILOWLUCV ~11 STRUCK • "HaYOG 811\1Qk 30.000 In Shl Mlnutea" Tiit arvptlon of Mt. ,.._ In 1902 look 30,000 ....... In ~· 1111 mlnulal; ol 30,000 people, juSI two ....,...,..,, D IHANANA Q N@WLVWEOGAME G HONUTAI.. CD n. MAD't' IUNCH CD ~12 Two anMd robber11 hold· •ng hoslagM and • --of ~ oc:c:upy Mal· ICJ}'and Reed • LA. INTPCHAHOE Clta11n~I Lbti119• 11 l<NXT (CBS) Los Angeles 0 KNBC (NBC) Los Angelos B KTLA (Ind ) Los Angeles KABC· TV (ABC) Los Angeles ()) KFMB (CBS) San Diego 0 KHJ. TV (Ind) Los Angeles di KCST (ABC) San Otego CD KTTV (Ind.) Los Angeles q) KCOP·TV (Ind.) Los Angeles S> KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angelos fl!) KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach "Snll)lhota" Ii) ITAMOAAO "The Mllll 8rotMta II" (I) lt2t,OOOQUUTION ~I FAMlt.YFIUD a:oo a CJ) 0000 TlMl!S P_,y~d'-• 1het 1moldfl0 can be ~ geroua to more tt\M one'• '*9tlh. 0 Glll%ZL Y ADAMS "The Seekara~ Ad1ma ~I .. a QIAllbll ex• cav11r11man (Keen1n WYMI -.dllllg the _... '*-IO find the non- l.lllliant l8nn1lrtd for wtlldl he •1tohanged '* 111• s8WlglL 0 MOVIE ••• ~ "'The Plalnemen" (1931) Oary Cooper, CNrtea 8icllford A tr1o ol lamoua Wll1em ~ ,.,. try 10 stop • wNI• man from Mill'O oi-lo ~.(:Zin) 0 9 EOHT• ENOUOH ··Much Ado About Oarblge" Tom II~ ed from 1111 job tllter accuelng City ol1lc:lttla and • gllbege company of OOf• rupllOn Ind lhln retu.ing to ,__, 1111 IOUl'<:ee lo • Gr and Juty Investigating hlSHpoM D JOt<m'I WILD CD CAAOL BUAHETT AHO~ Cit MOW! ..... "Aillld:ION 0-.. (*1) ....,_ T.,..,. w.tc:n do. Wllll• 1111 wife ···-e ....,. ofllas, an Alf'/fy eflcll' Ctlaillly .....,_ lfl UllOOl_,tlolllf ,,,.... ..... eMOYA "One .,..... 8alel" Patt 1 of • 2-t*t _.. on the ,_ to .. MOOft • Wiiy -11 ,,,., llllf]f fOt the u.e. to OIC ._. flrtt? • MMMC MITHOD Of' OIL PAINTINQ "Cencftl Artd Bottle'" uo. (I) IZV9DMC Nldt II ant9*d \o e ~....., ...... bW Wl1ll aha ~ out frOfll bthlnd .. ..... fAlllf. I CONCeN -----rrA-AA'TQI OROl*-MTa °""' l!MY • .i.na ~ acMI ..... tlOn; geriar9 ~ da11llilm•11tllltl. e;OO 8 (I) 0. MOVE * * * •·Tti• Train Robbers" (1973) John W~ Aftt.Mll~ A dtt!tar .. chlrtMd ~ • young widow ~o ...,.. Ing Che bln'9" ~ '*-1 tor ..... gold hkS- den ~ ...... tubend. ('!) D P&PtNO T1ME8 A --t19i,ted border guard, I tlolC*I on.trio Mii~. end. Nlow wtlo make• "81gloot•' tflldll for • prioe ... 900!• lighted by llottl AMn OppeliMlllt• and o.wt Lett•man In Ht cOINdy apec:Ull apooflllg TV ,_. magazine"'°'"' 89 QWW!'8 ANGELS •• Mgllil "' Thi Bac:llllald .• The Angell take potitJonl In a~ woman'• team 10 find out wtlO II trying to knodl out • female toolblll ltlgua. D IRON8IDE CD r.mw GIW'FIN Outael: Mllw ~. Joyce De Wiii, Kaye ea111rd, Armur 111d Kathryn Murray, LH Bf own. EJ:» OllEAT P£NIOAMANCES "U.8 0 Gitt'' A d<lfNllD- llon of Paul Oelllco'• ··vema.·· t.iurtng ~ Specek, Sally Ka9artnan. Howetd o.slYa end w-. ..... Hurt m EVEN TlE DE8EAT WIU8l.OOM A atudy of Ille di-ought dllemma "'wfllCh the_,. ern 11a1• fi"ll lhemMlvel l•Pf-lad tO:OO 0 POLICE WOMAH "The Young And The Feir Pepper poaee II a eotlege 11udan1 end llecomea TUBE TOPPERS KOOP 8:00 -.. Reflectlo in a· Golden Eye." Superst rs Elizabeth Taylor and Marion Brando to med up for thls 1987 movie drama aet on a military base . KCET 9-8:00 -Nova. 'Tho first of a two-part aenes on the U.S. race to land a man on the moon. · • NBC CD 9:00 -Peeping Times. A satire on TV's news magazine shows hosted w Alan Oppenheimer and David Letterman (see review befow). KCET 9 9:00 -Great Performances. Paul Gallico's "Verna: USO Glrl'• ls presented with Sissy Spacek, Sally Kellerman, Howard DaSllva and William Hurt. 10::•~ ln\loflled ..... • Arlb~ ~ lt9lld). bllllJiltlll '° .. operdflO • Mlddl9 !Ill ...... .......,. rtno. 1:=.v .. HUTCH "A ~ Wor111 OUerdlng" 1*81!y enct Hutcft try to P'O'ect. ,_..... ~ wftOM .......... . and the cm. balorNI • _., .,.__, one for Huldl. Monique Yan de van. 8lgrl8 Hesao au-i ,,.,, • HONIYMO<MM lnatalllng • ptlOne lgllnl1 RalS*'• ~Ab wins him OWi until he OWIMlr'I aofneofl9 ...... convertltlon. e~ "Equlll!Y" Olol'la Steinem, Senator Fred Hama and Jerem)' Aitkin dl1cuu eqUllllty of ...... r80I end economlo clroum· 11anca. 10:30·~ "Inner \/Wont" ...... -.. anti dOll drlrnaltc r-6- lnga trom lllr bOOll "A "** w~ SPMlll." • wall H dl1eu .. 1ng -·· llbarllOon with "°" De"1ld Oltpplnl. 11;00 08(1)9 NCWI "l.OYI.~ ITYl.E "LOW And The Opera ~ .. Or. Hayft\lft WOOi Linda at '-IMnllon. CJ MOVtE • .... "Oaborlh" (1117•1 Gig Young, Ctllf'lel Ofllla A wonlllfl with MCOfld 11g111 et••• orobleme tor her hulbafld afld lholl around '* 12 11'9 I CD ™' ooo COUPU! Cl) LET'S MM<I A OEAt. €Ill DICK ~\/£TT Guetl l<lflnelh Tyn1n, CriilC f Part 21 • MAOB...11.EtMR MllCMT ,,_.(I) HAW.Al FM5oO "Tiie Diamond Tl'lat "°'*'1 ..... A~ bur• p., ....... hal'na Of • p. Olllllllnt ~. eettlng "" • dllln Of ...,.. ... .... todlla.(R) 8 TONIGHT OUllt hoe: o.llld .....,_ ~&-.Alan. Qe-. llndAMoty. 8 LCMI, AMINCM alYLE "l.off And The Mind RaadW"~lnd8ob goto•~, .. ~ And The Unbearable Aanme" C1R1 BuW ,_ an CNel'IY p.CMc:llYe tao.. • 41 POUClm>AV .. ~ ... Houra" Tiie routine clutlea -atak• outa, folowlng -._.. OU'9 -of !he rot>bety aquad. Jackie Cooper, 0'-1 Corbett gu.t &tar. (RI I :WIMAAT "'*'· ~. e-,_ ~. tn. to prew.t Kl\08 "°"' ~ gll'IJ ... the tlll two 1*1• of a NCtet ~ formula. • CAl'T10NEO MIC NIW8 MORNING 12:il0 8 TWIUOtfT ZONE An ~ acout lor a Mertlert °'*""f lendl Ofl ....... • f'OflEVER nAHWOOO CD MOV1a • • "I. The Jury"' ( 1963) 8111 Elliot. Preston FOiltar. A Pflvlle detectN9 lnVMll• Oii.. thl lnlKder of hll Jrlend. ( 1 hi' •• 30 min.) 12-.aG 8 MOVIE • * • "Ci'c:u. Of Hotror1" ( I IM!OI Antofl Olflrlng. Ettkl Aeiriberg. A plHUO * '!niitti.:lmm •Ct ~-Ulllm • foftftel • ~~lll'ldl-~-·---·Cl In.) U:$7. AQD MYITEAY MOYlll ** •·tt lt'e A MM. Up .. (1911) Olrot ~. hilt Anolk A tMfllon modlt, wWI ~ iNl9 ................. llf a my1terlou. f\Mvy br9dllng pllono to ~-~(JU 11U). Cl> tcOJAK ''9el080f Tanv' k-It GO:lltto:•ld ,.fttl ........ dledllrlebyetrtoof-. perate llOl~l.IP mu dOl:•tdfl!t .,, ..... 111 ttJlln aut of .. CXJUr*Y w-ltllY .. ...... tMi' IM ........ (1') ,~ 0 TOMOMOW Mfla Aym. tom. ~ actloot cir~ l.US abovt ~ -..... l'tl.teband'. nwttMtllllloft dQ(lar Hwllllr "all'*G ~ LOlll '-wtlo GMlp llgnl '°' ICl'lll rtotrtt, fof Pl'.,.._ ....,.... -~ltrelt ... wl1tl two prOIClMOa ...,,. "°',.,..... D tef'Y 1:80. MOVll! •• "The ~ •• (1850) HI.to" WU-. M.i Zatt..itnQ. A aopNltioatld gift charml "" flllddla-egld ...... (1 hi',. 30 mill.I a.-001~ *!At "Hong t<ong Hot Hlrt>ot'' ( 1M2) Merton Cook, t<l1u1furo1n Wueeow. An Amertcan )OUmlllllt. .... ...._.,. Che dMUI ... Mind, ...,.. e ~.,.. Nat ~ Na pc>Qet and beconi .. lmlOMd Ir\). tlgfC -p f 11)11 of doclUlnlnel con"lnlno chemic~ t..-cft reuta. (2 tn ) ~ NEWS 2:29 NrW8 2:tO MOYla •* ''TM Matkln'ltl" (1t63) w.-MorYtl, a.. na Verdugo. A llend of n»- 1*'1 11 tracked down by a rnanh8I that .... ...,.,. 11\ot with • ~ ..... rffle. (1 hf .. 10 min.) G) MOVll **IA "Mila Grent Tilltll fUctlrnOndN ( t9491 LUCiiie e.11, Wllllam Holden. A MCretery gell "" crooked botl antqled In • lagill· mete houtlng pro)ICt. ( 1 hr.,30min) Tll•ncla•'• Da••lme If 0171ft MOANtNG aoO•••~-n.~ (111J6}.,.,.. ,...., ..... ~All ov.rp ••• ..... ..... ,.,.. . ...... IUband ....,,.,. '° ""* outhlr ~..at-... of .~(1 hr., :90 tMI.) 10*). ···~~ ... """*'° ( 19'7) POWll. "-t Ounna.; A ~end-tour ... mtft11D9 to,........ ._ ....... t)IW II I .,.,...(2....., N1'TERHOON 'll=IO. ** ...... And 81Ndt,. (1NO CWole Loillb9rd.. a..~ A --dlloowW by a ---------...... (1111'1.. 20"*t.) HO 0 * * "W..i..nd Of T.,.,..,,.. (1f70) Rot!M c-act. t...,..._AP* Of~·---· ll~IUINl:t wtlM .. W:tlm II IC "'' ..., llllld. (l hr., tC>min.) a:to• ··~ ~· tttan-rlte" (1175) Kim .... Doug MoCb& AIW balnO rllOUed from • boat dl1ft.. Ing 8lmllltty, • wom.t leltl her CoMt Guard ,..... CUll'I • lt"111ng .. of llOW Mr flllow Pll llftOWa died. (1hr .. 80 """-l A 60-minute Backlash of TV Satire . I• TV Dra111a William Hurt plays an rmy captain in the television play "Verna: USO Girl" tonight at 9 o'clock on KCET, Channel 28. BS Voting Minow By JAY SllARBUTT LOS ANGELES CAP) -CBS' "60 Minutes" takes things so seriously a reaction was bound to set in. It has. You'll see it ror an hour tonicht in an NBC special called "Peeplni Times" at 9 on Channel 4. The show is co-anchored by Dave Letterman and Allan Op penbeimer. At the start, they Oank an empty chair and ex· plain that the thln:l co-anchor, Arnie Vespuli, "Is on assign- ment." Lest you suspect this is a spoof oC "60 Minute," well, consider the stories covered and exposes expounded. TREY INCLUDE illegal alieM, victimless crime, pomo- gr aphy, rell1iou1 fashions, America's De.cl for more fat in its diel and a New York Jongshoteman'a long fliht to become a nun. There's even an Interview with an informer on organized crime. True, the informer, nlmed In shadows to hide his Identity. does lnadvertantly give his name, bis address and expoee his lac• by lighting a cl1arttte. But it is a serious interview. So is Letterman's lnqulry of a U.S. tiOrder: 1uatd In the report on me1al aliens. Aluti It must be said Letterman falls to note the many illegal allen1 seen tlp- toelnQ acrou the border durtna the l~terviow. OPPBNREDIBR'8 followup chat wltb a convicted alien· 1mu1gter b remarkable.· No matter tbi .f claims the FROM F ashio Islan Newport Beach (TV REVIEW J most common method of alien· smuggling Is through the mail, by parcel post. "l malled at least three dozen to North Oakota." he says. Then he shows how to pack an Ulegal alien in a box for shipment. It is a moment or great impact or something. There is a labored, in· conclusive segment on how the town of Yule, Wash., turned rumors of a monster called Bigfoot into a tourist Industry A.Srww]ob For Johnny OSWEGO, N. Y. (AP)-Tbe newspaper in Oswego, where 146.l Inches of snow already bas fallen thl• winter has a messaae for Johnny Carson. uwe just want you to know that Osweeo lives wlth its snow and you can bank on It;" the Osweio l'allodltnn-Ttmea 11idlft an open letter to Carson. "We're a Uttle flaky 1ometlmu. but there's not an t1too ln our whole town, ud llf e soes on ... Canon bu been Poklril tun~ eentb' at tbe tiny upstate NeW York communtt;y btc&use Of all the snow It ncelves. that even includes "Bisfoot Bur· ritos ·· AND YOU MAY find it hard to swallow when, In a report on victimless crime. a man doing two to five years In prison claims he was jailed jus\ because he ta~d a televised baseball game "without the ex· press written consent of the comm lssloner. •' Come to thlnk of it, It's harder to believe a segment on nutrition in which a scientist, bavlni fed mice refried beans, soul food. and some sandwiches. con-cludes: "All foods cause cancer." I also think the show just made up its story on a selr·help hospital where tho patients and their families dlasnose their own aihnents and even operate wltb the aid of euy-to- undentand chart.t. BUT AN OLD German homo movie cllp of Adolf Hitler cavortlne and lunchlns with Eva BrauD seems authentic, even tbough lDtler looks susplcloualy like Mel '"Sprin,Ume for HlUer'' Brooks. "Peeping 11mes, .. which NBC uys may become a weekly event, was put to1ether for David Frost's production com· pany by two sents named Ruey DeLuc11 and Barry Levlna()n. NBC ~tter move quickly. Otherwtae, Mike Wallace of "60 Minutes" will bear the laulh track. 1rtll DeLuca and Llvlnson, ud reveal they we.re Just klddillft -and dotq It U· trem~weU. : STEREO .SOUNDS OF ~HE ARBOR • • s ' • • • WINNER 5 Golden Globe· Nominations hat Plctw..ant Ac:tot-RJcMrd Dreyfuee a'1llt Am'M• Martt.. Maton 8nt ~ng Actrea~n Cummings Beet Screenplay-fMU Simon '' ••• Nell Simon makee feeling good legal ••• GENE SHALJT, NBC.TV ... . ................. ... . . l'RSD ALSO MADE ttlnhlon btatory. Peatu.r'ed In doiena of dramatte ud maaleal abOwa, b4I •• aatbertnc more fame and fortune wWi tbe aertel '°"1 Three SclDl, 0 At ~foot.a ~ and welahlu 185 poUndJ, be has alwA11 been one of the laana.om.st and~-_. mn 1n ttae mo~t•. BOrD Auplt IO, 1108, ta Kankakee, DL, PNd, widowed; mamed former actrets ad Jumtiate .June Haver, wbo bore bhD four dUJdien. • .He ad· mlta b1I bi~est b~eap In the mo918 bual..DMI wu that be 1 cane Ull'ou.lb ball • etDtu:r7 witboat a breath ot tcan4a1 ever touc:fllna b1m ••• Able to aflord 811,Jthlna be --~ MacllUl'rlJ ex:Pl•IM wily l:Ut-alda'f to the Y•dltinl route. Be IN aeaalck • • • He nelther pla)'I m aor 1o.a to nl&lit dubs, ad Ida molt r~ IDOYla (belGn eancer eneufd up co blm) wu .. Beyond the BermUda Triaa~,'' a 1'76 NBCmad•for·TV telept.,. • Sntl ~ qwtffonl lo Hu Gonfni;', "Glad YOll hked rid," cat• of um~. P.O. Boz 111a, ~ IU. •JJ. HarUp and H11 Ganllwr .CU cmauier e11 tnOllJI qs,,itltbu GI theJI con in thftr column, but the ooi.,,,.. of tDdU molcn J»teoaal nplla ~ ... JOINTBEFUN -LEAIU'i TO ICE SKATE AT TWO BEAU'ID1JL CHALETS IN COST A MES.\. . ....... -...... _ . . :!rb1s writ.er never ,..__. __ m.and al the apparent uc· t ce of American cbotal or- It iUtlODI to tackl the fttmldable but hardly:.-' for 4· dbia Mass in C by ~U\oven. :~t iJ a muslve tiifd movinl '1ork that lnvariabl1 dell•hta •u: ~nces u witn9S1 the reactlOn SQnday nlpt ot-an Oranae Co llece auditorium audience ch cave a richly deservtd din ontton to the OCC Qboral and lour splendid ta. TOE in C to taJu f Ill that d.!aunt impresarios :coma:iunlty level. there was nd •lcn ol them in a glowtna P<fformance that wa1 impec· c· l>ly handled by conductor bard Raub. ' ~a Din' ~ Remake Set : LOS ANGELES (AP> Bichard Burton. Roser Moore $1\d Richard Hani.I of "Wlld (;eeae" will team aialn for a re- make ot the 1939 classic ''Gunca DJn.'' ; Reginald Rose, who alao wrote ••wiJd Geese," is preparine the screenplay from a poem by Rudyard Kipling. Andrew McLaglen will direct. His father; Victor McLaglen, starred in the original movie film with Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Cary Grant and Sam Jaffe, uGunga Din. woaos o., PBAl8E, too. tor an orchestra that aave Raub all th aupport an1 CGDductor coWd .ban asted for in thiJ highly pro- f essional and deeply movine performance. It was certainly a joy to behold and it very obviously gave joy to thole splendid younc artists who made Sunday eve· nine in Ccsta Mesa an act of faith and a memorable celebration of a work tbatneverfails to please tho public. CHORDS AT RANDOM -Let us not overlook the OCC Chamber SineUS-who preceded the Mass with' delightful rendl. tiona of works by Brahms, Gib· bona and Hindemith. amon1 otben. Particularly, let us not over· look the fact that these Jilted youne singers joined the ran)<.s of the chorale 10 minutes later. Not long for a girl to change her gown and hardly enough time to chance one's musical mood. let alone draw cme's breath. Thank you, Chamber Slneen., for both splendid performances. c1nename 6 scAEEn 634 2 553 comPLE X MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY "Ct..OSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND" (PG)· "WORLD'S GREATEST LOVER" (PO)· "OPENING NIGAT" ·eoeev oeEAF1ao· "THE DEEP" CPO) \ .. LOOKING FOR MR. GOOOBAR•· .. HUSTLE" (R) ."THE ... EROES",.. "'THE STING'" ''OH GOO" (PG} "GUM BALL RALL V- "WHICH WAY IS UP" .. CARRIE" (R) ";THE.GAUNTLEr. (R) • -•FREEBEE & T}iE BEAN'" • 180 THO AS HOLLYWOOD (AP> -Why is N talle Wood up to her clavicle m nnmud? Sh berself wonder11 aa she swims futilely throu1h the brown ooze. The scripl had OQl;y aald that the characters escape Uirouah tho mud. Ne> mention ot 10 days amid tho sl\tdio on Stqo 30 of MGM, where Esther Willl•ms once swam in clearer 1tuff. NataUo Wood Ss Jearnlnl the haaardl ol appearin& in today's diuater movies. Along With Sean Cotinery. Karl Malden. Brian Keith. !fie\'OI' Heward mid Henry Fonda, aho is atarriQI in ••?afeteQr," which may be the diHster movie to d oll 1\ICb rums. ~valapt; .. tld 1 ~aves. holocaUsts of varied kinua will cost flS millioo. TH Pim: An e-mile-wiae mettor ts desceridin1 an earth and onlj' the combined rocketry of the U.S. and the U.~.S.R. woulC\ be able to atop it. Meallwblle. !racments of the meteor are destroying ,parts Of Auatria, Siberia. 'Hong Kong and M anbattan. Natalie Wood figures 1n the destruction or the latter. • •'J'm a Ruastan tryine to help in coordinatlng the mutual effort. to atop tho meteor," the actress expl1Jlned. 0 We're In ... under- ground communication eenter when a splinter of the meteor ·htta Manhattan. Tbe mud is caused when the Hudson lUver pours into the center ... Stage 30 is a mess of mod or the le~ used in oil drillln~e actors are splattered and y inundated by the cooey stuff bla1tted at them under hlali pre-ssure. "IN TBE BEGINNING ~y .. • had explosives ln the walli to glve the effect of the mud splaahine througb," Min Wood explained. "But the char1e1 cauted tbe wall• to fall dow~ so • that was eliminated. "Tbere ls no way yoq can p'°4 tect acainsl accident. For in· stance. yesterday a couple or shovels hacl beell left in the mud, and they came burlln• us. 'What the bell ts th&ff' I I ' ' 1 . ... -. J 1 \\'"PQO'l1 • ,\ .. \I ·' {\ • (.~ ... ~ . . . . . . . . . . .. • u ...... • ~ H: ... •f, 1L3:i1 , .. ' ·, tf~~1 I Tired of the same old meat-and-potatoes routine? Here 1 are fc;>ur recipe$ that will make dinner something to look · =a~a to. POQ Chicken is quickly made with a stir-fry nique. Sunny chicken is glazed with pineapple,. While a munctiy meatloaf is given an apple stuffing. And the famous Mr. Mcllhenny shares his chili recipe with us. : ·Glaze plain chicken with \~·pineapple, wine, marmalade. ' "A~wJ o• red.•• Tha"'•• what Soutbw~1temers call ehill. • ~isb ao un .. sophisticated and un• re1lmented. but most extraotdlnary by •lrtue of its variety ·.and uni versal appeal. Texans, who claim chill u their own inven· tlon, deftne a trueono as a comblilaUon of meat. which can be anything from beef or pork to venison or raccoon, with chill peppers. Tabasco pepper sauce and various spices an4 seasoD.inp. Beans, con• , aidered ballc to a goocl. chill in .some re11oa.s. are the ulUmate cbiU aacrile,e In other areas. Practically anyone o bu ever tumed on a stove bu their own chlll formula. But no two pots will ever be alike. '1he texture and juicllana of the meat alone can cban1e the flavor of the same nc-ipe time and time ••aln.<tHowever, the zealous t'c:hllihead" who prides himself on a c • Pumplcin Bread for housewsnnlng. PumpkiD B~eftd s Dessert Fare J • • ... .. ••• " • ..... • •• -~ .. • • .. •• tf • ......... -•• .. .. ,; :c . ~ .. .. I I Chicken Is ski/let-glazed and lnexpeMlve. Appealing Chicken · Even the most practiced jugcler takes a breather now and then. If you're exhausted from Ju11Ung your food b~et with one band while trying to create different meals with the other . . . help ls ~t hand. This new recipe is a "helping band" for easy-do, low cost and tempting main dishes. Skillet Glazed Chicken is a delightrul new way to prepare a favorite budget stand-by. Moderately priced chicken simmers to a colden tum in a special sauce. The sauce ts simply made wilh prepared yellow mustard and maple blended syrup. Apple slices add extra eye and taste appeal tolhls tasty main-<llsh. Serve with a tossed salad, creen beans, froet- ed cake squares, coffee or tea, and milk. SKILLET GLAZED CIDCKEN 1 fryl.ng chicken, cut up 2 or 3 tablespoons fat • 1 • cup prepared yellow mustard. '• cup maple blended syrup '•cup water 1 or 2 red apples, sliced Brown chick.en In fat in laree skillet; pour off excess fat. Stir toeether mustard, ayrup, and ..-ater; pour over chicken. Cover and simmer 40 to 50 minutes, until tender. Add apples; cook S minutes longer. 4 to s servinls- \. Hustle up grapefruit for bi'eB.Jdast ""' rl L•lllDOIC '-~'!".11·. D/'llY PllOT • .. .. ..... .. .. . ........ . .. ~ .... . . ,,. .. . .. -..... . DAl\.YPLOT , NO PU CHAii NICIQAAY-Get Fr .. ticket Jtftd ~tector c;ard al pw~pttlng atores-one llcket pW .Oc\\. 1& yea,. or Older, P9t'. atoi9 vielt. All Collector Carde.ate identical. With coin, tcretch.off all aJtver bOX" JNITAHT:WIM-lf any 3 ldentlcal dOllar amounts appear in a straight row. you win amount Indicated. For example, three $100 amounts 1n a row Wint $100. COLLI CT a WIN-Sep•rate the 2 bingo number pieces at bo\· tom Of ticket end place in m1tcn1ng bingo number spac99 on oollectof card. Collect number• to compi.te·any 11r11ght row of • t>ox ... Prize 1s 11m1ted to amount 1nown for game regardless of number of rows completed. I.Prize• ot 1100 1nd ovet will be paid by check afte< ver11teet1on. M1ttt1al1 aubmltted t>ec:ome th• proS*'lY of the •Po"'°'· Tu:• on ptliet are the re1ponslblllly of the prtze winners f .. Only matttlat. rnat't<ed with "Serles SL·22" ere valid. Matertala wlll be void If lli.Qlble. altered. mutilated. forged. tampered with In any w1y, not obtained leglttmatety. where prohibited by law, or If they contain pnnttr.g or other •"ors. 'I. Promotion available at S11ew1y Stor .. 1oea1ed in Cahfornia CounU18 ol: Los Angel ... Va111ura, S1111 Sem1r<11no. A111er11d1. San LUI• Obi•Po. Inyo. 011,,ge. Santa Barbara. Kern or Mono (107) and In Clark County !'lived• (13). Employees of Saf9Wty • Storn, Inc .. Ill e4 agencle1. game suppller1 and members ot ttwif k'nmedlate hOuaehQld fam1h .. are not ellgibl• to pt1y. • f. Beginning January 18 and acheduled to end April 18, 1i78, Of when all tlc;kai. ar• cS1s1rfbutf'd. Promotion term1na1ton wilt be announced. Pnz• must be c;lalmad Within 7 days ot announce- ment date Of they ire for111t9d. 7. Prl)motlon may be repeated wtten th.a set•" ands SU 0''1CfAL AULH ON COLL!CTO" CAf\D ,Of' COMPLIT O!TAILI • . . . and tJais Isn't all! More Sale -= = , ... 11' •11.• ,,, 1 r.~ .... ... ... u•• .... I.GI -i., 11UM mall ~11;124 i.--1 ~ 1~~ ndin 1 TOITS neat TS 1,'710.AIClt 11U1J ~-'74.0H ,,,., ..... 11.m ......, ·-·u .. 11MI I·•.;,.,. _ ... ••1 t· ...... m · I 111 14 ' ... · . ' 1<~·1• I 13 \ 7 .. _ . ....................... -....... ---·-"'--,_-_,.. .............. _ ...... ............, ... ... ...... • 1.. ...••••• - HOEDOWN SQUilES CAKE: on ·oz. ptc. o eup) aeinl-sweet real cbocolaite iDarieJj ~ 1% cup• UDIUte4 Dour 3 mwtuc table poems ~eotaaeel Fish Stick Boll·U~ ::)~*:: maclill barbeeue HUC9 '4 measurini t.eu-pared mustard >,\ cup 1ra!A94 c:bed· darcbeeae ~ cup alieed areen CIGlon instead~mmtard: poon salt Use~ ·cup chopped ~ cup batter. ~!,Jlckl• lastead of IGften:S ea P fl rm 17 Combtn• baf't)aeae ~"::;"'°sap.r sauce, dill pickle. acl One 17«. an tweet cb .... L~ si:d' on potatoes. drained and doup w-....el pr• mashed pare u d1reeted above. Ve cup frozen oran1e BOT J'ISB STICK juice concentrate. aou,.un thaYled WITH BOltBBMDlBB 14 cup bGne1 SAOCEJllLUNG ~ cup chopped Follow above recipe. walnuts • oAIM 111 ..... f FI to••••• .. . . Hot Flab Stick Boll·"PS are appealin1 to loOk at and surely delicious to eat -for the bikers an4 everJone el.le. Tbe1're easily made wltb a pactase of re1rt1erated crescent dinner rolla and pepped up wlth crated cheddar cheese, 1ree11 onion, and mustard. A variation with Barbecue Sauce !'Wiug 11 lrrelilU· ble. Jo WI Idea. chopped dill pickle and barbecue sauce are subltltuted for onion and mustard. Another •UICettlon i1 Honeradiab Sauce Fill· int •here borseradlab 11 substituted for mustard, the cheese omitted, and pickle rellab added. Unroll d• th; separate into 8 trtanll • Spread each trluale with multarct and aprlnklewitb2~ cbeue and 2 teaspoons green onl<ln. Place flllh aU<!t on abort.est eclee Ol trtanale and rou in Jelly· roll fashiOP. Place point aide dcnm m ~ aballow battn1 pan.' Bake in top,tbird ot moder ate oven, 175 de81'ees F., for 15 to 18 minutes or anUl ~ browned. Makes 8 serv· Inca. anlltilla .U. U..S au!>-. ~capnlllm .Ututkm: BOTTEaSCOTBC.B k.11~-N-• U1e ~ eap com. CllUllFJIOS'ftNG HOT FISH STICK aou.urs 1 packqe (8 ounces> refrleerated crescent dinner rolls 8 frolen fried flab aticka (1 ounce each) 1 3 tablespoou pre· HOT FISH STICK aGLirtJPI WITH BAaB•CUE SAUCE FILUNG FolloW above recipe makinl the Uated aub- stltutions: Uae ~ cup com· merclal boneradl1b a a u e e lo 1 tea d of One kz. ptg. (1 ntuat.ard: ·• .cop> butteneotcll Omit cbeele and add morsels v. cug well-drahited 2 IDEidSGliDI tables· pickle teUab. · • ' poons water Combine boncldlah ... Ooe a-01. pt1. aauce, pickle relllh. an4 a-eam t:buu, softened •reen onion; mlz. V.daeaamUl.lhapooll Spread over dou1b liJl trianclee and prepare u I eG1S lifted .eanfeo. dlrected above. Uoeen' SUI~ and rown cnpr: IMiat untU C.reuQJ• Adel ecP; to 3SO cteoees. Melt over one at a t:tme. beatbal hot <not boWnc> water. well aftareaCb acl41tlon. Sem I-Sweet Real Blend lniweetpota~ Cb~late Monell; Ht oruaeJQlceconeeattate aside. ID amall bowl. and bonq., Gradually eomblne thur 1ellow blen4 In 1U.V mixtUi'e. COl'DID•••· bakl•C Add DMlte4 cbOcolate. Porier, d:llamon ud walnuts ud ralltn1; 11att: eel 8*le. In larce mis well.· P01ll' into bowl. comblae battel' er••••d us0~··~2 .. ·~ .. • Wbat to do wt\b I fl. mhl\l • t to ve '1 111laUn. Combine with of UUa a &JO alH and 10\lf d b ol t. can't throw cream. Add cblcktn, l'• Ima lnatlve ham, c• relltb1 m maker. Toi& lt tn a ltmoa ulct, tall ana alad. ue it uto a pepper. over •.PPJ• cl tor l&Ddwtcb... tauce layer ln snold. ute It lD W•. Bake Cblll unUI firm, about • t lD a ar plt. Or,· tour boura. Uamold. ·•ua1t1U1.m lt Into a lhow· Strv• wttb addlUonal eee -a loveb', two--m 11onnalH or tour •. mold. cream. Oarnl1t& wltb • Tate far our ,.nt•1 and nd1lb rot•. • • • Ret C rrl • Fr I& aue: To pt.her compU· nta about your d rt from tour to l1s people, prepare tbe followln1: Combine 1 cup eacb of drained pcacbea, pear balv11 and 1prlcotbalv11. Add 1 cup caone4 apple aauc• mixed with -44 cup butter, ~ cup brown 1uiar and 1 teupooo curry powder. Sprinkle wltb tome ptaoppe4 maraaehiao cbenl and bake at 32$ d•1ret1 about •S mtnu • ..,.ro1&7 Apple.IA .a . . . . .. . . FOOD" Cblcken·Ha Crt1m1 S.rv•ltoL old. Tbe NC1P9 oaly calllfwl~wpaeacbGtr-------------~---------;;;;-~--"":"---:::::;;-~--------__:===:=;:==::;====::::::::;::::;::::::::::::::::;==:::;::========~------------------::cr:-:.~~~ Lucky cuts bbl : In • tall cla11, combine equal portlona of chl.Ued aPDle Juico and 'carbOnated-lemoo and lime drink. Top wttb a st00p cl lesnOD or lime 1berbft aDcl a 1Prt1 of mint. Serve "1th atrawa. Rtfre1talo1 and nouriab5.b1, too; . U7 other bapp1 com·· lllaaU ol IDMta. Uvea ~Yu.~.::~:in~:~~ . plc-Jt rtlllb, maJOD• your iooct bill na111 ailcl IOW' cream. Blad the la1r1dleat1 to1etbv wtlb unllaYOHd 1elatio. TbeD mold It ID a l'iDI pan °"" a layer ot ::p~u;.~.~-= by cutt1·n t E~!::S~~· g OU a· W ... ~tifii:!# orunchy 'with chopped •elery. the "fun & "'· The mold should be Glade well in advance, 10 it will have time to set •nd chill lo the refrl1eralor. It '1 un-:~~:e:n=:: :t!::i~ galrtrles w ctlt and allow foe a fluff ol panley and a radilb roee • or two for garnlab. Serve it with addltloa.al sour , cream or mayonna1H and perhaps cruncby bread atlckl. CUICKEN·BAM CREAMY MOLD . 2 envelopes un- flavored gelatin ~cup apple juice 2 cups canned apple sauce 2 tablespoons pre- pared horseradish Jh cup chopped celery Few drops red food color ~ cup cold water 1 cup mayoooaiae 1 cup sour cream H~ CUPI dioed cooked cldckea 1~ cups diced cooked ham v. cup aw.et pickle rel.lab 1 table1poon lemon juice \ . • . . 1 teupoon taJt y, teaapooo pepper Sprinkle one envelope celatln over apple Juice. Let stand 5 mlnutes lo soft.en. Hut and stir Ull· UI gelatln b dissolved. Add to apple aauce, bonerad1ali and celery. Tlnt wttb food color. Pour into t-lnch round aluminum mi. mold that h11 been rlDled 1n cold water. CbJU unUI partial· Jy set. In the meanUme, Careful pruning. We took a d~ep breath ... & zap! Key; Buys stretch your dollar further ' sprinkle remainlnl en· velope aelatin ovw cold water. Le& atan4 6 Beef . So Up Fifteen years ago, when we were young and trytng to make OW' way In the supermarket world, we kept looking for ways to make a contribution to our Industry and to our customen. So we took a long, hard quatlonlng look at busln .. prllCtk:et In general, and our own ln particular. We'd begun to wonder f some of the things that were being done to get cuatomm Into the atore were really accomplishing thetr purpos.e •.. things like aweepstaka, )ackpots and games. We wond~ because our aoeounting deportment told ut how much these carrot~•· •tick tactkl ccilt, and that lt waa actually raising the prica Ci foOd on our ahelva. Fresh Meats Away went the e><tras, never to return. Down went our proflt margin, for good measure. We snipped It to the bone to give our customers the best poss1b&e break at the cash Nglab'lr. And when we finished posting our new pnca, we found ourselves swrounded by a whole new bnted ol customers ..• In ever lncreastng numbtn. lheee were the type of folks who understood you don't get som.thlng for nothing. And, ~ know, It's stayed succaafully busy f~ us ever since. TMre are a lot of people who don't need a lottery at the ~. People who don't care fat gamea of chance.. but lnlt8ad pNf• the sure end steady thing o1 80lkl ewrvdaY .. dlleount prtctng polk:les. Uka the pa. ~1 tkid In thlt ad. Check them out, and you1 w why our aattonMn • INM the 1Mt laugh ... aD the way to the bank. Health le Beauty Alda ~~;~ ..... ~ i4& T.eotel STtAK IOll8MnOll,. ............... && 1. 98 I ="~~ .... w. .99 WGEEHD ~2a~ ...... &O. i39 TOPSIRl.OIN ~~ ..... Ut.1'a 06NELDS 9'UMP 9'0AST 1 aa WOllCUT llO!QDW I .... t ... J,D. BDHnMl<IYIWASlS llJC'I •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1A9 CHUOC 9'0AST IUIOIOlllOllllllD-.............. ,&a. .68 TOP M>UMO Sll'AK ~ ..................... u. 1. 7 8 O.OSSNI AOAS1 IOIUHDl .. -~ ...... a 1.39 eotcbWSll'WIMG 11111 Dll9 ..................... i. 1.4'9 GM>UMONIFPAtmS CDCUllDl••IOH~l) ••• o.a.w 2.58 OOtft'Ll$S TIPSIWC toll!IDUM»e. .............. ta. 1.68 Canned & NCICaged ~~~ •&MU61Aomt_. :TU.PM. -uu"=4 -. , ...... ,.. ....... ~ .... mmT l ~.~ .......... m 1.27 DeUcata..n l.ADYLEE P~OGMA c!.QvAAaTD •••• -~ ·T~ ••Cle .................... Alil..._~ .................... ._ .......... ._._.._ .......................... .. In addlHon to the low everyday dl9count prices you•n £ind In our stores, we off er hundreds and hundreds of eveft lower prtces. Thete are temporary aavlngs wh\ch come from manufacturer's promotional aU?Wances that we pa11 along to you. Look for the Key buy signs. There'• never enough room ln our ads for the whole list. eo come tn today and pluck them oft our ahetvel. Get d\9 extra llWlngs wh1Je yo&& can. Dairy & Frozen ~CMAll..G'tm42 ctWIPD ................ MolG. .. 2.29 l ~.~II\. 8.98 .UOlOAICANAUM ...... IOMC!Of •••••••••• cn. .. '·09 I .. • .. • .,, 1' •• , • • • • • • • .. ' . . ... ... . I 000 187t Questions About the· Safety of Dinner Pottery •• .PDQ <rn.PapCl) 1rapefrult are 1lm· mel'ed brW17 tn m am• broalal syrup of wlDe and oraqe juice and aprlnlded wtth almond blta for an lnteftlttnl contrast of color and texture. PDQ QikDN AND FRESH VEGETABLES a tablespoons veaetable au. dlTlded 1 cup ftnllJ chopped onlon U larae> 2 cup• arated pannipis ; 4 C\lpt aJlced fresh. broccoli (abou\ 1 buDcb) 1 tealpOoD Alt 14 twpoGD Cl'O'mCI llnaer 2 lart• eblcken breutl. boDed. attnned. halved and cut tnto '4· lDcb stripe l chlckee flavored bouillon cube 114 cups water, divided 2 teaspoons c orn· starch In lar1e skillet, beat 2 tableapoons oil over medlum·hlgb beat; add onion, parsnips, broc-· coll, salt and ginger. Cook, stlrrinf quickly and frequeq~ly UDtll veeetablea are crisp· tender, about 5 minutes. Remove vegetables to large bowl. Heat re- mainint 1 ta~espooa oil ln skillet; a Ur-fry chicken undl tender, about a to t mtnutea. Return veaetable1 to skillet; adcl bouillon cube and 1 CUii Wat.. In 1mall bowl, blend com· atarcb and rematnlna \4 cup water until smooth; aradually stir into bot mixture io skillet. Cook. stlrrln&. constantly, •nlil mix- ture boils an4 thickens. Makes 4 servings. Preparatlm Time: 25 mlnutes. FRF.SRQT.\JS COHPO'U~ 3 oran1ea, peeled and sectioned < !,\ cups aectlona) 2 crapefrul and sectioned ( aectlona) \'a cup Sau U,ht white wino in cupaua ,,_ CUP Irie annee Julee I/• ll'OUDd ctnnamca 14 cup finely elaopped a1ted allp~aaily Hctton oran1• and O'•~frulta: th abarp blle cat Ill top; cut off peel and round, lsVil . Go over fndt., m1&117nmi1$111q membran .. 1tde of eae membrane to mlddl move *1U0n over tiowJ Jatce. Com u1ar. en~ dnnamon pau~~ COok OY9 ... llllD unUl a dd Cl fUI l dm.atellNliUi' ervla lb ___ , ( Q&A J s ... Ra..,...,_.CUI Conallleal Brisket Flat CUI Brtsbl ': 111 Golden Premium Meats Pantry Fillers "'tXi .... .£!.. Cube S18ak '.: 1" '[,5~'i' .......... ,..,, .... ~ ~TlpStaak -.. , .. ~~·.;: 1.\lt ........ , .......... -111 ~~er.... ~-.!!C Top RCKRI S18ak ... ~ ... QI ............ Bonal B 11 Belf ROlll , .. ~g1•01 ... ~ · D1l1rg1nt 0 ........... PcRStllk I:' ,. ~ iii it' siiM ~&;~ ~.89 ~ .................... Tide D alarg1111 .75 a. .. ,. .. .39 - 11L .57 -·-.... ... -21• .... ... eartb.enw • and ev aMQllve and bone china _,.... 1i d to be pott0Uall7 basardoaa wbo add roods wei-e atored IA t.belD.: them. rreqaeacy of uae, duration of 1toraae. temperattu'e, and loe•· tlon of dHala were found to lnfl&aence tho de1ree ot toxicity pro- duced. l'ar example, de- It II Super Deli ~AUR&illcl ~;;.pc;;c.. 1t:N11!'M*l1dl Juice Super Bakery i: .89 ~ , .. :: .59 ::t.78 Super Produce t: .15 1 ·-: .25 2,..29 Wines & Spirits ::. I'' • m ma la 't be by • sht· ar7. t should be , .... #&....... are tbe aqary 1laa 1 Ylrtuall)' all eOokboob 1111a-t. How DO yo.i claae a ham lthout brown 1u1ar, ·~·mot or pre-Nutrllloua non· Hn••? Our favorite fattenlnt ways to use DMtbod la with a spicy ham leftovers : blend of fruits and -.mm. Julee1. Try tbls with '91 )'OQJ' lltlXt baked bam ! ' BAKSD BA WITH ~ GOLDEN F ~IT MVC& " Ready.to.eat h m, • bone lD (whole OI" b f) .S or e thin un led oran1e tllcea and 5 or I whole dova CopUonal) 11~ can juice· packed auabed plneap· pie ~ cup unaweetened apple or pineapple Juice (6-ounce cu) 1 tablespoon pre· pared spicy or bot muatard ~ cup orance 11· qaeur or oraqe Juice ~ cup wine vtneaar % cup cotden Seed· leuralsins ~ te•spoon each: ground cinnamon, nutme1, clove 2 tablespoons ar· rowroot or cornstarch Insert JDeat thermometer in ham and arrange ham tat· side up on a rack lD a shallow rout1n1 pan. Place In a slow 250· de1ree oven. Bake about 10 minutes per pound, unW thermometer reads 130 des:rees. (U package f label aaya "Cook before eating" bake ham at 325 degrees to an internal 1 temperature of 180). Remove ham from oven and pour off all melted fat. With a sharp knife, trim away and discard exterior skin and (at. (I( desired, decorate ham wllh orange slices "pinned" in place with whole cloves.) Combine remainln1 inaredients and stir well. Pour over ham. Raise oven ,thermometer to 400 :~egreea. Bake, baaUns iJrequently, unUl ham is Jwla1ed and sauce 11 :thick. Slice ham and WIElllllERVI THI lllQHT TO LIMIT Ofl llUUllE IALHTO COMMPCl.\L OEAlllllO.. WHOt.HAUJlll .... ,..u ... FoodSlempa el All , ..... IT&ID--.~IACX eua&11m•euun.un ammaam- • OICNIMAY81 • _,..Oii • 1 ,, IHF FIAE 1.u.,.a. ......... u. OICAll llAYM • llQUND, 80llAlll. Oii llU $14 f VAiiin PACI '"°"""a. .... u. "°"" $12' suaD UCON 1UPt18. ...... u. .IAC1C .... ". H.I. CAH • l'OllK $3 I SHOULDER PICNIC ............ ... ..,.,.~ ·····--'· ppl I -· . 1 pound leftover bilked ham. l Only, cut in two-lncb cu "4 nip canned un. sweetened pln apple <or other fndt):firlce 1 teaspoon pumpkin pie spire Coro and aecUon tbe unpeeled apples .lnto wed;ea <or use preas- down apple 1eettoner). Thread the apple WHniNG ........................... La.494 ,....~ $14' 1UUOT FILLn ................ "" PM1M FllOZlll $ ) 7 f 111S O' SHllMP ............... ~• ,.....l'flO. s2•• ICll.ANDIC HALIBUT ....... IA. :sene with sauce. Each ervin1: four ounces •llced ham and two ~~bldpoons sauce, about ""a INCLUDU 4t01F lAIEl. AJAX CLUllSER ............ ,~~ 24c t.-"0 calorie1. CBZDDAB·BAKED ztJCCIDNI 3 medium IUCChlni, •liced (or 2 pac:ka1ea roun) 11-ounce can omatoea, broken up well 6 eUces (3 ®nCff) . extra-ebarp Cheddar cheese S tablespoon• eaaoned breadcrumbs Allow IUCCblnl to efro1t tborou1hly, if rozen. Put a layer of uccblnl lJ1 the bottom of caatel'Ole or bakln1 lab. Add a layer of orD•UP ch•••• and roken-up tomatoes. onunuo layerln• sue· blnl. cbee1e and matoa: then 1prlnkle ith cnunbl. Bake in a de ovea 30 tO 30 lnutH unlll tender, rown nd bubbly. at t tenlnca, 75 Jori ch. BA ED VEGETABLM A s aoi; l'l'AUANO 1 larse eg plant, led and diced l•OUDC• pack••· tallan 1reeD be ns, efri>lted 18~unce aao un· ralnea It llan plutn omato 1, broken up 11 · or atllc a lt. 9PiPE°RTOWELS ......... 12KT. 59c tillCllMK 7MlDAYS, Mll.26 Nt.1,11n • • FOOD ,.,...-.__ ....... _ ........... , ____ ......__. _ ............. f -.;;r ii I Iii .. I dit re Ii U S ' ~ .......... ._ _.. • A collectton of toys, ofd and_new, is on display for the next month at the COSta Mesa Library, 586 Center St. The collection, belonging to an Irvine couple, consists of cast·iron, thumt). push, and mechanical toys dating back to the 1920s. The toys are dis- played in a case, but Brent and l'if· tany Hatfield of H untlngton Beach were allowed to look them over personally for a picture·ta1Ctng session. I 71ffany Hatfield, 6, with a moveable toy. -----~-·What's In a Name? Lots \ JANUAR'f SALE fRANCI©-ORR ,' fine stationery corona del mar RoB?r'm JBu-n:en ~ee• . Open 7 Days tnchacnng ~ 9-~ f .............. /21/71 ZACl'f MIM ""'°"' CHICKEN $119 ·!~.!!'!-~_: BRIAST u . Fl.AM(. S11AK .CHICKEN / .LEGS 79~ ..... .. --· I bave a hope-cheat filled with towei. and bedabeeta. two sets of dishe1 and 1Uverware. Harold Jiu 1uue1ted I let him use those Jhlng1 becau1e be ls ••a lltUe short.. and they would come in mighty handy . So far, I have refused. I clean his apartment twice a week .ml do bis Jawidry. On several tc· caslon• l have loaned him money. (He bas always paid me back.) I also let hlm use my car whenever he needs lt. Don't 1et me wron1. I don't mbad dolna these thJn11 for him because I • .:......~~~~~~...;.:..:.;;__.;_~~~~~~~~l SPORTSWEAR • . FlANNELETI'~ Pl:AtO 1st.A o • '44M1t I 'I Monte Carlo Night Proceeds from a Monte Carlo night wilt go to Temple Eilat's Bwlding Fund. The 'fonte Carlo night will begin at 8 p.m. Saturdav. FP.h. 4, at the Elk's Club. 25092 WOMEN'S AMERICAN ORT: The Newport Beach chapter will hold a l~cheon meetiQC at 11 a . m. Thursday, Jan. 26, at the home of Estelle Siegel, Corona del Mar. Burt Goldbere wm speak. For information on ORT call IJnda Lezak at559-431.3. NATIONAL WOMEN'S POLITICAL CAUCUS: The Orange County CIUa~r will bold a media seminar at 7:30 p.m. Tbtlnday, Jan. 26, at Republic Federal SaviQP and Loan, San- t a Ana. C'ALU'ORNIA PttESS WOMEN: Dr. Fttlhugh Dodson, will be guesL1pe.aker at the 7:30 p.m. meeting Tbursaay, Jan. 26, at the Mr. Stox Restaurant, Anaheim. TIARA DE NINOS: The group will bold a prospt><'hve membership and open house from t t a .m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 28, at the home or Mrs. Robert Ohland. HunUngton Beach and Costa Mesa residents are Invited. Call Mrs. Ohland, 979-8209, or Mrs. John Kasser, ~6761, 1f you want to attend. The group ls an auxiliary of the Children's Home Society. MENTAL HEALTH ASSOCIATION: 'rbe <i5sociation will hold volunteer orientation at 7 p.m. Thursday. Jan. 26, for (oµr consecutive Thursdays. f'or information, call Vi McBride, 547-7559. The group also will bold a weight con.Lrol workshop Crom 9:30 a.m. Lo noon Friday, Jan. 27, at the Westminster Brarlch Library. Westminster. Call 547-7559 for infgrm~on. AARP: The Newport Chapter •121 m eet for a brown bag..Junch at Qoon and a meet- ing at 1 p.m . Thursday, Jan. 26, at the Oasis Senior Center. in Corona del Mar. TROJAN GUILD: The Orange County group ~111 hold alun<'hcon meeting at 10 a .m. Thursday, J on. 26, at the home of Mrs. Oby E Woods. Santa Anu. Dr.J.auraS<:hlcss1nger will speak. ( Horoscope THURSDAY, JAN. 26 By SYDNEY OMA)Ul ' ARIES (Mar. 21-Apr. 19): Your. .. inner feel- ings" domlnate. Bt'lbl forth creaUv'e r&sou.rces. Means imprint yoor own touch, sfyle:-Pisces, Virgo fl1;ure promlnently. , 1 TAURUS (Apr. 20·1\hay 20): Stlclc to objec· tl\'ity -fantasy has no place in practical plana affecting basic security. • GEMINI <May 2l·June 20): F'Wsb aasiB!l· m ent, relax -short journey cbulcl ibe What' you need. Aries, Libra persons figure in acenario. _ CANCER. (June 21-July 22): Emphasis on money, what you n~. bow to obtaiA oecesaary ingredients, tools, capit~ New start In new direction indicated. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22>: Hunch Is acC1,ll'.te -display confldenc • act on wbat )'OU fetl. You can control circumstances. Means ~ts favor your efforts -you create your own "happen· inga." • • · VIRGO <Aug. ~SCpt. 22): What bad caused fear and doubt may now provOke lfughter. Your own lolblca could be aource of l\uinor -and should be. Marguerite Parkway, Mission Viejo. A Kosher deli buf~t will be served. Contact Anita Kurtz for information. MARIPOSA WOMEN'S CENTER: John Flood will be guest speaker at the alcohol awarenea program at 2 p.m. Thursday, Jan 26. 'Ihe cent.er ls located lo Oranie. HAPPY HOMEMAKERS: The group will meet at 10 a.m. Friday, Jan. 27. at the Fountain Valley Civic C.ter. Program and luncheon are $1.75. BIG 818Tl'!RS: The 1roup will hold a garage aale at 1307 W. Marcella Lane, Santa Ana, froan 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday and Sun- day, Jan. 28 and 29. NATIONAL SECRETARIES AS · SOCJATJON: The Bahia Chapter will hold a seminar from 8 a .m . to 12:30 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 28, at Orange Coast College. For reserva- tions, call the evening college, 556-5880. Cost is $10 per person. UNITED NATIONS ASSOCIATION: The Coastline Chapter will sponsor guest speaker Aryld Pardo at a luncheon lecture at 1 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 28, at UC. Irvine. HUNTING.TON BEACH JUNIOR WOMAN•s Cl.UB: The club will hold a soap box derby at 11 a.m. Saturday, Jan. ·21. at Ellis Street at Edwards. For Information, call Cheryl Simmons, 963-4004, or Clndy Clrar, 846;.co37 BAHIA CORINTWAN YACllT'CJ,;UB: The Co1J1modore's Ball will be held Satui'day, Jan 28. Cocktail hour is 7:30 p.m. and dinner will be served at 8:30 p.m. WOMEN FOR SObRIETV. INC.: JaMl Duddy, slate coordinator. will hold a brown bag Juncheon at noon Saturday, Jan. 28, al the Mariposa Women's Center, Orange. For m· formation, call Janet Duddy al 955-1156. or the <'enter, 547-6494. The eroup 1lves a woman with an alcohOltc problem an opportunity to share and solve it in a woman·only setting. • . , The fourth annual gala party of De!igiling :Women to benefit the Laguna Beach School of Art will be held Saturday, Jan. 28, ~in .. ninJI! at ~ p.m. at the Harlequin Dinner NEWPORT BEACll HADA.SSAB: The group will mett at '1:30 p.m. Monday, Jan. 301 at the Sprinshurat ',l'.ownhomes Clubhouse on Newland :Avenue. The Busioeu aod Professional Women wlll he81' gUest speaker Esther Leiner, For Information call 6'1'3-l403. or host Diane Mlles. 847·5959. FASHIONABLES: The sup.;rt gJ"OUp of Chapman College will holct a fashion lWicheoo at noon, TueSday, Jan, 31 in the Quarter Deck room ol the Balboa Bay Club. WOMEN'S CMJCUS: Tbe West.erl'I State Unlversity 1roup will spon5or speaker Alicemarie H~ber Stotler, municipal court judge or the Harbor District. al 5:30 p.m. Tues· day. Jan. 31. The pubhc 1s invited. AMERICAN LUPUS SOCIETY: The Playhouse. FolloWing dinner, cast will . perrorm the play •'The LaSt<>f The Red Hot Loven;." .. Orange County Chapter will meet at 7 p.m. ----=;.;::;....:.;;.;~;;....;~ Tuesday, Jan. 31. al the Oel Mar Mobile Estate Recreation Center, Huntington Beach. IRVJNE PHILHARMONIC COMMl1TEE: The society will hold a general meeting at 9: lS a.m Wc,'dnesday. Feb. l, at the home of Mrs. David PhJlhps. UNITED PRESBYTERIAN WOMEN'S FELLOWSHIP: A Gift of Love is lhe luncheon meet ng topic <>f the St. Andrew's group which wilt meet at tt.30 a:rn. Wednesday, Feb. I. I INSURANCE WOMEN: The Orange County ~roup will meet at 6 p.m. for cocktaiJs and 7 p m for dinner on Wedhesday, Feb. 1, at Re\'ere llouse in Tustin. ALPHA DELTA Pl: The Orange County Alumnae Assoc1at1on will hear David Grant spl•ak at a 7::M> p.m. Monday. Jan. 30, meetinc ;rt 'the home of Mrs. Frederic SylYia, Oranse. For 10format1on, call 637·6569. . WHITE'S ·- MISSION VIEJO ... ... ....,..,., 211•2•.-• .. "'1· •&.Z.e-• TM Ch .... ll'llf "ll•H• lhetr .... tor 'f<N/' ··--· ~--· ..._ - "And next you can test Mom'a eyeshact>v.t• FUNKY WINKER BEAN ~ 00~1HINK 5HOcJLO eE OONE IN '?HE. AREA OF OOME I EiE.NA~ WE~ -'eot.ltS~> )Ou MAYM.AWiO BLUR THEM ;. LrJr. by Tom latl DOOLEY'S WORLD ~ ---=-==-----=--- ------- TODAY'S CIDSSllBD PUIZLI UNITED F•turt ~ TYNdity'• ~It..,_ " I h'NI~ Noftj,j~t ~ ~ I: I ~ I • 11w.... '°y._,.. 41 Eltctriett HIOllh8f 4'2Gods 431illdmt '°' H•tcwwst .SW•1:"9ll• •e W1ctecte111 47 ···-ON: SPAGHERI 39c Reaular or Extro Thirk ... l 'h oz pkg Tomato Sauce . 33c Hunt'11 ... 1hick and Oa\·orful! I~ oz CAKE MIX Betty C'rocker all layer varieties Frosting RWYTO SPIEAD .ssc ,_ BeLty Croclter -all flavors -16 oz Corn Bread Mix 29c l!iquld detergent -22 oz (llo tff) Dog Food . . . . . . 33c J<al Kan Chunky MPS -14 01 can liJ1JnllG1ak There'11 more value in El Rancho•• round &teak ..• ~cause it's Center Cut frorn lt.>cted U.S,t) A. Choice beef! Omaha Roast .. s1 3! Round cut of U.S.D.A. Choice bttf CHUCK _,, STEAK 1 ~i .! U.S D.A. Choirt' beef, naturally . D lllldlo's rell lblian Style ..• wilff • nitrites! Swiss Steak ... s 1°! . STEW BEEF Extra Jean -boneleiw. -ena Choice! BOND.£SS ROLLED BEEF ROAST LEGS & THIGHS Rich tender juicy dark meat from U.S.0.A. Grade "A" fryers I I ' I I ' CHOOSE FROM ·ANv;>OF THESE 197.8 MODELS IN OUR BIG, BIG STOCK ~U:F. I SO's ALLF250's . • ALLF350's ALL VAN CONVERSIOl)I AU CAB & CHASSIS' ALL COURIERS ' I IF ITS IN OUR STOCK IT'S NOW REDUCED TO 50/o OVER FACTORY INVOICE! OFFER ENDS TUESDAY, JANUARY 31st! IFaof. la•oke IBCll du ~ m FoctOI, HolclMlcksJ '75 DODGE •/~ Tqn Va11 •51tOrtfe• 6 cyl., auto. trans., power steering, radio, heater. Hard to fi nd model! lie. # A83093 St. # 66SA T. V-8, Automehc Trans . Power Steer .. Power Braket. FllCtOfy Air CC>t'ld • St•eo Tape, Vinyl Roof, Radio, and Heater. 1.0 . 1 168520 Stk I P3127 s2• •74 AMC HOrMt HatchMclc CS cyl., Automatic Trant , Power Steering. Tinted Glass. WbHewall Tires, WhHI COvera. Red10. Hffter. A nice cart L1r. t828Kl 't Stll 12038 52288 '74 CHEVROLET 'y• G.T. Hatchbiek 4 cyl, 4 8Pe60. AMlFM RadlO. cbstom In. ltrtor, Rear Window Defogger. Tinted Glass. Rallye Wheel•. Only 43.000 Mtlet. Lie #575SLR Stk t526A • • . ' '• SUM PICKINGS IN SNOWY PASTURE Secretarl8t Oenera{ly IAeda Pam~red Uf• 'Sorry, Sire' Worth Don~t Faze a Winner By1ULESLOB -~'"' ... '*" , ...... PARIS, Ky. -U what they•ve been saying about hl.s children annoys him, he certainly doesn't abow it. What they've . been sayin1. tbeae cr1ttca, as anyone who • reads the papers knows, l.s th.at one of the· kids was too bis, another too little, one's back wasn't just right, another had u1ly knees, things like that, and that many of them seemed, well, a little slow. It doesn't faze Secretariat. THE BIG HORSE prances around his private paddock, head ht'1l, ears up, muscles rip- pUn1 under his rich red coat. He nips mischievously at. his keeper, plucks his haller off the book next to hls stall and. plays we-of.war, trots up to be petted on bis majestic head by all who come to visit. "I don't know whether all that talk about his foals 1eta to • Secretariat. but it 1ets to me," Lawrence Roblnaon said. "11"8 TOO SOON to say tiow ( ., J "AMERICA the fathering bualitees three-years. RIGHT NOW. LAW&ENCE RobinlOO and his crew are 1et· ting ready for the next breedinc season, which begins ln mid· February. The halters of· the horses Robinson has tended hang u mementos around the stallion barn, each idenUfled by a brass nameplate, givint the barn the aura of a Hall of Fame of horsedom -Gallant Fol{; Sir Galahad; Blenheim, the rather of Whtrlaway; Nasrullah, the father of Bold Ruler; Omaha, son of Gallant Fox: Nashua; Prtncequillo; and 1tandln1 in thetr stalls today: Riva Ridge, Hofst The Flaf, Nijinsky, Buckpasser, Hon t Pleasure. FOR SECRETARIAT, that's fast company. ..Don't worry about old Red, here." Robinson said. "He's ao- ing to do all riaht." More Fatalities Six Ad Claims Altered good a lire be'• 1oin1 to be. But don't fqet, he had a Itek .. winner in bis first crop, which have Jmt ~un to race, &net a number ol other 100d hOrs" too. I have a feeling be'• goln1 to be just fine. You're just fine, aren't you, Red?'' Robinson said, rub- bine the horse's forehead. Injury Accidents Lawrence Robinson has seen a iood many great sires in his •• Ume, so his feelinp do not atem on I y from affection for Secretariat. Robinson. for 31 year1, has been in char1e or tho ataWon bam at Claiborne Farm. where Secretariat and two dozen otMn of only somewhat less renown llve the pampered lives of prin«I to populate the sport of kin11. . ROBINSON HAS A"STAFF of "" six l(rooms and helpen, but be takes care of Secretariat personally. "H.e Isn't treated any different lrom any other horse on the farm," Roblnaoa Hid ... Tbey all set the same can, the same at-tenlton." F Tbe 1ame care, maybe, but not the same attention, at leut not from vl.slton. At Claiborne Farm, Secs·etal'lat• the • handsome ana hau1ht1 Triple Crown winner, WbltA. , Down in Newport IN lt7i, THERE were three traffic fatalltles in Newport Beacb, an unusually low fiiure for the city. The a~ven fatalities that occurred lll lm repraent. ·an iilcrease, bUt are closer to an avera1e figure ror tramc~e :tn tbe city, sald Sat. Tom Sltearn. 'l'h• numbers. type1 and loca· lions of accidents are c~full1 tabulated by Sheal'll en4 tbe otber members Of the poUce d• partmmt's trafftc division whO· teed the statlstlca into a com· puter each mmtb. What comes outjs dOcum t that Shearn says la p rttally retPonaible for ~· 1ucc &b depaftment had~ 1J7'1 In riduc· tn1 the number or lnJµey . accl· donta !rOm m bi 1978 to~. ' t !I -.. .... -........ - 1"111:11111..-:• Notice: All real estate advertised iD Ua1s MWlpa~r la IUb· Jeet to tM Federal Pair Hoaalna Act of 1968 UDO ISU Newly remod led 4 bdrm .• den. 4 baths, living rm. w /cathedral ceiling. Lge. master bdrm. suite. 32241950 llG CANYON 4 BR, fam. rm .• 3 baths. Beautifully d~corated Broad moor Plan 3 w /patio views from each room. $325,000 - BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR 341 Boy~1deOrive N .8. 67S ·6161 which makes 1t llle1al Lo '-!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! advert11e "any pre· I"" . . . . ... ... . .... . 2400 sq FT POOL HOM SI lt.IOO ln a prime neighborhood too! Beautiful ''bidden" two story. with shake roof', formal dining room. four bedrooms and two fireplaces. An executive home! Jn a prime location adjooent to the golr course and close to ,1 pork. The price again: just $139,500. UNIVUI: fi()Ml:S REAL TORS~. 546·5990 1525 Meu Verde Drive, E11t, Costa Me.a also 1n Corona <Jet Mar. at 675·6000 fereace, limlt1Uon, or GHtNI 10021Ge•1.a 1002 d.iaC'rlm.tnatJon baaed on ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••-••••••• G .. 1-•1G ,. IOO• race. color, reli1ton, ee•, -• v-••r• • or uationa1 onca.n. or an .............................................. . inlentloo to make an) such preference, llmila· uon, or dascnm1n1laon.'' Thia newapaper will not knowinaly accept any 1o1dverh11n& for real est.ate which LI IQ YIOl•· UOO of UM law. ERRORS: Ad\tet'fi1en shcMd chKk their ads dally and report er· ron lmnwdl .. .ty. The DAILY PILOT assumu liabHlty fof' the fint In- correct lnseriion only. HARIOR YIEW LUSK PRIVACY-PRIVACY-NJYACY This 4 bedroom haven is an executive reward -green hills. blue Pacific. a home to make it all worthwhile. Corona del Mar at its best! 1436 Keyview. Open daily tiU sold. $259,000. ORANGEfr:USTIM AREA Lovely. large 4 bdrm. home with over 3,000 sq. ft. of enjoyable living space. Paneled family rm., 3 baths, lge. recreation rm. with bar & ample space for pool table. Spacious rear yard with room for pool + play area. $121,500. 759-0811 Ftut itut Glut Wuuu BUg. Serving Costa Mesa-Irvine Hun1111gton Beach-Newport Beach CAMEO SHOR.ES -VIEW -S3 I 0,000 Gorgeous view of the ocean & sunsets from this 3 bdrm contemporary home. Laree step-down living rm, den W!Wet b3r. master bdrm wiseparate Mr. & Mrs. bath, formal DR & pool. WESLEY ~TAYLOR CO., "RI.Al.TORS 2111 Saft Jooq"M HI Rood NEWPORT catro. H.L 644-49' 0 A prime op port unity with an out.standing real estate organization + high earnings! Experience is a must. Prestigioua location. A 11 applications "eld in strictest confidence. P.lease reply to Ad #68, Daily Pilot. P.O. aox 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626 GtMrel IOOZ G......t 1002 1002 GeMf'Clt 1002 ••••••••••·~··••••••••• •••••••••••••~••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• GI • RVPARKING SEXY CAl\LSBAD·BY HARBOR VIEW $56,000 'DiESEA ltEtREAT! 3 • WITH A 1002 ---------............................................. . G""'al ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 ........••••....•...... DUrLtx jl hl'droom untl!. 105,000. Pr1dl' of 11wner11h1p. Excellent Costa Mt•n loc11t1on Owner anxious 642-5062 Ceatury 21 Crocker 111 'll'<:IO'll IU":Al'll 1.11.~ 11!• .. rh Iii\ d ·''° 12'.!ll LAGUNA Bt:ACll l 181 Gltnnt) rt l.•11un• Buth 4fM·!MfA SAOOl.F.BACI\ 2.'\ZO I.a Pat Road l.•r.:una llUI• $81 6310 :-.1111111 ('!Ill:\'' rl1•l lrt't'SAO 1220 CLASSIFllD DU DUMES f1Pn<tl11~ lot t'OPY It k 1111 1~ ~ 30 p m, th•• dav 11rrnn-rubhr111em ""' C'\'fll llW' Sund•• It Mnn. d•' tid1llQn1> v.111•n """'1h"" •~ S•lur"'" 1:? ... "' CLAS SI Fl ID ltlGULATIOMS FR ROI<:-Adnl'\l"W"r~ r.hnc.ild rll«k lh«'1r 1d~ d11llv It rt'port tr..-.r11 1mmf'dl1lflv. 111.: OAll.Y 1'11 .-01 IUUMC'll hahihlY for lhf' r1r1t In• ~ lr11-t111on tin I\. CAN t .l.f,l\'flON:o. Wht'll k1llM1fl an 11d hto utt tn m11~t a rt<tMd of th• KIJ,f, NUM 11 t: I( trlV\\11 .~•1,11 llv ~our 1d Ueki!" •• tt"·••pt or w1111r On(~l•ltOl'I 'lltl lull numbiM mull be l'rt'11t11· ll!d hY lhfo l"'°fttl"tr Ill nw or 1 dfJPVI f'. UDO ISLE Ir MUCH MUCH MORE 4!10 Nf Wl'Oll I C.:fNH U UlllVI J:>!t I»! I I 3 BR " 3 BA charrne Getterel I 002 GeMrol I 002 with 2 pallos. lded foun· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• I.am Great parkln« & a f>kip lo pm ate beach All REAL ESTATE for Gal.000 S .a.LES JACOIS REAL TY A 675-6670 4 Br 1114 a., bltna. etc .• Br 2 Ba. w /warm storaie shed in back. chocolate shat. fplc, HARBOR VIEW Hurry, won'tlaat, call: pool, sauaa. ·A10RE. First Tun Offe~. in Great condo for $64.SOO. the on11nal 1e<:t1on or Call: Harbor \'aew Hills. On WALLACE&CO. Uw \te._ 11de of While REALTORS Sails Way. an excep· 714_.33-6490 t1onally "harp 4 Br. 21"W bnlhl. fam rm home w1\h formal d1n1ne. lovely PoOl 6 jacuul. lAw care yard AND ~~HERITAGE REALTORS ~HERITAGE REALTORS TERMS . OD this btl1 •hia&I& roof nnc:b atyle family boml' 3 bd. 2 ba, fmly rm w/load1 ot cement work. pwat.er areas & big co\· e~ paUo. Also react>d doc run. lge ch1ldrens play hou.se & play yard. Only $78,SOO l Owner aolicltinl bat-k·up off en.. IW&-7111. OWNER ANXIOUS on this COM l>UPLEX Completely remodeled, MW paint in/out. F.ad1 unit 2 bedrm1. fireplarl', --------.i n•w built in krteh~n . OCEAN AND HARIOR VIEW Plus nite lights, too! Ana th t's not all. French doors, Private i>att03, Pool, wodd decking and a master bed room uite with library, complete the picture. $225,000. G~at location. Now ai;k lntsm .soo. •44-7270 Trr a Dally Pilot ---------• a-med Ad to buy. sell 142· 5678 or nmt aome°'ln ;;:.;:;;;,,;.;..--~---~~ ....... -· 1002 GeittraJ macnab I lrvtne realty 1002 WATERFRONT HOMES AEALE8TATE 63M400 -OMllSTORY C:ONDO :r 2 Pool• and puttln1 ~ areen. 2 Bedrm.t. a bathl. Raiwt hearth fireplace ,, le lar1e llvina room. '':. ~~Beachaddresat PETE BARRETT l.:r ; -REALTY-, . UN200 .. .. .. ,,....-·----· iii ... •• ..... /Jn NIGl:L 111\ll.EY & l\SSDCll\ 1 rs FOs:lEST E OLSON .... ' ... ~'.! ... HERITAGE HEAi TOR~ l achenmyer N·~ '"' I.Cl. l'IJU '•"'• '-'1:11 .. . " . ........ ~-· LBSUUWOILD Finally.• ebanee to c~ Int I Bdrm .. 2 bath 6: brand new hnttop unlt E:Jpanslve YI W1I ct the valley.S ,GOO. NORINS IEALTY 640.ttOO -*~4t'""'":4.a~O-:-S"!'"7...,.*_ IDEAL LOCATION LAWely 4br 1rs fem rm w/lrplc. Lfv rm. dln rin. Bttn China closet. Prof deco. a car 1ar. Yr old. Owner, 'f9t.Sla. SWter Hom•WbY C.01\· do? CoroeS" lot 2ba S7S,OOO CovJnston lU: 7eMlOI IOSZ CE 110181 ILlllS CD. Ill DOV. DllYI .. FORES T E OLSON ...,. ..... ,,. ..... -- • 2 + Oen, nr. ocean.1--------•1 - ••l 1u111J•• ·''',/IP••'·'• ftl .... I I lfl 'lo ' • t )I Io. SJMIWOM JO SIOMIWOM llcNW Closlilgt , ........ OUI tMYIMTOIY SHOWS WHYI EMERALD BAY, 11• lot ID prettiJiOU1 pn com· lily, W. •llreliiiillge munity. Plaot avail . . Vien 1.1rp r.to.gla ~tm To Stn• Ii 5 •• Loveb' cul-dHac lot lo .... Toe.. xlnt area. N.B. maWDa. Ooe ot few realdenUal UNITS PRICE 1ot.1 rema1n1n1. A1ent. 1 .•••...••••••••• $11().()QC) ...;141-...;.;...m_s _____ _ J •••••••••••••••• szzs.ooo WE PAY CASH 2 •••••••••••••••• $167,500 8,900 COUNTRY SPAMISH CAYWOOD REALTY Enjoy countrr life on IMC. 54'·1290 your Capistrano estaie.1--------1 Fantaatlc well built, • SPACIOUS UVIMG larae ranch bome. 5 4 Bedroom, z bath in rre· Bedrooms, ' balm, pool. atlglou1 Wutcl ff. Storybook home for YOW' Formal entry open to children. $325,000 Iarce llvln& room with brick fireplace, fully up· graded kitchen, landscaped )'ard, fenced, 3 Monarch Bay Plata fruit trees. veaetable La1unaNitue1 garden, 2 car 1arage. 496-7222 lll.0136 $140.000. Owner/Agent.\~~~~~~~~~! 673 7460 Santa AM I 010 New, upgraded JBr +1--------•1 FR at builders price $250,000. 644 4597 -------BALBOA CONDO Elegant, la.r1e lbr condo on bay front. Pool, boat slip avaU. Full aec. bldg. May exclllnl• fo~ units. $99,500. Owner I Alt. f75.'7520 RED CARPET" UDO IY OWM!ll 845 .. 3474 ....;.::~_;__ _ _,.._..,_~_'7208~~;:;;~~~~~~~1~~~~~~-:-::.::1 109VloW ....... 0,. OllJ I 2-6PM · Spacl<NI 5 Br, den, lam rm. w/2 patio., 1undeclt, nearby moorlnl •••ll. , ___ ..;.._ ____ _ U&bt Is cheerfult Atklng '"""' $32$,000. • •••••••••••••••••••••• '7J.7:17or,Ml37 ------· qutQSAU . IBt, VllW. HVH. '11UOO. By owner 769·01'1 or Mi-11113 2214P«tt&rllalt Pl llfhclan 1 1 ,I' •, I _, ___ _ - associated · ft '°4 If '~' ~ ' f ' ..... ' - HtfpW-..ed 7100 HllpW..t.4 710 ............................................. IOOKkl!ENR CLERK/TYrlST C~ISSIOMS Trainee S*itfon tor bill· Npl BCb Inv .. t l'irm. ins cleric for lnauranct P/char•• comnun's bk- lrp'r, Req exp in Ptl brd sya, bowledp In read- Bookkeeper. full charae. nper. Stat typing, Var. ot accts. Payroll UZ> $900 Nwpt Bch. Mr. Crawford 540-2200 Business Man requires amb\tlo111 person for aaJes & marketml! coo· 1uJUn1 bu.a. Oppor to de· vel<>c>e your own bus in apare Lime. &48·'79119 fo appt. CAMERAOPR. Exptt. w/a Walzberg or NuArc Camera pref 'd. MuA bt able to mlll'e half t.onee. Exper. r• t;'d. to atrlp for 12~x25\ pre· u., as well u 1n1aller ....... ,c ..... Bookkuper-''f'ra l n w/CPA....No lYPial· Sm. M~otc. '80Q. Ellle 0 Biien 54().5001 SMUin8 ti Snell1n I of NewPOrt Beach Acency '340Campu.Dnve UGALSIECTY Must have at least 3 yn C.llf. le1a1 exper • xlnt typbit wu.s. &11 "d• IDUldln1 H.B. omce, pa1itloa requires deleia· Uon to p/t aecty, tnUJt be &bl to use or be wlllbMC to learn 11•1 Card 1 macblne. Salary com· SIOMVllJO COMPAMY Z4IMJO Clu1aanta llilillon, Vlej(>Qa. 92615 tnJ) U1 -805C? -' I - DAILY P'LOT • 1968 Holiday Vacationer. 22', Cherry cond. 838-6008 afl noon. 7204 W. Cout -.;,......~-'-_,.._,.. ___ 1 Hwy,NptBch . ~~-• WE BUY CLIAHCAAS &TRUCKS CON Nill ~· Crll Craft, xlnt cond, L~ury Vai:atloneer, CHEVROLET manyr'IXtru, 1te to ap, loaded w/xtraa. Xlnt prec. Sac. ss:?·'f868 cond. 67~01 2828 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA lfl11 ~11.19', 190 OMC, Auto S..lce, Pcris 546-1200 und« warr., 20 hre, ex· & Acc"IOri" 94001-------- tr ... 980-1'91 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WEPAYTOPOOLLAR '7' M•RAUDER. 24 ', FORTOPUSEDCARS BARWICK DATSUN ~.1 11 •1J '" \ ,ap,·~11 .a11t1 8Jl.IJ7f, 4H.J J7S COSTA MESA DATSUN 28t5RARBOR JILVD, Uo:.641 O 540.02 I J c:.ommarid brid .. e. Twn OUT OF FOREIGN. DOMESTIC • ••"' orCLASSICS •---------~.du.al ataUon, trailer. WAIUUlMTY! If YoW' car ii extra clean Loaded·Mlntl IM(M836 '7"-'• '758, '76s Ii '771. seeuafint. NEWPORT OA lSUN '66 Porsche, runs &ood M.000 or best offer. 55'.Q976 loah.Rtftf/ <Older years·under IAUIAIUICIC ...., t 9050 2.8,000 miles.) To start -H-~-BI cl _.., vehicle service con· eo.taMes':""" ~~ 77 Ca.. ance 'fl9 tllE abarp, fuel lnJ., Demo le execut.1ve ule $-9pd, mae wbhl, $6800 . ........ ••••••••••••••• tract-12,000 or 12 m011th1, 1---------CHART £R Pluah 60' whichever occur• lat· YM:bt, reaaoaable, hour· today as low •• $31.12. ly « dally. 675-2172 ot Domuttc1 or llfht _615-6S85 __ _.... ______ 1 trucka·$1'8.50 yr.; m· ..,..._ IGll 9060 P o r t s o r l u x u r y ca rs-$198.50 yr. 24 hr . answering service na· ••••••••••••••••••••••• FUJI· YAMAHA DIAUIS Yacht Brokerage U.Unp Wanted I 5-ltrw....,,. YadltW.. 2616Newport Blvd. Newport Beach (714) 673-9211 Uonwide. , '64-'7'1 Used Mu1tan1 Parta. 990 No. Parker, <>ran1e. can m -2000 TOP DOI.LAI PAID FOR CLEAN IMPORT CARS ALLMODB.5 ~~] 1ii8 1'> II[ ACtt Ill , D 1tUNT1P11f;TON U[AUI 8-1~ 7!81 '>40 OH.' now eolng o~urry ! •DOVEST~EE'l' (Neu llaCArlhur: Blvd. lcJamboreeRoad> NEWPORT BEACH 13J..tl00 "15 B-210 btcblt, lo ml, AM/Fll radio, orlc. owner. f2H5/offe~ 6'1$-4U6 New 24 • American VCHWEAPpar1t1, all kinda, WllUY AM/Fll,Alr,1oodcond. USB> CARS! Make offer. 213/§8(.1061, s.tlboat. Take over pay. ·894-9404 We're the new Chevrolet or714/871-8850 menta. Hu trlr. 493-2612 --------• dealenblp in t.be Irvine 4 Nr new cadillae Seville Auto Center. We need '72 24-0Z, clean, AM/FM! 'nlADIFOR 1 radial tires by Vo1ue. youruaedcar' air cond, mags, Kon1 2.8' MORGON or. 1973 G78Xl4, $S0 ea.1'10-1822 JOI. thka. $WOO. 831-07'4. full keel crulslna boat lo ---------.. , excellent condition. Ne wly reblt Datsun MAC PHBSOM '73 240Z air, all xtras, --------t Atomic 4, tenoa, sleeps 6 engine for '63 Datsun CHEVROLET ~~!;S3•.~~~o3921 1bst ofr. adulta. New equipment. $200. Will sell rest of car ........... ....,. 6' 3" headroom, stand up for pw-ts $50. 839-0078 21 Auto Center Drl ve head. Will trade my equi· IRVINE ly for ear, truc k , AutosforSal• 768-7222 mtrhome, trallerable •••••••••••••••••••••••1--------boat or aircraft. Call~/ 1·627·2158 evea or Clillslcs weekends. Pr. prty. 9520 19788MW's HERE MOW! '75 280Z. St.ereo/eass AM· ---..-------1 FM, mag whls, silvet. S54SO. 645·1410 e vs, eva/wkods 846· 7161 wkd.ys ---~~~---· ,..,.. 9723 Cl,OSfD SUNDAYS SUPER STEAL. MOST SE~!! SharP '66 Silver Shadow. wbt R.R. Xlnl cond, SU,800 fltin. Call Robin atlll..QSU - -- ----~ -----~ ----___..._ ____ - - 7 ... ..,... PHOTO OF TYP.ICAL SOVIET COSMOS 8P.Y SATELLITE Craft Like Thi• fell From Orbit Over Canad• l Satellite Radiation Escp;pes ~etection ------------~ - l B1:.0 BAUER Ot•o.ltr,..... .... HWltlnctoD Beach City Coun· cllwoman Harriett Wlecltr ac· cuaed ell)' CO\IDC'tl colleaaue Ted Bartlett today ot ••wafflin1" re-· 1ardlq w ent.ry in tbe race for a aeat 011 die Oranl• County Board of Supenilora. Mn. Wieder aaid that '8artleU ta "either tor mo or aaainst me.· He can'tJlave 1t. both ways." The disP\lte was roawned bv a preas release wb.lcb Kn. Wieder said contained ••tbe wroo1 Janpa••·" In officially aDDOUllClnl ber candidacy ll«*la,. Kra. Wieder Ji1Ud five fellow clty council members u mernbenotberelec· tion committee whole sappcxt and encoura1ement wa1 respomtble for ber dedlimi to 11eek hiaber'Offlee. Bartlett. IUcbard Siebert and· .Women 'A·OK' A.atronaut Praises Choke DETROIT (AP) -Frank Borman says women astronauts are okay, as long as you don't have to sit too close to them for a long Ume. At a news conference Tuesday, Borman praised the National Aeronautics and Space Administration for its recent selection of new astronauts, which in- cluded several women. But he said there were good reasons women were not selected for earlier flights when the spaceships were smaller. "I think it would have been detrimental to spend two weeks in a space the size or the front of a Chevette or Volkswagen with a woman," said Borman. "It was tough enough with Lovell." After the jok~. Borman said he had "no prob- lem" with the admission of women to the astronauts• ranks. Hesaidhisfirstflightinstructor was a woman. . Fv Cheerleaders ·Parent Threatened Over Vote Dispute • ay RAYMOND ESTRADA JR. .. tllto.ily ............ I Parent Ken Hemon c1ahned W rore Huntin&ton Beach Unloo l1b School Dlatrlct. ttuat.es ueaday that be waa physically threatened by other parents because be disputed a Dec. 2 Fountain Valley Hltb School ~heerleader election. 1 In a Jan. 10 aecret mffting, tru1tee1 voided the ef ectlon because they believed not every atudent was allowed to vote. The school board then ordered a new contest to choose tht school's pep squad. Trusu.1 s~ood by their decillon Tuesday. Henson, whose daushter failed to wlh a cheerleader spot in the • Dec. 2 contest, userted Ile re· celved numeroul tbreatenln' telephone calla from parents who are afraid tbtir youo1sten will not be elected a1aln in the second pepster elecllon. Fountain Valley, H11b Sebool 'Principal Paul Berpr aald to- day tbe number of cbeerleaders wlll be increased over the 21 elected in the Dec. 2 contest. Ftb. l hu been att as the tm· tallve date for tho secomd elec· tion, besatd. a threat. After reading the letter. Niaco and the other pareotl stormed out of the meetini. Niaco said tbe ~rents object• eel to tbe aehool bOi.rd'• bearlq .. onl.Y one side of tbe story" about the disputed elecUon. "We would have liked to aee more inf onnatloo aupplled to \be board.•• t.e added. Nisco said h1S 1roup bas not ruled out some type of le&al ac· lion a&ainst the school dlltrlct ln the rttattcr. Trustees Helen Dltte and John Hundley praised Henson for bringin&thedllputetotheiratten- tlon and called tdm •'brave.'' Trustees blamed teacben for not handllna the pepster electlon adequately. Hundley aaid band memben were not allowed to vote due to a pracUce sesal.on scbedUled at tho same time as the election. "Five buid members were not allowed to be In th" parade because they Voted In the elec· lion anyway," Hundley said. Mrs. Ditte Said Henson wu the onltparent wbo uked to talk with theentireachoOl bOird lllioUt thevotiillirJ'eCuladU • run. . Mrs. Wieder 1atd that t.belr cooperation indicated 1upport and cndonemeat. .. ADJ otber hrt.sptetatloo .. 1Pllttioi balis, .. 1be aal~ . Sbe ccaft.rmed. however, tbat the presa release wu lDcorrectly written when it lilted her council colleasues OQ .ber election com- mittee . .. 1 don't have a commit.tee yet," the 1aid. Mrs. Wledet aald the release wu written by Don Frank, a supporter, the aicht before tbe press conference. Frank was unavailable for comment today, · Bartlett· aafd tocla1 t.tiat be aave Mrw. Wieder "Ids blea- tngs" to nm. Re said today that be didn't alp any endorse· ment and ta undeetdecl on wbo he will 1upport but that be 1J b~py that she ta nmntni. Mrs. Wieder said tbat Bullett attended a party Tuesday nitbt at her bowe tbat tbe held for a lar1e number of her 1upporten. She said ahe fovited Al Coen aod Bartlett to tbo fete ao tbat they mllbt pick up some support for tbelr candidacies int.be April ll city COUDdl eleetlOD. "WbJ was Bartl~ here 1f he wasn't aupporUn1 me:• she aaked ·toc1v. "I• be pJ11Y· backlnc oa m1 vota?" Botb COen and Mayor Ron PattiDlon have endoned Mn. Wieder'• ca.Ddldacy. Patttmon satd Tuetday that he will do all he can to work for Mrs. Wleder'a election. HB Surfers Field After 2 Days AH~ urflnf team tops a field of 50 squads after two days of competition in the ~•.lln Pro·Am Tea Cha eliP &lrt Cont.tit. Small waves forced contest of. ficlals to post~e today'• com- petition at Hunti111ton Beach MunlclpAl Pier. But action will conUnue Thuilday tr tbe 1Urf is up, they Mid. The Carl Hayward SUrf Team lrom Huntioston Beach bu out· performed the 180 other teun memben at the halfway point ln the conteet which bepa Mott- day. Bob Milfield, John Dennte. Ike IUc. and Cali Hayward are compettq on th• top squad. Surfera;· lnoludinl South African prof e11lonal Sbaun Tomson. are vyiDr for more tban $12,000ID prtae m ey. The Contest b apoalored bY -a Seal Beach surf sbOp. Ttam1 ale aponaorid by Calltomla aarf tboPI. Pbll Nlsco, who repreHnted 71 parent• at Tuesday'• tcbool board meettnc, ta>d the decision to vold the eJectloa ii "2italr. Nlaeo 1aid tbe parenta ot thole )'OQDllten who wan tM Dec. 2 CRASH ANTICIPATED.· •• • contest feel the teettt nulietiilJ t to orde:r a new elecUon wu DOt rilht. . • .. We don't underatand the ' board•• actiGb bor the manner tn whlch 1t wu decided," Nllco ald. "W• are trwUq that )'OU~ 1tve equal ~ldvatlon to ~ future crtcvance In tbe same n- pedl nt manner. 0 Nl co re d from a letttt to the diOolJJOarcl ltned by 71 parent.S. 'oan:t Pftsia t DOn list~ 4Utrtct d ch ckUUMIJ um • Kimberly Ann Groff. 18, of 178452 Toiyabe Circle, Fountain· Valley, was killed Tuesday af. ternoon when the car 1be was driving crashed Into the rear ~d of a natbed truck stalled on the San .Dleao Freeway in Costa Mesa. According to a California Hiahway Patrol report, Mtss Groff was drtvinl north on the freeway near Harbor Boulevard when her 1978 model auto slammed Into tho dlnbled truck. The truck drlven by a Long Beach tem·11er had stalled ln the freeway's number two lane and, because of heavy traffic, the yoWl& driver was unable to guide It off the roadw.ay. I',.... Page Al BAME ••• • The cHP report lndlcated the victhn "a~Y attempted to stop ber auto -wbtin she •Potted tbe 1talled truek. RowM'et, the car 1kldded and craabed under tbe truck'• flatbed.. , The victim was dead at the 1ceoe ot the 12:.S p.m. f~ accident, tho coroaer'• report sa14. 15Peopl,6 Evacuated By GOA Leak An unexplained leak in a natural cu pipeline feedlnt a business and residential area of central Seal Beach forced evacuatioo ot a trlan~ AC• tion of the dtf TUesdA1 • Police said about 15 people wero onlered • ot the wedae-ab a.P.ed Hllon bounded by Pacific COast Hlpway, Seveillb Street 8nd Marina WI:/ tor more th•D an hour. (. Gu company workmen took -40 minutes to find the leak in the main supply line into the clty and shut it off for neceuary re- pairs, which were qulcldy made. No Injuries or other damage were ~rted as a result of ~ gas leak; 1tccordinS to Police Sit. Leonari:l Frlsbte. Apmheid Aided MURIEL ••• I The Humphreys had tbree sona -Hul>ert Jr.. "Skip," a Minnesota state senator; RoBert and »ou&Ju. Nancy, tbeii' one daughter, ts marrltcl to C. Bruce Solomomon. • F,...PageAI . BOVAN ••• contract on Bovan after tbe Vf c .. Um plaMed the kidnapplnt of Prasadam prlnclril Alexander Kulik, 28, ot Newport Beach. Flori remains held in the county Jall today wit.b ball de- nied. Kullk 1J in cmtody with bail set at $2.~ million and todefen· dant Joaepb Gabriel Fedorowaki, 28. Js held Witb bis I>JU fil\lfO eet at $100,000. The remalnlna toW' deteo· dants are lJ'OO on ball~ WASHINGTON (AP) American corporations operat- ing In South Afrtca have done almost nr:Jtb.ln1 to resist that na· l 000 Troops Die? tlon•a ract.al aparttield J)o)lcy ' and have "acted contrary'' to BANGKOK. Tbi.lland CAP) - Amerlcan forelp polJcy, ac· ·Vietnamese forces ICUled more cotdlni to a report prepahd for tha1l 11000 Cambodian ~ 1n the Senate Porel1n RelatJOns one of a aertes of clashes iloo& 1ubCommtttee. the frootler. • .. - 7 • 111 Of ngeCoest OeityP1tot -- ----- ------ - A bit of a shadow b tieen ~ from tbe Hwstlngton Beach Planning Commi on Wltb the reslpatton of Roger Slates as its chairman. Many feel that Slate1, who Will remain as a com· missioner, bas been ~ ef!~e public servant. He is thorough and willing to devote time to his duties. However,' Sh~tes is a real est.ate brok4!r aqd. Js as- sociated in his bu.4'1ness with the Huntington Beach Com· pany, a large land investment and oll firm in the city. Some observers have long felt that Slates' poslUon as chairman has posed an embarrassment ~·cause of a possible conflict of interest. In fact, the district attorney's office late 1,at year looked into the relationship. Slates was told not to participate m or 1n any way at. tempt to influence a governmental deci$ion wblch would have a material effect on the company. . No _o_ne 1s saying that Sl~tes has taken advantage of has position. But his resiamation as planning commission chairman is nevertheless a goOd thine nd tt ts overdue. What many people still .Wl to realize, there is a need to operate city government 59 that there can be no ques- tion of impropriety. It is important to believe that no one is in any posltton to receive tavored treatment. Slates' resignation as chairman should help to allay any possible doubt. School Closures Parents of elementary school-age youngsters in Fountain Valley and parts of Huntington Beach should brace themselves for the closure of several schools dur- ing Ule next few years Alw<iys an emotional issue, the Fountain Valley <elementary> School District proposed school closure plan looks to be the hottest controversy in the area in some time. School district officials believe they have received plenty of community input from a 71·member advisory committee on the proposed district master plan. But taxpa~ers will have a chance to give the school board their views during the next month in three public hearings on the proposed school closures. School board members should listen closely to what these residents have to say and acknowledge there will be emotional views on the school closure issue. The cold statistics which predict a decline of about 2.000 students in the next four years do not tell the com· plete story. Whatever course the school trustees take on the plan, they should remember that they are directly accountable to taxpayers m explaining the rationale for their ultimate decision AgreeDient at Last Following a protracted period of negotiation, the teachers and administration of the Ocean View School District have come to basic agreement on a pay and benefit contract. The bargain they struck -and it ls a bareain for some teachers -was born with some pain and ~~mdri· ty, including strike threats. Teachers at first wanted an 11 percent ralse. The district counter·off ered with a 6.28, but it was heavily weighted toward the SO·Called top ena of the salary schedule. Those with master's degrees and extra units. with 15 years' experience and up, would get bigger checks. Some beginning teachers would just receive base pay plus a yearly cost.of-living pittance and wait atound to put in time and cam a master's degree to get a blfger check. Their living costs, obviously, aren't about to mork time, too The package scheduled for formal approval n xt Tuesday provides a starting teacher $101720 and a veteran $20,855 the first year, increasing to $11,310 and $21,947 the second year. Happily, this gives the entire faculty a rabe and still brings longtime Ocean View School District teachers closer to parity with thei~ counterparts in other county districts. They have been woefully below them.on the rel· ativepayscaleforyears. r The deallnp, however, went nine months past the due date for -a new contract and now another new one must again be fought out within 15 months. Ocean View School DL-;tract parents, who pay taxes to keep tho es 1 rtcs In line With tnc time~ •• and who heard many trike thr ats, co\lld be even happier with the 1979·81 contr.act. .. Only, however. if teachers and &dminlst.rators start tal ing aoout It soon and void another tense, nine-month overshot. --------------------- /Robert Seek U.S. Aid to Oust Soviets WAstrmGTON -Behind the "-bUc JIO.IPP Ind or'atoey of hls world &oilr. Preal.dent Carter w11 warned by l•adera ln W•tern J!:uJ'ope and ttie Peman Gulf that the Unlted States must 'PP~ ."countervaruzic ,preuure" tb dHpeolJi"a SoYlet latnalon in Ethiopia or riK 1lpall1Dc that tbe antl.CoaunusUit world in the end may 1ole by default. However exauerated it may seem, tbat wamln1 eaJDe flom the Sbah of Iran, tbe President of France and the Kine of Saudi Arabia. It .polnta up one 1troa1 leaaon of tbe- flrat Carter year: three years atu1r Vietnam, the U.S. muat assert It.a fuU role in the real world_t>f iDtematioilaJ polltfoa or lO!le toe .. conftdenc ot ltl friends and al· lies. Mr. Cartel' waa W'IJ botll lo Europe Mel in th P Ian Gulf oil counlriea ot Iran and Saudi Arabia to put 1lrat 11tc anns limitatJon talk <SALT ll> tn motbballa Ind finitely to eompel Moscow to halt military opera· tiona In Ethiopia. one uropean leader told the Carter travellln party: "Detente II not a H to be cut up iJl a 6oYl .,au.em; but a c:Clllllnuoua process evcy ... where:• THE BVGE ~let airlift lO Ethiopia started In late No-ember. Witbout ever revealing the real reuon, Mr. Carter sent Undenecretary of State PhWp Habib to Mo1cow in early December, Oltenslbly to explain the U.S. position on laraeU· Eayptlan neaotlationa but ac· tually to prottst the Kremlin'• Ethiopian adventure. Habib protested the Soviet THE ANGRY Nactlon from non~Commuoiat 1tatea came early tn the Carter trip. In Teberan. the Shah of Iran said flatly that bia ·country would "react'' ti lild whn the Soviet· bac:ked Bthi(ij:bns aet one foot Pets Deserve More Humane Euthanrlsia wishing to circulate a petition can call one of the followina num bera In Ora nee County between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m: 675·2533, 894-4016 or 636-9218. PEGGY MOORE Netfi'eoled this position need be lttcluded in the charter." NBVER have I w•tnessed ao blatant a power erab; so overt a move to take over a clty by an uo·elected <or elected for th.at matter) official than the above. Shades cl. dlctatol'!hip and bit· clly boaism. Think of it -a part·time c:lty c:ouncll thus la be- it•t asked to place the entire responsibility of city 1ovem· meat in tho harida of one unelect.- e d lndlvldual, d0Un1 out patronage, whO is not respOnsi· ble in any degree to tht elec· torate inchiaed In the 160,000. plus cltbena of Huntinaton Beach. Mr. Belsito, present city ad· mlniatrator, baa been doing a COod job, as far aa I know. But this attempt· at an obvious power.grab ahould be enoueb to discredit h(m and bJs staff, u worthy ol our conUnued trust. I have 1u11ested1 on more than ono occasion, that the city • admlnlttrator should be elected at the polls. 1'be tore1otn1 em· pbaaii the tmperaUve UI t Ulla now bOdone. ..,_ BobHop,e Airoiiled -~e• Winds Huff., Puff sANTA MoNrcA (AP) -A jestJDI Bob Actress Lee Grant and her husband, pro-house, valued at $300,000 when completed. Hope spent two daya In ducer Joe Feury, stand outside their sent it swirling and crashing Tuesday. "It Superior Court hammer· Malibu home that was under construction. was like Dorothy's house in 'The Wizard iDa out a •eW•ment ln Strong winds lifted the frame of the ·of Oz'," Miss Grant said. the $3 mllllon •ult he ------------------__,.;.------------------filed over a fire that Sailor Sets Solo Trip destroyed bis desert "dream house" tn 1973. Judge Mano Cllnco said TUesday that the negotiated settlement awarded the 74-year-old comedian $430,000 for SAN DIEGO (AP) -Seven years aner John Fairfax and Sylvia Cook became the first to cross the Pacific by rowboat, the 35-root Bntannia JI is back. This time. San Diego sailor Pat Satterlee will attempt the 8,000-mile voyage to Australia alone 10 the famous boat. Fairfax and Miss Cook made their record row 1n 1971·72. But Satterlee plans to leave March 31 and if he makes it, It will be the fm;t single-handed row across the Pacific. FAIRFAX ARRIVED HERE TUESDAY with the Britannia Il. His last visit was in 1971 after he began the two-person row in the sturdy craft. He says he was clinging to it for dear life. "The Bntannia Jost her rudder and we were blown right past San Diego in one storm after 5 Facilities 280 Hospital Beds Nixed SACRAMENTO CAP) -State officlala 1a1 the federal government Is preparinc another blow for California's mental hospital system: The de· certification of 280 beds al five ho:.pitals. State Health Department spokesman Peter Weisser said Tuesday the action will cost California $450,000 a month in federal aid, starting in late 1''ebruary. The new action t ) ~tems from health and STATE safety violations found _ by state inspectors at '--------facilities for the mentally disabled 1D Metropolitan, Camarillo, Patton, Napa and Atascadero slate hosp1lal.s in the fall or 1976 and the sprine of 1977. LNG r~r•lf•al Site Ptulted PALM SPRINGS (AP) -California utilities mtend to pr s their efforts for early approval or a site for a liquefied natural gas terminal near Point Conception, the board chairman of Southern California Gas Co. aald Tuesday. HarveJ A. Proctor, who is also chairman or the American Gas AB!loclat,lon and executive vice president of Pacific LighUni Corp., said Pacific Licbllne and Pacific Gu and Electric Co., are convinced tbot earliest possible receipt or LNG is essential to maintalnina a strone economy in California. Denlal of Pqy Stud~d another," the Brltiah adventurer sald. The two ceen could only hang on while the boat was town south and wound up on a beach at Enaenada, Mexico, he said. the partially cqn.slnlcted • . \ house near Palm 1 Sprlnes. "I THlNK they all ALSO ON BAND AT THE SAN Diego Rowlnc walked away pretty Club for the big rowboat's smooth arrival atop a satisfied," the jud1e truck trailer was Ian Clare Lallow, who built it said. "Both Delores and <!nd another or Fairfax's rowboats. Bob Hope were here for Fairfax rowed the AUantic ln 1969 1n a 22-root both day1. They had · ~ rig built by Lallow and then had the Brttlab enouch interest to atick '\I custom boat builder fuhion tbe Brit.annla D for around ad that wu a tiJ the Paclflc crossing. bla plus IQ tbelr faYOr. 11 The two are loanlnc the SS0,000 boat to Sat-Hope, who Uv al a ~ terlee for his record attempt. . m a1;11lOll ll:a uburl>1n "l'M GLAD I'll NOT OOJNG along ln the ~·~::& ... CW'J'ell~ , Britannia tbil time." said tbe 40-year.old Fairfax. Palm Sprlnp hOm• on a "Thia Ume, I'll be stayiq on the dock and I'll smaller acale than the 1iive Pat a little push and wish him luck.'' orielnaL It took nine months ror the two to row to Austraha, including a month to repair the boat after it struck a reef in the Gilbert Islands. FAIRFAX FIGUllES that with aome luck, Sat- terlee can make it in leu time. Lallow was here to check out bis handiwork for the upcoming croaaln.g prior to extensive test.. inc before the departure. All sale Items limited to stock on hand through 2/5/78 BankAmericard/Mastercharge. WHILE THERE was no aasienment of blame in the aeWement, tnltlal report.I lndleat.d that sparks from a welder's torch may bave touched off the blue. -------__..... --~ - - - - DAILY PILOT AS PRICE REDUCllDNS CHILDJlEN'S SHOES ADU>AS-IUITB ROWM-:- CHILD Ufl IS'~ SMCDALS a.,. to SH.ti 30 FASHION ISLAND• NEWPORT l~C.H ..... 644-2464 ... ~ .. ~-................. Shop early and take advantage of our alihiversa.ty celebration bargain prices. 7 B1 PHILIP aOSllAaIN Ot•o.tlf""'IUllt A part-time reereatlonal lrforker's complalnl that he was paid an hour overtlme wtileh be didn't work, hat led the Irvine City Council to order "a complete, thorovsh ld· veatlcation" of that and other ch arc es. CouncUman David SJlll 1ald the complalnll of 20·year-ol~ John Francis Codcle Jr. - favora 1e Job review by the council and clty m naa()r. Councilman John Bu~ton called tor a public hearint in two to study two issues be satd re raised by Codde's 1tatement.S -administration of the dep:irtment. and tbe number of peraons slped to ainale ta1b. Codde, whole eurrent employ- ment status ll uncertain, bu wOt'ked part·tlme 1lnce lut Ju· IIllII's :Widow ... _. ~ . To Fill BiS Seat MINN EA POLIS <AP) -Muriel Buck's boyfriend wrote her in 1135 of his dream• that the two might someday "work tor blgger things" and "probably be in government. politics or service." Today she picked up those dreams of the boyfriend she later married, Hubert Hum· phrey, and agreed to fill bis U.S. Senate seat. Humphrey died of cancer two weeks aeo. Mrs. Humphrey, SS, •was appointed by Minnesota Gov. RUdy Perpich to serve unW a 1pecial election in November. . Mrs. lfllmphrey lived and campalped by Humphrey'• side tOf' 41 years tollowlna thelr marriaae Sept. 3. 1938. At the time of their weddlDt, she was a colleee coed, be a pbannaclst, in Huron,S.D. In t.bat 1935 letter, the youn1 HUtnpbrey asked Muriel to alway• encourage bJm, to be his insplratlonal force and "never let me aet lazy orlUacoura1ed." Mrs. Humphrey mana1ed what fta4 been asted of ber as Humphrey became mayor of ........... ., ... o- SHA0£0 AREA: JON BRAND'S UNO PtAN From th• Mountain• to • •" Minneapolis, a U.S. aenator, vice president and three·tlme Hplrant for prealdent. Even Hum pbreJ'• criUca saw t.be late senator, the "happy warrior" and exponent or "the politics of joy" u buoyant. optimistic and rarely dlscoura1ed. When Humphrey ran unsuc- cessfully for maYor in 19'3, his youn1 Wife rani doorbells In the campaign. Her first real plunse Into heavy polltictin1 came dur· inc a succesatul mayor cam· palan two yean later. (8ee Ml11.JEL, Pase AZ> Radiation Expanded 'Fo U.S. Jy, u a recreation aide and a "tacllltJ supervisor,•• at UniveraitY Coromuruty Park. The UC trnne student told tho counttl, and a cable tel vlslon audience tuned In !or the municipal show, that after a public event at the park, he wu told by hii aupe"lsor he'd dot'lc a gOOd jOb and to put an extra hour on his tlmecard. Codde aaid he did, and was pai~, b~!elt.~Clly aboutit. ay LAURIE KASPE& •• .,.." l'fi.tt!Mff The Saddletiack Commulllty Colle1e Dl1tric:t could lose almost $1.3.5 mUUon -more than half of Its current $25 million budcet• -lf voter• pa11 t.be J el'VU inlUGtl vein 11 e. "'It's • very 1ub1tanUal amount. That would cripple the colle1e. there's no queatlon about. it, .. aald Ro7 Barletta. anlstant. H d OD other occ Ions cit)' employ were paid to work While mltblftl WU CoiDI otl, •• t• ~nc th , two of us, j t to k the restrooms open." Codde said he could have done that bY bimself. He userted hls supervisor didn't. listen to his au11e1tions tor better m I ment. Asked why be came befOt"e tho council; be repued, ''Sometimes thin11 tend to be covered up!' superintendent tor business. Such a loss~ming at a time when the district's enrollment ii groWJng -would likely eut. lhOi't development of the new noitberil campus in Irvine as well u re- duce current proaram oflering1. "3'.hat'a the <latk aide, the $13 million." Barletta said. He explained that ho based his estimate on the proportion of tu dollars t.he district currently re- , . SACRAMENTO CAP> -'Ibo tale Enerp Commllalon 1truclt a. iuajor blow to the future of nuclear pow r in California to- day. declarmc that no proven, permanent method exist.a to atore radloacttv nuclear W8'flel, commwion or th Le&lllature. no new atomic plant.I can be built in CaUfornia. The commiaslon endorsed a report saying waatH from nuclear plants ahould be con· 1idered danaerous for uo,ooo years, tind no method alata to keep them secure that lone. The commllslonera, all •P· pointees of Gov. Edmund Brown Jr., made the flndlna by a 4·1 vote. Under 19'16 state laws, untll that dec:lllon la reversed by the APWI,...._ FILLS HUSBAND'S SEAT Murlel Humphrey E'roa Page AJ MURIEL ••• Mrs. Humphrey, a quiet and unpretentious woman, stumped every election since then. When her husband was not a can·· didate. she campal1ned for others she backed. At first it was hard fot her to speak publlclv. . Once In 1960, when Humphrey was seekina the presidency, he was called to Washington for an important vote and his wile was psked to speak in his place before a prominent group of San Francisco lawyers. Mn. Hum-. phrey said she was terrified. Urged by a few a.ides and ac· con.panying reporters, Mrs. Humphrey agreed. With shaking .knees and In a voice sometimes quavering, she spoke with directness and clarity. At the end of her speech, the lawyers stood and applauded. By 1964,· her strength as a campaigner had grown as Hum- phrey campaigned for vice pres· i'dent. Mrs. Humphrey had more poise and confidence. She pui;hed henelf. Humphrey aides recall, and always had time lo talk with "just one more person." When she gave campaign talks, she said she stuck to the subjects that interested her and most women -such things p the needs of children. "We think the same,'' she said of herself and Humphrey. "But he arrives at his CO'llC!luslons by study and logic. Like a W()man, I get to the same place more by hunch." After Humohrey'1 1881 dee.at by Richard Nixon for the J>J'U· ideney. Mrs. Humphre1 once' aialn bad time to do her needle-pclnt, to sew her own clotba, to fuaa with the famify'1 lakeside : home at Waverly, Mbin., and to • work for impto•ed. care and services for the retarded. Her nrat trandchlld, Vlck.l, born to her dauchter Naacy Solomonaon. 11 meataUy tardecL ComlJliaaioner Gene Varantnl, author or the report that the commilsion adopted, said tests to demonstrate atorate methods could be made by the mld·ltlOI. But he said tboae teats could fail. J',....PatieAl JARVIS ••• increases in income taxes if the amendment passei. But Barletta said he doubts the state would make up the di5· trict's total loss. Saddleback's loss, be added, would be areater than some other diatrlcta because most ot its income comes from lhe local taxpayer. During a brief ditcunion of programs at thelr meetJ.na Mon· day, dittrict trustees expressed concern with the propOHd tu ln· iUatlve. Although the trusteee did not comment on B1rletta'a report. T1ylor said they will be adclrep.. ing it. He said the report was ''the first thing to have us becin thinking about it.'• Some aeencles have already RJanned layoffs if the amend· ment passes. U Saddlebac:k con- siders this, the employees, by law, must be informed by March 15. The board president aaid be \ID· derstands peoples' coocern about property tax but th1s initiatlve won't sOlve the problem. Taylor said be believes the solution Iles in a different system, one which doesn't cut the propertY tu aa much and in· clude1 more from the state's In· come and sates taxes. And, he said, the actual causes: of high property taxes are arowth and inflation. "I wish we could be talking about inflation," he said. Police, fire, roads, 1arbaee collection, water and other services as well as schools would be affected by the Jarvis in· ttiative, "Taylor said. It tt passes, he predicted, the state's un- employment. will increase. "I don't care where you are In the spectrum of society," he said, "somewhere or other th.ii is going to affect you." Ero. Page A J PROBE ••• What about betwttn times? "Oh," Codde said, "everyone sits around doing nothln&." Harry Ehrlich, actina director of the communlly services de· partment. said Codde'& was only the third allegation by employees of wronedolnga in the department. Ehrlich implied Codde ll a dis· gruntled employee who recently, be said. was warned about hi.a .work performance. Codde told the council he's worked otlly about 10 hours sloce November. Ehrlich said Codde no tonier is workine at the Unlvenlty Park commUnity bulldins, but that the department aWl 11 con· siderlne reaaslan•na hlm elsewhere. I Seniors Get Coordinator ·· r ecserai aU\nonu • keep 11v· Ins ua pep ta1ka l.Dstead ol sde.n· tUlc evidence," uid Com- mlsaioner Ronald Doctor, who voted for the report. The commission bas been asked, however, to recommend an exemption h'om the 1'16 laws for ttie propoHd Sundeeert nuclear plant Sn the Mojave Desert. It was scheduled to vote on the requat later in the day. Three commercial nuclear re- actors are operatin& in Callfornla and four more are neariaa completion. The 1978 laws do not apply to them. But the laws, the touchest nuclear safety atatuta in the na· tlon, have Imposed a moratorium oo any addiUonal nuclear plants. Today's decision could ext.end that moratorium for a decade or more. The Jaws ban new nuclear de· velopment until the commission finds that the federal eovem· ment bu !ound safe methods to reprocess nuclear fuel and permanenUy store radioactive wastes. They were paued by the Leslslature an<! siened by Brown ln the aprtnc of 1976, just before Prop. 15, a ballot measure with even tougher restrictions on nuclear power, was rejected by voters 2-1 • .Most utilities supported the laws in an attempttowardoff Prop.15. Sale Draws Ht•ndreds Newpo.rt Srore Crammed for Annual Event By JACKIE HYMAN Of•Oeltr ......... John Lawder of Balboa Island took this mornint off ftom his Santa Ana Pbotolf•pby firm to stand In a llne at Falhlon Island. He aot there 1t 6 o'clock. Just a dozen or so bOdles down from the first in line Lawder were Dwayne and Pat Merry or Newport Beach. They got there at. 7: 30 a.m. and came prepared wltb camp chairs and books. It was almost 9:45 and the line, made up ol an estimated 500 people, stretched almost to the parking lot of the Newport Beach abOppinl mail. The occasion wu the first day of the annual sale at the clothing at.ore, At·Eue. • 'Thls is the only time I buy clothes and it's the best sale in town," said Lawder, who's been alt.ending At-Eue sales Cor four Dealer Says Faulty Rolls ' Not His Car Newport Beach Rolla Royce dealer Roy Carver said today he did not sell the $35,000 car over which ho and the manufacturer are beine sued for $88,000 in damaaes. Tbe owners ol the car, Donald and Mary Chapton of Newport Beach, tlalm the 1976 Silver Shadow bad many sbortcominp and that Carver's aaency was unable to correct or repair them. Carver denied responslblllty !or any deficiencies and nld the Chaptons ac:tually pur:cbued the luxury aedan troi::D a Loa An&elea deiler, not froni Roy Carver Rolls Royce. Tbe Ota~ did not name the now'1tefunct Los Anaeles dealer hi their claim. They assert the~ returfted the car to the Ca"er firm on 1'7 ocoa ons for c:omctlolli '4. fault.a ana for ,. polra. SPY ••• years. At-Ease cames top quality - and usually fairly expensive - merchandise. But once a year for the past eight years owner Al Douglass pulls the stops out. The stock merchandise goes on sale -no promotional items are purchased especially for ules - and 1ome of the price cuts are startling. "One year we had six full· length rabbit fur coat•." said Douglass, who spent lhls mom· ing chatting with customers up and down t.M line. "We sold toor of them at $UO and then at the sate we sold two of them at $25 each. They went real last." The crowd that assembles bears little resemblance to \he more youthful. acruUy linu one might aee outside a ticket win· dow for a rock concert. "They're very well-behaved,'' said secur\ty guard Geor1e Smith. who's helped supervise the sale lines for the past three years. "We've had complaints this mornlne of llne-Jumplnc but we try to stop lt." He said he was keeping bi~ eye on a bend in the hne where aome people uasbed the line last year. Owner Douglaea said he believes people keep comln1 back partly bccauae of the way they're treated; Coffee and rolls are served from 8 :30 to 9:30 a.m .• about half an hour before the store opens. "We have an attitude that our sale customers are very honored people," Dou1lua ail.id. ..They really assl5t u5 in keeping our . merchandise and our money in motion. They're not someone to be looked down uwo." · He said some customers have developed their own tecbntques for taking advanta1e of the store's bargairis without wear· ing themselves out. "We have one lady that comes back on three ditrerenl visits on a sale day," Douglass said. ·'The first crack around she loads up on all the small items. Then she comes back about noon and collects all the basic Items and about four she comes back for a final sweep." The sale lasts five days. The lone line could pose problems, Douglass admitted. , "It has to be well ad- ministered. We bave about three weeks of preparation for lt. lt'a a big social event." Customers are let int,,o the store until 300, the fire d•· partment-specified maximum, have entered. Then others are allowed to enter as customers leave. Inside the store, which ls larger than me»l specialty shops but considerably smaller than a department store, a tank of ox· ygen ls kept in readiness ln case anyone faints • .And that bas hap- pened, Douglass stlld. Why would people spend up lo !our hours in line and take a chance of passine out from ex- haustion? .. Outstanding buy,,•• 1ald. Newport's Dwa:vne Merry IUC• clnctly. Then he and hls 1rlfe went back to readin& their boola. Fro• P.,,e AJ PARK ••• park cost) based on $10,000 to $50,000 an acre for 55,000 acres," Hid Seelye. He said that with a naUonal 1 debt of some $700 billion and a half trillion dollar budget pro- posal this year alone, Badham could not sponsor such legisla· lion. But Mayor Brand was un· daunted by Seelye's remarks. saytn• he'll be speakinc personally with Badham in March. 0 1 haven't heard that from rum personally, and be hasn't • even beard rny proposal or seen the allde presentation,'' Brand said. Brand received the endorse· ment of his own council tor the park last week aft.er presentin• a ~minute 1Ude show which 11· lustratea the Saddleback·to·tbe· SH parlc concept. "This plan can work without using massive amounts of federal money," be continued. . He said the land could be ac· · quired by exchancea with land· owners, gifts and Jan4 dedlca· bona. adding that the govern· ment already owna land upon whlcb the Marine Corps Air Sta- tion at El Toro is located. "The Marines have already purcbued all that land from the end of the runway to the <Sant.a · Ana) J'reeway, 10 with that atrlnf alre•dY acquired and with atnal purcbaseainbetween,we'll, have 1t,"beaaid. I Bo-van Tuesday. Su~rlOr Court Judge Robert P.. ICneelarid ruled that erand jurors had not been dven all the evidence held by the prosecu· Uon. Jlis n.illnc. handed down alter a day-long hearing lnto wbat ha.s come to be known u a "John.Ion motion," meaot the dismlual of murder and conspiracy charg~ aralost seven deleadantl, one of wbom faces the death penalty. Piano virtuoso Marlo Fe:nnen r tried out the Boesendorf er piano thiS week be will use in his Feb. a pertormance al the San Clemente Community Clubhouse. The Colton Piano Company of Santa .Ana is lending the piano for the concert, But the defeMaoti• ob'rioul joy at 'fo'hat they lhou1ht wOuld be fr edom wu sbOrt·llved. All seven were rearrested on the aamo charges t>efor• Uiey could leave the courtroom. Judge Kneeland'• ruling ap- pear d to criticize Deputy J>is. trict Attorney Dave Carter for hi• handuna of the evidence pre:. sented to the Grand Jury. "If Mr. Carter bad taken ju..t five minutes to tell the Grand 'Recreational Sex' OK .Judge 8ays Corutitution Prot£cts Prostitmes aldered a crime. But Judie Taylor ruled Tues. day that unmarried adultl, ln· cludlnt prostitutes and their patrons, have a consUtutional rtabt to privacy in the punuit ot pleasure. She al10 found that anti· prostitution law• are unfairlJ' enforeed a1atn1t women beeauae male-JJ&llanl are usual· lJ. aot prosecUted for their put in the crime.. Jud1e Taylor noted lD her d• clslon that in the fint alx months of im. there were 3,.219 prostitu- a on y 62 of for p tronldn a p~ MINNEAPOLIS (AP> -Muriel Buck'• boffriend wrote her In 1i3S of his dream• lhat the two mt,ist aomed•J' "wort for bl11er ~" and "probabb' be in 1overnmeot polltlc1 or aervlce.'' TodaJ 1he plck..S up thole dream• of the boyfriend 1ho , later married, Hubert Hum· pbrey, J.Dd asreed to fill bl.a U.S. Senate seat. Humphrey died of cancer two weeu ago. Mn. Humphrey, 85, was appointed by Minnesota Gov. Rudy Perplch to 1erve unUI NoFailout a special election in November. • Mn. Humphrey Jived and campal1ned by Humpbre7'a side for '1 years followtDf tbe1r marrlaae Sept. 3, 1931. At the time of tbelr wedcllnl, abe wu a colleae coed. be a pbanDaclst, lA Huron,S.D. In that 1935 Jetter, the Jount Humphrey asked Muriel to alwaya encouraae him, to be bis inspirational force and "never Jet me 1et Juy.or dlacoura1ed. •• Mrs. Humphrey menaced what bad been eked of her as Humphrey became mayor of The Dana Point Citluns tor Action will meet Tbursd1y night to consider formation of a Municipal Advlaory Committee to 1lve the communJty Impact on decl1lon1 concerning the :.trea. The committee would be elect· ed by Dana Point raldents to t represent the area in county de· t clsiona. The meeUn1 ls in lhe t cafeteria of R.H. Dana Elemen· t tary School, 24242 La Cresta Drive. t The same form of community • aovernment is utilized in Mis· ' sion Viejo. The community forum will also include a slide show presen- tation of new tracts approved for development in Dana Point, as well as open space inland of Laguna Niguel, Dana Pomt and Capistrano Beach. Other items Lo be discussed will be an update OD the atatus of the Dana Point blufftop acquisl· tion, and development of Thun· derbird Park West. For more information, call Sandy Boostrom at 496-7387. l'ro•P~Al BOVAN .•. what police allege was a trio or "hired iuns" imported from the EastCout. Earlier, Grand Jury evidence included the alleged confession of Jerry Peter Flori, 41, of Hunt- ington Beach who, the prosecu- tion claims, admitted that he ,shot Bovan nine times in a reprisal planned by operators of Praaadam D&1trlbutors Inc., a Newport Beach investment firm. The Grand Jury was told that Fiori, Anthony "Little Tony .. Maron~ Jr., 23, and Raymond Steven Resco, 28, all of Hunt- ' ington Beach, were given the contract on Bovan after the vic- tim planned the kidnapping ot Prasadam principal Alexander Kullk, 28, of Newport Beach. Flori remains held In the county jail today with bail de· nted. Kulik is in cwitody :with ball set at $2.35 million and codefen· dant Joseph Gabriel • Fedorowsk.i, 28, is held wlth hls ball fisure set at $100,000. • The remainln1 four defen- dants are free on bail. Hospital Sets Board Voting South Coast Community Hospital members will be voting on a slate of candidates for the hospital board· of directors Thursday at 7:30 p.m. The nominaUn1 committee will present a state of potential board meetlnp at the eeneral mem bershlp conference in the hospital auditorium. Board members whose terms of office are terminating include Arthur Brie&•. Lacuna Hilla; Raymond. Cox, South Laguna; Mrs. Mar1uerite De Loach, Laauna Beach; Ellison Hazard, South Lacuna; Bert Lampert.. Lacuna Nltuel; Low.a Zltnlk; t.a,una Beach and Melin· 'da White,LlgunaBeach. D8nce Concert Set For Dana Sehool. o-4.., .......... _ 'HOMEOWNERS' BOARD, SPARE THAT TREE' Richard Lewi F19htlng to Save 48 of Them Three Seized In Theft of Fishing Poles Three Riverside men -head- ing for a South La1una fishing trip -were arrested Tuesday by Orange County Sheriff's Deputies in Dana Point after they alleeedly took flshlne poles Crom an unidentified residence. Sheriffs Investigators said Malcolm Black, 24; Kirk Yates, 22 ; and James Yates, 24 are be· mg held in Orange County Jail on $10,000 bail. They are charged with residential burglary. According to sherirf's otflcers, the three men dropped off a hitchhiker on Colegio Drive in Dana Point, where they spotted the fishing poles in a garage. Deputies alJege the three pulled their car into a driveway and stole the polea from the 1ara1e. The three were arrested short· ly after 5 p.m. as they drove north or Pacific Coast H11hway. The three suspects are scheduled to appett In South Orange County Municipal Court Thursday on the charges. E'ro.Pqe.4J TREES •.. "I wu told by the altomey that the board didn't want me to have that list (ot addresaes)," Laws claimed.. LI oyd Nelson, general mana1er of tbe firm wblch maintains the common landscape area, defended the homeowner board'• action. "We've got too many •ycamores 1n there," he said. "We've got many more trees in there and a Jot or those sycamores are planted too close together." Nelson, also a resident of the West Nine complex, says the tree elimination program is based on more than trouble created by fallin1 leaves each fall. "Those trees are planted too close to the aidewalks and the bulldlnp," he aJSerted,. "Their roota are 1oln1 to be tearln1 up the sidewalks and creating problems wtth the foundations." He admitted the trees were not causing problems now but predicted they would in the future. "They're 1olna to have trunks that are three feet thick and then it ~l be much more U· penalve to remove them," he Hid. County Eyes Action To Halt Erosion Orange County aupervtaors plan to take legal action to hall erosion problems plagulne Caspers Regional Park. County Counsel Adrian Kuyper was given a week to re- port on what that action might entail. · Supervlaors Cbaltman Ero. ~age AJ MURIEL ••. Thomu Riley, wbo toured the erosion damage by helicopter Monday, told fellow board mem· ber11 Tuesday it should be clear that.the damage is caused b)' a sand and 1ravel operation downstream. Couot.y offtclala contend that a gravel pit excnated by the Conrock Co; ac~leratea the flow of San Juan Creek throulh the :S,500-acre park creatlri1 el'C8fon. Recent rain nnioff wuhed out the pai'k'a entrance road and created a Jl)O.foOt·Wfde ravine. · The park now has been closed to the public. County otftclala have su11est- ed that the mkllng firm buJld a flood control structure that would alleviate the problem at an eatJmated $400,000 to $500,000 coat. The City Councll warned Laeuna Beach Mayor Jon Brand that be face. an upblll battle Jn b1s crusade to acquire 50,000 acres Of south Oran1e County land for a national park. And, aure enouab, the lame duck mayor received hla ftnt disappointment Tuesday, less than a week alter be unveiled bla proposal for a "Saddleback· to·the-Sea National Urban Park." A spokesman for Rep. Robert Badham, R-Newport Be.ch, said in a telephone interview that the conireaaman wlU not ln· troduce legislation to create the fn#SSive park. Badham aide Howard Seelye said purchase of the park land, which stretches betwe.n Corona del Mar and Aliso Canyon ln South Lacuna and from the aea to Saddleback Pelle, could cott between ~ million and $2.7 billion to 1cqulre. ' "That'• our etUmate (of the park coet) baaed on •10,000 to $50,000 an acre for 5',000 acres," said Seelye. He said that with a national debt or some $700 blllion and a half trilllon dollar bud1et pro- posal this year alone, Badham could not sponsor such lellala· lion. .... ...... oge.4J KENNEL ••• volved than just tbe WU1e1otlat. eel '290,000 price tae. The alx cl· ty lot• currently bouae the town'• nuraery equipment, whlcb would be moved out to the barn lot at the SPCA it the site ls pure hued. Cost of movln1 the city nursery out to the barn would be around $10,000, he aald. Con· version of the barn for nursery use would coat an estimated $20,000, and a re•lty commission of aix percent would mean another $21,800 to $38,000. Add another $3,800 for mil· cellaneous expenses, and the animal shelter price tac hanp between $352,400 and $359,600. That would mean the city would only hue to sell three of the city.owned lots at the top price of Sl00,000 each beca""e the council has already budeet· ed another $60,000 for acqulat· lion of an animal shelter. The six city Iota were 1lven to the city in 1940. Some council members last week indicated they would pre- f er sellinl the lots to acquire the shelter to dipping into the city's . general reserves. 1 Stereo Gear Stolen At Clemente Home Stereo speakers, a receiver and turntable valued at a total of $817 were reported stolen Tues- day from a San Clemente home, where a burglar apparently forced a window to 1et inside. Timothy Michael Thompeon,. of 257 Ave. Granada H , told police the bur1lary at hla apart· ment occurred between 7:30 a.m. and 7:30p.m. But Mayor Brand was Uh· daunted by Seelye'• remub, uyln1 he'll b speakl~C personally wlth Badham " March. "I haven't heard that from hlm personally, and be h• 't even heard my propo .. l or n the slide taUon,'• Brand Hid. • Brand received the end ment of bis own cowicil for tM park Jut week after preaent.i.Da a 15-mlnute slide &bow wbtcb U· lustratea the Saddl~b clMO:the· Sea park concept. ''Thia plan can work •ithout ualDI maaslve amount• of federal money," be conUnued. He said the land cou.Id be ac- quired by exchanees with land· ownen, 5 and land dedka. lions, ad t.hat•the 1ovem· mont al owns hmd ypon wblcb the:Marine ~ Alr'St4· tJon at El Toro la located. "The Marines have atrea-cly purchased all tJlat land from the end of tb8 runway to lb (Santa Ana) Freeway, 10 wltb that 1trln1 atread)' ~ul~ '&lid With a mall p\irdlases ln betw , wt'U h•velt,"heaaJd. . * * * May,or Puahes 'Preseniation Of F artlJ]mid "Here we Jookliag dowa at the earth f~otta the moon,•• Lacuna Beach Mayor Joo Briuld Informed the Jmne City Council Tuesday, then called for bl1 next sltde. His point waa that "man'• reach abo~d exceed his trup:" the "lovely settin11" visible from the moon ought to be pre· served on the planet, he aald. The Art Colony mayor told the councll oae view clo • to hOmt ouabt particularly to tie Ptt· served: Tbe farmlands anil hUlsld• st.retch.lnl 50,000 acr from Saddleback Mountalft· to the Pacific Ocean, tbrou1h Irvine. from Corona del Mar to South Laguna. "Brand promoted creation of a "Saddleback-to·the-Sea urban national park, to preserve the land, he said, from an en· croachlng megalopoliS 1rowtn1 from Santa Barbara to San Diego,. "We are betnc Los Angelesized, ·•he said. He said the ~ropoaed parklands "do not have to be a Yosemite or a Grand Canyon . They can just be a place to enjoy the simple life, or quieter times." Although the Jrvlne council members made no comment on his presentation, Brand pressed his point that the park should be encouraged, through l1nd ex· changes with ownera of the property In return for develop· m~nt rightaelsewbere. He even offered to cban1e the working name of the parL "I really don't care wbat name you live ft," Brand aatd ... You could call It the lrvl.M NatJoaal Urban Park. You could Heo call it the Joan Irvin& Smith Recrea- tional Area, if that wtU ~etp." -: . ,,..... ., I ' ...., ". . ,, J Lind Dunn, a 20-year-old bank employe bas been crowned Mis Dana Point Chamber of Commerce. Mis Dunn Is a pollUcal c1cnce major at UC Irvine ond S n Juan Capistrano Parks and RecreaUon com- miaaioner. E,...P ... .41 SPY ••• search. !!'he <!enter of the search is obo~t 34 mUeJ east of the tatt~ tip Of Great Slave Lake and '!81'0ut 200 miles east of Yellowkrilte, a communitr or 6,000 aboUt ~ miles north of the 'U.S bofdU. In MoSc<>w. Canadian Charge D'Aflalree Alan P. McLalne met tOday With OIOdals at tho Soviet Foreisn Ministry to obtain more lnform•llon about the fallen eatelllte. McLalne said the So-- vtet.a were "very forthcoming'' and offered to help locate any debrla from the craft. Under International agree. ment, the Soviet Union is responsible for any dama1e caused by the satellite. Canada'• external affairs minister, Don Jamieson, said he would purusc with the Soviets "t.be question of financial liabili· ty for any costs of search or any other activltles that may be re- quired" Jamleaon also said his govern. ment is lookin1 into intern&· tlonal legal requirement• for cleaning up space debris and trytog to determine what the next step should be. "It appears that destruction did occur durtng the re-entry process and that the llkelibood or any nesatlve effect• are mi'ntmal,"' he said. I 1 Or tyP Ed torial P!ffle --- - ----------- ---- • R /Pu«»Uwr ea1'ftlt1-a Kre bkhm"'n .... .a.a ----- -------- - Laguna Beach council members let caution be the better part of wt dom )qt week when they ord red two planning commi&a1~ off the li t of municipal electlon Seek U.S. Aid to 0nst SovietS poll Inspectors. • The council b atened to add that the dismissals did 11-~~~.-. .... not refiect the inte1rlty of the two commissioner&, but sold that since tho question of propriety had been raised the pair should step down. "-''" ..... -It was two ctty council candidates who raiaed the ls· sue or Commissioners Belinda Blacketer and Bette Freeman serving as poll inspectors neit March 7. ... o I The council hopefuls indicated that planning com missioners do have an interest in the outcome of a city council election. They are ap~\nted' by the council at large. and serve at the *him of that city panel. But one candldate•s request that several other poll in- spectors be dismissed -just becauSF they serve as of· ricers in other Laguna civic groups -was going too far. Village Laguna anti Greenbelt oCCicers are perpetual volunteers. To restrict them from serving on election day from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. -would place a bigger burden on the city clerk, who has enouib trouble rounding up enough volunteer3 for ttie day.long ordeal. , A Grandiose Plan It sounds like a hare-brained scheme. A national urban park stretching from the sea to Saddleback peak. But when Laguna Beach Mayor Jon Brand presents his 15-minute slide presentation. and starts talking about federal funding of the more than 5,000-acre urban park. you ha,·c to admire his optimism He savs the f edcral government has purchased other large recreational areas, including the Golden Gate Na- tional Recreation area in California, Gateway Pa.rk in New York State and Cuyahoga National Recreation Area in Ohio So why not a "Saddleback to the Sea National Urban Park"? The plan would place about a fifth of Orange County in open space or agricultural lands. Brand says Orange County is smaller in area than 49 of the state'o; 58 counties, but is only exceeded by Los Angeles county in population. And we all know what Los Angeles Count:; looks like. So he's pushing his park plan at the local level, with eyes on state and (ederal officials when his tenure on the city council comes to an end in March. Tht> mayor has the endorsement of fell ow council members fo1 the scheme. but it's going to take a lot of convincing to get the feds to let loose the phenomenal amount needed to buy up Brand's Park. Dubious Tax Use Some Capistrano Unified School District voters may be surprised to learn they are paying to persuade themselves and fellow voters to support the $49.3 million school construction bond election on March 7. Supt Jerome Thornsley informed district trustees last week that a similar bond promotion before the 1976 election cost more than $10,000. Trustees can legally use a variety of promotion techniques to influence voter opin- ion, he said. For starters, trustees have split themselves Into four committees and granted each committee $1,500 to try to drive their message home, using videotapes, recorded telephone messages and other public relations pro- cedures. The Daily Pilot has supported two previous Capistrano Unified school construction bond measures because we believe the district's phenomenal Population growth justifies new schools. Taxpayers should not be forced to pay for promoting ballot measures, however. Taxing the electorate to sup- port one side of an issue may be legal, but we don't think it's right. • • Opinions expressed In the apace above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other v1ewa expressed on this page are those of tt'lelr authora and art11ta. Reader commen"t la Invited. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mese. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642'""321 . Boyd I Baby Feet WASHINGTON -Behlbd the pubUc pomp aod oratory of bi. world tour, Preald nt Carter wu warned by leaden \n Wfttem Eu.re>~ and the Perelan Oult that the tJmted 6tat mu.t applJ "COQJ!t.ervaUinl p,rqsaure'' to de~• SOVlet iritrilslcn ln EtbJoj)la or rtsk al1n&Wn1 that the antl'Communllt world in tbe end may lolo by default. However exagerated U may aeem, that warnln1 came from the Shah of Iran, the President of France and tbe Kln1 of Saudi Arabia. lt points up one 1tron1 leuon ot tbe flrtt Carter year: three 7eara aftu Vietnam, the U.S. mu.st dsert Its full role ln the real world ot lnternattanal pc>litlea or lose the MailOOX confidmce of it.a fricnti and al· IJ.u, TBlt IVG Sovl t lrllft to Ethiopia tarted In lat No· ember. WlthOUt cv revealtq th• ru1 reuoa, r .• Carter sent Undenecretary of State Philip Habib to Moacow in early December, oetemlbly to upla.LD the U.S. posltlon on Israeli· Etyptlan neaoUatlons but ac· tually to proteat the Kremlin'• Ethiopian adventure. Habib protested the Soviet. TBE ANGRY reacdon fl'OIJ) non·Communlat state.a ca1Pe early in the Carter trip. Jo Teheru, tbe Sbah of Iran uld fiatly that bis country wobld "react'' ii and when the SoViet· backed Ethiopians set one toot ac of Som~ 1P umllbl.V, WI would n lronlan alrllft (or aeallft from audl Anbl n bas 1 aeros the Red Sea) to bO t.er Somali forces. E• r aloe• Somalia ~Ur.d R i luty , lt&a \60\I U.S. ald- lnv ln. In P is, cb P lde:nt V lcry Gl c d d' taini re. v aled talon to p hard for th 0 MhaU ot African Unlty COAU>. led t>y DOD· nilat French· states, to wam MOlcow that Afrtca b off bo\mds. Mr. Carter ~ to help. Soon afterward, GI.Seard went to the Frencb-epeatlnc Ivory Coast to slut Of8An111ng a 111iv1 conUn t·wldt cam· paten for mHimum pollUcal preaaUl'e a1alnat tbo Soviet Union. IN a1Y ADU, the agltatlon ~ Kine Khaled or Saudi Arabia WU even more Intense. 1bus. durtna the trip, llr. Carter •treed to' persuade Somalla to seek a ceue-flre ln the war with Ethiopia. 'J'he U.S. would then put heavy pressure on Moscow lo compel Ethiopia to accept that ofter. Nexi would come a demand Jed by major African states -E1ypt. Sudan and ponlbly Kenya -for Soviet withdrawal from Ethiopia. any bard problems are posed by the European·Jranian· Saudi plan to put a atop to free- wheellns SOviel interventloa in Elblopf•. The $ball". despite beny investment bi American arms, cannot letally permit thelr ~ by a th1rd country. The ume la true of Saudi Arabia, IO fearful ~ rtstni Soviet tnvolve- ment aCT'OU the Red Sea that it now keeps at least two dlvialons on it.a southern Red sea coast. These caveats asade, Mr. Carter camQ home with a loud and clear messaae from this na- tion'• moat formidable lriends. Whether that messaae struck home, as some of these nations believe, wlll not be known for 1 veral weeks. What is clear now la that without U.S. leadenhlp, the pressures on the hom of Africa and everywhere else will eontlnue in diree. tlon. Fot the non·Communilt world, that dlttCUoo ll down. Pets Deserve More H11mane Euthanasia To the Editor: Orange County Animal Con· trol services all cities in the county with the exception Of Newport and J.aeuna Beaches. The pound, located in the city or Oran1e~ kill• approximate'y 45,000 of the usual 62,000 dogs and cats proceaHd yearly. Tbe methOd for destroying unwanted and unclaimed pets at the coun· ty pound la by the decom· pre11ton chamber. Tho decompression chamber la documented by expert. as cau1ln1 extreme 1ufferin1 ol anlmals from the lime the d001" or the chamber is closed to the time that d8ath occurs. Add to that the terror of beinl dra&&ed from the case on death TOW, forced Into tbe chamber caometimeS breuina less>, and overload1n1 of do11 and cata mlxed~er. Many animalJ do not die the prat Umo but must be decom- pr Heel several times before th•1 die; aome are still alive when picked up by the renderinc company. A great number ot im· pounded animals are alck, old, lnJured or wry youn1 and aulfer added afoot durln1 deeom-pre11ton. wlshinc to circulate a petition can caU one or the folloWinc numbers in Orange County between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m: 675·2533, 894·4016 or 838-9218 PEGGY MOORE Vetf .. Plu could not believe whaL I was reading, SO creat was my dis· beUef, that J went back and re· read the 'article that rtcently ap· pea red in the Pilot. What J read was an oul·and-out attack on Mom, ap· pie pie, and the American way of life. Donald Duck had been banned in Helsinki, Finland! Just betause the duck chose to remaln unmarried, Just becaute he took il upon himself to raise three harmless, well behaved nephews, the Finns chose to call him unzwural! Unnatural? Do you know what the FiD.n.S have? The Finns bave TROLLS, that's what the Finns have. You •ant to talk about un· natural, let's talk about those Trolls. Lurkin1 about, under those b , doing heaven only knows with their free time, probably altlng for unwary ladies tn (\I to pa11 O\lerhead. Unnat 1, bldeed. rudene1ll, ond/or annoyance at ha vine to bsten to my situation. I would not have had to sub- ject myself to this if my phone had been repaired correctly the first time. It seems to me the of· fices of Pacific Telephone have abandoned common courtesy in favor of amugnesa and the already worn phrue, "Because· of the rccenl.-alnstonns.'' MARY 8. BA VRY ~€....,.a• CAUFO IA0 ----·· .. LOS ANGELkS (AP> -A pollce feared bad met with .. foul P.la1'' bin e dllar. peared wlth aearl1 fl mtWoe In neiottab e aecurttlel lbowed up tor work todq -with the eecurtdee lD\aet but undelivered. ''JM ed bit boll and told blm ho wu on h1I way in to work thla momlnc," 1114 Pollet IL BUl Hocu• of th• JObboft·bomlcldt dhialoa. "A~ parentJ.y. he didn't bow what be bad. AppaND he dt4n1t I llko worldDI 1•terday <Tuelc!Q) a • tenaoon." THE Ml:SIEHGEa. Arthut" Wea4ell JUchard.lon, dlclQ't atay at work very loll -ia. wu flnd, aa1d ~tcbu Dtck WUUama of"'Rocket IC~~.~ Oourlv Sentoe, bulpolloe laid noQlar111wo_,boftlod.. DAILY OT AS ~----------------------------------------------- BobHoPe. Aumded ~es Winds Hutt, Putt sANTA xoN1cA (AP) -A jeatina Bob • Actress Lee Grant and her husband. pro-house, valued at $300,000 when completed, Hope spent two d&1I in ducer Joe Feury, stand outside their sent lt swirling and crasbln1 Tuesd~. ••tt Superior Court ham.mer· Malibu home that was under construction. waa like Dorothy'• house Si -rile Wilard lnl out a Htttemat in • Strong winds lifted tbe frame of the -of Oz' ,U Miss Grant said. th• SI mwron 1\llt he ___ ;.._ ____ ..,., ____________ """_.._ ____________ fil~ O'Hf a fire that Sailor Sets Solo Trip SAN DIEGO CAP) -Seven years after John F airfax and Sylvia Cook became the first to cl'06s the Pacific by rowboat, the JS.foot BritamUa II is back. This time, San Diego sailor Pat Satterlee will attempt the 8,000.mile voyqe to Australia aloae in the famous boal Fairfax and Mias Cook made their record row In 1m.72. But Satterlee plans to leave Mudl 31 and lf be makes It, it will be the first single-blDded row acrou the Pacific. FAIBFAX ARRIVED HERE TUESDAY with the Brit.annia II. 1lli last vlslt was ln 1971 after be began the two-person row in the sturdy craft. He says be was clinging to it for dear life. "The Britannia lost her rudder and we were blown right past San Diego in one storm after 5 Facilities 280 Hospital Beds Nixed SACRAMENTO (AP) -S\ate otftdell M1 the fedenl penu:nent la preparfnl iDotbel" blow fOr California's mental hospital system: The de· certification of 280 beds at five hospitals. St.ate Health Department spokesman Peter Weisser sald Tuesday tbe a ction will cost California $450,000 a month in federal aid, starting in late February. The new action ( ] . stems from health and SfATE safety violations found _ by state inspectors at '---------facillties for the mentally disabled ln Metropolitan, Camarillo, Patton, Napa and Atascadero state hoepitala in the fall or 1978 and the sprine of 1977. IN6 Ter.l•el Sl•e Pulletl PALM SPRINGS (AP) -Callfornla utllitlee .intend to pras tber efforu for early approval ol a aite for a liquelled natural pa terminal near Point Conception, the board chairman of Soutbem California Gu Co. said Tuesday. another," the Brltlah adventurer said. The two J>UMll&era could cnly hang on while the boat wu blown aouth and wound up on a beach .at Ensenada, llnico, be said. AUiO ON BAND AT TOE SAN Diego Rowing Club for the blg rowboat's amoath arriYal atop a truck tn11er waa Ian Clare Lallow, wbo built it and another ol Fairfax'• rowboats. Fairfax rowed the Atlantic la 19 ln a 22-foot rig built by Lallow and then bad the British custom boat builder fublon tbe Brltannla D fat the Pacific croatna. The two an Joanln1 the $50,000 boat to Sat- terlee for bll reecinl attempt. "I'M GLAD Ml NOT GOING alone ln the Britannia tb1a time," said the 40-year-old Fairfax. "This time, I'll be sta.Ylnl on tbt dock and I'll give Pat a llWe puah and wtdi him luck.'' IL took nine months for the two to row to Auatralla, lncludlna a month to repair the boat after it at.ruck a reef ln the Gilbert I1landa. F AIU'AX nGtJaBS tMt wltb IOllle luet. Sat· terlee cu make lt lD 11111 time. Lallow wu ber'9 to cbect out bll handiwork for the upmnifna eroaal.q prial' to utesh'e t-. Inc befcre the deputan. All tale Items ll.mtted to stock on hand through 2/5/78 BankAmerlcard/Maste.n:harge. deatroyed hl1 dHert "dream bouae" in 1973. Juda• Marlo CllAco said Tuesday that the negotiated settlement awarded the 74-year-old comedian $430,000 for the partially constructed · hou s e n e ar Palm Springs . ''I TWNK they all walked away pretty satisfied," the judge s aid. "Both Delores and Bob Hope were here for both days. They bad I enou1b lntenst to .Ueki ~l around and that wu a big ph• tn their favor.0 Hope, wbo llvea at a mansion ln auburban . ~ Toluca Lake, ls ~t· ly rebutl-a aeeoad Palm Sprlnaa home on a smaller scale than the original. WBILE THERE wu no uatcnment of blame tn the Httlement, lnltlal reportl indicated that aparka flolD a welder's torcb maJ bave touched off tht blUe. PRICE REDUCDllS Sale ...... , ..... ,. CHILDREN'S SHOES ADIDA5-1US111 ~. CMl.D LR ms Ate SAMDALS s300 ..... 114.tl 30 FASHION ISLAND • MlWPORT l~C;tl .... 644-2464 Hekd•1111·~-s. ........... Shop early and take advantage of our anniversary celebration. bargain prtces. e Haney A. Proctor, who la also cbalnllaa of the American Gas AasoclaUoo and encutlft vice president of Pacit1c Ll1htlnl Corp., said Pacific Lfghtlq and Paclflc Gas and Electric Co., are convinced that earliest possible 1'9eelpt Cl LNG ls easentlal to ma1Dtal.n.ln1 a 1tron1 econ.omy 1n Calif oral a. . It's our third anniwrsary and every department has extra special prices on our ftne quality produd:S. HMF PRICE SALE s I), 'NI-16.00 Now ss.oo 7 lb. reg. '9.95 Noar $4.97 ... .. • £1 La~a Beach council members let caution be the better part of 1sdom last week when they ordered two planning commissi on olf the liu of municipal election poll Inspectors. The council ha taned to add that the dismissals did not reflect the U'ltegrity of the two commissioners, but sald that sinco the que tion or propriety had been raised the pair should step down. It -.vas two city council candidates who raised the ls· sue of Commissioners Belinda Blacketer and Bette Freeman serving as poll inspectors ne~t March 7. The council hopefuls indicated that planning com· " missioners do have an interest in the outcome of a city ,council election. They are apP.9lrtted by the council at large, and serve at the w~imofthatcitypanel. But one candldate~s request that several other poll in· spectors be dismissed -,lust because they serve as of. ticers in other Laguna civic groups -was going too far. Village Laguna ana Greenbelt officers are perpetual volunteers. To restrict them from serving on election day -from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. -would place a bigger burden on the city clerk, who has enou1b trouble rounding up enough volunteers tor Uie day-long ordeal. , A Grandiose Plan It sounds like a hare-brained scheme. A national urban park stretching from the sea to Saddleback peak. But when Laguna Beach Mayor Jon Brand presents his 15·minute slide presentation, and starts talkini about federal funding or the more than 5,000·acre urban park. ) ou ha\'e to admire his optimism He says the federal government has purchased other large recreational areas, including the Golden Gate Na- tional Recreation area in California, Gateway Park in New York State and Cuyahoga National Recreation Area mOhio. So why not a "Saddleback to the Sea National Urban Park"? The plan would place about a fifth of Orange County in open space or agricultural lands. Brand says Orange County is smaller in area than 49 of the state's 58 counties, but is only exceeded by Los Angeles county in population. And we all know what Los Angeles County looks like. So he's pushing his park plan at the local level, with eyes on state and federal officials when his tenure on the city council comes to an endin March. The mavor has the endorsement of fellow council members for the scheme, but it's going to take a lot of con\ incing to get the feds to let loose the phenomenal amount needed to buy up Brand's Park. Dubious Tax Use Some Capistrano Unified School District voters may be surprised to learn they are eaying to persuade themselves and fellow voters to support the $49.3 million school construction bond election on March 7. Supt. Jerome Thornsley informed district trustees last week that a similar bond promotion before the 1976 election cost more than $10,000. Trustees can legally use a variety of promotion techniques to influence voter opln· ion, he said. For starters, trustees have spilt themselves into four committees and granted each committee $1,500 to try to drive their message home. using videotapes, recorded telephone messages and other public relations pro· cedures. The Daily Pilot has supported two previous Capistrano Unified school construction bond measures because we believe the district's phenomenal population growth justifies new schools. Taxpayers should not be forced to pay for promoting ballot measures, however. Taxing the electorate w sup· P.Ort one side of an issue may be legal, but we don't think 1t'1 right. • • Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other 111ew1 expressed on this page are those of their authora and artlata. Reader commef1\> la Invited. Addreu The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Cost' Mes., CA 92628. Phone (714) 642-4321. Boyd I Baby Eeet -·· • ··7 -. . . • t • ' • " " -L..:."..;..:J -·-'""'~ • ____ ._. __ ~--~-Robert N /Publisher TMMtl IC - Robttt N. Woed/PubUIMr m,tm a Krel hi ditorl -------------- - - ---- - -- Seek U.S. Aid to 0ust SovietS WASHINGTON -thind the public PomP, ind oratory of bia world tour, President Carter wu w rned by leaden in Wes~m ~and the Persian GWI that the United Stat must appl1 "eoantenailinar preaaur.-• to d"penin' Soviet bllrulicm tn Ethiopia or risk 1lcnallin1 that the antl-P,mmunllt world in the end may lole by default. However exa11erated it may seem, that W~I came from the Shah of Iran, the President of France and tbe Kln1 of Saudi Arabia. It polnta up one 1tron1 leuon ol the ftut Carter year: three yeara after Vietnam. the U.S. mu.st at.ert its full role in the real world or lntematlonal polltir.1 or lose the MailOOx confidence of lte frlendt d al· Uea. r. Carter w ur ed bOth ln Europe and In the Pcnlan GWI oil cowitri of Jran and SaUdi Arabia to put tho ab' t~glc llmltatlon talks (SAllT JI) in motbballs indeflnltely to co Moecow to halt military opera. Uona in Ethiopia. One Eu~~ leader told the Carter travcmna party: "Detente 11 not a aaus to be cut up ln Soviet pattern. but a cootinuous proce11 every· where." TOE HUGE SoViet airlift to Ethiopia start d ln late NO· ember. Without ever reveallnl the real reuon, Mr .• Carter aent Under1ecretary of State Pbllip Habib to Moacow in early December, ostensibly to explain the U.S. posltlon on J1raell· E1yptlan neeoUatlona but ac· tually to protest the Kremlin'• Ethiopian adventure. Habib protested the Soviet. . . . 1 THE ANG&Y reaeUon tram non·Comnivnlat state.a came early lJi the Carter trlp. Io Teberan. the Shah of Iran &aid flatly that his country wobld ·•react" it and when the Sovtet- backed Ethiopians aet one foot '. across of Som.UL Pr umably. thb wd m an Iranian alrlln <or 1 aUft from audl Ar bl n bases ICJ'OSI the Red $ea) to ~l>Olstcr Som 11 forces. • r 1l111ce somalia expclled I tyear,tthanou btU.S. d- lnvaln. In Parla, French President V l ry GI.Seard d' tain re· y led decislca to ror th Organi&atfon or A'fr:lc Unit)' (OAU), led by non- Marxiat Frencb·speaklnl •tat.I, to warn Moscow that Africa ii olf bounds. Mr. Cuter •freed to help. Soon IJ'Wward, Gbc:ard went to tho Fre.nch•peakin1 Ivory Coast to start or1anliin1 a maaslv conUnent-wlde cam· pal10 for 1naxtmum political preuure a1ainat the Soviet Union. · IN IIYADll. the aaltatlon of Kine Khaleel of Saudi Arabia wu even morelllten.se. Thus, du.rto1 the trip, Mr. Carter a1reed to persuade somalia to seek a ceue·flre In the war with Ethiopl~ 'J'he U.S. would then put heavy pressure on Moscow to compel ElbJopta to accept that otter. Next would come a demand led by major African atates -Egypt, Sudan and poaaiblJ Kenya -for Soviet withdrawal from Ethiopia . any hnd problem• are posed by the Europea.o·Iranian· Saudi plan to put a atop to free· wheelinC SoVlet intervention ln Ethiopia. The Sbab, despite heavy Investment in American arms, cannot le1atty permit their W! by a third country. The s me ii Uile of Saudi Arabia. so fearful Ol name Soviet involve- ment acrou the Red sea that it now keeps at least two divisions on tta aouthem Red Sea coast. These caveats aside, Mr. Carter camQ home with a loud and clear rnesaace from this Da· lion's most formidable friends. Whether that mesae1e struck home, as some of these nations believe. will not be khown for aeveral weeks. What is clear now ta that without U.S. 1eadershlp1 the presaures on the horn of Africa and everywhere elae will continue iJi one dlrec· tlon. For the non·Communilt world, that dlrectlon Ja down. Pets Deserve More Humane Euthanasia To the Editor: Orange County Animal Con· trol services all cities In the county with the exception of Newport 8hd Lisuna Beach•. The pound, located lo the city of Oran1e, kill• aprroximately 45,000 of the uaua 62,000 dogs and cats proceued yearly. The metbOd for deatroylne unwanted and uncli.lmed pets at the coun· ty pound is by the decom· pres1lon chamber. The decompression chamber ii documented by expertl u cau1ln1 extreme 1uffertn1 or animals from the time the door of the chamber ia closed to the ttme that deatb occurs. Add to that the tenor of beint draged from the caee on death row, forced into the chamber <eomellmes breakln•"' legs), and overloading. or do11 and cat• mJxtd together. any 41\im&ll do not die the fl.rat ime but must be decom· prea ed several times before they die; aomt are stUl alive when picked up by the rendering company. Agre t number ofim· nded animals ar alck, old, ured or l'l youna and a\lffer dtil a1on7 durlnt decom- PJ' tlon. • wishing to circulate a petition can call one of the foll0Win1 numbers in Orange Count)'. between 10 am. ana 5 p.m : 67S·2S33, 894-4016 or: 636·9218. PEGGY MOORE \'otf119 Plu could not believe what I was readln • SO 1reat wu my di•· belief, thot I went back and re· read th article that rec ntly ap· pearedinUi Pilot. Whet l read was an out·and.out attack on Mom, ap- ple pie, and the American way of lire. Donald Duck had been banneil In Helsinki, Finland! Just beeo the duck chose to remain un arried. Just became he took it upon himself to ralae three harmless, well behaved nephews, the Finns cboise to call bim unnatural! • Unn uraJ! Do you know what the Finna have? The Finns have TROLLS, that's what the Finns have. You ant to talk about un· natural, let's talk about those Trolls. Lurkln1 about, under those bridg • doini heaven only knowa Whot with thelr free time, probabl,Y alttne for unwary ladies In Jrts to pus overhead. Unnat raJ, deed. rudeness. and/or annoyance at having to listen to my situation. I would not have had to sub ject myself to thi~ if my phone h d been repaired correctly the first time. It seems to me the of· fices of Pacific Tel~phone have abandoned common courtesy in favor of 1mugnesa and the already worn phrase, "Becaute· of the ~t rainstorms." MARY B. BAVRY ~·a......-. Coast .VOL. 71, NO. 2S, ~ SECTIONS, 44 PAGES Ra<Uation· Search Dips Near to Chicago ~ELLOWKNIFE, Nortbwmt Territories <AP> -The aerial tearcJ\ for radiation contamina· tion from a fallen Soviet spy tellite hu been expanded lnto U.S. territory north of Chica&o. Canadian officials said today. Maj. Georie Haswell, Delense Department. spokei»man in Ot· tawa, stressed it. was only a pre· cautionary measure. He aald the sweeps by special- ly equipped planes takinl air aampl were broadened to in· elude a larger area of Canada and part of the northern United States -between James Bay and Lake Superior and between Lake Superior and Lake Mlchl1an. Haswell said that the U.S. tnd Canadian planes have detecled no radiation. The nuclear· powered satellite dlllnteirated . over northwest Canada· early Tuesday. Tbe aearc:h for possible debris from the satellite, which carried 100 pounds of enriched uranium 235, and for ~ible radiation contaminaUon was concentrated over an unpopulated reaion east of Great Slave Lake in the Nor\hwest Territories. A Canadian armed force& ..nuclear reaponae team" checked th street• of tbl1 nearby town with £ lier coun- tera aad •'tho results were iero, •• said Capt. John Lyne, the group's le der. In West Germany, .Prof &Or Heinz Kaminski, director of private iNlitut.e for pace re· search t Bochum, aald the flamto orbiter must h ve left a radiation cloud aom 200 miles long t an altJtute of 30 to 40 Widow Goes to Senate •r•.,.,.._ FILLS HUSBAND'S SEAT Murtel Humphrey Mi-s. Humphrey Carries Dream MINNEAPOLIS <AP> always encourage him, to be his Muriel Buck's boyfriend wrote inspirational force and "never her in 1935 or hia dreams that the let me eet lazy or discouraaed. '' two might someday "work for Mrs. Humphrey managed biner thinsa" and "probably be what had been asked of her as in• 1overnment politics or Humpbrey became mayor of service." Mtnneapolla, a U.S. senator, Today ahe picked up those vice president and three-time dreams or the boyfriend sbe aspirant for president. Even later married, Hubert Hum· Humphrey's critics saw tbe Jate pbrey, and •lreed to fill h1I U.S. senator, the "happy warrior,. Sena&. JeaL and exponent of "the polltlcs ~ Humphrey died of cancer two joy" as buoyant. optimlatlc and weeks aio. Mrs. Humphrey, es, rarely dlscouraaed. was appointed by Minnesota When Humpl)rey ran unsuc· Gov. Rudy Perplch to serve until ceaslully for mayor in 19'3, hiJ a special election ill November. young wife rang door!Mla in the Mrs. Humphrey lived and campaien. Her first real plunse campaiened by Humphrey's into heavy politicking came dur· side for 41 years following their ing a successful mayor cam· marnase Sept. 3, 1936. At the paien two years lat.er. time of their weddm1. she was a Mrs. Humphrey, a quiet and colle"' coed, he a pharmacist, m unpretentious woman, stumped Huron, S.D. every election since then. When In that 193S Jetter, the YOWli -her husband was not a can· Humphrey asked Muriel to didate, she campaigned for others she backed. At first it waa bard for her to speak pubUclv. Once in 1960, when Humphrey was 1eek:in1 the presidency, he was called to Wuhinston for an Important vote and his wife wu aaked to speak in bis place before a prominent croup of San FraQclseo lawyers. Mn. Hum- phrey said •he wu terrified. How to Kill Infant Eyed -Witness Nuclear R9Wer ¥ie SACRAMENTO (AP) -The state Energy Commisalon struck a major blow to the future of nuclear power in California to- day, declaring that no proven, permanent method exists to store radioactive nuclear wastes. The commissioners, all ap· pointeea of Gov. Edmund Brown Jr., made the finding by a '-1 vote. Under 1978 state laws, \lDtil that. decision is reversed by the commission or the Leela ture, no new atomic plants can be built in Calllornla. The commission endorsed a Jarvis Plan Could Slice N-MBn~et repott aa1lnc wastes from nuclear plallb should be co sldered danaerous for 250,000 years, and no method exist.I to keep them 1ecure that loot. Comrnlsaioner Gene Varanln.l, author of. the report that the commladtn adoi>ted. eaid tests to demoaatrate 1tora1e methods could be m.te by the m1d-1980ll. But he said those teat.a could fail. "Federal autbortUes keep llv· int UI pep talki mstead Of aclen- ttf i c endeace.'' nld· Com· mlaalontt RcilWd DoctOr, Who voted (or the report. The commkslon has been· BovanCase uke4, boweYer, to recommend an exemption from the 1976 laws for the proposed Sundesert nuclear pl•nt in the Mojave Desei't.. 1t wu scheduled to vote on the request later in the day. Three commercial nuclear re· actors are operating In Califomla and four more are nearln1 completion. The 1976 laws do not apply to them. But the laws. the toughest nuclear 1alety statutes in the na· tlon, have impo s ed a morl'tortum on any additional nuclear plants. Today's decision could extend that moratorium fot a decade or more. Judge Nixes Seven Death lndictment;s miles ln atmosJ)bere. thOU&h &o rar it bal esc J)cd detection. Asked Why h lbc>Qht such 11 cloud m y_ ha~e formed, Kamimki r-a cientlst often quoted in the German 'Pt'esl on space mutters -said: "With every rt'lCnterine of a satellite and co11Scquent dJsint ration, ioniied clouds have d v oped and will always de'lelop. That ia 1imply physics." Attention: Sale At Ease· Draws Hundred8 BJ .IACKJE HYMAN Of .. .,..., ..... S4«t Jobn t.Awder of Balboa ISiand took this morn.Ing off from bis S1mta Ana Ph<>lQll'•pby flrlD to stand in a Une .at'.Fashlon Island. He got there at s o'clock. Just a oozen or IC) bodies down from the flrat · in line Lawder were J>Wayne and Pat Merry of Newport Beach. Tbey aot there at 7:30 a.m. and came prepared. wlth camp chairs 1tnd books. It wu a\moat 9:4S and the Une, made up of an ulima~ :500 peopl~ stretched almost to the parldrig lot of the Newport Beach ahq>ping mall. The occaaion was the first day of the annual sale at the clothini store •. At.Ease. ·~hb b the only tlme I buy Talk Called Off By; Gray; Panther clothes and it'• the best sale lit towo," •aid Lawder. who's been atteRdlnc At-Ease sal.ea-for four yen5. At·Ease carries top quality - and usually fairly expensive - . merchandise. • \'But once a year tor Uie past eight years owner Al t>Oiag)us ·pulls the &to~ out. The st.oek merc'&andUe l<>eS on sale -no promotional items aTe purchased especially for sales - and aome of the prlco cuts are startlin~ .. One year we had a~ f\.ilJ. I en 1th rabbit fur coats," aaid Douatass. who apel!t this m91'fl· inl chatting with customer& \ll> and down the line. ••we &Old four of them at $150 and then at the sale we sold two of them at $2S each. They went real fast." The crowd that a11embles bears little resemblance tO the (See SALJ:, Page A%) .. Newport Beach city offlclals say they are workin& on a 1hop- pln1 list of sources or addlUonal income thal the clty can dip into in ca•e the Jarvla property tax llmltaUon lnitlatlve passes ln June. · The meuure would clamp a limit of $4 on the tax rate levied per $100 useased valuation in Newport Beach, accordln• to Ci- ty Manaeer Robert Wynn. In a report to city councilmen Monday, Wynn said that $4 would replace the 1977-78 S7.48 tax rate paid by residents of 1 Froma Page .4 J I BUDGET ••• school t.rmtees. Notln• that nearly one million Callfornlans have •lined the in· itiative (twice the number needed to place it on the balJot, Nicoll called it an "emotionally palatable bill" with a atron& chance of passage. "In 3S8 words, it revolu- tionizes the government opera- tion in this state," he added. Nicoll said a doubling of cur- rent sales taxes (to more than 12 percent} or substantial hikes In oeraonal state Income taxes would be needed to offset the deficit caused by passaae or the iniUative. Asked by a member of the au- dience at Tuesday ni1ht 'a school board meeting, Ro•er Nye, if there ml&ht be some way to head off the disutorous effects on the school dlatrlct, Nicoll replied, "Only God or the Legislature can answer that, and I'm not so sure about the Legislature. Nicoll admitted that "politl- c 1 ans are scurryln1" in Sacramento. However, he was not optimistic about an alternative tax reform bill before the June vote. Dealer Says Faulty Rolls Not His Car Newport Beach Rolla Royce dealer Roy Carver aald today he did nol sell the $35,000 car over which he and the manufacturer are being sued for $88,000 in damages. The owners of the car, Donald and Mary Chapton of Newport Beach, claim the 1976 Sliver Shadow bad many shortcomings and thal Carver's agency was unable to correct or repair them. Carver denied responsiblllty for any deflclenclca and said the Chaptons actually purchased the luxury sedan from a Los Angeles dealer, not lrom Roy Carver Roll1 Royce. The Cbaptona did 'not name the now-defunct Los An1eles dealer in their claim. They auert they returned the car to the Carver firm on 17 occaslons for correction of faults and for re- pairs. Drug Charge Refile Seen· SAN LUIS OBISPO (AP) - Char1es probably will be nilled aaatnat 18 people in connectloo with an aUe1ed attempt to amucle $50 million worth or marijuana into the country near San Simeon, olftclall aay. Charaes aaatnat the 18 men were thrown out of court early laat year by a Judie here, who nlled the law enforcement e bad been ml andted and the clvtl ri1hta or th• defondantl breached. Newport Beach. That combined tax rate includes Sl.03 levied by the clty, $1.33 levled by the COUD· ~ty, $3.'3 levied by the NeWPOrt· Mesa Unilied School District, IO cents levied by the Coast Com- m unity College District and 70 cents Ivied by special districtl. Wynn said the lnJUatlve car· ries no instructions of how those agencies are to divide up the $4 they will be left with. He estimated that the city'• current $25 million budget woUld be cut by $4.53 million tr the measure passes. About30percent of the city's income is raised by property truces. He said that, if the state wanta to aid agencies facln1 dlsastrouJ budget cuts because of the ln·. 1tiative, legislators are goinl to have to do things like increase the saJes tu to 12.S percent, make a 1SO percent aurcbar•• on the state's personal income tax rates or increaa. bank and COi'· poratlon taxes by 44 percent. Wynn said the city's 1971-19 bud1et, currently betn1 pre- pared, will come with a "shop· ping list" oullinln1 alternate sources of income for the city should the initiative paas. He also said a Ust of possible areas of cuts will be prepared ao that If the city baa to make drastic revisions ln U.c budcet, it can be done on a priority basis. Ransom Bid Not Met PARIS CAP) -The French government failed to comply today with a de- mand for the release of imprfsoned revolu - tionaries in exchange for the kidnapped in - dustrialist Baron Edouard-Jean Empaln. Officials said becaUJe of conflicting measaau purporting to come from the kidnappers, they doubted the authenUclty of the tbrut to execute Em· pain if the prisoners were not freed. Police said the kidnap- pers bad not contacted the family of the 40-year~ld head of the Emfaln· Schneider lnduatrta em· pire, who wa1 abducted by five masked men Monday as he was leavina hi& home. NB H~using Tract OK'd Over Protest Despite proteata by 1ome nel1bbors, Newport Beach City Council members have ap- proved a proposed 1ubdlvlalon in Newport Heilbta. Four new sln•le-famlly bomea would be built on the property at 2420, 2428 and 2428~ 15th Street. Council approval wu requested by developer Ed Hume for the aubdlvtaion and for some set- back variances. The protests centered on the fact that the bouaff are two stories high arid that the •hared private drive ls unusually nar· row. However, council members said they think the development wlll be consistent with the nelgbborhood. '*",... ......... YACHT 'MOJO' BACK AT BERTH IN NEWPORT, BUT NURSING STORM WOUNDS Big Se•• Damaged Focedeck, WheelhouM, Electrontca and Furnlahlnga Berthed Mojo Reeovers &dboa Rest Earned in Battle With Waves By ALMON LOCKABEY o.11, ,. ... .._,... Wtttw The "bii Mojo" is back at its berth at the Balboa Bay Club on- ly slightly the wone for wear after beinl pummeled by giant seas ofr Morro Bay last week. Marlne aurveyon today were going over the 85·foot power vessel to determine the extent of damage to its wheelhouse, elec- tronic gear, saJoon furniablit11 and foredeck. "Other than that," said skip- per Norm Catton, "the MoJo la in good shape .an~ wlll be b.ack in P,....PageAJ more youthful, scruffy lines one mi1ht see outside a ticket win- dow for a rock concert. "They're very well·behaved," said security 1uard G'Corge Smith, who's helped supervise the ulc lines for the past three years. "We've had complaints this morning of line-jumping but we try to stop it." He said he was keeping his eye on a bend in the line where some people crashed the line last year. Owner DougJa111 said he believes people keep coming back partly ~ause of the wiy they're treated. Coffee a.nd roUs are served from 8:30 to 9:30 a.m., about ball an hour before the store opens. "We have an attitude that our sale cuaU.Oera are very honored people," Douglass said. ''They really ass~t us in keeping our Fro. Pllfl4! A J DOCTOR. • • hours from difficulties created by the premature birth. Chatterton said Cornelson was in a nearby nursery attendlne another infant patient when Waddill came to him and told him that the baby 1lrl had died. Comebon will testify, he said, that he immediately went to the crlb and HW heavy brulsibl around the dead baby's neck. the pnieecutor said Cornelson wm tesUfJ that his conseience became troubled durln1 the day1 Immediately followtn1 the baby'• death and that be finally told hla story to Weitmtnster · police. • • merchandise and our money ln motion. They're not someone to be looked down upon." He saJd some customers have developed their own techniques for takine advantage of the store's bargains without wear- ing themselves out. "We have one lady that comes back on~ different vJalts on a sale day," Douglass said. "The first crack around she loads up on all the small Items. Then $he comes back about noon and collects all the basic Jtem1 and about four she comes back for a flnal sweep." The sate lasts five days. The long line could pose problems, Dou1lass adD'lilted. "It has to be well ad· ministered. We have about ttifee weeks of preparaUon ror It. lt'• a big soclal event." Customers are let lnto the store until 300, the fire de· partment-apecified maximum, )lave entered. Then othera are allowed to enter u cuatomera leave. Inside Ute store, which is larger than most apeclalt~ &hops but conaiderably amaller than a department 4tore, a tank of ox· ygen ls kep( In 'readlisee• tn cue anyone faints. And that has hap. pened, Dou&lau aald. · Why would people spend up to four hours in line and take a chance of pasline out from ex· haustlon? "Outstandlne buya, .. said Newport's Dwayne Merry suc- cinctly. Then he and bis wife went back to readln1 their books. service wttrun six weeks when we plan a charter cruise to Mexico." Catton said the dama1e to the vesael was lncui"red when lt was bit by a couple or wave1 about 300 yards out of Morro Bay. On bot.rd were actor Georce C. Scott. b1s wife and lour crewmen. No one wu seriously ~ "Just a fffW cuts and brul&ea from belna thrown about the cabin when the aeu at.ruck," sald Catton. After the incident Mojo was towed to Avila Beach and secured to a covemment moor- ln1 to dilembark ScoU ud hla wife, who bd. the yacht Under charter and were bound !or Mon- terey where Scott was scheduled to play in the Crosby coll b>uma- ment at Pebble Beach. "We boarded up the broken wheelhouse wlndowa and brought the boat back to Newport under lta own power," said Cat· ton. Mojo was built by Dittmar and Donaldson Sea Boat Company of Costa Mesa for the late Frank Mueller of Newport Beacti. She was laWlcbecl ln 19S9. Arter Mueller's G!ath the yacht was purchased by a syndicate which now operates er u a charter vessel under the aame MoJo, Inc. It was referred to by Mueller and his friend• as .. bl1 NoJo:• because a smaller vessel be owned also was called Mojo. MostoflhedamagetotheMoJo was to the foredeck wbere bulwarks and railin&s were car- ried away, and b> tbe 1theelhouae where broken window1 allowed water to come inside, 1lama&in1 the electronics and furnlsblDJB below. After a prellmlnaey survey, marine surveyor Cbarlu Daviea said it appeared that tbe wheelhouse WoU)d have to be re· built, much ol the electronlcs replaced, deck repairtd and some ol the carpets and furoisb.lilp replaced. Catton declined to place a dollar eitlmate OD the damqe but Davies said the cost ol ,... pain could run as hllh u $50,000. arum lion to halt a 1 lnve u au I The o contends that tho Grand Jury which Issued the firtt lodlctm t a1aln1t their seven clients II now "tainted." They argue that the panel should not be allowed b> •latn consider evld nco 1temmln1 frotn kUllq Boven lut Ocb> 22. Bovan was abot outalde the El Rancbito Restaurant In Newport •. each llftel' beint confronted by hat POUee all ie was a trio of .. hlr d cUm" imported from the a1t Coast. Earllor, Gra!ld Jury evidence included tbe alleaed conlesaion ol Jerry ~er Flori, 41, or Hunt· initon Beach who, the procecu. tlon claims, admitted that he shot Bovan nine times in a reprisal planned by operators ol Praaadam DiJtrlbutor1 Inc., a Newport Beach investment Orm. The Grand Jury was told that Flori, Anthony "lJttle Tony" Marone Jr., 23, and Raymond Steven Resc:o, 21, all of Hunt· lDston Beach, were 1lveo the conttact on Bovan after the vic- tim planned the kidnapping of Prasadam principal Alexander Kulik, 28, of Newport Beach. Flori r~malns held In the county Jail today wltb ball de- nied. · Kulik 11 in custody with bail set at $2.3S million and codefen- d ant Joaepb Gabriel Fedorowskl, 28, ls held with his ball niure set at $100,000. Tbe remalnina four defen- dant.a are free on ball. SA Valley Irrigation FirD1 Bought The lOO·year·old Santa Ana Valley lrrt1ation Co. <SAVI) bas been purchased by a trio of Sacramento.area Investment firms, according to an an· nouncement made Tuesday In Sacramento. Daniel De&er, president of In- tercoaat. lnveatmentl, Inc. said bis firm was Joined by Randolph Parks, Inc., and Hard Corp. in the $9.8 miWon purchase. The tmcauon company was foWlded in 187T to supply water for aericulture in central Oran1e County. In 1974, the firm turned to real estate when a1rlculture in the area wu • replaced by development. Am«me SA VJ'• holdtncs are Riverside International Raceway. Irvine Host Motor Hotel, Green River Golf Course and the 300-acre Weir Rancb. Bad Weather Halts Search ANCHORAGE <AP) -A mllitaty helicopter dlapatched to search for mlsslnc skiers ln the Turnacatn Pus rccreaUon area was turned back by bad weather, rescue officials aald. Poor weather conditions ao far · have thwarted 411 efforu to con- duct an aertaJ aearcb for four person.a mmtn1 alnce a 6atur· day avalanche. • ._.................... .., ..... -...-...---..----------------=-- The news that the NC!t'PQrt Beach City C<NneU Cle· ided to spend ,600 on yet another traffic survey may et residents to gn shlng tti ir teetli fn frustraUpp. However, before Jocat taxp ye~ tllart accusing coun- Umen of using trarnc atudles as a tactic to delay making Clccisions on the controveral81 topic, a couple of notes are i order. · · The study is being conducted 01 a supplement to the ity's $82,000 coml>Uterized tralllc model. Motorists top~ in traffic approaching the Pacific Coast Hi&hway bridge over Upper Newport Bay will be asked where hey're coming from, where they're golnc, why they're making lhe trip and whether or not they live in ewport The importance of this information is not that it"is expected to reveal aome new, startling facts abOut the ature of the city's traffic problem, but that it will help upply credibility to the product of that $82,000 com· puterizcd model. The elerhents in the community that want to vastly cut or halt development on the theory that the traffic is the result of buildinis ttiat go UJ) tn Newport Center. have already begtm a campai~ to discredit the work of t e computer-work that i.sn t even stated for completion un- til next month. • Since their council spo~esmqn, Paul Ryckoff asked for the survey, it seems Uke a wise move to supply him with the information he feels will validate what is likely \o be identical information which the computer will pro· duce. The money involved $5,600 is a reasonable price to pay to ha" l' soml'thing new in Newport a traffic study that isn't discredited before it's completl'd Valuable Gadfly It was a fitting tribute to his 30 years of newspaper publishing that Arvo Haapa, former owner of the weekly Newport Harbor Ensign, should be named the chamber of commerce's Citizen of the Year. Haapa, who recently sold his paper, himself acknowledged that the award given him last week at the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce installation banquet, was "a wonderful way to end my career." There were few in the audience. of 200 who at one lime or another had not felt the sting of Haapa's pen during hi s 30 years of serving as the Harbor Area's unofficial ' gadfly ReJrardless ot whether they agreed with his views, all had to acknowledge that Haapa provided a service to his community by keeping its officials constantly under public scrutiny. New Bridge Dilemma There are lots of things to do if you ever find yourself ituck in the nightly traffic jam of cars headed west on Pacific Coast Highway between Jamboree Road and Dover Dravc Among the verities of life that one could contemplate during the half-hour. it takes to drive approximately one mile between those intersections are the joys of sailing. However uauerated it may seem, that w&rnbi1 came from the Shah of Iran , tbe PrHldent of France and the Kini of Saudi Arabia. It polnta up oae 1t'ron1 leuon of, the flret Carter year:-three ;yeara after Vietnam, tbe U.S. muat uHrt lti full role iD the real world of International polltles or loee the -·. Mailbo • Aobott N. Wted/Publllher di tot ---------- --- confidence Of I triendi and al· lie . THE lruG Soviet alrWt to Ethiopia at rt d ln I te No. ember. Wltbout ever reve.uni the real reason, Mr. Carter sent Underaecmary of State Philip Habib to Moscow in early December, ottensibly to aptaln tbe. U.S. ~ltlop on Jaraell~ E1yptlan qegot.lation1 but ac- tually· to protest the Jtremlin'a Ethiopian adventure.· Habib protested the Soviet · . . . 1 THE ANGaY reaction from non-Communiat atates came earl1 in the Carter tr!p. Jn Teberan, the Shah ot Iran sald llaU)' that bis ~untry would "react .. it and when the Soviet· backed Ethiopians set one fool --- - IN alY ADD, the a1itaUon of Kine Khaleel otSaudi Arabia was even more 'Intense. Thas, during the trtp, Mr. Carter ••reed to persuad Somalia to seek a cease·fire in the war with Ethiopia. Tho U.S. would then put heavy pressure on Moscow to compel Ethiopia to accept that offer, Next would come a demand led by major African states -E1ypt, Sudan and posalbly Kenya -for Soriet wllhdrawal from Ethiopia . Many bard problems are posed by the European·lrinian· Saudi plan to put a atop to fr'ff- wheeling Soviet intenentlon in Ethiopia. The Shah, despite heavy Investment lrl American arms, cannot le1ally permit their use by a third country. 'l1le same li true of SaUdl Arabia, so fearful of rlsme soviet lnvOlve- ment across the Red Sea that it now keept at least two divisions on its soulhem Red Sea coast. These caveats aside, Mr. Cnrter cnme borne with a loud and clear message from this na- tion 'a m01t formidable friends. Whether that message struck home, as some of these naUons believe. will not be known for several weeks. What ls clear now ii that without U.S. leadership, the pressures on the horn or Africa and everywhere else will continue lri oao direc· tlon. Far tbe non-Communist world, that direction Is down. Sailing, especially sailing 14-f oot sail boats from the Upper Bay to the lower bay, is botmd to become a very popular topic in Newport Beach with the filing of a lawsuit which could halt the already delayed construction schedule of the new Upper Bay bridge. Pets Deserve More Humane Euthab.asia The new bridge, long sought to ease that traffic con· gestion, isn't expected to be completed until lllte 1980 and it may be delayed further because a Dover Shores resi· dent wants the bridge re-designed so he can sail his Lido 14 underneath it. Sailing is a wonderful pastime, it's a relaxing and non· polluting way to enjoy the bay. Still, we can't help wonder· mg if there aren't a few thousand motorists who would like to see the bridge U tigant take up another hobby. • Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views expreued on tht. page are those of their authora and artists. Reader comment I• Invited. Address The Oalty Piiot, P.O. BOx 1580, Costa Me , CA 92626. Phone (71•) 642·4321 . Boyd I Baby Feet wishing to circulate a petition can call one or the followini numbers in Oranee County between 10 a.m. and 5 pm: 675·2533, 894-COl& or 838·9218. P£GGYMOORE 't'otlllfl Pim could not believe what l was readin • So gre1t was sny dis· bellef ~ I went back and ~· read e rticle that receotly •P- peared ln the Pilot. What I read ae an out-arid-out aUack on Mom, ap- ple pie, and the American way of lite. Donald Duck had been bann d in Helsinki, Finland! Just because the duck chose to remain unmarned, Juat beeause he tool!; It upon himself to raise three harmless, well behaved nepheYt-a, tbe FinDJ cboee to call him unnatural! Unnatural? Do you know what the Finns have? The Finns have TROU'LS. that'a what the Fiom have. You want to talk about UD· natur I, let's talk about lh06e Trolls. Lli:rking about, under those bridges, doing heaven only knows what with their free time, probably waiUng for unwary ladie 1h 5kirts to paas overhead. Unnatural, indeed. rudeness, and/or annoyance aL having lo U&len lo my situation. I would not have had to sub- ject myself to this U my ptlone had bffn repolred 'correctly the first tlmt'. lt seems to me the of· ficea of PacUlc Telephone have abandoned common courtesy in (avor of smuanesa and the already worn phrue, "Because of the recent rainstorms." MARY B. BAVRY .,,,,... eon,,,. •• To the Editor: The federal government persists in deficit spending. There needs to be a restraint placed on the federal govern· ment to require a bal1nced bud1et. Deficit spending results in in· flation and a weakened economy. Our own 6tate re· quires a b11lanced budget, I believe. Why not lhe federal gov- ernment also? Our elected f tderal represen- tatives are not going to restrain themselves voluntarily or they would have done IO by noW! We need a federal constitutional amendment requirina a balaneed federal 1ovemment. ~..,..... PHOTO OF TYPICAL SOVIET COSMOS SPY SATELLITE Craft Like Thi• Fell From Orbit Over Canada I Satellite Radiation 1 r Escapes Detection naming orbiter must have Jell a radiation cloud some 200 mllee lon1 at an alUtute Rf 30 to 40 m tbe~"1..r:DOf:~~li;\bOUO so far lt baS escapei4 detecUcm. Aaked wby be tbOl.l&bi luCb • cloud may have formed, Kaminski -fclcDliat often quot d tbe German preu on space matters -satd: .. Wlt.b every re-enterina al a sat.clllte and consequent dislntesration, ionized clouds have dneloped and will always develop That ii simply physics." The aurvelllanee planes were following a 450-nJ.ile flitbt path. Taktna part in the search were a (See SPY, Pace A2) Judge Kills Indictment f qr l1iiixu1, 'ClUe WASHING'.l'QN <AP)-The dbcovey laat month Ut ta Soviet t.elllt w m lfunctionlnt and llkety to crub -1otnewbere - et off :week.a of tense. 1ecretlve w&iUU by diplomata and acleo- tl ts. The nucle -powered spy utellite crashed Tuesday near Great St ve Lake in far northwest Canada after plungina tbrouah the at· m pb a stteWni, clllioteiratma fireball~ BUT mB END OF COSMOS 95' befan late last year when computers L lhe North American Air Defense Command ln Colorado, which keeps tabs on 4,546 maorpiide objects in apace, signaled that the :Russian satellite was sl~wfnl down IDd dtoppln1. re ••complete. ot the aatenlte. Willow .. GoeS to Senate MTs. Humphrey CanieS Dream MlNNiAPOLIS (AP) - Muriel Buck's botfrlend wrote her in 19.1:5 of bis dreams that the two might someday "work for biHer thinp" and "probably be In 1overnment politics or service." Today she picked up those dreams of the boyfriend she later married, Hubert Hum- phrey, and atreed to fill his U.S. Senate aeat. Humphrey died ot cancer two week• ago. Mra. Humphrey, 65, wu appointed by Minnesota Gov. Rudy Perplch to terve until a special election ln November. Mrs. Humphrey lived and campai1ned by Humphrey's side for 41 yean t0Uowln1 their marriace Sept. 3, 1936. At t.be time of their wed.dine. ah• wu a colle•e coed. he a pharmacist, in Huron,S.D. Jn that 19.1:5 letter, the young Humphrey asked Murlel to ahivays encouraatt blm, to be his in1pirationial force and "never let me get~~ or cUs90ura1ed ... Mrs. Humpbre1 manaaed what bad been asked of her as Humphrey became mayor of Minneapolis, a U.S. senator, vice prealdent and three-time aspirant tor presldent. Even Humphre)''1 critkl saw the late senator. the ''bappy warrior" and exponat of "the politics ot joy" u buoyant. opUmiat.ic and rarely d.ileow'11ed. When Humphrey ran un.suc· ceasfully for mayor in 19'3, his youna Wile ranc doorbells 1n the campaign. Her lint real plun1e into )leavy pol1Ucldn1 came dur· ing a 1ucce11ful mayor cam· pai1n two years l \er. Mrs. Humphrey, a qulet and unpretentious woman, stumped every election 1lnce theo. When her husband was not a can- didate, 1he campal1ned for .... The d1 ck CQmm t1 Colle1e l>i tr:lct could lose .almost SJJ.5 million -mor than ball of it.I current $25 dliWoo bud1et -if voters pall the Jania initi.atlve in June. "It's a very 1ub1ta11tl1l ·amount. 'lbat would cripple the coll&fe, tbere'• no question about it,•• said ROy Barletta, assistant auperidtendent for bUSln • SUeb a lou~omtn1 at a time when tho distrlet'a enrollment Is powln1 ~woU.ld llkeb' cut ibOrt development of tho new northern campus tn Jrvtne as well as re- duce current program Olfetlil.p. ••Tbat'a tble dark ilde, the $13 mIWoo," Barletta iid. He explatn.a that be bued his ettlmate on the proportion' of tu dollari tl\e di.ltrict. eu.rrentlj re- celv~ The lnitiatlve, it passed, would llmit property taxes to one pet· cent of market value. No one tiu yet de~ili>W taxliit asen• ciea will sun th money r"alled others she backed. At first it was hard for her to apeak publicly. Once in 1960, when Humpbrey waa seek!na the presidency, be was called to WQhlngtOri for an Important vote 8.nd h1J wife was asked to speak in bls place before a prominent aroup of Sail Francisco lawyers. Mrs. Hum· phrey said she was terrified. Ur1ed by a few aides aDd ae-companyt~c r:e~rters, Mrs. Humphrey aireecL Wltll ahaklng knees and ln a voice somettmes quaverlna, she spoke with directness and clarity. :At the end of her speech, the lawyers atOod and applauded. By 1964, her stren1th u a campaiilfer had crowq as Bum· pbrey campaigned for vice pns· ldent. Mrs. Humphrey bad more poise and confidence. She pushed herself, Humphrey aides (See MURIEL, Pace AU s&ld mOSt eACies are usumm. for aOJf that the1 Will receive the same~ te amoWlt they CUITeotlycOIJeeL :when all ~on.s are tnoWn, Barletta sa.td, tbe di1trld'1 Jocsles autibuted to the bilU.Uve would probably ruse from $10 to $13 mlllion, or 40 to 50 percent ol the dlstrict's budget. But some ol the mone7 may be made up bY the state, wblch bas the respomlbilib' of provldinl • free, public educatl~ ~e a· plained that there have been sug. 1e.slions that the st.ate mcruse . . The Saddleback Valley Cba.mbei' ol Commerce'• miftual inatallailOD banquet and dJnDer dance b scheduled Frid17. at I p.m. at the Hali~ IDil, Lapna HW.. .. AP__... FILLS HU AND'8 SEAT Murtel Humphrey A 1 (A ) - French iovernm t fliled lo comply today with a de- mand for the rdeue of uoprhoned revoha- Uoaart• ln exchan11 for t 'be kldnapped tn - d u1trlalht Baron Edouard-Jen Empalo. Officials aaJd because of coafHctla• meua1H purporttq to come from the kldnappus, they doubted the authenticity of the threat to execute Em- paln if the priloners were not freed. Police said the kidnap- pers bad not contacted the family of the 40-year~ld head or the Emraln- Schneider indualrla em- pire, who waa abducted by live masked men Monday as he waa leavlor his home. E'roa Page Al JARVIS ... day, district trustees expressed concern with the proposed tax in- itiative. Althou&h the trustees did not comment on Barletta's report, Taylor said they will be address- ing it. He said the report was "the lirat thlng to have us be1ln thinking about lt." Some agencies have already planned layoffs if the amend·• ment passes. If Saddleback con s1dera this, the employees by law, must be informed by M~ch 15. The beard president said he un· derstand5 peoples' concern about property tax but this Initiative won't solve the problem. Taylor said he believea the solution lies In a different system, one which doean'tcut the property tax as much and In- cludes more from the state's in· come and sales taxea. And, he said, the actual causes of high property taxes are 1rowth and inflation. "I wish we could be talk in& about inflation,'' he said. Police, fire, roads, garba1e collection, water and other servicea as well as schools would be affected by the Jarvis in-1tiati vc, Taylor said. Ir it passes he predicted, the s tate's un: employment will increase. "I don 't care where you are In th~ s.~ctrum or society.•· he said. somewhere or other this la gomg to affect you." Girls' Group ~cks Queen At Saddleback The newly formed Saddleback Valle.Y Jobs Dauahters Bethel 163 tvlll Install thelr Honored Queen Leeanne Bitner at 2 p. m. Saturday in Los Aliso1 In-termediate School. . Eighteen youni women were Just Installed llito the new group this week. The new members are: Aimee Ashby, Leeanne Bitner, M7ra Carlson, Cynthia Carleon, Carey Frankel, Kimberly Johnson Jrene Larsen, Merlina Liv: Inf 1ton, Kathrine Lo tee El ubetti McKlnley, Debby Michell, Anne SlmP10n, Mona Simpson, Lori Smllb, Deanna Teeters, Lori Birmtn1ham, Robin Stutzman and Jane Coooer. Adult members ot the Grand Guardian Countll who allo were ln1talled are: Carol John1on Kenneth Stuttman, Joan Aabby: Karen Larsen, Shirley Stutaman, Jo Llvinpton Unda Smltb, Anabelle Carlson and Linda t.o.ee. An application by l"alnlew State Hoepttal Otflclala tO clGM 130 beds aQd ncllfltf7 us beds wm bO the subJect o1 a T:m meetlri• toidlht 'by the Oran1e County Health-Plannlnc Council (OCHPC). The moettq, conducted by the council's Health FacUlUea Review Committee, will be at the Costa Meta City Council Cbamben. 11 Fair Drive. The health councll'a staff has recommended approval of the application with tbe c:oodition E',.._PageAJ SPY ••• hifh-flying U.S. U-2 recon- naiuance plane, a U S. Boetnc· 101 and live Canadian armed forces military planes. A team of U S. experts in radiation detection and cleanup were flown from the Nevada• Nuclear Test Site near Laa Vegas to mount special sensors on the planes and aid in the search. The center of the search is about 34 miles east of the eastern tip of Great Slave Lake and about 200 miles eaat of Yellowknife, a community or 6,000 about 8SO miles north or the U.S. border. In Moscow, Canadian Charge D'ACfalres Alan P. McLalne met today with officials at the Soviet Foreign Ministry to obtain more lnfor~atioo about the fallen satellite. Mc-Laine sald the So· vlets were "very forthcoming" and offered to help locate any debris from the craft. Under International a1ree- m en t, the Soviet Union is responsible for any damage caused by the satellite. Canada's external affairs minister, Don Jamieson, said he would puruse with the Soviets "the question of financial liabill-· ty for any costs ol search or any other activities that may be re- quired." Jamieson also said his govern- ment is looking into lnterna-• tlonal legal requirements for cleaning up apace debris and try in& to determine what the· next step should be. ''It appears that deatructlon did occur during the re.entry· process and that the likelihood or any nesative effectl are minimal," he said. "But we don't· want to underestimate' that, and all necessary coordina- tion is going on with the United States and the SoYiet Union." Launched Sept. 18 as Cosmos 954 to keep track of U.S. Navy surface ships and submarines, the satellite's radar was powered by 100 pounds of enric.bed uranium 235. U.S. aatelbte trackers detected lut month that lt was alowlna down and mieht crash, and the U.S. and Soviet g9vernrnent1 had been consulting about it for the past two weeks. Canada waa Informed a week a10. But the public w11 not told, apparently because mass hysteria wa.s feared. * * * .. ~at the State l)epartmeot of.· Fmance c:Gad~ an &u4lt of hospital. Publtc comm wfil be t at tont•ht'a meetln1 and e committee II upected to mike a reconunend.Uon. The full council wiU coiislde:r that Neom~~on at a meet.- In• next Tuolilday, and a final de- cl1lon la exgected from 1tate health autborltlH ln earb sprlnc, OCHPCOfftcJal11aid. Fairview offtclals have uke«f to cloae 48 ac\lte p1ycbtatrtc beda and IC lk1lled DUtlini beds lea vine the hoapttal wltb a Ucenaed ca~ity ol 1,891, ac- cordlnc to OCHPC reports. In addition, hospital authoriUes leek recluslfication of 236 •killed nunln1 beda to in- termediate car• bed1 wblcb would reduce the atalf req_uln- menta, OCHPC olftclal1 aaid. The health plannin1 council is a government-tlnanced or- 1ani utlon which bas been granted review authority over Oran1e County medical faclUtlea. ,,.._P..,,eAJ BOVAN •• : qulry. Superior Court Jude• Bruce Sumner wu uked to ilaue 1uch an order late Tuesday but he declined and 1u11ested another judce after dJscusal.nc the mat- ter in bla chambers. Superior Court Judie Harmon G. Scoville hu a1reed to hear ar1uments on the defeue mo- tion to bait a Heond crand jury lnve.tigatJoa. The derenae contend• that the Grand Jury which lHued the lint Indictment a1aln1t their seven cllenta 11 ni>w .. tainted." They ar1ue that tbe panel 1hould not be allowed to •Cain ·consider evidence stemmln& from the klWn1 of Bovan last October22. Bovan was shot out.aide the El Ranchito Restaurant in Newport . . each after belna confronted by whit police alle1e w11 a trio of "hired guna" imported from the East Coast. Earlier, Grand Jury evidence included the alleaed confessiOn oC Jerry Peter Flori, 41, of HWll· ln1ton Beach fto, the prosecu· lion clalziu, admitted that he shot Bovan nine times in a reprisal planned by operatons of Pr11ada111 blatrtbutora Inc., a Newport Beach tnveatment firm. The Grand Jury was told that Fiori, Anthony "Little Tony" Marone Jr, 23, and Raymond Steven Reaco, 28, all of Hunt- ln.cton Beach. were elven the contract on Bovan after the vic- tim planned the kJd.Dappina of Pra11dam principal Alexander Kulik, 28, of Newport Beach. Fiort remains held in the county jail today with ball de-nted .. • Kulik la in custody with ball •et at $2.35 million and codeten- d ant .Joseph Gabriel Fedorowsld, 1!8, Is held wlth bis ball flruN aet at tl00,000. The remalninc four defen-dant.I &r• free OD b I. Fro• Page .4J CRASH ANTICIPATED. • • about the satelllte. 1'be chJef concern wu the nuclear reactor. which cenerated power for the satelUte's ndar, intended to keep track of U.S. Na.y •hips and submarines. Tile reactor wu 1uppo1ed to 1eparate after the aat,i.tite'• useful Ufe wu over, to be Jlttiloned lBto a hl&h •ate orbit tti:al would keep it clrcllila in spece tor huncsrectl of ye.ari. But tbe reactor on Colmos l5C Called to Hpatat. \l"n ~ late In December. Niguel Homeowner Fights Tree Cutting By WILLIAM HODGE Of .. Deity ...... ltaff The removal of 38 sycamore trees at a Lacuna Nl1uel con· dominium development has spurred • retired 1overnment worker to take action. Rlcbard Lawa 1ays he and his wife wlll continue to fl1ht to 11ve another .f.8 of the elfhl· year-old treea, which the NI1uel Villa• Condominium A11ociaUon has marked to be cut down. The uaoclatlon cites problems cau11d by taJUnc leaves and by the trees crowing too close to sidewalks and bulldlnaa. "We're talktna about $50,000 to $80,000 worth of treea being destroyed with no plan to rep,lace them," Laws aaid. Moat people In h re moved down from the city because of the COWlU')'·llke aetttn1," Laws Id of the Weal Nine develop· ment parallelln1 Crown Va11ey Parkway and the La1una Nl&Uel Golf Cowae. ''Now :thelo five people (the board of di.rectors) want to tW'n . Laguna Hills Display Set More than 2$0 aircraft miniatures were to 10 on display today thrbugh SWld..V at LallD"la Hills Mall In a hlatortcal salute to T5 years Ot avlaUon history. The collectlon, to be Jhown In the mall'• central court, be1lns with the Wrt1ht Brothera' 1903 Putber and includes th latett of today'• aircraft, said a mall spokesman. The apokesman said the ex· hlblt ls both hlstorlcal and educational and that precise de- tallin1 h11 sone Into the aircraft cockplta, tnteriora and cuta ay areas. It back lnto a likeness of one d the cltieathey left. "The implications art tbat 1 flve·meznber board cao hold meetlnt• clandestinely wit.bout 181 owners knowlnc, '' Lawa fumed. "What't to 1top them from taJdna another 80 treea out next year?" Laws and his wife, two people bent on stopplni the tree ~ moval, bad requested that the homeowner board poll the mem- bership. Their request was denied. "I wanted to make sure they told people the whole story," Uaws explained. ''The board Just went out and decided the trees were too messy -it was too ex- pensive to clean up." Law1' pr-0bler:M w•r'4 com· pllcated because 30 percent of the condominium development's owners do not live at West Nine. And the board reportedly re· fused to give Laws a list or ownen' addresses. The trees Populate an area owned by each association member. Last week, the di11runtled tree lover hired an 1ttomey. "I w .. told by the attorney that the board didn't w1nt me to hlVe that list (of addresses)," Lawa claimed. Lloyd Nelson. 1eneral manager of the firm which maintains the common landscape area, defended the homeowner board's action "We've cot too many sycamores 1n there," he said. "We've got many more trees in there and 'a lot of those sycamores are planted too dose to1ether." Nel10n, al.so a resident of the Weat Nine complex, uya the tree elimination pro1ram is based on more than trouble created by f allio1 leaves each fall Advisory ,,...., ... ,..1 MURIEL ••• recall, and always bad time to talk with "Juat on• more peraon." Wben th •ave campalan talks. •h aald abo stuck to the 1ubJecta that lnt.ereeted her and mott women -1uch thln_p as J.be nMdl ~children. "We think the 1ame;• she aald of herRU and Humphrey. "But he arrives at b1a concluslooa by 1tudy and IOJ)c. Lille • woman, I cet to the tame place more by hunch." After Humphrey's 1968 defeat by Richard Nixon for the pres- idency, Mrs. Humphrey once 11aln had time lo do her net!d.le- Polnt, lo aew her own clothe., to ru11 with the famlly'1 lakeside home at Waverly, Minn., and to work for Improved care and services for the retarded. Her first. &randcbild, Vicki, bom to her dauahter N"ancy Solomonson. ls mentally re- tarded. The Humphreys had three ton• -Hubert Jr., "Skip," a Mlnneaot& state senator: Robert and Douataa. Nancy, their one dau1bter, is married to C. Bruce Solomon.son. Baa Weather Halts Search ANCHORAGE CAP> -~ military helicopter dispatched lo search for miasin1 1klera 1n the Turna1aln Paaa recreation area was turned back by bad weather, rescue ofrlciala 1ald. Poor weather conditions so far have thwarted all efforts to con- duct an aertal 1earcb for four persons mlutn1 1lnce a Satur- day avalanche. Those persona have been iden· Urted aa Alon Worland, 27; Charles Kibler, 28, and Ellen DuFresoe -all of Ancboraae - and Paul Pollack, 31, of MOWl· taln View, Calif. Bob Ho~ . Aimnled ~es IRnds B•ll, Pull s~NTA MONICA (AP) -A Jestlnl Bob Actress Lee Grant and her husband. pro-house. valued at $300.000 when eompleted. HoPe .,.t two da1S IA ducer Joe Feury, stand outalde their sent it swtrlina and cruhlng 'l'Ueld!l· •·1~ &iplitarCourtbammel'lo Malibu home that was under construction. wu like Dorothy's house ID 'The WI.Ard lnl out a settlement ID Strong winds lifted the frame of the .cf Oz'." Ylss Grant aald. th• S3 mlWon •Ult be __ ......;;.._, ____________ ~-.----------------filed onr a fire that Saflor ·sets Soln Trip SAN DIEGO (AP> -Se.en years after John Falrf u: and Sylvia Coot became the first to cross tbe Pad.ftc by rowboat, tbe 85-foot Britannia IJ is back. Thll time, San Dleco 1aJJor Pat Satterlee will attempt the S,000.mlle voyaee to Australia alone in the famous boat. Fairfax and Jf1u Cook made their record row in 19'11·'1Z. But Satterlee plans to leave March 31 and ii be makes it, lt will be the first sinele-handed row acrou the Paclfic. PADPAX A.aaJVED REBE TUESDAY with tbe Britannla D. Ills last vt.sit was ln 1971 after be be&an the two-person row ln the sturdy era.ft. Be says be was clinling to It. for dear life. •'The Britannia I01t her rudder and we were blown right put San Dieeo in one storm after 5 Facilities 280 Hospital Beds Nixed SACRAllENTO CAP> -State offtclall 11.7 the federal .... nmeut .. prepam, ---bknr for California's mental hospital sy1tem: The de. certification of 280 bed.a at five 00.plt.all. State Health Department 1pokesman Peter W eiaaer said Tuesday tbe action wlll cost CaWomia $4.50,000 a month in federal ald, ataJtl.nC ln late February. Tb• new aettoa ( J Item• from health IDd STA.TE safe ty vlolatJona found _ by state inspectors at '------facilities for tbe mentally disabled lD lletropoUtan, Camarillo, Patton, Napa and Atucadero state boapit.at. in tbe fall ol 1978 and the spring of 1917. another," the British adventurer said. Tbe two C:.,. could only bani on Tthlle the boat... 80tltb and wound up on a beacb at EDNNKta, lf«doo. be Hid. ALSO ON BAND AT TBE SAN Diego Rowlni Club for the blf rowbost'I 1mootb arrival atop a truck trails wu Ian Clare Lal&ow, wbo built lt and anotbel' of Palrfu's rowboata. Falrfu rowed tbe Atlantic iD 199 lD a 22·foot rlg built by Lallow and tbesi bad the Brltilh custom boet builder falbkm U. Brlt&Dn.la 11 t« the Pac:lfte erou1aa. The two are loentnf the t:I0.000 bod to Sat-terlee for Ida ncorcl &u.mpt. "l'M GLAD I'll NOT 'GOING aJaaa ID U.. Britannia Uds Ume,0 laid the •,.alloOl4 Fahfa. •'Thll time, 111 be ltQlq OD tM dock and 111 iin Pat • little ptala and wllla blm luck." It toot nine months for the two to row to Auatr.U., lncladlD& a montlt to NDa1r tbe boat after it ltnack • ,..., lA tM Gllblrt Wanda. r.uaru nouaa um wit.ta ... 1-. Sat- terlee can make U lA ... time. LaUow ....... to .... oat bla bandlwart for tbe upcomlal CJ'Cllllq prior to er.tellllft test-ing befan tbe depe.rtme. All sale heml llmlted to stock on band tbroualt 2/5/78 BankAJMrleard/Mastercharge. de1troyed bt1 4!Hert ''dream b:Jiule" iD tm. Jud~:rlo Cllaco Hld Y tbat tbe negotiated aettlement awarded the 74-year-old comedian $430,000 fOl' tbe partially c:Qmtructed · house near Palm Sprlnp. "I TmNX they all walked away pretty 11ti1fied," the Judge said. "Both Delores and Bob Hope -. here for both day1. They bad enouab lntenlt to lllct around and that WM a bi, plua ID tbelr fawr :• HOpe. who lins at a ma111lon ln 1 burbaa Toi•• Lab. J7 rebtdtcHns a eeCaDd Palm Sprtap oa a smaller ICale tba the oriJlul. 1flllLB TRZaB WU no aatpment of blame bl tile ..uiement. lnltlal report.I lnclleated that 1paru t.rcma a welder's torch mq have t.oudaec:l olf tbe blue. CHILDREN'S SHOES AM>As-.usra •OYM- CllLD WI •s AMI IMmALS ..... SIC.ti 30 FASHION ISLAND• MEWPOlrl' ~~ .... 644-2464 Mel a •··~· .. *' t••11 e ••• • Som hom wnen nd Choo.I officials are med that b 1ncsse1 which will be alcoholic bevera are planned for a stq>pinl c ntcr acrOS5 fl'om tbe new Laguna lWl.J Hi h SCbooJ. Since scboo offi.clals udent.t agree that drink· Ing by our youths ls incrc · g. their concern ls UD· derstandabte. tl'hcy should mak tbos' concerns known to both the develo~r of the cent.er; and the 1tate'1 Depart· ment of Alcoholic Beverage Control. Preventing a liquor store or plua parlor from open- ing, howeve~1 will do litUe to solve the problem. Students are getting tne bOoze now and these businesses lo ques- tion haven't even been built yet. As Mark Howell, student memi>er of the S8ddleback Valley Unified School District Board of Education, point- ed out duririg a recent trustees' meeting, much more can and should be done. The student offered 1everiU worthy aua1estlon.s, in- cluding training for employees and a course on alcohol and drug abuse-for students. He should be congratulated for thinking beyond the immediate question. More importantly, however, his aug. gestions should be seriously considered by bOth trustees and administrators. Paying for Progress Irvine city councilmen are racking their brains over a city budget that shows conventional ways of financing public works projects are falling behind in the rapidly growing city. Hesitant to grapple with the politics of an increase in property taxes to pay for new streets, lights, traffic signals, parks or public buildings, the council seek.a new-and, frankly, less obvious-tax sources. Two maJor proposals to raise money are being tested in public debate. The first is a systems development tax, that would levy a percentage of building permit valuation against the developer of a new project. A similar tax is used in Newport Beach. The second ls a real estate transfer tax, charged against an owner who sells his property. Both types of tax, without doubt, will raise the prices of housing -the development charge immediately, the transfer tax to second owners. But the development tax has the benefit of putting the hurden of paying for new capital improvements squarely on the shoulders of the developers, whose projects generate the need for added public expenditures . Dubious Tax Use Some Capistrano Unified School District voters may be surprised to learn they are paying to persuade themselves and fellow voters to support the $49.3 million school construction bond election on March 7. Supt. Jerome Thornsley informed district trustees last week that a similar bond promotion before the 1976 election cost more than $10,000. Trustees can legally use a variety of promotion techniques to influence voter opln· ion,hesaid. For starters, trustees have split Uiemselves into four committees and granted each committee $1,500 to try to drive their message home, using, videotapes, recorded telephone messages and other public relations pro· cedures The Daily Pilot has supported two previous Capistrano Unified school construction bond m asures because we believe the district's phenomenal P9J>Ulation growth jus\iries new schools. Taxpayers should not be forced to pay for promoting ballot measures. however. Taxing the electorate to sup~ port one side of an issue may be legal, but we don't think it's right. • Opinions exprenctd 1n the apace 1bove are those of the Deity Piiot. Other views expreued on this pag are those of their atatt'lora and art11ta. Reader c:ommenl 11 Invited Addreaa The Daily Piiot, P.O. Box 1~. Coate Meaa, CA 92628. Phone (714) 6-42-4321. Howeftf' raaerated lt ~ 1eem, that wans.lD• came from the Sbab of Iran, the P.reJldent of Prance and tbe KIDI Of Saudi Arabia. Jt points up one 1tron1 leaon ol tb llnt Cuter 11ar: three years after , Vlebiaai, tbii U.S. muat assert lta full role in the real world of ta"'maUclaal politics or lose the ·~ MailbOx To the F.dltor · Orance County Animal COn· trot 1enlcea all cities in the eounty wlth the exception of Newpcrt and L•8Wt• :Beaches Tbe pound, located In the city or Oran1e1 kllb apfroxlmatety 4.S,000 Ol :the uaua 82,000 dogs and cat& pro'cessed yearly. The meth04 for destroylna unwanted and unclaimed pet.a at the coun· ty pound 11 by the decom· pret1lon chamber. · The decOmpression ehamber ta documented by experts as eautlni extreme suffering of anlmala from the Ume tne door « the chamber. la closed to tbe time that cfoath occurs. Ado to that tit terror ot beln1 drageed from tbO cage on death row, lorced into the ch amber CaomeUm breailns lets>. and overlorldlng of do11 and cats mixed qtther. M1n1 animaJ1 do not die the ftrst Jlme but must be decom· pro11~d several time• before they te; some are sun alive when lcked up by the rel\derln1 company. A treat number of Im· pounded animals ar 11ick, old, irijurtd or very younf and alltter addeCl aaony dUflDI decom· preaalon. wlshinl to circulate a peti\lon can call one of the folloWlnl numbere in Oran1e County between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m; 675·2533, 894-4016 or 6315·9218. PEGGY MOORE , ............... . 1:ould hot belleve what I was readin . So ar,at was my dis· belief, that I went bacir and re· read the article that reeently ap. pea red I.rt lbe Pilot .. Wh t l read was an out-and-out attack on Mom, ap. pie pie; nnd the American way of llfe. DOnald Duck had been Danned la Hel1inkl, Finland! Just becnus the duck chose to remain unmarri d, Just because be tool( it upon nJmsell to raise three h rmless. well behaved nephews, lb Finns chose to call htm UMntural ! Unnatur I? Do you know what the Finns b ve! The Finns have TROLLS, th•t'1 what the FirinS have. You want to talk about un· natural, I 's talk about those Trolls. lA\rkiDI about, under those btid , dolitg heaven only knows Wh t with their free Ume, probabll{ altlng for unwary ladies n k11U to pu1 overhead. Unnatwat. indeed. rudeness, and/or annoyance at having to listen to my situation. I would not have had lo sub-ject myself to this tr my phone had been repaired correctly the first time. It seems to me the of- tlcea of PaCific Telephone have abandoned common courtesy in favor of amucness and the already worn phrase, "Because of the recent rainstorms." M1 RY B. BAVR.Y .,,,,... c .... rn. To the F.dltor: The federal government persists in deficit 1pendin1. There needs to be a restraint placed on the (ederal govem· ment to require a balanced bud1et. Deficit £pendm1 results In In- flation and a weekened econt>my. Our own state re· quirH bat need bud1et, believe. Why not the federal 1ov emm nt also? Our eJeeted feder I repr sen t tlvea ve not goln to r trai themselves voluntarily Of the would have done so by now. W need 1 ftdtral ('Onstltutiona amendment req ul rtn1 ~lanced federal government. ' .. -.. - Franliilin Mint Tops Loss List; AN ARTICLE IN FORBES matazine Hid rn~ of Franklin Mint produc:ta fetch between 20 and 40 percent their original price wb.n ....old. An art.lei In 'Advertfltq Age quoted • philatelic expert: "Jt IOUDdi lncr ble, ib they're aelllng stamp aeta worth 15 eenta for $3.80." It ahould be noted that the company ll6Vet prom its articles Tt'OUld increue to value. lt a&ld: .. The predominant. reHon collector1 purcha c Franklin Mint products la, qulto almplJ, enjoyment.' Collectors derive a sense of peraonal HUitacUon pleasur or achievement from our products. Collecllna la fun, and cm;: lectora dnsh..-e their appreclatlooof beauty orthelr res~c for hletory with Others throuah the collectibles we produce. •11, produce.'' Wall St.rffl'• perception of Frankllh Mint H a beautiful company dimmed in 1977. Tho company entered the year with Its shares tradina •t $29.SO. It em &ed 11· lDI at $8,37. PenCXlal and f1mlly flnanc: • a coune d gned teach tho arta <>t money use and l)lanntn1 to tho I th practJcal pcnon, la bein1 otrer.d at Saddleb.ct Colle10 Wa 1ernester. , Tb clus wlll meet from I to 111.m. on aturday , bo11nntn1 Jan. 28, ln Room K·2 on the Mlaalon Viejo cam· pua. Emphaslt wPI be on tnowlcd&o that .in b lp • pe~ or f amlly use money more wisely. Bud1et. ing, jnsuranc:e1 Invest· inc, real Hlate anil various forms o! tax tlon also will be d" C TAKING ) __ S_TO_CK~1 New etu<lenta must CUSltd. fUe appllcatJons in the college dmlnlons offlco to obtal an a,J>polntmcnt to re1aster. Moro Wormation is avallabt at 831-2940. • · . • . . . . .. le. . l~o.. " ..... ·~.......... ,........_ •.....,. dilllaplWlt ................ .......,........,,...... ..... lfld ........ 11: "MCWll ··~ .,,..~ (1t74) Gig YOllllg, CMltle Dr-... ,. """" .. _., ... ~...-...lot .,., llUlbMf Ind .... 11round ,_, ('2 tn.) I TH& IMD't' BUNCH THaROOte8 O\ltlld9 pt...,,. .,. t""*'I one of u. -. cap9 Cll'I .. bell Into M ~,,.,.,... ·~OOWAHY MOUl.ATIONI: IT1PUN9 OR ITMll'ZN» lenator l!dwlfd M. ~ dlelrman end pfelildWlf °' Alnerta9I All· .. ANwt v. o..r: tor· '"" OA8 dleltlNln JOfln AotleOn¢ ~ Alttlnee The Good Gags ~-Set#._ ofllcs Edwin&. c... ny allCI 8ollttMillC ~ prealdellt lamllt MUM dlNfe .... nigutallon. al AION!Wa John Wayne and Ben Johnson star as drifters who help recover a stolen gold shipment in the movie "The Train Rob· bers" tonl•ht at 9 on CBS, Channel 2. HOG uavta *** "Pet1aoe To MMMllllM" (P.-t 2) ( 1944) Humptvey Bopt, Claude Aalnt. E1oapee1 ffom ~· lellftd attempt to t9't a.. Hate "°"' wCtll the F~ Frw for~ (1 hr .• • ll'WfT04to flt OVERIAIY .... Wy8tt; -""' ~ tlOfl; 0--11 .000.llOMI ~l-11-.tL Cl) C88NEWI 0 MEWGNFFIN OIMltr. Arthur Oodl.-Y. Joyoa De Wiii, 1<1y• Ballard, Arthur and ICatPlryn Murray, lH 8'0Wll 7:00 I H80 NSWI UAMCW9 MC..WI ILOVELUCV AOAM-12 Claa11n,l Lbfl11g• fJ KNXT (CBS) Los Angalea Cl KN8C(NBC) Los Angeles 8 KTLA (Ind) Los Angale1 0 KASC· TV (ABC) Lot Angeles ()) KFMB (CBS) San 01ego D KHJ·TV (Ind) Los Angeles (JI KCST (ABC) San Diego CD l<TlV (Ind) Los Angeles a> KCOP·TV (Ind) LOI Angeles fO KCET·TV !PBS) Los Angeles • KOCE·TV (PBS) Hunllngton Beach "81~ ID ITAMOAAO ''The M .. •octMwa II" I 1121.0000UESTION ,Nl!ll..Y f!UO L'OO CJ) 00001'1MD P9rlrty~~ l"9t tme*.lno 09\ be .,,,. oer-to .,... tMI\ one·• '-""' D OAIZZl.Y AOAM8 "Tlte S...." Ad..,_ enclOUrlW'I • ~ •• cavalryMtn (Keenan ~, MlrcfllllO .. ---derflMe to find fha non- exJttent t'""'9nCt for which he aicchanoed hi• Itta ........ 8 MOYIE ...... "'Ole Pllil...,.. .. (1UI) Otry CeoiMr, Ctlarttl Blc*fCll'~t A trio ol ,_. w-.m dlar*> ,.. try to lllo, • llltllte man .,_ ttllllO II"" to 1nC11ent. 12 hrl. I G O~• EHOUOtf "Much Ado About OarMgl'"Tomla~ ed "°"' hie job lift• ~ dty oftlc:Mla end • glttMge compeny of OOI'· rupllon and then relullng to r..,.., hit ~ to a Grand Jut'; '"-ClolllnO Plla .. PGM 0 JetWfl WILD CD CWQ.. IM.Wfl'TT AHO,..,.,. • MOYll .... ~·rn A Gofdtlt (1"1) T ,MMDt._. do, Wlllle tile wife tomllnO• • fllow ..... *' AlffP/ .... ~ ... unoorwtnllorlll ~a.(ttn.) .NOVA "'ON ........ '-', of • ..,.,. --Oft .. , .... the !MOit. ~ --"-.,, ..... u.e.tog.-u...,.1 e MAGIC MmtOo~ Ol.'MmNrl "'Cmdlt AN 1en1a• ... CJ) IZvazH'tK ...., ... ,0. ~lfllOW•HllP'• blr 111111 ft °"'* out "°"' belllN .., ..... IJ~,.. OV!RIMl'I W)'att; *"" edlJOlo ODn; o-w• ~ d•dCS-ll ...... t:OO. Cl) ClM MO'lll * • * "Tlla Trtln Robben" (1t71) John Wevne, Am-MarOl'CM. A dnl* II dletmed bV • ~,....,_WO~ lt'O 1119 ~ ~ .... tcw .... Odd NO- -bV .., ..,. llulbend. a Nl!JllNQ,.. A flNl•tlollled botdef ~d. a llOlpllAil onartng ... ....,,.,.,. and • ,..,. wtio mak• "8'91oot" tr•• fof • pttoe are IPOt• Ughtad by llOltt A._, °"'*•.,...,,. Ind Ohld ~In-~ ec>eallil ~ TV -~"'°"" GO~ ANGELI .. AllO* '" ,.,. 9edfntld'' The Anglla talce pot1tl0na In a pruhulc ..i women'• IMm lo find out wtlO II tl')'lnO to knodl out a tamale footllell leagu9. ~DI MERV 0,.,.,.,. OUlitta: Alttlur ~. Joy~ 0. W1tt, Kaye 8allard, Arthur end Ketllr~ Murray, C.H lrown. • GNAT ~ "US 0 . Olff"' A dr~ tlon of Paul Oailleo'a "V9Tfla.• t .. turlno llaay 8paclll, 81lly Kellemlen, HOwerd o.llv• 9nd w .. ..... Hurt ID RVlN THI ousn WlllBC.OOM A 1tudy of the dfOUghl dilamml In llirhlC" the_,_ .. " ''''" find "*""'-11 pt-'ed 10-00 0 POUCI WOMAN "The \'°""f1 And The F• ~poa. .. aC-. atudtnt tnd baconie1 TUBE TOPPERS KOOP 8 8:00 -.. Refle~tlons In a· Golden Eye.•• Superstars Elizabeth Taylor and Marton Brando teamed up for thla 1967 movie drama aet on a military base. KCET tZf 8:00 -Nova. 1be first of two-part senes on the U.S. race to l d a man on the moon. · • NBC GJ 9:00 -Peeping Tlm • A: aatlre on TV'1 news magazine shows hosted by Alan Oppenheimer and David Letterman <see review below) • KCET @ 9: 00 -Great Performances. Paul GaWco's .. Vern : USO Girl'' ia presented with Slsay Spacek, Sally Kellerman, Howard Dasilva and William Hurt. ~ llwol* wtlh • ..,. ArttJ .,,._ (AolMDo.,.,....,,., '° bl ~ • Middle hit wtwt• *-1 mg. ·~~ HUYot "A lody WOl'1tl ~ .. 8tenlly Md ~ try 10 proteCt. ~ b9llarN 'WtlOM Ille It threetened, and ttie oeae '*'°"* • vefY '*'°"" one for Hvfdl, Monique Vin de -~I ~ 1t:IO. (I) HAWAII fWl.O .. Tu Dl1mo11d Tllet NoOody ._ .. A Olt bur· gltr .,.... tN "°"" of • promNl'4 ~ .... "" • a.rt of ._.... Ollll Jaade to dallh. (A) D TONICIKT Ouee« tlOtC: Dt¥ld .,__, o.-8twaAlltn, a.... landltmofy. ·LOYI.~ 11"1'\.8 .. Ven. 8lgrlt Httao GUM ltar. Cl> HOHl\'MOOHEM '""lllllno a pflorie 1g81net Aeloh'a otljtctlorle, Aloe "'&.ov. Altd TIMI Mind "'8der" llllllv end lob \ 0010•~1-~ And Tile UnbHtebte Wiiia '*" over l.Wlll he ~-----· ~. • u.::&A&. "Equality'' Olotte Steinem, Senator ,,ed HMla end Jeremy f"lllln dltcult equality of aoa. .., raoe and 8COftOITllc cifoum- 1tanot. 10-.30 G) HIW8 IPl:Oltl .. ._~ .. Beet! RICh- arde doee dtlmatlo r-6- inga "°"' -boOll •. ,. Bid Women 8pealka,• • well ., dlaou11lno WOfMn'• llber9tloft with hoetDe-M~ H:OOB D. Cl) 0 HIWI LOW. AMUICAH ITYL! "Love And The Opera Sln\)er" Or Heyman WOOi Llnda111111~ 8 MOVIE ••o.t ··Oat1oranri 1111•1 Gig vouno. C1ler"8 Oralee A Women With aecond llghl trMltl on>bierne tor ,,., hUaband and tllOM around haf I' ht• l m THE 000 C0UPLe Cl> UT'I MAKE A OIAl • OtCK CAVITT G..-1 Kenneth Tynan, Crttc 10 art 21 ,.,_. .. c.ol .... ... "'~~ ....... . 80 ~ITOfff "Aobblf)': " Houri'' The routlM ~ -...._ oute. followtng llPt, llloOt· outa -of IN~ tqUad, Jadlie ()oop«, a-.. OortMllt .... -· (Al ·~~ 1"'811, '*""° • • -- ·-~. ltt• 10 iw-t UC. hm llllUO· 011ng In the ... IWO parta ot • Merel upio9"'• tCll'l'llVfa. • CAl"l10HID A8C HIWI MORNING 12:00 8 TWIUOHT ZOHI An edverl09 llCOUI lor a Mart I Ill COiony tand1 Ofl Mara. CD R>MVER FlllNWOOO CD MOIM ** "I, The ,Jufy" (1K3) Bltt E~. Prwton l'ott«. A orlva1e dtlectMI ln.....il· gll• O)e nvder of hie ltiend ( 1hr.,30 min I 1~· MOVll ••• ''Clrcul Of HOf'forl" ( tHO) Alllon Dlflrlno. Erika Aemb1r9, A PIHtl a MO ····~"""" ,,.., ;ac,.. .......... ~ Alt owrpcam .. .. 9lld • huilb9lld ......,. lo ...,,. .................... ...... , ....... (1 Ir,. IO 1191.) 10:00• • * *)t "Ll9 Wiit ,__.. (1M7) WW. ._.., hne n..., A ~---....... t11aneo-to mlinfplllat• ... ~~ PldrWd\. (2 ..... , AFTERNOON U:OO. •••"»'.MdMl'a; 8"'4111·• (tt41) c ... ....,.,..,,. a.. "-"' A --..._,., bV • ........... ~ .. ~CJ .. lO•.) uo 91 •• "'Wa9llend Of Tenor--( 1170) Roil9tt Conner. u....,.. ... of~---· .... -......... ~ ltMCld&n&tly .... (1 llr .. to llllnJ l:IO 8 * ·~ '"latwl'e Titan- ._ .. '""' eu.n Hiiwlk. ~ MoClln. AMt.,..,. reacuad ,...,.. a belll clrlft· lno ~ •• ..,... l*htreoeetau.d .... ~ ............. hOWt..ldlowpl II en dlld. , ...... ., mli\J A 60-minute Backlash of TV Satire l'V.Drcnaa • llllam Hurt plays an ,Army captain in the television play .. Verna: lJSO Girl" tonight at 9 ·o'clock on KCET, Channel .. 28. ,. By JAY 8HAaBUTI' LOS ANGELES <AP) -CBS' "60 Minutes" takes thln1s 10 serloUJly a reactioa was bound to set In. It has. You'll 1ee It for on hour tonl1ht in an NBC special called "Peepina Tlmet" at 9 on Channel 4. The show I• co-anchored by Dave Lett.ennan and Allan Op. penhelmer. At the start, they flank an empty chair and ex· plain that the thlrd co-anchor, Arnie Vespull. "Is on HSllJl· ment." Lest you suapect this la a 1P00t of .. eo Minute," well, conalder the stories covered and exposes expoundP.d. • THEY INCLUDE ille1al alien•, vtcUmleas crime, pomo- a rap hy, r~llglou1 faahlons, America'• Deed tor more fat in it• dlet atid a New York long1horem n'• Jone fJ1bt t& beComea • There'• even an lntervlew With nn informer on oraanlted crime. ~ue, tbe inlonner, ntmed la ab ad ow to hide bla identity, do 1 1Saadvert1nt11 1••• bis name, bis ac:ldriiSa and ex.PON ht1 tact by llgbUng a ctea~. But lt la aMrl lntervlew. SO la Lettfirman'1 tnqulry ot a u,s .. bordOT cue.rd hi the report. on me1ll itll • Alu,, tt must bO Id LettmD f Us to not• the mon:r. Illegal •ll m e tl~ toClJl across bOrder duttng th lnt-wta.111'. • (TV REVIEW) most common method of alien· 1muulin1 Is through the mail. by oarcel post. "I malled at least three dozen to North Dakota," he aays. Then he 1how1 how to pack an lllegal a1ten ln a box for shipment. It ls a moment of ereat Impact or 1ometbln1. There i1 a labored, ln· conclusive segment on how the town of Yule, Wash., turned rumors of a monster called Bl•foot Into a tour:lst industry A Snow Job For Johnny thttt even Includes "Bl1foot Bur· rllo11 .. ANO VOll MAY find it hard lo 11wa llow when. in a report on victimless crime. a man doing two to rive years in prison claims he was jailed just because he taped a televised baseball eame "Without the ex· prus written conaent or the commissioner." Come to think or It, ll'1 harder to believe a aegment on nutriUon in which a aclenUst, havlns fed mice refried bean1t, 1out food and some sandwiches, con-clude 1: "All foods cause cancer." I also think the show ju1t made up its llory on a aelf·tietp hospital where the pallenta and their famlllea dtaanose Uleir own ailments and even operate with the aid of euy-to· undentand charta. BUT AN OLD German home movie cllp·of Adolf Hitler cavortln& and lunchlna with Eva Braun seems authenUc, even though HJtler look.a 1UJpiclOU3IY. Uke Mel ''Sprinethne for Hitler ' Brookt. "Peeping Tim ... which NBC HJI may becoma a weekly event, WH put to1ether for David firolt.'1 prOducUon com· 6any by two gent.I named Rud,y btLuca and Barry Levinson. · NBC better move qulcldy. otb rwt , Mike Wa11 c of 1'60 Mlnuta0 wUl hear the 1 ugh track, 1rlll DeLuca and Levln~i and reveal th 1 w J t k png -and do41g lt treme1YwdL TEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR •