HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-01-27 - Orange Coast Pilot11
• Its n .
State .Justice Aide
Face~ Sex Charges
FRIDAY AFTERNOON,JANUARY~7, 1978
"°'-1t, ff. tt,• dcnGlll. 46 l'Ael'.I
• • .• ( • •
ui-der Trial ., Dismissal .~ Asked
ol'acrine
Russian Flu-
1 Moving Fast
t
WASHINGTON (AP) -~
firmatiou of an outbre of
Ruaaiaa Ou ln Wyoml12• raiaes the specter of a major epidemic
11veepln1 the country this 1prinJ
with no vacdne available t.o pro-
tect the public.
"We didn't doubt it (Rusaian flu)' would get here,'' said a
spokesman for tho 1ovft'11Dlent's
Center for Disease Control bl
Atlanta. ''The only real quelt.loo
was whether it would be thls nu.
season or next."
The apokeaman. Don A. Bel'I'
wrl Crushed
:fb-Rock· F (J1UJ
~COncen
ret!a, •aid Tbmsctay that there 19
DO WaJ to know at thla polpt
whether the atriln wlll develop tnt.o epidemic proportions In the
next rew weeks. But he Doted
that the Russian virus 'fbu already demonstrated it can
move fast... ·
, People under 2' and over so
are expected to be most auacep.
tlble to the Ru11lan strain,
which is believed to cause
somewhat less severe an illness
-and thua fewer deaths -than
the Asian and A-Hong Kone •tralns. Tboae two together
killed u estimated 90,000 people
in this couotry iD the 19S7 and
1911 epidemics.
Center lnVestlfators thll weet
idenUfted the Russlu Du vii'us
hl throat cultures taken from
hllb •cbool 1tudentl in
Cheyenne, Wyo. Tbe COi:dliina·
tiOn comes leas than two weeks after. pvenunent nu experts
a1reeCI that the strain could
strike bere this sprin& but that
tbere was no way to•~ read7
for it that soon. Gro~ tbe ~~it tnt.o ncd.De, testlDI and mus·
procluctaa it take• tbe
pharmaceutical lndu1try months, and wort hat just
btcun.
Tho 75 eJgJeJta were llelltant
to make finD pre'dlctioaa about a
possible epidemic iii the wue ol
last Winter'• abOitl•e aWine flu
'Yaccmatliil ~ampato.i-But they recommended that a Taccine
jililst tM JlUsiiin atraln be de-ve~ for jitjclusfon In ~ 1m·
munbatlon program next
<a. f'LU, a AJ>
'
•
'Killer Blizzard' Ruling
Delayed
,·By Judge
,., .......
OIUFIS MEASURED UP TO 15 FEET tN KAlAMAZOO, MICH., AS STORM CONTINUES
•K111er BUzzaid Looking for Vk:tlma' Strand• Thouaand• of Travelers
s
An elderly man takes a tumble while at-
tempting to cross an open area in Toron-
to's financial district during a windstorm.
''"' p"" -"'~ "' ,, ·~-.:. . I\ I t FLU ••• ·.-... !
. .
SNOW KILLS 47~ ••
which cut power to 160,000
homes, plied up 12•foot••drifts
and almost sank an ore
freighter.
Overnight tern peratures
ranged from 23 below zero in
Devil's Lake, N.D., to 61 m by
West, Fla.
Winds gusting up to 8S mph,
well beyond hurncane strength,
caused damage all over the East
and Mid west.
The stonn th-at· hit the
Mlrlwe:oit sent baromeler ~•d· mg~ to record lows, indicrttni
very low pressure generating n
1evere storm. In Pltlsburgri, the
barometer plunged to 28.49, th~
l<>Wfst since records were first
kept tbc'e in 1810.
1. Creeks and rivers are a\r~ady
over their banks or near flood
atage today in North Carolina,
Virginto, Pennsylvania, New
Jersey, West Vlrgnia; Rhode
Island, Vermont and
Massachusetts
The floodlng op~ared most
widespread in West Virginia,
where water isolated three
towns and forced lt least 3,90(> p~epte t.onee. ··· · ·) · · Th~ Little· ~aoawtia &•• c td major floocUnl at
Cr ton and Glenvtlle, part.I or
which were 10 feet under water.
The TUI Fork ovetflowed in
first-story level in flood.prone
Wllkes-Ba?Te and further aouth
f orc'ed evacuations lrom rural
ho,nes in Lancaster County.
tthodes noted that at least
15(),000 Ohio home$ had been
without heat most of Thursday:
"They are helpleu victims of
something they have no control
over.1'
11e said his office was recelv-
ing 25 calls evecy nve minutes,
•icrlia of mercy -U.ey want
bele and you~ap·t 1et to them."
.MPre thlJD 5,700 motQmta had
been rescued from ~tr•nded
vehicles along anow-blockod
Ohio highway&, aqd oWclals
said more than 2,000 remainied
beyond read~. . ·
Winds gustlnJ to 65 mph
Sfulpted snowdrifts 15 feet hl&b.
.... I • t -
Woman Flay& ..
Police Humor
LOS ANGEL~& ~~P.), ·-POlte. n a ng an tiicl· dent repo to them by a
youn1 women who said two
police officers scared her by tell-
ing her they were the Hillaide
Ste n er.
TRAIN •••
learned. we were 101.nl to be In·
volved ID the rescae, I 1ot °"1
the volunteer firemen ud thetl
our 1treet people to clear a path
from tbe crossiq to the ftre at&· lion... . . · , '
Tbe ~al rescue was effected
by 10 volunteel"9 dl1&tna through
the wall of anow, Amtrak
spokesman Joseph Vranich said.
That allowed the two rescue
Jocomot.lv• to join the stalled
train, and pasaenaers and crew
boarded the rescue units.
The snowplow-equipped
locomotives of the Louisville &
Nashville Railroad bad reached
within a few feet of the traln
,bortly after mldnl1bt. But
Vranich said they were •ftable
to plow throu1h the drift to cou·
pie with the lead JocomoUve and
haul it away.
...
Tbe tl'ac:ka ._ere in • luD1.
Vranich aald, and the 1now was
JO deep lt was impoaalble f01"·
paaaenien to walk from thelr
train tot.be rescue locomottva.
Water Usage
Normal Again
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Southern Californians who have
been scrimping on precious
water supplies since last May
can be&ln being frivolous again
-up to I point.
Because or heavy rains and
snbw1 during the put month.
the Clty Council voled Thursday
to end mandatory ratlonlnf that
required all residents to cut
water use by· 10 percent. Also
abandoned was a 10 percent sur-
charge levied on water 'bllla ~
offenders.
The rationing waa ended by a
unanimous vote and without dis-
cussion.
The tli-1 of Dr. Wa4d1J1 wDl
resume MOliday at t:'5 a.m. ht
Superior Court. r
•U.AU
FAMOUs.MAMI: ~,
IRANDS ' •
I
VOL. 71, NO. 27,' SECTIONS, 46 PAGES c TEN.CENTS j
· Drivers Told to Stay Home
,. ........
ELDERLY MAN TAKES A TUMBLE WHILE CROSSING DOWNTOWN STREET IN TORONTO
In C•n•d•, Gutta of Almo•t 100 Mlle• •n Hour Plaguing Ont•rlo Area
By,...., Auoclated Presa
Thousand.I remained stranded
today and mJlllons tried to dig
out after a record-bre1kin1
blizzard that passed over the
mid west and into the northeast.
At least 68 persons were killed
ip vicious weather. Denver
hotels were reported full with
airline passensers diverted from
Eastern airpOrta. Police issued
warnings in the Midwest for
drivers to atay olf roads.
Ohio wu having severe prob-
lem a with what the sovernor
called the "worst blizzard in his-
tory" and officials said that
even the federal h~lp that had
been promised -includln& aid
from the Army -was not
enough.
··we just haven't aotten what
we bad hoped to aet this time, ..
s aid Adjutant General James
Cle m of the Ohio National
Guard.
President Carter declared a
federal state of emercency in
Ohio and Indiana, but Clem aaid
that was not enouab. He said
federal equipment bad not been
freed for state use.
The fOUl weather that croued
the East on Tbunday lnchJded
the blizzard ln the North, hW'-
ricane force winds throu1b the
South, heavy rains, and fiOoc:liq
in West Vir&inia and elsewhere.
Gov. James Rhodes of Ohlo
expressed condolence for those
who lost loved ones in the
blizzard.
"Thia is tbe momioe that. moat
of us dreaded. It •s be re," he
said. ''The picture is not good. It
may not bO cood for the next two
ortbreectm."
And the National Weather
Scnke could d no encouraae·
ment s it icled more anow
for tho upper MJdwe5t.
Tho ands · atUl trying to
deal with the effects of the
OW,Pa1eAZ)
Flu.Hits .Wyoming;
No Vaccine Ready
WASHINGTON (AP> -Con·
'flrmation of an outbreak or
Russian nu in Wyomine raises
the specter of a major epidemic
aweeplne the country th1-1prio1
wlth no vaccine available to pro-
tect the public.
"We didn't doubt it (Russian
flu) would 1et here," said a
spokesman for the govemmenl'a
Center for Disease Control ln
Atlanta. '"nle only real question.
was whether it would be tb.la 1111.
lellOD or next."
The spokesman. Don A. Ber-reth. Hid 'lbw;sday that there ls
no way to know ·at this point
whether the strain will develop
into epidemic proportions in the
next few weeks. But he noted
that the Russian virus "bas
already demonstrated it can
move fast.".
People under 2' and over SO
are e.ipected to be most suscep·
tible to the Russian strain,
which is believed to cause
somewhat lesa severe an ll1ness
-and thm !ewer deaths -than
the Asian ud A·Ho.nf Kong
atralns. Thoae t o together
<See FLV. PgeAZ) * * * Amtrak Sun-seekers Caught in Drifts.
ROACHDALE, Ind. CAP) -
Work crews dug through a wall
of anow today to rescue 60 peo-
ple stranded more than 12 houra
on an Amtrak paaaencer train
• that stalled in a snowdrift and
then froie to the rails.
Tho 45 pauengen and 15 crew
members oo th• Chlcaco·to·
Florida.hound lorlcUab -re
1 ferried aboard anowplow
locomotives to a nearby cro1s-
ing, and then driven In trucu to
a fire station in the town or. Billn· bridge.
Durina their ordeal, an aboard
the aeven·car train moved into
the lead locomotive and buddied
under layers of blankets for
warmth, but four houra before
the rescue water ran out for the
train 's steam-beaUna ystem
and some pasaeneers auffered
frostbite, authoritlu 11Jd •
The train stalled about noon near thii nar&l commuhlty aboUl
35 mUeJ w :91 ndlanapQJ at
the helpt 'of a);Uznrd pt by
wind• .0 top> .inpb that dumped about a foot of snow on the
state's altdSection.
"It wu a pr y harro Jng ex-
perience,•• sat eager Ove
Knudsen. 69. Xnox, Ind. "It took
28 houn to go a little leas than 200
miles. But we are so thankful to ,,
School Employees
To · Vote on Contr:act
After five months of ne1otla-
tions, the Newport-Mesa Vnlfled
School Diatrtct and lta 900 non-
t e 1chtn1 employees have
reached a tentative contract
a1reement that would lncreue
salaries by 4.S pel"Cent and 1rant
employees an extra hoUday.
Members of the California
School Employees A11ocilt.lon
wut vote on tho tentaU·fe 11ree-ment at a Feb. 7 meeUna.
rile pay hike, retroacUve to
la.st Jul1 1 would raiae the
monthly aal ry of a head cuato-
dian with 10 years experience
trom $1.027 to $1,071, dlatrlct ad·
mlniatrative 1ul1t1nt Jean
Harmonwdtoday.
A beatnnlng stock clerk WOUid
see a pay increue from $114 to
$849 per montti.
The agreement is elated for
two years, but rene1ot1ation of
wacea and health and welfare
bentfill would be permlUed up.
on completion of the first year of
the contract.
Other benefit.a include llfe ln·
aurance and medical and dental
plans. The diltrict would pay up
to $1,156 per year for premhuns
for each ellgibleemployeea.
Cla11lfled employees -..ould
have 12 holidays per yeat, the
addlUonal day olf cominJ on the
Friday after Thankseivln1.
the firemen and to Amtrak.
They did the beat they could."
Knudle.n said be and his wife
were en route to West Palm
Beach. Florida, "and we still
aim to 1et there." •
Balnbrldae Town
Lout LOWef)" J aid
t llr hOu e h
woul4 bO taken 10 the othodllt
Church where the women's aux-
iliary as p parilig food .
He s d a folU'i-wheel drive
vehicle had sent tO bring
'the town doctor to aid the
passencers.
"We've Cot drin. 15 to 20 feet here, • Lowery said. "When I
learned we were going to be In·
volved in the rescue. I got out
the volunteer firemen and then
our atreet people to clear a path
from the el'OlliDI lo the fire Sta·
lion.'' ·
The rtnal rescue was effected
by 10 volunteers diHlnt throUlh
t&e wall of now, Amtrak
spokesman ~osepb Vranich said. ,, That allowed the two rescue
locomoth to join the stalled ..
train~ apd pu ngen and crew
boarCMG ue unite.
Tbe anowplow-equlpped
loeomCltlv• of the LoUisville &
Nashvlllt RailrOad had reuhed
within a few feet of the train
shortly after midnight. But ·
Vranich aid they were unable to plow thrOu h the drllt to cou-
ple with the lead locomotive and
haul It away.
Ttie tracks were 1ri a fully,
Vranich said, and the snow wu
10 deep it was Impossible for
passengen to walk from their
train to tho rucue locomotives.
...........
TRUCK DRIVER USES SPARE JACKET TO WARN MOTORISTS OF HIS TALLED TRUCK
• In ChlCago, Blluard narl• Traffic on Exprenw•y H Mldweat Surfed Deeper
7 Defendants Deny Guilt
dictment.
No auch omission occurf.ld
this time. carter said.
'tbe indictments are alleta·
tiona that the killing ol Bovan
stemmed from the decision of
several of the defendants to
eliminate the Fountain Valley
man for the part be played ln
planning an earlier, unreported
kidnapping of Kulik.
Pollce claim that the kidnap-
pin 1 and the Bovan murder
emah&ted from disputes wlthi'"
PraaaClam Distributinc Inc. a
'Newport Beach lnvestm~nt firm
alleat'dly linked to An intema· .
tional drUg consplracy.
It is alleged that profits frott1
'JDUlti·mlllion dollar drug
transadlOns were merged with
the funds ol a number of out· wardly respectable business
firms. several of them in the
Oran1e Coast area.
Police claim that Fiori, An·
tbony "Uttle l'ony" Marone Jr .•
23, 'and Raymond Steven Resco.
28, all of Huntinaton Beach,
wer• hired by Prasadam prin-
clp la to klll Boven .
They aay the contract was put
out by Kulik, Fedorowaki,
former Hare .Kflahna devotee
Roy Crlatopher Richard. 28.
L11una Beaeh and Newport
B•ach burilneuman Joseph
( VAN. Pase Al)
Impro:ve~ent~
By JACKIE tiYMAN Of .. a.llf -. ... ,...,
Falrvt~w Statt Hoi*»ltal .in
Costa Mesa It ~vJA.1, Cloaer to
Its aoal of rejalnr'-4 federal
certlflcatlon a ct mbuNe·
ments ror Medl·Cal expenses.
hospital chief F'rank CrJnella
said today. •
Dr. Crinella ll•ld a state
licensinc team tMt fled
the hospital laat !J,lm"ler: has
Just completed a ~o and t half
week lnapecUon.
"bur only crlUc~ itroblem
rt1ht now II ati.tfln1," he said. "All our operaUOOal J>l'ocedure
requlremcnta ar• mel or have
been waived under l lon1·term
plan or correction:• •·
Anolher step was taken this
week when a comnilttff or the
Orange County Health Planning
Council approved a plan to
eliminate 46 acute ps1chiatric
care beda and &4 skilled nunlna
care beds and to awltch another
236 11killed nursing care beds to
an intermediate care classifica-
tion.
If approved by U\e full council
Tuesday and later by state
health authorities, the move
would free a number of person·
nel to work in proarams and
wards where they are needed,
Or Crlnella said.
·'The critical element ri1ht
now is our need to hire 12 re·
ha bilitation therapists, but lhJs
is based on what llcensina sees
as 11i1ns or good faith ertort and
s11ns of movement In the other
areas
"Our actual shortaae Is more
f're•PageAJ
SNOW •..
storm.
Travelers were 1tjll tryln1 to
get from abandoned, S'(>OW·
trapped vehlClfS to emerg~ncy
sheller'!, hotels and motels
Hotels In Denver reported
they were hard-pressed to
meet the demand for rooms as
airlines possenaers were divert·
ed from Eastern airports closed
by the storm.
"I think we're getting close to
usina up most of the available
room a," aald Unlted AlrUnes
pa11en1er repr entatlve Kees
Janae·Kok.
Roads were 1etUn1 belt.er, but
travel advisories were still in er.
feel. And people were stlll tryina
to aet throuat\. de1plte drifll
that were as btih 1 15 !Ht lD
some places. -~
A Wisconsin traffic orricer
aid of the bUuard·challenstnc
drivers· "l can't believe how
tupid people are. No m~tter
what you tell lhem they won't
tay ore the roads."
Schools, offices and fac't0r:i.e1
emalned closed in Indiana an4
lsewhere u workers awaited
eoad-cleartni etrorts. ThoUlandl
r N atlonal Guardsmen 1trug.
led with the bUazard ln several
•tales and President Carter
uthorized the Sth Army tb help
'ilut in Ohio.
1._ A baby &irl born prematu~ly
·m Ohio died this momin1 u ef.
ort1 to 1et her apetlal care
ere blocked by the storm. or.
clall tried to take htr from
ellerontaine aboard a apeclal
ain to Columbus, but the train
as aluck in a snow drift Thun-
Y. Another enalne then toot
r back lo the holplt&l where
sl\e was born.
in. the neighborhood or 300. • ·
He &aid the hlrlna binges on
tbe Le1ialature· .. approval or
Govern0r. Brown'• request for
about $2'7.5 million in fundl for
fltate hospitals, fncludlnt $4
million tor Fai.rview.
"W.e 're sendina fervent
. prayers to Sacramento every
clay.~ ,Pr CrtneUa:tald,
He said he l.llo ex~cts to hear
soon from lhe state Personnel
Board on whether or not the
h°*pltal will be allowed to hire
needed employee• at hlihtr
than becinninJ ulaty ranks.
which would ertal>le 1t to atlract
more q'!allned personnel.
F,.._PGIJeAJ
FLU ..•
I
kllled an eatlrnated 90,000 people
In this country in the 1951 and
1968 epidemics.
Center investigatori; this week
Identified the Russian nu vlrus
In throat cultures taken from
high sc h ool stude nt s 1n
Cheyenne, Wyo. The confirm•·
tion comes less than two weeks
after government flu experts
aareed that the strain could
str ike here lh1s spring but that
there was no way to aet ready
for 1t that soon.
Growing the virus, turnina it
into vaccine, testing and mua-
p rod u c in g at takes tbe
ph a rm aceuti ca I ind us try
months, and work has just
begun.
The 75 experts were hesitant
to make firm predictions about a
possible epldemac In the wake or
last winter's abortive swine nu
vaccination campaign. But they
recommended that a vaccine
against the Russian strain b4l de·
veloped for inclusion In any &m·
muntzatton program next
season
Phyllis Starn
Of Costa Mesa
l\)ead f 58
Funeral aervtcea are
scheduled Saturday for Phyllis
Ann Stam of Co!i!la Mesa, a 29·
year resident of the area who
died Wednesday alter a loni m.
e .. }\ew&J$8.
rs. Starn, wtio lived at 940
Governor St., was active in the
Huntington Beach •Church o(
GOd, of which her husband A.ell• c. Starta ls pastor.
Vllitation is scheduled from .4
to t p .m . today at Pierce
Brothers Smiths' Mortuary, 627
• Main St .. Huntlnaton Beach, and
'funer:al services wlll be held
·there al 2 p.m. Saturday
Mrs. Stam is survived by her
husband; dau1hters, Allee K.
Duvall and Jennie Slam Kenny,
and 11ons, Paul Vernon Starn and
Timothy Lee Starn, ell of Costa
Mesa.
She is also Is survived by her
J>arents, Ruel and Helen
JobDson or Ohio, nlne brothers
and sisters, five grandchildren
and one great-granddauahter.
, Funeral Set
Saturday
For NB Man
.,.. ........
eek
Third Term D ONTON. Alb rt <A ~ nadian an(f
U.S. experts are making a ground search for debris
from the downed Soviet spy satellite that is believed
causing a patch of "extremely dangerous'' radlataon
in north-central Canada. ..
Defense Minister Barney Danson nid part of the
Cosmos satellite's nuclear pow r ~acka1e is
believed causing the hiih level of radlatlon aet cted
on the ground by aerial searchers abbut 200 miles
west or Baker Lake, a small outpOSt 100 mlles south
of the Arctic Circle.
Fourteen Canadian specialists and six
Americans aboard two helicopters were trying to
pu~point the source of the radiation ans,\ to determine
1f 1t came from the satellite that dropped lnto the
earth's atmosphere early Tuesday and burned up
O\'er northwest Canada.
Former state senate candidate
Loran Norton was ordered today
lo face arraJ&nment in Oranae
County Superior Court on
charaes or violating state cam-
pal&n finance laws.
Santa Ana Municipal Court
Judae Edward L. Laird made
that rul\ng after hearing
testimony during a three·day
prehmmary hearine.
Norton, 49, ol Sanla Ana, will
now go to Superior Court Feb. 10
to race charges ot perjury and
sohc1tmg perjury outhned In
four felony counts.
Judge Laird dismissed
TONIGHT
COSTA MESA CIVIC
PLAYHOUSE "Catch Me If
You Can," Jan. 27-28, Feb. 3·'4,
8 30 pm.
OCC PLANETARIUM -"The
Lonellnes11 Facto(." 7: 30 and 9
p.m . Saturday, 3 pm. and 7:30
p.m .
"A DOLL'S HOUSE" -South
Coast Repertory Theater.
Tueaday·Sunday throuah Feb.
18, 8 p.m. ,
OCC LtCTtJRES -'Pre· retirement Planning," Science
Lecture 2, 7:30 p.m. "World War
11 ." Fine Arts 116, 7 p.m.
"Astronomy," Science Lecture
1, 0 :30 p.fQ. "Telev1s1on," Fine
Arlt 119, 7!l0 o.m.
char1ea or •~mpted tubOma··
tlon, _.lbery and· decelvtn1
witned' contained In three add1·
tlonal felony alle1at1on1.
A 11 seven counta were di•·
missed last month by Superior
Court Judge Muon Fenton who
ruled ln pretrial action after tbe
grand jury indicted Norton.
But District Attorney Cecil
Hicks ordered the chareH re·
filed at municipal court level.
The prosecution said today that
Judge Laird's dllmlsaal of some
charges will have no affect on
lhelr prosecution of Norton.
It Is alleaed lhat Norton, a
former aide to county
Superviaor Laurence Schmit
who ran ror lhe atate senate u a
Republican in 1978, violated the
state'• campalan finance laws.
It ls alle1ed that Norton filed a
campalan finance report which
indicated that be personally
loaned his campaJan 16,800.
The prosecution claims that
SS,000 of that sum was received
from Irvlnt loan broker Gene
CO'l'\rad who facH trial on
criminal charaes contained In
')range County and federal
gn1nd jury indictments.
And during a press conrerence
this mornine Clark repreated his
hope that OCTD can acquire the
ftrat seven miles of now-
abandoned Pacific Electric rlsht
of way aa a future tranait cor·
ridor.
Clark's supervJsoriaJ district
lnelu~es Anaheim, Buena Park.
Second I .anguage
English Offered
Thirteen classes in Entllib u
a Second Lan1ua1e for students
of all lansuage backgrounds will
be offered belinninl Feb. 6 by
the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District Adult Education
Department.
Schedules and locations for
the free classes are availabl~ by
calling 556-3301.
La Palma and much of the cit)
of Orance. Clark was elected to tht
Anaheim Clly Council In 196E
and served as mayor in 1918 Ht
took ortlce as supervtsor in
January. 1wr1.
He served as supervisors
chairman in 1974 and as vice
chairman In 1'75. He also serves as a member of
the Oran1e County Transport&·
tlon Commwlon which hu re·
view authority over transit and
local road buildln1 proJecu.
I',.... rage Al
SCHAFER. •
Se1eratrom development com
pany ($200) plua lesser· contribu
Uons from South Cout NaUonaJ Bnk, Cadillac/Fairview and
Bell-Broadway Mortuary.
From a total of $3,815, Mrs
Schafer reporta she bu spent
$424 to date; She has also invest-
ed more than Sl,000 of her oWn
money ln her campailll. accord· ins to the report.
Bualneuman Christopher
Steel s~• be has received no
contrlbUllons to his campai~.
but hu 1pent S273 of his own
rund1 la his bld for election.
Th• rest of the candidates
filed form• at.aUne they bav'e
neither received nor spent more
than $200 on their campaisns so
far. They include OCC student
Carl Merkle, homemaker Dar·
rilyn Ollver, public ad-
mlnlstr.ator Paul Raver, Dr.
Godrrey Sandeen and attorneys
Michael Ellla and Thom8. Keer er.
U.S. OKs Refugee~
WASHINGTON CAP> -Tht
Juatice Department aays it will
admit '7,000 more Indochina rd·
ugee11, most of them "boa~
people," to the United States..
SATURDAY. JAN. 28
OCC LECTURE -"Orien·
teerma." Gymnasium Room 101,
10 a .m.
LIMITED QUANTITIES!
Bovan Death
Suspect Faces
Sex Charges
Murder suspect Jerry Peter
Fiori had new felony charces
added to his docket Thursday by
Oranae County Sheriff's of-
ficers.
Jail deputies booked Fiori, 41,
on charges or assault with a
deadly weapon and crimea ·
a,alnst nature after he allegedly
attacked a fellow prisoner while
they were detained in • Superior
Court hi>ldlng cell.
Officers alleaed Fiorl banaed
the 20-year-old victim's head
aeainst a. sink ln the cell and
then forced the dazed prisoner to
submit to an act of SOdomv.
* * * f'ro91PogeAJ
BOVAN .••
Shelton Davis 111, 28.
Rlcbard, who wu named u a
defendat1t tn the ttrat Ind.Jct·
m nt, has received Immunity
from ~utlon In return for
tilt 'Promise to appear H a
prosecuUon wttnw. Alto namea es a defendant in
the a cl:md lndJctD'lent l• El!ie
Caban Kulik, 28, of. Newport
Beach. \
MW.
MOH Tl CELLO
Bl GU OW
BIGEl.OW
BERVEN
£VAffS.llACI(
WALTERS
VAt«'iUARO
AVAl(W
ALEXAfllER·SMITH
Al.fXAIUR SMITH
t.OtTICEllO
OUWTY
l~ TERRACE
VARIATIONS
VARIATICWS
IN CONCERT
MALIBU
JMRINA DU RAY
GRAt«> AWARO
CATALINA
AHTIOOE VELVET
AHTIOOE VEl VET
APPlAUSE
tclOI
GOCO
PALE. PfACH MUL Tl
CllVl GRUN
C(ff[R-RUST M\Jl.TI
fMO MOTE
LIME CREIN
LIME GR£EH WOO. Pl.LISH
(lru:l llUE MUI HYlCW SHAG PLUSH 119 YOS SU5 Sl YD.
PALE YaLOW N'1l~ Pt.USH 65 YOS S3J5 SQ. YD.
NVllJt PLUSH 82 YDS.
MOSS GREEN "Yl(W Pl.USH 69 YOS.
NVl.!Ji Pl.USH
rmcw Pt.USH
an m NYtON
I
Glibsts Stalk ()
By WILLIAM HODGE
°'$lit °""' ,.... IUff San Ju n Capistrano. lone a favorite
haunt of California history buffl, ia inhabited
by le&tnds of a less substantial sort -1bo.ts.
Many long-limo residents and several
newc<?mers tell stories of "La Lloroqa" (The
WeepmJ One). a woman of lll·repute who
wanders alona the shores of Trabuco Creek
on cold, windy 01ght11 searching for her
drowned children.
So the lea end goes.
"SHE WAS A WOMAN of 1ll·repute who l&o
1a1d to have C1rowne<1 ner children when they
were born," fourth aenerahon San Juan rul·
dent and local hi1lorian Pam Hallan relates.
"She bad to roam the river looking for her
children "The moaning and crymg people hear
alona the creek as supposedly her remorseful
soul "
Mrs. Hallan. who discounts many of the
old ghost legends as merely "unexplaina·
hie." says the tradition started as a form of
entertalnnfent in the early Mission City
"IN ALL THOSE YEARS before
television and radio, people only had those
stories to tell," she explains "It's entertain-
ing and people loved to be entertained. , Dllfl• .......... "'-"'
SPINS GHOST STORIES
Hl1torlan Pam Hallan
By RAYMO. D li:STRADA JR. OI .,.. Otily I'll .. ll•ff
FBI aaenta said today they
beheve the lar1e. but agile bandit
who tool< $44,130 from a Hunt·
ington Beach bank Jan 16 is the
same gunman rcspon111ible for six
other holdups Jn Laguna Hilb1,
Granada Hills and Santa Barbara
during the past two years.
The robber, de5cribed as sax
feel. three Inches talJ and
weiah1ng about 240 pound•. ap·
parently waits until an armored
truck cash delivery is made at a
bank. leaps over a teller's counter
and snatches the money before
bank officials can aet at in the
vault. agents said.
Dubbed the "vault bandit," the
. robbery suspect ha netted more
than $150.000ln seven he1sta since
Jan 9, 1976,bankofficialssaid.
Most of the money the bandit
ha$ taken was to be counted and
placed in the vault JUSt before
the robbery occurred.
FBI aaenls say the bandit ap·
parently operates alone. They
believe he haa some type of ex·
perience in police or security
guard work.
. ,. . . ,
"I'm sure there was a period when peo·
ple were very superstitious here and those
stones were believed "
But San Juan's unearthly legends con
linue to abound Determined to wm the bet. the man
donned a full -length cape for warmth. packed
a sack of wme and stalked off for his night m
the graveyard
They say he always wears
gloves to avoid leaving
fingerprint.I and appears to have
excellent information on the
layout or each bank he robs.
IN HUNTINGTON BEACH
Ski MH9t on Fec.e
A few years back, a couple moved into a
new hon:ie and began having problems keep
ma a wmdow closed They would close the
window only to return a short tame later and
find 1t open again
OLDER SAN JUAN residents believe the
home built on the old El Camino Real ·
wa!I lhJ! site of a past violent incident
"They claim if a violent thma happened
on that sate, there could be a restless spirit in
the area." Mrs Hallan says "There were
periods of a lot of violence 1n San Juan during
the 18805 and 1890s and many people were
hung along the El Camino Real
"People would say once m a while they
would see a body hanging from a tree along
the old road '·
THE OPEN WINDOW finally drove the
couple to seek a home elsewhere
There arc, however, grim cases where
locals failt.'<1 to escape the rate of a ghostly
rlose encounter
Al lhl' turn of the ('C ntury. a group or
men bet another man he could not spend a
night alone sitting on a grave m San Juan's
cemetery off the Ortega Highway
HE NEVER MADE IT back alive
While pounding a stake into a grave -
his evidence of spendin& the mght m the
cemetery his cape was somehow caught and
he began feeling like he was being pulled Into
the grave.
He was found the nest morning staked to
a grave, the victim of a heart attack.
''That's an example of tragedies evoked
from someone's too active imagination,"
~rs. HaJJan says. "The guy was probably a
little drunk 11nd too scared to rP.aliie the cape
was caught."
MRS. HALLAN, WHO gives talks to city
groups about the area's spiritual legends,
always cautions her audiences with a warning
handed down from the city's early Inhabitants.
"ln San Juan Capistrano. if you feel you're
m the presence of someone else," she warns.
·you're 11upposed to ask 'Are you from this
worldorthenext?' " Most p<..'Ople probably wouldn't await the
reply.
Publisher Predicts
The Jarvis tax relief initiative wm have far-reaching effects on
American politics even if It is
voted down, San Francisco Ex·
aminer editor and publisher Reg
Murphy said Thur!lday in
Newport Beach
The rest of this country is~
ing to pay very close attention to
this election and especially to
the Jarvis initiative," Murphy
told merqbers of the Greater
Irvine Industrial League at a
cbnner at the Marriott Hotel
Mail service duru1g the Gold
Rush days of California will be
the focus of this years
ORCOEXPO Stamp Show today
through Sunday at the Anaheim
Convention Center.
Cecil .Rpspaw and Vick Knight
of the Orange County Historical
Society will discuss Orange
County's p0stal history tonight
at 7'30
On Saturday at 11 a.m. and 2
'P m , Bob Morrissey of the U.S.
Po11tal Service's Benjamin
Franklin Stamp Clubs will con-
duct free programs on collecline
for children.
Historian Richard Poura~
will speak on the impact or man
service on the settlement of the
West at4 p.m. Saturday.
An auction of rare stamps i ·
scheduled for 2 p.m. Sunday.
Show hoW'8 are 10 a .m . to 9
p. m . today arid Saturday, and 10
a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday. Ad·
mission, which includes lee:·
tures, is $2 for adults and $1 for
children.
"He ulwnys knows the
quickest getaway door,·• ob·
served Agent John Warren of the
FR 1 ·~Santa Ana office.
The robber, who points a large
hundgun at ha~ v1ct1ms. was
photographed by bank cameras
on several occasions.
In the bandit's last four heists
he donned a blaek ski mask w1th
orange circles around the eyes.
Warren said the "vault ban·
d1t" is respopsible ror the follow·
ing robberies:
-Jan. 16, 1978 : The Hunt·
anglon Beach Bank of Amenca
branch at 10121 Adapis Ave. was
struck and $44, 130 talcen.
-Jan. 5, 1978: A reported
$3,445 was taken from the
Laguna ltltls Bank of Amencu
Ex-Envoy to Speak
Arvid Pardo. former Maltese
ambassador to the United Na·
tions, speaks on "Justice and the
Oceans" at l pm. Saturday dur·
Sng the annual meeting of the
U. N. Auoclatlon. Coastline
Chapter.
The luncheon meeting. open to
the pubhc (tickets are $3.50), 1s
rn the Blut• Room of Mesa COm·
mons, at UC Irvine.
,qt s •. ~
branch. at 24061 Calle De La
Plata.
-Oct. 10, 1977: The Gran ad a
Hllls Bank of America branch
was held up and S41.000 taken.
-May 2,., lr77: A reported
$51 ,920 was stolen an a holdup at
the same Laguna Halls bank
robbed Jan. 5. 1978.
-April 5, lt77: A reported
$5,475 was stolen from the same
Granada Hills bank held up Oct.
10, 1977.
-April 12, 197': An un·
disclosed amount of cash was
taken from a Santa Barbara
Security Pacific Bank branch.
-Jan. 9, 1971: The same Santa
Barbara bank held up April 12,
was struck. The loss was not du;.
closed
The bandit, sometimes, clad In
a light blue windbreaker and
dark pants, has not injured
anyone in has seven heists, War
ren said.
However, in. the latest robbery
in Huntington Beach, a man
wearing a raincoat was thrown
up against the wall because the
gunman apparently thought he
was a P>liceman. Warren said After telllne everyon n lbe
bank t6 be 1ttn. the bandlt
·tuffed. the cash into a blue laun·
dry bag and scurried away to a
vehicle parked near the bank.
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FULL SELECTION OF SMALL FRUITS AND VEG ET ABLES ON HAND
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'
y Pn,.OT
• BEDEVILED AGAIN: Once
again. that 1reat Jouroal of the
· Eaat Coaat. the New York
Times, has awept into Oranie
County and done an article to
tell au of their ahlvertnr. snow-
bound readers how we live out here. ·
The headline over this piece
declares, .. Boom Jn Orange
County, CallL, Brtn1s Corrup-
tion With It."
That might elve you a bint of
the toae in the piece that follows.
The 17-inch piece is also ac-
companied by a map of Orange
County. Cities marked on the
map are Newport Beach, Irvine,
Laguna Beach and San
Clemente. The map ienores our
esteemed County Seat of Santa
Ana, as well us other fairly
large places like Anaheim, Hun-
tington Beach, or Garden Grove.
THE MAP DOES MANAGE to
get Long Beach into Orange
County, which nobody else has
ever been able to do.
Anyway. the article that
follows is curiously datelined out
of Newport Beach and tells lime·
worn story 11bout all the politi-
cians we've had indicted and
convicted and how we've been
''bedeviled by corruption."
No, wait! They don't mean
Newport Beach politicians. They
mean Orange County politicians.
Don't get contused, now.
TO EXPLAIN WHY Orange
County has been bedeviled by
corruption, the New York Times
article says an part it's because
we lack strong local news or-gan1zallons
"Meanwhile, politicians
without strong local news cov·
erage have turned to costly
mass mailings to reach voters."
the New York Tlmea explalned
to East Coasters
What the New York Tames
didn't know, however, was that
many or theae Orange County
politicians turned to mail-out
pieces because the local
11ewspapen wouldn't print the
kinds of li es and distortions they
were putt.in& in the mailers.
H the local newspapers of
Orange County went back
throu•h all of their 1977 issues
and tossed out all the news that
was prmtro about wrongdoing m
Oranee County 1overnment.
there would be some really
cmormou.~ blank spaces in those
,P.apers
Fl'RTllER, the su1cestlon
that Orange County's local
newspapers aren't reporting the
wrongdoings of our politicians
must come as a huge ahoek to
slx or our Investigative reporters
who were recently honored by
the Orange County Presa Club.
They were the people who
found and exposed the poUUcal
wrongdoines -often far ahead
of the DA or Grand Jury.
Despite this, one UCI pro·
lessor wu quoted in the New
York piece aa say1n1 "the
media" doesn't cover local
politics here and people tend to
think Tom Bradley is the
"mayor of Orange County.''
Maybe all that provea is that
the UCI prof doean't read mucb.
Except perhal>!' the New York 2'imes.
'''d • Jan~ 21. 1171
Fro t'sBook
·Wallace Nked
Help for Nixon
NEW YORK (AP) -Richard Nixon la quoted In a forthcomlnC
book by David Frost as saying that he decided to ruJp the prulden-
tY ooly after Alabama Gov. Georee Wallace nluaed to use bi. 1n-
ltuence to help rally con1reulonal support tor the belequered presi-
dent.
Nixon 1ald his decision to re-sicn wu made two weeks before
he stepped down Au1. 9, 1974 and
came after Wallace reruied his
request to intercede with Rep.
Walter P1owera to vote a1alnst
impeachment In the Houae
J udlclary Committee.
THE GOVE&Noa·s office
Thursday confirmed the Nixon
telephone call on July 23, 1974
and said Wallace told the presi
dent it would be "Improper" for
him to approach the Alabama
Democratic con1reuman.
Flowen was with tho m-,Jorlty
when the committee voted for impeachment.
Nixon said his chief of atafr.
Gen. Alexander Halg, "had been
in the room aa I wu talking (to
Wallace). And I said and he re
calls this very vividly, I said
·well, Al, there goea the pre-
sidency'."
THE 320-PAGE book, a copy
of which The Associated Preas
Fi:ve-day Siege
obtained ln advance of the
scheduled Monday releuo by
William Morrow " Co .•
'Jeacrtbea the event.a leadlni up
to and includin& the 29 boun of
Interviews Frost conducted for
five TV procrams.
A 1euetary at Nixon's San
Clemente estate aald Thursday
that U. waa not immediately
known 11 the former president
would comment on the book.
AMONG OTBEa thines. ''l
Gave Them a Sword" discloees
some or tbe details or Frwt's
neeotiatiOD.9, gives Nixon's ex·
planatlon for preaervlnc the
Water1ate tapes and explores
hla willingness to renew the
Vietnam War if the North Viet-
namese broke the peace accord.
Frost sald he paid Nlxo.._
$600,000 plus 20 percent ol wi-
s peclfled profits tor the ex-
clusive interviews. That could
easily have amounted to more
than $1 million for the former president.
Gunman Gives Up,
Releases Hostages
OAK LAKE, Manitoba <AP> A gunman today freed two
hostages he had been holding since Monday and gave up peaceful· ly to pollce
The gunman, 1denllfled by police as Donald Archer, 4.2, of
British Columbia, had been holed up in the two-story home and of·
fice of Or. Markus Scherz.
He released Scherz late Wednesday, and today freed Scherz'
wife Stephanie, and Dave Penny, a 4l·year-old farmer
The gunman had been demandln1 $100,000 and a plane to take
him, his hospitalized wife and a hostage to a neutral country and
guarantees that he would not be deported or extradited.
Efnlpt, l•roel to ~·~ TaU,.1
-NEW YORK (A<> Carter admln15tration officials aay E1ypt
and Israel are close to an al?"eement on principles for an overall MideaetpeacuettJement, ac-. · · ~ltotbeNewYorkTtmea. ( J
The newspaper, tn a re /N SHORT port from Was hington i~
today's editions. also quoted -_
officials as saying it is virtually certain that the defense mmisten fo~ the two countries will resume talks In Cairo next week. The
ministers wall try to determine whether further progress can be
m a~e on an ag~eemen~ to return the ::>mat t'en1nsuJa to Egyptian sov-ere11nty. theT1meaha1d.
GelM!ral Stri-Bit• Nk!ar.,,_
. MANAGUA, N~caragua (AP> -A general strike went into its
J1rth day t~ay amid opposition demands that President Anastuio
Somoza resign and aUtreotng resistance to his dictatorial regime.
The na~ional strike committee claimed the strike was 80 per:
cent effective Thursday and would 1et more support from busi·
nessmen and labor or1anlzatloru1 today. ·
The strike began Monday as a protest over the asaaulnatlon
Jan. 10 of Pedro Joaquin Chamorro, ppbllsher of the newspaper La
Prensa and a lon,Ume foe of the Sornoia dynaaty.
•-Beld tor Threat to Cartft'
' MIAMI CAP) -A former AUanta man ls beine l\eld on $200,000
bond arter threatenlna to klll Prealdent Carter !or not keepln1 his
campaien promise!, police said.
The man, identified as Leon Sttven1, 28, was arrested Wednea-•
day by police who reported hit threats to the Secret Service.
Stevena reportedly told police: "you're ,oin1 to see me on the six
o'cloek news becauae J'm to kill Ca_rter t I can't talk to bhn. The
president ia a dead man b-cauac I'm 1oln1 to blow the White
Houae off the map." .
. Storin Cripples Midwest
.........
.. . .. .
Striker• Strilc4?
Jim McCoy, of Valencia, Pa., standl l\ear his truck and
its load of coke. "It looked like a small army," McCoy
said of a group of about 6e striking coal miners who
forced him to dump hll load of coke in the middle of the
road Thursday. The coke, owned by Allegheny Ludlum·
Steel, was en route from Pittsburgh to Brackenridae, Pa.
Where to NOw?
Afuska Bank Heut Far Out
JUNEAU, Alaska <AP> -When news of the robbery at the N•·
tJonal Bank of Alaska spread, people couldn't believe lt. ''He's either
mcredlbly dumb or incredibly smart and knows some way to &et out
of thls town that I don't," aald Police Chief James Barkley.
. Surrotmded by water and &Iaclal mountaina, Alaska 'a capital city 1s an old gold·mlnlng town of
17,000 residents with about so miles of roads none of which and left the bank on foot, the Jeads anywhere'. FBI said. Bank officials and the
THE ONLY WAY FBI refused to say how much out of money was taken. Juneau ts by boat or by air on
one of the aht commercial ru1bta departina dally.
"A bank robbery? In Juneau,
Alaska? You sotta be klddin1
me," saJd a young man standing
on a street corner opposite the
bank.
THE ROBBERY occurred
about 2 p.m. Thursday, the FBI
said, when a middle·aaed man
armed with a revolver gave a
bank teller a handwrttt.en note
demanding her money.
He stuffed the money tnto a
paper bat, retrieved bis note
Maddox Tests Doe
ATLANTA (AP) -Fonner
Georgia Gov. Lester Maddox la
scheduled to under10 further
hospital tests Sunday. his son
said He entered a Marietta
hospital on Wednesday for a
routine checkup following the
severe heart attack he suffered
last September.
• 0"EXEL •
FBI AGENT Charles Dullnaky described the robber aa a white
man about 5·feet-10 and 160
pounds with a pockmarked,
heavily lined face. He waa wear·
ing a red and blue wool hat and
a heavy sreen parka with a fur
collar.
Bank officials were so shaken by the robbery that they cloaed
the bank early and refUJed to
make aay public at•tements. Wben oae irate cUitO er
manded to know the bant
mana1u's name, the tell r at the drive-in window efused to
give It out and nld, "I Just can't
say anything about anYf.ltin1."
The only other known bank
robbery in Jun, u history ..-as ln 1932 when a robber pomted a
pistol at a local bank teller and
told her to "dlsb lt out," then
left the bank with $3,000. He was
shot on the sidewalk in a piltol
duel with the bank cashler.
.
NATION I WORLD
WA HJNOTON <AP)
DefenH Secretary Harold
Brown wanta tbo Navy to con·
alder l~'"I th• role fl its
aircraft camera 1n posalbte con-
ventlo al wars, a IOW'Ce within the military qya.
The IOU.tee, wbo declined to be
ldentlned. aald the new Navy
role ia outllned ill the second
draft of Bnnm'1 CooaoUdated
G uldanee document for fiscal
1171. Tb at document becaa
elrculatinf amon1 the Army.
Navy and Air Force earlier tbb
month with eo1nment1 1ou1bt
from Neb branch on bud&et.ary
and plannlng mauen.
TBE 80UaCB said the plan
would call for aircraft carriers
to be pulled badt from possible
major eontlict areu an~ would
llmlt. lot' example, any Navy
Ylalon ot landlna troops in the
Soviet Union or provldln& planes
for air atrtket on the Soviet
mainland. · •
Jnateild, the earrlere would be
called to l)N!lCif1c minor contllcts
and to Proteellni crucial aea routes and bales.
THE PU&POSE ot the pro-
posals la to limit the need for the
•xpenaln carriers. Jenine
rnoro monoy for other defense
proJecll.
"But if any of these con-
clusions (about the use of car-
riert) IN valid, they must be
baaed upon valid assumetfons <about the need for the ships), ..
tbe source aald.
"Some of the people on his
(Browu'a) at&ff have floated
around Wasblnito11 for a loo1 time advocatlnl aucb theories
and now they have a Job and are
nry aerloua about their point of
view. Whether Brown ls, I don't
know," the source added.
Reds Miss
Saucer Pad
ST. PAUL. Alberta CAP)
-Insurance salesman J.
J . ParklNOn ls disappoint·
ed that the nuclear-
powered satellite that dis·
lnteJrated over Canada
mlued this nortbeul town.
It ta tho alte of tile
world'• ft.rtt llylnt saucer
landtn1 pad btdlt as rf, cen-
tennial project in 19e7.
"Hell. they ml.ssed Ui
pad by a aood 430 mllea."
quipped :Parkinson. Jfe
1u11est~ that next tlme
the Soviet.a need the pad,
they live St. Paul '8 hours
tYacuaUon notice.
0 i c < s
•
·winter Sale
Continues
CD "' g
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•
Featuring such famous lines as
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Stanton Gooper to name but a few
•
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Sample comparisons of
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S749.
729.
799,
839.
799.
828 ....
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Victim's Burglary
Record Reported
OAKLAND <AP> -Police aay the)' are eearcblnl for a moUve ln a
btple 1laytni whose .tcUms include a mu law enforcement IOW'cel
Hld bad a burtlary record and wu "f aJrly active In narcotics.''
Oakland poUce would not ••Y Tbanday wbat leada they bad tn the
•tabbing deaths of a rus and book importer. b1I wit• and b111ltter ln
their posh $150,000 home over·
lookine San Francisco Bay. found fully clothed tn the
bloodied recreaUon room of the,
two atoty home. Ra1uaa lylne
face down on the floor and bl.a
wife seated in a chair, her head bent back. ·~-.. T!US OF FIRING
But law enforcement sources
'Who asked not be to named told
the Associated Press that the importer, Francis Anthony
Ra1uaa, 30, wu arrested for
bur1Iarte1 in 1987 in New York
and 1973 In Oakland. The dLs·
potltion ot those arrests waa not known.
Racma'• alater wu found lY·
tn1 naked on her back on the floor of a nearby bed.room. In·
dJeatioos were that the YoUDC
woman, who was visltine the
couple, had not been sexually
molested, la.id chief deputy cor·
oner Roland Prahl.
Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jt.
THE souaCES also aaid
Jtacuaa appeared to have used
several aliases and was known
to have been "fairly active in
narcotics." They did not
elaborate.
Raiuu, his wire, Jennifer
Ann, 24, and his sister, Marianne
Jane, 21, were found stabbed to
deatb Wednesday afternoon
after Rqusa failed to pick up
his I-rear-old SOD at a private
achoo in Berkt'ley where be bad
been dropped off that morning.
Mre. Rai\laa was the dauibter
of FeUx Stumpf of Reno, Nev ..
whom police said was head of
the National Council of Jud1es.
POLICE SAID Thur11day an
interview with th~ young boy,
who ts Ragusa's son by a pre
vtous marriage, gave them
some clues, but they would not
elaborate.
Raeusa and his wife were
PRAHL WOULD NOT aay
how many times the vlctlm1 had
been stabbed, but one police of.
ficer described the attack.a aa
.. furious."
Homicide detective Set.
Alfred Severino •aid it WU poa.
1lble the victims knew their
m urdereror murderers.
The Ragusa home, which the
couple bad rented since the sum-
mer ot WT6, had burclar alarms
on all windows, double lock.a on
the front door and two German
shepherd watchdoea.
ITS EXPENSIVE Oriental
rugs and rare tapestries and an
elaborate stereo system were,
left untouched, police said, and
apparently nothin& was taken.
HEALTH SECRETARY
Marto Obledo
Fans Mourn Rock Figure
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -More than 400 friends
and fans -including Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr.
-have bade farewell to Terry Kath, lead guitarist
oC the rock group Cblca10 who died this week from
a self.inflicted eunshot
wound. --------
The strains of a Kath ( J vo• from the group's STATE' ·
latest album filled the '---------mortuary chapel Thurs-
has pleaded ~to tidnapplq an ll·1MN>ld
Burlineame boJ but bis attom.y, callln• Ma client
''a nice guy," ii Mekint a lenient aentace.
Scott J. Tlmmonds, wbo ii free on 125,000
bond, entered tho plea Thursday before San Mateo
County Superior Court Judie Thomas Jenldna, 1
who scheduled sentencing far March lS. Tim·
monda and a friend, John Reiser, 17, were char1ed.
with klmi:f:!::. Niels Le1aJJet, the son of a Bur-. line a me b man. day as tearful mourners heard the musician
eulogized. Jlape lAlfe Bqs ... If ... AppN I •I Kath, 31 died Monday night after potnttnc a
loaded piatol at b1a bead and pulline the trl11er. SACRAllENTO <AP> -An 11'12 npe la• Cllrat
The blaat killed him instantly. nnlice sald. threw out a 11-yeaP-old'a ftP9c:oavictlolllut1Ml'
r WOUld be 8CnR*l ader & "11 p&IHIS ~ tbe » Sauaellejeet.'i'fl#•IU semb~. , ·
SACRAMENTO / • P) - A bill -arded .._ Tbe 11711.aw ~::=r....,.ldlca of a mdh ~ • -ur under 14 NQubw pl"OQf -Mi tall aome lawmalcen u a dart bone aolution to the the YS•'9 ttatlmaay ,_ tla& 11ie wu plQ 11 D:J Lestalature:. dead.Jock oa property tu rellel bu capabl8 ~ eamm1ttlnC rape. been rejected by Ute S-ete. but supporters hope
to re,;~:e !eaaure, SB 1, by Sen. Peter Behr. R· Cmi .... Uf• A• •Di~.., ...
Marin County. would provide much ol itl r.u.t by LOS ANGELES (AP) -TeM'iillba t' r n
nlsioc the homeowne.r's property tax uemptiod here and In San Franclaco have tumed down an
to 72 percent of assessed value on the first $200.000 advertlsm, blitz by Atsemblymm Ken Maddy.
or a home's value. who had hoped to buy lar1e amounw ol air time to
-pLa:L GtlW• .. JCl.6--get more vat« recopJUon in his bld for the ~OP .1J11Ga ..,.... -r pbernatorial nomtnatlon, a eampaJan olfidal
REDWOOD CITY CAP> -A :tt.1ear-old man 'said.
ftlorist Sfeciall
I Gather up a nrietj of
Indoor Plants including:
SCHEFFLER.A, PRAYER PLANT,
MARBLEQUEEN,POTH~1 _!1ABY
TEARS, ~r D~AENA.
In 4." Pot
~. $2.49 to $8.49 . . 99~.a. .. Thna Ian: 81.
:INuneiz Specia~
J:DJ-w ~l®aed haiVeat
tCOMBINATION Fmlt Tree
NBCTABINB l'LAMI KIST
PEACH JtED HAVEN (free.tone)
SANTA RO If. PLUM
~llooone~!
~ .
SACRAMENTO <AP> -Gov.
Edmund Brown ~r. denia firin1
Josette Mondanaro because he
feared her lesbian Uleatyle
ml1bt bwt him poUUcallY,
Ht lnslrts lt wu G:aly because
of a aexualb' explicit letter lbs
wrote on 1taf.e atatJonery.
"l aaw Jangua1e qtat la abock· me •••• I feel ~ letter falls
aubstanUall.Y belOw Ule htvel of propriety that the peopJe have a
rt1ht to expect " Brown told a
State PenOMel Board heartni
officer at a special ae11ton
Tburaday night In hla ottlce.
Heartni attteer .Jam• Waller .Ued the covernor Jt it wu a
eenatderatlon that Dr. Mon·
daoaro mlOt be a •1pol1Ucal .
liabWty0 beCatJle ot tM letter
aacl her •1l1feiit1Je.•• an otmous
1'eferenee to the former Rate
dra1 abuM dlrect0r'1 oatlpoQn
lesbianism.
··No, rr WASN'T. Thia letter
in and ol itself wu the reaaon
for her dismllsal. Ablaent tbia
letter, she would be •orklnl for
state covernment. today." Brown replied.
The »minute 1ea1loa, with
only Brown. Waller, Deputy At.
torney Gmeral Alltboa.Y DaV110 ad two news Mnice reponer. pNSent. came after foar d81'I ol
public te1ttmonJ before Waller.
That tesUmony waa tebedWed to
contlDue today,
. DAILY PILOT .45
Da. 0 ANA o, a U·year-Brown f her leabia am old phyllctan, la appealln1 her" Wbuld hurt his r.electlOA eam-
diamlsaal last October u deputy pai1n. She also baa accused
director ol the Health Depart-Health and W lfare ~
ment'• Sub1tanc Abuae .Mar;lc>Obledootaeetdn1her ,.
Dlvl1lon;. mtual because ahO retusecl to
Dr. Mcmdanaro'1 leUer. writ· hlre Obledo's friend Henty
ten last June to a New \'orlt Collini.
lawyer-pbyalclan, used several TESTIFYING IN PU11UC
profanltlee.and vivld aexual im· Thune!~, Obledo admitted ask·
a1ea to convey her an1er with a Ins Health Department olftdallJ
magadne writer who advocated to consider Colllnl, but dealecl
more research before laws ban· ordertoc the hlrin1. But Health. •
nln1 child porno1rapby are Director Jerome Lackner aft&ri-
passed. ly countered that be was. ln·
She bas claimed the letter was deed, told to find a Job for
merely an ocuae to fire her and Collin• in h1a department.
Spirits Lifted
Margarita Official Drink
SAN DIEGO CAP -Tben'a the 0 Slniapore SUq0 and the
''Manhattan." Now a blend ol blue curacao and teqWJa makea
the ··san Dleeo Mar1artta."
The concoction wu the re1ult of the hotly eontestecl San
Dieeo Drink Con*t apomored by the Convention and Vlatton
Bureau. Tbe winner wu·declded Thursday Dllht. •
"O'l'llEa CJTIE8 BA VE their drlnb... said Dr. Al An··
denon, b:nmedlat. paat preaident of the bureau and otle ot tbo
four Jud&ea. 0 We felt San Dlqo should, too.••
Tbe 1S IUl'Ytwora out ot • arlllnal entranta bad a driQ.olr wlth • spat CIG tDe 'Toda," lbow CID NBC te1.evtaSoQ at stat ..
TBE WINNER. DON WJLDU. a 15-.)'ea.Mld Saa~ barteodw, •DI the TV eameraa botbered him a blt an4 6e
dJdn't evm name hla blad until tbe lut IDJnute.
I
Affention!
·Ladies •
and
Gentlemen
,
Orange Coast Daily Pilot
Whitewash Effort
tan~t Erase Stain .
Sworn affidavits and an official "clearance" by the
iU.S. Department of Justice cannot remove the extremely ,
unsavory aroma of the Carter Administration's dismissal
'of U.S. District Atty. David W. Marston in Philadelphia.
In fact, dragging the Justice Department into the
whitewash operation only made the whole charade look
worse.
During his campaign, Carter pledged that all
appointments of federal judges and prosecutors would be
made on the basis of merit, rather than party affiliation.
Even so, it would not have been too surprising if
Republican Marston had, in due course, been replaced by
a qualified Democrat. That's the way things go
• But when Marswn was kicked out in the middle of an
investigation into corruption in Philadelphia -involving,
among others, Democratic Congressmen Joshua Eilberg
and Daniel Flood -the administration didn't even have a
suitable replacement in mind.
In fact, as an afterthought, Atty. Gen. Griffin B. Bell
asked him to stay on until someone could be found.
Marston understandably refused and tendered his
resignation.
Carter's admission that Eilberg had phoned him to
ask that Marston's removal be expedited and that he had
told Bell to take care of the matter hinted at some very
ugly machinations. Partic~larly since Carter had earlier
stoutly denied any contact on the matter.
So Bell set the Justice Department off on an
''official" investigation of circumstances surroundine the
dismissal.
On the basis or sworn affidavits from both Carter and
Bell, attestmg that they did not know Eilberg was under
investigation when he sought to speed up the Philadephia
atto1 ncy's ouster, the Justice Department has cleared
them of any !-;USpicion of wrongdoing.
That's nice. But it is totally and utterly untrue.
:\ow the dark shadow of partisan manipulation looms
over the Justice Department as well as the president, the
attorney general and a finagling congressman. And
another campaign pledge goes down the dr~in.
Ballot Protected
It's encouraging to learn that the state Supreme
Court in Michigan has upheld the secret ballot right of a
21-ycar-old prelaw student.
Followin~ a disputed mayoral election in Ann Arbor,
Susan Van Jlattum was ordered by the Court o( Appeals
to n•v(•al which of two candidates she had voted for.
Tht• election was lost by one vote, but 23 of the votes
had been cust by people who had mistakenly registered
as Ann Arbor residents, including University of Michigan
student Van Hattum.
The loser felt the election result might be overturned
if it could be proved the deciding vote had been illegally
cast
When Miss Van Hattum insisted on her right to a
secret ballot, she was held in cont.empt by a lower court
trying to determine the outcome of the election. Her
appeal was rejected.
But the Supreme Court, f'mding there had been no
evidence of intentional fraud, has reversed the contempt ruhng
Now the lower court must find another way to settle
the election dispute. But the student's willingness to risk
a jail sentence to protect the secrecy of her vote has
confirmed a far more significant constitutional right.
UCiinSpace
A student from UC Irvine will have the rare honor of
having his personal scientific experiment go into orbit ln
space when the space shuttle Enterprise takes off in 1981.
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration
<NASA> will rent cargo space on each of the initial 11
flights or the Enterprise to outside agencies.
So the Orange County chapter of the American
Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics plans to chip in
$10,000 for five cubic feet of space to house UCI's Project
Enterprise, whatever it turns out to be. '
All students at the lrVine campus are-eligible to
propose experiments for the space journey and one
proposal will become the university's official contribution
to the space shuttle's load.
Another feather in iUCI's scientific cap.
• Opinions expreseed In the apace above are thOff of the Dally Piiot.
Other Views eJCpressed on this page re those of their authors and
artl1ta. Reader comment la Invited. Addreas The Dally Piiot, P.O. .eo-.. 1560, Costa Me CA 82828. PtiOne (71 '4) 642"""321.
Boyd I Ditties
ByLM.BOYD
It's widely known there
once was a popular 1001 en-
tl U e d "Who Threw the
Overalls In Mlatreu
urphy'1 Chowder?,. Lesa
ell remembered, thou1h.
re tbese otb r d!ttiea or
y steryear: ·•someon
ot ed tho Punch at Una's
'.I. ddlng," "Wheat Ban oa
lns Are F4llln1. I'll Come
SUdlnl B ck To You" and
D
01ny
, ...
•
Rot.rt H. W /Publl,htr Thomts K vii/Editor
Fri~. January v; 1111 Barbera KNlbkbl
U.S. ~ Global Enmionme:nt Cop
WASHIN9TON -An angry
counteratt clc atainst federal
envlronm tAHstl is now beln1 quietly plannUd by cabinet-level
departmenta, Jed by the Stato
Department, with tndlcatlons of
aupport ln the White Houae
Jtaelf.
The counteract.ct seems cer·
tain to modify drastically aDd
could kill
alto1etber '
new reaula·
tions pro-
pcMJed by th•
CouDcil for
Envirorunen·
tal Quallty
<CEQ) that
would make
Uncle Sam .
the environ-
mental policeman o! the world
-particularly policing nuclear
reactors. "Outraceous," one
State Department official told
us. "Tbeae regulations would
impose American environmen·
tal standards on all our foreign
friends and they would end up
hatine us."
This places President Carter
in a peculiar dilemma. While
crusading against nuclear pro-
liferation and environmental
Charles McCabe
pollution, h is bound as P I·
dent by tho _pr clicalJUea Of in·
ternatlonal ·ur . A• 1uch. ho
seems forced to disap~nt hi
environmental constituency.
THE ROP08ED reiulaU
· re dr wn secretly by CEQ planner with apparent help
from th Natural Reaources
Dcfcn e CoUncil CNRDC>, an en. vlronmentallst private action
croup. They would in erteet re-
quire standard environmental
impact statemcota (to be called
"aaasessmentt" in the foreign
field> for all :sported material
or technole>BY &0ld abroad with
some help -export licen or
loan 1uarantees -from the U.S.
covemment.
The real taraet may be
nuclear reactors, a prospect thllt
has infuriated the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission (NRC>.
At a closed-door meetin1 called
by CEQ Jan, 6, NRC u1t1tant
eeneral counsel Carlton Stoiber
said there la "no legal Juatlfica·
lion" !or imposin& U.S. environ·
mental standards abroad.
That brought objections from
CEQ chairman Charles Warren
and member Gus Speth, who
showed reluctance even to dis·
cuss lecal justirlcation. But
AT LEAST aa upset as NRC
and Ute State Department was
Export·lmport Bank pretident John Moore, who warn.ti the
Jan. 6 meet.1n1 that the proposed
re1utatlon1 would benefit
Japanese and West German ex·
porters at the expense ot this
country. The reason: endless de·
lays and lawsuits aaalnat U.S.
export$ on often spacious en·
vironmenlal crounds would tum
impatient foreign buyers away
from the U.S.
Moore, a former Atlanta
lawyer close to Mr. Carter.
stron&IY urged White House
domestic policy chief Stuart
Elzenatat to attend the Jan. 6
aesaion at CEQ. Eizeoatat
stayed long enoush to ask three
questions: What ia the cost to
the federal eovemment of the
proposed reculatlons? What is
their legal jwstificatlon? 'I'o what
extent would they impose
American standards on foreian
governments?
Speth, who took the leading
role f Of'. CEQ in the crimonJous
debate, ff•vo unlatormaUon and
"fud1ed' MSwera~ accordin1 to
one partlclpant. Eli natal left
the meeUnc before it ended, b\lt
those in position to know aay he
was un.lmprestecl wlth CEQ'a ra.
tlonale a.nd bu stronc reserva·
tiona about CEQ't ambition to be
top cop for cl.f>bal environment.
SPKnt -AS legal counsel for
the eovironmentallat NRDC
before .Mr. Carter put bim on the CEQ. Last year the NRDC
broucht suit against the Ex·lm
Bank to reqwre it to mee& CEQ's
domestic atandards in all its
foreign lending ~rations.
That suit, while not directly
related to CEQ's proposed new regulations, helps to explain
why Moore and the Ex·Im Bank
are so disturbed. The banlc bas
provided more than $20 bilUM ln
loans and euarantees for U.S.
exports since mld-1974, much of
tt for nuclear and conventional
power f aclllties and offshore oil
drilling. NRDC claims these
have direct impact on the en·
vlronment. . .
If Ex-Im Bank either loses the
NRDC suit <now in U.S. district
court here> or ls forced to comp-
ly with the proposed CEQ reg
ulations, billlon& of dollars'
worth or exports of U.S. prod·
ucts in the future could 10
down the drain. Foreign buyers
would be forced to wait out end·
less environmental invesli1a·
lions. fllinc or impact &tat,e.
ments and predictable harass-
ment of court actions btoulht by
well-meanina environmentaliat
1roup1.
ADD TO that da11ger the
equally predictable fury of
foreian buyers and aovernments
subjected to U.S. environmental
lnvesttgaUons on their own soil
and the awesome dimension of
CEQ's ambitions comea into
focus. But the CEQ has almost cer·
tainly overreached itself.
Represcnune an activist consti·
luency that takes a highly
neeatlve view of extendin& U.S.
mllltary aod political power
around the globe. it now wants
to blanket the worlcl with U .s.
environmental power. And that
is an unwanted extension of
Potomaa power which Jhmny •
Carter, arderit ~nmeatallst tboulh be ~ 1$ hams trouble • · accepu.n,.
Science Finds Love Is Good for Health
Center. Gennum eome up with
wondedull,y prepoaterous aames
lot. 1ome ol their ln1Ututlons:
but come to thlnk, 10 do we, u
in Transcendental Meditation,
!or keepin8 your mouth shut.
The Osculatory Research
Center has found that "87 per-
cent Of top business execUUves
tnterVlewed ld11 their wi\'es
every mominf." The Center
also disclosed that of 100 ex·
ecutlvcs whose careers were
slippm., st never kissed their
wivoa, and 32 seldom bothered.
1rea11 Pole wtio hate tbelr wives
with a pusloru And I know tota1
!allures wboH low, for and de-
pendency on their wlvea Is
patheUc. And~ than one of
each cateJOl'1, I may add.
But there li a Mrloul llde to
thia. The affedlona can truly af·
feet the health. Lack of Jove can
turn an OC"Clia&r7 •penoo into a
zomble. It can. and·bas, resulted
lb death. Tbls b no frivolous
1tatemem.
A CENTVllY a10. more than
half the chlldi'en bcirn In the
Engll1h·speaktn1 world died
·within tbe.lr ftnl year. These
bable1 died Of a disease called
~. from the Gr word
meanln1 "Walitl11a awa1."' The dlHue was alao known u inf an·
tile atrophy or debiUty.
"When intenislv• studlu were
undertaken tO track do.rn its
cauae," 1aya the anthropolo,Ut
Alhley Mooia,u, ''the discovery
was made that babies In lb best
homes and hoSpltAla were moat
often it.a vlcUmt, l>abios who
were appo nt.17 recelvln1 thQ
beat and moet cartful phySical
attention. While ba
pooreat hom with a ac:iOd
mother, cleaplte the Jack of
1'Y1lealc pby1lcal conditions, ott•n. cwercame the ph71ic&l
handicaps and flourilbed.
''What was wantln1 in tile
sterilized enVlronment of the
babln of the flnt class and wu
1enerally supplied tn babtes ot
the second claaa was mot.her
love."
TBOSE WERE tho daye when.
bablea were turned over to nan-
nies early as pc)salble. AU we
hear about these days were the
wonderful nannies. lncludlns
Churchill'• Mra. Everest. There
were also holy terrors. who
eame to the famiJY armed witb
the finest credeaUall. Many ct
them were loveless. or clOle to.
The boys and &iris who aur-
vived these monsters bee.mo
•Ory toup bOMbriil lilaeed -
admtral1 and eonfidenco 111en. Prime Ministers and plent~
tlarles. But they couldn't :11ve
love either, because they haCf not
been taut}it what it wu. 11\e
evidence, far too often, wu ln
their ions and daughters who led
ctiaoUc lives. These kids O.D. 'd
on a lot of thiqa. but Dot on
love.
-
Orange Coast Daily Pilot
Whitewash Effort
tan't Erase Stain
Sworn affidavits and an official "clearance" by the
U.S. Department of Justice cannot remove the extremely
uns avory aroma of the Carter Administntion'a dismissal
of U.S. District Atty. David W. Marston in Philadelphia.
In fact, dragging the Justice Department into the
whitewash operation only made the whole charade look
worse.
During his campaign, Carter pledged that all
app-0intments of federal judges and prosecutors would be
made on the basis of merit, rather than party affiliation.
Even so, it would not have been too surprialng if
Republican Marston had, in due course, been replaced by
a qualified Democrat. That's the way things go.
But when Marston was kicked out in the middle of an
investigation into corruption in Philadelphia -involving,
among others, Democratic Congressmen Joshua Eilberg
and Daniel Flood -the administration didn't even have a
suitable replacement in mind.
In fact, as an afterthought, Atty. Gen. Griffin B. Bell
asked him to stay on until someone could be found.
Marston understandably refused and tendered his
resignation
Carter's admission that Eilberg had phoned him to
ask that Marston's removal be expedited and that he had
told Bell to take care of the matter hinted at some very
ugly machinations. Particl,\larly since Carter had earlier
stoutly denied any contact on the matter.
So Bell set the Justice Department off on an
"official" mvesligation of circumstances surrounding the
dismissal
On the basis of sworn affidavits from both Carter and
Bell, attesting thut they did not know Eilberg was under
investigation when he sought to speed up the Phlladephla
attor ncy's ouster, the Justice Department has cleared
them of any suspicion of wrongdoing.
That's nice. But it is totally and utterly untrue
Now the dark shadow of partisan manipulation looms
over the Justice Department as well as the president. the
attorney general and a finagling congressman. And
another campaign pledge goes down the dr~in.
Ballot Protected
It's encouraging to learn that the state Supreme
Court m Michigan has upheld the secret ballot right of a
21-ycar-old prelaw student.
Following a disputed mayoral election in Ann Arbor.
SusCJn Van Hallum was ordered by the Court o( Appeals
to reveal which of two candidates she had voted for
Tht.• election was lost by one vote, but 23 of the votes
had been cast by people who had mistakenly registered
as Ann Arbor residents, including University of Michigan
student Van Hattum.
The loser felt the election result might be overturned
if it could be proved the deciding vote had been illegally
cast
When Miss Van Hattum insisted on her right to a
secret ballot, she was held in contempt by a lower court
trying to determine the outcome of .the election. Her
appeal was rejected.
But the Supreme Court, f'mcling there bad been no
evidence of intentional fraud, has reversed the contempt
ruling
Now the lower court must find another way to settle
the election dispute. But the student's willingness to risk
a jail sentence to protect the secrecy of her vote has
confirmed a far more significant constitutional right.
UCiinSpace
A student from UC Irvine will have the rare honor of
having his personal scientific experh:nent go into orbit in
space when the space shuttle Enterprise takes off 1n 1981.
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration
CN ASA) will rent cargo apace on each of the initial 11
flights of the Enterprise to outside agencies.
So the Orange County chapter of the American
Institute of Aeronautics and Astroriautlcs plans to chip 1il
$10,000 for five cubic feet of space to house UCI's Project
Enterprise, whatever it turns out to be.
All &ludents at the Irvine campus are-eligible to
propose experiments for the space Journey and one
proposal will become the uni\'ersity's official contribution
to the space shuttle's load.
Another feather in UCrs scientific cap.
• Opinion• expressed In the apace above are thoee of the Dally Piiot.
Other views exprHsed on thll page art thoM of their authora and
81114ts. Reader comment la Invited. Addre11 The Dally P-llot, P.O.
.eo~ 1560, Costa M CA 92628. PtiOne (714) 642"'4321.
Boy,d I Ditties·
ByLM.BOYD
It '1 widely known ther.
onco wu • popul•r ·~•en· titled "Who Threw the
Overalls ln Mh\reu
urphy'a Chowdert" Le5a
w ll remembered, thouah.
r tbcao other dltLlea of
y ateryear : ••someon
lted th Punch t Lena~
ddln1." "When Banana ma Arc Falllne. I'll Como
Sltdlnc ck To You" and
•
Robert N. W /PubllSher
U.S. as Global Enlilionment Cop
WASWNGTON -An angry
counterattack acatnst federal
environmentalists itt now beln1
quietly pJannOd by cablnet·level
departments, ll'd by the State
Department, with indlcatlons of
support tn the White House
itaelf.
Tho countenttack seems cer·
tain to modify drastically end
could kill
1lto1ether
new reaula-
tlona pro·
posed by the
Council for
Environmen-
tal Quality
(CEQ) that
would make
Uncle Sam .
the environ·
mental pollceman of the world
-particularly policing nuclear
reactors. "Outraeeous, •' one
State Department official told
us. "Thue reaulationa would
impose American environmen-
tal standards on all our foreign
friends and they would end up
halln& ua."
This places President Carter
in a peculiar dUemma. While
crusading against nuclear pro-
llf eration and environmental
,,
Charles McCabe
pollution, he i bound as PreSl· dent by tho practlc llti Of in·
ternatlonal life. As such, h
seems forced to dlaappOfnt hll
environmental constituency.
THE PROPOSED re1ulaUon
were drawn secretly by CEQ
planners with appar~nt help
from the Natural Resources
Defense Councll (NRDC). an en·
vlronmentallat private action
group. '8tey would in effect re-
quire -standard environmental
impact statementa (to be called
"assaessmcnta•• in the foretp
field) for all exported material
or technolQIY sold abroad with
some help -export licenses or
loan auarantecs -from the U.S.
1ovemment.
The real tar1et may be
nuclear reactors, a prospect that
has infuriated the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission <NRC).
At a cloaed·door rbeetlni called by CEQ Jan. 8, NRC aaslitant
general counsel Carlton Stoiber
said there lA "no legal justifica-
tion" for imposinl U.S. environ-
mental standards abroad.
That brou1ht objections from
CEQ chairman Charles Warren
and member Gua Speth, who
showed reluctance even to dis-
cuss legal justification. But
AT tFAST as up et as NRC
and the State Department was
Export·Impc>rt Bank presid nt
John Moore, who warned t.he
Jan. 6 mtetina that th propq$ed
regulations would benefit
Japane5e and West German ex·
porters at the ex~os of this
country. The reason: en<U~a d ·
Jays and lawsuits aaalnst U.S.
exporta on often pacious e.n ·
vironmental crounds would turn
impatient foreign buyers away
from the U.S.
Moore, a former Atlanta
lawyer close to Mr. Carter,
strongly uraed Whlle House
domestic policy chief Stuart
Elzenatat to attend the Jan. 6
seaaion at CEQ. Eiaenatat
stayed long enoush to uk three
questions: What ls the cost to
the federal 1overnment of the
proposed reeuiatlons? What is
their legal jusUficaUon? 'ro what
extent would they Impose
American standards on foreign
governments?
Speth, who took the leading
role fo~ CEQ Jn the acrlmonJous
d bate, aave uruntormatlon and
"fudaed" ~wers. ac~rdw to one participant. EJzenstat I~
tho m tin1 before it ende<l, but
those in poaition to know say he
was unlmpru ed with Cf:Q'a ra-
Uonale and has atrong reserva-
tions about CEQ'a ambition to be
top cop for 1~obal environment.
• PE'nl 1AS legal counsel for
the envlronmentallat. NRDC
before Mr. Carter put blm on the
CEQ. Last year the NRDC
broueht suit against the Ex-Im
Bank to require it to meet CEQ's
domestic atandards in all its
foreign lendinl operations.
That suit, whUe not directly
related to CEQ's proposed new
regulations, helps to explain
why Moore and the Ex-Im BanJc
are so disturbed. The bank has
provided more than $20 bllUon in
Joana and suarantees for U.S.
exports since mid-197•, much of
it for nuclear and conventional
power facillties and offshore oil
drilling. NRDC claims these
have direct impact on the en.
vlronment.
If Ex-tm Banlt either loses the
NRDC suit (now in U.S. district
court here) or is forced to comp-
ly with the proposed CEQ reg-
ulations. billlons of dollars'
worth of exports of U.S. prod·
ucta in tbe future could co
down the drain. Foreign buyers
would be forced to wait out end-
less environmental investiga-
tions, filing of impact atate-
mentl and predictable harass-
ment of court actions broo&ht by
well-meanina environmentaliat
croups.
ADD TO that danger the
equally predictable fury of
forel&n buyers and governments
subjected to U.S. environmental
inve&tlgations on their own soil
nnd the awesome dimension of
CEQ's ambitions comes into
focus But the CEQ has almost cer·
tainly overreached itself.
Representing an activist consll·
tuency that takes a highly
ne,ative view of extendin& U.S.
milltary and political Power
around the globe, it now wants
to blanket the world with U.S.
environmental power. And that
is an Ullwanted extension ot
Potomac power •hich Jimmy
Carter, ardent ~nmentallst
thoUfb be ts, ls bavtDc trOubJe •
aceeptblf.
Science Finds Love Is Good for Health
I've just read an account' or
one of tboee "scienWic" surveys
that so delllt)lt me. Surveys on
thln11 like; Do quick orgums
~urt YoUl' teeth? What perceo· t1ae of the people of the upper
Amaion believe in immortality?
Jtow JDany people are there in
the world?
Since nobo<ly knows the
answer to any of these ques-
tlons, pretty
much any
answer ii as
good aa tbe
next. Tb•
1ootler the
answer, the
more likely it
i. to aet. into print.
Thl• ooa J
Just r d
comes from West Germany.
Pun9(ent research by one Dr.
Albert Saabo, published tn
P.notlllba ma1Uine has abO\m
that people who start the day
wltb a Ida& .. enjoy better health,
llve longer, and earn more moQey."
It ia not 1urpriling that tbla bit
of NHatch was conducted at th
Kl l Oaculotory Re1earch
Center. Germans come up with
wonderfully prepostA!roua names tot. aome ot thelr lnatituUons;
but come to think, to do we as In Transcendental Medltailoft.
for keeplila your mouth lhul
The Oaculatory Research
Cent.er has found that "17 pel"-
cent of top buslDess execuUves
lnterVlewed klaa their Wi\tea
every mornlo1." The Center
also disclosed that or 100 ex-
ecutives whose careers were
slippini. 51 never kissed their
wives, and 32 seldom bothered.
THE aEASON, says Saabo. is
simple. "A buabaod wbo tiaaea
hlA wile begtns the day with a
positive atUtude. 'l'he ltbsed
husband's feellnc of harmony ta
reflec~lolopcally u well a1 men . However when a
man altipe hia mornlni kiss, ba'a
off to a ne11Uve start. He tends to be moody and dep eel. re·1
uninterested in hla work and lur· roundi~.··
~ne of this klnct of non-
sensical reHarch does •ny
harm. 'M 1 Hid, to questions Of
this kti1d ~'1W ean al•• a.tmc>lt
1ny kbld of 'M!wer. l know lads
t the top of th corpora
greuy pole who hate tbelr wives
with a pass~ And I know total
failures whoso 1oVe for and do-
pe.ndency on their wive• 11
patheUc. And~ than ono of each cate1oey, J ma.y add.
But there is a HnoUI de to
thll. The alfeetlonl can truly II·
feet tbe health. t.ck of love can
turn an ~·petlQn tnto a
zombie. It can. and hu, reaulted
lb Cleath. Thi.I la no frivolous
statement.
mother, decplte the Jack of
hyaleoic physical conditions~ oft.en overcame the physical
bandfeaps and flotlriabed.
•what was wantlDI In the
aterillzed enVJronment or the
blbiu ot the first clus and was
1cnerally aupplled in babies ot
the •~nd clus wu mother
love."
THOSE WERE the days when
babies were turned over to nan·
:nies a early u possible. All we
bear about these days were the
wonderful nannies, includlng
Cburcblll'a Mn. Everest. There
were also holy terrors, who
ume tO the family armed with
the finest credentials. Many oC
them were lovelesa. or cloee to.
The bo111 and Cirl• who sur·
vlved thcao monsters became very tOUgh tiOmbrils Indeed -
admlrala Ud eomidonce men.
Prime Mln and plonlpoten•
tiarles. BUl they couldn't live
lovo either, bCca they hacf not
been taulht hat lt waa. 'nte
evidence, tar toO often, was in
their sons and dau1bter1 who led
ctiaoUc lives. 'ntea kld O.D. 'ct
on a lot <>! thlni•. but not on Jon.
Booms··
Unexplainable
Phenomena?
JJ7Tbe Allocla&edPl'Cll
• MYaterioua atmoepheric explMlom have Jostlfld
the Eut Cout. They have baffied tbe public and the
1cienti1ta.
The window·ratWnc off.shore boom• •tarted
jn early Dec:.mber and have since resulted in
periodic rumbllnp heard and felt from Connec·
lieut to South Carolina.
THE POSSIBLE EXPLANATIONS HAVE
ranced from aircraft aonlc booms to 1u escapint
from ~raea aarbace dumps.
The mllitary aays it's not responsible. In fact,
all federal aaencles which conceivably could be in·
volved with the booms concluded that they are in·
noeent.
And the Defense
,---------..... Department com· ( J missioned the Naval SCIENCE Research Laboratory to ..., _______ ___,_ coordinate a further
federal study of the
phenomena and to report conclusions, if any, in March.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ASKED scientists
in several fields what caused the booms. Here, in part, are their responses.
Dr. Frank Pre11, a geologist who is President
Carter's science adviser:
"In my position, I can't speculate on them.
But I am following the situation closely. Not only
because l'm a scientist. but also offic1ally because
people are conrcrncd ubout them ·•
Dr. Georite Cre~11man, meteorologist director
of the National WNlher Service
''I don't have any information beyond whats
been in the newspapers some of which I believe
and some I don't believe. My first thought was that
something 1s going on that the military isn't telling
us about. But that's only speculation. I really have
a lot of other things to think about."
WlWam Dona, head of atmospheric sciences
at Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty
Geophysical Observatory in Palisades, N.Y.:
He concluded from measurements that
aircraft sonic booms were not responsible. He sug.
gested that secn•t government experiments might
be involved. This hus been denied.
Dr. Thomas Gold, dirertor of Cornell
University's Center for Rad1oph)sics and Space
Research.
The booms are caused by methane gas venting
from aacks in the earth's surface. Gold says
These tiant eas bubbles burped into the air could
ignite by static electricity or other means to pro·
duce the explosions Cornell researchers found
that every earthquake Is accompanied by these
au releases and in some cases preceded by them.
"We have evidence of hundreds of these
episodes occurring all over the earth and It's been
recorded for bundreda of years The eventa seem
more llkely to malce exploelve noises over water
than over land, where JW:ntnous displays seem
more common than over water.'·
Gold and others discounted a related theorJ
that the booms came Crom flammable gas general·
ed by water treatment sludge deposits and
garbage collecting on the ocean noor.
"Garbage can make methane but it can't
make it in big bubbles. The gas would dribble out a
little lt a lime ancl. large amounts have to be con·
tained under pressure lo cet enough for an ex·
plos1on"
Dr. Allan Bromley, professor or Physics at the
Yale University and aD omclal of the National
Academy or Sdences:
He discounted the 1arb11t ldea as "amusine."
"The most intereslln1 faet in all of this ls that
it is not new," Bromley said ... As far back u we
have recorded history in New England, we have
accounts of these booms off the coast. Tbis all sug-
gests very much that we are dealtnc with
phenomena that are natural in origin." -SpecialilSt.s with the U.S. Geoloeical Survey
aay the muffled booms are similar to those that
have been reported periodically in the past, often
u~related to recorded 1~lo1ical activity such aa
earthquakes.
James Devloe, head or the survey's earth·
quake studiea, says prior reports have come from'
the Finaer Lakes retion of New York, the
Midw8't, New En1tand, Florida, Australia and the
Mtddle East.
Dr. Al~• HJ1lek, the Northwestern University
Htronomer who heads the Center for UFO
Studie•: "There have been no re1>9.rted sl&hUnaa con·
nect6d with this since lt'a apparenuY a perfectly
n lural phenomenon that has been rePorttd for
centurl•."
Elvis Look-alike
Friday, Januory 27, 1978 DAILY PILOT 7
TV Cops Winged
SchOol Kids 'Review' Police Shows
CHICAGO <AP> -XoJalt rell on
"rubber band" scripts, Baretta ii as
unreallsUc a tale u Snow White, and
Stanky and Hutch ls popular. but
"reeks with violence."
These are aome cornmentl from
seventh tbrou1b 12th cradera ulced
to assume the role ol a TV critic and
write a 400-word review of a police or
detectlve program.
THE NATIONWIDE contest,
publlci.ied throuah a newsP.aper sup·
plement circulated primarily in rural
areas, ts the brainchild of Prtme
Time SchOol TV, a non·profit eroup
which wants to see popular television
pro1ram1 put to educational use.
The contest runs through Feb. 15
but Prime Time has released the beat
of what it said was representative
views of the 100 or so reviews it bu
received.
The pupils appeared most critical
of Kojak, while -despite one pupil
who expressed dislike for the
violence in Stank)' and Hutch -it
appears the most popular .
that aer1eant1, not captains, run
police ltaUons and that police o c
era would be man content plblila
card trick.I and drlnkinl beer than
solvin1 criminal cues."
Bruce Pody, 18, of Mitchell, S.D ..
wrote that th Jan. '1 KoJak progrun
contain~ "its abare of hookera.
plmps and winos" and Involved
"payoffs, murders and druas ... yet it
fai\ed to capture my full attenUon."
BAKETTA ALSO SU01JLD be
taken off the alr, wrote Kris
Evenson, 13, of Dover, Del.
·•All be ever does ls rt des around in a
car. plays With his pretty UWe bird.
shows on hit body and hurt.a oU\er
people," said Kris. "That klnd of PJ'0-
1ram makes a person afraid of
policemen and 1ive1 the impression
that women can't do tbe job. 11
makes people turn to crime."
Bill Sln&er. former Chlcaco
mayoral candidate who is president
of Prime Time, said he will probably
send the "cr1Uque1" to the televialon
networks.
Dennis Wise of Ocala, Fla , holding a photoJraph of Elvis
Presley, was to enter an Orlando hospital this week to un·
dergo c~melic surgery mtended to make him look like Elvis. He
hopes to build a museum in his honor.
KOJA.K PEES6NTS a poor imaae ot the policeman to the vlewer, wrote
Joseph Keene, 18, of Laredo, Tex.
.. THIS BOWS THAT many younJ
people are vlewina television with a
crltic•l eye and not Just acceptini
whatever they see as a reflection of
"The show would have us believe the real world,'' he said.
~----------------------------------------------------------------------~~
Sambo's
isj~tw.
the family ordered.
Here are some of our customers' favorite selections from our two big menus
-one for grown-ups and one for children.
Dinners
. . . served any time.
Top sirloin steak. ........ 3. 75
New York steak. .......... 3.95
Captain's platter (shrimp.
ocean fish. shellfish) .... 3.65
Country friea steak. •..... 2.95
Deep frled chicken ....... 2.95
Deep fried shrimp ........ 3.45
Burger Specialties
Hamburger combo (with
salad. frles) ............ 1.90
Cheeseburger deluxe
(with fries) ........ , ..... 1.60
Bacon burger combo
(with salad, fries) ....... 2.35
Sandwich Board
Ham & Swiss ............ 1. 75
The Texas sandwich ...... 2.25
Toasted bacon. lettuce and
tomato ...... , ......••. 1.55
Patty melt .............• 1.85
Chill size ................ 1.80
Soup & San~ch
Soup of the day with any sand·
wich for only 4~ more.
For Kids
Children 12 and under get their
own special menu. These arc
some of the selections they <:an
choose from.
Tiger burger. . .. . . .. . . .. . .35
Hot dog................. .35
Chicken dinner .......... 1.00
· Fish dinner .............. 1.00
Burger patty dinner ....... 1.00
Grilled cheese sandwich. . .~
Vegetables. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .25
Tossed green salad. . . . . . . .30
French fries. . . . . . . . . . . . . .25
Pancakes (four). . . . . . . . . . .50
Waftle .•••••••......... , . .95
French toast .....•.•...... 60
Bacon or sausage, egg, four
pancakes & toast. ...... 1.10
Pudding ......•..••....... 40
Sundaes... . . . . . . . . . . . . . .50
For Light Appetites
Beef patty plate .......... 1.80
Fish fllet plate ......•.... 1.80
Large chef's salad or
tuna salad •••.•.•.••.•• 2.25
Tuna stuffed tomato ..•••• 1.35
A a-carte
Vegetable of the day ••••••
Potato salad •••••••••••••
Tossed green sillad. ••••••
French fries or
hash browns .•••.•••••
Onion rings .••.....•....•
Desserts
Flaky crust pie .•...•.•...
Strawberry shortcake ...•.
Gela_tin ••••••••.......... carrot cake ••.•..•••.••..
Brown.le a la mode ...•....
Ice cream/Sherbet. ......•
Breakfasts
.45
.45
.60
.45
.60
• •
.65
.65
.40
.75
.80
.30
Some of the more popular
choices from our famous break-
fast menu.
Sambo·s special (one egg.
two strips bacon, six
pancakes) •.....•...•.• 1.50
Sausage or bacon & two
eggs, pancakes •...•.... 2.10
Ham & cheese omelette
with six pancakes ••.... 2.10
Lite breakfast (one egg.
English muffin. grapefruit
juice:) ••••.••••••.••..• 1.25
Wattle with egg and bacon.. 1.60
Six Sambo's pancakes. • . . . .85
Corned beef hash & egg. •• 2.55
Naturally, we also offer your
favorite family beverages. And
the items shown here represent
less than halt of our entire menu
selections. Come in soon, and
bring the family. We serve all
sclecUons all the tlmc. See our
complete menu for delicious
details. ·
\ll<ftllprlr m~IO~
...
OM.YPfl.OT LISC
·Quarterly Report~·Fikd
Companies Cite Earnings, Revenues, Pr'ofits
Jlfftwdai. ~ ..... , ....
Mlcrodata Corp., Irvine, baa reported re·
venuea of $9,414,000 and a net income of $6'0,000 or
29 cents a share on 2.2'0,000 average number of.
•bare& 'outatandlne ·for the firat quart.er, ended
Nov. 30, 1.977.
Jn the prior year'• (ir1l quarter revenues were
$9,571,000 and net income was $687,000 or 31 cents a
share on 2,245,000 shares outatandJng.
WhUe revenues and earninss per share were
down from the prior year's first quarter, tbe com·
pany increased ita 1ros1 proftt margins on product
sales to 4S percent, up from 38 percent in the
fourth quarter of fiscal year 1977, accord.inc to
Donald W. Fuller, chairman and president. The
coD.SOUdated tax rate ln tlfe first quarter fiacal
year 1978 wu 20 percent, compared with 43 per-
cent In the same quarter a year a10. the result of
increased Puerto Rico proflta. Service revenues
were up 113 percent over the same quarter a year
aeo. and the company's backlog as of Nov. 30, 1977, stood at approximately $19,000,000
C1111plder A 11t•••tloa
Computer Automation, Inc., Irvine. has re·
ported record eamln&• of $1,530,000, or 77 cents a
share, from sales of $14,561,000 for the second
quarter ended Jan. 1. Net Income growth wu 34
percent over the aame quarter la.at year, when the
company posted earnin11 of $1,145,000, or 59 cent.a
a abare.
Sales rose 45 percent over the $10,076,000 re·
ported for the second quarter or fiscal 1977.
For the first half of fiscal 1978, net income in·
creased 52 percent, to $2,846,000, or $1 .43 a share,
from $1 869 000, or 96 cents a share, for the like
half last yc;r Revenues for the first half of fiscal 1978 totalled $26,525,000, compared with $17,930,000
for the same pt.>riod last year. an increase of 48
percent
During the quarter t>ndcd Jan. 1, the company
paid a ca!>h d1"1dend of 10 cents u share, compared
Companies LefUe Space
Motivational Desian & MarkeUng, Inc., and
AM c Corp . are occupylna a 13,800-square-foot
bu1ld1ns:: at 16811 Milliken Ave, Irvine, purchased
by 168li M1lhkcn, Ltd., a South Laguna-based in·
Vl'stmcnt partnership, according to Cold~ell
Banker Commercial Brokerage Co., which
handled the i.alc and lease.
The building was purchased from Frank
.Fargo of Irvine for $350,000.
Motivational Design & Marketing designs
sales offices for housing development.a while AMC
is a wire distribution firm.
KawfUakl Mo~• Of flce
Kawasaki Moton COTp. h., lnO'led it.a natioaal
data proceaains headquarters from Coeta Mesa to
wlth I centl a aharo ln Decem tm. and 8 cents
a sh e tn June JJ77.
1'.ellle Llflll•I••
Pacific LllhUn1 Corp., Angeles, hu re·
ported unaudlted 1077 eamtn11 of 1149,000
before provialon for preferred dMdondl, equal to
$2. 76 a share of common stock.
lu 1976, the public uUllty bC>tdlnc company
earned SG0,96'1,000 belor. provlaloo for preferred
dividends, equal to $2.'8 a aw. ol commoii stock.
The Increase ln earnlnp wu attributed to the
company's oon·uUllty operatlcms. Earnlnp from
utility operation• were~ the aame ln 1977 as in 1976. The principal 1ublldiary ls Southern
California Gu Co. Other 1ublldlartes are lo real
estate, qriculture, utility-related and other ft~dl.
AMO Stahldlal'lf 6Clhl•
Avco Fmanciai Services Inc., N..-port Beach,
bas reported that 1977 was the best year ln ita bls·
tory with records ln earnlnis. total reetlvables,
volume of bUJlness, branch otnce expa~on, long-
term flnancin1. low delinquency and msurance
aubsidiary eaminp.
AFS, a consumer finance company, i.s a wholly
owned subsidiary of Avco Corp.
AFS earned ~.e million before unrealized
forei1n exchan1e loases of $9.9 m111lon and an ex-
traordinary tax credit of $S million ln the fiscal
year ended Nov. 30.
Thia wu an Increase of Z1 percent over 1976
levels of $44.6 million and more then double the
earnings level in 1970, when AFS ~as established.
Net earnings totaled $51. 7 million in 1977 and
$22 1 m illlon in 1976. .
Total receivables outstandine reached a .re-
cord $2.2 billion at Nov. 30, up nearly $300 million
from the 1976 yearend level For the first U!lle
AFS' installment receivables passed the $2 billion
mark in 1977, standing at $2.15 billion at yearend, a
15 percent lncreue over 1976.
The volume of business written durinc fiscal
1977 reached $1.72 billion, compared with $1.'3
billion in the prevtoua year.
Far Wnt r .. t• laerea.e
Far West Financial Corp., Newport Bea~h,
parent of Stat.t Mutual Savinp • Loan Alloc1a-
tlon bas announced net earnlno ot $4.'118.803. or
$2 ,i a share for the year. ded Dec. 31, com·
pired with $2:713,808, or $1.U a ahare, tor tbe 1976
per1od.
Current year's net eamloas continue to exceed
levels reported durina the past 10 years and
represent an lncreue of 71 percent over the prtor
year. ed Net earnings for the fourth quarter amount
to $1,414,691. or 72 cents a share, compared with
$875,604, or 44 cents, for the 1976 period.
Per share resulta lnclude non-recurriD1 gains
from the sale of land of 61 centa per share, re·
corded during the first nine mon~ of 1977.
Savings growth was $70.3 million for the year,
an increue of 68 percent eompared with the 1976
growth of $'1.9 mlWon. ... .
New loan volume amounted to $193.S million
for the year, an lncreaae ot 80 percent eompared
with p, l9'16 wlume ol S107.6 mllUon.
• lrvine. St ...,l'!aetlk
Kawasaki has leued a 19,200-SQ.U&re-toot in-
dustrial building at 1371 Reynolds Ave. in the
Irvine Industrial Complex from Charles and
Kathryn Wheeler, Newport Beach.
Jtli<>rodato l.JefUe• Space
M1crodata Corp., Irvine-hued business com-
puter manufacturer, has leased two buildines in
the Irvine Industrial Complex totaling 43,347
square feet for expansion purposes, bringing its
total space in the area to 190,000 square feet.
The buildings, both on McGraw Ave., are
28,000 and 15,347 square feet and were leased from
Irvine Business Properties, Costa Meu.
Uughe9 Breaks lleeord•
After !letting and breaking a series ot volume
records, Hughes Alrwest Orange County station
opened 1978 with a new h11h for tho number of
passengers boardlnl ln a single day.
The airline, which operatea 14 dally fiiahts out
of the Orange County Airport, boarded 28',163 at
the county facility. The highest one-day number.of
passenger boardinas in 1977 was 1,052 from Dec.
26.
However, station manaeer Tom Chandler said
that daily record has been broken and stands at
1,079, set Jan. 4.
Chandler said the airline ls abowinc increases
tn all 'Of its volume from Oranee County, includin1
frei&ht shipmenta.
In 1976, the total number of 1pusencen
boarded wu 229,482, maldnc the ml fllm'e a D.I
percent increase.
In freiaht, the Increase was 2lU percent, go~
from 531 tons in 1976to685toos1n 1977.
Panel Forms
To Work for
San Juan Vote
stiuadard·Pacltlc Corp., Costa JleH, hu an·
nounced that 1977 revenues and earnlnls rose to
record hlshs for the fifth conaecutive :vear.
Preliminary and unaudited net income for 1977
rose to $6,193,926, or $1.87 a ahare, fully diluted, on
revenues of $88,523,301, compared with net income
of $4,875,238, or $1.36, Cully diluted, on revenuea of
$79,334,485 for the prior year.
For the fourth quarter of um ended Dec. 31.
the company earned net Income of $1,813,738, or :SO
cents, fully diluted, on revenues ot $20,95'1,589,
compared with net income ot $1,888,143, or 51
cents, fully diluted, on revenues of $24,678.116 for
the like period in 1916.
Eaming1 per 1bare have beCD acijusted to
refiect a 3-for·2 stock 1p1n on Nov. 15.
aa.ic'• A••et• Gram
V alencla Bank bu mailed ahanholders stock
and cub dividends for fiscal um. Alseta in·
creased b7 81 ent to more than SSC lntWon iJl U'T1. Prom.a 1ncreued approximately 100 percent. • Plans for 1978 inClude appb1ni for a branch iJl
Irvine, construction of an additfoinal facility iJl
Placentia, expansion of the 2'-bour banking
system and contlnuatlon of crow ezcbanie
seminars.
CeaU ••d Wallaee llepert•
· Coats and Wallace Real Estate, Inc., Newport
Beach, hu reported a tales volume in exceat of
'61,000,000 tor 1977. The firm has offices at
Newport Center, HunUncton Bea~ and Oolta
Mesa In Orange County and a San Dteao faelltty ln
the Pacilio Beach area.
--.. . . . . . .
LOC L/BUSIN~
..,.., .............
ROADSIDE VENDOR MURPHY IN FRONT OF HIS COLORFUL VAN
TM Peanut• and Taffy Colt Money; Hie View• on Ute are Fr••
'Last Peanut Vendor'
Merchant Seaman Hauila 'em Between ShiJM
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Ot-Dallyf'li.tMift
stream' or traffic to sample his waree these
winter weekends, whether they buy or not.
Frank Murphy, 53. a merchant sea~~
for 2 yea~. is a familiar sight along ~acific
Coa&t Highway in Huntin,ton Beach.
"I'm the last of the peanut vendors
anymore and it keeps me off unemployment
or the welfare rolls," he says.
His flre·englne red van, usually parked
near the Huntlnaton Beach Edison plant, ia
plastered with letterlnl and ls hard to inlas.
"l'M JN BETWEEN ships rieht now;•
add.I the Lon.a Beach man, who put.a out
aboard at least three a year from Wil·
minaton, boundforfarawayplaeel.
He r.co!Ca at the idea of any romance In
going to aea, ln an a1e of computers, COD·
taineriied car10 veuels triple the she of
traditional frelahten. risiDI lnfJaUon and
mere l~bour stays in port.
MuaPBY C"N BE FOUND 1tandlnf
wtth one foot atop a red footlocker, or leanina
ovtr a battered card table laden with
goobera, caabew1, peanut brlttle and
aalt water tatfy. ,
1nnau;:J.roTlde1 one of Murpb1 a
mercantile chel.
•• ADOtber thine." be Hyt, hta elcar
bounelnl upward for emphulJ. "You tell
aome ol thole 1Urfel'8 who owe me co cfedlt
to come around and pay up."
•'The averaae ace of an able· bodied
seaman is 52, fella," he 1norts un-
ceremonioualy. "The Merchant Martne ls be·
ing phased out.''
Ll'ITLE DDS WITH $200 and $300 tn
wetaulta and boards can't even pay a quarter
debt. Of course, some do.''
M urph.y aay1 he still loves his work.
MURPHY'S CAP IS adorned by a pen·
guln brooch presented only to those who have
sailed the Strait of Ma&ellan at the tlp of
South America iD winter.
.. You meet a lot of nice people here. I
flaure I'll retire ln two years and open a
peanut and cashew 1bop atona the road.
Friend of mlno o~ one ln LA. but he's
been robbed 10 Umes. Of coune 1 don't .i.,
open herem,bt.l,knoct on WOC>d. •• Murphy ls more than wllllnc to bold forth
for anyone who puU. out ol the pauln&
LoOt to Be Returned
Newport Police Sift Through~ Goods
By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of .. DllllY ,.. • ...,.
Newport Beach detectives
have begun the task of match.tnt
burglary victims to ltema fo\ma
stockpiled lo the Utah home of
rape and baratary 1u1pect
Gerry CUrtll Bran.,an.
DetecUve Michael Jacbon, who returned to Newport
Wedneactay aft.er 1pendtn1 flve
days In Provo eatalo1ln1 the
more than :IOO anUques louad in
Branagan'• home, aaJd be will be
talk1n1 to the uarb' 80 Newport
Beach bur&t&r1 vtcltms ln an ef-
torttoldentltyltol p ...
· BRANAGAN, Jt, Wat ar-
retted Jan. U a f..,, boura after a
Corona del Mar woman reported
she was raped by a man who
broke Into her home. Tho rapist ~atole110meurt1ques.
Branapn hu bMG cbarpd
wltb two burslarl•, the rape
I
and child molestation which ldentl.fledWedneldqafterllyfnt
police said occurred Jan. 13 ln a to Provo.
almllar bur&larY.
Officers allege they found
aome of the items atolea In thole
two cues ln Branacan•1 rented
van and near the aeene ot hlJ ar·
rest.
TREY SAID tbey re·
covered more stolen property tn
his mother's Onario home and in
bia peraon.al car parted ln On-
tario.
Some ot the lteim 19<1 detec·
tJvu to suspect Brana1an as tho
burglar ln 30 th• of antiques
tbat ocCUJ'n!d in NewpOrt du,iq
tbeaummer.
Riverside law eutorcemeat d·
flclaJa also enteril'I. tile cue
became they alleced that IOme
of the ii.ms reco9ved wen
stolen ln burslartea ln tbolr
ju.riadlctlon.
TBE lltGGE8Tflnd of all came
thl1 weekend when JacklClll and
u_U1oritielln Provo used• 1eatCb d'rrant to co to Bruacan'i
home.
There they found what they d•cribed u a ••smJtlasOD!an" ot
uaertedly atolta antlquea whtc
they believe came from the
Newport and Blvenlde c •
Jackaon 1ald;9n of.
the Riverside c ... mfdftd
tbeft ot $90,000 WOrth of •
Uqus, molt ot wblch t.M Yid!m
EnlMATES ON the value ot
tbe items recovered ranae from
$$00,000to$1 Dilllion.
Jackaoo 1ald be and the other
detecttves worklna on the case are expandloi their lnveatiga·
tlon to find Brana1an '1 ac·
compUco.
He not*' that while lt mtibt bu·e been po11lble for one
person to commit the Newport
Beach barctarfes, the ltema
taken In tlt• RJvenld• cues
were so 1..,0, that lt woald have
taken at leut two people to
move them.
fflmeaDrive
Dinner Slmed
J
.. -. -....... .
.
' l
..
.. Ski Resort 'Snowe,d'
the fint ol January," Pam Rake, mna of tbe
ammodl Mount.a.ln Area ticket o ee, 1aid
Tbunday. ''The number of U1en 11 more than we've ever had before.,.
TM 11.fta and the bualneaes In town need extra
h lp1Jbe laid. •Jlllht now we bave about 30 opentnp in tbe
cafeteria, parldnc lot, and for ticket puncl>en at
"IT WM TB& 1108T tnow we'd ever had at. the Un.," she said. .. I know that tbe town Itself la
--~---~~--.:......!...------looldDI for people, for the restaurants and tbe . • shops ...
By Bil Keane
l!AJWD aSPO:&T8 'l'llAT Tll08E tobs had
all been ftllecl drew a lau&h. Sbe explained there la a .. ,.,. boaalnt
1ahortaae 1n tbe uea, ~ p!'Olpeetive
empl07ft from ftDdJDJ JOG • !•Jl., ol tbe worken jobs bat ba4 to UH
I lo dorms at '8 a nl&ht. and a kit ol tbem qutt after
a abort time. It's a real problem .. ' she Nld.
The nearl1 t~foot anowpaet at Mammoth ta
far abort d 1189'• record 20 feet. bat lbe aald the
1989 anowfall wu really too heavy for tOoct busl·
oe11, aheaald.
•"J'llE ROAD8 WERE BLOCKBD and the Utts
were burled," 1he 1aid, .. and nobod1 could move
in the town."
J .
In Soutbern California aid areas, when warm
temperaturu laat fall had prevented even
man-made mow from belnl available, tile aeuon
d.ldn 't really lt't under way until Cbriltmu, said
Don McKay, autstant muqer at Hollda18111 in
-Wrl1btwood, about eo mil• eut ol Loi Ansel• in
the San Gabriel Mountalm.
"It wu the lateet we ever sot started," said .
McKay. ~Faneg Cake•
BUTBEMIDTHE&El8aboutafootofnatur · "I don't WANT to sit on my thumb, Daddy!" snow 00 the upper slopes and they are matins anow Parent an4 child teams eom~eCl tbl• week at B. H.
-----------------dally for the loweralopes. , Dana Elementary School In Dana PolDt to come up with
Synanon Weapons
Buy Con/inned
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -Vowing to "do
whatever we have to to protect our wives, our
homes and our children," a 1pokeaman for
Synanon Foundation tnc. diacloaed it bas
purchased $62,300 worth of 1uns and ammwiition
to arm and train a private police force.
The disclosure was made Thursday by
Syn anon spokesman Skip Ferderber in a
copyrighted interview in the San Rafael tndepen.
dent Journal.
THE STORY APPEARED AS federal
firearms officials In San Francia~ scheduled a conference Monday with Synanon orlicials about
the purchase and leeal use of the arms.
f''erdcrber satd Synanon spent $28,081 for 172
shotguns, rifles and baod1uns and $34,219 for prac·
lice ammunition at sun stores here ud In Santa Monica in three Wfflu.
He said there had been an escalation of
violence directed at Synanoo members and that the weapons were needed to protect resident.a and
property at the foundation's four California ceo·
. ters.
A 31-MAN POLICE force and a 126-man re-
serve squad will be train~ in weapoo.a handling
and ln1>lructed tn arrest powers at Synanon's
center in the Sierra foothill• community of
Badger, Ferderber aaid. Synanon, founded in 1958, lilts its pUJ1>0H H
"rehabilitatlne drue addicts, alcoholics, delln·
quent.a and other people who flDd themadvea una·
ble to function responsibly 1n the lar&er society."
It has about 1,200 CaUloml• m~mbers and
other centers here, at Santa Monica and at
Marshall on Tomales Bay in Marin county.
FERDEBBE& SAID SYNANON bad compiled
a five.page U1t of assaults on Synanon realdenta,
dama1er to the oraanl!atlon's property, threats
and burglaries. He said "aensatlon-mongerlnc
members of the new• media'' have e:ncour11ed
hostility to the or1anliatlon.
Charles Schmitt, aaalltant special agent in
charee of tho Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms unit
• of the U.S. Treuury Department bere, 1aid be
, uked for the meet1n1 Kond&J '4th simply inform
• tb f o\midatlon d ftreanna laws."
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICT1'ftOUI aUMNUI •
He described the year u •'nonnat, neither better the best cake decoraUon. About 15 teams earned prizes.
norworae." The cakes were then auctioned off to raise money for
ButJanuary'uoowfall "can'tburt.''benld: ·. the school's Parent-Teacher Aasoclatlon.
OALV PllOT A•
Illustrated .
Lady Likes
Her Tattoos
• lllNNJ!!APOLIS <AP) -
Elisabeth Weinatrl sa11 that
when she wu IQ her 409, ber
buaba.od tOld ber be wutecl a
tattooed wlft. She didn't want to
move out, IO lbe 11v. tn. ••1 sot «aa Mei thoUsbt that
Id dO lt. but tbell l Want.cl another one, an4 &Dotber oae,"
the 71-)'Ul'-old Portland. on .•
woman Niel. A lar1e, black 1ptder web
rad.latte from Mn. Welmlrt'a nan~ and from that. brtJUant
ll'ffD la'Oll wol"k iJlcorpontea
vivid parrots, bluebirds,
nowers, butterfliu and other imqea dcJQe JuselJ iA bloes,
recb and onqea. Her upper anm are coffred,
11 are her lep to the tneea and
ber entire trunk.
'TattoolD1 1bouldn't be put down, because lt'a u art," aald
Mrs. Welmlrl, wbo wu ID 11iJt.
neaota for tbe North American
Tattoo Oub'1 tblid World Con·
ventloa ol Tattoo Artlatl and
Fans ID St. Paul
UFE, BE4'IJNG
PORBEROIN
ICUALA LUMPUR, llal.,Ua·
<AP) -Tbe Blih Court sen-
tenced Tal Fait, co, to lite lm· prllonmeat and m 1trok• ot the cane after aw pleaded IUilt:Y
to 11Wq Mro&D la;tt year.
•
Friday, J.nuarr 27. 1971 OBITUARIES I ORANGE COUNTY
"See here, Wilkens\ this 11 a business. You can't call tn
1tck because one or your plant.I has root rot! ..
I I.AS '11GAS -Mffft.ge llun-
UWOllere lnclUdt DK.• 3KILLITltA·HOOU RlcllarCI R.
1111, 2t, a!ld Lynne 0.IM, », bOlll flt Westr111t1ster
'TESKE·JUAG!HSIH -W•ller £., u. •1'111wy-..Htrrtngton,41,bOtllol
Westr111nu ... WALLIMS.HARI 0.0.... M .. 21,
...0 S\IWn M.,lt, 2', boll! of Founlt•fl "•ll•y !GGL!STON·SIMINTAL f'ft
Oo11eld, 2Q, of laltiw. a!ICI J!Wf S\lt,
lt,olC.,.laMMt SCOFI HP.HAMM Cllnlon Rttptl,
al, •"41 GYP'Y ();-:M both of H""I
)flOIOft lttcll
POWC RS·SUSONG Monty !Koll,
11 tnCI Melina J 71 bolll of s..n ,,,,.,.,,,.
llUSHARD·WALTER!> L ..
EdW•rd, 3', -Oonlw M , >J llOth of
5tnCi.r11ente
HOUSl·l'ACTOR • R-t IUOfM,
40, •'-' .... ,,.,. llttne, 27, IMlt.h et
NtWllO'I leech Dec,,
SCOVILLE·OTTO -"""''" or .. u.ck, n, ot S.n Ctefl'*ll•, ...-lur• l•rrel11t, J7, ot Twtl11 SKITCH-~OWIAS -Clare11ce
Jemu, 41, el Costa M .. •. a!ld
SdlatlOtll,)S,ollan oi._ UAl~KILl.IY -R ..... y Dale, t).
..... Karlll Klr11, n. "'" .. HOINl"lt .. a..c.h
ARMSTAONG-JOHNSOH -Harry
TILZl!A·CUMMING -EClwtnl
Al>ral\am, 24, w Rldlt11• Aldlne, H,
both of Huntmatenluc:ll SMITH·JAC06S -Clayton Sttven, 1•, of Wtllml,...,., end Florence
11'9nt,40,ofLaMlr ...
CHAULSETT·WARRl!N -~urlu Jolltl, 31. of Coste Mesa, encl P.tr1tla
A11n, "· of Slonton JOHNSON-LUTGEN -Mlcllffl W••·
rt n, 27, and Chrt•llM Ann, 2.S, bOth of
lrvlna
SALGADO.RINCON-R-Jr, 11,
•lld Prl>e•ll• VM.,., 11, .,..., o1 t:1
TO<o
J ... 1
HARKIN!> CARTER Charlu
Thtmn Jr 41, ol lrvlne, -Shlrlov Glad,., '3.o!Tushn
IVY·ROBINSON R-Lff, ,.
-G•I• ()j-. J:I, -not Corona Ml Mu SILVA•RA&ClllN Jolin, JI, of u
Pelr11•. •lld DIM O.nite, ?O of
Wftlr!llMW DODOS.OiORAK -tlltl<, ... •ncf (m,,.. M.,.,'9tll9'5Ma-nt1
JM.J HEHOEltSON·CAMl'Bl.LL -Jtl
f1'9'f A., 25, aM HeMl'I M., JI, llOll\ ef
C.t•Ma .. ULltlllCH-sANDl!llS -Jamn Kt,..
notll, ft, and Eclllll Ellatft, JO, both ot
w"''"'n1tw _,_,
SINCl.Allt·SIRNA -lrvln MICllHI,
21. •1'111 Kaw ... en~ n, 11o111 ot
Irvine
Tax Relief
Bill Viewed
819.c. \lSTINGS
Of oDatl)6taff
State sen. Dennis E. Carpenter, R·Newport
Beach, bu introduced a property ta.x relief bUl de-
veloped by (}range County Aa sor Bradley
Jacobs. The leaislation would increase the
homeowners exemption, proVido that tho exemp-
Uon illcreue each time the home ls rea11t:SMd, re·
quire counties to prepare t.Keln nnu budeets
wiUiout includlna anticipated property tax in-
creuea and require the atato to provide the coun-
Ues with additional funcla for P1'91l:•ms for the
aaed and disabled under eertalri circumstances.
* ....
Members of the Pro-Family Coalition, an or-
ganization opposln1 ratlficaUon of the federal
Equal Ril}lt.s Ainendment, n.ys about 2$0 Oran1e
County ... omen are invited to attend a Sacramento
rally Wednesday,
Seminars at the rally will cover top ca ran1ln&
from the femlniat movement to abortion. AddiUonal 1nform•Uon is available by callin1
Dorla Enderle at 84$-7236.
* * *
Two chapters of the League of Women Votua
in Oran1e County wUI join Feb. 9 In a free t.bree-
bour aesslon to discuss federal houstfta funds. The panel discussion, sponsored by the Oran1e
Coast and San'ta Ana, Tustln, Oran1e Area chap-
ters, will be held from 9 a.m. to noo.n at tbe
University Park community bulldin1 in lrvint.
Panelist.a inchide Newport Beach city council
member Lucille Kuehn; Blll McCue of the Orange
County Fair Houslnc Council; Bob Pusavat of the
Environmental Mana1ement Acency; urban plan-
ner Dr Ralph Kenney and architect Manuel
Mendez.
... * *
Donna WiUdnson, mayor of San Clemente, has
announced abe will support Marian Beraeson for
the Republican nomination to the 74th Assembly
District seat rather than nmninl for the position
herself. "There are too many project.a yet to be com·
pleted In San Clemente and I am confident that
Marian Bergeson will elfecUvely represent the
people of this district," Mrs. Wilkinson said. The seal is currently held by Ron Cordova, D·
El Toro
Air.port Kindles
Divergent Views
'By JOANNE aBYNOLDS Of .... OlilY ..........
Eyecybody loves an airport, partlcularly when it'a not in their
backyard~
.TAKE, FOR INSTANCE, the people who ahowed up tbeother day
dunnetheNewportBeachcitycouncll'aatudyaession.
Newport. councilmen, ln spite ot the fact they actively promote
the commercial expansion of the area around the Orance County
Airport, say they ,want that all'.POl't out of
their backyard beCause the commercial jet
traffic makes too much noise.
On band to bolster them \fttfl members
of the Inter-County Airport Authority and a
eentleman from Yorba Linda who misht be
described as an anti-inter-county airport
authority. .
THE ICAA PEOPLE are tryinc to •et a
city resolution in support for their attempt to
HY•O'-Of float a bond issue to .raise the money to plan
and build a recJonal airport in or near Oranee County.
The eenUeman from Yorba Unda la tta ma:yor, Henry Weeda
and he a~a the authority want.a to put this re,ional airport ln bls
backyard ln the Chino HUia. Weeda says all the plannln& has already
been done and talk o! the ICAA really conslderina other altes 11 just a
sham.
About the only thin& the council, Weeda and the ICAA people
could aaree on ia that there is definitely a need for a reaional
airport.
WEEDA, IN ADDITION to being the mayor of Yorba Linda, is. also the consultant Newport councilmen hired to help them in
their efforts to rid the beach city of commercial jets that use Oran1e
County Airport. Weeda told them the lCAA wants to put the new airport ln the
Chino Hllls, thus creatina a backyard problem for Yorba Linda
and councilmen didn't object when he said the airport really
shouldeoinatCampPendletontnSanDleaoCowrty.
Ah, but what do the folks there think about that! When
;pressed,JCAArepresentativesandWeedaconcededthatthereiscon·
:aiderable opJ>O$iUon in San Dieio to usin& camp Pendleton aa the
.airport alte. "
NEWPORT BEACH councilmen diclll•t have much to say about
the divet"gent view•. but dld paaa a aenerallzed resolution support·
inl anybody's regional airport study. Councilman Paul Ryckoff
said he dldn't really care bow many studies were beinl conducted and by wbom, be Just wtnt.s to solve Newport's airport problem.
A lurth r 12·d y dcla1 ho
b n ordered o th Orance
County SUpcrlor Court trial ol •
Costa Mesan accw;od f pl •
nine to murder and dlamemw
women he h1Hd to play roles m
pornoarapblc movies. •
Judco Nason Fenton set Feb.
7 as tho trial date for rr.a Bette
Dou1las after loarn.lnt tbat ~
furniture reftnlsher is sUU COil·
fined in Lona Beach Vetera.ns
Hospital.
Doucias. 49, of 276 16th Place.
was rushed ther la.st weekend
after complaining of sympt.oms
that indicateCl an apparept bea.rt
attack. He is undergo~ tests at
tho Lona Beacb facility.
Hospital offJcials said Douglas
continues' to mah satisfactory
progress and is receiving vi.a-
itors and makina telephone
calls. They said no flnal
diagnosis of hls condition has,Yet
beenmlde. l Dougtaa is free on $100,000 bl.ii
while he awaits trial on cbare~
of attempted ·murder and
soUcltaUon or murder.
He was arrested at a Yucca
VaUey location las\ July 26 after
being identified by two uG·
dercover policewomen as the
man who hired them for parts ln
porno1rapbic movies thtt
would, unknown to them, feature
their murder and dlamember·
ment as the final scene in the
"snuff pomo" movie.
Grant Given
By Foundation
Tho James lrvi.qe FouodaUan
hu aTJardcd a S2SO,ooo aranUor
acholarahipe and new equipment
to tbe Callfonala lnsUtute of tb& Arta in Valencia.
The scholarships are
earmarked for California resl·
dent.a. """'· 11. at>d .... ,,.,. -· ••• bOll'I olColl•MAMI DIEl'ANIACH·DIEl'INIACH
P•ul U., 40, Of Wftlr!llMlff', rtr!llr
;fed Edtl .... d l!IM, <ll. of Wupperlal,
Garr111ny
HOlllNIA·EWING -David EctwlfCI,
2', and J-tte I.ff, 22. bo01 of H1>nl·
lnQlOft8 .. <h
CLARk·GOBER -Eddie, is, ...CS R
Leora, U, bOtllof s... Clemtnt•
ZINSMANN·SOiAFElt -Theodor~
Freclorltk, tt.-LYM Ann, ti, boU1
ofCotteM ...
• • • Man Gets ·
One Year
COASTLINE COMMUNITY
MARCHAND-STEVENS Ro ... rl
P•trlo, 2', -Honey l illy, H. both
ofWt•lml,.t.r
Deaths Death Notices
ORIS&T
E '-ewherie WILLIAM GlttSET. rttleltnt •I £lJ otenc1a1e.Ce.IP.....it-..,•J•-rv 22, ,,,. ....... -.,,.~, .....
U.S. Sen John Tower of Texas will s~ak on
the politics behind President Carter's enerty plan
Feb. 10 at the Newporter IM in Newport Beach.
Hls talk will keynote a meetina of the
California Independent Producers Association
Feb. 8-10 at the hotel. ., n 'Killing
* * * . LONDON (P) -Leo .. witm• ...,.._ •.....,. .,...._, ee ,
.. Gema, 72. British actor :~·.=--:,~~"'=-~·if!· tntcScD. Georfe DeukmeJlan. R·LonS Beach, A man wbo admitted d lawyer whose mm tvcllr, Owl• H-•t••• .. Se will keyn luncheon , ....... er Sun"·-tor the tn court that be used a
nd sta1e career ::.~c.a..;..~'7n::i!: closing lon or a me~t of t.b;' P.•clfic hamm to :tnruct Jatal spanned 47 years, died ... ,.__, w..,...._ ,.._ _....,,.. Soutbwest District of Optlmiat International~ injuries on bis wife bas '
Thursday. Amon1t his ::.!:cifi::":."ar.::'.!:!~ whichbe1antoday.attbeReebtrYHotellnlrYine. been sentenced to one
plays were "12 J\n1ry -orts1u1 0r.,. c:-.., ..-,. Deukmejlan is Senate Minority Floor te.der year iQ tho Oran1e
Men.'• "The Sacred =::,r.::=:'c:"..it."'c:;,:!: and the official aponsor of the 1972 Death Penalty County Jan.
Fl am e' • and '•The ,,._ 0.1111 WlrSd w• 11 11e -l'hcl lnltialive. He also authored the new law mandat-Superior Court Jud&e
Devil's Advocate," and =-~~:i'::..=e~°",::: int atate prison sentences for anyone convicted of dRobedrt E. Rickles or-
his films included .. The .,,._, ., w11 WOt11 ......,_ Hts using a eun while committin& a felony. ere the jall term and s n n k e pit, • • • •The i..t '~"'1"' •• .,.. in 1t1 ... rsi. three yeara probation
Lop 1 est Day" and ~r .. 1n,.;::-,. ~·~::/~:"1~•,.•: * * * for Frederick Camden "Moby Dick .. 111• A.M. •Um1"'T11t11111 u1M Sa11· Balley, 36, ot Yorba Lin-
t• AM °"'9f It Sii N. 8'NdW1y. di f•--''--d f d ...,.... AM, ca. wit11 t11e ...... Hentt U .s. Rep. Robert E~adham, R-Newport • a ..-"'., e en ant
MILWAUKEE (AP) Vltntno of Ult So\ltlt HollrwOH Beach, will anaak at. 1 m ...... : .. ,, of th .. pleaded IUllty to volun-
r.====-====r COLLEGE BOOKSTORE -======-t .
HEAD9UARTERS FOR YOUR
SPRING SEMESTER
COASnlNE COLLEGE TEXTBOOK ~EEDS
.ALSO:
SPECIAl.itSTORE HOURS .... , .... ........,2 .. ....,
MON.-FRI .. 9 AM-t PM-SAT. I 0 AM-5 PM
\
COASn.lME COMMUNITY COLLEGE IOOISTOIE .,... •• ..,c:..... .... l•tw ...... •wfllWI
D A and J Qui k ..... .ar,t.,lar\Olurdlefflci.tlflt, 1111• w -V<>WUe ... tary m&IW uaht.er • ., rh. drm loped. e , ment at,.... o.. ~ Qmttery estem Sectional Conference of the Navy Leacue Bail .. v _!. book.eel on t;;· ~e~~e the bio!d~! t.!:'s.A,..":':.t~':,,~f;:!~ Jl,!~b. U.S. Feb. 3 on the Queen Maey hi Lone murd~ ;b':rin -hen tll06 llOOIHUllSTST. 964-J 588
I
.sa-41a1.. ...., wif ~... " FOUNTAIN YAWY c otUng abUlty and dis-n1.t111 Badbam wlll report• on Ute status or the na• ma e, ~u\D, died last
covered a new vitamin, 1PHVLL1SAHHITA1tN,.,.•nt1· tion•a defenses, u.sme ln part -w.l\nal 0 .......... -1 • ~•Y1, .. ~ in a local ~===='=.,..==lil=THl~=CLOC~~IU~~~~~~~~~=======~~ Vitamin Q, believed e1· :"J~':s."::J'H!:'::'.=: tlom made during a aeries Of brl'en'Qp ~UDNAToh nOIPl"-two dQa after
sentlal in blood clottlno, HH11tt••· s11e ts turvtn4 w "'" commanders. e beatherw\th a ham·
died Thuraday. -. ::=;:;.'!rice~·~ .. ::,~ mer. s1-K-r. '" -.. .,, v-* * * It wu testified that
SAN Dl•GO ~ •"411 TI"*"" \M S&enl; •II ot th tt t.. • /1:.-<AP> --CMt.,_..,,ca.At .. ~•"""""'" e a ac-. occurred Cecil R. Clark. 77. a Hrt"t• ........ Ntltft J.itMoA pl DaVid w. B . 1er. author or U9& r~--h ot shortly after Balley re-"ano t h le t '#Matw,ONewflWtrllldclllJdi'• 1LT ·'"'' ""~an; tu•ned .. f ·Pl uner w o ep .,,. M• •'"'-v~er. "'.. i'Oeou •Ark," ll coins on new search thl.a tl.me '" uome rom some or the world'• 11tnt .,......,. ..-tl$len. Mn. m tor the Bepubllcaa 1iom1.Dat1on for' tbe 39th psycblatrlct.rcnt.mcnt.
moat noted p1anlaU and :1:1:.',!!"! .. ': '::..::= :!:: Congr lonal District seat. aln1en on key, died in a c-c11 .. cw"'•....,.. F,... The incumbent. Charlca un .. :..1 •• ,, R-..FullertoD, San Dleeo Hospital. He may call for Yl•ltelltft •• ~MU la re"""'-"· "'~ . Brttllert lmllllll' MlftliarY 611 MMtt u..i.u•• wu a concert tuner-for a; N~ 9tiedl, ,_ .. :• ~..M. Balal1er ii a former Otange ~ewaman · the Ukesof Artur Rubena· • •:• !J.M. "' Pt...., ..._.., "· and served as ...... ...-ad ........ 'ft.._..
l P de kt V "".,..,. fllNr• -*•.at.. D .. ww.1 ~ &.i.-te n, a rewa • an c.-.ctw • s.1.-y J-y •· RelaUom d.lredor in 1 or Ronald Reqan'a
CU bum, Llly Poqs and mt •t trot ... -. IPlemi ...--. campaign frr aovemor ..
. Bina_Croeby. llftltltS' ~ He also wrote:'Tbe LlncolD Ccmpiraey.'•
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f1, '"" ..... _.. ..... ~ --.....
1.J MICOIMfCIC
MOITUUtU Laguna Beach
•94·0415 uguna Hiiis 741$-0933
SaB Juan Ceplatrano
-405-1778
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tnMC.lllldr91. Gr~ Mnl<ttwtll
M held"',,.,._.,, .-U.N a 41t I'M at Lam• Viti• Mtll'ltrlal !Jerl,
f'utltrtan With"" '1tt. WllllOll'I MtOf\ ottlcl_.1119. ,,,.,... _., ull at tho •ell .,.....,.,. MtrWlfY tit Sl#lcley 10
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C•i "'"" •• 'S u ernc1111 ~(lotill~ Ujllj •
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AT APPRAISING
DIAMONDS
BY COMPUTER
rds:w
PAD FE -
S11nday Pastime
Grmm,.up1. Play With B0""8
~ .
VAN NU\'S <AP> -Th• plnk
f11mln1oa 1too4 plaoldlv and
watched whilt a tuaboat came to
the aid of the stricken Titanic, .
run aground after 1ta rudder
Jammed. A lime wntp!
No, j\&St "'embers of Utt Su.n·
day Bo1Un1 Club Ctttinl
together with their remote·
controlled steam-powered model
boats.
'bu1lne11 w 1 hit by ... aeroapaee ind Uy atump ftv.
years a~o.
"The whole thing IS &reat, the
lOl'e or th• boat• and atealll
enclnea." ht said.
Otller ·'skipper•" oorne from
1lrnil1rly dlverairted baok·
grounds. .
Sandy Ornelas is an in-
vestigator for the Los An&eles
County Dbt.rict Attorney's office
wh built a three.toot repJloa ol
a German open-sea rescue boat
11bet•uH It WH different.''
THE ULLIPUTlt\N coft,
bet ween 2 and tO feet lon1.
range from the Titanic tho
biggest to 1 •mall cabin
cruiser. More than a do~n oJ tht 00.tl ORNEIAS, •4. SA•D, ''l'vo
ply the wat~r of the main lagoon b4ert bulldit\1 tnodela alnoe I was
at Busch Bard Sanctuary, a a kid. A couple of years aao I
hospitality center for the adja-saw a radio-controlled boat at a
cent Anheuser-'Busch, Inc., lake and I thought lt looked like
brewtr')' bere. fun. And tt ta."
The cilh include tugboats, a lt'S' •I.so e:itPJnslve l\adlo con ·
rescue boat, sailboats, launches, trols can coat $200 or more and a barge and a couple or paddle steam power plants wi~h boilers
wheel riverboata. Most are are priced at S400 and more. A
ateam·powertid, but some have complete ateam.powtred model
electric motors. can run Sl,000. Battery-powered O • bOatt ~are Cite~ and can be
"IT'S FUN, WHAT more can I put together for $250.
say? .. aald Gordon wn", • pro-
ducer or chlldr1n'1 \elevtaloft
showa and and nomlnal letdtr of
the group that moetl mont.hl)'. wn .. , boat la a launch w\U\
brass 1l1atnlftl from u.1 atack
and tlny rallln11. Tht deck la maho,.nr~ cut and laid Uk•
planlc1. Wlndow1 ar• hand·
etched llu• and mlntaw"' flt·
tings ofbr111 and cop"f have
been turned out on 1 ttnr lathe.
"1t'1 of\JoYablt. I wouldn't dO
it if it wun't tun,•• aald WU•,
who •~t 1lmo1t • )'eat buil4· inl bit boat trom Joratch, butid"
on bo)'hood memori cf a boat f
be kGW'? •1t'J f )'OU
haft ~de m, ·th rk ~'Vt ·~.pl >'P\I t to 111 th it .••
NEW YORK CAP> -A. j91Dt ventw-e to create
a cb•ln of 40 moder1te-
prlced h!Ml• ln Mexico
over tbo noxt 10 years bat beeo 11\DOWlCed by
Banco Naclocal do Mex-
ico and QuU~ Inna In-ternattonal lno. 'ouph McCarthy, president of Quality
Inns, eald at a news eon-
fjerence Thunday that it
•• the lar111t 1uch project ta h1I compuy'a
IT•ytar hl•tor1 and
• •r1pr efttt our first
move into lco."
QUALIS'Y Wll.L
Ht• bU.h tbe Jlexloao
oba&a of hQtela, each
bavln& at leut lOO roouu. throuJb purcbtH Of txlatln&
hottlt, n onatruc·
tlon, man11 rn con-traet1 1nd· franchise
•INtm • Th• ••Umattd aaset valut ol all proPfrtles wlll excetCS $100 million,
McCarthy 11id.
cCAaTRY SAID \he
flrat 10 hot.ell undoub· ttdly wlU be a()(lullltlons
and 1hould be ln opera-
tion by Quality wltbin
tWO rt&U in IUC h marktta u Mtxlco City. Acapulco, Cancun.
M1tJd1, Guadalajara,
and V er1m11.
Augustin Le1orr•ta,
president of Banco Na·
cional • .ald his bank is
involvtd in a similar
manacement
Dartn1r1hip wlth Wtttero International Hotels, which operates
the Camlno Real chain
of hotels.
He said his bank is
•'very interested in the
potential that increaaed
tourtam, bQth dome1tic
and international, oan
contrlbule to our coun-
try's economy "
'Fat Cats'
Health in
. THE DBAOLINID PO& oonuntat•
"'' on the new plan w11 Deo. a, but
th• departmen' announced lD Uit Federal Re1lster that McauH ot
.. wide publle tnteNat with opinions
dlfftrlnl an the detlrabllity0 et the
pl&D, tM d dliDt la bellll at.ended to Marcbao.
Slnct tho plan waa &DDounctd la October, mart Ulan a.soo com~tl
THE NSW O'POIAL developed
by a 1cttnUftQ pantl wh\cll et~~
mechanical d•bOnlnc, calla tor tho
JriQdin& or hand-trimmed benel.
prlmarlly aort. bc»\ea, whlcb •till have
con1lderabl• meJt cm thfm.
The re•ultln• materlal ls then
forced tbroulh a tleve to eeparJte meat and bone. Tho final pfodurt
would be allowed to contaJn a ax-
im um of thl'ee-quatten of one per-
cent of calcham.
Joggen
Street Ban
Mulred
N•EDA LAWYl!lt?
LIW ...... 111 ..
1 .• Dlvoret
• 11,,kruotc'I
• Crlmlnal • Wllla.Probltt • lftCOPPOrltlOf' • Accldent-lnJurv •Eviction
"
1 I
I
l I
I
OT Frtdtly. J8"1uwy 71, 1971 • LOCAL I NATIONAL
Affluent Snub College .
occ·s RAINMAKER DISGRUNTLED
Biii P•yne Blamed for Rain
Wet Woes
R ainmaker Splitting
Remember Orange Coast Co llege's
fabled rainmaker?
Well, he's reportedly disgruntled about
the bad rap he's been getting for the recent
rainstorms and 1s splitting the country
perhaps heading for Mexico
The rainmaker, also known as part-time
OCC art professor Bill Payne, made
headhnes la.st year when he claimed he .
could make it rain.
W1111 nlE AID OF HJS ancient Zapotec
Jndian rain god, Cocijo, Payne placed 60 clay
figures in a plowed field on the Costa Mesa
campus.
"It will be raining ln 24 hours," he pre-
dicted March IS, and sure enough, it rained
cats and dogs March 16. It hadn't rained in
four months.
The little rain gods have been in
ti!othballs since then, but Payne says he is
being incorrectly linked with the recent
deluge
"Throughout the drought, people be&ged
me to make tt rain, which I obligingly did on
a couple of occasions, and now they're after
my scalp and begging for sunshine," he
moaned
••THJS IS NO PLACE FOR a rainmaker
anyway," Payne complained "When it rains,
Culver Road (Irvine) turns into the best
waterskilng facility west of the Colorado
River and Huntington Beach becomes the
largest free·floating community in the coun·
try:'' So Payne apparently has disappeared,
or at least is keeping a low profile. He's due
to teach a clua thla summer in Mexico on
pre-Colombian cultural developme•t.
WASHINGTON <AP> -ProporUonatety fewer
childrt'h ol middle· and upper·income famllies are
enrolline In college, but lt us not clear that hiJber
education costs are responsible for tbo decline, the
Con•resaional Budeet Office says.
ln a report to Concreas on methods of finan-
cially aiding students, the budjet office said that
while colle1e charges increased about 75 percent
between 1967 and 1976, median famlly income in-
creased by 88.6 percent and income for famllies at
the top of the scale by as much u 85 percent.
FOR FAMIUES WITH INCOMES of $25,000 or
more, the report said, colleee cost.a represented a
smaller perceotaee of ( J
iltcome In 1976 than for EDV" ~"'lO~ comparable familiu in ~.1, '"
1967.
Nevertheless, the report said, In famWes with
incomes above 125,575, the percentage of collece-
age children enrolled 1n colleee dropped from 68.3
to S8 .2. At the same lime, the enrollment percen-
tage for all Income groups was almost uncbaneed.
Explanallooa for the decline among the more
affluent, the budget office said, may include the
end or presaure from the military draft, a declln-
in1 rate of financial return from a college educa-tion, family preferences for spendina on consumer
items "and simply the decision of some to work rather than to study."
A PROPOSAL FOR A tax crec:tit of up lo $2&0
tor parents of colleee students Jained support in
Congress last year and waa attached to the Social
Security financing bill. That leeislation almost
lltalled over the lasue, however, and sponsors final·
ly agreed to its deletion, providing such a plan
would be fully explored this year.
The budget office esllmated such a credit
would cost the federal treasury about $1. 7 billion a
year and that if an optional deduction of $1,000
were offered, the cost would 10 to $1.9 billion
A credit is a direct deduction from taxes owed.
A deduction comes out of taxable income, so its
value depends on the taxpayer's bracket.
THE BUDGET OFFICE IS forbidden by law
to make recommendations and merely described possible alternatives.
One would liberalize the exiaUnc Baste Educa-
tional Opportunity Grants program by increasing
the maximum erant from $1,800 to $2,100 and eas-
mg the requirements on the proportion of family
income that must be used lo pay expenses.
Such a proeram, the office said, would cost
a bout $800 million and benefit about "90,000 stu·
dents from families in the $10,000 to $25,000 income
bracket
THE EXISTING PROGRAM FOR guarantee-
ing educational loans from private banks, not
universally popular with the lending institutions.
might be made more attractive to them if the
federal subsidy on the Interest rate were increased
and costly administrative procedures simplified,
the budget office said. It said the cost could not be
estimated accurately.
Another possiblility would be for the govern·
ment to guarantee loans to parents, rather than
students.
"Such a proeram might not share the deficien-
cies of the guaranteed student loans program -high
default rate, for example-and therefore might pro·
ve more attractive to pnvate lenders," the office
said.
Ride the BIG WAVE coming to Southern California
from the beach
in Orange County .. ~ I
THE SOUTHLAND'S NEWEST RADIO STATION *
at the crest of your FM radio dial
• For..,etly K.4PX
Come on up to Sound Wave 108 and en-San Clemenle. All to the accompaniment
JOY the best of the bright, beautiful music of the refreshing sounds of the sea!.......,,,...,
you've heard on K·BIG KJOI or KAPX,
plus the mellow sounds of KNX-FM. To·
day's adult music IN A NEW BLEND on
the most powerful station in Orange
County. K·WAVE with 28,500 watts from
New space-age equipment enhances
the listenabllity and extends the effective
range of the atatlon. Help us test tfie new
coverage.~
1111111111••
.
period of nve lo 10 yeara and and int
percent to 10 percent.
T.he budget office did not tJmate the co t to
the government but 1u11eated lt might low r
than for student loans because the int ubSJdy
could be lower and the parents woUld be leu lllldy
to defaUlt.
Loans also ~ould bt provtded through th tax
system, the office sald, by allowlpl t*"J)ayera to
postpone, for enmple, •1.soo of tax du6 for each
year a student ls In achool. TM tax -could b8 ,..
pald over a 10.year perJod, a year after
1raduation.
Such a plan, the bud1et Office said, mllht cost
$8.8 billion the flnt year. but the Diet cost would
decline autistantially u t.upayen be1an to Pll)' back.
Bl ck militant
Angel Davis
hns been hired
tor $275 a month
to teach "basic
teminism" at
San Francisco
State University.
See the Bob Baker Marionettes
on stage Saturd~y, January 28th.
J
Come In. and ~ake Instant mov~es
of your children with the Marionettes
and watch them develop minutes later.
Show Time: hourly 11 a.m.-4 p.m.
Actress SeekS
$13 Million
From AP Dlspatebes CelebrtUee who 10 to Studio 5' in New York
City often spend t"e nltl\t tonln1 each other around ltl dance noor. But actress Sliuy Leldl
claims the trendy discotheque did aome ton1n1 OI
itt own -and sbe wants 113 million to make up for jt.
The actress, who ap~ared with ate•ard
Bartoa in "The Heretics,•• claims she wu "sud·
denly, violently, and a1ainst hf'r wtU lifted up and
handled with creat force" by Studio 5' employees
when she attempted to enter at 2:30 a.m. on New
:Year'• Day.
CJaim1D1 mental and physical tnJury, ahe filed
court papen ln State Supreme Court in Manhattan eekl~~= mUllon tn compensatory dama1ea and
$10 m in puntUve damacea . •
Textron lnc. directors selected Joseph a. :tcou1n._ to succeed Federal Reserve chairman·
11lpate G. WlWam MUler u chairman and chief.
execuUve officer otlhe lar1e con1lomerate.
... . aobert P. S&rale&1. ;t ) now a vice president, • PEOPLE was named president
and chief ot operations
•. for Textron, a Providen-
ce-baaed company . • •• ~· Sbh'ley PetUa, R·San Bernardino, who was ~.elected to Con reas in 197S to fill the seat of her
::'" late husband, announced she
:: will not run for re-election, cit-
::' ini the increasing demanda of
her job.
"It's something l've been
analydng for a long Ume," said
the 52-year·old Mrs. Pettis, ad-
ding that she .. struggled fierce·
ly over this decision for I really
love this job.
•·1 am findmg it increasing-' It difficult to shoulder my
responsibilities in Washington and to personally
travel throughout the 27.000 square miles of dis-
:trict. as conaist.ently as my conception of the Job
demands." • Miami banker Cbarle11 °Bebe" Rebozo, a con-
fidant to former Prealden& Nixon, asked a federal
JUdte in Miami to 11eal a deposl·
lion he gave to Washington Post
lawyers m connection with his
$5 million suit against that
paper.
Reboio told U.S. District
Judge Sidney Aronovltz that
iome of his answers to the Post lawyers miKht prove embar-
rassing m the light of public
scrutiny
The Kc) Biscayne banker ,.. .
filed suit agamsl the Post in connection with an
article which said he had knowingly sold Ul,500 in
~tolen IBM st<X'k.
• " Harry ~ La Roc:tae, 19, was convicted in
}{ackinaack, N.J. or murdertn1 hi• parent.I and
two brothers in 1976 wbil\home
from a military achoof to •hich
he didn't want to return. He wu
~Pnlenced to life in PrllQD. De La Roche's attome1 eaiCl be
would appeal. DuriDI the
3-~-week trial, the prosecutlOG
sald De La Roche abot to death hls lather, Harry De La Soetae,
Sr., 44 : his mother, MUJ .lue, ~. and his brothers Erlt, 12,
L.u and lloaald, 15, because he was
angry at beln1 forced to return to The Cita4'1, a
military colleae in Charleston, S.C., where ht wu
a freshman.
....... olllW .......... ·--··
John Dean,
former counsel
to President
Nixon, told the
59t Ohio.
Pastora Conven· tion that he was worried about
the Watergate
coverup. "I
knew what I
was doing was
wrong," he said.
...
. . . ..
Friday, JanUllY 27, 1978
NB Recyeling
In an effort to encoura•e other
.c:itiea to follow the example set
by Newport Beach, the
California· Committee for
Resource Recovery and the
Garden Slate Paper Corp. will
host a paper recyclin& luncheon
in Newport Beach ~n April 20.
. The city be&an a pro,ram of
recyclln1 n•:31pers n Sep-tember 1'74 alnce then bu
collected a total of 3,801U tons,
twLYPllOT AJ.1
enne
J
Newport Beach, Garden Center
Landscape Spec:ials .
1 gal. plants
'Your Choice
1.19
Choose from ass't
llliWPOB'I'
2 gal. pla"ts
Your Choice
3.99
~Choose from ass't
:azaleas, Australian
treeierns, New
Zealand tree ferns,
sword fems, ana
leather ferns.
Houseplant S&le .
Now Is the time to brlng some life Jnto
your: home. Choose from an assortment of
proven, easy to grow. 1st quality ho~lants ••
•
Friday. Januaty 27, 1978 •
.
Coll8t Yacht Cliibs Seifor Febroary Regattas
1 AUION LOCKABEY a.a, .... .._.,,.,..
Tl.me wu hen three or fOU&"
7acbt dw. in Ute Loa ,Aqel ~
• Long Beac:h harbOr area wen
bOlta to tM Southem Callfonua
Yachtlnc AuoclaUon Mldwm
Jle11tta.
At a nSult. the barbors were
Tlrtually blanketed by 1Bllboata
Of every Ille and 'description for
lbe Uiree days c4. the reptta. at
Umea lelioualy hamperiJ;lc com•
merclal tnmc 1D the•ast tom-pln. Tbat wu In the da,. when
ae·.eral hundred boabl turned oat for lb.a &1aDt 11114.wtnter. clualc.
B'VT AS THE aaUbO racinr
fever mounted with new classes tt became apparent that the'
Midwinters would have to be
~ondenaed an4 dlaperaed.
Especially when tbo event 1rew
to more than !l,oto boata iA
around 100 cluaes.
One of the reuoas for tbe caa·
den1ipg of the re1atta fro
three days to two was became
many buslnesaes and 1cbool1
8topi>ed cqlna tl>elr doon lot YiaahJn~•1 mrtliday. Hence. N wron aaaaoa AND
LIDO ISLE YACHT CLUBS-'
Two QnitManzanillo
The San D1ego Yacht Club has
announced that two yachts have
withdrawn from the 1,240.mlle
· Manzanillo race scheduled to get
under w~ Feb. '-
largest number of entries for la
San Diego to Mexico race, in-
cluding the heydey of the
Acapulco race.
F.iv• local ·)'achts are entered
in the race. Tbey are Audacious,
Mike Kennedy, Dana Point YC:
Speec!ball-14, Luer A and B,
Lebman-12, Naples Sabot A, B,
C and over .0.
SEAL BEACH YACHT
CLUB-MORF A and B MORA,
Catallna·30, Catal\na-27 ,
Newport-27, Coronado·2S,
Catalina-25, Catallna-22,
New~20. Aquarlus-23, Clip-
per-21.
ALAMITOS BAY YACHT
CLUB-Cal 20 A and B, 470,
ln~·1', Udo-14 A, B and C, Na·
tlonal One-Deslp, Snipe A and B. Conmad~l.5. Tuer, Luer.
LONG BEACH YACHT
CLUB-Power cruisers (predict·
ed 101). Cal·29, Cal·2S, San·
tana-27, E~c-llbur·26, Cal-28.
Cal-27, Newport-30.
LITTLE SHIPS FLEET OF
LONG BEACH-PCC, PHRF A,
B, C and without plnnakers;
Jlanier-33, Columbla-26 Mark II.
HUNTINGTON HARBOUR
YACHT CLUB-M·20 Scow,
Force s, Small Boat Arbitrary,
Ghost A and B, Cyclone.
CABRJLLO BEACH YACHT
CLUB-MuWhull Arbitrary, p.
Cat, Cal·20, Geary·18, Mercury,
ao5, Fireball, Sol Cat., 18-equare
meter, Flytn,c Dutchman. Day Sailer. ·
LOS ANGELES YACHT CLUB-IOR Mark III Ca) A, B, C
and D: Cal-40, One Ton, Three· quarter ton, Ericson-35.
KING HARBOR Y ACHT
CL U B-PHRF A, B, C and
witho ut s pinnakers; Santa
Cruz-27, Thunderbird, Cal-20,
Victory. .
..... :'\ --
John Fairfax Oeft) and Ian Clare Lallow show their
Britannia II after its arrival in San Diego. They were
the first to row across the Pacific Ocean ln it seven
years ago. They'll loan it to Pat Satterlee, who wants to
row it 8,000 miles to Australia.
Cocutel Weat]W:r IAlV"°"T v..-..111et11gt1c1w11_,......_.........,. Plnthlw •:•• ..... "'"'* "'"' 1't:••.M·
, ..
.u
Gener al chairman Ben
l!cKessm said the two dropouts
were John Scripps' 79-foot ketch
Miramar and Bob Colll.na' '3-
foot sloop Briana, both from Sm
l>Ie10.
Cottontail, lohn Arens, Balboe
YC; Free Spirit, Richard Et-
tlnaer, Newport Harbor YC;
Hawkeye. David Cuckler,
NHYC, and Hucklebenj Frog.
Joseph Holf11H1Jl. Bahla Carin· thlan YC. ~
CALIJ'ORNIA YACHT
CLUB-&>Uaa, Half-too, Tem·
pest, Tornado, Star• Quarter ton.
Finn, International Coatencler.
L"afll v..-e ...,_ n1Q11t ... IMl'!W IWUl'lt tt!QM~ten. """ .... '""....,.. 4.S
~ The withdrawal• redaeea tho
atarting fleet to 44, auu the
, ' • .t~
IAmtp• -·-~air DEAR PAT: I aent two separate
orders for mail.order merchandlae to
Clt?mstar in New York. ~'9
ebeck fer two lamps was e last
. Oct. 11. The aecond order was for
three dolls and that check fDr itlT~
wa1 cubed Dec. 7. Jbaven'trecelved
either order and sending e<>ples o!
my canceled cbeclu donn't seem to
do any good. Can you help me out?
D. s .• Costa Mesa
Clematar'a customer aenice de-
partmeut aaya yot1r dolls !lave jast
beea malled, ~ ... waa DO nicol'i
at all of your flni order or Of your
foUowup Inquiry. Jt will be ftlled,
bowever, ill view of Ule delay yoa
Jaave esperteaced. No explaaatl
was glvee u &o wby the copy el JODI'
eancelecl cbeck ltad bot hluHed la
&Jae flnt order belllic mJe4.
<littles,.. .. ,, c-i
ON11tl .,,... \Wiii ,_.. ...._ A6
DEL REY YACHT CLUB-
Ocean Racln1 catamarans.
Eric.son 2-32, 1'41. KORA, Islan·
der-36, Cal-~ PC, Venture-24 •
Cal·24.
encl u. llllend ................ , .... ~
41 eM ... ""' ........... .,,.""' .....
• Coe a proN"'• Th" trntr to PDl 0... Pot toill
ot rrd taiwr f1"tll"f1 tlM' O...,,,..,f tlltd CXllOlt "°" llttd '" """" 111"'1""'•" in 9'" '"'mm -1 ltwiftn1 Mml """'~""""to Pm°"""· At Your s.m.10 , '"O•ll"
C0<nf Doily l'il<•t. P 0 Hn;r 1560. Ct,.ta Mno. CA
»!i16 A1 manv lrtrrra o.t jl(luttU "'Ill ~ .,,...,_rd,
ttW ~ l'W11'',,..' or /..u~ ..oc 1t1eludlng tJw
rndn'11"" "°"'"· oddr•si and~",...,.,. pllOfW .,,..w-r cormoc ti. cOfUldnfd. Tlluc:o1¥11111 ~daj..
l11•ic"Pl SalUTdoJll ...
peu1on.cue
DEAR PAT: I'm encloslnt a dt.J>:
ping from the Jan. 11, um edition Of
tbe Dally Pilot. It state• that the U.S.
Supreme Court had a,reed w deolde wbetber private companies muat
ctve veterans credit for ihllitary
service ln computln1t pension
beoefitl. Can you find out wbat the
court decided?
s...., ltJ~ Tide• .._.,_ HtO~Y ~ .. "" lecoM"-,,,., ...
In this cab, you're king. Hi·back
bucket c;eels, wall-to-wall ptur.h
carpeting. AM FM radio, center
console and tinted glass. all
standard.
A standard 5-spced oa.terdrive trans-
mission which delivers hefty pulling
power end terrific gas mileage. fn
California EPA tests the SR·S Sport
Truck was rated at 28 high~ 21 city.
• These EPA ratrnga are estimates.Yoor
mileage will yary de~nC:hng on ~r
driving habits and your truck's coi'tditlon
and equipment.
You can carry on with almost
anything.A bed oa.1er.,. ~
end a useful ~oae of
1100 pOunQs.
... ,
4.J
IUlfDAY ll'lrttN.._ Ur•a.a. 4A .......... '* .... u .... ..._ 11;.41 ..... 41
119c911dlow • 6lU,_.. e.t ...,, .... ,: ........... :,., ......
~m.1;e..,....111at:•1 ....
THE LONG BEACH Yae
Club will hold fin l allo Salurd-,y and Sunday to
the West Coast repraentaUve Cor tbe Conereaaloo L Cup m tCh
racln1
Marcb.
Othen alrUdy'ln 1ho lineup
are Ted Turner, winD of the
1911 America •a Cup i Ton7
Parker, Annapolis, d.;
Graham Hall, Lucbomont, ·
N.Y.; 1!~~n Deaver, Newport Beacn ( I for Loe Anaelea
Yacht Club, and DemUa Conner,
SanDiega.)
The good ride.
lndei)endcnt
front suspefislon
geometry onhanceS
the car~1ke hafldting,
ride. and atabmty.
rs • usl s
•Stock
-
Jim Dexter: An underwater fisherman:
i I ight Diving I ·. . . It's looked upon with some sort of envy by people
·who don't understand why people go into the water and
cope with the cold and the dark.'
By CHERYL ROMO
Ol U. l>.tlly Ptlll ltaft
The moon cans a mnallic r•fl«t.ion acrou tis.
•bony water tu two figurf!I autMr' down tis. C'faggy
Lagund di/I with 60 poWldl of mro 1.0dght on their
black·aldnned bodwa. L~ nocturnal ft~i. t~
#nk Into tht! potmding 8UTf and cbJppear.
Jim Dexter, 26, and Karen Strauss, 28, are
Dlght divers. But they aubmer1e themselves In·
to chilly <SO to 60 deerees) water for different purposes.
Dexter, who works for a local dlvinf equip-
ment manufacturer, is an underwater .flsb-
erman wbo takes pride in catcbine lobster with
bla bare hands -and wbo speaks glowinely of
machismo and the •;c!!;•lcal aUmulaUon and th&
rush" otdoinlaome I "mostpeopledon'tbave
theneryetqdo."
Ms. Strauss, a professional divine instruc-
tor, takea underwater pbotoeraphs. She says
she feels ocean resources are belni depleted by
game bunters and think• it is unnatural to take
wild animals from their own habitat.
Both admit they go night dlvint for the
beauty of it. "The conditions at night are dll·
ferent and the vl!lbWty la reduced," aays Ma.
Strausa. "Most of the animals are nocturnal -so you can aee more . . . "
Dexter adds the .U,ht is "more beautitul"
<SeeDIVIN'G, Pate 82>
Eloise Kieke is leaving
UCI and beading for
home.in Elsinore.
~DI
•••
ptn to her potltion wb n told Cbucellor
Daniel o. IJ~ch about her declaion to retire two Ytan ear • rtlfhi.I JQb Important," the 1ald. "I didn't
want to tee It ldeftWled aa a woman'• Job, bUL I
dldA 't want to '" lt l01t to a man."
THB 80LtJTION wu to mere• two Jobs, the
asalatant chaMellor'a and tbe affinnau.. ac·
tlon omcer'1, and let a aecond ~rac>n handle the day.to-clay upect.s of afftrmaUve acUon.
Tbrou&h<>ut her 15 yean on the campus, Ma.
Kfob lwi alway1 fousbt for mote recopiUon for women and minorlUes. 'l'Mre were no laws
protectlna women when ahe came to UCI in 1912
but ah• treat.cl her own network of aid.
She went to penonnel in 1910 to get some
help and ended up f ormina the ftnt Status of Women committee on a UC campua ... Tbey are now mandated by law on all lb campuses,'' she
Hid. Women have come a loot way but there is
still a loft& Jr•)' to 10, lht believes. "We have
been lady=llke ln our a,pPJ"Oleh beCause I'm an
advocate ot workin( wllhln the 1:yatem, but women 1hould conUnue to preu."
TBdE AaE NO women deans (academic>
at UCI now and Ms. Kloke would like to see that
chanced soon. "I'd like to aee them make a few
mil takes on women, if necessary."
To make proireu, womea must care about
other women, 1b• a1aetted. ••we can't let down
for a minute ln our awareneu and in 1upportln1
one ailoU\er." · Ma. Kloke la aenaltlve •bout women'a l.ssues
because ahe say• she bu "experienced juat
about ev'l')'thlna that la a problem for women"
in her career. She'• had "th• title but not the salary,"
been cut out of jobs and suffered pay dia·
crlmlnatloo. But all that ii behind her now "Just think-I'll never have to look for a job
aaaln," ahe said. Jt hdn't been a bad Ute for Ma. Kloke, ln
the Ions nm. Sbe has traveled extensively, see·
iDI all of Eu.rope, the Mediterranean area.
South America, Africa, Canada, Alaska and
Mexico and much of the United States, she en·
joyed a preaU&loua position at UCI and bu
made man1 friend.I throu&b tbe yeara. ''TH Bll E," as they used to call her at
UCI, la 1llppin1 out to a new pbaH of life, which
belin•, appropriately enoup, 'tritb a crulae
throufh th• Panama canal. .. " 've never been in-Central America," abe
aald. "And I love 1blps. I've alwaya thou.Cfit I'd
llke to get on a frelgbter and ao around the world.
Ttiat'• aomeU\lnsyou can't dowben you're work·
inc."
••• DySlexla
( HorosC!~pe
211 ..... 11 .. 1 ' z 1 ff Wiii 0,.-,..,, .... ,...
Picnic
IU48T1
to .
333 E. 17th St. No; 8
" •• If
. -
i
' ' ' • . • ' ' l
PVBUC NOTICE
"CTITIOUI eu1111u1
llAMI ITlt.TllolllllT
Tiie IOHWlllO ,.,_,, ••• dol"9 ..... ...,. ...
CITY l!NGINE 11ilUILOl!ltS,
21'6 rt«"'1 ... CoM.t MKa. CA '2Ut
ltlte C-y, 1"21 BM-Ln H""ll"flOft l!IM<ll, C4 '2..,
GM< .. T, C-..y l•IZl 80<\IN
L". H\lllllllflOfl l .. <h. CA.,..,
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Pullll&lw4 Or-Coesl O•llY Piiot Jen, 20, 27, Fn J, 10, lt11
tl>I II
PUBLIC NOTICE
fllCTITIOUI IUSINH5
MA.Ml IT•TIMIU~T
The 101-.ne --II 0011\0 ll\ltl
MUh
GIOltOf S SIGNS UO F •"' SI ,
Sen11 "'""'· (.4 Jemn L £11-. ~·~ he<O" SI • H.-.,.r11M<11 Clt.llMJ
This ......_,I\ <onduc.I .. by •n '"
divl..,el.
J-l..1!11-
Thh tltl-••• I l.O wllll 1 ...
C-ty Cle<ll .. Or-Cownly Oft J""
JA, l•t• ,...,.
Publll-Or-CoeU Oe•ly PllOI Jen Jt, Ftb l. I0, 11, ltll
flt:TITlOUS •UllNUS
MAMI STATIMlllT
lll• IOllOwlf\9 pet>on• ••• clolnt
bul4,..UH
NIWP'O"T f'lltU IHVlSTlo\UOl $fRVICl!S. )d) ltY•ne ,..,..,. ... , !>\lllt
21', Htw-1 llH<ll, CA.,.,
Wllll""' J~ ~trry ltH Porl
1'\uo•te Pie<•. He,.po<t 8•e<h, C:•
I t?MO
t
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1010 Gr•nvlllt, Ntwpo<I hoKll, CA n..o
Thi\ bu•ln.u h c.onductff by •
oener•t~r•nt"hfp
Wllll•m J ferry This ll<tl-nl .,., 1111(1 wllh 11\t
Counly Ctt•ll o4 Or-Counly on J•n 20, .. ,.
1'11642
Publl•'*' er-. C.0.•I O•llY rt1•I J•" 11, Fob l, 10 II, 1'71
PUBUC NOTICE
fllt:TITIOUI •UllNllS
MAMalTATIMlllT
The to11...ino --I• fclont bull "'" .,. THI! SICILIA~, 11'1 Sovt" Coett
Hlthw•Y "--lee<h C4 "°''' ,.,.,,.., J MOt1,,..I• I''° Templt Ttrro<e, L...,,. !Moch. C4 .,~,
Thll llVJl,_.l Is ~loci by • ., '" cllvlcN•I
,....._. J. "'-""ODie
Th1t &tel-I we• llled with IM
County Cler" ol Or•" .. County Oft J.,,...,., ... 1'111 ,
, P11bll1-Or ..... Coe\I O•llY PllOI
J ... 20. 27, f'tll 1 10, .. ,.
PUBLIC NOTICE
ll7·11
PUBUC NOTICE
'ICTIT10UI IU"Mlll .. Ml.ITAT8MaNT
TM 191 ....... ,.,_ It feljlf !Wtl-
MM•: OIL LAOO "1!4LTV', 12111
... -.. Ml•lall V .. ID. CA. ftUS Jet•I• Ouane Har•lfl, !2112 ......... Mt•• v1ei.. c.a.. "'" T1llle ....-.. _.. "' ....... . ..,.~·'· Jer4114~H~lfl
l1 UC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
"CTITIOUI •UllNaH
NAMliTATIMlllT
Ha9
Pulltltl!M Or-C.oet\ Dally Piiot,
Jen 20, Jr, '90 3, 10, 1'11 .,,.
. fnctlr, Januaty 'Z7, 1118
PVBUC NOTICE
IOl 71
PUBUC NOTICE
POBUC NOTICE
DAI\. Y f'll.OT 8J
lfOTICI M w.&.e 0, r1 •tot1.u. rlllff I •TY
'ff ~ -Q _,... ...... .
6"" _.....,.. ..... ._ -.... ,.. "°"-ll>e -tiQMe OOHlt.LO t: UV OLUNO iM ... ..., ..-. ~ ....
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Oo!wlcl II..---..OU\Jljlll Or.nQI (Miit Oalty IOllOI J-r -.11. 1m 2•11
PUBUC NOTICE
PICT1TIOUI IUllMIH
NAMI ST4TUAaMT
T ... l .. IOWl"t ,..--I& CIOl"9 bu I ,,."' .,
COMH&LLY"S W&LOIMG. UO
2Jnt. c.tl. Ml!4e. C4 f't77 Gll•tll11.1a frlt ,.ul090, 2 ...
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••• 1'11 ,...,
Pllbll,_ Or ... CM•I o.lly P1io.
Jtll lt. f1. ,..0 l. 10 .. ''" IJHI
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
HOTICll TOCONTUCTOlta
CALUHO !'Ott ••ot tc.._. Ol~l NP~ln-MESA
Ullll,110 SC...oot. O!STIUCT
lld DNOI": 2 • •'clocll p.m. ot
Ille "'" .. , .. l'etlnMry. ,,,. "'oc•W 1141 R~: 11'7 Ploc•nll• kr•t. C.te-. c.llfoml• 0'17 Pr•l•<I lfentlflcall°" Nam•:
IN Tl:lt IOlt/IXTERIOA 1'41NTING
PNn "--"' llM: OfflGI., -Oil"Klor ol ~1..t-nt• -~·· !left,, , ....... M. lff•t!M>f, .,, ........
Mrffl, Cetta MfM, Celllott!18 •2•-·
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YPfLOT Business
"
u~
MOST PASSERSBY STOP TO CHAT AT LITTLE TOLL HOU81! ON Dl!LAWAAE RIVER
Caretaker Carl Benaley Collect• 35 Cent• per Car CroHlng Private llrtdge
' I
PliintExemptionBacked
Senate Edges Approval of Sundesert Plea
SACRAMENTO <AP> -TN! state Senate bas voted to ex·
empt the proposed Sundeaert
nuclear r.ower plant from
CalUomla a ttinaent nuclear
aafecuard Jaws.
The vote Tbunday was the Oft·
ly po1lUve •ten La a week of •el·
back• for proPOnente of the
1,900-mecawatt project. on the
Mojave Desert near lslythe.
The 21·10 Senate vote, the
minimum Offdtd ror pa11aae.
sent. the bill, SB 101~ by Sen.
Newton Russell, R·Tujun.a, to
tbo Auembly, which baa ~
much more ho ttle than the
Senate to nuclear power in re·
cent years.
SDGAE Eflft S9'e
SAN DIEGO <AP> -San
Dieso Gu & Electric Co. hopes
to sell and leue back ill Enclna
fouil-fuel power plant in
Carhbad, a move that reported·
ly would raise $120 million.
( TAKING J
....__S_TO_CK_
The plan was disclosed at a
hearinl of the California PUbllc
Utilittes Comm1e1!on. Public
Utilltlet Commlnlon. Ralph L.
Meyer, treasurer of the uUlity,
aald it would aboll1b tho need to
issue $50 million ln bOndl this
year ror new construction. ..
.lof)Selm ... Deart
WASHINGTON CAP)
Concresalonal economists aay
the n~tion's perslsteot un·
employment problem is llkely to
be solved within the nen several
years by sharply lower 1rowth
ln the laborforce.
Exxon Corp.. baa become the
second major American firm to
announc ita participation ln
Disney World'& Future World
project.
Exxon Wlll mponsor an etietSY
pavlUoa at lb lone-planned Bx·
penmental ~ Communl·
ty or Tomorrow. wblch includes·
Future World and World
Showcase theme parka. Tb• AD·
nouncement did not disclose
financial details.
Cla•JtCft" •• /fled
The Oranie County chapter ol
the Construction Specification.
Institute will meet Feb. 'I at the
Holiday lnn OI Costa Mesa.
The sodal hour wtll bealn at
5:30 p.m. with dinner at t :ao.
Cost ls $8.~. or $7.50 with ft·
aervatlons, which may bo made
by eaillnl 5'1-8225. €••..-er 1'ete eC
'Family' Loves Bri~ge
Such a radical development,
they said in a report reJeaed
Thursday. could result In start!· tns 1ocla1 cbantes: leas mtira·
tlon from the cold North to the
Sun Belt; more nexlble worklnc
conditions; more automation;
1reater opportunities for Un·
derskilJed or older workers, and,
perhapt, a movine away from
the "materialism·• of the 1970a
WASHINGTON (AP) -A tet
conaressional vote ls scheduled
next month on estab.U1h1n1 a federal consumer protection
a1ency, a proposal that haa
pitted bu.slness groupa against.
consumer lobbyists for almost a
decade.
By Jl'l.ES I.OH .,. ...... c.w.._....,
. DrNGMAN'S FERRY. Pa
EVl'ry morning before first light
Carl Bcn1>lcy, a dedicated man,
puts out some cracked corn for
the deer lhat wanders daily to
has dooryard. Then he goea and
sees to lhe bridge.
He walks across It, checu it.a
wooden surface, its iron
~uperstructure, ats great stone
pilings that are its foundation. .
OTHER BRIDGES, dozens of
them , span the swift ano
sparkling Delaware River on
Hs journey through this quiet
valley, but this bridge is a special
one .
You sense its dlrference 1m-
mcdiat<'ly.
You drive across Its rattling
"Planks and stop al a little white
loll hou.'le with a green roof and
red brick chlmney The toll
taker ambles up to the car win·
cfow. smiling, to collect lhe 35
t·ents. Most passersby pause to
t hat, about the . weather, about
the airy lrrideacence of the river today, about whether lhe
two golden eagles who do their
• hshlng here have been about lately.
THIS BalDGE NOT only links
t't\-O states, Pennsylvania and
New Jersey, but is a link as well
with .more than two centunes of
history. And It is one of lhe last
remaining privately owned
bridges in lhe land.
·'The bridge is a buainess. of
course," Carl Bensley said, "but
l think its owners are just u
concerned about lts hJstorlcal
importance as its buaine11 lm·
portance. They really love the
bridge.
"Every October they have a
stockholders meeting here. It's
Jike a family reunion. They cet
motel rooms and visit with one
another, and they all go down
and loot at the brid&e, see that.
it's in good repair. That's my
Job, keeping it ln good repair."
No wonder it's like a family
reunion.
NEARLY ALL THE 38
shareholders in the Dlngmans
Choice and Delaware Bridie Co.
are related. most or them
descendants of the brothers who
bought into the bridge In 1900,
the rest descendants of old An·
drew Olngman himself.
In his pioneering way, Andrew
Dingman was a straightforward,
no-nonsense sort of man. Thi.
was the place where, in 1715, he
chose to live. So he named it
Dlngmans Choice. He didn't
eyen complicate t.be name with
en apostrophe.
He atarted a business poling A
flat-bottomed ferry across the
river. HU off1prln1 tolloweCI
S\ll\. and eventually the Dingman family owned a big
stone house with balconi• ori
both floora overlooklnt the
river.
THE OLD HOUSE atlll stands,
sadly deserted, a haven tor
squirrels who play by day tn a
( AMERICA J
surroundinc gl'ove ot linden
trees.
"I lived in that bouae back In
the '20s," said Doris Lan~ of
Medina, Ohio, presldellt ot the
bridge company. ''My father
died there. Some ot \IS ln tho
family are determined to rest.ore
lt It ... ill be expemive, but it ls
our dream."
Mrs. Lance llved there tons
a rte r the ferry had been
replaced by a bridge. That was
In 183-t when the le11slatures of
both statea granted a charter for
a toll bridge. That charter 11 still
in effect.
THE ORIGINAL bridse
washed out lo a flood, and so did
ita replacement, built lo 1885. In·
deed, ferries had to be uatd ao
often the village came to be
known u Dingman's Ferry.
Finally, lo 1900, Mrs. Lance's
uncle and hls two brothers, rrom
Ohio. boueht a discarded
wrought-Iron railroad bridce. carted it here jn tbl"ff 233-foot
Kllons, set it on the orlctnal
stone pilings, which they rai!ed,
and that ii the brldte that re-mains today.
According to the 183' charter,
schoolchildren and people eoing
t.o church or t.o a burial could
cross the bridge free. That pro-
vision rema.ln.s today, too.
Coastal Employees Promoted
M arleoe Zell hits been promoted to the position
or vice president and fashion director at Ballock'•·
She joined Bullock's In 1988 and most rec:enUy
held the position of divisional merchandise
manager. Her new responsiblllties Include
merchand1.le development and presentation for
women's, men's and children's fa.sh.Ion apparel and
accessories.
• Mlcllael Weisber1, 1eneral manager, Bullock's
South Coast Plaza, wlll succeed Ms. Zell as
divisional merchandlae manacer in a reallpment of departm.cnta.
ISeU)' .Joleennlnf has been named dlvialonal
vice prHldent. and dhiaional JQercbandise
mana1er. Her m01t recent posltlon wu that. of
dtvlllonal merchandise mana1er. New
Claims
CAPITOLIZE · Filed
WITH
CAPITOL
The followlna have
flhcl petltlona of
bankru,Ptcy ln 'Santa
Ana Federal Court:
ruponaiblllties include merchandisin& of
sportswear and empbaiia apparel. * .
Ra.uell R. DlehJ, Costa Mesa, hu been promot·
ed to aaa!atant vice president. in VDJon Bl.Ilk'• in·
ternatlonal dlvlslon.
He Jolned the bank In ms and most recently
served as an lntemaUonal officer and regional ad·
ministrator for Latin America. • DaYlcl a. C1ner, Coata M a, bu been pro-·
moted to manacer for NaU-wtde P'tllaadal Corp ••
He will be ln charge of the Weatmlnlter office.
He Joined the firm last Aupat as an aasiltant
manatcr for~ DOwney office. • John D. O'Donnell & Partners, Newport Beach
induattlaJ real estate developer, ha1 chanted lta
name to O'OOiaileU, Brt1b1m a Putae:i'L
The name qt 1' nae• W. Brt1bun, Irvine, a
general partner since June tm. bas been added to ·
the firm'• UUe. He la responilblo for finance and
1dmini1ttative actlvlU •
''WHEN MY FATHER was
the toll taker in 1926," Mn.
Lance recalled, "a man dressed
as a mi.niater frequently crossed
the bridge drlvlng a hearse.
'rhat was durlne Problbltion,
and my father came to find out
that what wu LD the coffin was
whlakey."
Carl Bensley, the local resl·
dent who sea to the brldie'1 re-
pair, says nothln1 that inlrlau·
ine happens •t the bridge
nowadays. ''It's JUSl a/lace to
cross the river." he sai • "but a
very pleasant place."
My, yes. The tramc is sparse.
the countryside quiet· and re·
motq. It would be hard t.o quar·
rel ..Vlth Din9man's choice.
'
FHgltU to ae...e
SAN l>IEGO CAP) -Scenic
Airlines will resume flights
between Palomar Airport and
Las Vegas on Feb. 1 with a atop
in Palm Springs, company of.
ficlals say.
Scenic started Carllb.Jd to Las
Veiaa aervice 1ut. October but It
was terminated Jan. 15 because
the company couldn't obtain ap-
proval for the Palm Sprln11 atop
!tom the Public UtlllUes Com·
mlaalon. Company ofncials said
the commission chan1ed its
mind
Ezzon.J....,,Dblletf
LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla.
CAP> -Exxon Co., a division of
Over The Counter
NASDUttfnp
Houae Speaker Thomas P.
O'Neill Jr. announced he has
scheduled a House vote, expect·
ed to be the major tut. o! tho
bill. for Feb. 7. Tbe bill would
establish a government ace.DCY
to represent. con.au.men before
federal regulators, where con·
sumer groups say they now are
badly outnumbered by corporate
representatives.
l..•..,we• • •••ea.
Remus M. Cadar, pr~ident of
the American Foreisn Exchange
Co , Los An1elea, wUl speak at
the organlzatlonal meeting of
the Orange County Bar Auocia·
lion's lntem-.tlona1 law section
at noon Tuesday at the Ba.r As·
soclatlon otnces in Tustin.
• /SUSI NESS -
'lfB~SACTIONS
Friday, J&r'IU*Y 'Z7. 1978 N DAIL V PILOT 8:J
UN'l1L Ult. THE AGE AT WIUCH benefits become
payable regardless of eamtnp. Nmalns T2. St.arttn1 in
1982, the •ee will be cut to '10.
Congresa &topj)ed short of wipmf out the retirement
teat. That would KaV. been a much more cosUy step than
~uttin& off at age 70, because m~ more people •led 6S to
10 are sWI in tM wol'k force than are people in the •r.~
bracket of 70 to 72.
Pa.rt of tbe cost or t.Mse llberaliuUou will be offset by
chante that eUmliiatu lbo monthly earntnis teat. lt
permitted a beftef1Clary with 1ubltantial e~ to aet
around the intent Of the l'd:i.nmeot teeL
UNDER THE MONTHLY TSS'I'. reeardlen of annut:l
income, a beneficiary could collect a benefit check for by
month ln which wases amounted to I/lab or lat of tho
annual exempt total and he or she did not perform
aubltanUal services in aelf·emptoyment.
The obJecUve was to take into account those w~o
retired in mld·year or who could get an occasional JOb at
good wage.s.
From now on, the monthly eamlnp test can apply to
only the initial year or retirement. But interpretation df
the ruling hasn't been pinned dowo.
If it applies strictly tt> new beneficiaries in their fim
year of retirement, the Social Security system will aav,
S200 million in 1978.
Prices, Volume Off
As Market Slumps
NEW YORK (AP> -Stock prices turned In a mixed
showing today m a quiet, drlftJnt session.
The Dowzo • average of 30 industrials, which had rouen 9.10 points ursday to a 33-month low, edged up 0.78
to76.f.l.2
But los outnumbered gainers by a e-s margin
among New York Stock Exchanae·Uated issues.
Analy~ noted some reUef over the Federal Reserve's
weekly ataUsticaJ report at the close on Thursday, which
showed a smaller increase ln the basic measure of the
money supply than some traders had feared.
But brolcets aJso pointed out that buying lntereit was
Do.,lonnA r•~•
""' lJ"'IAP) l'llMll Oow--av«attt
ITOC OMol HI"' I.ow 0-Qll~
• '" ,.,,., 1'&.St "'·" 1'4.11+ •. ,... 20 Trn l0t.2t 21UI 207 .. 109 71-0.111 IJ UU 105.l• IM .. IOUl !Of.at-O.IO +s $111 M.$1 170.20 Mt.M t4UJ.J-t 2'
lftdlil • .. • • • .......... , ..... ~. Tr•• . . .. .. .......... )IS~
lttllS ..................... • • !!?~-~ USttl ....................... _,.._
NlW YOlllC IAll't
. . ••
Changmg Straet11re Drives U0111hs Out
B1 GLBNN WllJTE °'-~ ...........
• Elmer Oombl is rellrlnf as
: :auntinstoa Beach llilh athletic
• 11,rector at tho end ol the current.
;chool year and a repl•cement
• expected to bQ cboaen in the
aear future.
Combs wlll move Into the
Classroom, be aaya, to teach
traffic 1afety and bealt.b.
Lut spring he reUrod from
basketball coachinc duties.
• He cttod ever-expanding p~
blems In t.be pbyalcal education
department and in aportl u hls
reuon for neatiDe the athletic
directonhip.
Primarily, it ls the advent of
Title JX, the law whJcb eays
elrl.s must bave equal partlclpa·
tion and consideration with boys
in sportl and physical education.
Classes have become coeduca·
tional. Interscholastic basket·
ball season has been shortened
for the boys. And use of facWtlea
by boys and girls bas become an
obstacle f~ teams trylne to
work out.
.. For. me, tt's time for a
cbanie," Combs nya. .. I'm not
sure I a1ree with Title IX.
They've eooe overboard on eer4
tnin thlop, 1ucb u the restruc·
turtn1 or P.E. to n>"ake it coeducatlonal.
"For example, when we had
just boys in the duaes, they bad
five minutes to dress and be
ready for gym clau. But the &lrla
take 10 ininutes, ao we have to
wait that much loneer to 1et 10-
ing.
"Then, the girls waot to eo in
·~ .....
DOWN FOR THE COUNT New York's Glen
Gondrczick is pinned under Scott Wedman
and teammate Ray Williams in a struggle
for a loose ball at Madison Square Garden
Thursday night. A jump ball was ruled in
the NBA battle which was won by the
Knicks over Kansas City, 112-105.
Sports in Brief
Navratilova Wins;
Borg Cets Scare
LOS ANGELES Mar\ina
Navratilova and Greer Stevens
scored straight vict.ones Thurs· day night to earn spots in
the semifinals of a women's ten-
nis toUU'ament at the Sports
Arena.
Navratilova eliminated 15·
year-old Tracy Austin of Rolling
Hills, 6-3, 6-4 while Stevena upset
Virginia Wade, 6-4, 7·5.
Sue Barker downed Zenda
Liess, 6-0, 7-s while R~ie Casals
outlasted Mariana Slmionescu,
6-3,3--6,M.
In other matches Yvonne
Vermaak won by default over
Dlanne Fromholll, who is ~
fering from the flu, and Marlse
Kruaer whipped Reelna
?darslkova, 6-2, 6-3.
Two quarter final matches are
scheduled ton1eht wlt.b Barker
Unknown Pro
Leading SD
GoUTourney
facing Casals and Marise
Kruger meeting Yvonne
Vermaak.
eon....-.R.u.
PHILADELPHIA -Jimmy
Connors scored an easy 6-1, 6-1
victory over Buster Mottram to
· reach the quart.er flnala of the
$225,000 U.S. indoor pro tenbla
champlcoshlp Thunday.
But second-seeded Bjorn Borg, had to wage an Intense
two-hour battle before defeattna
22-year-old Peter Flemlq.
Borg narrowly escaped with a
3-6, 7-6, 6-3 victory after FlemlnJ served a double fault in the tbltd
game of the third set.
In otber matcbet..t .J~bn
McEnroe upeet Manuel urt.me1,
'1·6, 6-2; Sandy Jdayer topped
Vltu Q.-olaitt.a, 6-2, 7·5; ltaal
Ramire& defeated Keo :Rosewall. M. f.2; BrlaD Gott-
tried defeated WoJtek Ftbak.
16·3, 1·8.LE~ddie :Olbba b1tat Harold l:IOIOIDOO. a.a. 8-1 and
Roseoe Tanner stopped Ille Nutue, 1-1, 1-7, U. .., • .._.r.....,.c
I
earlier because they aay tt takes
tonier for &Mm to shower and
dress.
"'Yet every P.E. clan la eoed.
It'• ln1anlty. There are certain
k1d1 who don't want lt, but are
forced into It. •
..Dlsclpllne ls 1olnf. down.
Some men teachers caQ t handle
cJrla, aome of the women in·
atructors can't. handle boys. If you have strenuous exerclae.
they (gtrls) don't want lt. ..
Combe polnU to eban•• tn
athletics as a aocoo4 reuoo for
hfl decision to 10 to the
cla11room tul.lUme.
•• Atbletica on tho blgb 1chool
level ts ln financial trouble.
Now we are s~dinl as much time ralalng funds t.o supPort our
eporta u we do coacblnf,"
Combt1&y1.
.. The~ are very few coaches
tlleae days wbo are wllllDf t.o spend time that coaches
used to put ln. Y oa wo11't see peo.
ple atayioc 1n coacb.lnc 20 to 25
yean, which wu common in the
past.
"'There ls too much added
...
·Pacific TriumphJJ
Sputtering UCI
T11mbles, 70-58
Bl curo BBEl'P GI-~.-..._
UC Irvine bukotball eoach
Tim Ttft had hoped h1I team
could win at Jeast one aam• this week to have a chance at a berth
Jn the Paclt1c Coast Athletic M,,.
aoclation playoffs ln March.
But if tba Anteaters CGDtlDae
to play like tbe1 did Thursday
ni&llt aiaimt vtattlna University of Pacific that hope wW be just
a dream.·
Paclfic had little trouble 1n
rollln• to a 'JO.A vi~ over the
Anteaters -controlliJll tbe
game from at.art to pntab ..-
thann maln)y ·to aome 11J2.llng
free throw 1bootiD1 and UC1'1 mediocre pla,y in tile opentn1
half.
Coach Stan Morrison's Ttaers
hit 16 of 18 free throws in the first half and 22 of 2' for the
game. UCI, meanwhile, went to
the charity stripe just twice.
Pacific completely abut of!
UCI inside and the Anteaters
were foreed to cut away -with
below avenie result.a. Only in
the latter staies ot the came -
when Padtlc bad a bl& lead -
did UCI start to warm up. And'
then lt wu too late.
The '11gers Jumped to a 1~2
lead, bad a 30-18 adnntaee late
in tbo flrlt half and a 16-2S
margin· at the half. Then, after
popping in six ol lta ftnt seven
shots after the intermlasion.
Pacific barged ahead, ~30. and
it was a yawner tbe rest of tho
way. • • UCI's Wayne Smltb, who
scored 91 points 1n the la3t three
eamea and bad hit '10 percent o£
his shots 1n that span. was far
off that fonn -canning 9 of 21 attempts (42.9 percent). Still be
rmiabed with 20 point.a for game
honors. Both teams had 16 turnovers,
but UCL gave it up 13 times in
the open.in& half when it really
counted.
Pacific fired lo 46 percent of
It.a abota <.24 of 52) while UCI
· connected on 28 of 63 (44 per·
cent).
• Irvine, now ~5 in PCAA pl~y.
host.a San Jose State Saturday
• night.
PacllkOH
.. ft ... Bf'YWlt 2 0 • •
c.n.tt a••• ~ , ....
~-2246 Glinll4 IW • • 1 '2 ~ 2 2 f 6
McLWglll'" 2J 2 " McGuire ~ o .c
TMell ~ 22 110
t4•1fll~---.
* *
Ul)UCI~ .. .....
5"1'11th0
• 2 ' • ,.......,. 2 0 ...
Olrtlt 1 0 2 2
MCOflfre• ' 0 ,.,.
C4<Mft •4 •O I I Jwtt • 0 , •
StepMM 1 0 0 ,
9t'OWll 2004
Totals 21 2 n .se
* f'CAA STAMDINGS
"'""°"·· Gel Stet• (Flllle<1ml) Pedf k
• Sell Oleoo State • C.I Mott (Lollg llelC!I> S.11Jose..,.. ucs.ni......,.
UC:lrvlM Tta .........
W L Pl' l'A
s 0 ·* 243 .. 1 ,,, J3.I
41a:JUJ
3 2 >n XII
2 I 366 31' , • J2$ U4 ,,,,,,..
0 5 »1 :llS
.... Olelo ... 14. c;.l SllW (l'lllllt1DPI) .. CAI~ C1An11MC11)1J,UCs.nt...--.06' I ,.,_,.... ,,, lln.Jote Mlltlt 4S
P.eclfk1'UCIMM•
c.1...-b'll ~J:::... O'lllldlnl ,.,_ ......... fie
UC~..,_.._. Sell ~Sbt8 S..,,_SIMelllOC:IMN
Kings Erupt
To Trip Blues
INGLEWOOD (AP) -Glenn
Goldup stnact fer a pair of coats
and Marcel Dklmte fl.red tn h1a
2SOtb Natklnal Hockey Leap
goal and added two aasl•t•
Tb•raday ni&bt •• tbe Los
AQaeles IQqs scored a ~1 vie·
tol'7 over the St. Loats Blues.
A four-coal outburst tn the
third period enabled the Kinp to
twin. their second same ln a row
and keep the Blues wlnleu in
their lut ftve ouUDge.
. ·preuure1 now. People thlnk
about, t&Jt about and ct to
athletics. Booetera are more pre-:
Yalent and like to have tb.u aq_
about the school's pro.ram. ·
"It's ao euy to crltlclie, anct
these 1uya (coadtet) aren't 10co
Inf. to lut. 'It's ju.st not worth it • ••rve tried to be flwble but
hnd I can't do It anymore. I
won't misa lt. I don't mlss
coaching. I've 1otten tt all out Ol myayatem."
"Glrl.a aporta have Just eoaio
OD tooltroag and too fast:••
E.MERCOMBS
Fullerton
Falls, 94-69
To Aztecs
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Klm
Goetz scored 31 points to lead·
San Dle&o ~te to a 9M8 vic-tory over Cal State (FuJlerto1l)
Thursday nitht ln • Pacific
Coaat Athletic Aatoclatlon
basketball aame.
The Titans auffered their ftiit
PCAA loes in five sames while the Aztecs improved their cc..
ference record to 3-2.
San Diego State nner traDe4 ln scoring the ,aaler·thaa· •
expected nctorJ. TU A.atees lecl
at halltfme, 53-ZT, and tbe '1'ltam
never thttatened leriousl1.nao
the lntermlulon.
Steve Malovic added 18 paints'
for San Dieao State. Joel,
Kramer had 12 point.a and 10 i.-
bounds and Mike Dodd 12 pohltl
and nine rebound• for the~
Aztecs, who are now 10.'I for tbe
season.
Keith Anderson and Mllur"
Niles led the Titans, who are
·now 13-4, with 12 points apleee.
Gref Bunch wu held to Just U
point.a and srabbed only two ,.
bound• for Fullerton. Buach
brouaht a 11.0 acorint avierqe
and an 8.3 reboU'odillg averare
into the 1amc. •
..
BOB JOHNSON
Johnson
Selected
At El Toro
_ By a o.l17 PUOt rnir
Junlor-domlaated Newport
Harbor HJch will be tl7lq to 1µcce11fu.Uy defend four COD•
aecutive Sunset Loatu• varalty
awtm cl'OWDI th1e year aa the season ceta under way.
Coach Bill Jewell, belfrmlng
bla seventh year at tbe bllm,
hH plenty of talent OQ band. but
admltl that it'll be toup to ,...
peat With onl1 one aemor Oil &be
squad.
Tbat'1 ClaDey LaTIM, MW to
the progam, but wltlr 11.a
credenti in the 100 fl a ut;le u a aopboa>ore.
The l'fllt ol the nrSlb' Will be made up ol last year'• outitmd-int froab-eopb aureptlon and
It may be enouah to olfHt the
depth at Edison <SantlDctQD Beacb)HJCIL
Junlora Jeff Pult1, Peter
Gorman. James Ber1MOD and
Keith Kenworthy comblOed to
wlo the 200-yard medley Nia)' ln
the CIF froab-aoph cham-
pionahipftnals (1:'3.76).
That quartet ta on band, u ls
sophomore Mike Grier (HCODCI
ln the trosb-sopb 100 br.ut at
1:03.25 lb the CIP) and Junior
Paul POlteVeol
Also, tbe saDon are boJltencl
by freth.Uan Shawn Da•t1, JUnior &am W1Dlamt llcl Bunt-tnston Beach Junior tru.Uer Tom Ta)'lor.
J'\dta WU leCOOd tn the fl'Glb..
aopb $0 free at CIF CJ2. '11> eDd
Bergaon and Grier ft< \-1 m
the 100 breast Yitb S.rpecm re-
cording a CJF NCOrd l :OL
Grier was pueblA& wltb a
1:03.25.
Poiteveot, KenwrtbY: Grier
and l"ults eombiMd for a 1:36.N
1ll UM 400-Jard treestyte nla)',
B1LL .JEWELL.
• . . •
Cage Crueial
MV, Tritons Clash
In Battle for 2nd
... _
_.., ... ,.. ......
__............ .. ............ ---------·--·--·---............. , ..................... -................................ ..
A llo ln the field are Monty
'Montaomery, 71, of Sherman
Oaks, who holds every rttord
from a,es 8$ throach 71; Pet.er
Strudwick of La Palma, the Coot· leas maratlion runner; M•vi1
Lindarm, a TO.year-old woman:
and Susan Peterson, 33, of
Laguna Beach wbo f ls she can
run under J:SO.
The meet is aancUoned ti)' the
Pacific AisoCiatioo of the MU
with a number of troPbles to be presented to wlimers In the It
dlvlal®S of the race aloq with
tbe oldest imd Joun&est llnbhera
and team plaques.
Special divisioa.s are beln( run
for mUitaJy penonnel, law en-
forcement. attonteya ancl ~ton along itb •I• •roup
•
breakdown• tor mea and -..... ~----;.---~ women. ·.
Entries will be taken lip to
ata.rtlnc tlm with tbe-$3 fee pl\11
a U late entry fee J>einc
cliaraect. 1'bo coune 1s rated as the
fas&eat flat course ill the coun·
try. It will 1tart on Glusell
Street just north of Cbapman. and co eoutJi to .chestnut. Eaat
on Cbestnut, then Bryao to Jef•
trey. South to Trabu.co, east to
Sand Can~ and up to JniDe.
On Irvine lt 1oe1 back to
Pros~. nort1a to Sprint, bade
to Hewes, to Bood, Collins eJKt
then on Sbafler ancl Walnut to
tbeacbooi.
Girls'
Athletic
Alamitos Race Results t i
Results
~
lltwnmrMl'f
• OMr.'n'•• .... llHT •A~ -• raNt. 9 'fUI elfl & up. CMltnlna. Pllr'lll '2,IOO
Ol•O•vld (Hartl 10.il 6.11 a.a
A11a<lla Olwvt fUllllalftl ...-1 .•
Mr Mosler (Dltnl1 ... d IA
Tlme-2U:I
Al• r~ -S4MIMt %111\1, Oldle W
W..-'l lwllMll.. ; =:":~.,:.:'."s:m.~ ::. C•I Paly IM.01 t~I '6111 UC lrvl'" Ml luddla
400·vard medl•'t' rel•Y 1. UCI S<r•l<lled Tra91c l!nd, Or ~ U 1 kobey, llKkY 74, s..tr Alwt
SOO frH-1. Dull Ill S:J7.7, 2 » lau .. I-of• 0.'114 a .... ,.,._
Kl,..man (CPI S '1 3, J kruM Cll Curi•. PeldiJl.tl
s '' 4 SO 1>410 I Corto (fl 30 •. 2 Helm SICOND •ACE 3JO yards. J
ICPI Jl 0. J la"°" ICPI :13 2 yur olda Cl•lmlno tor m•ld•n• 700 l)rU•I I. 0-11 (CPI2.0 4, 2 PurH U,100
5111rp (I) 2•44 l, l. 9"Qer (CPI l!cllal'\ Oreem
! St t (Hartl S4 40 21 20 1UO
SO fly 1 lr<ll Ill 30 6, 2, LeOQt Go M•ld Oo (Cllntwl '4.40 1UO cCP1)07,J llAll•tCPlttO OH·N•lllNM ta.rd) UO
100 fr .. -t. 0<111'91 (CPI SU; 2 OH·"'" ~nt• lfllenw') 10.00 SMpllard tCP) ,..J; I. ,..,,.,,. 0 Tim. -tt.16
1 01 2. Aleo nn -s..pr1 CAprlcorn, ,,.,.
200 lndo-t, Ovff (I) 2.2J I; f , Cute Gel, IClll'f'*9 Mooll, Tl'llrd llrown1119 Ill 2. 24.S; ~. ICl,..man Ho<IM, DuAln llou. Fa.I Jetawey
ICPI 2.2'.S Scrat,IMf-l"rllc-LW Go, lie
l·metw .,...._.. ,._~ (CP) M MoOll Qlteif,..,._ .......... ~
1'7 SS; t. ~ ((Pl \tU; 3. ~er h
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f'OUlnlt llAC9 -ut ywct.. :a "~::::-" ' veer Oldt. Clelml"9. F~ tMldtnt,
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CM1'91 II. >
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'
<>r a•Qluntv••o dtlt
fJnooln-Mtttury IMl«lh p
t
Lessons
Learned
Easel-ly
• Creative children will have three new chances to bruah
up on their AB~ starting Saturday al Newport Harbor Art 1
Museum. In this case, A stands for all, around, art and adven·
lures.
And C Is for creativity and compatibility.
The museum 1s expanding its art program for
I youngsters through weekend workshops, accordin1 to
Phyllis Lutjeans, curator of education.
! "WE ARE DELIGHTED to have Chuck Feesago W'ho
has been working with our start and with children for two
years," she said. "His aim is to transmit .his talent to I young students 4 to 8-years old.
"Form, shape, line and color will come to We't.broulh
·•·• • his akill and craftsmanship in teachint mural makine.. col-laae. assemblage, performance andset<teslp. '' 1 l Feesago, a studio arts major at UC Irvine, further ex-
1
,r'··
1
plained that his Art is All Around sessions will prompt an " awareness of the environment.
HE WILL TEACH workshop participants How to ap-
preciate architecture, entertain themselves, make their
own toys, write plays and .,.ork toaether. 1
,.
His 9 a.m. to noon cJ~ continue for ei&bt weeu.
AllO on Saturdays. JOwap\erl from 9 to 13 will have a
more advanced workibop taught by Cbadlyn J.,nes, em>·
sultant for children's art projects at the Allao ElementarJ
School and the Lacuna Beacll School of Del~. No~ for her expertise m combining ethnic culture
with art lw1rnlo1 and process, abo will mix primitive and·
contemporary tdeu with her Adventures in Art.
Material.a from other cultura will be~ u well as
the cban11n1 exhlbitlona. Drawing, patntina. cla7
sculpture, prtntmaklnl and aaaembla&e are 10me of tb•
media to be explore<I.
EVERY Ol'llER SUNDAY, beglmtirts Jan. 29, P ... ton
Hibbard Will mer1e chUdten and parents in CreaUvtt1 and
CompaUbllity from l to 4 p.m. • 1 Ms. J.,utjean referred to Hlbbard's endle$1-capacl\y \o
produce inventive and workable ideas. This aeries, timed
at the 7 to 13 aae aroupt marks bis th.lid retdrn to the
museuln. The courae bas been designed to have family memben
creatively enjoy each other. A full three hours will bC d•·
voted to pa~'lcUlpture, mun.J.s and very intricate P\l.P~
andmuk·m~.
For repattauon informailon, phoiie 159·1122.
• •
-..
HE STARTS each momin( b)'
writing a love ~tter to Ills W\!e
-he also does a pencil sketch
for her. Then he'll sit at the
piano and compose several
tunes. (His concerts include his
own wilinal mu.sic.)
Whils: dnvioj to bis omcc be di~tates a ah<it story Idea into • canette tape :recorder. on S&m·
daya be taltes the best ldea and
writes the story.
EYen :w~ he's on the road he ~arrles his oil paints and each
rucb\ outlines a new paintina.
His .clown p.mtings may 11 for
$15,000 to art calleries. wblcb. ln
'You can't lie to
tnat camera.
'I have no hatred
of Reople.
'/ think that comes
acr:O$S.'
-Red Skelton
i
l
l
'r
. r
SADOLEBACK'S 'MAN OF LA MANCHA' STARS AT 'BRAVO' BEST
David Holnday (left) play• Don Quixote and Tert Ralaton I• Aldonza
ARTISTS WAMl'ID!
OWnenOf
HASWIH ART GA' I FRY, GLBl>ALE .............. ~ ....
wru. n '" LA•UMA. FltL ... J SUIF. SAM> MOTL P9ftMOUSI sum TO ACCVT ON CO..ON,_NT
Show Biz
Stars at
SVPlay
top L."91 WOfb of "-t•Mk>Mt Attllta In on., Actyln. Weter~. Pottery W••vlnt, We ~. lcutphne, Eta.
Actot Andrew Parks
and actress Bonnie Ebsen will be amon1
s pecial guests at
Saturday·s VIP night at
Saddleback College's
staae presentation of
"Man of La Mancha."
Other show buslne11
personalities and area
official.I are expected to
alt.end the musical. The
play is the first produc-t.ion ln the recentb' com-
-pleted (l(».1eat F\De Arts
'I'b at.I' Oil ttiO OD Mejocam at.allnl, featurln1
ee prolesaionals who
b1ve performed on
Broadway, David Holli·
day. Teri Ralston and
Rudy Tronto, ls being
1ta1ed tonight, Satur·
day and next Wednes·
day through Saturday,
Feb. 4 at 8 p.m. Sun-
Hours: 2-6 PM 7 .. P 2tl> 24M711
DISCO FEVER -
AT1"1
\tA"IU"it
LOUNGE
• day's curtain, as well as on Feb. 5, wlll be at 5 • p.m . The play opened ~~~~~~~~~~~!!!~~~~!!.
Thursday . . ~ SATURD~Y·s per-
• formance is 11old out.
• Tickets for the other
: ~hows may be pur·
~ chas ed in person or
by mail t.broulh tbe col· ~ lege Fine Arta box of·
flee. 28000 Mar1uerltt
Parkway, MiJsion VleJo.
• The bOx office lJ open 10
a.m. to 2 p.m. Mon.day•
throu1h Fridaya, 5 p, m •
. to 7 p.m. Monday•
1 throu1h Tb daya, 8 to
• 8 p .m. Saturdays and 3
lG 1 plm. &mdan. Holliday plays the
lud role of Don QUlxO\e.
in Ralston start u
Aldonza and Tronto ii
Sancho Panza.
• 111 Ralsto'l was a
;;,1foundln1: member of the South eoatt Repertory
In Coai. Mesa and bas
appeared In many Pl•1• on the West Cout, New
ork Qty and abroad.
D~V PllC\T 0
MISCELLANY
Chamber Music on
WANTED!.
HUNTIMGTOM llAC~OHI CUii
lnvlt• you to the
BIG IAMD DANCE
at tht
IALIOA PAVIUOM MARCH 10
........ ....c ~ = Wl1ltllill ........ ~... ~
o ... .,.."" ~-... 9JOO PM-1:00 ....
S&ND l'OR :tlCKBTS NOW...:..T $7.50 EACH
U0MS: P.c>. 101U1 J-NUMl'Alt' YAWY f o< ,,,,_ ~ oonllltl!'.lctWI ~ ~.,.. ......_
.U.0114~~-... , ....
I 1y, Ft11naary U
TIIE OREA 0 PETER BROOIC <ono·man pro1r1m> Wllh John Kant
ay, Fe11nary 1'
GREAT AGE OP FOOLS
<An ElizabC!\hu Entt.rtainment by Sha\ pear• ud O\hen
with T Hardiman, Barbara Lcl&h·Hunt, Bill HomewoOd, John Kane
Wed delay Febniary ti
PLEAIU•B AND aEPENTANCE wlth Torrence Hardiman. Barbara Leljb·Hun~
Bill Homewood, Tony Chl.ircll
All ptrformancet in u~ Vlll•1• ne.tre. a 11.m.
ttJSK INTE~ORS
INVITES YOU
TOOIJR
RIBST A:blNUAL
FtOOB 8t,iMPL:E
SOIF\EE
r
..
BOUT I GALLERIES
• • :xpress1omst
c COLLEmo -•kl of
German upres loniat GabrleU• lluntber <tm·UG> ace on dilplay at U.. Lacuna Beach
Museum ol Art \bJ'ou1b Feb. 21. Am~ expo.
neat ol the Fauve acbool, abe hlld a dnamlc
eoocept ot color abown in some 100 landscape1,
portraill, flsurea and silll·life pal.ntin1a. The
Galleries /Exhibits
museum at PacUic Coast Highway and Cliff
Drive ls open from 11.30 Lm. lo 4:30 p.m. daily
except Tueaday.
DISTINCT DURABILITY -Eight
sculptures by internat1onally acclaimed Frank
Gallo exhibited at the Spencer/Howard Gallery,
1166 Glenneyre, La1una Beach, Gallo, who works
in polyester resin reinforced with fiber&}ass, wu
honored by the American Institute o( Graphic
Arts for his aculpture or Raquel Welch which ap-
pearedon a Time magazine cover.
Alao on display are oil paintings by
Yugoslav1an·boro Alex Bozlcl<ovlc who depicts
people who "are aware of the harsh realities of
We but are not embittered by them." Gallery
hours are ll a.m. to 6 pm. daily except Mon-
days.
FWPINO WELCOME -Tanar Gallery ot
• Laguna Beach is sponsonna the first mainland
· showing ol watercolors by Leon Pacunayen of
the Philippines. Using the wet-0n·wet technique
or the Oriental masters. he creates visions of
floating worlds whether the subject Is textured
shanties, Roman ruins, modem cities or lux·
urious countryside. Viewing times are 11 a.m.
to 7 p.m. daily except Wednesdays and Sun·
days, through Feb. 21.
NOSTALGIC NEWPORT Beach scenes
1n w-.tercolors, oil~ and acrylics by Eve
Thompson are being shown at the Civic Center
Gallery, Newport Beach through Feb. 28. Her
paintings have been top winners in the Newport
Beach Festival of Arts for five years.
ECCENTRIC IMAGERY -New exhibit by
Newport Harbor Art Museum, 850 San Clemente
Drive, Newport Center. Featured tbroueh March
8 are 26 ''remembrance pieces" -sculptural
beds, Chinese salk appliqued quilts, cut and as·
sem bled multicolored tin cubes and concrete
castings of stones and waves
COLLAGRAPHS by Peter Keefer and L.C.
Blair through March 9 at Bird's Eye View
Gallery, 3420 Via Oporto No. 3, Newport Beach
Hours J l am to 5 p.m. Tuesdays through Sun·
days.
STUDENT RENDERINGS in main readin1
room or Golden West Collete Library, 15744
lhghest Qua!Jty
NaUve ~l('ll.IC&n Foods
Open 1 Da>:-
All SPORTS EVENTS
GIANT 7 FOOT TV SCREEN .
Mon.·Tlu. 11 :JU a m, to 10 p.m
Frt & Sat. 11:30 o.m. to 11 p.m. COCKTAILS
SIM'lday 4 p.m. to I 0 p.m.
9093 E. ADAMS, ~UNTINGTON BEACH
962-7911
EXPRE8810NIST IN SE&Jl..POATRAIT
GabrleU• Muenther'• Work In Laguna
Golden West St., Huntineton Beaeb. Houn 7:30
a.m. to 10 p.m. Mondays tbroucb Thursdays,
7:30 a.m. to s p.m. Fridays and noon to 4 p.m.
Saturdays and Sundays.
,,.
There a Ume 'b t.be old •
eeneral atore terveil H a
catherinl place ror e.ecy~
from mlle1 aroUnd. U •ucb lOolii
to be happenint •l•lD these
dayt ln Huntin;ton Beach. do.'t
be 1urprlaed.
J.P. Mac•• 1ener1l atore
· restaurant provtdea a 1ocll6 ln
· wlllch aoclallty come1 to th
fore. It's beyond lma1tnin1 •• in
rac\, that Onilge County d.lnen
will ever. acquire a more con·
vlvlal bone out for mealUme en-
joyment
TOP·NOTCll food and service
are mattera for pralJe in the
COUlH ~ tbe evenma at this U•
cltlD1 i'pot. ~o ,first kudos th t
have to be extended. however,
are tho1e for decor and at·
mospbere.
One could &pend daya, much
leu hours, studyin1 the wealth
of objects and architectural de-
tail incorporated into the build·
l.o1.
Note but a few: extraordlaari·
ly bJ1h beamed celllnp, the Q·
tensive u.se of natural wooda, a
profualoo of lush creenery and
haogina plants, spacious and
comfortable aeat1n1 arran1e-
meots at both tabl• and booths.
A V ABT array of anUquea bu
been coupled with other de-
corative touches to carry out the
country store theme. Jn the en·
frtday, JanU411Y 21, 1971
tryway alone, the contents of the
shelves and the marvelous old
tlaas abowcaaes are enough to
aend aa,y<11e on a noataJctc ~
ptng spree like srudma m1&ht
have made.
Even it you feel you've bad 1t
up to wberevtt wU.h new themo
restaurants, this one can't fall to
please. ·
The responsible parties are
John Mcintosh and his wife.
Pam. But make tlaat John, 1r.,
so there's no confusion witb bis
father, John, founder and
cbalrman of the bc>a.rd ol Oruie
County-based Far Weat Services.
JOUN Ill. IS understandably
well·lrounded lo all aspects of
the reataw-aot bu11Deas. J.P.
lilac'• la strictly bll enterprise, tboup. eel bu no auocla&G
wltb bla dad'• wlde·ran1in1
chain.
Dlnner entrees at J.P. Mac's
are divided into two categories:
from the butcher block or fish·
erman'a faire. All are
served with a crisp salad -a
concoction of your own creation
at tbe ttem·laden salad bar -or
a bowl of the day'a soup -an
unusual and savory cream of
broccoli 4uring our vllit -a
choice ol PQt.atoes and a buket
Of hotbrud.
Tlie ftrst ol OW' three entrees
wu a superbly roasted cut of
prime rib of beef, $7.50. In u
uncommon touch, the 1elect
eutem bed bad been bJckCll')'
roasted for addlUonal navor and •
tenderness.
NEXT VP WU • first-rate
scampi tempura, $7.25. Here,
a1atn, there wu an unusual pre-
paration: the tender shrimp bad
initially been deep fried, t.em·
pura atyle, then laced wtth
garlic butter and Parmesan
cheese.
DAILY PILOT Q
llcatelf nuteed and topped with
roaattd etmQpds,
For laiDiiUna purpose.a. we
alto ordereCl tbe two a la carte
d.ithee cin tbl menu. The ant -
ftt.sb vecetabl• skillet; $2.50 -
netted crisp ateamed ftC tables
(broccoli. ~uliflowv ancl car-
rots), ~ wlth melted butter
and Parmesan cheese.
COUNTJlY aJED 1ucChini,
St.ts, pl'Oft4 equally aatisfYlnl.
Here, fresh ltaHan squub bad
been dJpPed in eu batter. rolled
in s~al hOuse breadin• and d ep tried to a golden bron.
AddlUona\ entre P.oatbllttJes uu:lude ranch atylo spare nba, s,,.~; top sirloin •teat. $1S.75;
terlyakl 1t~ak, $6,9s;.. J'.P.'s
Woe:bette 'of tieef, '5-95: country
fried chicken. $:S.2S and mahi·
malll or ac.Uops. $S. 75,
PE&USING TllE restaurant'•
luncheon bUl or f~ we noted a well-balanced aelectlon of
sandwich.es, hot entreea, weigbt-
wetchers• dllbes, omelettes and
salads.
But\ the likely choice for our
first midday v~lt, we decided,
would be a quiclde. Two are of-
fered at $2.95 each: seaf"'r's
<crab, shrimp and onloA With a
blend of cheeses and a amidieon
of herbl) or Califomla (a com-
bination of ham, cheese, onions and 1reen cbiles. ..
Quite apart fl' om tbe
dtnln1 sections of
J.P. Mac's la a delicbtful
cocktail lounae. You can -.Joy
live entertainment here, Wed·.
neaday throu1h Sunday until
1:30 a.m. :,t'he talented 1roup
currently on stage is the San
P.llnons Trio.
DeTAIL PROM •cANCEUATIONI• SERIE& BY THOMAI F. BARROW
In 'Two From Albuq~ue· how •t Sunn Sphtta G•HetY In Newport
Roaindlng out our selections
was the true fish lovers cbolce.
fllet of sole elmondine, $5.95.
Tim nifty dish had been de-
Lunch ls served from 11:30
a.m. to 3:30 p.m .. Monday
through Friday; dinner from 4
to 11, Sunday through Thursday,
and to 12 mldnilht on Friday
and Saturday, at 10142 Adams,
near the Intersection of
Brookburst, Huntinaton Beach.
Telepboae: 963-7829.
LEFTY'S
NeWDOrt's Newest
LUNCH ·."DIMMER • COCltT AILS
I LIVE MUSIC FRI. & SAT. I
Allple"" ,.,...
1617 WestcHff DriYe
Newport leach 64&;52Z2
Now Appearing
''CHARLIE''
For Dancing and Entertainment
It's All Happening Nightly. at
The LldG L()UDtle
IQ/f'"~
Real
••there w
t•k• home
STAG
CHINESE CASIHU
111 2ht Pl., Newport a .. c.n ORlole US40
..._ .. M~ D..,_W..._. u.fll 1:00...,
O••HW...ltl ....... MIA
CROWN HOUSE
RESTAURANT'
32'02 COAST HWY.
LAGUNA MOUEl. CAI C-Y..., l'..-et)
IVY HOUSE
RESTAURANT
Lunch from 11 mn
{New, modemfely.priutl mmu) • Din"'1' from 5 pm • Brtalf ast al Csino s
Sundsivs from 10 am • Sunstf at Cano's
Wtthlays from 4 pm
• •
Seema like only yesterday that we were
rouama lD this apace about tbe lack ot leu.
meat on the menu.a of Or.Ce Coat com·
UD.lty theaters.
· Actually, it was only lut month when, ill re. .tewilal tbe 1ear of 1917 in local theater. we
nUODed that tbe commUDlty ~bou&el put
onlJ 11¥ drama.a all year.
wen. here lt la not even tbe end ot Jana1117
&Del already oar noa.profeatoaal tbeeW llVQPll
ave eltber opened or are about to mount ftve
oua abon. And that'• n« countlnf pro-
f"'IQp.al and eollege productions. wblch ~ add four more to the lilt.
, CLEAaLY. 1171 looks like a revlnl y.ar
: for hefty drama. The Westminster Community J Theater led lt off two weeka ago with "The !Jon
ln Winter .. (and the· Costa Meaa Clvlc
·Playhouse hu a May production of the same
plaJ on-lta achedule). Then the Laawl• Moulton
1 Playbouao brouiht lD Oraqe Cout COUei•'• ~'ifltlmable '.'Equua'' u ita January abow.
~ Tbe San Clemente Community Theater cur• tnntly bu the cbiller "Dial M tor Murder .. on
the boards, and next week 'Vrill aee the debut of
• new local iJ'OUP -the SOUth Coast Acton' eo.
f
op with 0 A Hatfu1 of Rain .. at Lacuna'• Forum
Theater.
South Coast Repertory, the top profeaslonal I theater alone the coast, baa an excellent veralon.
of "A Doll's House'' on ataee, wblle Golden
West College, which put on "Rain" eartler this
month, opeos "Picnic" tonlfht. And Oru1e
494-1011/9
... LCOAIT NWT.
L-...llAQI
''ALLYSONS''
A HtlrU11J(WdJI Rtstdllrlllrt
INVITl!.S YOU TO OUR
8 A .M. GOOD MORNING
S~ltii•• I• &.n.1n.1 81W/11J1
11 O'dld: LUNCH TIME
3:30 AFTERNOON TEA
5:30lo11:00.BVENJNG CUISINI!
3421 VIA UDO, N!Jf'PORT BEACH
~ lwfl fr-,..,.,...~ T._,.
RESERVATIONS' 61H>l20
Cliiill M0ttlll11
. . .
LOOKllCO ABBAD, we have tbe San
Clemente poup nt~ Oil Feb. 16 with •The
Rainmater." Another new orcanlaaUon, th• Newport Beach Theater Art.I Center, w1ll pre· seat .. A Man for All Seuona., the weekend o(
Ytb, 17·19. Md Laauna ta m rehealaal for an
elaborate PiocluctlOD Qf .. Becket." opeD!Di Feb. ae •
Even If the local ~atera .U Gldlb CM the
year with Neil Simon_ 1.My wW baYe ~
themHlvea artl11Uc:all7 ov• tbe dramatlcall7 midlln.
*** TllE 84DDL.llACK ValltJ' Community
Theater ba announcect Its cutina for "The
Fatal Weunas.'' a seldom·pilOduced oldie by
George Kelly, author of ·~e Torcbbearen."
John Ch1ldraa and Jean Hyde will bud the
caat o! the comedy. ~Ith Joa Slclen. Mary Lou
Humpbrty, MJchael Bielits and 1'a,y Oettlna
completlnc tho compu7. Ben JUUi 11 dliect1ni
tboabow.
"Tbe Fatal Wealmesa,. WW open March a th
the llW. theater at MlulOD Viejo Hlah School.
Information and reaervaUona are available by
calJJ.DI S86-884I. .....
BACKSTAGE -Thtrd tbrou•b alxth
sradera Ill seven Oraqe Cout ICbool dlJtricts
will view live aesiuenta at t.he opera 0 Tbe Barber of Seville .. over the next three
months. ••• the ffee mualcal entertainment is
aponaoNd by Lu Campa.Du, which pnaents
the Oranae County Opera ...• it's performed
in Eo1U.h and 1uo1 by local profeaaional
art.i1t1.
" • • • • • .. • ii
Van Cliburn will solo
with the Lo~c Beach
Symphony ln
Saturday'• grand
opening concert of
the new Terrace
Theater at the Lone
Beae!h Convention Center. Ticket.a are
still available for a
second performance
Sunday by telephon-
ing 213-4;36-3203.
• GOURM!T DINING -MIDITS.AANl!AN AM,
• CHAMPAGNE IRUNCHSUNDAYI 104PM 18700 MAC ARTHUR BLVD.
• DANCING NIGHTLV-CAIAAITLOUNGI!
• CAPTAIN'S TABLE COPPEE SHOP-24 HRS.
IAVINE, CALIFORNIA
l()ppotltt OIWloe CountvAlfpon)
(714) 933.2no
spcil/1lndutlltfJ11P11111111, t.holt:I of blktd patlto 01 dc1
.... "'!"Ill.. RED SN~R ••••••••• 3A5
MAHI MAHI ••••••••••• 3.96
GR,ILLEO SEA BASS • , •• 3.95
TOP. SIRLOIN STEAK ••• 4.25
NEW YORK STEAK ••••• 4.96
LOBSTER TAIL •••••••• 5.95
STEAK ANO LOBSTER •• 8.96
L .... wrWll •lly 'ti 4 P JI.
Priwtt Pasty Feciritiel to 300
ao11. COAl~tlWY .:i. COltONA DEL*" RUal.VAnONI 17'41 C760IOO
11271 PAC"IC *IT HWY •• HUNTINGTON llACH
lllllRVATlONI <1111 Jl2.1D1
~Lear Talla ol Dirision
King Lear, portrayed by Tom "Bradac, disCusses with his three
daµghten th division of his kingdom in this scene from Oranae
Coast Collete's production of ~akespeare'a tra&edy, ''Kini
Lear.'' The daughters are played by (from left) Carole
Knickerbocker, Francis Hubble and Felicia Hernandez. The play
is tonight and Saturday at 8 p.m. in the Drama Lab Theater on
the Costa Mesa campus.
iNight of Joy Art Fest
Meet Set
. ·' . .,.
,;
~ Diitneykmd Event Set .
Ticket. are avaUable for DiHeytand's
.. Niabt cl Jay,. an evenlnf cl contemporary
Cbrl9thm music scheduled Friday, Feb. 3 from
8p.m.to1 LID.
.....
t ....... ,. •I!! I • • ,•
•
. ~Play's the' ......_fhing in O~
PtAMO WWWi WTWM UlllW el UC,,.,.~ ...... ._ ..... ._a. ua ,._,1...,._. _
~---.... OA•DtDA. A .._,... ._...,. 11\ew .,..,..._ ..... , .........
F"*Y9•t ........ ~··--
Times/Places
9 ._"' .................. ..,.._
Miwdl I a Mlii It • I ~-!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~ c.w.Ull .... ~•hdld. p;""'""" no......... ..... ~
tAftml.Y.........., • .....,."°" •• nWe.t .....-... •• , ................... Me c.ene... ........... .....
CYNTHIA MU.Ult • .Mi«ICM
m•n••,.111"••· -"" lier Loe .......... ...a• lllOltt Wltll IM Lee =ta ""-.-IC:. •:• •• m .. CllMr ~ .... """""' .... tormetllll, wtMIW211.
AU~ltT l'ttOellAM,, t:• P"'·~ .. y .... ~ .......
dlttten 0.-.. Ordleltre. ~ ..... Uc&.AC....,, ....
IUtmAY • .MINAaYa
T\11,...Y, JANUAllY 11
"A•LUI •'-0•1i-aon1a1, """""· .. ~ ~ Clft-U.CWIW,
C.11141-1871.
Put • , •• WOtd• •
to WllM'k tor
. . .
DAA.YPtLOT
Advanee tiekete are $7.50 and may be
purcb-.ecl at tbe Dl1nqland Box Offtce,
.Maramtha vtnaie, Tlcketrcn or llelodJland. U anUable, tickets wlll aell tor $8 after S p.m. the
day ot the event.
A public fOl"UID on the
Newport Beach Art
Festini ii lehedulM for
7:30 p.m. Wedneeday at
the Newpllt Jilarllor Art
Mmeum. Tiie ftnm ls
set at tbo wmeam, uo
San ci .. eate Drive, ---------
THE ORE& entitles ticket holders to use
or Disneyland'• more than 50 m~or attractlOM
(except abootlnC 1allerlea), alon& with the en·
tertainment.
: Headllninl perfonnera for the neninl will
be Andrae Crouch and the Dbciplea. Others ap-
pea rlng at varloua Park location• include
vocalist.a Danniebelle Hall. Walt.er and Edwin
Hawkins, Keith Green and •ln&inl '1'0QP1 Reba.
Parable, Sweet Comfort, Seawlnd and Chico
Holiday, alona with comedian Mike Warnke.
.. Newpcllt Beach.
A pend cl d'ric and
art leaders will diaculs
with tboM in attendHce four point.I of interest
concerninf the feetbal,
acbedulod th117ear Mq 13thro~2L
Cell 142-1171.
Put a tew worda
to work for u.
nt!O ~t~ creriyoJti Boneless ti
Breast of Chi&1{e11
Dinners {Or~9S
SP.OUTER SALOOI
W:at«l'mnl f·i\'Oritt' ttf
OW Whalm. SaUurs end Nnbic' (\I Skippm
l;Nl'l'.RTAIN\IEN"t
NOW!!
BOBWHITE
PLUS
USIL&
COMPANY
Umlted
Eq9ment
lfowltafn v...., .............................. 131-tlOO •u• C1IJ c::::sneo. ..................................... , ... ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 111-lllO
.UA 8o COelt'. ••••••••••••••••••••••,••••••l40-GIN WaatAdf 111 r .... • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • •• • .a.cNl4I ·Ora"I• m ••.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 111-1022
.PaMlon __.,.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.,..-sl. ~--·····················~· .. ·······.,.,...... ·Ora1tae ..................................... 111.0S.O ~..-......................................... 1111-4747
• I •
' -... ..
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f tldcy, JenuetY 27, 1171 MUSIC REVIEW I MISCELLANY
enson's Jazz Im.pro;ves
Album Offen Grdtar, Vocal flalance
By MIKE PASKEVICH
ot•DellY~ll•IUH
Jau l\dtartst Georte Benson'1 latfft album -
• double·aet recorded live Jut fall at Hollywood's
1\oxy certainly ia an Improvement over bis dis
urbine 1ummer performance at the Orante Cowl· y Fair.
J. An immediate advantaee ol "Weekend In
t...A.," (Warner Bros. 2WB 3139) la that it cancels
e fl'\llU'aUoo of watchlne ooe ~the world'• most
lented l\dtarilta boldlnt a mike 1tand and croon-
1. rath• tban offerinl a healthier dose of his
vocative styllnp and sol0.9.
With a near oven mixture of vocal and in·
strumental tracks, the album fives a wortbJ
'eapsulluticn of Ben.on'• continued mOYo toward.I
a pleasant, tr often unchallen1in1, brand of pop-
ortented Jazz.
BENSON'S VOCALS are suitably smooth and
caaual In a Stevie Wonder-lab vein, particularly el·
fective on ballads llke Leon Russell's "Laity
Blue," but prone to exce11ive dramatic• on tunes
such aa ''The Greatest" or the auperfluous remake
of the Drltlers' "On Broadway."
But from a sheerly lnatrwnental viewpoint,
this is the best music Benaon hu turned out since
his Clnal albums with CTI records, and a reaf-
firmation or his ability to craft acceaalble jau
compoeilions.
The best material here la Benson'• own. The
title track is an uptempo piece structured around a
·spar k Uni gwtar introductory phrue, some fast·
finger solos and a steady 1roove. Likewise,
· Benaon.s'a mellow "Ode To A Kuudu" diaplays bi.I
very artful fultar skills at their finest. •
Benson's move towards the ma.I.mt.ream baa
not been without critlclam, especlally from those
who fint noUced him in an acoustic quartet that
incl\lded claaalcal e uitar prodlay Earl Klu&h in
about 1972.
This ne1attvt f eellna could easily ex·
tend to ••Callfornla P.M.,'' a lengthy ttack that ia
so tifhUy atructured and meticulous that it is near·
ly aoulless. Ia Jau 1D. danaer of becomln1 so de·
velo~ed that It ii no lon1er recocnnable? The
postubillfy exilts. Gran~. Benion himself bu never abandoned
bi.a dedJcaUon and commitment to the sound of the
1reat W• Montcomery. The new album includes
Stevie Wonder's "We All it.member Wes," in
which Benson conveys the exuberant splrit of Montgomery wltb excellent te1ulta.
The backup band la eaenUaUy the aame one
that performed here last aummer -basstat
Stanle1 Bankt# anunmer Harve1 MUOD and
keyboardlst.i Jorse Daito and lloimle Focter.
TOE STEADY ensembl la efven added punch
with the addition of hl1hly·re1arded rhythm
guitarist Phll Uptburch and all·purpose
percussionist Ralph McDonald. .
The band bn't tl\'en ~ aiuslcaJ apace,
which may lead more eerlou.a llltenera to feel
they're beartn& mU1lc better suited for trav lod1e,
or perh&J)I a hfp waltin1 l'OQm.
However, tber•'• no doubt that BeQIOQ f ana
will enjoy "Weekend In L.A." It reveals • muter
mulclan and above avera1e alng~r tikiil, full ad·
vanta1e ol the commercial paeaibWttoa ol •zz. . . ..
JAZZ NOl'E8: Verve Records bu completed
Its three part Hrles of Charlie Parker re-issues
with "Tbe Vern Yeart (lts2-5') (Ve-2·2523). Tho
legendary aax man ta featured in four separate
sessions that Include h1I :experimentations with
1trin11. volcee and a bll band IOUDd. Mu Roach,
Charlie Minp, ind Oacv Petenon aie alao
JAZZ MUSICIAN'S LATEST AlBUM EARNS PRAISE
George Ben10n Effort Aeatftnnatlon of Ctlft
featured. and Bob Blwnenthill'• llner ~ aboYe ' The Cal State Looi Beach ctn. Peb. N. Tbe e•1n ...
are worth tbo price. Unlnntty Qdr will have ita scheduled each ft1 mt t p.a tn
Also avallable from Verve la "Db and n.oy:• only OD-C&mpm performances the Stalio TbeMer. fltt S. 1th
(Ve-2·2524) teaturiJll 10$4~ aeeaiom wltb Dill)' thia aeuon when it appea.ra ln St .• i.-, Beach. .
Movies
For eaf
Slated
Gillelpie and llOJ EldrtdJe. concert MXt 'lbataday aad Fri· ClMlllnI, pop, jm ... felt ~------~~----~:.:.;.:..:..:....:::.:.:....:.::.::..:;.~_:_.;__~~~;;.;;..;,;;..;..;..;~.:..:...;=--..;.,_----~·----:-:--:--~~~--~
4 Golden Globe Nominations
BHt Picture
Beat Actor In Supporting Role -Alec Qulnnt11
Beat Director -George LucH
Beat Orlglnal Score -John Wllllam•
~ HAMlll HAMISON FOPD CAMI€ F1SHffi
PETtl\ CUSHING rd /.IS:. GUNeS
Mon· Fri 7:30, 10:00
Sat /Sun 12:00, 2:30,
5:00, 7:30, 10:00
"The talk around ~ Hollywood Is that our
·movie may be a· heavy favorite for an
Academy Award -No kidding, an Oscar! I
may even have to r.ent a tuxedo.l"
\
I
...
, ...... , ., . ..... . .. ·
Comic Creates a Crush
Bette MUBer Club 'A.ct'• a Hit in NYC
"1 UM aOBINSON
Bette JOdler tied up tnmc GD Ne• York's
Eut eot11 Street for nearly an bour th• nlSht Ibo
opened at Copecabana for a one-week ran ol her
••J.numate Bftllina With Bette.''
But tbe eris& outside WU nothlDC com-
pared to UM caadltiona l=tde the clu1--where
., peQple ..... stuffed '* tbe baMmlat (in
wbat Memed like a 90-decree atm01pbere) to
welcome Mte back to New York. •
Her club aet doesn't dJl'f .. much frolll what
lhe'1 daoe cmstqe befor•, and If aQJtblDi, two
weekl CJD Brolldway would 'ba•• beeD far more comfortable. Sure, Bette probably can ••eet
ctown•• mare in a club. but lbe "tot down" so
much that th1s obsener felt ber raps often
bordered perilouab' clole to abeer wlprity.
THIS IS VNPOtTtJNATE, because
Bette ta a ereat talent who doesn.'t have to re·
tort to tG1et jokes to &et her crowd eomi.
Weartq a aJ.lttery tap (abe later removed It
to reveal one ~ those eoneta> and ald:DtiSht
black tcnador pants, with her red hair frizzed
out to u.r., Bette referred to henelf as .. the
Abraham Lincoln of rock and roll"
(because Ibo Mt the Harlettea, who reccrd on
their own for CBS, ••tree"), told tbe usual
• Sophie Tucker jokes, dJ.abed New York Mayor
Ed Koch (who aat at rlnf.Jlde wlth Bess Myenon), Unda llonlt8dt., 'Saturday Ni&ht
Fever" (tho film) and "LoMina for Mr. Good-
bar.'•
She 1an1 a mhture ~ raunchy blues and
rock •n roll numbers ud senstUve ball.lldl ln a
voice that seemed -at that openm, abow. at
1~ -IOIDeWbat atraJned..
BUT BETl'E WORKS bard, and even
thoa1b lhe bu It.ill oat manapd "> reconl an
album tbat trul1 oaptarea her bra11y, ahowbiZZJ briillaDce, one eoaUmla to root for
her. When ahe'1 &ood abe'a very, 'ffllTY aood. and
when lbe'• not ••• well, it'• a dis~. 6'14>"° .nrfq · .
For the art lover ~~
with discerning taste r..;r
Via Lido Plaza
3439 Via Udo, N.B. 873-5430
To a1 at lovers: We ae mpedi19 a consiqwnent of 19th and •
19th CerNy a1 painliqs and wots c:dcn of investrrwit quality. M'
ort lov.s and ffleltors ae lrMt.d. Fw Mtier deta1, watch the local
newspaper crricxn:ernents Of cal in f*10r1 ot the gallery.
Anothcw first{ While awaitinQ ~ lovely repast ot Allyson's, a
. Hemingway restcuant, er1oy browsinQ In <XX gallery. When ycu
table 11 ~. you wiU hea ~ name called on °" intercom
system. ,
All merc:hadse comes on &R:onOlional 7«,y money bode
<}JOrOntee.
OPEN T DAYS PER~ FROM1D-6
Omgratulations to die Magnlfu;entNew Terrace Theatre
andm. easy tor~ by m many~
( ROCK.TALK )
A ward we about NYC'• OOpaeabaa. ODC•
a 11amcirous QIO&club, u a poulble futun rock .,enue. PnimOtec' Ron Dellener add tbat toUow-tnl Bette'1antabow aometablll ..,.nmoved.
and otben ealarced. to mate lt men com!orta·
ble far tbe audience -wbo lbelled out '25 per ticket. He llid tb.at tbe place could wort for
som• rock act.. but I have ID7 doubta. Eapedaf-
Jy when they charc• S3S for an '8 bottle al
Korbel (dom.uc) cbam1'9pe. 1 Deftl' tboqht
I'd say tbls, but I looted for tbe ••comfort .. of
the Bottom Unie. •••
IN TBESE DAYS of new-wave bandl who
outJump, outrqe and outvolume each other,
22-yeaN>ld Steven Forbert, who baila from
Merldlm. Mia, 11 a re!reahinc chanae back to
the ead7 DJ1an school of &ln&e.r /IOalWrltera.
tt ta lmpoa1ble not to tblnk ol Bob l>Jlan
(and I usually ·abhor aucb comparlJoaa) when
Forbert ltaDdl on.stage at Gerde•a Folk Cit1.
accom...,tni himself on acousUc IU1tar and
harmonica. HI• Hxy, lanky preHDCe la.
however, more .James Dean-lab. and luNlf be
11 the belt loolclng "folbiDler-" we•ve bad alnce
the YOUDI .Jacboo Browne.
Forbert•1 ftice is unique, husk1 (a trace of
Rod Stewart), and bla aonp are catehy.
Altboulb Forbert'a manaeer DaDD7 Pleldl
(who ello manaaes the Ra---.> .. be bu
no immediate plw for a backup band. tt would
be ea17 to tmaeine one bebfDd blJn. At tbll mo-
m.mt, record oompanle1 an ..,_.to llp bim..
Stay tuned.
I
• .. I '
•
'" 'JanuttY '7, 1171 CAIL. Y PILOT Cl
Winner 5 Golden Globe Nominations
Beat PlctUre, Bett Actor...;;.ftlchard Dreyfuu,
Beat Actre...-Marsha Maaon,
Beat Supporting Actre~lnn Cumming•
Beat ScrMnplay--Nell 5111M>n
""lbe Goodbye Gbl'
lsaJoyomcomedy-
)lstwbatthe
doctor onleied.
Nell Simon makes
feeling good legal ••• •
GENESHALJT, NBC-TV
,..~ ........ .-...
• Tele.,ision
DUiMl'MICY ONll
Pet8'nMIC8 0• and
DeSoto --• baby, dHplta the fathar'a
prot.ta. 11114 o.aoto '*°'" ,. about hie c:ullnaty
talent. D MOY• •*I-' "Summerllml
' Kller'' (1173) Kati M.idan,
Qlri9tophat Mnchllm. A
young boy, M'<llng Wit·
ftMMd ,. Mther'• ........
1IOft by the undatwotld, -r-. (2.,,.)
I nta tiMl1'f IUHCt4
THI~
The poloa In tha-
ly -lrMIMd In a CM1P b cMllnqua!'ll youlN ~-
i ~-duly 161"9.
ll!AN. y ~INCAHI
Tiie -d of the Mtty
Am«leane and IN W1l)'a
~ halpa to reoon-
etruct •"•nt• are
euminad. Close Encounter?
MOHIWS
THI~ 18 RIOHT
NWIT<:tfED
~IMY
eu.t• Crebba; tune rings;
helplng dllplaoed ~
mlkere find emptoyment. D CONSUMER
8UfMVAlM
Granville Van Dusen, Jobeth Williams
and Barnard Hughes are terrorized by
supernatural forces in "The World
Beyond," a TV movie tonight at 9 on
CBS, Channel 2.
"FMt, C11<e, Lile lnaur•
ence"
(!D MPV ORlfflN
OUMta: To .. Announced.
7:00 9 THI MUPPETS
~ f'udolph Nureyev.
Q HBCHEWI Q UAMCLUB D ABCHEWS
Q) I LOVI LUCY at ADAM-1.a
A blttlf ex~ and a ~
tywood at.al1et preMnt
problerN tot Mallov end
Reed
• MAOHU./ L.IHM"
~ Ill CALWOAHIA
TONIGHT CJ) TOTtLL THaTRUTM
1:30 8 Au..al'AA AHYTHINO ooa
B H!WL YWEO GAM!
IHOWOOWN OFl'HIE
OMAMT!AMI ID THI! BAAOY BUNCH G) ADAM-12
Two omean -anot down
In embuahby "*"ban of
a mllttant grouci. SI LA. INTEACHANOE
"fnlonnad 5<¥CN" Ill VOT'Eft'9 PIPEl.IN! •. ,_ And taeu.: On
A..ing Chlldten" Co-
auth«I Or. P8UI Wood and
8amard 8chwaTt.z QIW
acMca to '*"'" wflO wMt to make llionlflCMt
changel In their behllllOr.
Cl) YOUNO PEOPL.E'I
SPECIAL
• My FatMr, My Broti-
And Ma''
9 HOU.YWOOO
80UAMS "Comadt1n1"
"Comlcl"
,, .. UIO 8 Cl) WOHOat
WOMAN Cl Wll..D KIHOOOU Wonder WOl'llan la 114tled
Claa•n~I Ll•tl•fl•
8 KNXT (CBS) Loa Angeles D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles 8 KTLA (Ind ) Los Angeles 8 KABC· TV (ABC) Los Angeles
Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Otego D KHJ..TV(lnd.)LotAngeres 9 KCST (ABC) San Diego
! KTlV (Ind.) Los Angeles
KCOP·TV (Ind ) Los Angeles
KCET·TV (PBS) Los Angelea
G Kcx;E·TV (PBS} Huntington Beach
egalnll a compute< Olfllul
(l'loaa ._.atttn) who 11..i1
.,.. .iec:tronlo ,,,_ ...
and progrem• of th•
world'e largMI COfTIPUlltl,
Including Iha I.A 0 C.'1
own tlllcau,,. eui>«·brllln.
• par1 of hie mut• plll\
to Ilka control of u ...
llWOtld. G OPOaHAMFf
"CloM lnooun1en Of The
Wrong Kind" 8h11Uy,
1-ote to .,_,.. tha OCU•
• to ~ •tlaotlon tot NI girlfnlnd, allendl a
group ..,.itMty ~
andll~tntoa
wrttable~
• MOV1I ••• ''V•• Cn.la .. (18a.) o.,-, Cooper, Burt ~
tar. A pelf of ~en.
join In the MulDln Ww. (2
Ive)
8 DONNY l MM!!!
Gualll: ANty Gibb, PIUI
• Batty WllHa.
JOQWIWILD
CWQ.~
ANOFAl£N08
• MAAOUI WIUY. .... o.
A couple'• dream of own-
ing """ OW'\ tiom. •• llhal·
'-" ~ lfle hulband
Mada an ~ l'IMtt
~·tlon. ID CD WASHtNOTON
WEIK IN RIVIEW
l:JO 8 CHICO ANO THI MAH
"Charo ,Md The Malad«''
.._... Aunt Charo pr•
tencb to Id~ Ill to...
will\ (d "'-'° .....,
from W'9 ciJiMd "V •
-tldof to whoo'll IN •M
IMWw==· • WAL.I. rrfWET
WEE<
"Air...-l\OO!ol' A·
OK?'' au-ti WOlfglf\O H
Damllefl. Wll l)l"llklant.
Smith Berney, Harri•
l.JpNm a Co., lno.
t;OO 8 WOlllLD llFfOND
Ol'alWllle Van ~ .....
nerd~ o~ a
IUj)lmatur .. Inner "olOI I
eportaoMilal •ttaMP'* to
aid a 10l"IO woman -"° ...... '* bfotNt ... lilied !Ir. mud lf!Ol'ldtr.
• AOCKFON> '1LU
• Owwf In A Helum Hat'"
,. Attar rl09MnQ • dllth
thtaat, Aodllord ~
the caller ~ to c:iorrtACt
• pllyboy (JoM PIMMl11)
..tlOM -.. "'*' ,_. tollllUllN~
book. 8 9 A.IC MOVIE ·-n. llar'Muda Olptha"
(Premier.) Burt !vaa, LalQib
J . McClolalay. 9clan'*8
---• "-'1ltul ..,. who •••m• to have
ratumad lrOln Illa • dead
~ • ptehlltOltc c:irMture
In the 8armUda Trlangla.
• l9'0NllDe
Atll ~alien II fotced to .,,_ hit tobacco ~ to
be ueed for manjulna
..,.. to avoid depottatlon.
• ...ERV GAll'FIN
0.-ta: To Be Announced.
Cl) JOHH "' AtCa MUOIOUI S,,0W.
• Vl8IOHI
"The Wfl Widow" Wttlla
,_ flulband .. flgtlttng In
•<renoe dUrlng WOfld Wat I.
• lonltV ~ -ltndl harMlf baeomlng 110.,..9'1 .n.ctlld to
.wiotNr .--.. (") i=LM
••• "TM Legend Of IJl.
;ill lordln" (tt76) EJtza.
bclth Montgomery, Fl1ta
WMVlf. A woman le
ecclJMd of the .... ,,.,,,. .,. °' .. tatMI' Mel ·~.(2,...)
~-CllNIW9~ :JM Alpubllcan ~ ol tM
State Of *"9 union.
• OIWJ'f
"Peeling" 91 ~
lno • *"" folll'ld In ... ..... ~~.,.
ceaa °' a labor IMdar who myetartoutly ~ .. m en tlllQed ta m1111on
In union fund1. Zottra
Lampert 8wnon OMiand
r:;,~ m HoHIYMOONIM
A.llph end Ed atart """' own bu11ne11. and II
~ doofnad to falln,
TUBE· TOPPERS
ABC fJ 9 :00 -"Tlie Bermuda
Deaths." A beautiful &irl seems to have
returned from the dead in this new TV
movie about the Bermuda Trlanele.
CBS fJ 10:00 • News S~cial. The
Republicans reply to President Carter's
State of the Union message.
CBS 12:05 -"Shaft." The
Oscar winning music highlights this 1971
action movie about a black pfivate eye
<Richard Roundtree) taking 'on the
Mafia.
""" they get an un.pact. ed.indfal. .MOWI *** "PlftdOra'e Boa"
(1921) °" .... by 0 w.
Ptlllat. A Lorldon etr•·
w•llt9', mtttr... of a
--. Ooclor, unwtttlngl)I
entattM\a the lol'"'°"8
"JICll The Ripper:·
10:ao D lMI CHILD IN
~
Tiie problem of c;hltd
.,.. 11 lkamlned (Part 2)
•• NEWI
• l.ATINO CON80AT1UM
"My Coualnl On 8und1y"
11:001•8{I)111 NIW8
LOVI, AMENcAM ml..l
''l.'°"'9 Md TM Chacll''
~ ttlM to OIM •
check tor •1 mllllon
dolll(I. I "L.o\19 And The
sa..Ttttoogtl Men" Nll'CY
la fNtrlM to an lnYlalble
INln. a MOYI!! • **" "Summertime K...-(1&n) Katt ....o.n.
Chtlstophar Mttohum. A
YOWftl boV. NW'I 111111·
naeMd '* fat,_.• __,. "°" .,, tt1a undal woncs. "°"" ,._. (2 m .)
I THe 000 COUflU
LIT'I w.Ka A DIAL
DICK CAVETJ
Guell: 9funO llllCWitllm,
~ 8'ld eultlOf of
" .. UNI Of l!ncltl6ntrnent ''
11:908(1) M0A•t•H
"Dear Ded-~ .......
.. .,. .._ eo hie fettw
~'*"~~ ..... Jk*a. • good .. pon who
rady lln 't • doctcW, .,,., •
ooolWIQ MtwMn "'** lfld Hot Lipe. (A) 8 TONXaHT ~ r-t: DIWld llf'anntt.
Oua1t1: Halen Gurley
8fOWll, 8obby Vinton, Tom
amotnera. Ubaraoe. • U>VI. AMINCWt
8tYIA
"Looile And The 01#\1" a.-
" Dotti •• tieppy une• tliey me9t a fUIU· I "loYe
Alld The Pl'!yalcal" Boni .,,.,,... • ~tor""
11-wlttlout Mn knOWlnG
It 89 SARETTA
"Thi f'IYa Alld Half PO&lllcf
.IUllkla" T Ofly II taoad WITtl
lhe talk of ttl!CklnO dO'M\
'"' ~ of • cHdtlOod friend end aiding Ille
vlclwn'a druO lddltt preg-
nant widow. (R)
·=-IMAAT ~ ...,,. O\at • hUfMrf
O'llfMI' la a KA08 aoant
..t!OMOJ91-. .........
anti• WuNngton olflollll. • CAPTIONED.MC HIWI
I!) MACHllL I t.BIPl£R
~
MORNING
12:00. 'YWIUOHT ZONI! ~ ICCICit ,.,..
dine .. °'*' • boolt of
rneglc wtlld\ --help the Confildlracy • Iha CIVIi
Wll.
• fOMVIR ,...WOOD
G) MOYIE
• •'A MPlrf Or Die" (1MO)
EmMt ~ Zottra
L.afTlpart. A polOI ...,._
ant bltUea to keep New
Yortl'e Utlla lt#y ... of
the drHdad "Bleck
Hand.'' (1llr.,30 min.)
12:ol 8 Cl) ce8 l.ATI MOVIE • * * "'8Nft" ( 1971) Rlc:n-
atd Roundtr .. , M-
Ounn. A b1ac* ~ a,9.
ln\leltiOtllnO • lddMpplng.
talc• on Ila Ml1ia and"
bltie* oenoeian. (A)
12ll0. MOVli •••'h •·auu. Denim"
(t858) 8randon de Wilde,
Cllol Lynlay. Two teanag-
-11aw nowri.re to tum when they find .,., .ill be
the~ of.,,~
ad Cl\lld. (1 hf .. 55 min.)
WOM.DOF IUfMVAL
11:.118 IT NmMI!
"Don't Wiii For T-rflW': "-ano Brazl, ~
• •
TONIGHT S LATEST LISTINGS
* •• "Womtn lft ~" ( '971) Ide Ll.tplno, I.Oil
""11Ja1111ft. A ~
~ lnalOa • "'*""
--.,., oNy ti to die Ollttlde Wortd dlaa. t' Iv ..
tO""")
1:00 G MJONQHT 8HOIAL
Hott Aretti. ''•nkOn.
OU.ti 1"9 FtNt T~
OM HUI, FHld Tr8"'*" .. fY~--~ ,.,.,
MOVm
••• ''The ••a•in1t1"
(1tQ) Join l'Of'l•me.
Edlftorld O'IMI\. A men la
tom by M io... fur twO
__, In • ~ flat
parmKa O!W -wtt.. ( 1
IV , IO rMI)
1:118 TAUCA80UT
"LAttlnl w_,·• 1:SO. WCMI ** ''Ctlnle And ~ mam. USA"(1808)0-,.
Haml\OI\, Mary~. A
collaOI ...... ~ ....
II • tiNllldal Mdel't to '* ..... ..-~.
~-· (1 hr .. ,., min.)
~·= * * "Platinum Hloll School" (1MO) Mell.,
Aoof\IJ', T•ry litoere.
All9r Ill• eon dlH
"aooidanlalty", • man
In~ Illa bof•,....
tary ICtlool. (2 tn.) =1= *** "The Man Who Cried WW' ( 1137) lAWla
Stone. Tom 11toWn. A man ,,. ....... of, ....
C01 l1•IDM lft ....,, to
Ol1Wlf ttle ""'"* hi IWIJy did ooi'iirntt. ( 1 lw .. 2& in{ft.)
• MOVU! • • • "Oii 1445. DliMll
"ow" (1HI) Wllllam
Campllll. ~ ar.nt. c.,e a-nan·· aito-
...~ ol .....
.,_ Illa •wt In ortma to
hl1 1ourth •••cutlon
....... ~.(1
llr., IC> "*' )
2:41 ~
t.'00 MIWI
8:20 MOYie * • • "W1ngl Of FW'
(1tl7) 8ulww1e Plllhetta.
UC,.S NDllft. NI ftllMll
attll'llQl8 to -ttta ~
--f\l!'9 ...., flltw by WIMinO aft -r1M.(2htt) 1:111 eEWa .. MOVla
........... On fir•"
(1H3) Ohrl1tlan
~.Magali Noel. A
\'lteran trOllbla-llllooter
drtv. hi• man In an
ettampt to btlng an ol wall In~·. drtllng-llOn ~...,... (2
"'')
pr.t.aMld9•
Chatc*ell lntO
11'11111 n>bblly. ~ tn.)
MOYIE • * * "Tll• 81f1Cel\ ..... (19&4) RleMdo
~a.n. Jotln.
~lM 13~
CtVMdilll. • ftlllll .....
niurcsw. (2 tn.)
-
..... \11 t<U ·"
(I) R080NIO ooou M:aeatnNll.8 uova
• ·~ "c-lry e....t"' (1151) Aqd Cametott. AAltltfr/ "°'IOo A _....
ICIOlll .... out to ~ "'° It*' GeillnO O'N ....... ....,...tobbad
tro111 • ...-. ,, ..... ao
i~YMPDI
• • • ..UllbOM"' (18") T....,, ~ Joha
Hodllk. The COllll••idar
of • °"""" U..oo.t .... • tlla~Of•hWI'« ,_.-* 1n ....,., ca
Ma.)
uo I Cl) '"'° tuGGY 8UNRMTCH
MOVla * * "Thi IOng Of The Wiid 81111oN.. (1t58) Gaofoge
Montgomery, Dlal\na
trewetar. A captured
blade tlalllon OOfMI '° the aid .. • Widow Wld lier
eon. flolltlne to -tfMlr nndl. ( 1 hr .. 30 lllln.)
(A Quick.Look at the Movies J 'Pardon Mon Mfaire' So We11:ry
Artsy critics across
the land, by nature
enamored of thln's
French, have dra11ed
out their favorite ap·
pellations for Yves
Robert's "Pardon Mon
Affalre." Director
Robert'• lat.est, we are told, is a .. stylish adult
comedy" th•t wtll tickle us "'1th "lau1b after
sophlstlcated lau,b."
What Robert delivers,
though, is Rock tlud.son
and Dqria Day with sub·
titles, a lightweight
adultery adventure of
tbe aort Hollywood
tinkered wjth and aban·
doned more than a dee·
ade · a10. lt ia the same
old farce about a man
who has allowed his
marri8'e to become his
·prlaon. a man wbo, like
all pri.aoners, dreams or
escape -or at least a
temporary respite.
Arter ..m1.1cb ado, our
hero (Jllcel:r played by
Jean Rochefort), fiilally
makes his fantasy affair
a reality and becomP.1 involved with a female
co-worker, who ii also
married. Ttiey finally
make 1t lnto bed
. (aomethln1 .Rock aod
Doris always eleverly
avoided) when, guess
what happens! Right.
The woman's husband
comes home <they
alway& come home) and
Rochefort retreats to the
bedroom window ledge.
It makes you miss
}larold Lloyd.
"Pardon Non Affaire"
la, in abort, an only
allglitly; better than
mediocre "rft'Orkinc of a
weary theme. UnJeas
you 're nuning an acute
case of FrancophlJia,
Robert's latest film -
those nifty subtitl s
not.withitandlni -is an
affair you can afford to
miss. Rat.lni PG.
"Ml aoa" -l'lnef,,. there 11 a
movie tllat c,..lb4y aUfftl uP CM
pt1111t Of tM Vietnam "'''""· •1'feroea." atlln'llll Htnry Wlllllter •
eM S.ll'F ,..._,II t aft~ .... ., ... "'·"---...... ·--.. ewey 11Y llM'Unl e 1eft9<Ml'llllff
clr'Hm
Al Jecl1 Owww, W!Mllf .... • ncellent It* ef ,,_,,,. f""1 IN
-"'· ''~' "~z"-~ lie pl·~ .. leleVlslen 10 • CANlflad
llllt detenn!Md ,._.an WllD-U to
ltart • .-m form In c.tlf«nl• Wiii\ ...... ""-~ '°""""...,. ......... New VOf"ll, ,.,~,. '" ...... '""' . ~· ll11Ullal~111f C1ttror11to, lie _ _... c.tol ..... PIO.,.. IUlll a lllt_ll..,...,."' ..,, Ft.14.
Tiii two,,"*"-.~...,,. h'• tlllll\lllll _., fftlft • ""-· ..... "''"" '° ""'-v.t..,. _..
' ..
.. . . . . .. ... . • • • •• • a ,.t • • I I
•
r
"8o tell me, do blondes have more fun? ..
FUNKY WINKER BEAN
a..._,~ ....... --,_ ··-.......... , _ ... .,. ..... _...,.)'Ill_.,... __
..,....... ....... --.-·--__ , ..... ·-~---S.ll.tcyl .,.. __ , .. .
'JI -• C..hlo<111a e•lallOll .... ,, • --..__ .... _._ .....
bl9. M 1•1• ••· OOtWWtl••c• .,..._, ---,.,..., -.......... '""" .,.. , •• , ... ,.,,., .... ,d •. ""'••
--11111p1... Set. OxttTINON SUI. ICftl.
NEW 178 FORD MUSTANG ·11
2 DOoa HAlDTOP
351 V·8 engine, automatic
transml .. lon, bright RV.
mlrrora, tinted glaaa, txtra
cooling radiator. dual gaa
tank1, power ate.ring, H.O.
shocks. chrornt bumper & grill
l more. Ser. #HB09573 Stk.
f119.
...... ~ ........ . -, .
• !
t
,.. ....... Hoffee:
All real estate ad vertlsect ID tb.is newapaper la sub
ject to the 1''•ral Fat
)lou1ln1 Act of 111
-.hicb makes lt W.•al
advertise "any pre
ference, llmllatlon, o
dlscrlminatloo baled o
2 EXCWSIVE BAYFRONT HOMES
UDO ISLI IA YFRONT
Near new 4 bdrm., 4' bath, formal
dining rm., pier & slip for large boat.
$650,000.
IUa.A VISTA IA YRtOM'I'
Prime location & view; euatom 3 bdrm., 41h baths, s frplcs., lge. his &
hers gourmet k i tcheo, fin eat
appointments thruout. Brochure on
request. $950,000.
nee, color, rell1i.on, .ex. •------.. ~------. or national ori&la, or a JDteaUop to make ao llUcb pnf trtQCO, limlta ttca. «dtacrtin.luUoo. •• Lawson
Realty Comp.any
3416 Vii lido
Newport Beach
714·675-4562
'J1lla IHWJ~ will D
lmowln&IY accept an advertising tor rea
•late which ta in viola· GtMral I 002 G1111ral I 002
Uonolthelaw. •••••••••••*••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Ad\~l'I m1v plue
thf1r 11d• bv te)tpllont 11.ooa.m toS:atp.m. Monday thru P'rida.Y
• a&onoonSllunt11
<.:a;TA Mt.SA OFFICE
330W. Ray
&42~8
ll\JNTlNGTON REACH
17'7$Reach Rlvd.
640-1220
LAGUNA BEACH n• G&eon«yr~
Latu• Beach 4N· ...
SADDLE BACK 2* IA Paa •oa.t1 Lacuna HW. Ml.QlO
NOR'nt COUNTY dill,...,. ... ,
FOii TMI Holl~ INTHUSIAST
-Oversized 3 car gara e attached to
this immaculate 4 bedroom, 2 bath home. All new landacapina with
sprinklers front and rear. Stop by Sun·
day from 1-5 to view this o\itsta.nding
home for SU&,000. 1103 Salinas, <Mesa
Woods) Costa Mesa MM14t
COMMUMITY u.uas -find this an
outatandina neighborhood in which to
live. Join the leaden and enjoy this
lovely tree lined street with that back
home feeling in ttila 3 bednn for only
$135,000. 64Ml61
$1~rv1119 Costa M esa-Irvine
Huntin~1t on Bt·ach·Newport Beach
,-I 1i ll •_, T {
I OLSO~
4604 Sea1•0~ M.I
$171.000 See• Hear the S'URP! Beauti!Q14t clec!orated 2 bdrm unttJ with all the
-. .
S ... OOMS OM ,.._ WA
A~tually. OVER the water (wh U>e
tide is In!), sits this 5 bedi'Oom beach.
house with funky d cor; sunny
kitchen, artist'• studio arid topo;of.tho
world sun roof. Don't 1 the words
fool you. this homo is solid redwood
and ac.Uacent to Cl\ina (ov beach. Truly'Uniquo at 1395,000.
U~ICJIJI: liC)Mll
REAL TORS~ 875-6000
2443 EHt Cont Highway, Coront del M•t
also in Mota Verde, at &46·59$}0
FINll HOMES
MOM $39,500 TO 5'75,000
COllOMA D& MAit
3700 sq. ~. custom. quality bullt
wood t Ii alus home under con·
strucUon SC1. of Hwy. ~. 6
BR, 4 bath w /3 paUos. aauna. jacuzzi, walk-in cloeet.a & 3-ca.r
garage. $395,000. LyMe Valentine
6"·82XJO, (G-11)
DOU. HOUll w /GUIST UNIT.
NEWPORT HEIGHTSI CharminJ,
one-of ·a·kind, 2 BR., a bath home
w /authentic ••pub'' family rm
w /beam ceiling le brk fpl. Most of
Jo•ely anUque decor is avail. Complete 2-rm guest unit In rear.
NOW ONLY $139,SOO • .Jeanne
BUD 84,-COO. (0;1')
EM LD IAY
I. W ~ I ll:st:.t to kit -Utl,000
1. W~p; J Ir; ec._ •l•w-S415,000
l. L-.., ...... 5 II. '4H,OOO
4 • .i.t ~ Spec. View, .... ., ._..
S4t5.000
644:-7020
ttlWPOlT IEAOI
1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
UDO ISLE
Newly rc;nOdeled 4 bdrm . den. 4
baths. Jiving rm w cathedral ceilin~.
Lge. ma~ter bdrm. suite. S224.9SO
llG CAMYOH
4 BR. fam rm . 3 baths Heaullfully
decorlilk'<i Broadmoor Plan 3 w patio
views from each room. 5)25,000
BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR
J.11 Suv~·d·· Ot1Vt' N 8 "IS. t1 l6 I
1002 GeMrel 1002
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
A VOID THI RUSH
Owners are anuous
they will include the
rerr1eerator .
waa.her/dryer and of
<'OW'5e the kitchen 11ink.
Larae Muter Bedroom
" k1tc:hentd1n1n1 area 3Br. home. Call 54&-e313 Ol'l•l M ~•H'S •u.'J 101<1 I. I [~1~11
HARBOR VIEW
WITHA
HARIORVIEW
.f1!'3t Time Offered. 10
BUllOABLE R-4 LAND
Choice 61 Unit Site, heart of Costa
Mesa. walking distance t-0 major
business, shopping & schools (2. l
acre~).
CANNERY VILLAGE
Three contiguous C-2 lots, visable
from Newport Blvd , walking dis·
lance to bay. beaches & business.
Sulldlng plans for propotled 2 sty
:Victorian Comm. of c building are
available in our office. Asking
$228,500. .
STARNES CO Y
REAL; TORS 640-5711
180 Newport Center Or .. NB. r IESEKTS
• yon Golf Course Estate•
The ultimate an hvjng 1'1xury 011
nearly ~ ac. lot. Enter parking court
thru remote control gates for privacy
& secunly. Marvel at nearly 7000 q. rt. home ldcu lly designed und
decorated for formal entertaining, yet
has a cozy den for relaxing, a
separate game room/wet bar for
casual parties, spectacular free ~rm
pool/jacuzzi and separate pool house
for wet fun . 5 huge bedrooms, 51 2
baths, breakfast nook, and of course
an exercise room.
I ti...,.. I 002 hMnl I 002
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
HARIOR VIEW LUSK
PRIVACY -rttlYACY -NWACY
This 4 bedroom haven 1s an executive
reward -green hills, blue Pacific, a
home to make 1t all worthwhile . Corona dcl Mar at its best! 1436
Keyview. Open dally till sold. S259,000.
675•3411-I
LUSK \i R EALTY
a Ju/Jn lJ. I." sk S So11 ( u.
251 S E. Coo\t Hwy. Corona dt!'l M ar
GeMt'al I 002 G....... I 002 ..............................................
<#~~•HERITAGE
. ·• REALTORS
ATTIHT10M
FMA/YAIUYERS
GOOOAalA
~ Walker 1; lee
RealEltate
58Rlt2BA
Wood noon, wood ·~ roof. fireplace, dble farace. Sf.4,SOO.
GI/FHA 11Aancinl avaU.
SaDta Au our Wamer.
IOJMcC...n. 1119.~lh-d. c.ta w... 1a.11z9
--
,1Rul Eat•te
~
u I ..... IQ 1: I \I I '
• I I, , I I '9 6 ' ':'"I•••·' ... -*' ,..__.,_._ ..
-. ... . .
/ ~ .......... !!~!!'!~ .......... !~~~
MANAGER.:...REAL ESTATE
NEWPORT BEACH
A pr~me opportunity wi~h an
outstanding real estate organitahon + high earnings! Experience is a
must. Prestigious location. All
applieations held rn strictest
confidence. Pleaitc reply to Ad #68,
Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa
Mesa, CA 92626
oLDe COIOHA Da MAR CHAIM S1'IPS TO OCIAM IASTSID
SPICW.
PllMILOCATIO ..
Spacious 3 Bdrm home ln extremely
desirable location. Lge. fam. rm. &
brick patio create ideal atmosphere
for entertaining. Sep of c & bath. New cop~r plumbing & xlnt constr. View
of Jetty & ocean front decks & mslr bdrm S249.SOO, View by appt. "Call Bernita Eilertsen at ~he Real
Estaters. 6'73-8550
ONN SAT/SUM
Warm au.ract\n 1 bdrm
+ den condo. Co• 'd
patio. Abuftdll\t alteet
puk.lq nur your front
door. Adul\a only. Ideal (or~ retlfed COU• ~ PdMcl to u at onl>
~NIGEL
CAIL('' E.
ASSOC::IA TES
IAYAlOM'f HOME
3 Bdrm1., 3 bath.I ,+
mald'• or 1u1l qtu. Lars• •0tlrllbop, com·
pletely secured. Space
for boa&. approx. 45 n.
Newly decorat.ed. new
NE'fiLY&EllODEL'!l> carpet, rotewool cabi.nMI, cedar ciutai<Se: I BB. S. OF HWY fee led. W15,000
f1S.7'83l MAURYSTAUPTER
Oft.X IY OWHat SEA I.JON REALTY
2 Bdnm each unru ~ car 3801 E. Cit, C4M m-w..
·-· MS-4N91. ~ Walker & lr.e
aw.Dtote
~ Walker 1; lee
Real Estate
ew Conde». 2 Br, 2~ Ba. 2 frp\c'a, ceumto u1, ·
.kJtchen.s Ir bath. Pool &
spa. 6'1)..4i12 Brolttr
HANDYMAN'S
DREAM HOME
Fantasllc opportunity
let the bandymu teek· in& a Iara• workshop i.l
home. Bll aeparate
Wldln& in back 11.Dtabl' for mecbantc. wood worur, elet1.nclan. Of
!T? .Belief hurrYl Call
IGOl'l.
FOREST l!
OLSON ............... pr. Deck le. view from 1%13N. Cat. Lal\lll•
upper unit • .,.., is newly ·~~~«~·~3Jll8~~=!l--•--_..;..~--~---canatruct.ed. me..soo. Ph 1:.. LICI NIW
«·3Sll COLLIGI PAD
OCEA.,. V W CHAIM C.omplctely redff. 4 br. 2 Pnvateacceuto~cb; 10 old Corona; im· ba DOOi homo with new
custom 5 bdrftl .• famlly maculate S bdtat .• 2 bath eqtip. •All new rarpet. rm.. neartng c:omple· home; ideal for home or cutt.om pab)t.. dbl frplc &
Uon ·, _,ck colon to your t.o add unlt for lnve&t· NllY ne~ Jtb'l!I. 189,llOO '" mmt. Outa\ati.ding bu)' 8 ta.ate. $3'15,000 at $llll.OOO '38 Princeton. y owner SEAVIEW 1 657-3344 Ev ...
Broadmoot, nw a bdrm. IED HILL + family rm., ocean REAi.TY 144-4900 MESA D MAR
view; guarde4 communl· Charming! Br 2 Ba, new
t,y t __ , .. •·pool ..,_ 000 epta, fplc prof ln4scp. ; ii.MT"ouri.ii'' 1--------11tedwood Jae. many
Two frplc. .• 2 bdrms. JASMIMICll xtru.'83,500.CSCortei . each; comer locatioo, B r a a d n • .,,_s.w-__ 70_1.S1 _____ ....
to\>~· $173;500 wAvECBEST. wi. • M•uaGER ST.SlOOCIAM BR. i BA. famll1 room. Im
3 + l'amil>' rot.: could bqe nOOI" to eelUn& Moat be member of
beahoWplac:e! fiJ'ePlace. l'onual din· Ne-rt Harbor/Costa pu• MA.ITIN int. wet w. JleauWul -..... -uae of custom Ule. Mesa Board wtt.b a bis· UAL UT A ft kltcben f1oort.nJ. ~arpet· torY ol succ:•s ln real
644-7111 tna' "drap.1. Near poo1 -.aw wes-fQr det.aill
" tenola. Private ull Chuck Nash at IY OWNER ruarded communltf. _-.._mo _____ _
2brUiabae. N• paiotln SIJOS,OOO tee. Owner/act. IY OWH "out. Newauper d1x 2br, 141M18QO. a BR. 2 BA. FR. DR, tnr<I
2ba apt over 1ar. All pool, Jse co\l')' kltc:h,
bttDI, crpt.a • drpa. View <XJlV. lbr, Zba + pest ttallall tile entry. elec
• ocean 4' Faahlon ble. Ftpl, 2 p,tiol, R·! iar opnr much more
710 Femleaf Ave. Opri Prtn. Oftb'. $JS7,000. •.soo. ()p(;. Sat/Son.
Sat/Suo 1·5. ~J73·1H2. Own*,M0-'1 1157 Columbia Dr.
Slat,500. t?Wl76 ·~~--------..-...--~
BA~JI ~) "'·"'·' .. ~In<.
.. -·--
~JttlF tc OH 1
~ fSlltllHS 1
~--~---
_._,:r~
I, 'I --,. ' \' I . .. . . ..
Li W W i OS
THEFIMESTI
3 .. ,..... aa.i i.atll aft
~'"' R•1 mad•1 tewaheuH ll'I Ral'lelile
(
-
.. -
I '
The Bluffs
OwMr a)Ollvalt'd, hue
bouth\ .... notht'r home. G~at 3 bd1m Trina ~d
uNt \IMUi private jacuui,
Too many 1oodles to hi t. ~ $1.$7,500. 5'.lb!Jllt a1J reaonabltt off era.
C& I Don or Helen
SQrRIAl.TY 1a·1;.•t11
Open Sunday l·~
408 Plata,Jllpt.J3ch
WHITEWATll
~EAHVIEW
f!ORGST E
Ol-SON ........... ....,
OCEANFRONT
I ....., CoffCICJe
BY OWNERS E,,ute Sale. St95.000
1-'lrm·Princlples only
•911 SealhOre Or.
642-64.50 or 642-SB
1311•
NOR INS
REALTY
Pride or Ownershap
make this unique tri-plex
Plltela11
IH41 l'llAll
~e ol the best values In -
Dana Point. Exullt'nl I UM1TS/Cotto MHo tax •helter with Capital 18 yurt old. Huge lut,
Oain potenUal. $'ll5,000. Room to build. Fixers.
S~ak:lnl or Tu: Shelter· Live in thla charmltlc 2
Bdrm. hwtO ln Corena
del Mar & have 2 unlta
help make tbe payment.a.
$175,000.
5U-OUSAceot ------..,......----
% + 2700
Nu:e older unit.a in Lonr • •H•••••• ••• •••• •• • • ••
S.ach. positive cuh HOltSllAHCHlS
now. areat starter in· Two to choose Crom .
vatment at $35,000 One-:ot Br 2..., Ba, Fam I·
D. IUdaeth IUtr
955-0ct'T 842 3283
4PLIX·IEACH
SllS,000
Xtra 1harp Covio1ton
lDIALfOl-
a·S-4 member l11mlly. wk Hart>or Vi w Hills.
9.lpU t'lt!an. beaut. de
cor., 3 brm 2 ba, tam rm. elec blt.·ln lutchen. vault·
----.. -~..,..., ..
lab For.It 3215 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Exec 5 Br home. Wood•.
A/C. Beacb t.eMIS club.
Immed occup. 1700. CHI ~· Rily 17CMl882
3br or 2 + den, fam rm
All lake privlle1•. ltn
nit. Adulla only, no peta,
$47$ mo. i.e. 581·5711 eva.
'15H8Md)'».
associated·
8M• •t. J" ., f I\ • · •· .
I ~ I '"' t ' ' ' '
Preattg oua office .W 'l"IJIOcom
• Bch/Alrport • Teat.tut t'ectlPtkm by, tel~ meana-,...,,~
terence rooms, kttchen, 'b91VM'Aa111:
outgoing mau aervlce, dlctatlng
machln• •. trevel conauttanta, m-
p u tertzed typeaettlng. Complete
aecreterlel ••rvtoea evallable •• needed. Froml290 per mo. c• 014111z. 1110
)
4dd lt .•. 8ulld lt ... Oi per 1t...Hammer It .•• Carpe · SERVICE (t ••• Cem nt It ... Wire it ... Hoe U ... Clean it ... Move
it...Prcss lt ... P Int lt...Nall lt ... Plaster lt .•. Flx it ...
. ' .
Allllllia11C8..,. C11••/C-... ~~ •••I · . ....................... •....•••••••........... ....................... .....•.•.........•.•••. •.•.••.•............... ••••..•...........•..•. ....................... ..•••••................ ...................... .
B61A.PPU "· l~t ea.,,.ntu, CEMEr.T. WORK. All !l.ECf'IUCAL SERVICE ploadt.r, Dump tnark, dOoelnmybome. PE'l'EILSP~"TlNG Attlalf let M c. I~ '8 lnatalW fadal'7
TAIPCltARO $10 repalra, remodeU01. . S....able. P'rff CAW SU hr. ll 611ALL Hau1ta1. trte work, Jlc: apiece. Expr'd. 1 Jbte1. l\IP4'1'1r plt&cl, dired: .a.ab IS Jtl. Call
ZOZSS ll&Ul,S A roaltnt. tree rtmoval, t9tl.C.U'T JO IOGU 1radlnl, demo etc ._.lJO Frff Eat. Call Oene & ck-sips. Custom H&roldGUMMt-811
S.-JUZ 111$7 01 = Jollll, Ul-IOIZ Cement •ork, block It ttA:•" Btdrfc ISH.2S7 I& G~ tgm Mt·Zll4 ----------i brick . Patio• 6 Uc3Z'71M "5-tt74 H1111de-.:9 ....................... All PROFESSJONAL DcJus ...................... .
••••••••••••••••••••••• c.p.t,_..,.u drive••>'•· Frte esta. ••••••••••••••••••••••• LANDSCAPING. Palat1n1. Jnter/ltxttr . ...._.,,. r ramie TU~c. an
BabJIU·ll)' borne ••••••••••••••••••••••• -.mT ELECTRJCIAN·Priced Want a REALLY CLEAN Reuonable prtctt. Reaa. wort tuart4J.03M n••••••••••••••••••••• emn••Ooon. 25yra e.I·
Da11·Maturewomaa carpet Man wlll lay youn a......an Coo • ~ ri&bt-rrff eaUmat• OD HOUSE? CalJ OIP1bam ...-nl3orU7.sl46 0..1-u--. •-•-/t~•-. •w, VERYNEATPA'OCH t-'l*'.._._m_.t_ID ____ _ •M5-0394• or mine Repaira ..--.. c crete. uvw ~ Lar&eoramallJobe Glrl Frteett6'$ $123 • -...... -w ..... .,... JO •TEXTURI!: clean&nl tOo! Guar wor day It full day ratea. Ucwed ~ · · tht d •c• pr'd1 boa•l, Deal,. reu. P'nle•L JG Ctilt. New or re·
Uc. day can w /pr•chool at bluer HVinJJI.• Fr 8S'l·at23, or &U-3Z57 Roort SUMSHIMI ~llLS ••••••n•••••u•••••••• Uc'o 9"-1045 Dave model. Fret .at. Sad )bs
to1ram. In Newport est,~ C: tJ wtor •••••o••oo••n••u•• HouNd.eanloi 4 office Hom tl4•t .. -.ce YOUNG KAN. I yn expr PATCH P~ICRl.NG wel(OQM. •zcas aft 5
ach.C.llNl·ZUl Sha Is t.e I ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'loor,. window cover ~ti. We welcome Bob'31-lf70U.5P.ll. in walleoverh11. Free All type1 . Free utoriltt
.. llltAlenla Co~bri1~e!~1~ 4!r~ R.J.H~fsnan" Son, Gen in11. cork wall tllH: Apf. ·~:~d:r.~·~1•:, u._,l ests.~7tAndy •thna'411.CallMCM1125 •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• $ 10 min bleach. Clean Coatr CU.tom Alt It Add, tark•tt, etc. 27 >' ra ....tor month. Bonded, ....... •••••••••• .. ••• ,,...a..;.a Y--C•.11-. PLASTERING • rtAHO SMALL BUSINESSES Ii b di hallS15 A patlo1, cablneta, bc./aal•/contr. Cameo Brick k s _.. -.,. Homea, additlol\I, to· IMSTlUCTIOM s T A R T u p s v, n rm, b · vba formlca. New con.at. Ret Jntenon UJ.f.640 ltc 'd, loud. Reh· wor • mall Jobi&. Awrap ~tStry• 1tucco, free e1t1, low Xlnt Crt-denUala • Jn
u /B I rm $7.SO, couc tJ,O, c r •-,,. 'I •~• ••H · ~ N,ewJiort, Coate M•a • 2.:.--.,,. Jhtt<Ltc.. ... _ _. .. .,,.. ho "-ll T =~f:nr:z:e~!.u::1:e!: ~. Guar •Um pet odor. ~~Uc ~~nd",d. or Gm •••t Irvlae. f7U175 eve.. ~ ~atrlnabo":. r • ._. --l:"~ m. ··-erry
unique fee arrandement CptDo nrp~r. 15 yltra •a·~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,,...._......... SI •-· bl .. brt L. Guar/lnJr·F\'eeat. P1•t111 Be fit f • . wor .. myse • _. KAR.KSlLE.R CONT WEEDING..a..EANUPS Qul.lityMt'Y. wit.bat um111-oc.., c.. LlcJIC91 TedGl-7085 ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• French tutor 4 Jn Paris
... ~ ~~~v!~:bl~a.~ 5.11-0lOl . New~ RM/com~'!. W.-Ji)(alllteaaoce "Penonal Touch''. ir4'na=*:· •:r.:fa'· ' HOKESAVEl\S. Phunb· will travel "ccbu voua.;
lar1e companlu. WeC.reCarpetCleaners. RmMd,remodel,paUo rr .. eat MJ.190'r Uc4kref'1.Af.ISZI rtc-ed Lie ... f:od~ Flnepalnt1DfaU\aybua7 lnl•H linJ. Freettt.,.ac_ ... __ . _____ _
751-4780 Steamclean or•hampoo. Uccoatr.Callf7t..4411 HOUSEKEEPER Esprd ~b87Utet · prl~Trym,treat.at SlObr.Hon llJrellable W••t.• --------• Aboupholst.ery AJI It Dtc It Landlcape Ma.ln· .... • .. _.8 • • lfc,.-.v.831-Sl.'U aervfce. 8>fA, M/C 01'. c•I 11Malldttg .,,__ • WO~ c....... tenance· Mow • Edi• -oowuw at. Ma..&... 7Sl'3150orN7.o313 ..................... .. 1u.ar. 4• ...,k mount uott, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Full • l t ... lt · CallMe-1338 .._ • ..., CUSTOM PAINTINO. Pine Is So 11 d 0 a k ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fr eat reaa ratea. man· uau DI, "••••••••••••••••••••• Exterior Spectal'at 15 P ... s.r.tc. ltpeln waterbedsQunpletelln ·~ FJn,l~h.~h.':" 6'.S-S718. ----~~.. ...~~ ~:~:s.~~0U1Ua1. ffouNCl••1n1D1 'tdOdH bty "vT·~ Ilea wm )fove yra local "''· Uc/boD· •••••••••••• ! ............ a<'c. Rea1on1ble~ an n .. ml eve co · • u en · ou' We handle bif ded/iftlrd 1u.1r work ..__ p 1 s 1 Terry'a Nwpt·Bay
by the old fuhloo "'-....&/C -4 a.1..,. Olkllero Is Soo's Depend.own ll'&DI. Rell. tn o v • •. o t t l c e ,.,._•ti ' WOD't be un' irout1on oo • erv ce. sci.o1s1 way.Uc.281400$45·53C'7 -.-m oncnn• ._. , Aft6·00PM 5SIMl90 houubold Dlata " ._.4,.,...·-. • Complete awlmmln11-------------------....................... Dtqscn.. Freeest.Cle&aUJ>t,tree · · · nee """'"" _._ pool malatenaace WI.dowel a.... c.,.,.,.. Cullom Concrete Is Block ....................... tnm.~all•PM A Woman'• Touch. Hou.• local, alao 'l)acklnJ. . • 8'154111 • ........... !:':':;: .... ..
•••••••••••••••••••••••Work Patao covers "Drapery lt'abr:c Sale G a1---.a.. cleaiun1talloredtoyour Loweal Je••l ra\e. ~j clpau ex1;!lAt P•,tat SPAJlKLINGCLEAN n-~·• odl o 1t' •. d d -ooo _._. ._ 1m:._...., .. H _ ___._,....,,_,,. Lic/lnll'd.C.1Tlll·N4. a,. aperaan1a1.1eoft.g .._.-r. rem e. l yrs bric . Lie ... Boo e ••,JUU y1.,.. m stoc .. mwat ••••••••• ... •••••••••••• _.,.,.....,.._ PbMT·11'1'1 cabl-. r~llhed etc.•••••••••••••-•••••••• Windows Is bouaeelean· cl.J"peat.ry experience. M2-681M be tc*f: 70~ ·~vlnp in· HANDYMAN· C 0 ,..., Do -~ bo.. 25ynexp. m-sa. n.J..-... w ~· .. ,1 t tna. •5844, ~nu 496.a22 veatory reduct.Jon 1uar • :ri: _,, you..-.. ~r .. ae r..aa/P••riltt ._ • .--.._.."' JPeS.
---------Cooc:ret.e. Maaonry. slabs, lat quality. Ken Butcher electrical, plul:ll ln1 • clea.oed? Call~ for ••••••••••••••••••••••• Llc/bond'd. Insur. rr.. do w l n d 0 w 1. 11 y Silver Hammer Framina fouadaUona. 1:U1bwalla, Drapel')' 15l0 E. Edinser f1oon.IC'7·2'71'7,557""5CM SOOCl,rellableworker. PalnUnS. Hom• Jntr i. Quality Palntlbf. Loweat eatlmate. 894·0'21 or livelihood depend• on
Co. Com./Rea. Room pallo•. Licensed EVH Sui ta Ana 541.0203 Sell th1Qp l•t WO Dally Have 10methln1 to aellT Exterior. Speclaltr: "* ln town. rr .. eat. sn-tm quality work ~ equip.
addsl>rywall551-4120 ~l 5'.1..-, PllolWantAdl. Clasalfttcladadottwell. Aptl.LoraU..U1·2:IOI Jackf1M.138/17f.'7280 WantAds Ca11M2-5671 ::1Jioo. Jack
General
l;J.Jij•
AutamneDna
Pk<weil19,lnc.
CPI. Tb• Pe111lon
Slrvice Divlalo11 Cl( ADP
naeda)'CN.
We have Immediate
opcn1np ln our NewPort
Beaclt Adminlatratlve
Cellte' IOC': .,.. ...... c .....
•Typist
•SwltcNlosd
4-14.tlht ...
•tlllcroflllt Cftortr
·~Cleftc
etRLFllOAY
Mnlcan Company baa
oPIDlni for all al'®Dd of· lfcs wOrk:er: a HMrV•· Uonl•t w/1ome prior aitl1oe tict.UU di*'· Is
kncr9'led1• of llealco btJpful; booktHP•r wttravel lndt11t.rJ buaS.
... aper. belpfUL Alk
fcll' Jloll1, 'fGO'rll.
OAlL.V PtLOT
ll48C ..... Drin
546-4741
(Across From
Ora.nae Co. All"pOrt > Equal Oppor Employer
*$8.50HR
Noexperne-c. we U'am
•IMSTAU..ERS
•SALES
•SERVICE
•M(iMT
TRAIMEIS FuUorpartUmo
Cal Mr. Mafon
*957-8189*
• 'i '.ii ... ~
Fr141Y. January 27. 1978
I
6PCPL\YPEN
(2)1'SOl'AS.
(1) toVES!:AT
.201T0Mi\NS
SACJUJ'IC&
ON~Y$488.
Sf'OBOOJIOROUP
6PCBEDBOOJI
'Heatf§ of C£ove
This Valentine's Day send your love
a greeting all the world can share
with a Daily Pilot Heart of Love.
It 's easy. compose your
personalized greeting & we'll set
your message in type to fit the
border o1 your cho\ce or your own
handwritten tho~hts may appear
m th• border you select.
DAILY PILOT
1978
SEA~Y'S
•
"" ~ ....
.·
, ... " ·-AU.t911
POlllnl
GYPSY
..
BARWICK DATSUN
""" ~ 1 I 11. • r 1 4 ,1 • • 1 t • • •,
6ll·ll75 493-lHS
-l'71CHEVY 'l1TOH~X4
Automatic. VI, radio,
pwr. toerln1 & brakc1,
(W2(13), (Uled>.
$7666
WE BUY
CllAHCAIS
&taUCkS
CONNRL
CHEVROLET
19rafOID ~';:lld.
C.toM~ldt 14~1200
Au\om atlc, V 8, pw r • ..--.-.~--__,.--..-•~ • at , air WEPAYTOPDO.LLAR
cond •• cualom palnt, FORTOP\JSEDCARS m&O + Ci , (flM). FOREIGN, DOM&STIC <U ), otCLASSICS u•tt 1f }'OW' ear Cdn ·=-\llftnl.
I 971 J CJS IAU IUICK
"'" ~ ... :;.._ .. _. ·-... Harbor Blvd. ..... -" ....... pWr. Omt&M tTl).ZSOO tteertns,wbeels Ura • ..;.;.;~;;;.;;::=.. ...... .-:.::..::==.
<°'llJ1.Z>. =· TOP DOLi.Al -PAID
FOR CLEAN
IMPORTCAIS
At.LMOD S
lt71GMC
'!2 TOM PICKUP
(51'*9). (Used).
$46'6
~·J , 88)'> Bl ACH Run
tlUNTINGION 0[6(.t'
1.H1 ns1 ~·o 0.147
WllUY
U &SAL
2QaBH&rbol', O>ata Kesa
USIDCARSI
We're &be new Cbe•rolet dtalv&biP an the Irvine
Auta Center. We need
1QUr UMd C*l' l
9Sl0
JOE
MACPHllSON
CMIVIOLIT
2.1 A\#.OOlntel' Drive
IRVINE
761-7222
MISSIO" VllJO 11•P')IH\
BJI 1748 41~ •70•
'fS Ford Van. Low
inllHI•· Good coDd. f//00/olr. Calllf.2.151'
A aaalc "12 Cbe9Y Van, xtra •barp. paneled,
llJIO, JW1t CGDd, lo IU
Jnl, mu1t. Hll in.so. ~sftSPll
1978BMW's
HERE NOW!
COMPLlll
IODYSMOP
WOP8'
-
Brand•• 1978 IMC Yi , •• L.8D PICKUP crco14azs1oasg)
I '
· IMMEDIAIE DELIVERY
BRAND NEW 1978
CAIAILO
Power steertng, power brakes, custom gauge package,
automatic transmission, vinyl seat. P20S radials. (12170)
(5W80A8Z500822t.
IMMEDIATE •IYERY
$
llAllD NEW 1978
JeyQIOl.Billl!o.
tpfSngs. H.O. metn & aux. r. eprfngs. H.O. power t>rUes.
350 v..a. awe. fuel tank, power 1t .. 1ng, H.O. battery, H.D.
cooling, radio~ 8t8p bumper, chrome frl bumper, gauges,
(5)9.50x18.5 8J>ly tlree .. (12100) (TCL348Z507319) ·
•
.. ,. . . -· .
AMtos, Autos, 1..,1"'4 Alltot. l........ ......... Aalfot, IBUXll"llld II ..........................................................................................................................................
,, • ~ ............. !!.~~ ~ ............. !?.·.~ ~ .............. !?!! ~ ............ !?!~ !!:! •••••••• , ••••• !!!~ . ··-······-· .. ····· ....... ! ....... --~~ ........... .
'72a11w21002••pd. Orann ,..,.hittv's .,,.az.aereo1eu1.ur. AATU4 ~ ..... t74o .. ••••-••~•-••·
dean,aftertlpm, "'•• "'"""1 111, mai wblt, 1Uftl'. srtD• ••••-••-••••••••••• M ft R Q D I s caUISHllO. "450.&Q.HIOe~a/wkndl CONYBtTI !S 722'0 4.
'73BllW3D02 mln\eo.d FIAT *'7181wkd.11 <UToCbooM~ Thla le a ch11lc · ~ 'c ' 1971 •uoz l l '75. ~Ua '.lT Mert"ed•• Ill whieh .. • ta.,., A • radJail, ... • • v r • or I All wtt.b lo. au.i-u ar. la 1howa superb c•re. Lux·
"100.IN-1111 owaer. ou Urn, A/C, acellent abowroom -· W'Jtciulppe¢ < IA). M D T D R s . All·nl •tereo ~ det. ditloa. (11'11). ~T"" MAU 0
SMWllSAW ~••••••••••••!?.'.~ LAND -::~:a,~ r~1c. Mcedt.W WthavealoodteledlOo
tt7)1AYARIA 1171 Capri u, Super cpe, complate o'haul. citotherlbltllBZalnour
&'''A HOADWaY Autoa.Uc, air cond. " Sbarp, v-a. am/Im ISAT Papen.SlUOm-4741
CREVIER .MIS\ltlN VII J(J •Mll'OllY\ ... .. \• ........ .
UHfA AHA r.unrool. (003N8Z). ltereo. Cell Wknda or
ais·3171 lt7J l.OCS ev •.•••. 1484712 PP. DICI MlllER THCW..n-..0114~1 ~C:.>witb aunroor. '71 Oaprt Vt,' apd, Dl\< MOTOIS
•USIDIMW'•* 1t742002 ••11. r1aa1 1ood,
'Tl Bav~\.lJ'"°• 8 /11. 4 •peed. air cond " SIOOO/Olr. NO-'llJI
~•-A t.oae8LPO •ltreo cat1et\e. 11'1JCAPJU
-u . {'1153MCC) AC ' cyl enc Xlnt IU ··~•IJ>d~~> 1'74 J.OS. rzoOo/lllltolr.at-c79e ' "'112002~~&/RMSNLP AutomaUc, air cond. ft-------
'Trm&ASJRlmlSK iWU'OOI. <381KLF), OalM 9720 ~0.S. ... '9 19743.0CM -• .. •••HH•HH••••• ~~----'""'---t Automatic. 1unroor &i * DIUYI A* Olt.+.Heil COUHTY'S ~iM{ I n t e r I o r .
OLDIST lt76 UOla * LITI"LL * & . . apetd wi\h 1unroo(. SAVE A LOT
<ERIN D). 3 to choose
from.
. . . . . . ~ ..
BARWIC K DA HUH ~~ 8ll-204'04ts-4949 ........ ,'·•·''''·•I'•,, ..... 831 ·1J/'>49 ).J J75 ~c. BMW ldMltenu 6'2-1171
:1111 ::n-amboree ..-.... Mew 9100 Call
'J\JewportJ!llada ~ ••••••• ................ HIWPOITDATSUM fer the belt bUJ ha a H• oruMd l>atJunt
833-130
n.7hk9 ......
All modtla. eolon • .......
W...,T..,I
OVER
200
FIATS
TO CHOOSI MOM
A Few exam•:
'78 FIAT
f212Dr.
$69.
. -..... .
a J r 1 14 a 411 s 1 1 04
'2550
$ 2 says you1ll Uke
Last chance tor lantuOc
aavl.np oo all remalnm1 "'Tl mode1a 1D atock.
COSTA MESA
DATSUN
mo. Aln.t new bhae := LUSi SPICCAL da Accord. 5 Speed,
a 178 VW better. ~HARBOR BLVD.
140-641014M2 I J
30 Moa. Open End Le&a« 1t5m.C:.ll$$8-91J.
on approved cred.IL Cap ......_ 97•0
Coll susuo. lleeldua: -------~ .-. 0.. s ... .,.... .. ,.... ....... ...... snn.~. Total Dn. ISCIO ...................... .
Total ol Periodic Pmt. Ml~~~·~u~t~ell , 71 JA.U.UXICI .... ,.. .................... chd
VW AT
N£WPOR r OA f SUN 0434.51. ~-•N ..... 0 & Adtom&Uc. aJ.r cond. 4' _.,c.,.ue. near.no AM/FM. OoJ1 51,000
em1lflop eontrola. Save 1111*1 lhtr1tt (1124BW) • lalDdredl CID price. f\Jel. • Harbour Volkswagen n.... ..._.,_, .... drf••· Ny. cm
?7Cll••U
Demo fc uecut.lve aaJe
now loinl on-burr)' l
•DOVE SfREET (Near MacArthur Blvd.
•Jamboree Road)
NEWPORT BEACH
lll-1300
lltAMD MIW c • l l 4 ••• 2 4 • ' ALLEN
FIAT SPlftnl ewa/wbdl. Oldl/OadJllac/GMC
.............. .-dell ........ " ........ W:S:.'°" ...... ...... UUl '7' Dataua Pickup, AM· S.D. Frwy •• Avery Exlt
995 FM &ter.o, mai whit, LAGUNANIGUEL
...... . lllllM. -.$! F4Wpped ==:~i~:P: !~~!~!~!~ m (SER 2211118) eq\ipped. '8CiO(I. Term.a. 197'DATSUM
~IOHATCHIACK
5 speed, AM/FM radio.
radial tlrt!9, low mllH " ln excellent coocU\loD !
(OOlllO&). Now red11eed to
1: Other 'TiSpl~ra Ftnwf 9723 ~. W/UIM10$'l
For lmmediat.e Dellvel)' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...._ 9732 0 VlR I'. U'>ED IUGS & CO~V(Rl lll IS
Choice cl Colors "'15 Ferrart IOI GT4. Lo •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• Equipped Nicely miles, abowroom eondl· "71 .JeD181 Heab' CouYl •10 vw c ............... s 1895
Blue, ahlwp C8f. 1 oa304
. •70 vw .. . ......•.... s 1511
4 It)., red. cielK. 205ABU
'69 vw Buq . ,.,.,1 I ,, ... , .• s 1488
.! ' 'l 'J. ~., ...... , h• I'• / \i( J•O
'72 vw c. .............. $3195
4 IP., yellow, lharp. 139187
'73 YW ._ •••••••••••• SJJtS
Auto . overhead air, a beauty. 8071-tWH
'74 vw... . ........... $2195
A ir, mags. ~low. e69MXM
'72 PORSCHE 914 ........ SAVE
• ~ ' • I ' • , I j • t • '
OMLYSJl95
COSTA MESA
DATSUN
284.SHARBOR BLVD .
540-6410 S4M2 I J
1977DATSUM
IOMGCAI PICICUP
with camper ahell. 5
speed trant., fador'1 aJ• ~ton1nl &i AM/FM
1tseo\ape. (1E4'751'1).
MAJC!OFRll
MIS\ION VllJO IMPOIHS a•... I 'O e ., ..... ·~ ...... .
HI I 114 6 411~.t 104 •74 VW am · ..••••• : •• ~.SJ4tl · !1~~~; W'lbip1"9· mtga, tt-.ct't t7tc. IO "75 B-210 btcbt. lo ml,
•
$4895 • one
FtA. T SPICIALS
•74 VW .,_ ftU-s..a All/P'M radio, orlc . .... w,....... • • • ~YYI ownar. •2Hl/offer. '11 IJI 441". S47ft
Air, 1terwo, 1utoege r.ck. sharp. 2~ l'1WCM Low milealt J>EMO
•76 VW ... ••••••••••••••SAVI 'TS BalO laatebbaek. Aato. tr•••·• alr Sliver, 11.-0.-fS ml 017NXQ AMfnf. Air, lood coad. eonditklalzC. l.oMed db
•75 VW....,. 2 *· •. • ... $JJtS · Mu. olftl'. 311/eN-lOll, atras. <Ser. 111131) Mto .• pert. 5*g. tt.-.o, beauty. 034NV8 or 7Wtm-a50 .,, 131 W .... l4fff 1-----,~--------.iol --------tAuto. trant .• Pact. Ab H.-1...-:.-Volksw11nen "12 a.oz, clean. AM/FM, Cond .. AM/Plf Radio,
ur-UVW"' -"":J aJr coad, map, Kool Mais. etc.'._ •· ~ 842-4435 sbb. t.ooo. ln·0'7'4. 76 124..... •
117111Mdtlttd..I ....... .._. '71 Dataua PU, air, Ollly1U30mn..toeded ''°/Im, radlala, c/o •Like"-· (JO'fNaN> S. Hrc t ._ M t-t. Sat f.7, S. I 0.7 cm pr, atove, relrl 1. 75 124 S,WW 14491
MMc.et""8T•tLlt.()l..,._C....Oltlr .... 101' elect, Wat.tr $llOO al\ l'rory flnlab. FUIJ1
• epmll&C-180 ~lpped, Mint eondWon .
.... UM4 :AlltM.UM4 'Allfol.Uted i'°tir2°8> 4
.. ••••••••••••••••••••• •••• ••••• ••••••••••• ••• ••••••••••• ............ 1 4 -~ S,W.-tr . S3 ti •P•wu ans.. ~tereo
COSTA DATSUN
M F.SA -IS EXCITED TO
ANNOUNCE WE'RE HA YIM& A.
llAID •Elll
CELEllAllOI
radio, racUa1 Ur9, etc.
COSSNOJ> 7• auw..-sm1 I apetd · lr1a1ml11Jon,
radio. Ml&er, e&e., ~
'"8LIV) • Saperb 8lnke n.pt. All ..,. Rbtec:t to Prior Sate. AU PrleM Pim Taic le Uc.
Prlce10ood •Rn. afttr' MUcaUoo
DICI MlllER
MOTO.S
'
lion. 1·2H·2Z'l·IHT aew mtr, Ownei
Fr.no cleaperat.tl "1000/Blt ofr . Gt.mt
•
..
Ml~\tllN V ll JI) IMPOlll\
• • ' I•' •
lj JI 11411 49~ 1104
•
MIHtON VllJO IMPO•I\ .. .. '· . . . ~
llll 114/S H) 1104
lt71Ml'l2400
' speed. pwl'. lt.9iorln,. All/FM 6 fUDrOO •
(CMll).
MUSTlllJ SAODLllAQ(
VAU.IYIMPOITS
Hl·Z0404'Mt4t
74MIZ410SI
Complete wltb at•reo,
pwr. wlndow1, crui••
control • lela than St.000 mu... A rare find r ' ..
Ml~\ION VII Jn 1.MPOllrS . . . -. . ... . ..
llJ 1 -1/411 411~ 1104
.
VOLVO~ TOYOTA
SPECIAL TY CARS
\
c ..
1'
I
(
~
f
c
MIHION VllJO IMPO•f\ . ... . .. .. . . .... .
llJI 1148 4Y5 1104
~ ---~ L --..
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(004HS0)
.. ,.
f09
UMCHHO
25730H)
1914
MG
MlNIT (()()el.JO
1976
FOllD "HfO IUHAIOUT
1?28PWOl
~YO DAY
19729llTTarg11, blk.
A C. blk. $7250
67~79711
A 5 · DAY USED CAR SALE-------..
BEGINS AT ORANGE COUNTY'S # 1 BUICK DEALERSHIP
BAUER BUICK on
Computer Iested Automobiles
... We Take· The Worry Out Of Your
Next Automobile lnvestment~top By. Today ..•
CHEVROLETS FORDS
from $1295
Bill MAXEY
TOYOTA ..... ····~•l•d. •• t \\\ """'IN(. f()fol U •\.'.:"
Bill MAXEY
TOYOTA ••••• •••d•l••<l ,., ., .. ,
•t"Nfl .. C,.1(Nof U.6C.H
r?J TR Sptlflre, red, Lie
tYRUut. $249S.
C&LAutoM..t
Bananca &ArrowHw1
C21Jtt66-1697
'70 GT8 in :slnl cond. Rblt
trans & rear end. nnf
tires AM /FM 66,000
milts Muti aee t.o ap·
p~.NM$60
VolbWCICJM • ••••••••••••••••••••••
-
MISSION VllJO IMPORfS ... . .. •' .... .
'''" ... ll ........... .
I JI 1141 .C9~ 170•
*ALLEN* CADILLAC
lESALIS
~
I '71.&DORADO
llAUITZ.'t
<4l To CboOde From
All are luUy "lo~". 1i1u.. as low as uoo.
(171211}.
HUGISAVIHGS
"77 R.EITWOOD
lttOUGHAMS
(3) ToCbOOle f'rom
All fully eq\aipped •1\h miles u Jow H 10.~
<561'l'LP >. Pric.4to WI
•
T2 Chevy Vt•• w •In • Pd air. '70 Dodi• ••Ill ~ •· each. MU.t 540 5630 • lell. 14$-1'41. Evt. M·F lriMftlllill .. llNiilNii..__ •n~:,~~c =.. .,25 li!-
~·ther. ta.Jeo tape. •••••••••••••• ••••• •• •• 2&26 HARIOI ILVD.
..,._, 8 eoat.rol II all the '76 Cordoba, Silver & COSTA MHA uaat.&Uatrtt. (08330). ..,. In I l ... - -Sf &II wnae v y top, eawatr Mweffck
(4) 'Tris l"f• ~lll~s IOle. crul1c control, etc. TOC'booltJ'rom 14950. PIP 846·14•0 or
640-~
Nabers ··cadillac
1971 CADIUAC
CNDmLU .. __ _,. ......
._ 11.000 .... efl ~ .,..,
----~--............ __... to47'POI._
PltCIO rosau
~lJSTAFSON
llNCOlN M~RCUllY
I"°° ... "'. leYl.Y .. d I • "'l''""''M lffcll, 142 .. 144
'75 Cad convt. w /boot.
Xlntcond. P /Pt8600 ~
1011 \SO\ & SO\
• l INCOl N Mf nnmv
2626 HAltlOR ILVD.
COSTA MESA
C...t tf 27 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'77 COMIT 4Dr
Auto trao1. air cond.,
power 1lecnn11. power
brake•. radio. healer. Real c lean c ar .
(740RSDl
•$3222
S40-S630 IW,JWUJI
2626 HAltlOlt ILVD.
COSTA MESA
9930 •••••••••••••••••••••••
1976 Cpe DeVllle, xlnl. '61 UMCOLM
SunrooC • xtraa. new CONTIHIMT AL urn • brka. Avl Z/I. 4 Door. full power, power seeoo or bat. "Z·HH aeata. AM/FM stereo,
Monday vinyl root. See 1t today! ~__;;.:.....~~~~-I •$2495
540·5630
C-re "" •••••••••••••••••••••••
l.918 JOT, auto. air. P /S. 1011 \SO\,\ SO\
• I INCOl N Ml 11c unv
P/B, 1 owner. immac. 2626HAR101l ILVD. Orn1 w /nu wht top. COSTA MES• 5"8·1501 dy1, 5U·ZHI ----'---""-"'-..i::---1
evea. C...... 'ttU ca...roe.t tt20 •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• •CORVmlS
19711
NICE SELECTION!
HOW4DC.....,._..t
OO'VE•QUAJLSTS.
<Near MacArthur, Jam·
boreft 'Bri1tol l
it ~WP()RT BEACH
71 MAVElttCK
s cyl., alJcll a haft. AM
radio, beater. Ont of
Ford& Detter Ideas! CLH.'
1.&4.U7 )
•SZ4ts
S40·S630
ltHl\SO\ & SO\
• l.INCOLN· Mf IH .. UllY
• •
: '75 Velte. blue/silver,
., Load~. 39,000 ml.•"· . ~ ........ J.t30 ____ ,
it ,., tm m•r.· l ·trk, ioaded,
lit It' lo ml eace. IH9t.
R R Mll.LER SAYS, '51·001or132-0l&Z
.. SHDPIYPHOMI'' ~ tUJ 4t4-l 1JI 146-tt67 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'72 XR·7 C.01t1ar. 50,000
ml, one owner, xlnl.
SMOO/ofr 552-~
"14 Coufar, xlnl cond.
'7,000 m1·1. Best oCr. can
64$-2235.
-'°'·' ''.~·~ .. ~ ~····' ·~ f'rT:
...... ut.4
ORA.NOE COUNTY HIWIST
lJNCOLN·MERCUAY Dealenhtp .. now OPF.N
IA Y FLADEIOI
UNCOLN·MERCURY
16· ll Auto C.11ter Or Sl>Fwy·Lake f'Cll'Ht exit
IRVJNE
U0-7000 .. ·1a Monarch Ghia, 6 cyl,
Afr. P/~1 P/B, 16,000ml.
new rarual ti.res. mutt
tell! $3005 ar beat offer.
1977 MOH4lCH
AIR
CLOSE-OUT
Lowa
$4195
C"2RSD>
540·5630
1011\SO\ ,\SO\
• 1 INCOl N Ml.RI unv
I
.. , .....
....... of 11•1• ... 41 fftOl'\lh l 01'1
-...-loi• CU ii P<ICe U n2.
-... ' le Oe'wt .. "'2t 72 Ind , ......
& l11tere11 A~nu11
P•ree11t1te ref• 11 n.
,
J
\
•
I
__ ..,. -~----- ---..
1978 CORDOBA
s1595
17
'
\ I t= f4 •
' •
i l
ton Beach
•
t VOL 7t, NO. 27, 4 SECTIONS, '6 PAGES
Thousands Stranded
• • ICIOUS
* * * * * * 60Rneued
Train Rams
Wall of Snow
ROACHDALE. Ind CAP) -
Work crews dug through a wall
or snow today to rescue 60 peo-
ple stranded more than 12 hours
on an Amtrak passenger train
.that stalled In a snowdritt and
then froie to the rails.
The 45 passengers and 15 crew
members on the Chicago-to·
Florida-bound Floridian were
I ferried aboard snowplow
locomotives to a nearby cross·
t int, and then driven in trucks to
a fire station in the town or Bain· bridge.
During their ordeal, all aboard
the seven-car train moved into
the lead locomotive and huddled
Ice Causes
Train Crash
CHICAGO (AP) -or.
ficials blame icy tracks
for a smashup between
two 1J1inoia Central Gulf
commuter traim that sent
317 people to hOspltals. No tiljuries ,..
alted from tbe crash
'l'buraday evemng or the
two trains at a downtown
ataUon. a Red Oro11·
spokeswoman •• d.
However, 10 ~le •w
admllted to apatall. the
aald.
Wayne Dunham, a
Regional Transportation
spokesman, said a train
travelllig at about 5 mph
struck the rear of another
that was Just comin1 to a
halt at the Van Buren
Street staUon.
"People went fl7lng
everywhere, .. said Sharon
Hardaway, a passen1er: on
ttie train that was hll from
. behind.
under layers or blankets for
warmth, but four hours before
the rescue water ran out for the
train 's steam-heating system
and some passengers suffered
frostbite. authorities said.
The train stalled about noon
near this rural community about
35 miles west or Indianapolis at
the height or a blizzard swept by
winds 40 to SO mph that dumped
about a foot of snow on the
state's midsection.
"It was a pretty barrowine ex-
perience," said passenger Ove
Knudsen, 69, Knox, Ind. "It look
28 hours to go a little less than 200
miles. But we are so thankfUI to
the firemen and to Amtrak.
They did the best they could."
Knudsen said he and his wife
were en route to West Palm
Beach, Florida, "and we still
aim to get there "
Bainbridge Town Marshal
Louis Lowery Jr. said that ~rom
the fire house the evacuees
would be taken to the Methodist
Church where the women's awe·
iUary Wat preparin1 food.
He said a four·wb el drive
v~hlcle had been aeot to brin1
tbo to 'D doctor to l lbe
passebgen.
"We've 1ot drifts 1' to 20 feet
bore.'' Lowery aald. "Wben I
l amed we were oln' to in· 1 ed Iii the u , l ot out
the volun~r firemen and then
our street people to clear a path
from the crossln1 to the fire •ta·
lion."
The final rescue was effected
by 10 volunteers digelnc lbroueh
the wall of snow, Amtrak
spokesman Joseph Vranich said.
That allowed the two rescue
locomoUves to Join the stalled
train, and passengers and crew
boarded the rescue units.
The snowplow-equipped
locomotives of the Louisville &
Nasbvllle Railroad bad reached
within a few reet of the train
shortly after midnl1ht. But
Vranich 1iid they were unable-
to plow through th• drill to cou· pie wlth the lead locomoUv ud
hauUtaway.
' Ttie Lracb were ln a 1ully,
Vranich said, and the anow was
10 deep n WU impossible for
passeu.gera to watk from their
train-to the reaeue locomotlvts.
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 1978 TEN CENTS
...........
DRIFTS MEASURED UP TO 15 FEET IN KALAMAZOO, MICH., AS STORM CONTINUES
'Kiiier Blizzard Looking for Victim•' Strand• ThouHnd• of Trev•l•r•
7 Indicted Plead
47
Blizzard
Looks for
Victims
By11teAUocla bas
Flash floods are threatenlnl
etalea already reelin1 from
h•avy snows, burricane·force
winds, a thaw that turned mOUll·
tains of 1now to 1lush a.lid a
vicious bUuard that stranded
thousands of travelers.
As the Midweal was clob~red
Thursday by wbat Ohio Gov\
James Rhodes called "a killer
blinard lookinl for Tlclims, ••
the Southeut wu drenched by
raln, sleet and snow. Toroadoes
touched doWD in Vjrgillla and
North Carolina. and tem•
pet"atura dip~ to the 20s.
At least •1 people were tilled
in mishaps blamed on the er·
ratlc weather : nlne in
Wisconsin, eight In Mtchi1an,
five in lnd1ana, four in both Ohio
and Kentucky, two each in 11·
linois, Maryland, Pen.nsylvanla1
Alabama and G~rgia, North
Dakota and one each in Main • • Vlrg\nia, Minnesota, Nebraska
and South Dakota.
President Carter d c1arecl
federal st.ate of mer ency
Ohio and \Oday ordered \&nlts ~
tbe 5lh Army into th te to
help x •uatecl National
Gu rdsm n Teacue stranded
mot~ iSl 'I palrmen rts\Orlr\g e116Cl.nc.111
power to tbQu.tlanda ol homes.
The &Ji~S? .. Nattoaal Gaant
w aiobllii,ed.and QaV, William
Ulllkcn declared a elate o! ~ r~encyiSO the state cOu1d ap. PJY for I al &Jd. The 1t«m.
which cut· _power to 160,00C>
ho,nea, piled up 12·foot drift&
and almost aank an ore
frei1hter.
Overnltht temperatures
raneed from 23 below z~ ill
Devil's Lake, N.D., to 61 tn Kq
We•t. Fla.
Wlnds 11ustin1 up to IS ml>h.
well beyond hurricane 1trenith.
caused damage all over the Ea.at
and Midwe$t.
Tbe storm that hit th
Midwest sent barometer re•d·
ings to record lows, ind.1eatin1
very low pressure geDeraUng
severe atorm. In Plttaburch, the
barometer plunced to 28.49, the
lowest since records were lint
kept there in 1870.
Creeks and riv81'1 are alreadv
over their. banks or near fiood
(See SNOW• Pa1e AZ)
3CHILDREN
SEE MOM DIE
SAN DI GO CAP) -Precl
Lee. Vem Bo_yd and her th.rt
children ro ••lklni to church TbuHd~y night When car p..
pro ched on the dirt 11*tulder of
th road ln &Outhe t)S4n Die o.
The chlldnn\ ran1in1 in.
from s to 8 juo:rpod out of \
\
I
DAil. Y PILOT H iF' '
3rd Term
By Clark
Orange County Supervisor
h Clark said today he will
seek his Uurd
four -y e nr
term a s
Fourth Dis-
t r 1 c t
supervisor
this year.
' And the
!form e r ~naheim
mayor said so
a.AH far it looks hke he may be MJnning unop-
P<>1'Cd for re-election.
Clark said he believes he has
shown the past eight years that
he can be effective and responsi-
ble as a county supervisor.
In addition to serving as
supervisor, Clark also has been
chairman of the Orange County
Transit District Board of Direc-
tors since the bua system began
operations five years ago
He noted that during lhat lime
OCTD has grown from five
buses operating tn Santa Ana to
a modem fleet of 325 buses coun-
tywide
And during a press conference
thia momlhg Clark repreated his
hope that ocro can acquire the
first seven males of now-
abandoned Pacific Electric rllht
of way ac; a future transit cor-
ndor
Clark's supervisorial diatrlct
includes Anaheim, Buena Park.
La Palma and much of the city
of Orange
Clark was elected to the
Anaheim City Council in 1968
and served as mayor in 1969 He
took office as supervisor in
January, 1971.
He served as supervisors•
chairman in 197( and as vice
chairman in 1975.
lie also serves as a member of
the Orange County Transporta-
tion CommJss1on which has re-
view authority over transit ud
local roiicl building projects. -. .
3 First .Ladies .
Invited to
GOP Dinner
..... l'ttc .........
ACCIDENT-PRON INT!RSECTION
ach Boulevard Tough on Motort1ta •
Cycles,. Compacts -Led HB. Fatalities
.By RAYMOND ES'l'llADA Jlt. Olti.o.lly ..........
Motorcyclists anct compact
auto drivers were t!ui m<m com-
mon ratal traftlc ~ acct dent ric-
tims in Huntington Beach during
1977, police reported today.
Although motorcycles were in-
volved in only three percent o!
4,006 Hµntington Beacb traffic
accidents in 1977, the. two-
wheeled vehicles accounted for
one-fourth or the 19 tnflac
tatalit1es recorded by police,
Five men, all of whom wore
no protective helmets, died
while riding motorcycles in Hun-
tington Beach this past year.
Police Lt. Tom Patton. said he
was surprised by the number of
motorcycle fatalities and tbe
fact that 10 of the 19 fatal traffic
crasJtes in the city involved com-
pact cars.
Patton noted that the tQtal
number of vehicles on the road
increased 22 percent during the
year.
The 1977 total of 4,006 traffic
mishaps, up 535 from last year,
represents an average of about
11 accidents per day, Patton
s aid.
in 1977. Forty.nine ot the mo-ped
mishaps resulted iii injuries.
Mo-peels first became leaat on city streets Jan. 1. 1976.
Patton said Beach BOulevard
and Pacific Cout HJ1hway were
the two most common scenes of
fatal traffic crashes in 1977.
Six or the 19 traffic fatalities
occurred on these two
thorougbf ares.
Three traffic deaths took place
on Newland Street. "Newland is
Cast becoming one of the busiest
s'reets in the city," Patton
noted.
Iilne ot the deaths occurred
between May and September.
And nine of the fatal mishaps
took place on weekends, Patton
said.
Ten of those fatal crashes took
place between 5 and 9 p.m. with
five traffic deaths during the 6 to
7 p.m. late rush hour, be added.
Thief Gets
Pair of $100
Drinking was a factor in about ·Autographs one-third of the 1,150 injury acci-
d ents, he noted b l r d . t Patton's reportalsoandicated· A urg ar s tppe tn o a
_Bicycle ac~dents increa:sed southeast Huntin1ton Beach
almost 17 ._,.cent. T,here were home Thursday and made off ,... with Robert Hudson's mementos 145 in 1977. of jailed daredevil Evel Kolevel
Formet' ltepublican first ' -:-~otor~y,fle ac~ld~"'s • and members bf the rock band de~'rea'sed by two percent. from ood ladles Mamie Eisenhower, Pat 136 in 1976to 133 in 1977• Fleetw Mac.
Nixon and Betty Ford have been h All the thief got were auto-invited to headline a GOP fund--Mo-ped accidents 5 ot up graphs or the 1>t9raonalities.
l'aisinf dinDer ntxt monUl at the ~ percent from lS in lt7& tor . '"t the, BHto&~phf!f W~~e On Disu.ey~ Hot.el• two $100 bills, moun~ iD plaaUc
Tom Glass, a ablff member of C frames.
the Orange County Republican Midwav ily Hudson, of 22002 Newport Cir-
Central Committee aaid.tba diA-• ./ _ • • • ele; "toldrtlce that the thiet who
er is still in t'iie planning invade his bedroom took
1tages. He said it ls scheduled _Ei!tery He. ifll. nothing else. • r Feb. 22. -... :· ~ Tl one C·hOte was autographed.
Tickets will be sold at,a~.... . .. -• -by Knievel.· th~ notortol1s
erson. w• ' .. s t Held m<>a.rcyale stUJttDJan now Hrv~ Glass said none of· Che t&ree USpeC a i~C lime at a Los Aoieles Coub·
rm er first ladies have definlte, A «unman took t3'5 tn cuh ty Jtil honor fllfm,
said they wtll attend, but a , f • Tlie otber1wu ltgoed by the ne1otiations are still gpJni on.., • fiotn a fast food outlet n .. en ti re mem betablp of the
He said the evening's teatun.ill M~way City Thursday and ~n. · Fleetwood Mac.
peaker will be former. 'l'ezaa fled 9~ fo?t, Orange County _.. Poli~e estimated Hu<!aon's
overnor and treasury Set!Nlaty • Sheriff ~ offic~rs said. OH at S200. detllniog to attempt
ohn Connolly. Deputies sa1d a search of the to calculate the jwo bills' h1a:.
Glau said the pToceeds will be ,urroundmg area led ro the ar--Clc!"or seaUmentlll vt.h~. ~ '~s~ of Jerry Vurque1.fie~. / ., sed to benefit Republlc!•ti tan-24, or Westmlneter "~,.wu ·
dates in .the fall general elec-lodged in the county JIU on
on and to pay for a voter reg. cbaries of armed robbery.
trationdrive. They said Sepeda was halted
'1 Gloss said central co111mlttee by offlcel'9 who noted ..that bis l emba' Ernte Winter of .St-1 : t!Mil ba ....-... ' each ls he••u .... the committee dt was id~ .:-r. tot l ,,,.,,._,. ~ ...... "8 d ut in1 the robbery tiy ~anning the event. employ~ ofttle Jack ln tbe Box .
1 ~ ·-k'estaurant.15232 Beach Blvd.
Officer;1 said they recovered
the -money and confiscated the .. '°ffP'D" llegcft!I \Ule<l in the llolGa.u>.:. · .. ~ ~ ! ... . . .... • l. •••
p,.._ Page AJ
. •
A 7·y• ltd 8W1tlnaton Beach
1lrl escaped harm Thursday at·
ternoon When aho ran from the
parked truck of a man who kid· •
napped her and held her for 45
minutes, police reported. .
Police are searchin1 today fat
a bearded man ln a whlte pickup
truck wbo erabbed the victim at
3:20 p.m. and pulled her into hla
vehicle 'Pftlle sbe waa playin&
wlth bcr brOth r at Colle1e View
Park ear Hell A venue and
Edwai'dSSb'eet.
Polle 'tald tbe kidnapper
drove W'bUD4 central Huntington
Beach tWfore parkinc near aome
apartments near the corner or
Edwar :Street and :Wun
Avenue. • Aa the man wplked tow i'd
apartments. tbo Uttle rl
jumped from the truck nmt ran
back to her babysitt ' omt
near College. Yiew Park.,
Tbe youn1 1trl was not
harm~. said Police De~Uve
Dennis Branch. '
Ten police oltlcer1 combed the
area where the kidnapper's
while pickup truck with a
camper shell was last seen.
•Branch said the motive for the
kidnapping is not known.
The etrl and her brother said
they had not seen the bearded
man before. He was described
as in his 20's wearing a white
shirt, white pant.a and tortoise
shell rimmed gluses.
I" ..... rage Al
DOCTOR •••
played 1n the death of the infant.
Chatterton, furious at the aua-
gestlon, denied any such plan.a.
But the proaecuter agreed
with the defense that Mrs. Ken-
nedy will invoke her rlthts un-
der the Fifth Amendment if she
is subPOenaed as a witness.
Judge Turner called a three-
day weekend recess in the trial
after the defense filed its motion
for dismissal.
8atell1t
Debris Ctlll8e
EDMONTON. Alberta <AP>-Canadlan and
U.S. experts are making a ground search for debris
from the downed Soviet spy satellite that ls ~Ueved
causing a patch of "exlremcl.Y dangerous" radiation
Jn north-central Canada.
Defense Minister Barney Danson said part or th
9smos satellite's nuclear power packase is
believed causing th high level or rnd1ation detected
()A. the ground by aerial searchen about 200 miles
west of Baker Lake, a small outpost 100 miles south.
of the Arctic Circle .
• Fourteen Canadian s pectalists and six
Americans tlboard two helicopters "'ere trylf1$ to
pinpaint the source of the radiahon and lo determine
it 1t came from the satellite th t aropped into the
c'M ti's atmosphertl early Tuesday and burned up over northwest Canada.
VaJ.leyElementa~y
SchoQls Face Crisis
Fountain Valley (elementary)
School District officials indicat-
ed Thursday that lbe district
may be "on the brink or
bankruptcy•• unless drastic
measures are taken this year.
"The district is in danger of
spending more than its Income,"
said Orange County Education
Department Asslst4lllt Superin-
tendent Dewey Hillman.
Fountain Valley School Dis-
trict Superintendent Bill Plaster
told school board members that
the di.strict must act quickly to
brin~ saa.lni casti reserves up to par.
Officials said district cash re-
serves are down to about $200,000, or about one-half per-
cent of the district's total
budget. County otnclats recoin-
mend at least a five percent re-
serve.
Plaster lubed out at critics or
a proposed plan to close three
schools in the next four yelll'S
and bring other sweeping
changes to the dlstrkt.
"As for financial considera-
tions, we are between a rock and
a hard place," Pla.ster said.
Plaster said coun\y officials
have told hha the dlatrict "can't
go on dolnt Lhin11 tb1J way or
we will be on the brink of bankruptcy.''
Plaster also cited declines in
enrollment this year and pre.
dieted student drops durtnc Ute
next tour years. •
Enrollment dec"'ued by ~
students this year and is expect-
ed to drop by 2.000 ln 1982. Cur
rent enrollment ls about 10,000.
Plaster .said the lou of stu-
dents wU1 mean fewer funds for
the dialrict in comi.oJ years.
School board members Mvo
scheduled three February pubUc
hearinp to review the propoud
dlsttlct ma.st.er plan.
The meetlri1a wlll be beld at the dillrlct ofClces, near the cct-
n er of Newland Street and
Talbert Avenue at 1:30 p.i:q .•
Feb. 2. 9 and 16.
The. achoo\ board wJll bold '
joint meetJn1 with the Fountain
Valley city council Tuesday at
7: 30 p. m. in tho district offices.. ·
We't9 c ....... 4ecb '9 tlM l!......_ te
••lat W., fir MW M'i..fwyll "'• -........ w ~.,,..,...,., ..... Ill -..... ~ .. ,. ........... ..
..... I! first'~.~ IW1Pe4. .. ......,
wWlt c.-... .,..-y ,.. .... Ill ~ •• ., .......
LIMITED QUANTITIES!
IW QUAUTY CllOI '
t.OTICHLO ' lcrtnf TERRACE PURPLE
81G£LOW VARIATIONS CAO
BKaOW VARIATIONS OllMOOI. GOLD. -Tt WUl.TI
SERVEN IN ~CERT
EYANSllACK MALIBU
WALTERS MARINA DEL RAY
VANGUARD (JRAtf) AWARD •
AVAL~ CATM.INA
Al.EXAN[lR-SMITH ANTIWE vnvrr
ALE»Jm SMITH ANTIWE VELV£T
t.Off at.LO Am.AUS£
BIGflOW VARIATl~S •
SERVEN MM> WAroN
SllVER SPRI~ HYlcr. PLUSH
Sit~ SPRINGS rm.Of PLUSH
'A iM ~ CA • 92427 •
.. '
YPO.OT s
Alcohol
Wm11ings
'&udied
WASHfNGTON (AP)
-Tbe federal aovem·
p:iu.t hu taken a flrat ·
step toward possibly re·
q,u i r inc lab e 1 a on
aleobolic. beverages lo
warn preenant women
1 that heavy drinkine can
c;aus~ t>lrth defects.
The Tre~ury Depart·
ment·s Bureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco and
irearms announced
1hat iL was considering
1uch a rule. It uked for
public com meot on
whether lo require
warning labels, what
they should say and
~Jl•lber they would
work.
LAST JUNE, the Na·
,tional Institute on
Alcohol Abuse and
Alcoholism said that
women who take more
(CONSUMER)
than two drinks a day
during pregnancy risk
glving birth to mentally
retarded and physically
deformed babies
N"t only heavy
drinkers run lh1s risk
but also tho!>c who only
occas1onally go on a
binge, according lo the
bureau.
THE BUREAU, m an
"'Advance Notice of
'Proposed Rule Making"
that was published in
the Federal Register,
aaid it was particularly
interested in comments
rom consumers, in·
dustry, women's or-
ganizations and medical
experts
Commentll on the
alcohol warning should
be sent within 60 days to
the director, Bureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco and
f'irearms, Washington,
D.C. 20226.
A SPOKESMAN for
the Distilled Spirits
Council reiterated the
industry group's poai·
tion that no research baa
shown that drinking at
"normal levels" is
dangerous !or pregnant
women.
He said women
alcoholics were most
likely to bear babies sur-
ferin~ from the fetal
alcohol syndrome. and
he added that theae
women were least likely
to be stopped by a warn-
ing label.
llE SAID that 2th
billion liquor bottles are
sold ln this nation each
year. If the label coet
hair-cent per bottle, lhe
overall cost to the in·
dustry and consumers
would be $12 milllon, he
said.
FDA Commissioner
Donald Kennedy, who
asked the bureau iii'
November lo require
warning labels, said he
applauded the bureau's
action in taJ<ing the step.
The bureau said re-
search showed women
who consume the
equivalent of 1lx
alcoholic drink• definite-
ly run the risk of harm·
ing their babies.
Price o,f LNG
A Big Issue
Three separate state commissions are in the
midst d frantic hearinr schedules aimed at pro-
ducing a decision by mid-summer on whet.her and
where California's first liquefied natural &as
terminal will be built.
All are operatinr on the asaumptlon their de·
cislons on supply, siting aoa aafet,Y will be final.
BUT A TOP oirnCJAL OF the new federal
Energy Department bas thrown what mtcht be a
monkey wrench into the proceedlnp. ·
The omclal is David Bardin, tblef of the new
department's Economic --------Regulatory Agency. and SOUfHERN
the issue he raised is CALIFORNIA
pricing. FOCUS
Bardin 's agency --------must approve any pn>-
ject either importing LNG &om other nations or
moving it from state lo state. He ruled Jut month
that virtually any site chosen by California
authorities would be OK with t.be federal eovern·
ment for the LNG importing terminal.
THE STATE PUBLIC UTILITIES Com-.
mission 1s to make that final deciaion wilh help
from the Coastal Commission, while lhe Ener1Y
Commission makes safety rules.
But Bardin insists that the price of the import·
ed LNG not be pegged to the prevaillng oil prices
oC the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Coun-
tries, the Arab-dominated international oil cartel.
Most or the LNG California would Import un·
d<'r the plan pushed by both Pacific Gas & Eleclnc
Co and the Southern California Gas Co. would
come from Indonesia, a charter member of OPEC.
BARDIN SAID THE ENEllGY Department
"ould accept a price formula "wtlh an escalator
C'lause not linked to fuels lndexes.'' bot peeged to
oth('r economic indicators and the value of the
dollar on foreign exchanges.
What's uncertain is whether Indonesia will
ngree to any formula not linked lo OPEC oil.
IC that nation does not acne, t is free to sell
the gas earmarked for Ca.llfornia in other markets,
like Japan and Australia. The IndolMaians tould
take the gas away from Califamta at almost any
time berore the LNG terminal ls built, since their
last contract with this state's utilities expired in
O<:l.oberandbasonlybeeninformallyextended.
SHOULD THIS hAPPEN, THE California
utilities would lose 500 million cubic feet of gas per
da1, leaving them with LNG Imports or only 400
million cubic feet daily from the Kenai Inlet of
Alaska.
"We would still build the LNG termlnal for the
gas from south Alaska," said a spokesman for
W cs tern LNG Terminal A3soclates, the utlllty
partnership whose officials are hastily trying to
ne«otiate a pricing formula wllh Pertamina, the
lndoneslan oil and gas production company.
But loss of more than half the expected LNG
would reopen the question of whether the itate
should 10 aloo1 with building an LNG termiilal -to be paid for by aas cu.stomenl through mon\hly
bills.
IF ONLY THE A.IASKAN LNG ts involved,
the terminal could be much smallCr, but most
other factors in the decision-ma.king proceu would~
remain tbe same.
The terminal would still have to be 1omewbere
on tbe coast, most likely at Point Conception, now
viewed as the most politically-acceptable spot. It
would still require a large and costly addition lo
the state's existing network of natural 1as
pipellnes, and so it would still add significantly to
the capital lnvestmertt that ls the basis for fl1urin1
bow muchprollt a re1ulated utility can make.
IN SHORT, LOSS OF the Indonesian eas
would reopen many issues that led to lencthy
legislative batUes last year. It would certainly
lead to questioning ot whether bringing in a r•
latively small amount of LNG is worth all the trou·
ble and expense.
It zniCht also make the frantic work of three
state comn\lssions useless, or at Jeaat lead to a
new start for them with entirely new factors ln·
volved in lheir decisions.
Searches to Continue
MONTGOMERY. Ala. (AP) -Desplte com·
plaint.I from a cl-.tl llbertlea group. Mayor Emory
Folmar says be will mue it a practice to have all·
dlencea searched at rock concert• in the
Mont,omery Civic Cater. · More than 40 penons were arreated, moat on.
charges of poaesstns drup, after a r111ad ol 43
policemen searebecl hUDdrid.a ol persona t tho
center.
re1pon1Slbl• for respondlnt to fn·
formaUoo·Meting letters from
pubtlc.
--~ ----------........-
Doctor
Says He
Forged
BAKERSFIEW (AP)
-A former mayor of
Wasco In llOttbcm Kem
County who b been a
physician tbere for 30 yean has pl ed guilty
to forlin.a a prescrip-
tion.
Dr .. Glenn Hallock, 60
was lined $6,260 and
placed on probation by
Superior Court Judge
JobnNalm.
HALLOCK PLEADED
aullty to 1uuln1 Dex·
edrine to a woman usln1
an 111umed patient's
name.
Eleven other coUDts were dismissed. They
included another felony
charge of forging a pre·
scrlpllon and two felony
counts of prescribing
dru1a to an addict or
habitual user.
HALLOCK, It, re· signed u a Wasco coun.
cilman three days
berore be was charged
last October. He bad
served on the council for
almost 20 years and was
mayor for five years.
The charges followed
an investigation by the
stale Board of Medical
Quality Assurance
which plans to hold a
hearing.
Guilt Upheld
FRESNO CAP) -An
appellate court has up-
held a Tulare County
heroin conviction. The
•late'• 5th District Court
of Al>peal said it fouo~
no prejucllclal error ~
the jury verdict that
Rita Mae Gonzales was
1ullty of selllne heroin in Visalia Oct. 30, 1975.
•
LOCAL I NATION~~
Man Held
I In 1915
Cars well past their prime sit on a public beach below a
La Jolla home to protect wave-eroded bluffs during high
waves. Special permission was granted for the cars to
be placed there for two weeks, when wave action is ex·
pected to return to normal.
13 BB Girls Seek
City Pageant Title
Thirteen girls wlU vie for the
title of Miss Huntington Beach
Feb. 4 at the Huntington Beach
High School auditorium.
The winner of the paeeant will represent the city at functions
throughout the year.
Girls wm appear in bathing.
aults as well u formals &Dd also
will put their talent on display at
the pageant.
Price of admission is *3 and
wlll include paeeant pro·
crams. The event is aponSOfed
by the Women's Dlvisloo of the
Huntington Beach Chamber ol
Commerce. .
Myra Robinson ls the outaot.nc
Miu Huntington Beach.
~laying
A Bemadino man is slated
for a Feb. 9 arral1nment In
Oran1e Cowlty Superior Court
on murder ch*'&es stemming
from the un:s shooUn1 death of a
Huntlncton Bettb resident dW'· tnr an ar1ument o•er Jllke box 1
muslc selection ln a doWDtown
bar.
• Leo Allen "Butch" Frader.
85, was bound over this ,..eek to
Superior Cowt by West Oranae
County Municipal Judie Wllllain Mock.
FRAZIER. -AS arrested In
Fresno Nov. 18 And charged with the slaying 'of Kenneth Aubry
Kini, '25. ~It ts alleced that
Frailer shot Kine twice at the
Caprl Cocktail Lounge, 406
Pacific Ooast Hiabway, on Jan.
30. 1975 ..
Frazier was released from
Orance Count)' Jail in December
because a key witness In the
case a1aimt him could not be
found.
THE MUaDt:R suspect WU
turned over to San Bernardino
County autboritl~ and held on
assault charges 1temmin1 from
a 1976lncldent1n that county.
Oran1e County District At·
torney'a Office lnvestl1ators
located the key witness, Thomas
Anthony Lambertson, 39, earlier
this month at Hoag Memorial
Hospital in Newport Beach.
Lamberton bad been admitted
lo the hospital for treatment of
blood clota in b1s lee during the
put year, officials indicated.
Plan Endorsed
LONG BEACH CAP) -A pTOo
l)M&l intended to increase tbe
aumbet' ol Mexlcan-American
teachers in Los Angeles city
school& baa been endorsed by
the trusleel ot the California
State UDiveraily and Colleges.
SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE SALE
AT PLAINS HO.ME CEN1ERS
1.-p .. C:..0' ,_ ..,,..
E-Z KARE
LATEX
FLAT ENAMEL
#2 PINE SPECIALS
•
Reg. $1.95 ONLY$1.50
WE STOCK EVERYTHING
YOUNEEDTO
INSTALL IT YOURSELF.
Std. •b8 Sheet
Reg. $5.35
OllLY$399
ltOUlm•tn';anellng
For a Wttlem accertf. 1ry this new
"branded"' panel ftom Georola·Paclfic.
Au1t.n11c Wc!llern branding iron
symbols stamped Into the surface.
Ideal for ch1ldron'1 bedrooms.
family rooms. dons. s599
4''x8' sheet
GeorgiaRtciflC ... 'it_., lllYWOOO n •
PA ADHESIVE W CARTRIDGE
LIMITED TO STOCK ON HAND-
SORRY, NO RAIN CHECKS.
IN-SINK-ERA TOR
FOOD DISPOSERS ..
NATIONAL
East~s Booms·
Unexplainable
Phenomena?
.
• My1terlous atmospheric explosions have jostled
the East Cout. They have baffled the public and the
aclenUatl.
Tbe window-rattllnl orr-shore booma started to eady December and have stnce resulted in
~riodlc rurnbll.n11 heard and felt from Connec·
tlcut to South Carolina.
THE POSSIBLE EXPLANATIONS HAVE
rAPled from aircraft sonic booms to au escaptnc
from Wlderaea 1arba1e dums-.
The military aays it's not responsible. Jn fact,.
all federal a1enclea which conceivably could be in· ..
volved with the booms concluded that they are in·
nocent. ·
And the Defense
,.-:..-------..Department com-
(. SCIE'JUCE J missioned the Naval
1 • Research Laboratory to
--------" coordina,,te a further federal study of the
phenomena and to report conclusions, If any, in
March.
TBE A880CIATED PR~ ASKED sclenUstl 1n several ftelds what caused the booms. Here, in part, are their responses.
Dr. Frank Preas, a geolo1ist who is President
Carter's science adviser:
· "In my position, I can't speculate on them.
But I am following the situallon closely. Not only
because I'm a scienltst, but also officially because
people are concerned about them "
Dr. George Cressman, meteorologist director
of the National Weather Service
"l'don't have any informallon beyond what's
been in the newspapers -some of which I believe
and aome I don't believe. My first thought was that
something is goine on that the military isn't telling
us about. But that's only speculation. I really have a Jot of other things to think about."
WlWam Donn, head of atmospheric sciences
at Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty
Geophysical Observatory In Palisades, N. Y.:
He concluded from measurements that
aJrcraft sonic booms were not responsible. He sug·
gested that secret eovernment experiments might
be mvolved. This has been denied.
Dr. Thomu Gold, director of Cornell
University's Center for Radiophysics and Space
Research.
The booms are caused by methane gas venting
from eracks In the earth's surface, Gold says.
These Ciut gas bubbles burped into the air could
ignite by static electricity or other means to pro-
duce the explosion1. Cornell researcbers found
that every earthquake ls accompanied by these
gu releases and in some cases preceded by them.
••we have evidence o( hundreds of these
episodes occurring all over the earth and it's been
recorded for hundreds of years. The events seem
• )Dote UltelY to malto expl~vt noises over water
than o'fer land, where luaunous diSplays seem
more common than over water."
Gold and others discou.nt.ed a related t~
that the boom~came Crom flammable gas 'enerat-
ed by water \,reatment sludge deposits and
garbage collectmg on the ocean floor.
"Garbage can make methane but it can't
rnake it in bi& bubbh!s. The cas would dribble out a
little at a time and lar1e amounts have to be con·
tained under pressure to &et enough ror an ex-plosion "
Dr. Allan Bromley, professor of Physics at the
Yale University and an oftlclat of the National Academy of SClenoea:
He discounted the 1arb1p ldea as "amusing."
"The most interesting fact In alt or this is that
it Is not new," Bromley 111id. "As far back .as we
have recorded history in New Engl~d. we have
accounts of these booms off the coast. Thia all sue·
gests1 very much that we are deaUn1 with
phenomena that are natural in ori1in."
Specialilt. with the U.S. Geolo1ical Survey
say the mufned boOms are similar to those that
have been reported periodically in the put, often
unrelated to recorded 1eolo1lcal activity sucb aa
earthqu kes.
James Dnllle, head of the survey'• earth·
quake atudlea, says prior reporU have come from'
the Fin1er Lakea re&lon of New York, the
Midwest.. New England, Florida, Australia and tbe
?diddle East.
Elms Loolc-allke
T 0 -_____ .., __ ·--
'l'HE NATIONWIDE contest,
pubUcl1ed throu1h a newspaper su~
plement circulated primarily in rural
areas, la the brainchild of Prime
1fatne Sehool XV. a D.OD·pr«lt ll'OUP
wbtch wanta to see pop tar televialoo
programs put to educational use.
The contest hiris throu1b Fe-b. 15
but Prime Time bu released th best
of what I\ aald was representative
views Of the 100 or so reviews it has
receive(!,
The pupll.J appeared most critical
of Kojak, while -de&pite one pupil
who expressed dislike for tbe
violence in Sl~b and Hutch -it
appears the most popular.
DAILY PILOT 7
tbat 1er1eantl, not captains, un ~Uce &tatiani and that WUce c would be more tontent pla I
card trickl and drinking beer than
1olvin1 criminal casH."
Bruce Pody, 11, of Mitchell, S.D.,
wrote that the Jan. 7 KoJak prorram
contained "ita share of hookers,
pimps and w1no1" and involved
••payoffs, murders and drup ... yet it
f alled to capture my full attenUon."
BA ETTA ALSO SHOULD be
taken orr the air, wrote Kris
Evenson, 13, of Dover, Del. ••All he ever does ts rides around in a
car. pl~• with his pretty Utile blrd,
ahows orr his body and hurts other
people," said Kris. •'That kind of pro-
gram makes a person afraid or
policemen and cives the impression
that omen un't do lbe job. ll
makU"PCOPle tum lo crime."
Bill 61ncer. former Chlca19 mayoral candidate who 1s president
of Prime Time, said he wall probably
&end the "critiques" to the television
networks.
Dennis Wise of Ocala, Fla., holding a photoJraph of Elvis
Presley, was to enter an Orlando hospital this week to un-
dergo cosmetic surgery intended to make him look like Elvia. He
hopes to build a museum in his honor.
ICOIAIC PEESENTS a poor image
or th• policeman to the viewer, wrote
Joseph Keene, 18, ofLa~o. Tex.
"The abow would have us believe
"THIS SHOWS THAT many youQf
people are viewin& television with a
crltlcal eye and not just accepUne
whatever they see as a reflection ~
the real world," he said.
Dinners
.•• served any time
Top sirloin steak. ......•• 3. 75
New York: steak. .......... 3.95
captain's platter (shrimp,
~fish, shellfish) .•. :3.65
Countl}' fried steak. ...... 2.95
Deep fried chicken ....... 2.95
Deep fried shrimp ........ 3.45
Burger Specialties
Hamburger combo (with
salad, fries) ••...•.•..•. 1.90
Cheeseburger deluxe
(with fries) •..........•. 1.60
Bacon burger combo
(with salad, fries) ....... 2.35
Sandwich Board
..
Waffle ................... ,
French toast. •....•.••...
Bacon or sausage, egg, four
pancakes&: toast. ...... 1.10
Pudding .•• , • . • . • . • • • • . . • .40
Sundaes .....•.••.. , • . . . .50
Flaky crust pie ....... • ..•.
StraWberry shortcake .... .
Gelatin ................. .
Carrot cake •••••.••••.... Browni~ a la mode ....... .
Ice cream/Sherbet •••.•...
Bre81Wists
.45
.60
.65
.65
. 40
.75
. 80
.30
Some of the more popular
choices from our famous break·
fast menu.
Sambo's s~cial (one egg,
two strips bacorl, six
p.anca.k.es) ••••••••••••• 1.50
Sausage or bacon & two
eggs. pan.c.ak ••••••••• 2.10
Ham & cheese omelette
withsixpancakes ..•..• 2.10
Lite bredtast (one egg,
English muffin. grapef ruJt
JUiee) •••••• : •••••••••• 1.25
watne with~and t>aeon .• 1.60
Six Sambo's panc:alte&. • . • . .85
COmed beef hash & egg. •• 2.5S
J" c
.r
NATIONAL
East~s Booms·
Unexplainable
Phenomena?
By Tiie Aatoelated Pren
• Mysterious atmospheric explosion• have jostled
the Eut Cout. They have baffled the public and the
acientiata.
Tbe wtndow·rattlin1 off.shore booms started
in early December and have since nsulted in
period.le rumblinp heard and felt from Connec-
ticut to South Carolina.
THE POSSIBLE EXPLANATIONS HAVE
ran1ed from aircraft sonic booms to cu escapinf
from undersea 1arba1e dumps.
The military says it's not responsible. Jn fact,.
all federal aeencies which conceivably could be in·
volved with the booms concluded that they are ln·
noeent. ·
And the Defense
,.---------..Department com-
( SCIE'JUCE ) missioned the Naval '-. Research Laboratory to
--------' coordinate a further federal study of the
phenomena and to report conclusions, if any, in
March.
THE AS80CIA TED PR~ ASKED scientist&
1n several nelds what caused the booms. Here, in part, are their responses.
Dr. Frank Press, a geologist who is President
Carter's science adviser:
"In my position, I can't speculate on them.
But I am following the situation closely. Not only
because I'm a scientist, but also 0Htc1ally because
people are concerned about them "
Dr. Geor«e Cressman, meteorologist director
of the National Weather Service.
"I don't have any information beyond what's
been in the newspapers -some of which I believe
and some I don't believe. My first thought was that
something is going on that the military isn't telling
us about. But that's only speculation. I really have
a lot of other things to think about."
William Donn, head of atmospheric sciences
at Columbia University's Lamont·Doherty
Geophysical O~ervatory in Palisades, N.Y.:
He concluded from measurements that
aircraft soruc booms were not responsible. He sug-
gested that secret government experiments might
be mvolved. This has been denied
Dr. Thomas Gold, director of Cornell
University's Center for Radiophysics and Space
Research:
The booms are caused by methane gas venting
from eracks in the earth's surface, Gold says.
These ciut gas bubbles burped into the air could
ignite by static electricity or other means to pro-
duce the explosion.a. Cornell researchers found
that every earthquake is accompanied by these
gu releues and in some cases preceded by them.
··we have evidence or hundreds of these
episodes occurring all over the earth and It's been
recorded for hundred.a or years. The events seem
• more llltely to make exploaiv• nolsea over water than over land, where lummoua displays seem
more common than over water."
Gold and others diuounted a related Uteot"r->t,
that the booms came from flammable eas generat-
ed by water treatment sludge deposits and
garbage collecting on the ocean floor.
"Garbage can make methane but it can't
make it in big bubbles. The 1as would dribble out a
little at a lime and larte amotmts have to be con-
tained under pressure to cet enough for an ex·
plos1on"
Dr. ~llan Bromley, professor of Physics at the
Yale University and an oftlclal or the National
Academy oC Sclenoes:
He discounted the rarb1,. tdea as "amusing."
"The most Interesting fact In all of this is that
it Is not new," Bromley said. "As far back as we
have recorded history in New England, we have
accounts of the e bOoms off the coast. Thia all sue·
gests, very much that we are dealtne with
phenomena that are natural in ori1in."
-...!-
Specialist. with the U.S. Geotoctcal Survey
say the muffled booms are similar to those that
have been reported periodically In the past, often
unrelated to recorded 1eolo1ical activity sucb as
earthquakes.
Ja ea Devine, head of the aurvey's earth·
quake atudlea, says prlor reports have come frotn'
the Finger Lakes region of New York, the
Midwest. New England, Florida, Auatralia an4 th~
Middle East.
Elris Look-allke .
DAILY PILOT 7
T¥ Cops Win ed
CHICAGO CAP> -Kojak rell on
"rubber band" scripts, Baretta a u
unrealistic a tale q Snow Wh1 , d
Starsky and Hutell is popular • but
"reeks with violence."
These ate some comments from
seventh throu1h '12th 1radert uked
to •Hume the l"Ole of J TV eritl~ and
write a 4'00-word revl•w or a police or
detective program.
THE NATIONWIDE contest,
pubUch:ed throu1h a newspaper sup.
plement circulated primarily in rural
areas, ia the brainchild of Prime
Th:no Sc:bool TV, a non·prollt Cl'QCQ>
which wants to ~ popular television
programs put to educational use.
The contqt runs throu1h Feb. lS
but Prime Time has released tho best
of what it said was representaUve
views of the 100 or so reviews it has
received. The pupila appeared most critical
of Kojak, while -despite one pupil
who expressed dislike for tbe
violence in Statau and Hutch -it
appears the most popular.
that serceanu, not captains,
p0Uce statlGn& and Qt it ~lice en would be more eoiit t Pl•
card tricks and drlnklnc beer than
solvlnJ criminal cases.''
Bruce Pody, 18, of Mitchell, S.D., wrote that U\o Jan. 1 Kojat prosr•m
contained ''Its abare of hooken-,
pimps and winos" and involved
"payotla, mW'dera and drugs ... yet it
Called to capture my full attenUon."
BARETTA A.LSO SBOtJLD be
taken off the air, wrot• Krla
Evenson, 13, of Dover, Del.
"Allheeverdoeaisrades aroundllia
car, plays with his pretty little bircl,
shows olf his body and hurts Otber
~pie," said Kris. •'That kind ot pro.
cram makes a person afrald or
policem n and give. the impression
that qmen can't do the job. Jl
make people turn to crime."
Bill Sin1er. former Cbleaco
mayoral candidate who is president ot Prime Time, said he will probably
send the "critiques" to the television
networks. . ' .
Dennis Wise of Ocala, Fla., holding a photosraph of Elvis
Presley, was to enter an Orlando hospital this week to un-
dergo cosmetic surgery intended to make him look like Elvis. He
hopes to build a .museum in his honor.
KOJAK PEES.ENTS a poor ima1e
of the policeman t.o tbe viewer, wrote
Joseph Keene, 18, of Laredo, Tex.
"The show would have us believe
"THlS SHOWS THAT many ~· people are viewinJ television with a
critical eye and not Jwst aceepthle
whatever they see as a reflection ~f
the real world,!' he said.
Sambds
isjust wb.at
the family ordered.
.•• sctved any time.
Top sirloin steak. ........ 3.75
· N(w !orlf steak. .•........ 3.95
C~talbl platter (shriJJ'.ll>
ocean fish. shellfish) .••• 3.65
Country fried steak. ...... 2.95
Deep fried chicken ....... 2.95
Deep fried shrimp ........ 3.45
Burger Specialties
Hamburger combo (with
salad. fries) .....•...... 1.90
Cheeseburger deluxe
(with fries) ............. 1.60
Bacon burger combo
(with salad, fries) .•..... 2.35
Sandwich Board
<?hildren 12 and under get their
own special menu. These are
some of the selections they can
chooseJrom.
Tiger burger.. .. . .. .. . .. . .35
Hot dog .................. 35
Chicken dinner .......... 1.00
Fi&h dinner .............. 1.00
Burger patty dinner ....... 1.00
Grilled cheese sandwich. . .50
Vegetables. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .25
Tossed green salad. . . . . . . .30
French fries. . . . . . . . . . . . . .25
Pancakes (four). . . . . . . . . . .50
Waffle .•• , ••.••....•.••..• 95'
French toast............ .60
Bacon or sausage. egg, four
pancakes & toast. ...... 1.10
Pudding. . . . . . . . . • . • . • . . • .40
Sundaes ................• 50
For Light Appetites
Beef patty plate .......... 1.80
Fish fi.let pJatc ....•. • .... 1.80
Large chef's salad or
tuna salad ••••.••..•.•• 2.25
Tuna tuffed tomato •••••• 1.35
Yegetable or the day. • • • • • .45
Potato salai1 •• "......... .45
.60
.45
On.ion rings. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .60
Flaky crust pie .•.•.. : ...•
Strawberry shortcake .... .
Gelatin ................. .
Carrot c.ake ........••...• Brownj;: la mode .•.•....
Ice er /Shetbet. •..•...
Bre8liWts
.65
.65
.40
.75
.80
.30
Some of the more popular
choices from our famous break ..
fast menu.
Sambo's special (one egg.
two strips bacon, six
pan,c:altes) ••••••••••••• 1.50
Sausage or baron & two
eggs, ~cakes •••••••.• 2.10
Ham & cheese omelette
with six pancake5 .....• 2.10
Lite breakfast (one~
English muffin, grapefruit
juice) .•.•.• : •..•••..•• 1.25
wamewdh~andtiacon.~ 1.60
Six Sambo's pan~. • • • . .85
Comed beef bash & egg. •. 2.55
...
r •
,
1 li
(
WASHINGTON' <AP)
-Tb• lederal 1ovem· nie.at. hu taken a rtnt.
Fd • JanlJllY '11, 1111
Price of LNG
A Big Issa
B1 THOMAS D. EUAS
&tap toward poulbly re· Tb.rte separate state comm.IAlons a.re in the
q u l r i n I Ja be la o n m ldst ol frantJc bearinf acbedules al med at pro·
alcoholic beveraaes to ducing a decision by mld-aummer oil whether and
warn pre&aaot women where California's first Uquerted natural 111
, that heavy drinldni can terminal wUl be bunt.
c::aase l>irth defecta. All are operatlnt on the assumption their de·
The Treasury Depart· cisions on supply. silinl and safety will be final.
meot's Bureau of · Alcohol, Tobacco and BUT A 'IOP OFFICIAL OF the new federal
JliT••rms announced Ener&Y Department has thrown what mi1ht be a
that it wu COMlderin& monkey wrench into the proceedings. ·
such a rule. It uked for The official is David Bardln, chief of the new
public com meot on department's Economic ---:~==~--.. whethu to require Regulatory A1eney. and SOUfHERN
warnma labels, what the isaue he raJsed is CALIFORNIA
they should say and pricing. J..,OCUS
wtietber they would Bardin's agency --------work. mui.t approve any pro-
LAST JUNE, the Na-
1 tion a I Inst1lute on
Alcohol Abuse and
Alcoholism said that
women who truce more
than two drinks a day
during pregnancy risk
i:iv1ng birth to mentally
relu rded and physic ally
deformed babies
Nrt only heavy
drinkers run this risk
but also those "ho only
occasionally go on o
binge, according to the
bureau.
THE BUREAU, tn un .. Advance Notice of
Proposed Rule Making"
that was published in
the Federal Register,
said it was particularly
interested ln comments
from consumers, In·
dustry, women's or-
~anlzutions and medical experts.
Comments on the
alcohol warning should
be sent within 60 days lo
the director, Hureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco and
Firearms, Washington,
D.C. 20226.
A SPOKESMAN for
the Distilled Spirits
Council reiterated the industry group's poll•
tion that no research haa
shown that drinkinf at
"normal levels· is
daneerous for prepant
women.
He said women
alcoholics were most
Likely to bear babies suf·
fering from the fetal
alcohol syndrome, and
he added that these
women were least likely
lo be stopped by a warn-
ing label.
JI E SAID that 2~
billion liquor bottles are
sold in this nation each
year. U the label eost
half.cent per botUe, the
overall cost to the In·
dustry and consumers
would be $12 million, be
said.
FDA Commissioner
Donald Kennedy, who
asked the bureau hi
November to require
warning labels, said he
applauded the bureau's
acllon ln taklnf the step.
The bureau said re·
search showed women
who consume the
equivalent of •Ix
alcohollc: drtnkl defiriit•
1y run the risk of harm·
in& thelr babies.
JeCl either importing LNG from other oat.ions or
moving it from state to state. He ruled Jut month
that virtually any site chosen by California
authorities would be OK with the federal aovern·
ment ror the LNG Importing terminal.
THE STATE PUBLIC UTILITIES Com-.
mission 1s to make that final decision with help
from the Coastal Commission, while the Eneriy
Commission makes safety rules
But Bardin insists that the price of the Import-
ed LNG not be pegged to the prevailing oil prices
of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Coun-
tries, the Arab-dominated international oil cartel
Most of the LNG California would Import un-
der the plan pushed by both Pacific Gas & Electric
Co. and the Southern California Gas Co. would
come from Indonesia, a charter member of OPEC
BARDIN SAID THE ENERGY Department
\\Ould accept a price formula "with an escalator
clause not hnked lo fuels indexes." bot pegeed to
other economic indicators and the value of the
dollar on foreign exchanges.
What's uncertain is whether Indonesia will
agree to any formuJa not linked to OPEC oil.
Ir that nation does not aaree. It 1J free to sell
the gas earmarked for Callfornla in other markets,
like Japan and Australia. The Indoneslam could
take the gas away from CallfomJa at almOlt any
time before the LNG terminal ls built, since their
last contract with thia state's utilities expired In
October and has only been ~formally extended.
SHOULD THIS HAPPEN, THE Cahfomia
utilities would lose 500 million cubic feet of gas per.
day, leaving them with LNG Imports' or only 400
million cubic feet daily from the Kenai Inlet ol
Alaska.
"We would still build the LNG terminal for the
itas from south Alaska," said a spokesman for
Western LNG Terminal Associates, the utility
partnership whose officials are hastily trying to
negotiate a pricing formula with Pertamlna, the
Indonesian oil and gas production company.
But losa ot more than half Ule expect.eel LNG
would reopen the question of whether the state
should io alont with buildlnl an LNG terminal -
to be paid for by ias customers tbrou1b monthly
bllls.
IF ONLY THE AIASKAN LNG ls Involved,
the terminal could be much smaller, but most
other fact.orl in the decision-making process would~
rem•hi the same.
The terminal would atlll have to be somewhere
on lb• coast. most likely at Polnt Conception, now
viewed as the moet politically-acceptable spot. It
would sWl require a larie and costly addition to
the state's existing network or natural &as pipelines, and so lt would aWl add significantly to
the capital investment that La the bull for n1uring
bow much profit a re1ulated utility can make.
IN SHORT, LOSS OF the Indonesian gas
would reopen many issues that led to len1lhy
leglalaUve batUes last year. It would certainly
lead to questtonlni or whether bringtn1 1n a re-
JatlvelJ amall amount of LNG is worth all the trou·
ble and expense.
It mllht also make the franUc work of three
atal'& commissions useless, or at leut lead to a
new start tor them with entirely new facton in-
volved in their decislona..
Searches to Continue • MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) -Despite com·
plaints from a c:lvtt liberties group. Mayor Emory
Folmar says be will make it a practice to have au·
dlences searched at rock concert• ln the
Monteomery Civic Cellter. ·
More than 4-0 persons were UTested, m01t on
chariea t4 poaeaslaf dNp, after a f'1Uad of 43
policemen searched hundttda ol peraona at the
center.
Skills P11bliSlled .
Carten'OUdetFoWul,atHoms
responsible for responding to tn-
forrnatloa-.Metlng lettera from the
public.
£
Doctor
Says He
Forged
BA ERSFlELD CAP)
-A ormer mayor ()f
aaco ln north m Kem
County who h been a
p ntclan th re for 30 ye rs hu pl ded 1ullty
to forsln a pre1crip· tlon.
Dr. Glenn Halloek, 60
was fined U,260 and
placed on prObelion by
Su~ertor Court JJ.141• John Nalm.
HALLOCK PL ADED
1ullt1 to lssuln Dex·
edrine to a womJn uslnc
D a11umed patient'•
name.
Eleven other counts
were dismissed. They
Included another felony
charge of for1Lng a pre-
scription and two felony
counts of prescribing
dru11 lo an addict or
habitual user.
HALLOCK, IO, re-
signed as a Wasco coun-
cilman three days
before he was charged
last October. He had
served on the council for
almost 20 years and was
mayor for five years.
The charges followed
an investigation by the
state Board of Medical Quality Assurance
which plans lo hold a
hearing.
Guilt Uplield
FR~O CAP) -An appellate court hu up·
held a Tulare County
heroin convict.ion. The
state'• 6th District Court
of Al>peal said it found
no prejudicial error I!
the jury verdict that
Rita Mae Gonzalea was
1uilty or selling heroin
in Visalia Oct. 30, 1975.
•
Cars well past their prime sit on a public beach below a
La Jolla home to protect wave-eroded bluffs during blab waves. Special permission was granted for the cars t-0
be placed there for two weeks, when wave action is ex·
peeled to return to normal.
13 BB Girls Seek
City Pageant Title
Thirteen girls will vie for the
title of Miu Huntlnrton Beach
Feb. 4 at the Huntinaton 8eacb
Hilb School auditorium.
The winner of the p11eant will
represent the city at f unctlons
tbrou1hout the year.
Girls wlll appear ln bathlnc'
suits u well u formala and also
will put their talent on dlsplaJ at
the pageant.
Price al adml.ulon ls S3 and
wlll include paeeant pro-
1ram1. The event Is 1pons0rild
by the Women's DIVislon ot the
HunUnaton Beach Chamber of
Commerce. .
Myra Robinson 1J the outaolnc
Mila Huntington Beach.
LOCAL/ NATIO~
•
Man Held
In 1915
~ Dying
A San Btmadino man 11 slated
for a Feb. 9 arralcnment ln Oran1e County SUperlor Court
on murder cbar1u atemmlnc
from the 1975 shooUn1 death of a
Hunllnlf«i Beach resident dur·
inc an ar1ument over Jue bOic 1
rnuslc aclecUon ln a downtown
bar.
Lee Allen "Bulcb'' Fruier,
35, was bound over tbli week to Superior CcNrt by West Orange
Count1 Municipal Judie W'alllam ode.
&AZIEa ·WAS arreated 1n
Fresno Nov. 1a and charged with
the alayt.ni 'of Kenneth Aubry
Kint. '25. lt ls alle1ed tbat
Fr'ailer shot King twice at the
Caprl Cocktail Loun1e, 408
Pacific Ooast Hiihway, on Jan.. 30, 1975, •
Frazier was released from
Oranre County Jail in December
because a key witness ln the
case a1ain.st him could not be
found.
THE MUaDBR auaped was
turned over to San Bernardino
County authoriUes ond held on
assault charees 1temmln1 from a 1976 lncldent ln that county.
Oran1e County District At·
torney'a omce investicators
l~ated the key witaeaa. Thomas
Anthony Lambertson, 39, earlier
thJs month at Hoag Memorial
Hospital In Newport Beacb.
Lamberton had been admitted
to the hospital for treatment of
blood clots in bb lei during tho put year, alficlala indicated.
Plan Endorsed
LONG BEACH <AP) -A pro-
posal intended to lnc:reue the
number of Yexlcan·Americ:an
teachers In Loa Aneelea clty
acbooll bu been endorsed by
the trustees of the California Sta~ UD.lvensity and Colleaes.
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Irvine
EDITION
VOL. 71, NO. 27, 4 SECTIONS, "6 PAGES
Two
B1 PIDUP ROSMARIN Of•IMltrl'l ... ICMt
Two Irvine City Council mem-
ber• exchan1ed •harp words
over one'• insinuation that the
other'• vote on a zonine matter
waa lofluenced because a busi-
neaaman involved contributed to
bis 1974 cowicll campaign.
The flueup lnvolvine John
Burton. and Mary Ann Galdo, took place during Tuesday's
68Killed
• e
council meeting.
Burton had just agreed with
Councilmen David Sills and Blll
V ardoulli that a proposed zoning
change for a Koll Company proj·
ect did not require an environ·
mental impact report.
City aides had argued that an
EIR was needed because the
change, from zoning for re-
search industry to zoning for
professional office buildings,
Flash Floods
Follow Storm
By 'lbe Associated Preu
Flash floods are threatening
state& already reeling from
heavy snows, hurricane·Corce
winds, a thaw that turned moun-
tains or snow to slush and a
vicious blizzard that stranded
thousands or travelers.
* * *
(JO Saved
As Storm
Halts Xrain
ROACHDALE, Ind.' (AP) -
Work crews dua through a wall
of snow today to rescue eo peo·
ple atranded more than 12 hours
on an Amtrak passenger train
.that stalled in a snowdrift and then froze to the rails.
The 4S pusengers and 15 crew
members on the Chtca1o·to-Florida-bound Floridian were
ferried aboard snowplow
locomotives to a nearby cross-
ing, and then driven in trucks to
a fire station in the town of Bain· bridge. 1 Durtna their ordeal, all aboard
. the seven-car train moved into
the lead .k>comotlve and huddled
under layers of. blankets for
warmth, but four hours before
the rescue water ran out for the
train'• steam·heatin1 system
and some passen1ers suffered
frostbite. authortttes aald.
Tbe train stalled about noon
near this rural community about
35 miles west of Indianapolis at
the b~i&ht of a blizzard swept by
wtnds 40 to 50 mph that dumped
about a foot of anow on the
1tate'1 mtaaecuon.
"It wu a pretty harrowing ex-
JK!rience," said pa.uen1er Ove
KDudsen. GD. Knox, Ind. "It took 28hoursto10 a little less than 200
miles. But we are ao thankful to
th firemen and to Amtrak.
y did the belt they could."
IKliudsen 11.ld he and his wife r• en route to West Palm
eec'fi. J1.ortda, .. and we aUll
ID to get there."
(SeeTaAJN, l'ace AZ)
I
As the Midwest was clobbered
Thursday by what Ohio Gov.
James Rhodes called ••a killer
blizzard looking for victims,"
the Southeast was drenched by
rain, sleet and snow. Tornadoes
touched down in Virginia and
North Carolina, and tem-
peratures diooed to the 2Qs.
Sixty-eight deaths were
blamed on the erratic weather,
as follows: 15 in Wisconsin, 10 in
Illinois, eight in Michlgin, nine
m Indiana, six m Ohio, four In
Kentucky, three in Alabama,
two each in Maryland, Pen-
nsylvania. Georgia, and North
Dakota and one each in South
Dakota, Nebraska, Maine,
Vlr&iJ:lia and MinDesota.
President Carter declared a
federal state of emereency In
Ohio and today ordered unit.s or
the 5th Army into the state to
help exhausted National
Guardsmen rescue stranded
motorists and assist utility re-
pairmen in restorinc elecllical
power to thou.sands or homes.
The Michigan National Guard
was mobilized and Gov. William
Milliken declared a slate of
emertency so the state could ap-
ply for federal aid. The storm.
which cut power to 160,000
homes, plied up 12-foot drifts
and almost sank an ore
freighter.
Overnight temperatures
ranged from 23 below zero In
Devil's Lake, N.D., to 61 in Key
West, Fla.
Winds gusting up to 85 mph,
well beyond hurricane strength,
caused damage all over the East
and Midwest.
The storm that hit the
Midwest sent barometer read·
togs to record lows, indJcating
very low pressure generatinc a
severe storm. In Pittsburgh, the
barometer plunged to 28.49, the
lowest since records were first
kept there in 1870.
Creeks and rivers are alreadf .
over their bank.a or near flood
stage today in North Carolina,
Virginia, Pennsylvania, New
Jersey, West Vir1nia, Rhode
Jaland, Vermont and
M aesachuaetts.
The Oooding appeared m01t
widespread In West Vlr11nta.
where water taolated three
towns ana forced at least 3,000
CS.SNOW, Pace Al)
Council Me
would substantially bicreaae
traffic throu1h the area. at •
Michelaon Drive and Von
Karman Avenue.
Mrs. Gaido aaJd waiver of the
ElR "smacks as if we're doing
the Koll Company a favor."
"l'm not dolnc anybody a
favor," Burton snapped. "I've
been in tbJs town for a lone time.
I have been part and party to
many of the chances that have
taken place 'in ttiat complex
<Irvlne Jnduatrlal Complex· West).
"I knowthetralflc .•.
.. , object. I really seriously ob.
ject, to any alleaaUon~ that this
it doin1 anyone a favor • •
"As far as I'm concemecl -I
am operat1n1 on objective iii<
formatlon."
Mn. Galdo started to tepty.
was interrupted by another
TEN CENTS~
Clash
councilman, but wu offered. a
chance to continue later.
She said, .,Oh, l was merely
going to say that I doubted Hr.
Burton's objectivity when it'• a
matter of public record that Tim
Strader (a Koll Company
partner who appeared before the
council with the ElR req t)
ha• donated at leut $SOO to
campa.lln. "But I don't thlnk I'll say
that."
Burton eethed, "I want to o
on public reeord as aayin that
Tim Slrader's been a fri nd of
mine and a close confidant
politically since he and l worited
very ha.rd to establish the city
that Mary Ann G&ldo ls now do-ine her damnde&t to destroy
with her social procrams!"
Campalp statements of COD·
<SeeaAS11, Pace AZ>
• ennc for · ? ee
Wyoming
Bithy
Virus
WASHINGTON (AP) -Con-
'firmation of an outbreak or
Russian Ou in Wyoming raises
the specter of a major epidemic
sweeping the country this spring
with no vaccine available to pro-
ttd the public.
"We didn't doubt it ~Ru~<dan flu) would get here," sa~d ;t
spokesman for the governmf'nt' ~
Center for Disease Cont "' fn Atlanta. "The only real question
waa whether lt would be this flu.
season or next."
The spokesman, Don A. Ber·
retb, said Thursday that there is
no way to know at this point.
whether the atrain will develop
into epidemic proportions in tho
next few wee kl. But he noted that the Russian vlros uhas
already demonstrated it ean • movet t."
Pf!ilml~,,_._.,24 ui! OYet' :I'>
are expected to be most suscep.
tible to the Jluasian .strain. . . .,.,~
ELDERLY MAN TAKES A TUMBLE WHILE CROSSING DOWNTOWN STRE!T IN TORONTO
which is bell v d cau.s som what l s $eve nn illneaS ....... and th /, d aUi1 -than
the A l n od A-Hone Kone
atr 1na. Tboae two together
killed ,an estimated 90,000 people
in this country in the 1957 and
1968 epldemiei.
In Canada, Gusta of Almoat 100 Mil•• aft HOUr Plagutng Ontario Ana
$10,000 F11.nd Amass~d Center investiaators this weelc
identified the Russian flu virus
in throat cultures taken from
hl&b school students in Cheyenne, Wyo. The confirm&•
tion comet less than two weeks lroine Corureil Hopefubl Tell Contributwm
About $10,000 has been
ama11ed by eipt candidates for
the Irvine City Council duri~
the !int month of a run tor office
which culminates ln a March 1
election.
Campalen dlscloaure state·
menu ol contributions and ex·
pendltures through Jan. 23, flied
at city hall this week, show that •
former mayor Art Anthony so
far bas collected the most, ind
spent the most.
Monetary cont~butlons and
loans to Anthony totalled $4.810.
He had made $2,781 in payments
by the period filing date.
In Irvine, there is a $250 COil·
tribuUoa limit for any ODe COG·
tributor.
Anthony 1ametC4 two mu·
lmum stfta, one from Irvine
architect Dell DeRevere and one
from devel~r John D. O'Doo~
nell of Newport Beach.
The second·rankln1 gift aetter ana apender WU attorney Larry
Aaran, who received $3,18$ tn
cash contributions and so far
hU apent $2.11.2 ..
allo eonf.ributed to the Anthon¥ after eovernment nu experts
campaign. agreed that the strain could .
The remalnlilg three ofnclal strike here this spring but that
candldatea. attorneys Da\lld there was no way to get ready
Warren and Jerry Shaw. and • for it that soon. . .
private mvesttaator Carol Effen· Growine the v1rua, turning it
berter each repOrted contribu• into vaccine. tcstin1 and mus·
tJons aD4 expenditures ot under prod u cl n g it ta .k es the $200. (See FLU, Page AZ)
Shaw has withdrawn from the
race, tboa&h bis name will ap-
pear on Uae ballot.
Navy to Loan
GlomarSbip
To NB Firm
3CHJLDREN
SEE MOM DIE
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Precious
Lee Vem Boyd and her three
children were walking to churcb
Tburaday night when a car ap-
proached on the dirt sboalder of
the road ln southeast San Die,o.
The chlld~n ran1lng in aee
from 5 to 8 jumped out of the
way but Mrs. Boyd. 35, was
struck and ldllCd. Police aald tho
motorist conUnued without stop.
pins and was betoi aouaht.
Third Term
Orange County Supervisor
Ralph Clark said today he will
~ek hi.I third
fo,ur-year
terlJl ,as
Fourth Dis·
t r i c t
supervisor
this year.
And the
fornter
Annbetm
mayor said so cu•• tar it looks
like he may be running eop-
posed for re·elecllon.
Clark said he believes he has
shown the past eight years that
he can be effective and respons1·
ble as a county supervisor
In addition to serving as
supervisor, Clark also has been
chairman of the Oranae County
Transit District Board of Direc-
tors since the bus system began
operations rave years ago.
He noted that during that time
OCTD has grown from five
buses operating m Santa Ana to
a mocll'rn fh~et of 325 bu!>es coun
l}wade
And during ~1 press conference
this morrung Clark rcpreated his
hope that OCTD ran acqmre the
first seven miles of now-
&1bandoncd Pal•1fic Electric ri&ht
of "'u~ ws a future transit cor-
ndor Clark's supervisorial district
includes Anaheim, Buena Park,
La Palma and much of the city
of Or:inge
Clark 'A as elected to the
Anaht•am City Council in 1968
.ind served as mayor m 1969. He
Six County
Judges Named ..
By Governor
Sax Judges, two of them
women. were appointed Thurs·
day to Gov. Edmund G. Brown
Jr to serve in Orange County
Among them 1s Judge Robert
C Todd, 49, or Newport Beach,
who has been elevated from the
Harbor Municipal Court to the
Supenor Court bench, replacing
Judge Wilham Speirs, who re·
tired
Frances Munoz 47, of
Anaheim, previously a county
public defender. was appointed
to the Harbor Municipal Court to
replace
Jacquelyn Thomason, 46, or
Vllla Park, an attorney tn
A9aheim. was named to the Cen·
tr9l Orange County Municipal
Cqurt bench, a newly created poeition
•ppomted to the West Orange
County Municipal Court to
replace the late Judge Patrick
Mccrary is Phillip E . Cox, 48, of
L9s Alamitos, already a
msniclpal court commissioner.
Jrhchael Naughton, 37, of Mia·
sidn VleJo, a private attorney ln
TU8tln, will join the South
Oriange County Municipal Court,
r•placing Judge Richard
Ham Jlton, wtio WU elevated to
tht Superior Court earlier.
The North Oranee County
M icipal Court bench will 1ain
AMold P Mordkln, 40, of N~port ~ach, a private at·
tor?t\?y in Fullerton. H• .f'eplaces
Ju e Leonard Goldstein, who
w elevated to the Superior
C rt earlier
t m way Program
'fASHINGTON (AP) -Presi·
dt• Carter asked Coneress on
Tharsday to authorile a rive·
ye•, $50 billion proiram that he
saill would make federal aid to
hifllwaya and mass transit
ayaems "simpler and more
m a1eable."
OMNQ COAST
DAILY PILOT
took. office as aupervli.or in
January, 1971.
He served as au~ervlsors'
chakmJD in 1974 and u vice
chairman in 1975.
H~ also serves as a member of
the Orange County Transport•·
lion Commisston which bu re-
view authority over transit and
local road bwld.ing project.a
CLASH •••
tributJons and expendJtures in
1974 , on file with the city. show
that Strader contributed $2SO to
Burton's election that year
Another $250 conltibution was
hated from Donald Koll, owner
of the Koll Company
After the council flareup, the
ElR wu approved on a ,:2 vote,
with Mrs Gaido and Gabrielle
Pryor opposing.
The council also caJted for a
study on what slmllar zone
changes. increasing the number
or omce bwldin&s in the area,
might do to the economy of the
complex.
Koll Co. plans later to ask for
the actual zone change with
which the EIR waa associated.
A staff report on likely
economic effects is to be COft·
sidered before council action on
the zoning.
Bovan D e ath
Susp ect F a ces
Sex Charges
Murder suspect Jerry Peter
Fion had new felony charges
added to his docket Thursday by
Orange County Sheriff's of·
flcers.
Jail deputies booked Fton. 41,
on charees or assault with a
deadly weapon and crimes
against nature after he allegedly
attacked a fellow prisoner while
they were detained in a Superior
Court holding cell ·
Officers alleged Fiori banged
the 20-year-old victim's head
a1alnst a sink in the cell and
then forced the dazed prisoner to
submit to an act of sodomy
Fiori faces the death penalty
for his alleged slaying of
Stephen John Bovan of Fountam
Valley last Oct
SF J ail Sex
Charges Eyed
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The
San Francisco aheritt'a depart·
ment ta investigatibl allegations
that two deputies took a female
pflsoner from her cell and had
sex with her
Acting Sheriff Jamu Denman
did oot name the officers TbUrl··
day but identified them u an
acting Jail ser1eant and a depU·
ty who joined the department
leas than a year aao.
Denman said be transferred
the officers from their post.a at
Ctty Prison and ordered the in·
vesti1ation art•r hearing
"rumors" about the incident,
which allegedly took place over
.. the Cbriatmaa holi(lay ..
GoP R e plies
To P resiaent
..........
'Ni L1tti euw itaa'
caused major ftoodln1 at
Cre.stoo and Glenvtlle, parts of
which w 10 feet under wat r.
The TU8 Fork overOOwtd in
Min10 County, where df111trou.1
Ooods lut April almOlt awept ,
aeveral tiny mininc towas out ot
the hollows. On Thursday, the
hom ea from which 1ome ·
famll ned v.-ero eovemment
tra Jen supplied when their
bouaea were destroyed last l
sprlna.
Pennsylvania reported flood·
In& alon1 the Mononaabela •
Rlver in tbe southwestern cor·
ner, and atona the Susquehanna
to tbe eu,, which n»e to the
flrst·story level In Oood·prooe•
Wilkes-Barre and further aouth
forced evacuations from rural
homes in La.neuter Cou.nt.y.
DRIFTS MEASURED UP TO 1 S FEET IN KALAMAZOO, MICH., AS TORM CONTINUES
'Killer Bllzurd Looking for Victim•' Strande ThouHnda ~ Travefera
Rhodes noted that at leut'
150,000 Ohlo homea had been !
without heat most of Tburtday:
"They are helpless victims ol
somethine they han no contrOl
over." .
Citron Erred--Kuyper tte SAlCl hlS Clfnce WIS V•
in& 2S calls every flve minutes,
"cries of me~y -they want
help and you can't 1et to them!'
More than 5,700 motorist. ad
been rescued from stranded
vehicles along snow-blocked
Ohio hiehways, and officials
said more than 2,000 remained
beyond reach.
Orange County Tax .Collector-
Treasurer Robert Citron erred
recently when he left his can
didate's qualification statement
on his secretary's desk for coun·
ty. employees to siin, accordi.oe
to County Counsel Adr1an
Kuyper.
Kuyper nixed Citron'• method
of collectina sienaturea on his
re-election nomination papers
because each aiinature la worth
25 cent.a.
That value comes from the 25
cent reduction in the '857 filln1
fee Citron receives for each
sl1nature affixed to hia nomlna·
lion papert.
F,....PageAJ
Ftu ...
pharmaceutical industry
months, and work bas just
becun.
The 75 experts were hesitant
to make firm predictions about a
possible epidemic in the wake of
last winter's abortive swine fin
vaccination ompaian. But they
recommended that a vaccine
agalpst the Russian strain be de·
veloped for inclusion in any im·
munhation program next
season.
Late in 1976, the government
launched a larae swine flu In·
oculatlon campaign in anticipa-
tion of an epidemic that never
materialized The campa~gn was
abruptly canceled after a
statlalical link was found
betwe1n a flu vaccine and a rare naralytic dlsease.
Flu sea.sons usually begin In
the fall and run their course by
the end of March or April.
The Russian flu, known In
medical circles u A-USSR and
technically as HlNl, already has
swept across two continents
leaving millions of sick people
.ana thousands of dead in its
wake. But precise information
on the· virulence of the strain
and the toll U\at it mi1ht t e
her:. ls beinc analyMd by a team
of experts who returned Thurs-
day from Moscow. They wiU re·
PQrl their findiop Monday to a
special Oepariment of Health,
Ed\Jcatlon and Welfare panel.
The Russian flu was isolated
lri the Soviet Union '1 Asian re·
publics in early December, then
swept across the country and In· .
to Europe within a month.
Whlle it is not known why the
atr in made Its firat U.S ap-
pearanc• in Wyomln1, CDC in·
ve1ti11ton focused attentJon on
Warren Air Force Base outside
Cheyenne, 1peculatin1 tbat the
virus may ba90 been flown in
from Enaland.
•
And though the amount ts not
large and does not go into
Citron's pockets, Kuyper said
the petitions Jell on the
secretary's desk were "an in·
direct solicitation" from county
employees.
Water UBage
Normal Again
LOS ANGELES CAP) -
Southern Calllorntana who have
been scrlmplne on precious
water aupplles since last May
can belin being frivolous aeain
-up to a point.
Because of heavy ralnt, and
anowa durlne the past month,
the City Council voted Thursday
to end mandatory rationine that
required all residents to cut
water use by 10 percent. Abo
abandoned was a 10 percent sur-
charge levied on water bills of
offenders.
"So be it," Citron said "I
didn't i;ee it that way and didn't
mlend for it to be anythmg more
than a voluntary cesture by
those who wanted to sigo."
"I think the whole thing has
been blown out or proportion.
It's very regrettable," the lax
collector-treasurer added.
K uyper's ruline on tbe
nomination paper controversy
was requested by County Board
of Supervisors Chairman
Thomas Riley after an
anonymous employee com·
plained to him and the county
Grand Jury.
In bis -~uling. the county
counsel ci'ted U S Supreme
Court pronouncement that said
government work forces "should
not be employed to build a
powerful, lnvineible and perhaps
corrupt political machine."
Kuyper alao noted that the
court aaid "employment and ad·
vancement in 1overnment
service should not depend on
political performance."
Winds euaune to 65 mpb
sculpted .snowdrlfta 15 feet hlab. t
Wonum Plays
Police Humor
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Pollet are lnveaUptl.ne an inci-
dent reported to them by a
youne women who aaid two
pohce officers scared her by tell·
Ing her they were the Hillalde
Stran1lera.
Beth Ann Shannon told Cb1er •
Robert ROck In a meetin1 Thurs-I
day that last month 1he had re-l
ported seeto1 a man wbo
matched a compoaite drawtne of!
the strangler. When she nport-1 ed the matter to the police, two 4 officers amved in a car. I
LIMITED q>UANTITIES!
•U.AU
FA MOUS-MAM IUMDS
Mill GOW TY crua
t.nmcmo LOOlH TfRRACE PIJRPt[
BIGELOW VARIATIOO 00.0
Bl(ll.OW VARIATl~S QllANOr. ~Q -n.u..n
Bf RVEH IN CONCERT PM, PEACH MULTI
£VANS-aMX MALIBU (l.IVE GREEN
WALTERS rMRINA 00 RAY C(ff[R·RUST MULTI
v~ QWll AWARD • ANTIOOE GOCD
AVALClC CATALINA BRO~
AJ..EXMt)[R SMITH
Al.EXAraR SMITH 'MTIWE VELVET CAMEO WHITE
MCWTICEllO APfUIJSE illll GRUN
BIGELOW VARIATIOO LIME GREEN V«Xl. PLUSH
8£RVEH BAii> WAGON NYl~ SHAGKUSH
VANGUARD NW.~ f\USH
VAltUARD ~.
'M.IOMfN IM.Clf PLUSH
BERVEN MYSTICS ~GR££N
~
8EJMH
EVANSUl
• COS1A
La 11na/South Coast
VOL. 71, NO. 27, ~SECTIONS, '6 PAGES
By ANNE COOPE& ot T1lle .,..,, ...... Sutt
Dana Point citizens face
higher taitea, overcrowded
schools, con1ested streets,
jammed park.in& lots and inade·
quate parks, unless controls are
developed and enforced on con-
struction in the seaside com-munity,
This was the message de-
livered to about 50 Dana Point
residents Thursday at a meeting
68Killed
of the Dana Pomt Citizens for
Action.
County supervisors have
alteady approved 1,742 1in1le
family homes, 412 multi-family
homes and 381 condominiums in
the Dana Point area, said San·
dra Boostrom. a member of
C1t1zens for Action who said she
has made a study of the Dana
Point housing situation.
"There is no phasing in unin·
corporated lands here" said
FlaSh Floods
Follow Storm
By The Associated Press
Flash floods are threatening
states already reeling from
heavy snows, hurricane-force
winds, a thaw that turned moun·
tains of snow to slush and a
vicious blizzard that stranded
thousands or travelers.
As the Midwest was clobbered
Tburaday by what Ohio Gov.
* * *
James Rhodes called •a killer
blizzard looking for victims,"
the Southeast was drenched by
rain, sleet and snow Tornadoes
touched down in Virg101a and
North Carolina, and tem -
peratures dipped to the 20s
Sixty-eight deaths were
blamed on the erratic weather.
as follows: 15 in Wisconsin, 10 JD
lllinois, eight in Michigan , nine
in Indiana, six in Ohio, four in
Kentucky, three in Alabama,
two each in Maryland, Pen-
nsylvania, Geor&ia, and North
Dakota and one each ln South
Dakota, Nebraska, Maine,
Vireinla and Minnesota.
President Carter declared a
federal state of emorgency in
Ohlo and today ordered '1nits of
the Sth Army lntoi\he• state to
help exbauated National
Guard•men rescue stranded
motorists and assist utility re·
palrmen bl restoring eleetrtcaJ
power to thousaods of bomes.
The Michigan National Guard
was mobilized and Gov. Willlam
Mtlllken declared a state of
emeriency to the state could ap-
ply for federal ald. The storm,
whlch cu' power to 160,000 homes, piled up 12-root drifts
and almost sank an ore
freighter.
Overnight temperatures
ranged from 23 below zero in
Devil's Lake, N.D., to 61 in Key.
West, Fla.
Winds gLlStinc up to 85 mph,
w611 beyond hurricane strength.
caused damage all over the East
and Midwest.
The storm that hlt the
Midwest aent barometer read· <See O , Pa1e AZ>
Body Found
Off~
Mn. Boostrom. "Once projects
are aPPf()ved, the de loper de·
cides when to bUlld them."
Some ol the projects currently
goin1 up ln Dana Point were ap-
proved as long aa four years aao
and would not meet current
county building standards, she
asserted.
Unless some controls are
brought to bear on the boominc
construction in th"e community,
schools -already operating at
• en11c
A bland environmental impact appeal over th project and the
report on a 533-unlt con· EIR with supervisors. who wm
dominium project along El Toro hear tbat Jroup's arawnents lD
Road ls under fire by I.;aguna the near future.
Beach city councilmen who con· M anwbile. Lacuna coun·
tend the 1ctual impact wlll be clhnen are claiming t.he ElR
more of a jolt than forecast. does not adequately address fm· ·
While claiming they are not pacts on Laguna Beach resu~
oppose<! to the Ross moor from the project.
La11.ma Hills project, coun• And, they claim, recent fiC)Od
cilmen reccnUy sent a letter tO damage 'alorta Laguna C yon
Orange County su~r.visorS H· • Roaa only accents tbeir con·
pressing concerns over inado· • cerns.
quacy of environmental impact The letter to superV!iora 'ci
projection . Tb EIR has re· , Laguna's exveriencu wJtb
ceived the endorsement of the earlier ROssmoor developmeiitl county'sphinningcommiuion~ ln the upper La1una Canyon
Tile proposed development
would be at the northwest quad·
· rant of El Toro Road's in-
tersection With cane Corte on
2,240 acres. The site la about
three miles from El Tro 'Road'i
intersection With Wu.na Can·
yon Road. ·
The environmental-minded
Laiuna Greenbelt bas filed an
wale~.
"When the previous
CRoumoor > units were de·
veloeed, .. the Jetter states,
••seaament and dirt from the
construct.ion phase transversed
Laguna Canyon drainage
tributaries for well over a
yeJr,"
Councnrnen clatm foulfbJ Of
the coastUne occurred when the
construction wastes reached
Main Beach Park, .. a re,tonal
faciUty utilized by county resi·
den~."
"'They do not tieUeve the com·
<See CO DO, Pa•e A.%)
TEN CENTS
m nt.
-Ur1lng the county to require
developers to dedicate school
sites or pay in lieu tees for new schools.
-Working with the county for
better drcwaUoai.and parklng in
Dana Potnt.
-Pressuring the county to de·
\'eloe .. &uidelines ror monitoring
grow1h, and then urging strict
· eriforcement.
< BOOM, Pace A2>
Wyoming
Hithy
Virus
WASHINGTON CAP) -Con-
firmation of an outbreak of
Russian nu iA Wyomlna rais
the specter of a major epidemic
sweeping the country this sprinc
wath no vaccine available to pro-
teet the public.
"We didn't doubt lt ~Russian
flu) would 1et here,'' said a
spokesman for the eovemment'•
Center for Disease Control in
Atlanta ... 'Ibe only re1l question
was whether it would be U\is nu
season or nut.••
The spokesman. Don A. Ber·
rettt. said Thursday that there is
no way to know at this point
whether the strain will dnelop
into ep demic proportl_ons in the
next few weeks. But be noted
that the Rus ian varus ••baa •
already demonstrated It can ov r ..
Reopl under a& and over 00
are expected to be most. suscep.-
tible to th Russian •trah>.
which is lielleved to cau1e
som whnt l g vera n Ulness
-ana lhus fewer death• -Ulan
the Asaan nd A-Hone Kone
atraiqs. Those two together
killed .esUmottd 90,000 people
in thf 1 country 10 tho 1957 and
1968 eJ)idemics.
Center investi11tora this week
ideotlflect the Russian nu virus
in throat cultures taken from
hi' h • chool students .in
Cheyenne, Wyo. The conlirma-
Uon comet leas than two weeks
after c~ernment flu nperts
atreed• that the strain could
strike here this sprinc but that
there was no way to get ready
for tt that soon.
Growing the vlnn1, turning It
into vaccine, testlil1 and mass-
p rod u c in g it takes the
pharmaceutical industry
months, and work has just
begun.
The 75 experts were hesitant
to make firm predictions about a
possible epidemic in the wake or ·
last winter's abortive awlne nu
vaccinatioa campaign. But they
recommended that a vaccine
•i•lnst the Russian strain be de·
veloped for inclusion in aoy im·
m uni&atloa program next
season.
bate in 1976, the eovemment
launched a large awlno nu to-
oculatlon campaign in anliclpa·
tto or an cpid mic tbat never
materialized. The campaian was
abruptl,Y. canceled after a •
<See FLU, P11e A1) •
; " --~----~~~~-----
Variable hi.ch cloudineu
througb Saturday. Not
mu.ch tem9erature
chan1e • .Lori toijtgbt 48 to
62. Hi Satul'Qy. to '12.
$3,000 m I lon· ppro • ·ct l:!lR a ,
dreasN that l The cowtcll
For Opponents aka that the pro) ct be ht!d uo
unUI a aolution to lhat problem
l• Included in the develo~r·1
plans.
The council also expressca
concerns about the amount of
1radina to be done on th proJ By WILLIAM HODGE Of"" O.•ly ...... ''-"
Two San Juan Captatrano
<'IVlc lrOUpl oe~~ t.o .. ro~d
growth and developn'lenl hive
reported a combined political
war chest of more than $3,000 (or
poi;1Sible use an sy{>portla• can·
d1dates and opposlJlf 1aaues in
March elections.
Their funds are the larte•l on
a list of 15 candidates and cam·
paign committees nuns cam·
paign finance stateme"u with
the city clerk Thunday.
The group. led by Councilman
Douglas Nash, bs aupportlnc
James Thorpe, Gary Hauadorfer
and Phillip Schwartze in the
t•ouncil election. They are oppos·
mg propos1t1ons aimed at creat·
111u councilmanic dl.stricts and
1 cpeallng the city's agricultural
preservation program.
Town Hall Association of San
Juan Capistrano, which includes
many San Juan Civic Associa·
lion member~. lists ,$1,182 in
funds available to oppo!!e the
lY.O propos1t1ons on March 7
election ballots.
While each campa1i.:n finance
!->la t ement fil ed Thursday
carefully details each contribu·
tion received above SSO, the Hall
statement lasts the total amount
,1\ atlable an their treasury. They
cl1d not h!it individual contribu·
t1ons
"We dcc1dl•d we Y.ere going to
use our funds to oppose these
two bullot measures," Town
llall spokesman Michael Berns
~J•d Thur~day •·we have not
IJct'n a polit1l·al organization up
until now
· We JU:.t deci~d these issues
were important so we're going
to spend our money opposing
them
Berns said the money was col·
lt•ctcd over the pa11t few years
from duts, pot luck dinners and
.t gara.:e sale. Town Hall has
been orgam~ed since 1973.
"We're entering this election
Fro• Page A J
BOOM ..•
-Workin,:: toward develop·
ment of a Dana Point master
plan. "We have a right to a
plan." said Mrs. Boostrom.
··After all, we pay taxes."
-Supportln~ the Capistrano
Unified School District's S49.3
million bond and $15 mlllion
s tate loan election dn t.fllr~li 1 to
enable the district to build new
!ichools as needed
Ollie Harris, past president of
the Dann Point Chamber of
Commerce. also urged voter ap·
proval of the school bond and
Joan measures.
"There 1s no question of
whether we need schools --only
how we will pay for th'em," he
said. "There's almply no good
alternative to n bond issue for
school construction financing.
Harri.8 dlsngreed with Dana
Point Citizens for Action,
however, on forming a
municipal advisory council.
"A MAC has no real authority
-it simply affects the board ol
supervisors," he sa1d. "And only
one supervisor.is reaeon•ible to
us. •
"We are aoing t.o have t.o de.
clde whether we wlll lncorporat9
and control our own destinies ot
whether we will become a part
of San Juan Capistrano or San
Clem ente."
Cycle Kills Pair
CUPERTINO <M» -A San
Jose couple, Thomaa Rose, 18,
end Becky Hernande•, 17,
thrown rrom a motottycle when
It went out of cofttrol, were
found dead Wedn sday by a retl·
dtnl who saw thct~ bodies on hla
lawn when h was leaving for
work.
as an 1nd.lv1dual." 8 ms said .
"Any individual can 1pend any
amount of money he or she
wanll to spend.
"It so happens that we h ve
$1.200 In our treasury," he con·
tinued. "I think that can be
viewed as an Individual spend·
ing t~ money."
Berns snld the Town Hall
1roup was not actively AOltc.IUna
contrlbutJons. .
Meanwhlle, the Voice ot the
Electorate committee <VOTE>,
an organiLution supl)Ortln& re·
peal or the city's agrlc\dtural
preserve, received $900 fn con·
tributlons rrom farmers and
local businessmen.
The Concerned Citizens for
Responsive Government. a
group that pumped $2.88). Into
ptacing the councilmanlc dis·
trlct1 imt1uti ve on the ballot,
filed a short form indlcatin&
they received no addltional con·
tributions through Jan 23
San Juan Residents for Real
Government, a group 6ppostna
counc1lmanac districts, failed to
file a form Thitt means, ap·
parently, that they gathered less
than $500 through Jan 23
While most council candidates
rec el ved less than $200 "'before
the reporting period deadline.
three filed statements listing
contributions.
The three candidates are:
Gary Hausdorfer, whose
campaign committee raiaed
$739.
-Marilyn Williams. who Uat-
ed $710 in contributions.
-Phlllip Schwartze, who lists
$472 In contributions.
Al Arps, Susan Cumminca.
Edwin E . "Jerry" Drake, Jim·
my D. Larsen, John B.
Sweeney, James Thorpe and
Charles H Ward all received
less than $200 through Jan. 23.
The next campaign finance re·
porting period ends Feb 20
Those statements must b<: hied
with the city clerk by Feb 23.
-lnclud.inc reloc:aun 'fOO,
cublc y rds of earth.
They also object to a seemln
ly offhand statement In the de·
\'elop~r·s response to • queatioq
fron1 the clty about wlldllfo:
"Loss o( wildlife habitat Is iden·
llfaed u an unavotdabJo adverse
impact."
, Finally, tho Laeuna counc I
claims the Rosamoor report
does not adequately dlacuss lh
impact or the development on
overconguted Laauna Canyoa
Road. Music Stars at Dana
Threo Dana Bills High School sophomores
singled out for music honors are.. (left to
. right> Helen Schwabe, Carol Langford and
Charlene Woodward Violinists Helen and
Carol were named to the 127·member All
Southern California H1ah School Honor
Orchestra. ChacJene, who plays clarinet.
was one of 270 students cho!>cn from 728
applicants for the Cahforma All State
Honor Band.
Campaign Spending Told
Seven of the 11 candidates
seeking three !>cats on the
Laguna Beach Clty Council in
March. claim they have re
celved and spent less than $200
thus far In their campaigns.
And while it's too early Jn the
campaign lo see any bulky war
chests, four other council can·
didates have collected amounts
ranging from S2Sf to $705.
The bi& spender to date ap-
pears to be Fluor Corp. ex·
ecutive Wayne Baglln, who has
collected $649 and spent S2S4
Hi• major contributors include
Harry Lawrence. who donated
$50 toward Baalln's campaign,
Larry Hunt Auto Center. $50;
Eu1ene Shidler, SSO and LeRoy
Child, $50.
Phyllis Sweeney, the lncum·
bent councilwoman, reported re
celving $4~ to date. and says
she has spent $73 of that amount.
Her contributors those giving
$50 or more -include Don
and Roma Rose, $100, and
Eugene and Barbara Auerbach,
also $100.
Stockbroker Howard Dawson,
who has received $705, reports
expenditures of only $19 to date
Water Usage
Normal Again
LOS ANGELES <AP>
Southern Californians who have
been scrimping on precious
water supplies since Inst May
can begin being frivolous again -up to a point
Because of heavy rams and
snows during the past month
lht• City Council voted Thursday
to end mand11tory ratwnlng that
1cqu1red ull residents to cut
water use uy 10 percent.
lli!i contributor:. mclude Louis J.
Z1tn1k. $100; Ervin Watk1ni;,
$100: Massen und Green In·
\estors. SlOO: llarry Lawrence.
S50, Eugene Shidler, $50. and H.
Howorth. $50.
Law consultant James Bishop ha~ received $2'J8 for ht!> cam·
paign war chest to date and haa
spl•nt Sl2 of that amount. He
names Wilham llarncv1ous as a
$50 donor, and Kathleen Jame!>
($100 > as contributors.
Candidates Barbara Smith.
Diana Dike, Kelly Boyd. John
Gabriels. Mai,;g1c Meggs, Adena
Gay and Males Esko reported
contributions and expenditure:.
of less than $200.
The campaign stutements
were all turned in before the 5
p m. dcadhnt• Thursday, accord·
init to City Clerk Verna Jtoll·
ingcr 1 he next statement or
contributions and expenditures
lS due rt•b 23
LB Attorney
Joins Panel
Laguna Beach attorney IJ, Law~on Mead has been appoint·
cd to the Orance County llousine
and Communlty Development
Task Foree.
The task force was created by
supervisors to provide recom·
mendal1ons on how federal hous·
mg and community development
funds should be spent.
M cad, an Orange County
native. Slrve:; legal counsel to
the Orunge County llouain&
Authonty.
3CHILDREN
SEE MOM DIE
SAN DIEGO CAP) -Precious
Lee Vern Boyd and her thrc;e
t•hlldren were walking lo churc,h
Thursday night when a car ap·
proacht.>d on the dirt shoulder bf
the road an southeast San Dlego.
The children ranging In a~e
from s to 8 Jumped out or tile
way hut Mu. Boyd, 35, was
struck and killed. Pohce said Uta
motorist continued without atop. pana and was being sought. I
Big Spenders Told
In Clemente Race
Big spenders in the first leg or
the March 7 San Clemente City
Council race were s tore
manaaer Rot Hamm, who spent
$927, and builder Allan Wulfeck,
who spent $998
All City Council candidates
were required to file financial
!itatemcnts with the city clerk b>
5 p.m. Thu111day, indicating how
much. they have collected and
spent on their campaign!>. They
will r.le two more financial
statements, one by Feb. 23, and
a final statement in May.
Except for Hamm. Wutreck
and a third candidate, Howard
Mushett, who said he has spent
Sl 13, the remainina candidates
filed shorter form&. indicaUng
they had collected less than ~
In their campaigns.
Wulfeck, who is a city plan·
ning commlasloner. said he has
collected $1,224 toward his cam·
pai&n. His contributors include.
-$100 each lrom eledrical
contractor Harold Oesbow; the
San Clemente Jnn, bU1inesarnan
Ray Campbell; homemaker Stl'rah McCoy ; developer
Willi am Sammond1,
veterinari•n Lloyd Thomas;
businessman Norman Clow;
masonry contractor Paul Watt.a
and rancher Toby Tauma and
$200 from retired builder
Howard Massey.
Hamm, who manaees the
FLU .••
Sears •tore In San Clemente. ha!I
collected Sl,938 rrom the follow.
Ins contributors
-$100 each from exc11vat1on
company owner.ii Cecil and Ellen
Hom ilfl. financial adviser \ Jfltt:
Simonds; reaaltor H.8 Marks.
broker James Mead. the San
Clemente lnn . Geoq~c Gearn
<retired!. realtor E.L H1sley,
hom cmakc•r D1an<1 Bt•ndlin.
restaurant ownt•r Eu~toalhe
Mthopoulos , county haw en·
forcement crnploycc Robert
Jensen. lawyer Hemard Allen
realtor Melford Portwood and
factory representative Robert
Hayden.
• -$200 each from bus1 ·
nessman Ray Campbell and
public relations executive te1
Holderater.
-S98 from const.rucUon ex·
ecuhve John Douala11 and $S0
or less from other ~ontributora.
M uahett, president of the Son
Clemente Homeowners A11ocla·
tlon, said he haa collected $335.
Real e$lale appraiser Herbert
Lipp and Joseph Einscle (re·
tired> each contributed SlOO to
Muahett'• campaign, the can·
di<fate sajd.
Incumbent city councilman
Tony DiGiovanoi said he haa
collected l~s U>an $200. Oth•r
candidates reported spending
less than $200.
W•'r• c'"""9 .. lu Ill tti. • ....._. te
.... 11t ••r f(W .... 1 ...... twy11 ,,., -
hee4eclM, .... r-., ... rftMtty ..... "' -.......,.__ lw-4 ,.,.,. .............. .a.
s.e•~" Ant c-. fint Hne4. s.e Wry ....... c-. .wf ..-itr ro.'•• "' ..-. 1t
' ... ;i •••.
LIMITED QUANTITIES!
ALLAH
FAMOUs..HAME
IRAHDS
Mlll GO.lllTY COlOR TEXTURE
MONTIClllO LON~ TERRACE PURPI.£ SHAG PlU~ NYLON
BIGHOW VARIATIONS GOt.O WOO. PLUSH
VARIATIONS OflAHOl GO\.O WIUllolVL'1 'BIGELOW CUT too> NYlON
&RVEN IN CONCERT PAlE. PlACH MUl Tl
EVANS.BlACK MALIBU <l1V£ GRUN
WALTERS MARINA DEl RAY C(ff[R RUST MUUI
VAMJUARO CRAkD AWARD ANTIOOE GOlO
CATALINA 8ROWN
AHTIOCl Vll VH -T&ll-4T 1'4'.i lf~~OW Gllf(OI
ALOANOER SMITH ANTIOOE V£LVH CAM(O WHIT£
MOOTICELLO APPLAUSE ll r.t: GREEN
Blr.ELOW VARIATIONS t1M£ GRECH WIXl PLUSH
BAN> WAGON a. ooo ll.U£ t.t1t n HYLCI SHAG PLUSH
VAHGUARO Sil VER SPRINGS PAI.£ YELLOW NYl~ PLUSH
Sil vtR SPRINGS -11"""°" f'4U Gllt(>I NYL~ PlUSH
MYSTICS OSS GRH.N HYUlf PLUSH
AHOrnER SPRING 1'4&.C Gllllffl #lli 111.Uf Miil Ti
()8£AMWAIJ( AWA riRCfH
SEA DANCE PINK WHITE
PURPLE
8£1(1 CREAM
?·TONE 00.0
52 ros
133 VOS.
37 YOS
t .. l
.,
VOL. 71, NO. 27, 4 SECTIONS, '46 PAGES N TEN CENTS
At Least 68 Die in Vieious Storm
........... ELDERLY MAN TAKES A TUMBLE WHILE CROSSING DOWNTOWN STREET IN TORONTO
In Cen•d•, Guats of Almost 100 MtlH an Hout Plaguing Onterlo Ar••
By Tbe AalocfaWd Pren
Thowsands ~malned stranded
today end mlllions tried lO d11
out after a record0brealdn1
blizzard that passed over tM
mldwest and into the nort.beut.
AL lea.sl 68 peraona were k1Uea
in vicious weather. Denvet
hotela were reported run with
airline passenaera diverted from
Eastern airports. Police issued
warnin11 in the Mldweat for
driven to stay off roads.
Ohio wu having severe prob·
lema with what the sovemor
called the "wont blluard In hla.
tory" and official• a~d that
even the federal help that bad
been promised -lncludlnJ aid
from the Army -waa not
enou1h.
"We just haven't 1otten what
we had hoped to get thla Ume."
aald Adjutant General James
Clem of the Ohio National
Guard.
Pre1ldent Cart.er declared a
federal state of enler1ency ln
Ohio and Indiana, but Clem aald
that wu not enoueh. He said
federal equip11>ent bad not been
freed ror state uae.
The foul weather that crosged
the East on Thursday included
tbe blizzard in the North, hur·
r1cane force wtnds tbrouah the
* * *
South. heavy ralns. and no0ctirt1
1n West Virginia end eb <M.bero.
Gov. James Rbodea of Ohio
expreued condol ncea for Ui:>se
who lost loved ones in tbe
bliu.ard.
"Tbil la the momin1 that mo1t or ua d~ ded. it ·s h re," he
uld. ''Th~ picture ls not 1ood. It
may not be 1ood for the next two
or three days."
And the National Weather
Service could add no encouraae·
ment as it predicted more snow
for the upper Midwest.
Thousands were atUl tryin& to
deal with the effects or the
<SeeS ow. Pase At>
Flu Hits Wyoming;
No Vaccine Ready
WASHINGTON <AP> -Con·
flrmatlon of an outbred of
Russian Ou ln Wyomin1 raises
the specter or a major epJdemlc
•weeping the count!')' this •Prins
With no vaccme available to pro-
tect the public.
"We didn't doub it <Russian
nu> would 1~ here, ... said a
apokeaman for the aovernment'a
Center for Dbeue Control in
Atlanta .... The only real queaUon
waa whether it would be this flu.
1easoo or next."
The spokesman. Don A . )Jer·
reth, 1ald Thursday that thtre is
no wuy to know at this point
whether the strain will develop
into epldemlc proportions in the
next few weeks. But he noted
that the Rusai•n virus "has
already demonstrated it can
move fut."
People under 24 and over 50
are expected to be m06t suscep·
Uble to the Russian 1traln.
whlcb l1 believed to cause
somewhat less severe an illness
-and thus fewer deaths -than
the A i n ana A·Heng Kone
straina. Those two together
(See FLU, Pase A2)
Amtrak Sun-seekers CaJ19ht in Drifts
ROACHDALE, Ind. (AP) -
Work crews dug throu1h a wall or snow today to re1cue 60 peo-
ple stranded more than 12 hours
on an Amtrak passenger train
. that stalled in a 1nowdrlfl and
then froze to the rat ls.
The '5 pauengen and 1$ crew
memben on &he Chtc110-to· t Florlda·bound Fl rldian wert
ferried aboard anowpfow
loeomoUves to a nearby croa.
ing. and then driven in truck• to
a fire station ln lhe towt\ Of Baln·
bridae.
Durin1 \helt ordeal, all aboard
the seven-car train moved into
the lead locomotlvo and huddled
under layers of blankets ror
warmth, but four hours before
the rescue water ran put lor the
train 's 1team·htaUn1 syatem
and some pasaen1ers suffered
frostbite, authorities uld .
The train stalled about noon
near this rural community about
35 mUeJS w l ot Jndlanapolls at
the height ot a bliuard swept by
winds 40 to!M mph that dumped
about a foot of anow on the
state's midsection
"It was a pretty hatro'ft'ina ex·
perlence," said pusenger Ove
Knudsen, 69. Knox, Ind. "It took
28 hours to eo a little less than 200
miles. But we are so thankful to
Sclwol Employees
To Vote on Contract
Arter five months of negotla·
tlona. the Newport·Me1a Unified
School Dtalrtct and ita 900 non·
teacbln1 employees have
reacbed a tentative contract
agreement that would tncreue
11laries by 4.3 percent and 1rant
employers an extra boUday.
llernbera of the California
School Employees Anoclalion
will vote on lhe tentaUve asree-
mtnl at a Feb. 7 meeUnc.
The pay hlke, retroacUve to
last July 1, would raise the
monthly 11tary of a head custo-
dJan with 10 years txperienu
from $1,027 to $1.071, district ad·
minlatratlve 11i1tant Jean
Harmon said today.
A beaiMinc at.ock clerk would
see a pay increase from $814 lO
*849 per month.
The qreement Is slated for
two years, but rene10UaUon of
wafes and health and welfare
benefits would be permitted up-
on completion of the first year of
the contract.
Other benefits lnclude Ufe in·
aurance and medical and dental
plans. The di.strict would pay up
to $1,156 per year for premiums
for each ellalble employee&.
Classlfled employees would
have 12 boUdaya per year, the
additional day off comln1 on the
Friday aller Thank11Mn1.
the firemen and to Amtrak.
They did the best they could."
Knudsen Hid he hnd his wife
w re n route to West Palm
Beach, Florida, .. and we still
aim to &et ther . "
Balnbrld&e own Marshal
Louia Lo~ J old thpt from
tht fire hous b evacu •
would be taken tif'thl M~th Jst ·
Church where the women's au,c.
Hlary was prep•r1.n1 f POd.
He said a fOJ.lr·wheel drive
vehicle b b4Sen ffnt to bring
the town doctor to aid the
puaen1ers.
"We've got drifta 16 to 20 f t
here," Lowery said "When I
learned we were 1olng to be fn.
volved in the rescue, l got out
the volunteer firemen and lhen
our street people to clear a path
from the crossln1 to the fire sta·
lion."
The final rescue was effected
by 10 volunteer• dl,.ln1 throuch
the wall of snow. Amtrak
1pok'e1man Joteph Vranich said.
That allowed the two rescue
Jocom'?llvea to joln the stalled
traln, and 1»auenaers and crew
boarded the rescue units.
The snowplow-equipped
locomotives of the Louisville •
Naahvllle Rallroad bad reached
wUbln a few feet of the tratb
ahorlly after midnight. But ·
Vranich 1aJd they were unable
lO plow through the drift to cou·
pie with the lead ~omollve ahd
haul lt away.
The tracks were In a gull)',
Vranich said, and the snow wu
10 deep tt was impossible for
paallengers to wait from their
train to tbe rescue locomotivea.
Al'WI~
' i.;,. TRUCK DRIVER USES ARE JACKIT TO WARN MOTORISTS OF HIS STALLED TRUCK
tn Chlceoo, 81llurd Snart• Traffic enil:xpr•NW•Y H Mldweet Burled Deeper
dictmtnt. Praudam Distributing Inc. a
NJ> such oiniaslon occurred Newport Beach Investment firm
&his &1me, Carter ••id. alluedly linked to an intema·
il'be inCfictments are alleaa· tional drug conspiracy.
lions t!tat the killini of Bovan tt is alleged that profits from
stemmed from the decl~ion of mulli·million dollar drug
several of the defendant• to transactions were merged with
eliminate the Fountain Valley the funds of a number of out·
man for the part he played in wardly respectable buslne11 plannans:~ cadler, unreported firms, Hveral or them in the kJ<lna.P~I ol Kulik. Oran4e Coast area.
Polle• clalm that the kidnap· ,, Pohc claim that Fiori, An·
pin& and the Bovan murd~r tbony "tiUle Tony" Marone Jr .•
emanated from ~sputes Wlthin 23, and Raymond Stev n Resco,
28. u ot Hur.unaton Bea~h.
w r hired by Prasadam pnn·
clpals to kill Bovan.
( BOVAN, Pase A2)
TODAY
Go thrQU{lh Klem • Kodid·
i!lehopper cild Frtdd Ch ,.. lDadtr to ~ tlie reol
R•d Skelton fn Dcnnil
• cl..ellan'1 ITvitiD on P.og
CJ.
N
nty Supervis
Third Term
Orange County Supervisor
Ralph Clvk said today he will
seek his third
four-year
term as
Fourth Dis-
t r 1 c t
supervisor
thla year
And the
Coi-mer
Anaheim
mayor said so
a .. oic far it Jooks
hke he may be runnio& unop-
posed for re election.
Clark said he believes he has
shown lhe past eight years lhat
he can be effective and responsi-
ble as a county supervisor.
In addltion to serving as
supervisor, Clark also has been
('hairman or the Oranae County
Transit District Board of Direc-
tors since the bus system began
operations five years ago.
He noted that dunng that time
OCTD has erown from five
buses operating in Santa Ana to
a modem neet of 32S buses coun-tywadc
And during a press conference
this morning Clark repreatcd tus
hope that OCTD can acquire the
first seven males or now-
abandoned Pacific Electric right
of way llS a future transit cor-
ridor .
Clark's supervisorial district
includes Anabe1m, Buena Park.
La Palma and much of the city
of Orange.
Clark was elected to the
Anaheim City Council In 1968
and served as mayor in 1968. He
Funeral Set
Saturday
For McClellan
Funeral services are
st·heduled Saturday for Rollo W
McClellan Sr. of Newport Beach.
whose dredging firm was
responsible for bulldlna up
Harbor Island.
Mr. McClellan, who came to
Orange County from Mlasouri
when he was a and moved to
Newport Beach in 1928. dled
Wednesday at the ace of 98.
His numerous bualne11 ven-
• tures lncludlns owning a feed
store in Anaheim and an oranee
ranch In the same city. Mr
McClellan later formed a r.arlne~
aw At:~es~.~~r!f~~:. eavated th basemen or
·Old Clty Hall In Anaheim and
ter dredged part ot Nt~rt
iarbor ~
Mr. McClellan waw also ,a
ember or the Costa Mesa.
ewport Harbor Llo.n1 Club
hich he Joined In 1942. '
He is survived by his wtte,
"Blanche McClellan, of NewpOrt
')Jeach; sons Rollo McClellan Jr.
nd Sparks McClellan bf>tb of
cwport Beach; dauabtera El·
Jen Cross of Paso Roble1 and
·Virginia Hoaland ot Costa Mesa;
•'Sisters Leola Johnson of T\&Stln,
Lula Koch and Lora Barber,
both ot Anaheim; nine ~ erandch.lldren and elaht creat·
srandchildren.
' ! Services wlll be held at 11
.m. Saturday at the First Chrls·
an Church of Anaheim, 520 W.
l.lU. ~· Viaitalioo will be from ) to t p.m. Frid., at Ba11ou &
hacbt MOl'Ul&ry lD Anaheim.
took office as supervisor in
January, 1971.
He &erved as supervisors'
chairman m 1974 and a1 ylcc
chairman in lrJS.
He also serves aa a member ot
the Orange County Transporta-
tion Commission which has re·
view authority over transit and
local road bwldin& projects.
FLU ..•
killed an esllmated. 90,000 people
in this country in the 1957 and
1968 epidemics.
Center mveatigators this week
identified the Rusaian flu virus
in throat cultur~ taken from
high school students in
Cheyenne. Wyo. The conf1rma·
lion comes less than two weeks
after government nu espetts
agreed that the strain could
strike here this spring but that
there was no way to get ready
for 1t lhat soon.
GrowinR the virus, turning it
into vaccine. testing and mass
producing it takes the
pharmaceutical industry
months, and work has just
begun.
The 75 exeerts were hesitant
to make firm predictions about a
possible epidemic In the wake or
last wanter's abortive swine nu
vaccination campaign, Bat they
rectimmended that a vaccine
against the Russian strain be de·
veloped for incJuslon in any im-
m uni z at ioo proeram next
season.
Lale in 1976, the government
launched a large swine nu in-
oculation campaign in antaclpa-
t1on or an epidemic that never
materialized. The campaign was
abruptly canceled after a
statistical link was found
between a flu vaccine and a rare
paralytic disease.
Flu seasons usually begin in
the fall and run their course by
the end of March or April.
The Russian flu, known in
medical circles as A-USSR and
technically as HlNl, already has
swept across two continents
leaving milliona of sick people
and thousands or dead in U.s
waJre. But pr.fCi .. informlltlon
on the virulence of the atraln
and th.e toU that it mt&ht take
here is being analyzed by a team
or experts wbo returned Thun-
day from Moecpw. They wnl re-
port their fin 11 ondaY. to p
!'P,ci&I Depaffiiient of Het.lth.
Education and Welfare panel.
From Page AJ
SNOW ..•
I
Former stale senate candidate
Loran Norton was ordered today
to face arTaignment. ln Orange
County Su~erlor Court on
charges of violating state cam-
pal1n finance laws.
Santa Ana Municipal Court
Judge Edward L. Laird made
that ruling after bearing
testimony durhl1 a three-day
prelimmary hearing.
Norton. 49, of Santa Ana, will
now 10 to Superior Court Feb. 10
to face charges of perjury and
soliciting perJury outlined in
four felony counts
Jud&e Laard dismissed
Bovan Death
Suspect Faces
Sex Charges
Murder suspect Jerry Peter
Fiori had new felony cbarsu
added to hJs docket Thur1day by
Orange County Sheriff's of-
ficers
Jail deputies booked Fiori, 41.
on cbarses of assault with a
deadly weapon and crimes
a1ainst nalW'e after he allegedly
attacked a fellow prisoner while
they were detained In a Superior
Court holding cell.
Olltcers alleaed Fforf banged
the 20.year.old victhn' bead
alnst a llft1t 1n Uie ~l and then forced the dazed prl~,. to
submit to an act of sodom1.
Fiori faces the death penalty
for his alleced slayioc of
Stepben John Bovan of Fouotajn
Vall y I Oct. 22.
* * * .lf,....PageAJ
BOVAN •••
They say the contract wa1 put
out by Kulik. Fedorowskl,
former Hare Krishna devotee
Roy Cristopher Rlchatd, 28,
Laguna Beach and Newl)Ort
Beach busil)esaman. .Joseph
• Shelton Davll tJI. 28. • • tchaNS. who wa named as a
Ciefendant in the first indict-ment, hal received immunity
from p~ution in return for
)\Is promile to appear as a
prosecutlcm witness.
Abo named as a defendant tn
the second indictment la Elsle
Caban Kulik, 28, or Newport .
8each.
charaes of au.cm~ •·
tion, bribery and defflv1n1 a
witness contained in three addl·
tlonal felony alleaattona.
All seven counts were dis·
missed tut month by Superior
Court Judge Mason Fenton who
ruled ln pretrial action alter the
grand jury Indicted Norton.
But District Attorney Cecil
Hicks ordered the charges re-
filed at muruclpal court level.
The prosecution aald today \hat
Judge Laird's dismissal or some
charges wlll have no affect on
thelr prosecution or Norton.
It Is alleged that Norton, a
former atde to county
Supervisor Laurence Schmit
who ran for the state sentt.e as a
Republican ln llr78, violated the
state's campaign finance laws.
1t ia alleJed tbat Norton flied a
campaicn finance report whlcb
indicated that he peraonally
loaned hla campai1n $6.600.
The prosecution claims that
SS.000 of lhat aum was received
from Irvine loan broker Gene
Conrad wbo faces trial on
crlmlqal char1ea contained ln
Orange County and federal
grand Jury indictments.
By JACKIE HYMAN • Of•o.11.,,....,.,._..
F kv ew Stile Hospital tn
Cost a 1a movina closer to
ita I of re1alnln1 feC!er l cer~lfieatton and retmburt ·
ment1 for Medi-Cal expenstt.
Mapital chief Frank Crinella
said today.
Dr. Crinella said a ste.tt
Jlcenrtng team that decerWaed
the bospltal last summer haa
Just completed a two and a haJf
week lniJ)e<!lion.
' Our only critical problem
rta t ls stalflnc;• he saJd.
"AU r ~rational procedure
r mei>t.s are met or have
waived under a lona·term of~Uon."
·iAJhm!hf!lr •:,step was taken thll u,.-...w ....... '-" a committee of tho
Or e COUnty Health Plannlnf
CouMU app1oved a pla'n to
eU lb "8 acute paycbtatrtc
t'ate'bedS Ind 3' sknted nur1i.n1
care beds and to •witch another 2U skilled nursing care beds to
an lntermediate care cluslflca-
tlon.
If approved by the full council
Tuesday and later by state
health authorlltes, the move
would free a number of person
nel to work in proarams and
Police Pr.obe
Boat Tlw/t
Newport Beach police are in·
vesttgatinc the reported tbett of
$7 ,SSS ln pbotoeraphy and other
equipment from a docked boat.
The equipment was found
missing Wednesday from the
boat belonging to Underwater
Resdrch Inc. It was d<><:ked at a
guest berth et 1801 Bayside
Drive
Police sa\d there were no
1i1ns of forced entry but that all
employees With keys had been
checked and none report having
the equipment.
, ALL Aat
wards where they are needed,
Dr. Crlnt!lla sa\d.
•'The crtlical element ri1ht
now is our need to hire J.2 re-
habilitation lheraplsts. but this
14 based an wbat J.lcenstn1 sees .. ·~ns ol food lalth ttort and
s1ans of moveqaent In the otber
areas,
"Our actual &hortaae 11 more
in tho netshborbood of 300. 11
He said the hlrln1 hlncea on
the Leatalature'a approval of
Governor Brown's request for
about $2'7.5 million in funds for
state hospitals! JncJudln1 $4
million for Falrv ew.
"We're aendln1 fervent
prayera to Sacramento every
day,'' Dr. Crtnella aald.
Ho said be also eJCpect.a to hear eoon from th4t actate Personnel
Board on whether or not the
hospltal will be allowed to hire
needed employtes at blaber
thin becinnJng ali.Jary ranks,
which wouJd ablo It to attract
more q~allfied personnel.
D~Sought
After Bite
InN~wport
Newport Beach animal control
off le era are sec kin a a doi that
reportedly blt a youni 1lrl •s
hand near Andersen School in
Newport Beach Tbunday.
Jennller Breslow, 1. of 18216
Port Charles Place, may have to
undereo rabtea shots if officers
are unable to locate tbe doa.
lt ts described as • black
short·ba.lred ·dot with a brown
spot on the left of it.a nose and
another brown spot on its back.
Il has a short tail and Iona ears,
accordln1 to lht girl's mother,
Andrea Breslow.
Anyone 1lahtlnc the dog or
knowing of lts whereabouts
should call 6'4·3717.
FAMOU~AM .
IUMDS LIMITED 9UANTITIES!
Mill llOWTY CllOI TDl\Jlt
MONTICELLO l<HX* TERRACE PURPl£ SHAG PUJSH lffi.OH 52 VOS.
BIGELOW VARIATIONS GOlD Mn PLUSH 133 YOS.
BIGELOW VARIATIONS OllAHQI, OOl.O '11114Tl!~tl
SERVEN IN C(J«:ERT PAI.£. PEACH MUI. Tl
£VANSBlACK <X.IVE GREEN
WALTERS C(ff>(R-RIJST MUI. Tl
AMTIWEW
BROWN
~-...r.
"A\a Ya.I.OW OMDC
CAAlO WHITE
UME GRlIN
. LIAI Q!ffM WOO. PLUSH
Cl(U> llU£ MIUI HYlm SHAG Pt.USff
PALE YEll<WI
~
"A4.IOl'lffM NYLC* Pt.USH
NY\.OH Pt.USH
f
I
.........-... ¥ .....
Saddlebaek
VOL. 71, NO. 27, .. SECTIONS, 46 PAGES
68Killed
Flash_ Floods
Follow Storm •
By The Assodated Prt''>s
Flash floods are threatening
slates already reeling from
heavy snows, hurricane force
winds. a thaw that turned moun
tains of snow to slush and a
vicious bhuard that stranded
thousands of travelers
* * *
(J() Saved
As Storn1
As the Midwest was clobbered
Thursday by what Ohio Go\
Jame~ Rhodes called "u killer
bllllard lookini.: for victims,"
thl' Southeast ~as drenched by
ram. sleet and snow. Tornadoes
touched down in Virginia and
North Carolina, and tem ·
peratures daoood to the 20s.
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
• eIDIC
1 Halts Train
Sixty-eight death~ were
blamed on the erratic weather.
as follows 15 an Wisconsin. 10 in
Ilhno1s, eight in M1ch11i:an, nine
in Indiana, s ix in Ohio. four 1n
Kentucky , thrc<.• in Alabama,
two t•ach in Maryland, Pen
nsylvania Georgia. and North
Dakota and one each in South
Dakota Nl•hraska, Maine .
Virginia and Minnesota.
ROACllDALE Ind. (AP>
Work crews dug through a wall
of snow today lo rescue 60 peo·
pie stranded more than 12 hours
on an Amtrak passenger train
.that !tlalled an a snowdrift and
then froze to the rails.
The 45 passengers and 15 crew
members on the Chicago-lo·
F'lorida bound Floridian were
rerr1ed aboard snowplow
locomotives to a nearby cross·
ing, and then driven in trucks to
I fire station tn the town of Bain
bridge.
During their ordeal, all aboard
the !!even-car train moved into
the lead locomotive and buddied
under layers of blankets ror
warmth, but four hours before
the rescue water ran out for the
traln's steam·heallna ayst.em
and some passengen 'uttered
frostbite, authorities said.
The train stalled about noon
near this rural community about
35 miles west of Indianapolis at
the height or a blitzard swept by
w1ads 40 to 50 mph that dumped
about a foot of snow on the
state's midsection.
"ll wns a pretty harrowing ex·
perience," said passenger Ove
Knudsen. 69. Knox. Ind. "It took
28 hours to go a little less than 200
miles. But we are so thankful to
the nremen and to Amtrak.
They did the be!!t they could."
• Knudsen said he and his wife
were en route to West Palm
Beach. Florida, "and we still
aim to get there "
Bainbridge Town Marshal
Louis Lowery Jr. said that from
the fire house the evacuees
would be taken to the Methodlat
Church where the women'• aux·
illary was preparing food.
He ·said a four-whe•I drive
vehicle had been sent to bring
the town doctor to aid the
passengers.
"We've 1ot drifts 15 to 20 feet
here," Lowery said. "When I
learned we were going to be in·
olved in the rescue, I got out
the volunteer firemen and then
our sltect people to clear a ~th
from the crosalna to the fire sta·
t1on."
The final rescue was effected by 10 volunteert diQln& throuah
~be wall of anow, Amtrak
pokeaman JoseP,h Vranlch aald.
President Carter declared a
frcleral state of l'mcrg<.•ncy m
Ohio and today ordered units of
tht• 5th Army into the state to
ht'lp exhaustt!d National
G uardsm<·n re'.'lcue s tranded
motorists ancl a11sist utility rt'-
paarmen in restormp electncal
power to thousands of homes
The M1ch1~an National Guard
was mobill7.ed and G()v William
Milliken declared· u !-.late of
emergency so the stale could ap.
ply for federal aid The storm.
which cut power lo 160.000
homes, plied up 12 foot drifts
and almost sank an ore
freighter
Ovt•rnlght temperaturu
ranged from Z3 below tero in
Devil's Lake, N.D .. to 61 in Key
West. Fla.
Winds uatina up to...;.8$ mph.
well beyond hurricane strength,
caused dama1e all over the East
and Mid west.
The storm that hit the
Midwest sent barometer read·
ings to record lows, indicating
very low pressure generating u
9evere storm. Jn Pittsburgh, the
barometer plunged to 28-49. the
(Sff SNOW. Pace AZ)
... w.,......
ELDERLY MAN TAKES A TUMBLE WHILE CROSSING DOWNTOWN STREET IN TORONTO
In Canada, Gusts of Almost 100 MllH en Hour Plegulng Onterlo Aree
Three First Ladies
To Headline Dinner
rnrm1•r r1rst ladll's havt> definil
7 Plead
Former Republican first
lad1e11 Mamie ~ ho er. P t
Nixon una Bettv 'P'ori:J H ve b<.>en
in1"ited to headiinc a GOP rund·
rai'.'lin" dinner next .month at the
I>'. l>a111 they wtll Uend..t-~'~ti:~Ws~~@fi~~ "n<'J!nf1,1lln11-. are stlll ,::oini0n.
WJtyluncl Uotel
Tom Gia!>.~. a stuff member of
the Oran~t' Countv RepubhcJn
Central Committee·. s111d the dan
ner is -.till in the planning
!lta~cs. Ile sauJ il is schedult'<i
Cor 1-'eb 22.
Tickets will be sold at Sl2S per
person
Glas~ soid none of the thr~
I Ii' ... 1111 llw l'Vcning'i. reatured
!-JH'.1k1 •1 will tw former Texas
i.:o\ t•rnor .mil tn·usury i;ecrtitary
.l11h11 ('n1111nllv
1, l.1-.o; .11il t ht• proct•edi; will be
11 • d 1 .. h1 11• 111 Ht•puhlican can-
d1d.tt,.., 111 llw fall i.:cner;.il elcc·
111111 .111<1 lu I'•" ror .1 voll·r rei.:·
1:-0l 1 .1I11111 d I I\ 1 •
<; 1 . .-. ... -..1111 n·ntr.tl tom mittt'e
nll'nil11·1 1 .. 11111• Winter of Seal
111•,ll'h 1 Ii• ,1t1111i.: th1• committee
pl.11111111.: llit I'\ 1•111
Judge Robert . Krieelan<l, the
Jurn.t who dismissed identical
churge:iJ contained in the far.st in-
dictment, wns 9n the bench. He
will preside over pretrial action
and the trial itself
Lake Mission Viejo
Judge Kneeland scheduled the
first pretrial action on cbaoies
of murder and conspiracy: for
1''eb. lS In his courtroom. He told
:;even defense lawyers today
that he will schedule the trial al
a later date. Rains Delay Pipeline
pumping
Three of the seven defendants
were brought from the county
Jail to answer the re-filed
charges and will remain there, it
wu ruled lOday, pending a bail
hearing. ~
They are: Alexander K~hk,
28, of Newport Beach; Jerry
Peter Fiori, 41, of Hunlinaton
Beach, and Joseph Gabriel
Fedorowaki, 28, ot Newport
Beach.
• ? ee
Wyoming
Hithy
Virus
WASHINGTON <AP) -Con•
firmation of an outbreak or
Russian flu in Wyomin1 raises
the specter of a major epidemic
sweeping the country this aJ>rina
wJth no vaccine available to pro.
tect the public.
"We didn't doubt it <Russian
flu> would 1et here," said a
spoke man for the 1ovemment'!S
Center for Disease Control in
Atlanta. ''11\e only real questi<m
waa whether it would bo this nil
season or next."
The spokesman, Don A. Ber·
reth, said Thursday that there is
no way to know at this point
whether the strain will develop
into epidemic proportions in the
next few weeks. But he noted
that the Russian virus "has
already demonstrated It can
move fast."
People Wlder 24 and over 50
are expected to be most suscep-
tible to the Russian strain,
which is believed to cause
somewhat Jess severe an illness
-and thus fewer death!t -than
the Asian and A-Hone Kong
strains. Those two together.
killed an estimated 90,000 J>4!9ple
in this country in the 1957 and
1968 epidemics
Center imest1eators this week
ldentaf1ed tht> Russian Ou viru •
m throat cultures taken from
high· school students in
Cheyenne. Wyo The confirm•·
lion comes less than two weeks
after government flu experta
aereed that the train could
Jtrik t.h spnns but th t •
there w no way to get ready
tor It that soon.
Growing the virus, turning il
Into • ln , t tin nd masa· pro uchtc h ukes the
pb rlY!ec uttcal tnduatrv
months, an<f work has just ~IUD.
The 75 cicperts were hesitant
to make firm predictions about• <See FLtJ, Pa1e AZ>
State Liaison ~
Charged With
3 Sex Crimes .
SACRAMENTO <AP) -The
State Department of Justice's
top liaison with tho Legislature
has been booked for investi1a·
lion of orrering to commit a sex
act in a pornographic movie
arcade, deputies said today.
Peter G. DeMauro, 3S, was re·
leased on $7,500 ball from county
jaal after beJn1 booked for in-
vesti gatlon ot indecent ex·
posure, ~olicilin1 for a lewd eel
and attempting to commit an act
of oral copulation, a ahenff's
apokcsman aaid
The Incident iovolvinc
D Mauro, who ls in charge Of
Jegislati\'e services for the de·
Pl\rtment, occurred Wednesday
nf1ht U the Adultworld
bOok lore and movie arcede f n
&he Sacramento auburb of North
Hi1hland ,, deputies said.
l)eM uro could 1>ot be reached
fot immediate comment.
OAll'I' PILOT
"By :JE&RY CLAUSEN
°'Ult Olll~ ..... ""'
TWELV~·'Y.EAR·OLD PARAPLE GIC Eddie Rua, who
captured the hearu of Saddlebaelr Valley residentt aner
he fell from the rool of his home just before Chrtatmas.
may be facinc some new complications.
Eddie's father, Octavio "Roclty"
Rua, said today that doctors at a
Pomona hospital report the youtb hat
atom uch pains resultini from aall
tWn~. ' TWoWomen
northw t a aa.
,. nt l>f El T6ro Road'a n -
t.e ec ~ th Calle Corte on
2,240 acr . Th site 11 about
three miles from El Tro Road's
intersection with La1una Can·
yon Road.
The environmental·mlnd~d
Laguna Gretnbelt has filed an
appeal ov r the project and the
EJR with tu~rvisors, who will
hear t up' arau.m l8 in
tht near future.
Meanwf\Ue, J.;a euna coun·
cllmen are, clalmtn1 the £lit
does not adequately address Im·
pacts on Laguna Beach reaulUnit
from the prOJect.
And, lb y cl m, r~cnL OOOd
dam11ge al I Laguna Can)'on
Road only accents their con·
cerns.
The letter to supervisors cites
Laguna's experiences with earl! r Rossmoor developments
in the upper Laguna Canyon
wat r•~.
"When the previous
tRoomoor > uni\1 were de·
velo'Rtd,'' the leU.er slates,
"1edlm cnt and dirt from the
C!onatructJon pbaso transversed Laiunn Canyon d rainage
tributarlef for well over a
year."
Councilmen claim foullne or
the coasWne occurred whe'l the
construction wastes reached
Mam Beach Park, "a regional
facility utllizt!d by county resl·
dents.''
L:". nclUdana tt~1ling 700,oOO
cubic yard£ ore rtJ'I.
They also object to a seemln1·
ly offhand stQtemenl in the de·
\'eloper'• rt>SpoMc to a question
from the t:aty about wildlife:
"Lon or wildhfe habatat 11 tde11·
tlfled as an unavoidable adverse
tmpuct."
t'inolly, the Laiunu c:Guncll
cl ims the Rosamoor report
dOff not adequately discuss the
impact of th deve1opm nt on
overcongtsh .. 'CS Laguna Canyol\
Road.
Body Found
Off Laguna
.. , find it hard to believe in anyone
that young," said Rocky. "At leut be
<Eddie) was feeling better yesterday.''
Meanwhile, an Eddie Rua fwid col·
ll'ctl'd at the Laguna HUit family's
11u• church has topped $6,200 and a (1,1.1\d·
ra1S1ng firm and San Joaqwn Elementary Sthoo1'1 PTA
ha\·c JOaned in fund-ra1S1nf. dforts for the Rua famlly.
And Rot·ky, out or work :-ance a Christmas lay off, said
he "-Ill begin work wt Holmes and Narver in Oran1e on
l"eb.6
Six Judge~ Named
To County Benches
They do not believe the com·
m isslon-approved El R ad·
dresses thot Issue. The council
usk.i Utlt lhe project be held up
until a ibJution to thut problem
is included in the developer's
planis.
The council also expressed
concem ebout the amount or
arading to be done on the project
Officials ut Oanu Point
Harbor said a badly de·
com poa;ed body or a
woman wu found this
mornini in the ocean
about a hair-mile off
Laguna Beach's Victoria
Beach.
Sheriffs Deputy Robert
F. Thoma."i said the body
v. as d1scoven•d by the
cr1.1w ur u &Jr1vute ves!Jel.
No 1dentific1&l1on was
available.
• • •
SADDl,EBACK VAl,LEY real el>lale salesmen better
wutrh out 1-;1 Toro lhgh Schools Dino Vakoulis is looking
ot real l'Statt· us his futun· career
AlthouKh h<.''s only u sophomore, he's already gaining
a reputution as a "bu per suh:sman."
ror the past two years, he has won the grand prizes ID
the school's fund raising dnves. This year, he turned
In Sl ,050 from the candy sale and won a tnp lo the Super
Bowl La..,t year, he won a mo-ped by sellina 631 dance
marathon tickets.
But he had already proven his sales skills before he
got to the high school. As a Little Leaguer. he won an
aluminum bat and a ten-speed bike by selling pancake
break rast ticket!!.
A reporter from tho i.chool 's newspaper. Ole, asked
how he sold so much or the candy "Well," replied
\'akoulls, "I showt-d the people the boxes bec~use they
v. ere prl'tty baJ: and I gave them free samples. This made
at hard for them to refuse."
He added. "l\lso, I never lel the customer say
anything."
His efforts have· helped the Associated Student Body
raise from $16,000 to $17,000 toward the $90,000 they need to
build bleachers on campus.
• * *
SAFETY, as well as sales, interests al least one
motorcycle manurocturer
The entire corporate office s taff or Triumph
Motorcycles of America, based an Placentia, is enrolling in
Saddlcbnck College's basic motorcycle rider sufety course.
Jack Hawthorne, the farm's president and a Sad
dleback Valley resident who has already completed both
the basic and advanced courses, said he wants to expat'ld
his employees' understand an& or the safe handllnC of
motorcycles.
He Hid employees who participate an the CO\lr"Se wUl
gei bonus checks In their pay envelopes as well as lhe col·
lege credit and operator's licenses that normally <:ome
with the course.
er t 5 t ree years, almost 2.000 ridert have
ti21i!ett-ai colle1e'1 basic ... abaa..d
<'ourses for motorcyclists.
Six judges, two of them
women, were appoanted Thurs·
day to Gov. Edmund G. Brown
Jr. to serve in Orange County.
/\mong them is ;udge Robert
C. Todd, 49, of Newport Beach,
who has been elevated from the
Harbor Municipal Court to the
Superior Court bench, replacing
Judge Wilham Speirs, who re·
l!red
F ro• PageAJ
SNOW ...
lowest since records were first
kept there in 1870
Creeks und rl\ers ltrl' already
over their banks or near Oood
~lage today in North Carolina,
Virginia, Pennsylvania. l\ew
Jersey, West Viq~nia. Rhode
l<1land, Vermont and
M assachusclls.
The flooding appeured most
widesprcwd in West V1rgm1a,
"here water isolated th rel'
towns and forced at li•ust 3.000
lll'Oph• to flt•e
T h l' L 1 t t l e K a n a w h u h as
cuuscd n1JJor flooding at
Crt•ston and Olenv11le. parts of
\\hleh \\ere Ill frt•t undcr water.
Tht• TuJ.( Fork overflowed in
MingQ County. where disastrous
flooJ~ last AJJrll almost swept
<;fV«.>ral tiny minin~ towns out of
lht• hollows On Thursday, the
home11 from which some
fumllles fled were government
tr'ailcrs !upplled when their
hou11es were destroyed last
sprang
Pennsyl\'un1a reported tlood-
inJ alorw. the ~tonongahcla
Rl\ier an the stluthwestcrn cor-
ner. and along the Susquehanna
lo the east, whkh rose to the
first ·Story le\'el in flood·prone
Wilkes Barrl' and further south
Leukelfil·a. Clai·ms forced evacuutaons from rural homes an L:rnca~ter County.
Rhodes noted that at least
150,000 Ohio homes had been
S A B 6 without heat most of Thursday· anta na Oy' •"They .ire helpless victims oC
somcLhinit they have no control
over.••
A 6·ycar-old Santµ ,Ana
ukemia victim died early lo·
ay after losing his battle
uin11t leukemia and chicken
pox.
Tony Enriquez, son or Jose
and Maria Enriquez, died at 6:30
a . m ... at Children's Hospital of
Orange County.
Hospital ofOclals had Issued
n appeal for adult b1o0d donors
ftho have had eltbe.r 1hln1le1 or ~hlcken pox withtn the past
tribnth In an effort lo Kitp save f e yowipter's life.
The boy's white blood cells,
hlch already were not function.
I well because of the
ukemla, were attacked further
the normally-mild childhood
seaae of chicken pox.
Tony's leukemia h ad been In
ml11ton the paat four yeal'S,
1pltal otflclall said, but h&
a dmltt d to t he bospltal
nday wtth compUcntlons as a
ult of tho chicken ~x.
Hospital 1Ulhorltles said they
d recelvtd more than 40 calla
om poesible blood Cfonora
Those still wishing to donate lie said his otricc was receiv·
may do so and the white blood in' 25 calls every five minutes,
ll l I ts d d f ht h "cries or mercy -they want ce P ate e nee e lo ig t e help and you can't "It to thtm." ch1cken pox will be frozen ror ~ use In the event a slmUor case More than 5,700 motorists had occurs l>een rescued from stranded
Spokesmen said the hospital .. vehicles along snow-blocked
hos equipment th t eparates Ohio hlihway1, and otr1c.lal1
white blood cells from the red said more than 2.000 remamed
<.'eJls, and the red cells are re-beyoJ1d reach. .
turned tot.he donor's system. Winds ausll!"a to 65 mpt\
T he white cella or those re· J;CUlpted •nowdnlts 15 feet hlah.
cently recovered from either
ahlnilu or chlcl<en pqx contain
antibodies to fight the dlte~ ,
spokesmen said.
p,.._P..,AJ
PIPELINE. •
· ·CoUmel Says
Citron ErTed
On Statement
Frances Munoi. ,7, of
Anaheim, previously u county
public defender. was 'appointed
to the Harbor Municipal Court to
replace Todd.
Jacquelyn Thomason, 46, of
Villa Park, nn attorney In
Anaheim, wus named to the Cen
tral Orange County Municipal
Court bench, a newly created
position
Appclnted to tbe West Oran&e
County Municipal Court to
replace the 1ato Judge Patrick
Mccrary ts Phillip E . Cox. 48, or
Los Alamitos, alreudy u
municlpalcourtcommiss1oner.
Michael Nauahton, 37, or Mis·
slon Viejo, a private attorney in
Tustin, will join the South
Orange County Municipal Court,
repluc1ni: Jud.ce Richard
llamaltun. "'ho v.as elevated lo
the Superior Court earht-r.
The North Orange County
~tunil·ipal Court bt•nch will gain
Arnold P . Mordkin, 40, or
~ewport Beach, 11 private at·
tornt•y in Fullerton. Jle replaces
Judge l.A.'Onard Gold"teln. who
v. as t•lc•vuh•d to the Superior
Court uarllt'r
Girl Crushed
IJyRockFam
lJuring Concert,
TOKYO CAP> -A crowd of
2,000 screaming rans stampeded
during a conct!rt of the British
rock band Rainbow In Sapporo
today. crushmg a 19-year·old
girl to death and injuring
se\'eral other people, police satd
They said the crowd rushed at
the band shortly .after the
popular Or1tish group, led by
Ritchie Black Moore. began
playing at the winter sports re·
11ort on the northern \sland ot
Hokkaido, ubout 600 miles north
or Tokyo. 1'hc concert. was part
of n lWO·Week tour Of Japan.
Poll<.'e identified the etrl killed
as Junl<o Kowahara<fa, i college
stud!!nt.
A county Harbor Putrol
boat v. us dliipatched lo the
scene
Fro• Page A l
FLU •••
po!.siblc epidemic m the wake of
lust "inter's abortive swine nu
\'al't:tnaUon campaign. But they
rc.•<•11m mendl'd that a vaccine
ai:<11nst the Jtussrnn strain be de·
\eloped for inclusion in any im·
mun1zatlon program next
.,ea son
Late in 1976. the governmettt
launched a large swine flu lq·
oculation campaign an anlicip._.
tion or an epidemic that nevet"
materiall:t.1.>d. The campaign wti
u bru plly c1&ncelcd art er a
stut1istlcol link was found
botween a nu vaccioe and a rart
t1.i1·11tytic dibc11se.
LIMITED QUANTITIES!
AUAttl
FAMOU~AU9".._.....•
lltAHDS
Mill
MONTICELLO
81C£LOW
BIGELOW
&RYEN
£VANS Bl.ACK
WALTERS
Al.EXAt«>ER SMITH
r.o.TQ'.LLO
BIGELOW
B£RVEN
VANGUARO
VNQIARD
B(RV[H
OUAUTY
L()t(l()N TERRACE
VARIATIONS
VARIATIONS
IN CONC£RT
COlOI
PURPLE
GOW
Oll.t.i.GE OQ.O WHl!l MIA.Tl
PAL[. PfACH MULTI
(l!VE GREEN
ClffER·RUST MUJ.TI
ANTIOOE 00.0
CAt.£0 WHITE
LIM£ GREEN
UW GRUN
llW> Bltl t.tll Tl
PALE YEilOW
TmutE
WOO. PLUSH
CUT LCXJ> NYLOH
NYLON FRIEZE PLUSH
• CO TA M A CAt 92627 • P 0
~
11NDEa THE MONTHLY TD'I\ recaidleS'I Of annu.!~ income?. a beneficiary could c:oUect a benefit cb ck fol' any
montb m which wa1ea amounted to 1/Uth or Jess of tho
annual exempt total and tie or she did not ~rform
aubstantlal services in aelt-employm nt;
Tho obJecUvo wu to take lnto account those :wt\(>
retired in mid-year or who COuld 1et an occaalonal job at &oOd ... , ...
From now on, the monthly eamln11 test can apply to
only the inttial year of retlrement. But lnten>reta.Uon pr
the rulinl bun 't bffn pinned down. •
Jf It appttea 1trlctly to 1'_ew benefic1artos ln tbeJr ti~t
year of ret.trement, the SoCiil SeCur1ty 1y1tem will H fr.
$200 million in 1978. ,
1
Baker
.h
1GLENN
• • 11111tr .....
Elmer Combl retiring u a tinatoo Beach HJ1b albleUe
Alnetor at the end ol the current
lcllool year and a replacement
·• expected to ~ cboSen in th
l88l' f utare.
Combs will move lnto the
~la11room, be aay1, to teacb
rafftc aaf ety and health.
Last spring he reilred from
..a1ketball coacb.lna i:lutlea.
He cited ever-expandlnl pro.
lem1 ln the pbyalcal educaUoa
'4H,~iJM>,'iR'N ln sports b1s
vacatinl tbo athleUc p.
Primarily. It ta the adn:nt ol
Title Ix; tbe Jaw which MYS
airla must have eqoal part.lcipa·
tlon and coastderatlon with boys
in apotti &Del PbYaical edueatlon.
Claues have become coeduca·
tlooal. Interachola1tlc bulret·
ball season hu been shortened
for tbe boys. And use of facilities
by boy1 and clrb bu beeome an
obstacle for team1 trying to workout.
14 01. roe, lt's time for a
ch ," Combe says ... I'm not
sure 1 ree ttb Tltle IX.
Tbey' • oPe overboard on cer-tain , such u the restruc-
tu rlng of P.E. to mate it
coeduc onal.
"For example, when we bad
just boys in the dass .. , they bad
five 1nhiutea lo dreea and be
ready fortym clus. But the girls
take 10 nrunatea, so we have to
wait that much lancer to 1et 10-
ln1.
... ,.....
?OWN FOR THE COUNT-New York's Glen
}ondrezick is pinned under Scott Wedman
md teammate Ray Williams in a struggle
or a loose ball at Madison Square Garden
Thursday night. A jump ball was ruled in
the NBA battle which was won by the
Knicks over Kansas City, 112·105.
ports in Brief
Navratilova Wins;
Borg ·Gets Scare
r..os ANGELES -Martina .vraWova and Greer Stevens
>red st.rai&bt victories Thura-
Y night to earn spots io
! semiftnals of a women'• ten·
> tougiament at lbe Sports
ena.
'iavratilova eliminated 15· ar-old Tracy Austin of RoUio1
Us, 6-3, 6-4 while Stevena'upset
rgioia Wade, 6-4, 7-5.
5ue Barker downed Zenda
ass, &o, 7·S while R.osle ca .. i.
tlastecl Marlana Slmloneacu.
:,3·8,M.
ln other matches Yvonne
·rmaak won b1 default over
anne Fromboltz, who 11 auf· ·m1 from the flu, and Marin
ru cer whipped Re1l11a
aralkoq, s.2, 6-3. rwo quarter ftnal matches are
beduled toailht wltb Barker
Tnknown Pro
.eadingSD
· :OJI Tourney
lacin1 Casals and Marlae
Kruaer meeting Yvonne
Vermaak.
eo. ...... a.u.
PHILADELPHIA -Jimmy
Connors scored an easy 6-1, 8-1
victory over Buater Mottram to
reacb the quarter flnala ot the
$225,000 U.S. Indoor pro tenni.
championship Thursday.
But aeeond·eeeded BJorn
Bora, had to wage an Intense
two-hour batUe before defeatlng
22·year-old Peter Flemlnc.
Borg IUUTO'Wly escaped· with a
U, 7..$, 8-1 victory after Flemtn1
11ned a double falilt ln the third a.am• ot the third •et. In other matcbes...t John
McEnroe upaet Manuel urantea,
7-6, e-2; Sandy Mayer topped
Vital G«'a1aiti1. 6-a, T-5; Raul
llamlrez defeated Keo l\olewaJJ. 8-4. 1-2; Brian Gott·
fried defeated WoJtet Fll>ak,
18·1, 1·S,i_.Eddte Dlbbs b1tat Harold D01CJIDOD. 8-1, a.a .ct
Rotcoe Tuner atop;ed Ille N~ .. 1. 8-7, 8-0 • .._••wr •• 1 .. e
NEW YORK -In the third
stop of IA lDdoOi track uuon
that hU him ~I the
Unlted StiteS. SttYe Scott of UC Inbie WW compete tn the mile
run ta ton!Ot'• MlllroH Gamet at Mad.lscn Sctuate'Gard • Scott'• top compeUtloa ijill
come from Dtclt.·Buerkl••
Fttbert BIJI. Wlllon Watswa.
Paul Cummina• ancS Mark Belle&'.~
BJ caAJG SBEFP °' .. ...,,... ... UC lrvtne buketball eoach
Tim Tift had hoped h1I team
could win at leut one aaioe this
week to have a chance at a berth
in the Pacific Coast Athletic N,.
eoclatioo p~fa ln Marcb.
But if the hteaten ecmUnne
to play like they dfd Tbunday
n11ht against vblUM Unlvenlty
of Paclllc·that hope will be just
a dream.·
Paclfte had little trouble In rolllne to a 70-58 victory over the
Anteaters -controllfnc tbe
1ame from start to flnllh -
thank• mainly lo some 1lulln1
free throw lhootinl aad UCl'•
mediocre play In the openln&
half.
Coach Stan llorriJon'1 Ttcera
hlt 16 of 18 free throws In the
fint half and 22 of 2' for the
game. UCI, metnwhJle, went to
the charity stripe just twice.
Pacific completely abut off
UCI iDBlde and the Anteaters
were foreect to c:ut away -.ntb
below averaee results. Only In
tbo lat• ataces of Ute came -
wben Paclftc had a btc lead -
did UCI start lo warm up. And.
Ulen it was too late.
The Tlcen Jumped to a 10:3
lead, had a I0-18 advantace lato
lo tbe fint h.U and a 18-26
mar11n·at the half. Then. after poppiq ID 11.x ot lts first seven
abot1 after the lnterml1ilon,
Paclllc b&Ued ahead. a~. and
it waa a yawner the rest ol the way. •
• UCl'• Wayne Smltb, ,.bo
scored tl.points in the lm three
aames ana bacl bit 70 pereent ol
his ahots In that •pan, wu far
off that form -eaiillna 9 Of 21
attemptJ ('2.9 percent). Still be
fiolabed with 20 pOints for 1amo
honors.
Both teams bad 18 turnovers,
but UCL cave it up 13 times ln
tbe opeidn& ball when lt reall,y
eoun~ Paclflc fired tn 48 percent ot
lta abots (24 of 52) while UCI
· cottnectect~ 28 of &3 (44 per·
cent). • Irvine. now 0-5 1n PCAA play,
host.I San Jose State Saturday
• nlaht.
,__Olt Of)VC...._ .. """' fl.,,. •'Y• t t t 4 SMIOI• 9 l S Jt car....-' ... ,. ~ ' ... ' CllltftoM 1 4 t 1t Ortlt • 1 • :t ._! ,_.., t I 4 • ~ S t ).JV
'c.-11111 .... 1 ti c..r-.. ti! •
..._-. 2 I t • JW'll At ,,.. e ~!,,#ltt ........ , •• ,
McGuire 1" I • ~ t O I ' T.. s 2' ll I 7t T~ • S If.
.H•tfUIM hdflclWI.
* * * KAA~Nt~• WC. Pl"N .s • SQ
41atSM .. , .. -lfln»l
21*6a7t
1 ' -154 • t ' ,,, -
• 6 --'Tllllllae'll tcefW left DI-a. ... CM~ INlertonl .. Oll1tnen....e.idl}12.UC$ellt9.__dS I ,,.........,..,. .......... .., J11Wt1e,_,udm.• .......,.. ..... c.t 1t• a.. ... , •• Ct! ..... ("'1f""'8) ,_ ~ec "*'fie
UC .. "._..,_. al left Olt!fO St.It• .. ,..HMsc.teet UC lfllllll
Fullerton
Falls, 94-69
To Aztecs
SAN DIEGO (AP) -ltlm
Goeti ooNd 31 polota to lead··
San DI o State to a tc• tory over Cil state <FWlertOn)
Thursday nl1ht ,ln a Pacific
Coaat Athletic A11odatlon
baskettiall came.
The Titans auflerecl thel.r tint
PCM Joa ln five sames while
the Alt Improved &heir CIOll•
ferell(:t ~td to a.a.
S niDie&e> State Dtftr trillect fn acorlnr the easier-than·• expected vlc:torY. The Attecl Jed
at h1UUrne, 53-27, and the 'JUifts
never thre aeriOUslt after
th• lritermlaton.
Ste•e aJov\c adacid 18
for San D1e10 State. ~oel
Kr mer bad 12 potnta illli.41 re.
bounds and Ure Docl4 12 po
and nln rebounds for tbe
~ztea, who are now 10-'l lor the
uon.
Keith Anderson and Mite
Nilct led the Titans, who are
'now 13-4, wit p polnts apleee.
Greg B Cb u held to Just 11 pointa and gr bbed Oftly two re-
bounds for J:WUertoa. Bunch
brou1ht a 16.C> sCorlnJ avera1e
and an 8.3 reb0und1D1 averqe into the same.