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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-01-30 - Orange Coast PilotI · • Highest Co~ty Propel!ty Taxes MONDAY AFTERNOON, January 30, 1978 YOL. 11, NO .. J HCTtQtlS, 24 ~AOH i.a1NC CHORE )UDE E4SIER PacTel Pay;s '.fop OCTax Pacific Telephone Company hns dislodged the Irvine Com· pany as Oranae County's number one property taxpayer. nccord1ng to fieurc11 released to· dny by tax collector-trea11urer Robert Citron. While climbing Into the number one slot among county taxpayers, Paciric became the first taxpayer to incur a $14 mllllon liability. Citron said. The previous hlih was paid last year by the Irvine Com· pany, a 12.7 million payment. But ln l9'71·7 Pacific's tax bill increased 12.7 percent to reach . $14.l illlon whll the Irvine Co~p ll)''S 2.1' cent gain in tax liability bOosted its tax bill to Sl3 million. Citron'a rankinc of the coun· ty'a top ten taxpayers put the Southern California Edison CoD1p&ny in third place with a $10.9 mllllon property tax bill. Next in line were th~ UDlvn Oil Company ($4.2 mill ion>, Rockwell International ($4.l million) and General Telephone Company <$3.7 mllUon.} Ranked In tho number seven a pot was Standard ou Comf any wllh o 1~·7 tn liability o $3.5 rntllion Citron'• llstin 11howed that the Southern CaUmla Gas Com· p ny'a $2.8 million tax bill <SteTAXF~, Pag A2> . ~ound in ~anada PETERHEAD. Scotland <AP) -A 29·~·ear-o1d man who admitted assaulting a man but denied bit- ing a dog has been sentenced lo 60 days in jail and fined S4 .75. Petc•r Beagrie admitted in 5hcriff's court that he assaulted the rather of Caroline Walker. 15. But he denied he bit Laddie, the dog, as charged by Miss Walker. • Bcagrie was sentenced tc160 days for assaulting the man and fine~ for biting the dog. • were unable to locate the truck. The womnn delicribed her ab-• ..4uctor as being about 30 to 35 years old and weichlng about 250 pounds. POlice said sbe wu una· bl• to aupply further information at. tho tlme ol the re1>0rt. ut; 4 Inches Of Snow Expected By Th A lated Preu Scattucd can; and trucks ht· ter snowy highway1. Runaway barge clog rivers, hitting dams and endanaicrln& other water traffic. And many towns remain unwilling fortresses a1ainst the out.aide world behind enormous snowbanks. Still, Ohio' la diHing out of the blizzard that paralyzed the state for !our days and killed at least 30 people. "Thine• are celling bettet" every day," Denni• Kwaltkowski. head of the Federal Disaster As· sistance Administration's snow removal project In Ohio, said Sm'\• day. Ohio expected 1 to 4 inches ot fresh snow today, with tem .. peratures no higher than the 3>5, and oflicaalit expressed hope tbat it would not create new cleanup problems. Other tnt also struuled to recover: trotn the devastating 1torm: .. A"W1'"4Mtt MUSKINGUM RIVER HAS OVERFLOWED ITS BANK Jim McDonald Chops Ice, Brother Jim Paddles Fro• P age Al SNOW R EMO VA L. • • showshocs The roofs on at least fi,·c buildings ha\"C collapsed. MH·h1 gan State Uni ve rsity plannt.•cl to n•opcn today alter two da vs of l'.mtclcd classes last \\ t.•t.•k • • * .. -llllnol' oCftccs, schools and rouds wt•1c opened today. O'Hare Airport was open but running ht·htnd schedule. * * .. ~orthwcstcrn Indiana re- 1·1•1, ~·d :.! to t inchus of new snow Sunday. SC"altcn•d power out· ;q.~t·s \H'fl' reported .... In Kentucky, 208 National c; u .ird1>1nt•lf who had helped with 11':-.cue operations wcr~ cleac· ti\ att'd. Schools were to remain t lm.l'd, and tht• forecast was for more snow today. The biggest probh•m was on the Ohlo River, Baja Search May Enil,for Kay~ Vi ctim By The As"IOClated Press The Coast Guard. search for a North Carolina man 1nlsslne ln a,; kayak that caf>s1zed off the Baja C'ahforma coast wilt likely end toni~ht when Mexinn aovera: ment clearance for the U.S. !>ea rchcrs expires, a Coast Guard orticial said. The mlsslnR man, 18·year-old David Sch\\-1mmcr of Raleigh, fell into rough seas that hit a stu· dent kayak expedit.ioA Tuesday. Two other students were found drownt'd Saturday otf the west coast of Carmen laland, !lbout 750 miles southeast of San Diego A Coast Guard helicopter s~archcd more than 400 .miles alon~ the cast coa&t. ol Baja California on Sunday but aaw no signs or the mtsaina, student from · Duke Uni\'~ntly· in Durham, N.C., said Lt. Crndr. Don Hagler. The drowned 111tu9Jnll were idcntined as Tim Breiilegam, 21, ot Kutrtown, Pa.. and Brenda He rman. 19. of Cincinnati, Ohio. Breidegam was a student al Moravian CollC!'ge In Bethlehem, Pa. and Ml s Herman attended Bennington College In Vermont. Schwimmer, Breldea•m and Misa Herman were amon1 nine students taking a three-week sea kayaklnt course ottered by the C\outhwe11t Outward Bound school. The group left Tuesday rrom a polat north of Loreto, Mexico. where 100 wayward cool and ~rain baues had broken free · from moorings bt'tween Pills· burgh and Louisville -some had slammed into dams. *** In Vlr1LDla, where snow and driving winds preceded weekend flooding in almost all sections. the forecast was for more snow tonight and Tuesday. .... Because Ohio was declared a federal emergency area, 'he federal govemQ\ent will pay for 65 percent or snow removal work contracted before m1dnl1ht Tuesday. Crews from the Army Corps of Engineers, the Army Re1ervc and the Ohio National Guard - more than 3.800 men in all were working today to clear roads and highways of drift MS high as 15 _feet. Miserable road conditions fa ile d to deter weekend sightseers, and their stuck veJiicles added to the chno:. In areas like Toledo, where the Highway Patrol was forced to close major roads. Similar havoc led police in sc\.'eral rural communities to threaten arrest of travelers not on emergenc)' trips. Some emergency runs could be made only by air. Army and National Guard helicopters are flying mercy missions in Ohio in weather that •normally would keep them grounded Court Nixes Jilt Damage PORTLAND, Malne CAP) The Mame ~uprer11e Court has ruled that the parents of a woutd-be bride cannot collect damages from the tnan whO they contend Jiited their daughter at the altar. The court ruled unanimously in the case of Kathy Waddell of Augusta. who· was to have been married In August 1974 to Robert Briggs of Augusta. Brina did not show up for the wedding and Miss Waddell's parents sued him for $10,000 for willrul breach or promise. They later 1.mended thtir, complaint .. to Charge that Briggs malicious· ly and intentionally caused them mental •ufferine. NEW WESTMINSTER, Drttlsh Columbia (AP) -Jn· mates holding seven women and three men hostage today at the Brltlsh Columbia Penitentiary met faee-to·fac:e wlth Royal C•naclian Moun ted Polic:e "' negotiatou and demanded transrers to another prison. U'he .meeting late Sunday came more than 30 boun after the Incident began. Earlier bar1aininC was ou th tetepbone. · · r tl'iink some of them are anxious to bnnf thll down as . oon as po sible, • said Inspector Roy Pickell after the 4.S·minute !>cssion with the inmates . .;No reason wa~ gaven for the tnnafu dem nd, but one ob- 11erver ..said contin)Jill tanTe&t at the 100-year-old prison stems Crom inmate anger at conditions there. This was the 13th S\.ICh incl· dent al the prison since 1963. gtv. mg the .. B.C. Pen'' the repula· tlon of btlna the worst in Canada "and perhaps tll of North America," said Jtm Spears, a reporter for the Vancouver Province who bai; been involved in negotiations in previous con· Cron ta lions. ThlrLeen hosta1e1 wtre taken originally -two inmates, a mate visitor and 10 women vis· !tors. Three women have been released ln exchange for food, cigarettes, coffee and drug!'. The prisoners claimed to be armed with a pistol and two ~renades, but officials could not confirm this. A prlSOI\ auard, Roy Yasuda, 32, was gtabbed in the throat. when the fiostages were taken about 10 a .m. Saturday and was reported in serious but alable condition. One or the five prisoners, An· drew Bruce, 28, was apparently shghtly wounded in the leg by a ricocheting bullet. Bruce ls a convicted murderer who was ln· vol ved in two qthn hostage· taklnas. " Total Power Asked in Talks Diane Kenton hugs N.Y. Film Critic's award as best actress for "Annie Hall" Sunday night. She grew up in Santa Ana and played Maria in "Sound of Music" while at OCC. Iler parents live in Col'ona del Mor. ·A eovernment state· m6nt aaid Defense Minister Ezer Weliman and his necollat\ng team wlll leave for Cairo Tue»· day, where Wetzma.n will face hll E1yptinn coun· terp.rt, Mohamed Abdel G)\PnY. Gama sy. T)le military talks ·re· cessed Jan. 13 in deadlock ov(r the future Q.f the 20 J e w11b sett I em en ts established by Israel in tt'le Sinal Desert. Ein ency Stated MANAGUA, Nicara1ua <AR) -F-aced with a deepening political and economic crisia, President Anastasio Somoza threatened to begin enforcipi: the atate of emergency declared during the earthquake of 1972 and use It to end a nationwide strike which was in Its seventh day Sunday. HB Plant's Union ·studies 'May' Vote Leaders ot a machinists union at McDonnell Douglas Astronautie5 Company in Hunt· lntton Beach today called for an immed.hate meettnt after the company's latest contract offer was rejected Saturday. Ted Neima, spokesman for the International Auociation or Machinists (IAM), said union leaders were to meet either to- day or Tuflday to analyze the weekend vote and to develop a successful proposal. Union members rejected the Douglas otter In votes taken at four locaUons in LQs Angeles and al Vandenberg Air Force Base, Palmdale and Cape Canaveral, Fla .. McDonnell Dougla~ reportedly orrered a 5.6 percent wage in· crease in the first year and three percent increues in the second Tanker to Pay . .. , ~: RABAT, Malla (A~) -Black auerrilla leaders, pledglng to push their war to end while rule in Rhodesia, left litUe room for com promise as lbet .. t down to; day wltb AmeriCJJl and British envoys to discuss a plan to transrer .power to the black ma· • and third years ot a three.year contract. BRASILIA. Brazll (AP) Owners of the Llberlan ret- htered oil tanker Brazilian Marina have paid fines totalling • about $131,000 and have aa~ to pay for dama1e resulting - from a major oil spill ore t.be co of Brwl 20 daya a10. It ts i esllmatc:id that damaces could • jority. · Andrew Young, the U.S. Am· bassador lo the United Nations, and British Foreian Secretary David Owen met Joshua Nkomo and Robert Mugabe amid in· dlcalions the blaclt leaders will reject the latest British· American plan for a peaceful. political settlement. Nkomo and Mugabe, joint leaders or the Patriotic Front battling the wblte-mlnorlty Rhodesian eovemment, went in· to the talks after aervins pubUc notice their only aim ls to secure n total transfer of power from Prime Minister Ian Smith'• re- glme. lmprov d health ure and penaiOfl tieneflta also were in· eluded. ,l'he proposal was turned run as hi&h u $500,000. at th crest of your FM radio dial 'F••••rfr IC APX et;me on up to Sound Wave 108 and en· San Clemente. All to the accompaniment JOY the best of the bright, beautiful n)~'rc of the refreshing aounds of the sea! '"V 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 1n Orange County, K·WAVE watl'I 28,500 watts from New space·age equipment enhances the 1tstenab1hty and extends the effective ra~o of the station. Help us test the new coverage. Y..- tionnaire because that will help u1 better serve you.) Entries must be postmark d before February 1, l978. Winners will ibe broadcast February 14ttl, Vatentine's Day. "V VOL. 71, NO. 30, 3 SECTIONS, 2 PacTel Big Sa"et-lfnder .Jarvis Bill • • 8)' GARY GRANVILLE OI -o.I IJ l"UtC IUll Orange County's top 10 prop· erty taxp_av.c rs collectively would have saved $40.6 million this year ar the proposed Jarvis· Gann tax reform initiative was ln etrect. accordin£ to Tax Colle ctor-Treasurer Robert Catron. , Top tax dollar saver IC the in· * * * itiatlve, calling for a lid on the amount the asse-ssor can value real property, would have ~en the collftty's number one tax· payer, Pacific Telephone Com·, pany. According to Citron's Clgures, Pac1rac's 1977·78 tax bill is $14.l mallion, Under provision11 or Jarrn •. Gann, the company's tax bill * * * Chart Indicates Tax ·Differences Chart indicates tax savings that would have occurred for Orunge County's top 10 property taxpayers had the Jarvis-Gunn Initiative been In effect this year. ACTUAL UNDER CO'.WPANV tt77·78TAX .IARVls.GANN TRIM , Pacific Telephone $14.1 million $4 .4 million $9.6 million Irvine Co. $13 million $4.7 million S8.3 million • S<>ulhcm California Edison Co. SJ0.9 millton l 'nion 011 Co $4.2 million Rot'k well lnkrn S-i.1 m1Ilton General Telephone $3.7 million Stundard 011 $3.5 million ~outhl•m Cahfomaa Gas Co $2.8 milhon Disneyland $2.8 million ~l c Donnell Douglas S2 3 m ti hon * * * S4.2 mllhon $6.7 million $992.000 $3.2 mtlhon Sl.6 million S2.5 million Sl.4 million S2 3 milhon Sl 2 m1lhon $2,3 million $881.000 S89I.000 S788,000 * S2 m1lhon Sl.9 milhon Sl.5 million * * :Pacific Telephone Top OC Taxpayer r Pat'1fic Telephone Company has d1slodj.(t'd the Irvine Com· pany as Orungc County's number one property laxpuyer, accordm~ to figures released to· day by tax t'Ollc<:tor·treasurer Robert Citron While climb1n1 into the number one slot among county taxpayers, P;&ciCic became the ftrst taxpayer to incur a Sl4 million liabalily, Citron said. The previou~ high was paid last year by the In·ine COm· pany. a $12.7 million payment. But in 1977·78 Paciflc'a tax bill increased 12.7 percent to reach $14.1 million . while the Irvine Company's 2.7 percent 1ain tn tax liabihty boosted Its tax bill to $13 million. Citron's ranking of the coun· ty's top ten taxpayers put the Southern California Edison Company In third place with a $10.9 million property tax bill. Next in hnc were the Union Oil Company <SL2 m1llion1. Rock\\Cll International ($4,1 m1l11on > llnd General Telephone Company ($3 7 million. l Ranked in the number !leven spot was Standard Oil Company with a 1977·78 tax liability of $3 5 million. Citron's listing showed that the Southern California Gas Com pony's $2.8 mill on tax bill earned it eighth plac~ on the top ten list while Walt D1sMy Productions and Disneyland fcll into the ninth sppt wUh a t x Just $43,000 less than the company. In tenth spot among the coun· ty's top property _taxpayers was the M cDonnelM>Ouglas Corpora· tton whose taxes figured at $2.3 million. Collectively, the top ten will pay $61.8 million in property taxes. That is $4.5 mllllon more thall the some ten companies paid in 1976-77. would have been $4.4 million, or S9 6 million less. Citron said. The Jarv1s ·G1rnn initiative which would place a one percent or full market \'alue limitation on "hut u county as~~ssor may \'&lue real property, ~ill be on the June ballot No matter \\h;.it Cahforma·~ 'oter~ dec1dl', the tnittatl\'e \\ill not affect 1971·7K t'ounty tax ball Citron' 1..·omp ri on w simpl~ a device intcna d lo how th Impact of J rvts·G•rin had it been in effect lhls jear. The county's number .two tax· payer. the lrttin Company would have a tax liabahly or .7 mallton rather than lh $13 million bill It now holds. Oranjle Countv's lh1rd r nked Total Prohibition? SateUite Paet A,Wlt~ SOVIET SATELLITE FOUND NEAR ARCTJC OUTPOST Official Views Debris From NuclHr-powered Craft Searchei-s llisco~e~ Sittellite Wreckage BAKER LAKE. Northwest Territories <AP> A Canadian- Amerkan search team strug· gled through wa1st-h111:h snow to the edge of a cratl•r nearly 10 fret u<"ross in thl' ice on the Thelon River and found wreckage from a runaway Sov iet nuclN1r satellite. Lt. Col. Donald Davidson of the Conudlun Armed 1-'orccs told a news conference today that tubing and a perforated metal canister were found 1>rotruding from the Ice Sunday. ·tound e1glit mile:; northeast or the landing str'lp at Warden's Grove. u weather outpost In the Dubawnt Lake area l,000 miles :10rlh of the North Dakota boracr. Duvidi;on said the two men made a sled trip up the Thelon River Saturday and encountered the crater on their return. tore' Paul furda. leader or u five- mnn' \J.S scientific crew, said tta 'C ID tCr \\US "sort of like 8 c~lln\l r thal got !>mashed'" wtille the ~ubinc "looks like struct.µral tubing " W tuMill Def.eme: ·'Som hang has really gone thr u h that tee at a high llpecd. ' said Davidson. "This is all that's left sticking out, or maybe separate pieces. We don 'l know. We didn't pull it apart." \ A Chinook helicopter took the 13·member orcw from Balter Lake to the crater 180 miles to the southwest after tt was found by two of the six members of a Canadlan·American team win- tering in the area on a wildlife iturvey tor the Northwest Ter· r1tories ,government. Th ac ri trorn the nuclear· pow red Co m .954 satellite that f~ll from orbit Tuesday was . Fetus Not Human . Griffin Bell the request of Rep. Joshua Eilberg. D-Pa., that th Marston ouster be ~Jped•ted. He said he did not know at the time th;at Ellber1 was under in- vestigation by Marston's office, although he had be told th.at the con rt-m n's name had bt"en 1ralsed an connection with an investl Uoo. WASHINGTON (AP) ~The government reported today that he nation had a record dcflclt or $20.7 billion an its world trade last year as the cost of imp0rtcll oil from abroad drained $42.1 billion from American pocket· books and banks, a $lO,b1lli0o in-. cw m ye r earlier 4 - The trud d flclt ru1 more thun four µmes the worst ptt· viou a ficit or scu billion in 1972. . Cntrtcr f lals bl m d the <lefic1t m rily on a 20 pcr~enl ln· c:r s :in rnporls o! ostl)' forclgn oil. The totnl on fo1pott bill uf $42.l bllllon compared i\h $32.2 billion in 1976. The nation lmported n total of arly 3.2 blllion b rrel in 1978. Imports of all 'Oods increased much faster during 19tt thane¥• pd,rt • atlhou h both increased, lmportil rose 22 percent to ' lotaJ or $147 billion. whllo ex· port& odvanced 5 pcr(ent to Slg9 billion. There was a slieht 'mprovc- ment. ho\\ever, in the nation's ·trade picture In December. The CommC!!'CC Depoartment sila the trade deficit duriDg the month was $2 029 .billion, down from Nov mb r' deficit of $2.0a2 billion. Oil Imports in December • declined to $3.219 billion, down from $3 billion in Nov mber. Trade Ni ed - • \% OAIL Y PILOT LOS ANGELES <AP> -The body or a woman who had been beaten to death was found today 10 a Hollywood apartment tfevcral b~ks from where two victims ofThe Hillside stran1ler were last seen alive, police said. The woman, between 35 and 40 years old, was found on the bathroom floor by the apart- ment manager and tentatively identified as a resident of the bulldinc on La Mirada Avenue, said police Lt. James Troutman. However, police would not re- lease the name until they were sure Police Cmdr. Wilham Booth told reporters she had been bound and beaten with a blunt jnstrument. ··we do not believe this has u n y connection with the strangulation deaths being tn· v es ti gatcd by the Hillside Strangler Task Force," Booth said The ta!-.k force has been called off the case and the case been assigned instead to the Police Department's Hollywood I>1v1s1on. "She's a little old lo fit the pat- tern of the strangler," said police Lt Dan Cooke. Most of the 12 Hillside Strangler victims had been in their teens or early 20s. The apartment is three miles Crom the Tamarind Apartments where victim Kim- berly Diane Martin answered a prostitution call Dec 13. Her body was found next morning on a hillside o\'crlookang downtown Los Angeles. Miss Martin i1 the last known victim of the :-tranglcr. The Tamarind Apartments Jre at'ross the street from the Sct<.'ntoloi:y Celebrity Center "here Jane Evelyn King, an .1spiring actress-model, was last '.'Cen alive ~O\'. 9 Her body was found 111 shrubs along a freeway onramp Al least one of the 12 strangler \Jct1ms, Jill Barcomb, had been hPaten in the course of her :-;trangulalton death, coroner's mvcsligators have said. lier body was found Nov. 10 In Franklyn Canyon off Mulholland I> rive in Wesl Los Aneeles. Diane Keaton hugs N.Y. FAHm Critic's award as beat actrcs!I . .ft>r ••Annie Hall" Sunday night. She grew up in Santa Ana and played· Mnria in "Sound of Music .. while at OCC. Iler. p rents liv in Corona dcl Mar. Owners Sought For New Snow· By n Ati latt-d Pr.u Scattered e and trucks lit· ter snowy highways. Runaway baraea clos Hv l'lt blttina dam and eridMr: rin1 other water traffic. And many towns remaln unwuunc fortresses against the outalde. world behind enormoui anowbanks. Still. Ohio ls dltging out of tho bliizard that paralyzed lbe state • lbr four days and killed at lea.st. 30 people. ~ '•Thin11 are 1ettlng better every day," Denn.isKwailkowskl, head of Ute Federal Disaster M· sistance Administration'• snow removal project ln Ohio, saldSim- da)'. · Ohio expected 1 to 4 Inches bf fresh snow today, wilh l~m. peratures no hlcher than th• 203. and officials expressed hope that it would not creat.e new cleanup problems. Other states also stni11Jed to recover from the devaatattna storm: .. ••lit weekend noocdng in almost all section • the for.:cast was fi more anow tonl t Tueado,y_ * •1* In ~ oi lcY. National Guardsmen who had helped with rescue operalion were deac- tivated. Schools were te remain closed, and the fo.rec:ast was for more snow today. The blaeest problem was on the Ohio River, where 100 wayward coal and grain bafjtes had broken free from moorings betw en Pitts- burgh and Louisville -some had slammed into darns. Because Ohio was declared a federal emeraency area, the federal iovemment wlll pay for 65 percent ol snow removal work contracted before midnight. Tuesday.. • Provo, Utah, detectives. Dave Adamson ('>'-ithout coat) and Bud Gillman check old clocks found along with 500 antiques in the Provo home of rape and burglary suspect Gerry Curtis Branagan who was arrested in Newport Beach. Newport detectives want anyone who has lost antiques in a burglary in the past 18 months to call them at 644-3765 or 644-3763 to see if the items can be identified. -In Mlchl1an, where 19 died and 15,000 travelers were stranded, many roads a.re still under 12-foot drift.. In.the Lans- ing area, aome 1hertfr•1 deputies made their rounds on showshoes. The roofs on at leqt five buUdines have collapsed. Michigan State University planned to reopen today after two days of canceled classes last week Union Calls Me~tingon Dougltu Pact Leaders or a machlnlsta \D\~ a t M c D o n n e 11 P o u g l a.s Astronautics Company In Hunt- ington Beach today called tor a,n immediate meeting after the co1pvany's latest contract orrer Seal Beach Land .Sold was rejected Saturdny. • , Ted Nelma, spokesman ror the International Association of M achinlsts HAM), said unlon leaders were to meet eitt)er to- day or Tuesday to analyze weekend vote and to develop successful proposal. Lots Average 885,000 Each in Auction ... * * -Illinois omces, schools and roads were opened today. O'Hare Airport was open but running behind schedule. Bidding was spirited -and expensive -Sunday as 23 buyers paid an average of $85,000 for 35 residential Jots t'arved out at the old city yard In Seal Beach. The bids, ranging from $80,000 to $90,000, surprised many ob- servers. City Manager Dennis Courtemarche s19id clly officials had expected to realize only about $1.5 million from the sale, but buyers shelled out $2,973,000 for the lota. They are louted 1ust three blocks from the beach and two blocks from the Long Beach Arena. Pendleton Opposed As· Oil Terminal ByTheAs1oclated Press The Navy says there Is no way Camp Pendleton will be used as a site for a mammoth liqulfied natural gas terminal. It was one or five sjtes proposed by the California Coastal Commission. Navy officials told the com- mission Friday that such a terminal would be "incompati ble with the mission of Camp Pendleton" in training Marines for amphibious landings. The coastal commission has identified the sprawling Marine base 25 miles north or San Dleeo as one or the sites where tankers could otnoad the super-cooled ea1 Into storage tanks. On Tuesday, the starr will pre- sent the commission its order of preference for the proposed terminal sites. The Public Utilities Com- mission gets the ~(:~astal ag - cy's researdt report.S Ma>: 31 and will make the final declSlon on where the Jiqulfied natural gas terminal will be located. Baja Search May End/or Kayak Victim By '!be Auocla~ Pre11 The' Coast Guard 1earc}) for a North CaroU)\a man missing ln a kayak that capsized ofr Uie Bl,Ja Calilomia coast will Jlkety end tonieht when Mexican .govern- ment clearan~e for the U.S. searchers expires. & Cont Guard official said. Commission spokesman Pat Weinstein admitted the Pen- tagon bas never been contacted about use of the baie aa a terminal site. He said it was as sumed there would be a "major problem" in acquiring access to the land. Israel, Egypt Talks Resume JERt:SALEM CAP) - Israel-Egyptian military talks aimed at working out a formula ror an Israeli pullout from the Sinai Peninsula will resume Tuesday night }n Cairo, Israel announcea today. A government state· ment said Defense Minister Ezer Welzma'h and his neg0Uatln1 team will leave for Cairo Tues- day, where Weizman will race hls Egyptian coun- terpart, Mohamed Abdel Ghany Gamassy. The military talks re· cessed Jan. 13 in deadlock over the future Qf the 20 Jewish settlements established by Israel Jn the Sinai Desert. F,...Page.41 DEFENSE ••• The 3.5-acre site, formerly the c1ty public works yard, ls near Pacific Coast Highway and Marina Drive. The cily has re· located its public works yard. About 700 bidders attended the auction held in a tent pitched near the Seal Beach City Pier. Courtemai:che said the city could have sold the land as one parcel but decided to subdivide it into 36 by 86-foot lots to max- imize profits. The funds from the land sale will be placed into city reserve and a building depreciation ac- count, Courtemarche said. The city wUl pay about $400,000 for streets and other public works improvements beCore the sinrilc family houses are bullt, he added. The city will also pay a report- ed $24,000 plus a percentage to Kennedy-Wilson Auctioneers of El Segundo who conducted the sale Sunday. *** -Northwestern Indiana re- ceived 2 to 4 inches of new snow Sunday. Scattered power out- ages were reported. *** In Vlr1tnla, where snow and drivin~ winds pre.ceded Fro111 Page AJ JARVIS ••. said he based hls compari69.l\ on the current full market v•fue' as determined by county asseuor Bradley Jacobs apd then placea the one percent tax rate pro- vlsion of Jarvis-Gann on i'Uiat c\arrent market value. e emphasized that ht.a ur were based on intor:wia-Uon gath red from tax bills ae_P.t the county's top 10 taxpayen, Union members rejected the Douglas o!rer In votes taken at four locaUons in Los Angeles and at Vandenberg Air Force Base, Palmdale and Cape Canaveral, Fla McDonnell Douglas repor~ offered a S.6 percent wa1e1 ti· crease in the first year and ~ percent increases in the second and third years of a three·YC¥ contract. I.(. Improved health care ali:l pension benefits also were in- cluded. The proposal was turned.f down by a 51.6 percent margin .. Douglas spokesman Don Hansoo said that about 1,4$-p members of the IAM are employed at the Hunttnitoh Beach plant. Other IAM workers • who rejected the contract are employed at Torrance, Cape Canaveral, Palmdale and Van- denberg. Ride the BIG WAVE coming to Southern California from the beach in Oraoge County,..~ THE SOUTHLAND'S &Est RADIO STATION* at the crest of your FM radio dial • Fo•mt•ly IC APX come on up to Sound Wave 108 and en-. San Clemente. 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 aault 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 llstenabllity and e>Ctends the effective range of the station. Hetp us test the new coverage. Y--- • I Al'Wlf' ....... E:re<•utiue Baby Sitter Prl'Sldl•nt .carll'r c·arries his ~randson. James Earl J\' 11pon lt·anng lht· First Baptist Church Sundav Cartt•r hi ... \\Ill', Hosalynn. and her mothC'r attended ser.v1ce:-. Edison Exec Again. Heads United Way Philip t. M<1rt1n . of Placenhll. has bL't.'ll unu111mously elected to a second lt·rm as presid<'nl or the Board of Otrl'<:tors of United Way of OrunKc Count> North South M.irtin IS a VIC'l' pr<•1sdent or the !)outhcrn California Edison Co In ;.ulrl1tton tn United Way, wh1rh hl· has served since 1957, Martin holds 0H1r.c in lhe Orilnl!t' Empin• Council of the Boy ~couts or America, St. Joseph's lfosp1tal. 1-'rlends of Cal Slate Fullerton, and Junior Achievement or Orange County A native of Santa Ana. he earned degrees in buslnesa admlnlstra· tion from USC and the Unlversl· ty of Jcluho. and ts a 12-year veteral'I of the U.S. Navy Wasps Kill Far.m Worker NEW YORK CAP) -An ex- hu band of the late Judy Garland U)'8 he is rc;vivlng ll i1ul\ cbar1h1 the president of Columbia Pictures, an admitted embei1ler, with robbing the slnaer>act.resa of hundreds · ol thousands of dollars when he was her agent. Sid Luft announced the suit and made the charges agairuot David Be&elman in an interview with New York and New W~ t ma1aiJn • Beeelman recently admitted em beullng more than $60,000 from Columbia by writing un· authorized chocks. Beeelman. who 1»a1d the em- b e u le men t resulted from '·neurotic di5pla) s of self~ destructiveness." was sus- pended from the Columbia post but latct reinstated after he paid buck the embenlcd fund11 . Luft was quoted 1n a copyrighted article rn the mMgazlnes &$ saying he has a file box or records. dating to 1961 . showing that Begelman and his associate. Freddie Field:.. now a major Hollywood p r oducer . milked Miss Garland's funds while serving as her ~genb during the 1960s Among other things. the pair wroll' phony check:. to steal money from lht> s1n~er . Luft al- ll'Ji(t•d l.asl week. Miss Garland"s three children Liza M1nneU1 und Lorna and Joseph Luft • said in .1 surrogate·:. tourt pct1 · lion f1lt.'<l here that their mother probabl.> d1t!d broke The probate application al · lcged that various debts. mclud- ing federal and stule taxes. ··may exceed the gross \'alue of the estate." Lurt !'laid that 1n 1963 he had an 3l'Countant study records of how Miss Garland's fund~ '4ere handled by Bt.•gclmun and fo'lt•lds In the tnlcrnew. Luft said lhl' afrount;mt found scvf!rul unex pl111m·d items. Including S.15.7t4 1n rhl'l'ks written to ·cash · b\ lh'gt·lman and t·ashed ut La~ ... \' t' g ll s t-,o le I ' S 5 0. 0 0 O tr ;111sft•tr1·d from ;1 (iJrland ac t·ou n t in Lonclon lo a 'I; l' \\ York acl·ount of lfrgelman. Sl0.000 trnn~fern·d Crom un account of Ucgclawn 1n trust for Miss CArlnnd to <1n CJceount 1n H gelm:rn's name al~rfe. and I a l t• r \\ 1 t h d r a " n s e ' c r a I thousand doll.irs 1n other t' h 1.• l' k s , a I I w r 1 t t e n b ) lh-~1.·lman: and a nl'\\ Cad11lar lislt·d b part of .'.I1ss Garlands ':duo for a TV show. Lufl says Mills Garland ne\er knt•'4 about the car 3nd it later turned up registered 1n Be~clmnn·s name Luft 1ald Begelman and fields ma} try lo throw out tht• surt because it ha!. lain dormant so long. but his atlorm•) hl'lieves under New York law the chance of thl11 happening is slim ~rinkles Due Fo~Arwther ( Pilot Logbciok J One SC Student Can Take 'Hart' y ANNE COOPER Of •• o.llY l'lllll ICMf SOM£ OF tJS EACTIONA&Y adults may have cheertd 'P s51age or the Uart Sill. which requires 1raduat. in high choOI 11emor6 \o prol'e certain baalc competen· cte • but the kids know better. RequJring t t to prove abllfty to read, write aod f11Jure in order tO sraduate Just Isn't rair. accordine to a co~umn in the San Cl mente High School newspaper, 'The Triton" Many tt-ens who don't have basic kills are tine tudents nonetheless, said author Stephen Cain, a enior. "Our newspaper class 1s a fine ex- ample," he said. "Some of the staff can do arithmetic, some can read and a cou· ple can \Hile. but none of us citn do all three. "YET ONE WILL NEVER FIND a group of more brilliant and dedicated students than 'The Tnton' staff wit· ness the f1f11Shcd product '· • 1'he produrt 1sn 't bad THE LEAD STORY, wntten by C'in and feUow staff "rtlcr Chris Rul!s1ck, alerts students that John D. Lusk and Son developers 1& seek1nt a vanance to a city gradtna ordinance. which would allow more than 1.000 homes on the hills surrounding the school The article is well researched, concisely wntten and ll· lustrall'<l with a mup of the proposed development. Oth~r front page loitorle& include reports on lbe school's M arlln Luther King commemoration 1rnd on the awardin1 or a SiJ.000 blalc grant to the school. The crant "a awarded after four teachers spent "many hours ov~r Christmas vaeauon·• prepart.n& for i!rant competition. wrote editor Monique Reallon One of thc teachers. accompanied by other school represen- tatives. spent Jun 4 1n Santa Ana. convincing a state board that Saa Ckmentt• should be one of 40 California school!! to n•t·t'l\'t' a !(rant under the new AB·6S funding 1iro\ 1s1on . DF-'iPITE THE EXCELLENCE of writing and matun- h or Judgment demonstrated in this sample copy or the ~chool paper. any adult knows kids don·t talk this way. Cam knows this, too "f asked a t)pical hlib school student lo convert one· fifth to a percentage figllte." he wrote in tus column. "After staring into space for several minutes. he answered thoughtfully, 'Hey, lake. I mean. I never did like percents. ya know"' But like. if you ask me about any. like division. man, I could probably tell you. 'cause I got a B·plus in Prc-AIJ(ebra 11. ya know?"' Sc·hoolo; han· come lo see the Colly of teachmg ··use- ll•ss · 11cudcm1c subJeCtl, says Cam ("I knew 1l' I knew 1t 1" cry parents everywhere ) Rt•qu1rin~ stud<·nts to prove they can read. wnte and do artthmet1l· 1n order to i!raduute from high school 1i; ob \ 1nus c·ruelty. ht• says "THOSE o•· YOU who were able to read this column must alert }Our illiterate fnends to the danger Cof not re s1st1ng the Hart Dill J," writes Cam. ''Then we can all nse 1 n r1 ghll'ous ind1gnat1on und wrath. We shall overcome " Cain and his newspaper haven't convinced me I wa .. "ron~ to think tu11h chool graduates should prove they h~l\'O ma!itcrcd baaic kills. But I certatnly was wrong to thtnl\ s11hoohng has deteriorated since the olden days - 14 hen I "Aas 1n i;chool I t·ouldn t ha\l• written a better column than Cain's m~ -;elf <And JUSl between you and me. our high school papt>r "a!li a rag. J Driver Killed, Two Injured in Crash John Robert Hernande1. 25. of Bueno Parl\. \\a~ killed early Sunday morn1n~ when he ap- parently fell asleep and the truck he was driving crashed tn· to a re Y.ay guard rail in Orange and ovtrturned . A coroner's report said Hernnndu "'as dead at the scene ol the 3:0.5 a.m. cra!'lh on the Newport Free"'al' JU:at south of Katelta Avenue. Seriously tnJured in the early morning accident was Steven Schultz. 25. of Buena Park. . .\ nother passenger in ttlc truck, Lisa Murray, 22. oC Orange received 1nJur1e ~ described as moderate by a California Highway P1tlrol "POkesman. Both 11\Jure.d persons 14 ere taken to St. Joseph's Hospital DAILY PILOf NEW YORK 4AP> J ptred by o ttlC\!i ion commercial for tiuw bOot host ge , • Qu teen-aaer \rie<r to t.•xtort $700 from hts parents by laking hi1> own k1dnappina. police reported todn\. rollce tl8ld thac when ht wa~ arrested Sunday night, 18-year: old William Banks Jr. of the' Jamaica ecllon was pla)'lnt card '4ith one of his alleged ab· ductors. ThOmus Da\•is. 25, at Davi!'' hom~. also lo Jamaica. 8 nks. Davis and Davts' 30· \'ear.old wife. Lanoma, were l'harged '4ith grand larcen). conspiracy and aggravated harassm<'nl Oetecttn• Jack Sauthers said the r~port of a kidnapping came ut 4 '45 p.m. Sunday, when Hanks' parents. Mr and Mn; Wllliam lirutks. received a call Crom a woman who claimed that thl' younJ(er Bank~ hnd peen'ab· ducted The woman demanded S700 for Bank!\· rt-lease, Smithers said A seeond call came a half hour later. This time. Smithers said, the y9ungcr Banks talked to his parerita, and said his captor~ had a gun to hu, neck Smithers i.aid a third call wus received und a drop-off of the ransom wa~ arranged for lil vacant house on l33rd Avenue. \ rmal call came al 9 so p.m . when a set•mlngly desperate Hankf' talked l<> his J(randmoth r·. and demanded to know why the ran om mone~ had not been turned over. The "oman told hl'r grandson that his father '4a tryinl' to rab.e the monl'\ Sm1tb~rs said 30 detectives searched the n eighborhood 14 here the ransom was to be ex- chanaed. He said detectives ""' two men ut 11 pay tel~pbone at !1.50 p.m .. one of them flttln~ B 1tn ks· dcscra pl1on. The fine I t·all 14ai-traced baek to thal tt•lephont• booth Tht> thn . ..-were arrested in the Duv1scs'.hou!I<'. acrosi; the strCf't trom the ransom drop-off point. Sm 1thers said Hanks told police that thl' sche m e was form ulatcd Sunday afternoon. when the thrt>e were watching tele\·1s1on. Smithers 11a1d Banks . aid the caper wai. inspired by • <in ABC-TV commcrc1al ror a proaram nbout tw>tnll a ho taite. Driver Hunted Santa Ana pohce are seekin • toduy lhe hit·and·run driver who "lpc<I oft Sunday night after lu,_ auto i;trurk and lulled • ~destnan Pollce identified the victim as Daniel Qu1ror. Avalos. 39. of 402 S. Wood Sl.. Santa Ana. They HJd Avalos and a com: panion were ~ro sang the street 1n lhe 2200 block of West Finl Street when the eastbound aulO hit Avalos. The vu~hm 's companion mana1ed to leap out of the path of the oncomln& car, pohce s.aid They n:i>e>ned both men were w1tlklng m a marked crouwalk at 7:0S p.m. when Avalos was fatally 11\jured. J • ' CLAMMY CUMF.8: You 1et so weary these days bearin1 about all the shortaaea we bave. Like aaaoline or electrical power. Now we have a new one alon1 our own coaatllne. We've come up a bit short on Pismo clams. For decades, it's been tradi- tlooal alq OW' shoreline for clam entbusla.sts to cather on the beaches when the bivalve mollusk.a are in seuon and the tides ebb low. Pismo clam' thus exposed, these people get out there with long forb and burlap sacks and scoop up free clam chowder for dinner A COUPLE OF the favorite damming apots are the long strands of ·Huntlneton Beach Stale Beach and Newport Beach between tho Santa Ana River mouth and Newport Pier Clamming, however, ha& ~n off in recent times due to a cou pie of condltlom. For one tblni, the sea otter. once considered an endangered species, has been maklog a comeback. Sea otters love clams. Thus the clam baa not been mak- ing a comeback. Hlgb tides and heavy surf have also made tt sllm pickings for clammers In some re. gioDJ You 1et the word on how this works because earlier this month during quite low tides, on Jan. 7 and 8. the state Depart.. ment of Fish and Game conduct- ed an exhaustive study of clam- men and clamming. Tbe Fish and Game people ev~.l had airplanes up above. countinc clammers as they sloshed and washed about ln the surfllne, huntlnc the little devils. Thus we learn that on those two low tide days, the Hunt· ington Beach shoreline was vis· ited by 939 clammers who put ln J ,607 hours ln order to walk away with 4,573 clams. NEWPORT BEACH, between the river mouth and pier, was far leu popular but the averages were pret.ly &ood. Only 20 clammen showed ~p over the two days. But they only put in 32 hours to grab 92 clams. Thal avereca 4.60 Pismo peaches ..-ach. All U-~ can boagle your mind. You are left wonder- ing how a person ceta a spilt like 4.60 clams! Probably one person gets 10 Pismo,, and some other wet, haple11 bunter walked away wlth an empty sack Regardless, the Fish and Game people learned a lot about <'lamming. They note, for exam· ple, thatyoupro~blydon'l want to go clamro.lnJ at Zmudowskl State Beach near Monterey, even lf you <'an pronounce ZmudowskJ State Beach. During the department'• ex- haustive study, they teamed no clammers showed up there and thus there were zero hours put in t.o find zero clams. THE CONCLUSION is that, there are zero clams at Zmudowakl State Beach. Maybe tho clams juat don't like the name ot the place. Touring the Loeb Sen. Alan Cranston, D.Cahf •• leans over the main con- trol tower's railing to watch ships move through the Miraflores Locks of the Panama Canal. He and nine other U.S. senators had a tour and briefing on the locks Sunday. Super-heated House Blamed in 7 Deaths LAYTON, Utah <AP)·-Blood tests were to lte performeil today on seven members of .,. family found dud 1n a bome wbere police said temperatures measured at least 112 decrees. AutbortUes 1aid the seven apparently died of aspbyxlaUon from a f auttJ f\lnlace. Based on the tests to determine if carbon monoxide wu preserit in the blood. officials will decide wbetber or not to perform autopsies. "ll'1 about as tra.ic a thi.JJJ( as rve seen," said Davis County Sheriff Wllllam Lawrence. ffe estimat«t the victims bad been dead about 12 boura when they were discovered by relatives about 4 p.m. Sunday. Police identified the. dead as · Ruben Martlnn. 22; bia wife Ernisllna, 26; his dau1bter, Jessicka, 2; his son, Zakery, 9 months; his twin brothers, Rowdy and Randy, both 9; and his siJit.er, Bernadine, 16. THE STATE MEDICAL ex- aminer, Dr. Serge Moan, aald all appand.ly died of aaDh.Yxia~ tlon fn their sleep Saturday night. He said there waa no evidence ol foul play. Police Cblef Lamar Chard said the victims were discovered by Mary and Janice Mart.lnez, the mother and sister of Ruben. He said they broke a window to get in after their knocka went unanswered. Chard said lhe furnace thermostat was broken and only the "on-off' switch was func- tioning. lie said the swttcb was 1n the on position and the furnace was running. we'd been there 'for about 30 minutel, with both doora open, tho temperature lD the coolest room wu ltill 103 deuees." THE BODIES OP Bernadine and one of the twins were in the llvtng rctom, Mr. and Mrs. Martlnerz were ln one bedroom, another twin and Jeaslcka were in another bedroom and the baby waa alone ln a third bedroom. olflclala aaid. Police Bet-Roa Lal'evre said the Mdlea were ftlnond from tbe bome late &undq and taken to the Unlvenlty of Utah Medical Omter in Salt Lake City for the teca. Layton ls about 2S miles north ol Salt Lake City. Further. the Fish and Game people atron1ly W'I• that you do 11ot take underalzed clams - . whatever that ta -at Zmudowakt State Beach or any other beach alon.1 our shoreline. "THE H~T ROOM was · in the baby's room, wbore It waa 112 degrees," sald Lawrence. "But I'm sure it was between 125 and 140 degrees before we got there. By touch, even tboulh rlgor mortls bad set lD, tt wu almost hot enough to burn something on their little skins. "l would assume tbat the furnace maUunctioned, prob- ably uamc ~all of the oxygen. So I ibJnk tt would be an OXY&eD· deprivation thing. ....... If you do, this wtll cott you SO clams in court. The lq, .'~reen kind. •'The h®se waa incredibly bot," said one detective. "Aft.er Wl!STERN ACTOR DIES nm McCoy, 87 Bitter Cold Grips East Grdf CotUt Covered With F-reezi'ff8 Rain Tneperat•re. NI U> ~llG ,, 1• ... • • u u ,. .. u 11 ,. ,. ,.. n J: ' • ti •• •• 1) ,. n . " U •I ,, , " 1J ,. .. *' " IJ J IS M 11 .. ,. ·t ,, ., ., .. , '4 ... NATION I WORLD Buying Power • • 1Se8 Slow Investment Clorids Outlook WASHINGTON <AP) - Americans cener.U, wlll be bet· ter off 1n 1978. benefltiq from a 5 s>ettG Increase lo ~ulaa power, but the nation's economlc future rem alna clouded bY lluabh lnvestmerrt. actlvlty, .tarter odmlnlltrat1Cll\ economiltl HY. Tbe Increase tn pnttb11tn1 power, Ul> from a 4.t.Ptreent. ln· creaM In 1m. 1boulcl belp pro-pel the economy to overall 1rowtb durJnr tbe 1ear of between 4.5 percent arid i pct· Cetlt, l\dftdent to fUrtber reduce the natlaa'• rate. UNEMPLOYllBN"I' 8R011Lb decline to between I percent and e.2' perceat b)' th• end of the year, down tram the 1.4 perc=ent rate in Deelmber, and tnnatiocl la Ukel1 to remain stuck at about th• aame a percent rate u lut year. Tb• admln11tratJon"I latest projecUom for tlill year are con- tained lD the president'• annual economic report to Conpeu, whlcb wu prepared by Illa Council of Economic Advi.lera. headed b)' Cbarlea L. Schulbo. and re.leaed todaJ. Some b1ahll&bta of the rePOrt were dllclOeecl by tbe pralclent in bl• economic me11a1e to Coogrea two weea aaa. TBB PBBSIDENT'S advbera eave tbll cmiraU abort·term .... sessmait of tbe econom7: "Praspecta for continued ex· i>anslon wen favorable u 1977 came to a clole. Tbe Mc:ton fl the economy were In 1ooct balance, lnveotortes were re. laUvelt lean end the balance sbeeta ot buslnelNI and ftnaD.. clal lmtlbiloaa w-. 1tron1." Tbey tald tbe projected growth in the nation's ll'O&S Da· Uonal product ot ~ween 4.5 and 5 percent depend.I on enactment of carter•s proPQHd $25 billion in tu cut&. The GNP, which measures tbe total output of gooda and aervlcea In tbe economy, expanded 4.9 percent in 197'1. WITHOUT THE TAX cuts, they said, the economy mlaht start to stow down beelnnfn1 about mld-year. ~d e¥t.ending into 1919. Bat th y made tlear th econom1 II not by any m out ol the wood.a, 4tV n with the tax cu.t. Jnflatioo and the un mplo1- ment are senou.a problems, ••and lnlt rces ol &he U.S. economy are still lneomplete)y uUllled.0 il N14. . TRBRB 18 GOOD H for conaumen and workers In th report'• project.loo t.bat't>urchaa-- lnl power, caUed real di.apoNble income, Will tncreue by 6 per- cent or more tbl• year. up 8llaht- 1Y from the U percent l tf ar. 8BelowZero Girl, 11, Raped, Escapes Cold Car Ric:= Mlnn. (AP)-All ll·)'e&N>l4 Cbi WU·~ ta• ually then locked hi the tnmk ot a ear ,or more tb&ll 10 boun Wen Ibo escaped bY lqueeslDg thl'OU.lh a knocked-out tallll~ police aaid. The prl wellhl Jess than to Pocmda ad eseapecl throqb a llx· by u.tneb tiOle, Oft.leers aald. Temperaturea luld dropptd to (,. _________ 1 :::~::·,:t.~~14 IN SHORT An U.)'MHld JUdllllld man wu arrested boun after tbe &ht escaped Saturday nl11Jt. Ametlcan th team reported Chart• ot •ara•ated ea1mtnal todar. aenal conduct and lddnapptni Tb flu attack rate there for would M llled, ott1cen aald. dilldrea 1S and older wu Uper· cent. Dr. Mlcbael oreu ot tbe JtldeorUe s..peeied Center for Disease Coot.rot told a aovermmnt ocmfereace oo the NEW ORLEANS <AP> -A 1\asilan nu. For the enUre bri1bt llash that li&bted the lk)' Ruaalan population, the attack over a wide aect.ion of the Gulf • •* u,4..-t Coast for about five second.a ra-was _ ... _ may have beet\ • meteorit., 3 l'led•s F••tl federal authorities said. KANSAS CITY'" Mo. ·<A Pl - A aPOkesman at the Federal The charred bodle!J of three Aviatfon Administration office more victims, two of them small ln New Orleans said people as children, baYe been foUDd far away u Fort Smith, Ark.. amonf tbt ice-coated debrla of and Jactao.mlle, Fla., reported the Coat.el Houae hotel. The d1!J. aeeln1 the flash Sun.day Dlght. coverlea today brou&ht the death IW~ IU'.IH-........... toll to 18. ...... ..-.., .... ren Ten peoplft. were IS\lll mtae> WASHINGTON (AP> -More counted for, but offlelals said than 30 pereent or the children 1n some or all of them may have tbe 6"tet \7n1oa 14 or•der came simpty drtft.ed away aft.et eecap-do:wll with the l\a11lm Ila, an . inC from the fire. Western Actor Succumbs rrJNOTTOO LATEI ENROLL NOW FOR A JPRING LEARNING EXPERIENCE AT: ---· . !prir1Q Jemeiter Jrartr February Rafting On River Revised SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -Runnmg the Grand Canyon in a ran will be all ridin1 tho cur· rent. with 10me aweat and mw;cle to steer, In three )'ears If a Nation(ll Park Service propoul ls adopted. The service made public its plan to ban outboard motor-powered rafts from the 277 miles of the Colorado In the depths or the canyon. The proposal con· eluded that. motorized trips, which now make 80 percent of all <·om· merclal trips on the Colorado. reduced the canyon's enjoyment. . --· ... DAA.Y l'tl.OT .45 Pony Finally Free SODA SPRL"'JGS <APl -Coco the pony ls I.finally headM for a three. aero app)e orchard near Sacramento after belhs 1tranded tn a hotel hue· mtnt for two months. l:he problem beean when three of Maule Uttensteln's daughters led the pony into the basement tbrouch a large eround-level entrance last Thanksglving to shelter him from the snow. BUT IT SNOWED for 21 stra11ht days, piling a 30-loot drift again.st the basement door. Coco could have walked up the stairs and out a lobby door anytime he wanted to. But he didn't want to. And the Littensteins couldn't think ot any way to mate him. THEY TRIED pleading, puJUn1. pushing and even starving him for a few days in hopes be would be en· liced upstairs by fresh apples. "It looked pretty atlly, but It wu really easy.'' Hid Kra. IJttenstei , owner of tbo Soda Sprlnp. Hote "We thought tho bone wetahed mo than lt did. "It must have looked f\lf\ro' to; all the customera. Tho hone was going out the rront door while people were arrtvln1 here for bnmth." COCO HAD BEEN a problem for the Littenstelns even berore he aot 1lranded In the basement. For one thtni he had a habit of crawlln1 out of the tc>rral oo his belly and eaUng other ~pl 'a grain. He also ef\Joyed eatina the unguardea lunthea of tross·country skiers. The uttenstelns bad already do- cidM to clvo Coco away, but tbeir truck broke down and he had to stay a little lonaer. Then came the 1n<>ws and what was to t • the temporary basement reCuae Crom the weather. But motor trips are fat.ter and cheaper for travelers than oar trips. Most or the rafts are large inflatable rubber boats powered by out- board motors owned by 21 companies authorized by the service to travel the river. River running ta a SS million·a-year business. Paddlewheeler'• Nf!'le Owner Noth'in1 worked. So Sunday they resorted to what Mrs. Litten stein acknowled&ed turned out to be a decepUveJ7 simple ~olutlon. HEALTH AUTHOalTIES threatened to have Mrs. Llttenstel.a arrested when they fol wind of the situatioo because Jt's llegal to keep a horH in a hotel Tom Fat. a Sacramento restaurateur, µoscs alongside the paddlewlieel riverboat Oclta Kmg after buying it ot a sheriff's auction in Rio Vista for $.12,000. Fat. who outbid just one rival. said he might con- \·crt the steel-hulled, four-deck boat into a restaurant with shops and hotel rooms. East Side Rapist Teen Sisters Latest Victims SACRAMENTO <AP> -The ec>e.aJled East Side Rapist has claimed his 29th and 30tb victim•• Sacramento County sheriff's officers report. Sheriffs spokesman Bill Miller said Sunday the rapist came earlier than usual this time: It was only about 10:15 p.m. Saturday when he en- tered a home south of American Raver Community College. Miller said the latest victims were teen-age sisters who were awakened from their sleep. The &iris' parent.II came home about an hour and 15 minutes after the rapist Jen, finding the girls tied up, Miller said. Ottldal A tcalt• Decldon SACRAMENTO (AP) -After ftH' days of testimony touchin& on lesbianism. profanity, chargM of cronyism and &CC'\&Sations of political motJves. Josette l\fondanaro's appeal of her firing JS on Ila way to a declsfon. James Waller, bearing officer for the state Personnel Board, said he had "a very difficult de ~islon" to make io determlniJli his recommenda- tion to the 00.rd. T ...___ 1 .... be ...... " eaa eu.uer J accept hJs recommenda- ( err ~-rr-tion on whether Dr. Mon· .:ura.1 a:. danaro, 32, should be re- '--------instated as state drug abuse director. or read the hearing transcript and go the other way. Fll'f! R~ld IR Drtlfl But LYNWOO) CAP> -She~Urs deputtes have ar- rested five persons ln connection with the opera- tion or a million-dollar "angel dust" laboratory. Deputies found about 200 pounds of drugs In various stag«.-s or processing and equipment used to manufacture PCP. Booked for lnveatl&atlon or manufacturing PCP were: Carol F. Trotter, 26, and Debrah Gen- try, 21, who lived at the raided house; and Cornelius McDUffy, ~. Stephen ~-Russell. 21. and Michael MeadoM, 22. all of Loi Mieles. .lewJa Aita<tlc 8e1'fn roar LOS ANGELES CAP) -A delegation of 57 Soviet eovemment ofClcials was followed by Jewlab protestors as lt toured the Los Angeles area, authorities said. A 15-~ar-old Jewlah Defense League member was booked for lnvesUgatlon of assault and battery Sunday after he allegedly thn?w a plate of food at one Soviet official at the Victoria Station reataurant at Universal City. Shertrf'a spokesman Marvin Cavsnaufb said a U.S. Secret Service •tent deflected the plate and most of the food, but several morsels hit Vasili G. Rigorilzlch Vysotln, head of the foreien relations department of the presidturn or the U.S.S.R. Supreme Soviet. Jtfarfan Probe Shootl•fl ALAMEDA <AP) -A marine kiJle<l during a changing ol the guard at Alameda N'•v.al Air Sta· Uoa was mortally wounded by a bullet from another marine'• gun, officlal111ld Sunday lntttal reportl bad aald Lance Corp. Ramon G. Avila, 20, ol El Paso. Tu .• died Saturday when his own weapoo mlsllred. An lnveltlp.tioa into the lboottne. tentatively Jabeled accidental, was conUnuln1, said Pixie JUck1. asatst.nt pubJlc lnformaUon officer at the baae. DAILY PILOT The 243-paasenger Delta King. built in 1927. once sailed the Sacramento River between San Francisco and Sacramento. Fat said he thought it would take S3 million to SS million to restore the riverboat. SIX STRONG volunteers carried Coco up the stairs after a veterinarian bad &iven bim a shot to make him take a nap. ••we didn't like havln& the horse in there either," she said. "We bad to 'Pine Sol' the place four t.lmes a d&)" to eet rid ot tho amelL" Sale! SectionalS and sofas with 2-week delivery $399 to $999 Here's the kind of seating you need In the fabrics you like. Elegant velvets, casual corduroys cottons and leather-like vinyls. Their unique contemporary design makes them compact yet roomy. To an the most-wanted qualities, we've added specfal prices and qufck 2-week delivery. Take a look. A. Loose 10 % down eo % feather pftlow back sofa In burnt orange cotton velvet. Orfglnally $995 now $699 Matching loveseat. Orig. $975, $849 B. Sofa in off-White woven cotton Imported from India. A dramatic addition. Special, $399 Matching loveseaL Special, $379 C. Sable brown vinyl button tufted sofa. Special, $499 Matchf ng loveseat. Special, $449 0. Two-piece sectional in acorn brown wtde-wale cotton corduroy. Rugged beauty. Reg. $1299. $999 Use our Termway. Furniture • rAsk More Contact or Jail Inmates A federal cow1. judge in Los Angeles last week· rec· ommcnded some changes in operation of Orange County Jail. ,. Most of the changes endorsed by U.S. District Judge William Gray have to do with giving inmates greater con· ·tact with the outside world. . Included omong the recommended changes were :more telephones for prisoner use, a halt to jail officials .reuding outgoing inmate mail, allowing prisoners to re· cceive more outside reading material and an end to a ban 'Prohibiting minors unaccompanied by an adult from vis- "iting inmate relatives. • On the surface, there appears to be little earth· ·shaking about the judge's recommendation unless in some , way they jeopardize jail security. Those recommendations may eventually take the form of a court order as a result of a lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union in 1975. The judge indicated such a court order would not m· c.•1ude the more serious allegations and remedies sought by the ACLU in its '75 suit. In that case, the jail ad· ministration will have been upheld on most major issues . . That fact again points out that those who operate Orange County Jail are doing the job properly. It also points out that most of the jail's shortcomings such as s parse recreation time are the fault of limitations of the physical plant r ather than a design of jail administrators Voters Mad, Not Stupid Asscmbl)-~pcak cr Leo McCarthy is urging the formation of a coalition of business, civic and educational organizations to defeat the Jarvis.Gann property tax r e- lief initiat1,·c T}\c init1atn l't which \\-OUld limit property taxation to l percent of 1975 value and require a two-thirds vote in the Legis lature for any increases in other taxes . cl ear!~ has government tit all levels in a tizzy No one knows where the S7 billion 1t "ould lop from s ta te revenue could be recovered. " McCarthy said last week the Jarvis initiative may "·m YOll•r approval eve n if the Mate Legislature does fome up with a tax relief bill before June. That's not necessarily so. The voters are not entirely stupid. They're just mad and they want some action. They finally voted down Prop. 15, the initiative that \\Ould have blocked nuclear development in California. 0tfter the Legislature got the message and produced some acceptable nuclear control measures. The same could happen with the Jarvis initiative if the lawmakers c.·an generate a reasonably acceptable alternativl• and c·orwincl' the voter:. that .Jarvis is not m•t·dcd. If they cannot, it won't be the fault of Howard Jarvis . The responsibility hes directly on the shoulders of Gov. Brown, McCarthy and the rest of the leadership in .Sarramento. A Typical Patch-up 1 Early New Yearf1 Day. two people lost their lives in an auto accident on Newport Bay Bridge The crash took 1 out a sizeable section of the concrete bridge railing. Now, nearly one month later, the smashed bridge s ection remains unrepaired, a grim reminder of the highway tragedy. The only attempt to "fix" the bridge has been the 1tlap-dash application of a metal strip rail across the smashed concrete. This patchwork approach may well exemplify the ~d of highway repair and maintenance program we are getting all across California these days. Don't fix it; just atch it. Or just let it go completely. . Thus Newport Bay Bridge, with its ugly hole and mporary metal rail. may be sort of a symbol ot our· Um es. • Qplniona exproSMd 1n the apace above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views eJCpressed on this page are those of thi!ir authors and a. Reader comment Is Invited. Address The Dally Piiot, Po. 1560, Coata Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321. Boyd/Blimp • more than ~.ooo Orders of Lenin, the nation's hithest award. Q ... Did Willlam Shakespeare smoke a pipe? .. A. Nobody knows. There'I no mention of any •ort or arpokina ln hls enUre work Seems Odd, too. It's about the only thing he missed. Q ·'What are the mo t popular name., for newborn babieit now?" A 1 Michael, Jason and ?thJ·. thew. Jennller, Amy and Suah. .. ----~----- Rowland Evam / Robert Novak E11rocommunism View Rev;ised W ASIUNGTON -President Carttr'1 new wamlnc a1ainat dangers ol "Eurocommunlsm" in Italy rcnocu a confloontat!on with reality after one year in of. flee -by the Presldent. in general and by Ambassador Richard Gardner In particular. When plucked from hh chair as professor of Jnternat.lonal law 11t Columbia University to b ~ a m • bauador in R o me , Gardner joined other new Carter officials in viewint Henry Kiss· Inger's hard line agairuot Western European Communist parties us· a cold· war throwb3ck. Just before the first anniversary of the Catler inaueuration, Gardner helped guide policy back to the KJss. inger line · Communist power- sharing in NATO member na- tions must be resisted with max- Jmum political pressure THIS SIDFT ls only the latest signal that Mr. Carter is revert.· Ing to more conventional anU- Soviet policies, following the confusing rhetoric early in his administration. No longer is the Soviet-Cuban interventiot1 in Angola rationalized a i. "stabilizing." A strong U.S. re aclion to the Soviet role in Ethiopia 1i. now given Lop priority. The rhetoric al :;hift on Eurocommunism, proclaimed in a Jan. 12 State Department s tatement, typifies the ad ministration's new realis m about military and pohtical vacuums. The President is now aware they will quickly be filled by Soviet penetrations If the U.S. fails to make lhe case for the Western de· mocrac1es publirly and forcefully. So the Jan 12 stalt'ment wa~ both public and forcrful "Wt do not believe th11t the Communist.<, 'shart•" lhl• "profound dtom crat1c v:1lucs unrl 1ntnt-l'li-of Wt-stern pol1t1rnl !'.V~t<'mi­ Thc U S "woulcl ltkt 11• l'('( Communist influence in any Western European country re- duced." THOSE &tssertlons and the warninl that recent ltaUan ~Utical developments "have ln· creased the level of our con· cern" are far more pointed than last April' ,pc>llcy atatement, which avoided direct attack on the Communists. The still neophyte Ambass dor G1nb\er ' helped draft the Aprll 1977 at.a ment: the more Masoned Am· baasador Garctn r was directly responsible tor tho January 1978 statement. Nichol~ "·ou Hoffman The administration's claim that the new policy ls a Late- ment or tho old la belltd both ln the words them&elves and in Gardner' p,rofound convicllon, the product of one year's U· perience ln Rome. that Soviet in· lluence l:i pervasive at top 1 v Is of the Italian Communist party <PCO. lfe 1:J also convinced that the Soviet Uolon. helped b.Y Us Ciechoslov11k and E st. German Commuhlst pAl'tie , is th m-1or ource of terrorism that bas brought Italy close to anarchy. GARDN£1l'S quick lli1ht to Washington to.argue for the new h rd·Un policy wa.s lntonded as a warninc to tho old auard ot the Christian DemO(rattc P&lrty not lo vleld to PC! press\lre without a&n ull·out ~ebt. Strong fac tlons in the old iuard, which bu rul~d It.al)' tor 30 years, woutd ccept alliance with the Com· munl1t1 in order to cUnt to ;power in a coalltloo covern· ment. Youn1er, more proaresalve Cbrlstian Democrats seek nother eours : a top·to-bottom shakeup of th Ir stratified party nd lts stale. rilld policies. That' ls also what Gardner wants, based on hls political education in Rome. To cite one example, • luncheon was arran1od for a Nov. 22 visit to Rome by Rep. Peter Rodino nd Health, Education and Welfare Secretary Joseph Callfano, ''lorilh Gardner invited. Tho hosts wer~ Christian DemO(raUc memb4..rs of parliament. ShOrt.ly before lhe luncheon the U.S. embassy dis· covered that two Communists would also attend the luncheon. THAT SMACKED of political i;abotaee. alarmlne the embassy and increasing Gardner's con- cern thMt some Christian Democrats wero lntentlOTially promoUn1 a coaliUon wjth the Com munisl5. Wltbout any. publicity, the hmcheon w.s can- ~elled. Such events ~taee·maD&led by Chrastian Democrallc politicians are extremely useful to the Com· munl$ts. Played up in the left· wloc press, they are aupposed to "sicnal" subtle changes in U.S. policy by showing Gardner con- sorting with Communist..-.. Tbe result has been Am· bassador Gardner'• inslslence and President Carter'• aeree· menl on eUminalinc the am- bleulUes of the April 1tatement. Such realism ts both overdue and welcome. Even if lt fails to arrest Italy's poUtlcal decay .and the shattering Impact on the Western alliance of Communist power·sharing in Rome. it re- veals an awaren~s of reality by the admJnislraUon sadly lacking when Jimmy Carter took office a year aco. Government Can't Restore ID.dians' Past 1'ht> Cupt• t'otl '11 la~c o f M ashf>('e hos bt"t•n m a,k "hJ!thlf' for cmcri;r nry low 1nl t'rt'l-t 1 lo ans and otht>r form s or ~conom1<' assislun<'c hy the Federal Small Bus rness Ad· ministration. This s mull Massachusetts community of 3,000 persons hnsn 'l been hit by a tidal wave. or a nor'easter or a hurricane. Only by a lawsuit. In August of t!r76 a group of Mashpee cittiens. representing themselves to be members of' the Wam- panoac ln-dlan tribe, fiJed lluit rn Federal Court claimioe all the land in the comruanatywas theirs. ALTJIQUGRtodlam have been aellln;i land to non-Indians for th put 108 years, the.Ir claim ts based 011 provisions of a 2970 federal 1 w forbidding the transfer Of any Jodlan·owntd land without the ppronl or Congress. VnUl recent court de- clslons, it li be n umed the law did not pply to tbe ,l3 original atat 1 -wbare large tr ct.a ol real est te b cl been bought, atolcD nnd lrickect out of Indian hands Jong before ttiere w s Ccmi?r s. The \q>Sbot. of th sbpoc sult bai'been to cast iucb dOUtit over tho validity of titles and ctercl,. th111 busincs~ m the com· muni t~ has bt"cn uch"crscly af· h·rtC'cl Ilene«.' the Small Busi· Ol'l-l-Adm1nil'truUon disaster• rt.'lt'-'r A few days ugo a Jury hearing lht• case decided lhal. while a W:impanoag tribe existed in a le.:al sense In 1834 and in 1842 no such tribe cx1sll'd in 1790. 1889, 1870 and 1971i. a ll dates crucial to the succcs~ful pros· ecutlon of the claim. No one hai. yet come forth to explain how u tribe could not exist in 1790 and then reappear in 1834. Th" answer may be that the law, as Dr. Johnson said, is an ass. The rest of us aren't looking too good on the Jndlan question e tlier. A number of other. rn- dlans in the sociological. if not the legal meanin1 of the word. hue flied suit alleclng breach of tbe same Ul8 year.old 1tatute. ACTIONS ARE pendini elsewhere in Jlassachuselts, in !\bode llland,; New York, Con- necticut and Maine where tbe Pa11am quoddya and Penobscots are uJdna ror about two-lhlr~ of Ute 1tate1. Don't laugh. A referee appointed by Pre Jclent Carter baa recom· m oded that the lndiao1 be wardtd 25 mUllon fe~ral dollars end 100,000 acr • There la someWnc ludicrous 1b0ut the Urutcd Stat.el trying to recUty the wrong Of eotn• mltt.cd 200 years o whJ1o tl backs brae\ in th mlttcd aealnat Egypt two day• o. rame does not make a cnme any ll'1>s of a crime, but it does make 1 t impossible to restore the ~tolcn property without commit· ting yet new and possibly worse crimes. That's why no reasona· bl c person wouJd suiiest. that the land taken from the Pales· t1nlanArabs be returned. At some point, bygones muat be declared bygones. We can't make jt up to the Indiana or the original Americans\ as it J1> becoming fashlonab e to call them for some unaccountabl& rcHOD. They got hosed but so did the Druids. HJatory and archeology teem •ith sociedea. peoples, languaces and cultures whJch are no more. THE ROMAN empire aot offed by the Vandals and the Visigoths, so should the modern· day Italians suet All they can do is learn Latin as you can Jeana any dead language; they can't briDC back .Julius Caesar. A similar situation a:tats .W. American lndi.aas. TbeJr culture cannot survive In a technological IOClety where we play computer games lo our liv- ing room. It's too bad. Mc:auae tho blankets. Uae jewelry, tho ~one• and the at-oneness with nature compel the admltaUon of Americans concerned about the future of the country1ide and the wild places. That does not make Indi apeclal cue. The Pennsylva.illa It's Get~ing Hard to 'Ont-plain' the Dutch farmeri. with the 16th cen· lury culture are going too. Even cult.ut'~s jn people wh o ~uperficlall1 look unchanged are utt.erty different today thnn trom the way their aneestora lived in 1790. The Polll•h peanut who labored tn serfdom tor his lord now Perhaps JabOrs (or hJs com- missar, but it's a totally dlf· lerent serfdom. FOR 1ovemment policy to en- cou ra1e Indians to remain cultural1y Indians Is to make them liUle better'. than tragic clowna. The suddenly oU-rich ln- dl an In the blgb black hat with the pl1tai11 drivlnc a Cadillac ls Jong 1inco a stock f1aure in our ethnic comedy; the starvln1 reservation Indian holding on to the pa~ child is a atock ncure ror our tean. With tbo enthusiasm for know· mg one'• roots. th~e m111eem like harsh obffrvatlona. But it ls one thlDI for Kunta Klnto'a deaceDdanta to atUdy blm, know about him, and honor him. and qutte another to 10 back to Africa and live like him. There t no time warp: a polloy en· coura1ln1 trtballam and balf- forgottc!l1 nomadic bunUng and lllhlng c:uJtures Isn't going to give the Red Man JusUce or pre· eerve bla dlcnity. It'• onl)' coing to maktt him look lik a manne· quin in a <llonma or an actor in the lndlan vtU Ion ol ome ICCOnd 0rat , imltaUon Dis· ney World. • • BOATING I OBITUARIES QUHNJE British Crew in Lead?' RIO DE JANEIRO. Bral:il (P) -The Great Brttaln n. Yiitb a crew ol 14 men and one woman, tailed lrito Rio de Jan lro jlllt befo~ noon Satur- day aa tbe second bOat. t.o flnl.ab the Auckland, New Zealand-Rio do Janlelro lee of the Wbitbread round·the-world yacht race. The fint boat to arrive lo Rio do Janeiro, the French Pen Dulek VI, aldppered by Eric Tabarly, may be ~uallfiod'from the race. The boat la us-inl a W'anium keel which lt denser than lead, the normal standard acalnat which other metala are measured. "THE CROUING WAS quJTE difficult but really enjoyable,•• aaid Dlana Thomaa·Ellam, the only woman aboard the Great BriUan II. ••we are feellna terrific," said Captain Robert James upon antval. "l am relaxed-I just wlah they would fi&iire a way to warm these aeata." Durgan Wins W~essiomd Cup Round NB's Morrie Kirlk Yachtsman of Year Deaih8 Elsewhere SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -Harold Lionel Zellerbach , 83, a longtime civic and In· dustrial leader who was chairman of the board of Zellerbach Paper Co., died Sunday while vaca- tioning on the cruise· ship Mariposa near Honolulu. NEW YORK (AP) - A Ilea Pre1cott, 74, originator of several New York area radio Dftlth Noti~n shows and a frequent substitute host on Don McNeil's nationally broadcast "The Breakfast Show," died Friday of a heart attack. PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) -.loaepb "<· Copelaod, 91, founder Of a family-owned lumber• yard chain, died Friday. Copeland Lumber Yards, under his guidance, grew to in- clude 83 lumber yards in Oregon, Washington, Idaho, California and Nevada. """" BALTIMORE (AP) - HINDA M. Kl!ITH, r1114'tf\t or Dr. Alvin Nason. 58, a L•lswr• W••ld, lfl'H~d •••r •" Johns Hopkins Uoiversi- Jet1u•,., ». mt. S..Vlwd ..., .,... "" t bi h i t b WI Ill am lttllh, two -It Mrs, Yerk H. Y 0C em S W 0 COn· 59frrow ""' w.11• s. '"""'II. """ tributed to research on cou•lna Marlon Lawlor, ¥t1t1i.m L. enzyme processes~in l'unck, and o.oroe • SM• l"unck. l'unera1 W"lic"w111 • Mkl TYltdeY various forms of life, uo P.M. •• 111e c.._1 ot o·ean,., died Saturday Laouna Hiiis, 2Sl01 Allele lfl'arkwav. • Laoun• Hiiia, c.a. l'ollowe<I llY prlwa•• -- lamlly en1om1>nwn1 o·eonnor L•llUN SUMMERFIELD, La. Hiii• Mor1 .... wd1r.c1ors CAP) -WlWe Ralnach, The aalloff to determine the West Coast entry in the Congressional Cup match racing series was prolonged Sunday when light airs off Long Beach Yacht. Club forced n shortening of the series among contenders. Dennis Durian of Newport Harbor Yacht Club wound up with the beat record but wlll be forced into a safloff with the winner of a match between Tim Hogan, NHYC, and Robbie Haines, San Diego Yacht Club to be sailed next weekend. TUE PAIRINGS were further complicated by the appearance of only 11 boats, forcing one boat to draw a bye in each race. Durian won both of his matches and drew a bye in the· third. Hogan and Haines also won two races with one bye and wlll meet next Saturday t.o de· termine who meets Duraan for. the final selec- tion. nuM•N•u 64, a segregationist • M y R T L E A 0 ' LA I 0 1 . l t h led th R d Lin ILUM(NAU, rHldenl of LlflU"a eglS a Of W 0 e e e Hllll, Ca. PasM<I .,.,.yon JaUMtY 2t,. battle against integra· 1m 11.,,. ... °' 101 Surw1wec1 bf,., tlon in Louisiana, died nepl>ew Paul •• !MnUI_., of~ City, w· Arlaon1. <i<'•-IOe ...... 1m wlll M Thursday of a self-inner llekl T~y .i-ry JI, Im et 1,00 inflicted tUDSbot WOUDd, ,._,._.-.._..- P../1#.. •I 1119.._.. MIMOfi.f Petti I" - 111e1ewMC1, c... ""'"" "'"· o-1e1 authorlUes reported. S411r.-n el lrvlM offl<latl,. ...,,ltl! Of s • Tuthill La"* C.ta,,..... ~--y M0A YVILLE, N.D. er1es d lrtcton ......... HllT'Ol.INO H!Nllt t.,,etATOltHO. r"i-."t ~ • Gero.n ~ ..,._ llW•Y J-..ry 1', "71. Survl .. d bv hl1 mol!Mlr, N'erull• lertOllno of l'r•nc•. -,,,. ter, M .. y ltOM MertlonM of l'r-., uncl• Pl•rA B•rtollno of ~.ort e .. ch. 0111 nePlltw and -nltc•. Ornuldt 1trvlcts wlll be llelel en We<1nUd1y "*"9ry 1 at 11 AM at Pacific \lltw Memo<ltl Ptrll,. 8•11 Broectwe\I Mor1lltlry Olrtctcw" (AP) ....:. C. Norman Bruaadale, 86, RepUbUcan ff rnor of North Olko<a from 1951 to 1957, died Friday. Hobie Alter, ~alllng catamaran impresario Crom Capistrano Beach, confounded the sailing fraternity Sunday by GLASGOW. Scotland recruiting a crew and <AP) -Dr. William sailing a monohull to Barclay, 70, interna-victory ln the first race tionally recoaruzed New of Capistrano Bay Yacht Testament scholar and Club's San Juan Series. Scottish television· A Iler won the A personality died Tues-d i v l s i o n · o f t h o day ' Performance Handicap • _ ·Racing Fleet <PHRF) at LONDON CAP) -the helm of Red Llne. a E4•ard Sutro, 78, one of Santa Cruz-27 sloop. London's inost ardent Four cluaes of PHRF theatergoers and listed boats turned out for the ln the Guinnea• Sook of event. Results: Records for havina at· tended more Ulan 9J..000 openlng Jllght.a, died ni- day of a heart attack. md1Wt141Nlll Se~· Concluded Morrie Kirk of Newport Beach was named Yach~man of tM Year by the Southern California Yachting Association <SCYA> and awarded the Jim Webster perpetual trophy for ''excep· tlonal 1ervlce to yachtln1 ln Southern CaUf omia." Kirk's most recent achieve· ment was ~he healing of a 1chl1m within the Ocean Racing Fleet by eUecting a mercer with that body and the International Offshore Racing Aasoclation or Southern Calif omia. . AS PR~IDENT of ORF he brought together the two fac- tions which had differing con- cepts for handicapping offshore racing. As a result, the ownen of older boa~ will race under the lntemaUonal Offshore Rule Mark lll (a) along wt th the slick new ocean racers designed and built to the IOR. The rule wtll be frozen for a good while to come. Kirk ii a past commodore or SCYA and a past commodore of Balboa Yacht Club. His racing career aboard bls Petenon 2-ton sloop Huqicane Deck is marked by wins aftd near wins ln many offshore races. He is currently a member of th Oflaho~ Racln1 COUnd.l or. Southern California, an or· 1anlzaUon aet UD to coordinate all y achll that race offshore. Indlao. 1alled by Ed Feo. Alamlt09 Bay Yacht Club, was the Performance Handlaap. Racine Fleet Class A winner Sunday lD Huntlneton Harbour Yacht Club'• Wring Out Reaat· ta, celebratiq the flrst weekend of dry weather. Forty-one boats inf our classes turned out for the regat~ · a three·race series sailed la. the ocean off Huntmcton H.arbOW'. Reaults: PH,.,-A CUI -1, IMll!f·f..r.. lttiMM. ~ %•tl"'tr1 UP; j, ~Didi amyvo, ~YC. lfl'H It, ·I C10) -;, W AIJl.r, ,.._ Oti/lf!IY, • AIYC: 2. Carll K. ~ •ona.. It IYC; a,·.....,. Doll, 011 T~ HHYC. CAL•lt '61 -1, Hitlt ~. HNYCr 2, ()ele '9tlfl .. ". HHVC. CATALINA·17 (10) -,L. CM'1ft lt~-~f IYC; 2, Tony -.iWyc, S1 •YC: 3. Sc.ony Al-.., s1 eve. h ClS !et ... ad ,, le • •· l• • • • l1 W'ASHJNGTON (AP.\ -fi al :peracmn • I m p I >1P l Urily d ablllty P•Y· U t.o a jobl work , lm~DI the ar on hlpway deaths, hlflatlnJ the covemmeot. payroll and pfOlecUn1 1oof-Olf1 from beinl fired. It once otdericl about $5,000 ln back pay for a )>Oltal worker who wa1 flred for ehooUoa a col· leacue tn the stomach at a Manhattan poat office. lt eent a Commerce Department manaier t.bl"ougb a 21-mcnth-lonc maze of paperwork to fire an $8,000·a·year eecretary who comleteDU)' falled to abow up for work and who lied about bavin1 doc· tors• appointment.a. IT PAYS I BLUE·COU.Aa workers an averaae ol I percent lllore than their counterpUU in private enterprise, by the 1ovemment'1 reuon- Jn1. But it paye ill top manacen thousands ol dollars a year Jess than maJlY could earn in aim liar corpor e Jobe. It ratee 81 percent of lts white-collar employees "aatlafactory" and most of the rest "outetandlng, .. and it elves periodic merit raises to 99.3 percent of them (ln acldiUoo to yearly ralaes t.o compensate for inflation>. Jn abort, ac~rdin1 to top federal executives interviewed by Th Aasoclat.ed Presa. the system isn't worklnl the way lt is suppo1ed to work. THE crvlL SERVICE SYSTEM was set up in 1883 to proted th4' pub Uc from the historic abuses of the spoils ayatem, In which the victorious political party awarded federal jobs to its mem- bers as "the spoils ot victory." In theory, the present system provides a corps of non-partlaan, professional workers selected and . promoted on the basis of merit and paid at levela comparable to private industry. ttie pre:sldent and bl• as.sntantl are allow d to put l)olltical appo.iritees In the top Z,200 or ao pollcy-maklne Jotil. where they can be fired at wm, Tb~ of the remal~ t.lplWon clvlliane ln the executlve brancti eojoy aomethlnl •P· proachbag lite tenure, a~ are supposed t.o run tbe eove~ Jn accordance with policies aet at the top. So uCh for theory. AT '111.E SOCIAL 8 CUIUTY Admin1stration, tens of tbOusands of persons wait for months Jon1er tNui necessa!'l t.o get diaa U1Y peDal because tY n't fuJ1USbeit OUlb administratlv law Udg to clit a backlog Ot ap- peall ca.see. At the National HlJ.hway Transportation Safe· ty AdmlnistraUon. whOse :lob 11110 cut road deaths, ~lgbt top spote h ve beer\ vacant for months--------....· because a civil service rule forbids filling them while the agency re·-------~~­oganises. Agency chief Joan Claybrook says this haselowed her work. Throughout the federal aovemmtnl in cue after c&H, anacers ay ~ keep inefficient employ the public P•1J'9ll rather than firlnl them beeauae Civil Hrvice nJ.les make it too dif • ficult. Result: taxpayers 1upport iM lriefflcient ones wl\Ue their work fat1' on the shoulders of col· leagues, wtiose own-morale sometimes suffers. THE FAMILY CIRCUS. By Bil Keane L-HTHE8E RULES AND aEGtJLATIONS originated as a defenae a1alDSt the spoilS sys~m "Why don't you vision?" go watch tele- · and the poor 1ovemmeat that it provided, but they now re8Ult in as much inefficiency aa they were designed to prevent," says Allan Campbell, chairman ol the CivtrServ1ce Commlsaloo. It is so difficult to ftfe or discipline a federal employee for luinesa or inefficiency that Leonard Reed, a 2'-year veteran of the civil service, called the tedet"al government "the incom~eot'a best friend" In an article in the Wuhlnat.on Monthly magazine. A former Washincton Journalist who recently accepted a federal manaaement ~t u.ld: ''It la just a whole lot worsb than t thought. I alwa11 thou1ht that the n~mber of drones was abOut the sarn~~ in th public sector as in the private. I no lonaer Qi1nk eo.'' "IT'S A REAL tlltEDIJIENT.'' said the Of· nclal, who uked not to be named. ''I have re· pe1tedly aaked my very bat career people, and I have some real winners, 'How can I get rid of X?' They all say, 'You won't live that long."' Howard Messner, an otnclal in the president's manal(ement office, illustrates the point wit' an elght·foot-long chart documentinc the steps taken in the 21-month strugsle to fire a malin1erer from the Commerce Department. Repeatedfy the woman's boss reprimanded her, ....... .._._ NATIONAL as lrite WASHINGTON <AP> ROBERT • T IA , A LA YER who -The Consumer routln ly ~nts federal employees who ap-Product Safety Com· ~:;;::;:;~iiirr==~ ~al dismiSsala or other adverse actions, inelate mission has moved to that the fault in this cue Jay wltb t.be manaser, not require cbild·reaistant the eyltem. packa1e1 for aeplrin "They should have fired the boss for takinl subetitute PrOCfucts. two years to do a Job that should have taken two The cornmlsalon vo ed monthS," h said. to require that the But dismissing the man•1er for inefflclency epeclal packa1in1 be would have been much harder than flrin1 the uaed on products ~on· worpan for abuse of sick leave. In the entire t1tnin1 acetaminophen. federal government there were only 226 tiriJip for The action will take •f· · tnettlclency in the mo•t ~ent 12·month ~riod on feet foUowtnc a period of ~~~~~~~~!!!!' record. pubUc comment. 'I'he 1ub1tltt1te pro· FEDERAL MANAGE OFTEN FIND it ducts, well !mown under e11ter to transfer, ignore or even promote 1neffi. such brand nam 1 as clent employees than to fire them. Othen find the ~atril and '.l'Ylenol, ar• rwes make it euler to eliminate a persoos' job, ften used by "nsons and them With it, than t.o fire them outri1ht. Tales who ue aenstt1ve or al· regularly surface of federal employees who do no ler1ic to aspirin. work whatsoever. havln1 been shunted into do-The commission noted nothincjobsjust to set them out of the way. that overdoses of There are a host of Other complaints about t.be acetaminoi>hen can lead system: Ment pay raises are virtually automatic; t.o illness and lnjury in· discrimination complaints arc ~)' to bring and cludin& pooalbly eerious hard to defend a1alnst; women sUffer because of liver damage. •Divorce • Bankruptcy 1 •Criminal * WlllS·Probate • Incorporation • Acctdtnt·lnJury •Eviction the legally required preference 1iven to military The commwion noted veterans who make up more than tialf the federal that deaths of children :=:::::::==:===~ wor,kforce. due to ~rln poisoni"I The performance evaluation system falls to have dropped eubst n· ~ort out the eoOd performers from the mediocre; tlally •ince chlldresl•· there aroJew monetary incentives to put out more · tant eaps have been re· t.hao minimum effort. quired on that product. THE APPEALS SYSTEM, ELABORATE as it is. doesn't completely 1uard ag&lnat improper Tenn Given poUt.Jcal hlrinas or Improper finns• of "whistle· blowers" who embarrass their bosses by pubUciz· 1ng waste or other abuses ln their a1ency. Employee Wl1ons say it 1s too easy to fire someone Cor minor rules lnfractlons. President Curter feels that unlesa chan1es are made be cannot hope to fulfill his campaign pro- mise to make the federal 1ovemment more effl. cient. "Even the bcst-or1anized government will only be a efrectlve aa the people who carry out lts SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Kenneth C. Wilson, 33, of Ross, a M arln County real estate investment man has been sentenced to two months in prison and fined $10,000 for failure t.o me a I-cit rat tax return. • LI IN IDE: •Stocks •Televl Ion •Movies •Comics Monday,.i.tu.,y 30, 1971 ' • DAILY PILOT Maris Broke Ruth's Record the • ID • KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -His waislline has thlckerfed with the years but time's passage, I most obviously, has ~eled away I the top layer ot hla bitterness. , .. I read the other day," Roger Maris said with a wry smile. ''where some guy wrote. If he hadn't hit 61 home runs he'd be driving the truck now instead of owning it.· "I got a big chuckle out of that .one." Chuckles rarely came to the man who committed the sacrilege of breaking Babe ·W ashingt;on. Playniaker !Hurts LA LANDOVER, Md. CAP> ZSob Dandridge credits the re turn of playmaker Tom Hen- derson and better execution or :the plays for his recent scoring surge that has brought the lWasblngton Bullets out of their tailspin. DandridRe has scored 66 points in the last two games a.s the Bullets ended a five.game 4osin& streak by beating Chicago f nd Los Angeles. , "When we run our plays prop- rly, 1 can get open inside," the eteran forward said Sunday ollowing a 29-point performance the Bullets' 119·112 National asketball Association victory over the Laken "Getting To'iany Henderson ck has picked up the pace of qur offense and 1 'm usually 01ore effective In a running 4ame," Dandridge continued. Henderson mi ssed three sames with a sprained ankle and the Bullets were soundly beaten In all of them "Henderson Is the catalyst of our runoing game," said coach Dick Motta, who had lost to the Lakers six straight times since joining the Bullets last season. ••once he l'!Ot into the flow, he save us the quickness we needed." Henderson came off the bench to score 18 points in 21 minutes as the Bullets snapped the Lakers' five.game winning 11treak. The Lakers lost their slx· th straight road game despite 31 points by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. "We played as well as we can to the first haH," said Los Angeles coach Jerry West. "But in the second half we played like we have been. U we don't get more consistent, we're going to have a short season." t \.OS ANO ELD 11121 -o.nu.,-Jt, ,wd .. Ab- , .. l·Jebkr JI, Nl1ot1 t, kotl 14, HUdlOn 6, C:..r I, llebh<ll 6, Wll1<418. Tot.114 .. 14-11111. .Wi\SHINOTOH Utt) -o.«ldfl It, H~ M, U11seld 2, Gn .. y IJ, Wrltflt 14, a.Iliff •· ftnderllOll 11, P-.e 6, ~ 11. Tet.I, •17-41 .. '"""'• n ~ n 21-112 Was111ntte11 21 u as :11 ~11• ,.,.,, .. ~ _ ...,._ ,..,., *"' -I.Al ....... fY, Wallli.tOll tt. TedliWcel -fofd, A -11,n.. Ruth's sin1le-1eason home run record. And he still feels the h11. torte 61st home run he slammed in the laat regular season 1ame in October. 1981, was cheapened by the asterisk then - commissioner Ford Frick at- tached to it. But he now looks upon his rocky career u just a part ot an era -the wrong era for tamper- mi with idols of Ruthlan propor- tion. "It was the times," the former Yankees slugger said Saturday prior to making his first ap- pearance at a baseball awards dinner since 1962. "Baseball waa rolllnr along on an even keel.· Then Mickey · <Manth!t and I started hitting some home runs and sort of shaking things up. People just weren't ready to accept lt. "It was like the Vietnam War. We've had wars in the past, but the times weren't right for that one. And the times weren't right for me to break Ruth's record. "The press got on me after the 1962 season and swayed the tans away from me," he said. SD Golf Winner Haas' Problems Now Forgotten .. SAN DIEGO CAP> -Married life will be a little simpler tor Jay Haas. It's never really easy for the touring golf pros, who follow a gypsy existence in an endless series of hotels. But it ia easier when you can plan your schedule. AQd bright, 24-year·old Jay Haas, who plans to be married next winter. solved a lot of problems and potential problems with his front·running victccy in the San DlecoOpen. The victory. the first in his brief, two-year tour career, was worth $40,000 from the total purse of $200,000 and carried some other very important dividends. It lifts him out of the ranks of qualifiers for 12 months. And, with assured ap- pearances ln the Masters and Tournament of Champions, virtually assures him of a apot In this year's top 60 money win· ners and an exemption for all of 1979. "You really can't appreciate how much that means," said Haas. a former national col legiate champion from Wake Forest. "You can plan your schedule. You can take some time off without losing your ex- ernptlon for the next tourna- ment. You don't have to worry about beinf somewhere on Mon- day to quallf y. "l can't begin to tell you how important this is to me. "&!most anybody out here on the ft.ur will tell you that the ex- emptlon ls the most important thing you can have." He nailed it down with a front- running, final round of 2·under· par 10 that made him a 3·stroke winner at 278, 10 shots under par on the 7i..~-yard South course at Torrey !'U\ea • Veterall Gene 1.JtUer and bli Andy Bean, both of whom made cballengea. then fell vlctlm to their own mistalces, and John Schroeder tied for second at 281. Littler, who left one in a bunker on the 15th, had a final 72. llean. whose drive for the top died when he 3-putt~ the 16th, and Schroeder had final 69S. lrvine's Alan Tapie had a 284 and won SS,000 Tom Wat.son, twice a winner this year and the 1977 San Diego champion, made eagle 3 on the final hole for a 71 and a 285 total. Johnny Miller finished at the same fiiure after a closing 69. · "Now that I've won, If I get in position again, I can tell myself. 'okay, you've been there before. Now 10 and get lt.' " L•edl119 KGrft •nd ,,_.,.W/M111tt SUncle'( "' lhe S.n 01e,io <>PHI 9011 tou•.,.ment °" the ~~~.,.~~·c:::n Sootlt COll•M II , ... TOOT.., Jay HHt. s.«),000 Oel>t Llltler. •IS ... , Alldy B .. n. SIS,4t1 Johll khf'oe<Ser. llS,4t7 Fuuv Zoeller, M.200 """•"·"·us Grier J-'-S6.22S Oo119 Tewtlt, $6,22.S Ma•-Pltll, S6.22S AIMI Tepte, $5.000 Ttm Watton, $4,200 JOIWll'IY Mlllw, $4,200 Jedi ,_.,._., $4,200 lla"y JM<llel, U, 100 Brue• o.vun. p , 100 11111 ~al ten, P. UIO S<oll 51.,,._, P , IOO Al'dy Nortll. P ,100 Gre ... m Mani\, U.100 JC SMM,U.O. ... twJ~UO. HtwarfTW<tty,U .068 Gery M<CMd. U,IMI \...,Hlnll ... '2. ... LYll Lat~ $1.~ .Hrry H-0, $1,S40 Biiiy CftPW, Sl.S.O Mar-He'tft, Sl,S.0 urry 21991w, Sl.Sol9 G<lry G ...... Sl.20 Bob SltetfW, SI.JO Oeft l!IClltll:ie~. SI.JO Gffrt• '"""· Sl,Ja Marty "'O"*'• Sl,2~J n-44-n.~m "**'2-1'1 11·11·~-111 H·n-11..,._,., '°'"'11·11-412 , ..... ,,..._211 7l .... 70·7f-21l ... 11.10.n-m tt~Hta=m 1'·11·1"1t-m 11·72-1Mt-2tJ '8-14·1S.10-3IS 13-10.n-11-a. JJ.71.71.11-i. ... 1).12-n-a. ,,...n.1>-m ,, .... ,,,,, __ 1J .... 7Hl-216 1'·1 J.70·11-1'7 1$-10·11·11-211 1S.1).11 ·10-U1 11-6t-7S.7J-UI 1HMl-n-.1 11.1s.n ,, __ 1\.10.n.69-• ,s.11-1o.n-ne ... n.1•-n-m IMH~IS-1'1 ll-11·13-'1-1" n 1J.1'-'1-ll't ,..,,.,...,_,... 1s11 ,._.. l~ .._,., .. n m Havlicek Will Retire BOSTON (AP> -John Havllcek the most durable basketball player In the history of the professional game. an· nounced Sunday Jle will retire from tho B01to11 Celtics at the end• of tho current National BaskeU>all Associatlon aeuon. I tJYervous Rangers "gverythlng a pl~er could ccompll b, l"ve done, '.said the forward·su rd, who will be 38 in April. he 6·foot·5 Havlicek, \\Ibo earns lil ac s or $200,000 a year, cruno out of Ohio State as a flnt·round C.lUca draft choice. in 1962. He played on eight Bolton ·NBA 'championship teams, but said he made up his mlnd to quit. before he reported for is 16th season. ·No Match for ~ings cor sl5• Iri8b lBJa t Terp "I would £..O to a b"'eJ,itll din· ner and stay three hourt1 atter !t was over, slanlna autograPhs. I'd be the last one to leave. then I'd. read ln the paper that I h d refused to slgn autoaraph .. That's when I atopped aoln to these things." • Marls, who wa elven special nostalala award ot tho Kansas Clty dinner Saturday night, said he was coaxed to tho affair by Royals ..manager Whitey Hef'Z.9i, an old friend, and his fond memories ol play- ing days in Kansas City. JAY HAAS BLASTS OUT OF A. TRAP ON THE WAY TO SAN DIEGO OPEN VICTORY. Tennis in '84 Olymi)ies? JOC to Consider Proposal in May LONDON CAP ) -Tennis could still sqUl'<'7c through the back door into the 1984 Olympic Gam""· hut tht•rt• ar" still a lot of th stand mg m the" <lY 1'•'11111-. 11Hil'1.tls have no hope ol 1 pl.11 ,. :11 ~toscnw m l!lHO. but 11 I 11 i\ngl•l1•s "'ms its all ·alonc h1cl 111 !ilai:c th1• l!l!U Olympwo;. <llld 1r tlw hnsl r1ty regains its los t 11ght to nominate two extra spot I , 1n lhC' program, tennis could makl' it The chances arc small. Five other sports ·badminton, table tc>nnts, i.ofthall, roller skating and orientcenng -are lin'in1 up to try to get into the Games, and the International Olympic Com· mitlee JS talking o( reducing the program, not expanding it. But David Gray. secretary of the International Tennis Federa- tion, is an optimist. "We have a stronger claim than any of the$& other sports,'' he said in an int.crview. "Tennis 15 played on an organized baSis in 68 countries, and probably by 100 million people. We have a lot or innoonual ~ple campalan- ing for us.•• If the IOC opens the door lo tennis a~ Los .Angeles In 191M, It mu t happen at ilfi :annual ssioo Jn Athens ne.xt May. program, partly bocause of poor That is when LoS An cles' bld orcanluUon nd partly because - will be considered. ot alle1aUona of under-the· The IOC's Program Com· counter payments for players. mission, which advises on the Today, big·Ume tennis ls un• future shape of the Games, has ashamedly professional. But the already set a schedule for 1980 ITF ls mal<ing a big push to im· nnd 1984. There is no provlsion prove standards for the millions for tennis or any other addi· or people around the world who ' t1onal sport. plal tennis ju:1t tor run. , But the commission 1s con· I tennis aot into the Olympics, 1 . slderlng the.possibility of l'C6tor· it would not be just for the mg th~ hott city's rilhl to add no1i9diea. Talented juniors like two sport.a ol its own ch01ce. Johll McEnroe and Tracy Austin • This used to be a regula~ feature would be eJi,ibte. because they of the Olympt.cs, but-was di> not~. prize mone1. scrapped after the Tokyo Game::; ••1t would bO Uie flneat thing of 1964 because the IOC thought tor democr•Uzlng tho game," the Olympics were &rowing too Gray said. ••You would find large. some of the be$t young players There is no firm slgn that the delaying turning 1Profe11lonal, commission will make aucb re-and aiming for the\honor of aft commendation at the Atbens 6lymplc eold medal first. meeting and no sign that the, "But alSO it woc1ld bring a lot . IOC would ratify lt.: But the com· • of much~ncedCd llnanclal help it> mission is expected to make a am tbUt tCnri1 In most coua. report of some kind, so teunis of. tri there {s no grant from the ficials can keep bopln1. government at all. Any m~ Tennis was in the Olympie handc<l out 1oes to Olympic GemQ from 1900 to 1924, 'but spoffi, 1x'caw;e Olympic medall then it !ell out of the Olympic inunaomuch." NavriitilOVa Tops Ctuah . az DAIL y PllOT Tanner PHILADELPHIA -Top· seeded Jimmy Connors easily defeated Roscoe Tanner Sunday t.o win the $225,000 U.S. Pro In door tennis championship, 6·2, 6-4, 6·3. The 25·year-old Connors earned the $35,000 first pr1te with a week's work that included victories over Cliff Drysdale, Adriane Panatla, Buster Mot- tram, Raul Ramire:t and Bnan Gottlrled. It was the seeond timt> 1n the last three years Connors has won the pro tour's Philadelphia event. Carner Tops Pal•ft9 PALM SPRINGS -JoAnne Carner sank a 3·foot putt for a par 5 on the 18th hole Sunday to defeat Sandra Palmer 1-up in a dramatic finish to the SlOS,000 Triple Crown match play cham pionship. . . Palmer, invited to join this tournament only after Carol Mann had to withdraw from the opening fi~ld of 16, had just mis· sed a 13-foot putt trying to salvage her par on 18 and send the m atcb into extra holes. Van,t llot Runnn-up HOUSTON -Trinity University's Eric Iskersky swept by Robert Van't Hof of Southern California, 6-4. 6·1 Sun- day to capture the National In· tercollegiate Tennis C_paches As· soc1ation Jndoor Singles Cham-pionship. Van't Hof is a freshman from Downey. Sldl'f!r, JS, Win• COLUMBUS. Ohlo -Pam Shiver, a lS·year-old from Baltimore, beat Kate Latham of Palo Alto, 6·1, 6·3 Sunday and won a $20,000 pro tennis tourna- ment The hiJ:h school student C'Orned her first womcn·s circuit victory and $2,800. Track Ret!ord Set LOS ANGELES -Arc1enl Ti· tie set a Santa Anita track record in w10n1nl'( the $52,750 San Pasqual Handicap by 11;; lengths before a crowd of 42,047 Sunday. The B·year-old Ancient Title, ridden by Darrel McHargue and carrying high weight or 124 pounds. covered 1 1/US mites in 1 :40 1·5 over a fast track In de- f ea Ung his three nvals. Tucker, Mercer 1f'I• SCOTI'SOALE, Ariz. -Bob Tucker of the Minnesota Vikings and Bobby Murcer of the Chicaco Cubs won the football· baseball partners best·ball han· dicap golf tourney Sunday by a stroke. Murcer and Tucker led all the way in the three-day, 54-hole event at McCormick Ranch Country Club but almost Jost to a fast-closing challenge from Len Barney of the Detroit Lions and Jason 'Thompson or the Detroit Tigers. &tancia Wrestles Estancia Hlah School (Costa M eaa > will host Tustin Tuesday afternoon (3) In a key Century League wrestling match that could determine tbe circuit championship. Estancia enters the meet with a 13·1 overall record and 11 un· defeated ln lea1ue (5-0). TusUn is 4· 1 in lea1ue action with one match remalninl after the Tuea.- dey olfalr. Vu Pahm at 98 and Kevin Sloan ln the heavywel1ht division are Estancl•'• top en· tr an ta. (III.l :''. . '' ... . . . . LARRY BUDOEN MITCH FINKLEA Pro Cage, Hockey Standings Finkka Unbeaten FV Wrestlers Rank With Best By BOWARD L. HANDY Of tlle O.lly P'ltlt IUff When the Fountain Valley Barons wrestling team begins a quest or defending the CIF Southern Section Championship title It won last year, at least three members or the team will be among the favorites lo cap. lure thelr weight divisions. Gary Bohay, wrestling at 123 pounds this season, is the de· fending 106-pound champion. Milch Finklea, the Barons' heavyweight (at 215 pounds), Is undefeated after 22 matches this season and has pinned 14 of those foes. Last Saturday he won the Cal Poly <SLO) title. An Im- pressive record in any division, much less one in which he usual- ly gives away considerable pound•ge. Any wrestler weighing more than 194 pounds is a heavyweight. He was the tunnerup in CJF at. 194 pounds last season and is a team leader according to coach John Rosales. "Milch has a tremendous sense of humor, yet he Is a natural leader. He can be firm and yet joke about a situation," the coach says In prais1n1 Finklea. "He is strong and very quick for a big boy and he is knowledgable and uses tecbni· ques very well. The key to his success has been his ability to improve each year. "He is also willing to ~acri!ice for the good of the team and Is our team captain." How does Finklea look at fac- ing bigger opponents? "Most of them weigh more than I do," he says. "But nobody is any stronger. at least so far. l worked a lot with wel&hts during the o(f.season Hd lt helped to build up my leis. My thiabs were 22 inches Jut year, this year they are 28. "I started in tree style wrest!· ing in the seventh irade and 1 think I hke that better than high school wrestling. Jn tree style, you wrestle on your feet and a couple of times I have !Men able to get a bear hug on a •uy and force him to give up." Finklea isn't certain about a college but says he may attend Oranee Coast and play football along with wrestlint. His lt'ade point avera1e of 3.29 could get him an offer from a major un- iversity, however. The third man who will prob· Marathon ably be seeded first in bis "' 11t "' 12' ,.. 160 ,,. 1)4 weight division Is Larry Bud1en To Carlson al 178. lie had a record of 17·1 after the Five Counties meet and Joe Carlson of Long wa s a qualifier for CIF finals Beach captured first <.'Ompellt1on last year. place in the Worltl "Larry has tremendous ex · Masters Marathon race periencc," Rosales says. "He at Chapman College has been through the wars and Sunday with a lime or has a lot of free s tyl~ ex· 2: 18.41 with the first perience. He haa; a reserve of woman to finish being knowledge and knows how to Susan Peterson, 33, or handle it In matches. It's like La g u n a Be a ch in ·having another coach in the 2:52 .41. room. Bill Francis. a 13· "Ho is much more consistent year-old from Fountain than he was last year and he 1s Valley, finished 28th and able to utilize all of the techni· was a member of tho que!l he has been taueht. winning Blue Angels "I feel we are very fortunate three-man team along to have three \loresllers on a with Frank Duarte (8th) team of this caliber." and Robert Planta, 14 Budgen's only loss came in the (10th) • Clovis tournament to a wrestler Other.\ in the top four from Oakland. included Thomas Bryant MISCELLANY Alamitos Race Entries ., .. '-'"" Plm,..11:0 llllll'T" •AC• -11'11 , .. .,... J .,..,. !INS l WO Cl•IMI... P\IJM SJ, IOO. Tau lo• lMt'lftl S•"4 R•I-o'"-.1 I.Mr~ llQl'tl "l•IT llAC9-MO,.,~. J .,.., Ci.1"""9 IWKt V.000 ,.,.., ... ,""" ._.., •Id• ...... O.ltlllllO Pww "·*· ,,,,,,.Int IWlct ti.ODO AwtYSNOtH•~> 122 °"Jody , ......... 1 ••,IMtl 1,,.~ ICl•rluel ZIO'l Son ICtl'CIOltl '" 1.My"a ... T1111..-<w.ar•• Ill Ml 0.Llthl(._.a. 117 SlllMnly $111Mmy ICM-) "' llt lit llt llt 11• Mr a I•• 10om1,,...,1 "' lar Too !Lu<lli.l 1.llClly ,, (V.....,.) '" •11•1• Girl IT,_..,., 112 'Tit T..,fll ICJen-) lit ,, ... ,,_ ,..,._,, 11t Gl<clclv'a Roe.IL" IC:.W•rt I 11' ..... ,. (itnolllitltll 111 , .. '" 1n ••OMTM •ac. -Ut • .,,,,, 2 Wtr tldl &. 141-Ali.w-e. l"wM ..... Mt9l(lttlon (QflOml») Tiny Holw CTru-.1 MlolltyCN1'9"f IGu<el MIU f'•M'I' PeQt 18arll lwMI Clly IPwMrl 119 f'tPH'I 9rtt ,...,,.,, lit Grtdt !ltqlll fl1 11• "' 111 ua 0. S,;e Mt COet\Mit I Httlw C'"" llMonl<t) ci..nh at.,_I CW.II FlllttN'Flel .. ~I Htlllll'll-CT,_..> ~,. l.llUI Jet '°"'°"*', O.a fllMI IM (""'911) llt an..ottt l(llty (AIU-) Ht '"' Jr>dy IV ..... ! 1tt Dew ... Ce1ll1 ~) "' ". tit '" 11• '~ , .. 122 HT '" ,,, Ht 117 11r m "' "' 12t 111 "' ltJ lit 1tt 12l Ut Area Sports Calendar 00 IMPORTANT ~ ~ BUSINESS ALERT!·~ COMING SOON For Mission Vlelo. B Toro, Lake Forest LCICJUll.a H(Ds and Leisure W oriel A NEW CONCEn IN TELEPHONE DIRECTORY ADVERTISING Published by &tMl'Cll Tele,._.. Dllectory ~ .. _, A WW, OWMd 5111111•.., of G...,Cll Tellp•-& ~a•c• Katella Still County's No.I. The AlJ-CIF first team of· of San ta Mon l ca fensive guard in football is <2:21.14), Ron Kurrie, strong in the upper body and en· Long Beach (2:21.52) Joys b~ng aggressive on the ... ~an~d~~D~a~v~e~W~h~i~t~e~,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~! mat. Anaheim (2:22.52). "I like to go out and push my Ka tell a (Anaheim) Hlgh's Knights continue their stranglehold on the top spot In the official Orange County high school basketball Top 10 poll. garnering all of the first place votes for Lhe f ourtb straight week. • The Knight& are 18-1 and have 'been lashing Empire Leaeue com petWoo at a consistent pace. Onnge Coant1 Top tt BASKETBALL POLL Pos. School, record Point. 1. Katella (18-1) 60 2. Servite (18·2> 54 1,,.3. Fountain Valley (15-4) 41 4. El Modena (11·5) 3S 6.LosAmlaot<l&-3) 33 6. Can)ion (14·5) 32 7. Brea (JU) 30 8. Hunttngt.On Beach (13-8) 21 9. Valentia (13-4) 15 ~o. Santa Ana (IJ.5) 5 opponent around." he says. "l figure if you push people, they will eventually make a mls· take." Is there a comparison between wrestlint and football? "Playing on the tine in football is less glamorous than wrestl- ing," he says. "There are a lot of good linemen around. Jn wrestllng, you are out there on your own." Budgen talk& of the chicken·. wing hold, grabbinc an arm on the mat, and the aranby roll when a wreaUer 11 on the bot· tom. "I remember one time lut year when I was wrestling a guy from Edison <Huntington Beaeh),t' be aay11 .. We had wrestled a couple of Umea betore and were down on the mat, nose-to-nose. We both start· ed JauRhing and backed off to atatt over again." • ••1 have tiMn d91ng bU1 ,_. wt .la and Ion 11nce 1171 when I pu~ my llrtt new Uncofn. Your HMol C:Sept. Undtr Chuck Woodn'• 9'11d• hU •twiyl aul]WaHd my .,,.cta11onL No1 once h8ve • Md to rttum my r tor 90fMtfllng nol-.. cotrlCttJ. JOltnWNh EJTerw Otanot Oounty•a oldllt Unco n M«curv Otalenthlp alomBor STOCKS I BUSINESS y'• Pri NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS Monday, Ja1uary 30, 1178 l/N DAILY "LDT MajOr Changes Make It Easier B18YLVIA PO&TE.a ...... FllllDC out tm federal Income tu retmu .W be oulel" because Of four uia,Jor cbu& : <1) 1'bo 18 perceni atandald deduct!OD wtt.b mlnlmuma and muintu.m1 bu repl ced by a •-.era bnck" amount" that breab down u foUowa: -A $.1,200 deduction toe manied PoOPle fWni Jolnt r&o tu.ro1. -A $3,200 deducUcm tor the or unm&trled h ad of household. -n.eoo for married peoplo nun. separately. VNLIU! TUE OLD STANl>AaD DEDUCl'ION, ll't computed automaUc&lly In tbe ltT7 t.u t.able1 a.ad tu rate achedules, f\'Om wbfcb you ftDc1 your tu. Personal eumptlon1 and exempllon1 for depen- dent.a and for betq 65 or over GI' bllnd bave beoQ in· corporated tn the tu tables. (3) The tables also take into account the ieneral credit, which la $35 per exemption or 2 percent ,. of taxable income up lo $9,000, whichever 11 larger, but not more than $1S>. You don't do this arithmetic. 1be t.as Money's Worth tables do. (4) Filling out Form 104.oA wtll bl a dneh th.la year 1! . your income la $40,000 or less and you are married fllln& a joint retum. or $20,000 or less f« any other nun, status, and your income ts 1olely from waces. aalarles and Upa. plus not more th&Q $400 of interest or S.00 of dlvldoudl and ~ou do not itemize your deductions. · ALL YOU NEED DO IS ENTBa THE usual tnfonna• Uon on your marital atatua, the number of uempUona to wblch yoU are entitled, and your wain. interest and dividends. Total up •d.Justed po111Dcome -then lum to the table that corresponds to your marital 1tatua. and find your tax. The only other alep ia aubtracUl\8 the amount Withheld from wages. But there are compllcallaos for tholo who fllo fonn 1040. lF, FOR INSTANCE. YOU?l'EIDZEDdeductlouand then pick your tax from tbo tables, JOU would be taldn& both the itemized deducUons and the iero bracket amount. To eliminate this duplication. Form 1040 Sebedule A requires you to reduce your total ltemhed deductions -th~ increasing your income -by tbe '11\ount of tbo flat standard deduction built into the table. Flllbg will be more complicated. it you can't use the tax tables because (1) Income l'Wll over the $20,000 or $40.000 limits, or (2) exempUons are greater than the tables provide for, or (3) you are married fUlns 1eparately and your spouse itemizes deductions, or <•> you can be claimed as a dependent on your parents' retum and have $150 or more of unearned income and less than $2,200 of earned Income lt you are linate ($1,GOO if married fiUn& 11eparat.ely). Everyone must complete put or all of a new tax computatlon schedule. Nm: Moneu...auing tips ors lellea ftU ~ Market Absorbs &ul News, Rebounds NEW YORK CAP) -Tbe ltoc.k market nilled lo quiet trading today u the eovernmeut repo~. 11'7'1 v.s. trade deficit that.., a btt amaller than llOll)e uilnta feared. Tbe Dow Jones averaae of 30 lndUIUtala~ wu Q 8.32 p0lnta toT72.M. Galnen held u 8-5 acJvantaie onr loHn amonf New York Stock Exchango-lhted lsautl. The govenubeot reported that U.S. Imports nceedec! e~port.s by $2.03 bllllon in Deeeln~h~ the tot.al de. !icit fortbeyear to a record $215.12 But analysts noted that tbe news bad been wl4e11 ad· vert.laed in advance, and that the ftf\l.Nll aetuaJq came i'1 below advance esUmates ol about $30 blWon. Brokers alao said the market ieemed to belleftt ftom buying by investors who bad bean boldlna back until the t.rade-deficlt newt wu out of tho 917. s • • . • I ... DAILY PtLOT Tele"ision · EVENING HO. caa NlWI NlWI EMEAOEHCY OHEl P1tam1d1u 011• h lelec19d 10 mooet 81 ,,,. ldM ft<e<nlll 0 MOVIE • • •-t ' Olngaka' ( 11165) Stanley Baker, Jult•I Prowse. An 111orn1y dalanda a native ~ffd ot commt1uno • murder tn rev.nge for the dHlh OI Na daughlet (2 hrs I Q) THE BAAOY BUNCH Gr90 Ind Marc:ll blbylll the reat ot the kids Cl) THE AOOl<IES &) ELECTRIC COMPANY W FVTUf\E OF THE 80CW. SECURITY SYSTEM Gueets. Jamu ll C1rdw9'I, CO<l'Vrl41t1on•r Of the Soc:lal Securny edm n- ••lllllOll, Rep B•rbet 8 Conabte Jr , 1111 rankrng minottl)' member of '"- Hou11 Ways and MHna Comm11t••. Rep Al Ullman cha.,man ol the HOUM Waya And MHN Comm•llM. and W Allon w,1111. Cha1rmat1 of the advtaory cornm1ttff 10 AEL'a Pro)ICt on &ociel Socurlly and Rettrement l'olrCy Saved From Terror Ztppi :\laimon. a hostage of Arab ter· rorists, 1s rescued by her brother Gahl in the Israel town of Ms'slot. The mc1· dent is examined on an ABC docmcn· tary tonight at 10 on Channel 7. tO ABCNEWS &300 MOVIE when brother Ernie ac:c:u'" t11m or taklf'lg a 1111u1ble penny from h1a COlf'l tollecllon, fl\) OVl!R EASY Guell Sammy Cohan (I) UNT AMEO WORLD (@) MEJIV ORIFFIN • • • •·strange e.dlel- lows" (1965) Rock Hucston, Gig Young. Aller conetdef· Ing divorce, a corporlle execullve a111mpt1 1 reconcll1atlon with hit l1ury-tempe<ed wile ( 1 hr , JO min) Q) MY THREE SONS Chip demand• a jury trial Ou"'' Dr. William Rad8< l111onn11 Brown, Marty ~!)SI, Don Edinger 1;00 D NBC NEWS 0 UARSCLUB 0 ABCNEWS Channel Lbt ings f) KNXT (CBS) Los Angalt•o; G KNBC (NBC) Los Angelos 0 KTLA (Ind ) Los Angelo~ D KABC·lV (ABC) Los Angeli•:. ({) 11.FMB (CBS) San Diego 0 KHJ·TV (Ind) Los Angulos I'll KCST (ABC) San 01ugo Q) KTTV (Ind.) Los Angelu:. Q) KCOP· TV ( lnd ) Los Angeles tJ) KCET-TV (PBS) Los Angeles ~ KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beacn m I LOVE LUCY Lucy con111nc t Ricky that he snould Ngh•pt'9l1oUre 111~ boas 1n10 gtVtng him • '911 )ft CD AOAM-12 fD MACNEIL J LEHRER REPORT c:1) COLLECTIVE BAROAININO GOES TO SCHOOL (I) TO TELL THE TRUTH 7 30 Q LATIN WAVE The rsprdlV grow1nq L,11in poriulo11ior1 a 1n1p..ct 11nd mfluf'nce, on the United St.itM ••• exaomm.O. 0 NEWLYWEOOAME 0 ON TRIAL: A CASE OF TEENAGE PREGNANCY A nign athOOI boy lucoa • manstdught11r ctoarg.1 when he defends h11 gtrHr!Gnd I repulltton by atr1k1ng It 188cNlr. Q) THE BAAOV BUNCH More<• gets A cruah on het ....... d-Onl~t CD ADAM-12 • U.. INTEACHANOI! 'PopoQfll' 19 "Ae>fCH CHEF "TN Whole Rah Story' (Al 1100.000 NANI! THAT TUNe ~ KUPER OF THE WILO 1:00 t) Cl) 0000 TIMES "I Had A Dream ' When JJ'I promo1ion II lhrNt· en6d by ptejoelic.. "" anlll•ty, and 1 •-too m.,,y c:t11M Clog•. cauM 1 wild dreem In whlC:h ,,. i. a white man. Somlll Book• ~t•t1r1 CJ UTTU! HOUSE ON THE fORAIRIE ' Be My Friend" Laura joy• fully bec:om .. a eurrogate moll\4W when alle dllcov· .,. an abandoMd Infant (90mln.) 0 MOVIE * * V. "Cro11curr•nt" ( 19711 Robert H~a. J«• my Slate. Two San Fran• CIACO d•tKllVM ~t>­ gall tlMI murdef' of a youth aboatd • c:a~ c:.,. (2 hra.) 1J (!J) SIX MIWOH DOU.ARMAN "The LOii llland'' A beau· trlut )'OU"O woman trom a Pac1llC llland tnhabol.0 Dy d .. c41ndantt ol bl1ng1 lrom et¥>tMir planet, ...... St9'<• .<usttn'a help In uv· •no'*~ lrom exttnc- hon (2 hrs) 0 JOKER'S WILO Q) CAROi.. BURNETT ANDFAlelOS Cl) MOVIE * * • "Force 01 Arma" ( 195 t) w1111am Holden. Nancy 0150l'I. An Army heutenant and a WAC tall 1n love In World War II llaly (2 hrs) fD THE PRISONER 'A. 8, & C" The PrllOnlf la lhu &ublKt ol on e1tp<!tl- men1 10 m&nlpul&I• his dr111tr"' c:1) SPECIAL inn .. V1a1ons ' Beeh Rich- ards does dramatic rNd· 1ngs trom her boOlt • A B•eck woman Sl)9aks," as well as d11c:u111ng womon·a llbltallon ..,,h hosl OllVtd Cr1ppina. 1:30 0 (I) llABV, l'M BACK (Pr•mlere) A legally deceased huaDand (OemOIWS Wiison) .uddenly rN~I and ttlN to fl'tl!V9 hi~ dHd marriage betore h•• wile (Denise TUBE TOPPERS ~ 6.00 "Future or the Social Security System." Puhl1c official:; dis· l'Uss the outlook of the system. e 8:00 -"Little House on the Prairie." Laura chst·o,·cr~ an abundoned bab\. Episode was \\l'ittcn an<l directed bv l\lichad Landon. Ninety minutes. f1 8:00 -"Six Million Dollar Man " A young woman from a South Pacific island seeks Steve Austm's help in sav- ing her people. New lime. Two hours. QJ 10:30 'Woman as Painter." Feminine artists through the.• ages <ire profiled . NocholU) t ... the m.tpflll knot ¥1-lth lllf QIOWlt !>Nu G CONCINTAATION CD l12t.OOOOOE8TION 8i) OV'lA fAIV GUMI SammyOohen, 9:008(1) M•A•S•H When Hot Lipe tt11nk1 lllle·1 pregnant, He.-eye V.Mll to uu Radar'• rabbit to -It Ille'& ngllt. MMn· ll<hde, • hOl'nlsldc l)tlllnl hOlds ChM!M and 8 J 11o11iage 0 EVANS ANO NOVAI( "W11tungton And The SALT Tllkl" Amblsaador Paul Wamlle, Ch .. t SALT negotlllor, la lntervt.we<t. Q) MERV ORIFFIN Gllfttt Or W11J1em Radet,' Lavonne Brown. M1r1y Rosa. Don Edi~. Darren 81ankerlhlp, Jan Bl1nker- ah1p. fD THE ountRINO PRIZES "A Past Lit•" Adam enjoya lhe tasll ol prolM1tonaJ succ:eu and attempts to publicly debate with one ot Ille marn Engftlh aupporl • era ot la9Qtrn c:1) OAVIO SUSSKINO 9:300 ()) ONEDAYATA TIME Jeaioua of Ju11e and atarv- tng tor allenhon, Barbar• dec:tdM 11'1 111111 for e change and 1t1rt1 by changing he< reputatJOn. 0 COLUM&O "Murdw Under 01111' When a re1taurateur (Mtch .. I v. Ouzo) U1r11t-to expo11 • blecilmeobng food etitic (Loul• Jourdan), 111 ~ the vtet•m 1n a -~ectCMll. 10 oo 0 Cl) L04J GRANT A m1n'a (Robetf Earl Jonee) an ""°"'· puitld on hil wall, la tht•tened ..,th deltructlon "''*' the t>uildlng .. ~ 10 be rand 0 · HEWS Q A8CNEW8 CLOSEUP • Hoetaoel.. An exam•n•· lion ot the frightening phe- nomenon ot thl 1970'1 - it1cldent1 ot terrorttm lllld hOl1~1a111ng In E\H'OP41. the Middle Ea" end Atrtca. ti) HOHEVMOOHtM 1030CD G) NllWS fD WOMAN Al PAINTEft Among the otten-owr. looked lemlnlne aru111 examined In thta program ••• Renaltffnee portraou- "" Sophon11ba Allgulscio- la, 17th century 1111y· • Artemtlla G41t10letcl'll; and Lilllll VlgN-lf'Drun. the darting OI pr•ReYOlullon- lty French aociety 11ooaoo m~ NEWS 0 LOVE, AMERICAN STVI£ • love A'1d The Great C1r1teh • Ad .. m West dropa "' on Harry Cl<1rman 10 buy M>me stamps. 0 MOVIE • •1> "Dino••· 11965> Sllnley Siker. Juliet Prowse. An attorney oetends 1 native aecused MORNING 12:00 0 TWIUOHT Z~ A guerilla leader llllCQledl In overthrowtng !tie regime ot the ~pt oowmment ot hi• country. CD FONVIR KRNWOOO G) MOVIE • * .. Ferry To Hong Kono" ( 1981 I Curt Jutgent, Oraon Wellee. A drifter on a Wl'y boet lljf'nt hero v.tlll'I the lhrp It alllldled. ( 1 hr .. 30 min ) 1~ 0 ODIE AUTAV 'Man From Muttc Mouf\tlll'I" CD CRo&S-wrT8 12'.310 8TAATIMl! "'Storm Cfoellng'' Barbara Auel!. Jadt LOfd, 9 IAONSIOE An 1Yal'll-Qlf0. thealer group·a new pn>duction la ~ v.t'9l'I • cut rnein- blr la mwdefed. Tue•da9• Da11d•e/tl MORNING .-1 UO 0 * •i.. •<>s-.iion II Metmeod"' (1M1) K...., Wynn, Ma Z. ..... \<M Amerlean c:omman~. !\Olding on.-ttwd of • IDCtet mac>. -u.e -411\ thr• 8n111h ••~ doe tor lhe hidden~ of • top Nu.I on tile~· of Nomiudy, ( t hf •• J mm) AFTERNOON °' 12.00 Q) * * * •,t "Som v ... di(' (1950) Judy Hollld Wlfflam Holden. ~ bM\l\ltul blonde di that her boytrltnd ll'IVO!Wd tn aorne pret underhanded deelnp, rune away v.tltl IMlr ciuett• lnstruc:t~or(2 20 lnlft.) ~ GJ ••**"The C#dl. nel" (Prlrl 1) ( tl>U) T Tryon. RolTiy • An ""*~ Pflelt tiec:k on hi• r~ car-• he reoeMlr card•nal'I robeL ( 1 t,,. 30 .. llW\.) ... A~ ~•***"tfow~ 111•• (t9H) De ReynolOI, J-. WIMln a~ oirttrlend to ~ P&t'lnl$ follow '*"' l1 30min) I Demond's 'Back,' rBut Why? LOS ANGELES -KNBC, Channel 4, will telecast a 30· minute documentary which gives a positive look at. the rapidly growing Latin ROPUla- tion and its impact ahd in· fluences on Southern California, "The Latin Wave/La Onda Latina." tonight at 7:30 with a Spanish language simulcast on KALI Radio, 1430 AM t1on, <O Los A~eeles .hv the fifth laraest Latin Arnencan population of any city U\ e world, <S) the benefits of~ pandlng population a stimulation of ttanomic I , the creation of jobs, and a0tiii urban revitalization, •• wen increa~ political stren-••··-· .. By JAY SUARBUTT LOS ANGELES CAP> Demond Wilson left NBC's "Sanford and Son" .because Redd l"oxx left it for ABC 1 omght, Wilson reappears tn a new sitcom -on CBS ap· proprialcly called "Baby, I'm Back." <Channel 2, 8:30 p.m. > llC' now plays a J(uy declared fegally dl'ad after he disap- peared se\'cn years ago from his borne. his wire <Denise ~icholasl and their l\\O youn~ Jids <Kim Fields and Tony lolmesl tr tonight's premiere is typical, he should have stayed AWOL Actor Richard Yniquez will narrate the documentary. He is best known for his performance as a heroic Mexican-American policeman in the docudrama "The Deadly Tower ," most re- cently. he starred in the special two·hour episode of "Police Story" entitled "River OC Promises" II E STARTS IT by unexpec- 1cdly barging In on a ceremony m which his wife, flanked by the kids and his battle-ax of a mother-in-law (Helen Martin) Is about to marry ber boss, a stuffy Army colonel. 'DADDY' RETURNS TO ASTONISHED KIDS IN NEW TV SERIES 'BABY, l'M BACK' Demond Wiison (center) Stara With Tony Holm••· Kim Fields In Comedy SOMF, FACTS presented in the documentary a re: (1) Chicanos number one-and-a-half million in Los Angeles County and more thao half million in Los Angeles, (2) the Latino population is the youngest in the country, with a median age of lJH\a as compared to about 29 for the general population, (3) In Los Angeles Latinos are 33 per· cent of the student popula• The shock causes a temporary delay in the proceediogs. ll 's quickly established that Wilson sUll loves her, but she does not love him any more. In fact, she and the colonel plan another attempt at gelling hitched the next day. But first she hires a shyster Jawyer <Tlrilmy Roaers) to get an injunction barring Wilson from baretnc ln aealn. Biggest Gross LOS ANGELES (AP> -Oh, God! 11 has become the biggest- grossing comedy of all time with a gross of more than $45 mllllon to date. l'he film, starring George Burns and John Denver, wa written by Larry Gelbart and directed b,Y Carl Reiner. It opened Oct. '1, and is playlna ln more than 900 theatens. IF ANY MORE barging oc· curs, mother-in-law vows, "he'll see a closo enceuntcr or the fourth kind -my fist in his face." A friendly studio audience howls at this. But then it howls at everything, even when Wilson ruiks his mother-in-law: "Isn't it time you fed your bats." In re-wooing his wife, he ex- plains he only left home because he couldn't find a Job, kept los- ing at the track and wone. He demands to know how she can love the colonel. ''And what's love?" she re- torts. "Once I thought lt was a beautiful man who knew what I was thinking even before I uid a word. But all that walkfd out on me seven years ago. "NOW t TJONK Jove is sccuri· ty, dependability and a future tbat has a future." At this point, the eudlence a hion Island ewport Beach - goes ''Oooh'' and applauds. And then Wilson frantically at- tempts to foll the wedding by go- ing to court and having himself declared legally alive -which would make his wife a bigamist if she weds the colonel. It's laborious, but there are sporadic flashes of humor. One occurs whenever Rogers, as the lawyer, breathes life into his fee. ble Jines with expert mugging and cries or, ''Oh, yeahhh." ANOTIIER GOOD tum comes from Jack Fletcher, cast as a prissy court clerk with whom Wilson wangles a fast t\Ppoint- ment. As he sees WUson. he re. coils .sllgbUy and inquires: "Are you a terrorist!" But moments like these are few and tar between in the script. by April Kelly and Tom Gelger, who work from a series idea cooked up by producer Lila Gar .. rett ond veteran cagwriter Mort l.achman. Maybe in future showl! "Rabv, I'm Back" will make a come- back from its limp commence- ment exercise. But it's a bad omen when only the vlsitin1 players -Roge~ and Fletcher -man age to be funny. 'Taxi' Drama Sheen, Saint Starring LOS ANGELES (AP.> -Eva Marie Saint and Martin Sheen go for a ride In "Taxi! !J" on the Hall of Fame on NBC on Thursday at 10 p.m. He's a rough·taltina cabbte from Brooklyn and she's a sophisticated 'Noman who ttach out to each other durin1 a. ride to New York's Kennedy International Airport. They have the only 11'Caklng roles ln tho twe>-hour drama by Lanford WJlson. Joseph Hardy directed. STEREO.SOUNDS OF Southern California. Among those featured in documentary is Vilma Mart.in • Pre~idcnt of Medcan-Americ Legal Defense Education and n Governor Brown~~ pointee to the Unlversit f Calltomla Board of Rea • who discusses the impac f "The Latin Wave" from the point of view of tho American census. She states that tbe.im .. portance 1n the accuracy of tho census ls refiected ln reappor- tionment, political empower· mcnt, representation, revenue sharing funds, schools, as~l"ell as q uallficatlona for social benefits proerams. I DISC JOCKEY Chico Sessna. or KALI Radio, bu been broad· casting in Los Angeles for de- cades. In giving his oplnlort of the impact of ''The Latin. Wave, .. ho compares todai to the Los Angeles of twenty y~ ago and observes that we i;.nt now experiencing a "cultUral catalyst." I Daniel Lopei, publisher of Nuestro Magulne, a naUOn publication t~ LaUns, diacUJlleS the significance of sucl a magailne where otbera tan learn about tho Latln culb.t'(e and understand tho Latin 1eble of pride and heart. l The documentar)' ful'~er aivea a revtew of lmmlara! trends from the turn·ofil e· t!entury throUtn the 70'1 ancl projected Inc for 1990. • 'MARMADUKE by Brad A derson ,..a_o_o_M_E_R __ --.....-..i 1·30 { ~'f J.WAv ~A '111/Gt.!5 Wle.C&/\ID ••• / MISS PEACH - -h!C' 11~ oo{ I Ger ?Tuel( wrn~ GA~ Mi A TA218l£ ~IA"A~~! • · "Come out here and tell me what you've rlnnAI" ,,., FllNKYWINKERBEAN r. (I)'\~ I ~'VE GOr A PHONE CALL /N 1HE OFFICE FRCW1 .X)E GARAGIOLA ! I·~' CASEY IS 11115 REAL.l4 JOE GARAGIOLA ~ NO KIDDING~! by Tom Batiuk by Ferd and Tom Johnson ~ BoY' HIM AND HIS SENIORITY!.' I lo -- DOOLEY'S WORLD DR.SMOCK HOW WIL..L-;r. t.OOK AF1"6R THE e>A1-.u:=>AGes AAe RBMOVE!P, DOCTOR, OR AM :t ee:1NG -roo NOSE!Y? MOTLEY'S CREW GI.AD 1'0 ~AVS YOU BACK, NCn~'I. HOPe YOU DON'f HAW AW ~flt) ~eet.tll!G5 ASOCJr Al~ t..4VI~ 'lt)(J OFF: nd Mel Casson by Mell Moncier. Jlnuwy 30. ,,,. DAILY PILOT U PEANUTS HAAOS CAN ~NT PICTURES ftA'I MUSiC • ANO Mk£ PIES! &....:.;~-..:;,;....._..._....___. '--~.-.CQ.l~_..;,'·-J._.o I --------------.,--------------.! HANOs CAN ro A MIWON '™'N65 •. l!MILe ~'RE AT IT, i l.CT'S Al.SO HEAR IT FM ! CLAWSAAO~! . by Roger Bradfleid . I by George Lemont YOLJ '-'LJS"f' ANSWeRSP YOUR OWN QUE!S'T'ION, MRS. TURN!!R by Templeton and Forman YEP .. AWO~~ H.6.VE ea:t41M6 F"'vt 6UY l 60f RIDOF I TODAY'S GIDSSWDRD PVZZLI t UlillTEO Feettn 8Yftdlc1te • Saturdlyte Puale lofved: 1 2 Boot eso.n 13 A~•noeon wtgll 21 Tiie eun 23 E•t1lbilt l1t• f1tua1to1t 25 E11r00t11\ 1arco1t 27Anfwl'llUI 11\ttl\lrO. 29At111911 21-Liea ~81110t1 a•Mtft,t-41 • • • t DAILY PtlOT Monda;, Januart SO. 1178 By Tbe Auocla&ed Preas The following are Butboard'a bot record hits tbe week ending February ( as they appear ln n t week'• issue of Billboard m_!11azlne. HOT SINGLES 1. STA YIN' ALIVE -Bee Gees CRSO) 2. SHORT PEOPLE Randy Newman CWarncr Bros ) 3 BABY COME BACK Player <RSO) 4 WE ARE THE CHAMPIONS -Queen • CIUektra) 5 LOVE JS THICKER THAN WATER -Andy Gibb CRSO> 6. JUST THE WAY YOU ARE -Billy Joel ieolumbia) 7 HOW DEEP IS YOUR LOVE -Bee Gees lRSC)) 8 SOMETIMES WHEN WE TOUCH -Dan }1111 120th Ct!ntury l 9. YOU'HE IN MY HEART -Rod Stewart <Warner Bros.) 10 EMOTION Samantha Sang (Private Stock> TOP J,Ps 1. "SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER" Soundtrack <RSOl 2. ROD STEWART • • Foot Loose & Fancy '.Free (Warner Bros.) • 3 EARTll, WIND & FIRE -All 'N' All _<Columbia) • , 4 QUEEN Nt•ws Of The World <Elektra i 5 ELECTRIC LIGHT ORCHESTRA -Out or The Blue (Jet> t:AS'V LISTENING 1 Dt:SJRl':E Nt•il Diamond <Columbia) 2 JUST Tilt-: WAY YOU ARE -Billy Joel (Columbia> :J GOODRYI': GIRL David Gates <Elektra) 4 CURIOl S MINDS Johnny R1vers <Big Trecl Samantha Sang (Private 5. 'EMOTIO"l Stock l SOl1L SINGl,F-~ l. Wlll<'ll \\A Y IS UP Stargard CMCA> 2. Ol'Jl 1.0VE Natalie Cole <Capitol> 3. i\L\\'i\ YS AND FOREVER -Heatwave 1Ep1c l 4 TOO llOT TO TROT • Commodores ~Moto" n > ~1 Fl-TN Con Funk Shun CMeroeury > COUNTRY SINGLES 1 BED 2 ])Ol I OUT OF MY HEAD AND BACK IN MY Lorl'tta Lynn <MCA) YOU'HE TllE ONE Oakridge Boys CABC· 3 TO DADDY Bros ) Emmylou Harris <Warner .i I JLST WISH YOU WERE SOMEONE I J.OV E Larry Gatlin <Monument) . 5 DON'T BREAK THE HEART THAT LOVtS YOU Margo Smith (Warner Bros.) Balloting Starts For Oscar Awards LOS ANGELES CAl» -Members of the Academy or Motion Picture Arts and Sciences have begun nominations for the Oscar awards to be presented April 3. Voters will submit mail ballots nominating no more than five achievements in each of 16 categories, including best picture. best director. best actor and best actress. L The nominations will be announced Feb. 21. SIMONE SIQNOAIT "DIABOLIQUE" 6:00 A 10:20 'FoUl Piny' More Hitchcock Homag; ·~~ 'FOUL PLAY' STARS CHAS£ ANO HAWN Another Tribute to Hitchcock Filming Liza Back, Slwu· Goes On Tonight NEW YORK <AP) -Mpw that Liza is back, "The Act" can go on Producers announced Sunday that Liza Min- nelh has recuperated Crom a viral infection and will be hack on stage tonight In Broadway's highest priced show. "The Act" is virtually a one-woman show and M 1ss Minnclli has no understudy. When she can't perform. the show 1s canceled. She was out Ill with the nu from Dec. 21 to Dec. 27 and again from Jan. 14 until tonight. The last week was spent at an unnamed spa in Texas. At S25 a ticket on Saturday njghts and $20 most other limes, MlSS Mmnelli's nu coslo; the producers of lhe show close to $30,000 a performance. By 808 THOMAS HOLLYWOOD CAP> -With all the tribute be· ing paid to him, Alfred Hitchcock must wonder if he's still alive. First Mel Brook!. raahloned a valentine lo the still-active master or suspense with the current "Hiah Anxiety." Now Paramount ia starrinc Goldie Hawn and Chevy Chuo in "Foul Play." "It's an affectionate look al tho Hitchcocklan thriller," admits dlrector·writer Colin Hlegins. ·•but it's aeared to the 1970s. 1 wrote 'Silver Streak' out of affection for the Hitchcock movie of ·North by Northwest.• 'Foul Play' is more alone the lines of 'The Man Who Knew Too Much,· with Goldie in the Doris Day part." A VJSnoll TO THE set of "Foul Play" cets tho picture in the rehearsal of a key scene. Goldie blurt.s oul a story about an albino, a dwarf and a dead body to a skeptical audience consistine of police investieatora Chase and Brian Denahy and landlord Burgen Meredith, Tbe movie offera a couple of firsts: first mm role for Chevy Chue, first direction by Colin Hig· gins. Chase, the fallinc·down fellow from "Saturday Night Live," talked in the mobile home that serves as his dressing room: "This ia the first real role I've played. I've always done revue sketches. usually with material that 1 wrote. What I did was quick and hopefully funny; I never had to sustain a role "THIS ROLE ISN'T 'Sleuth' -there's no depth of emotion, but it's still a challenge for a clown like me. There's nothing In the role that re- quires any broad comic business. Yes, I do a fall. There was a fall in the beglnrunc of the picture, but I didn't think lt was right, so I asked for a change. Now I fall off a houseboat later in the pic- ture. "I think I will always do Calls, even if my act· ing career develops. J think it works for me; peo· pie don't expect lt lo happen to a big guy like me. Like on the Oscar show. I understand some people actually said, 'Too bad it happened to such a ruce- looking fellow, but he carried It off very well.• "I HA VEN'T"'done my best Call yet. I've writ- ten one for the picture I'm eoine to make for Unit· ed Artists. I'll go crashing down several flights of "W1 Aa N0t AU)M• oS'flll~c!.1 IClllY, NO MIMS "OUtlAMOOJ Ii ft Rati' , .. CHOealOYl 111 -· rul oc1vt1C11 IOMltfUYOUA urutDAY ......, RVll ('I) ICllll'' NO Ma•t •Olla• .., .... .,.. .. .,..,. OH OOOl (N l .......... u ... .. uruu111. , ....... ,. UIA -l1Jel09f. 00 .. 10 NIW YOIK. NlW YOU (NI "u• ONI ON ONI !Nl TEMPORlllLY CLOSED stairs: It will be terrific. So 11 lhe dnl with Un t Art15t1, whkh I JU t concluded Will I direcl rn cript? That's a httle 5cary; it could bo the N Principle at work." · COUN IDGCIN HAS no such reluctance. "I've wanted to direct ever sltlce I left UC film .!!chool. Arter araduallng, I knew t would h to write somcthm& unui.ual to get a chanc: make a film in the studios. t wro • 'Harold a Maude' as my mastn's thesls and sold ll to Par • mount with me rut dlrectt1r. Then the studio I cold feet and t wa kicked upstairs as producer • "I lived in France Cor a while, and when f turned I knew 1 y.'Ould have to write a succ mm to get back lh the indu try. So J wrote ·sn Streak,' All the studios were wilUnc to b\lY • Play' but only Paramount would take a cb c me as a director." AS FOR GOLDIE. here's what she had "This is my f1111t work ln -let's see. month:,. What have I been doing! Well, ftrst made a baby. His name is Oliver <Father ls ~in Bill Hud!>on>. Then I didn't ao back to wo becau~e I wanted to spend Oliver's llrst year wi him : the first year 1s the most important. "l turned do"'n a lot or scripts, but my ace was understandin1e. I don't think I mLssed anythin good. 'Semi-Tough' was one of the scripts, but didn't like the woman's role. I thouabt it w degrading. Istilldo." • " • f t 1 ''Eclectic" ii' probably the bolt t. word to ct.cribe the Turtle BOck: ! )tome ot Dr. and Mrt. AnthOllY N. lJ'oto. The three-bedroom home, t!DUI· sled a1alnst one of Irvine'• sreen- billa, la a 1howcase for be m&D1 obJelt d'art, pieces of sculpture, anUques, palDtmp and artifacts that the Totos have collected dur· m. their world tranls. "It'• a bl~ of cultures," aald Shelley Toto, travel comul· ta.nt for Mesa Travel. (Since abe .woru at home, 1be baa converted one of the bed,rooms Into office apace.) Dr. Toto, fOftJ1er medical director at Fairview State Hospital. ls involved with private medical ~actice. In aiSditlon to 1Iobe-lJ'QtUn1 and interest tn co1lectln1 beautiful ob- jecta, Mn. Toto la also involved in interior deai111. "l knew when I aaw the layout of the house that I wanted to use mlrrora and architectural forrm," she said. After th• Totoe m<>Ved in· .to the hoUle a little more than a ..... Ila ....... year ago, lhe redesJened the main apace and spent lhre moalhs ex· ecuting tbe project. Mra. Toto bu reworked two en· tire \Ulla with arched mlriors. creaUnt a reflection effect for a number of plantl, a ch and lier · and matchlDc tconcet. _. The arcbe$ are separated by wooden columns, whidl bave been covered with a vinyl wallpaper that slmwates travertine marble. • The moldia,c is done in an antlq stain. The focal pol.Dt in the center of the ar i.s an atrium, lf•ced wltb a reproduction of a marble statue, Renoir's "The Bather," and a variety of green planta. •'I tried to eet an effect of Mediterranean villa" said Jira. Toto. "I wanted to have a !eellnf of open.neq." she added, polntlna out that the cathedral cellin1 with skylights encoura1e1 the vast dimensiom in the central rooms. Gold, beige and brown Italian <See VILLA, Pace en J.ournal Writing ·, • DAr1. Y PlLOT ot DEAi, WIL · LIAMSPORT : I Just c:bt>c:ked wttb Dr. James Bowman -Unlvenlty or ChlcalitO Df'partmeot ( TUESDAY, JAN. 31 By SYDNEY OMARR ) • Shelley Toto ~its beneath shaped, wooden valence. .......... A very powerful OX· rlenc ," e aid. She now it t.f· naively ln her pracUce, whtcb aid ts made up largely of creative adult&. Accordin1 to Dr. Whitcomb, th dtf· ference betw Jqumal wriUM and the other popular therapies such ._, est and encounter ft'OU ii th•t rno-t ol ~ lat. ter b e th Jr methOd on interaction between ~pie, Wlth the Journals there 11 no lnterpcrsonal encounter. "The journal la a non·JUdsmentat way of working with youraeU," Dornen comq_ienttd. "Other therapies, such H \l:ansacUonal analyals, work on your behavlor while the Joumal wora on. ~our deep aeu ... He aald many people are f!urprised to nad that they have ICl active lnner lite. "People often have never looked a' lt. The jOurnal WU ttiern 1n touch With their inner natur . " It also teach that 0 works," •ucti as a per100'1 vocation or pastimes. have Jives of their own and may be dlalogued with. ••A PERSON'S life is an art waft 1n many ways," Dornan said. "The journal teaches that we have some ability to guide and direct our lives." Dr. Whitcomb said the clarity on "where a person is" in his life often opens new directions and i.Jtematlves u well as new personal relationships. It even gives new energy. "There is eneray bound up with people in the paat. It is released as we go through," Dr. Whitcomb said. Geor1ie E. Vauahn, a librarian at Cal State Long Beach, agrees with Dr Whitcomb. She has taken one of his workshops and now finds the journal a valuable place lo explore anger and lrustraUon. "U J feel upset I alt down and write in my fournal. Then I start dl&losulnc with ttie penon.s or events. I start to leel relieved." Karen Clarke-Cherry, an Orange Coast CoUeie sociology major, said she d.llcovered she was making "a Jot of cloauret With things that bad been bGtberlDC me" when she took Doman's cfh s. 8 E CA1LS THE process ''pu~ :your Jlf e on paper to deal with 1t better." <Yrom Page CU ' ':Reps. Cardi.aft Collins. l>.llH Shlrley N. Pettis, D·Callf.; IUl<l Corrinne C. Bogp, D·La., whole husband, Hale Bogss. is pre· sumed to have been killed 1n a plane crash ln Alaska. Before 1949, 4S percent of the women 1n Conaresa sqcceeded their hmbands. But that flgfare dropped to ~ percent from lfH9 throuah 1971 and ls no• con· sider ably lower. Many women elected or •P· pointed to complete their Ji'1Sband'1 terms have done that and aone no further. Others, however, have gone on to long congressional careers on their own. In 1931. Hattte W. Caraway of Arkansas was appointed to fill the vacancy caused by the death of her husband, Sen. Thaddeus Cara way, D-Ark. She subse- quently was elected to two full, six -year terms. •haS>ed valence at the front win· dowa. Tbe ~t Ind.Ian forms in tbe valence add atlll another foret.p influene to the culture mixture. Margaret Chase Smith was elected to the House in 1940 to fill the wiexpired term or her late husband, Rep. Clyde H. Smith, R-Maine. She went on to win four more terms on her own and was elected to the Senate in 1948. She served until 1973, longer than any other woman senator. Rep. F.dith Nourse Ro1ers. R-Mus., bolds the record of aen- jni longer in the House tban afly other woman. She was elected in 192S to fill the neaocy caUsed by the death or her buaband ud served unW her own death 1n 1960. For reading or wate!bln1 telev~ the intimate den area Is decorai.d ~en aat!Dal-Jun1l• talande theme.. complete with grua clOtti wilJpepu, 'leopard fur upbotatered couch, animal print throw pulowa and a fluffy Greek area nag. Rep. Frances P. Bolton, R .. Olilo, won eleotlon in 1940 to auc- eeed her husband in the House and was ~lected repeatedly untll 1868. The iervlce in Congress by a numb4tr ~women could be con- 110 ..... st .. L•e • t4-llU 0,..., INclt pa Thou h or ho m nr. coll~ " ol proc H bC~ . . about m• ......... ~. s. La •• ln~:J.> rtls:ular. sat dOwn and dialo U Will\ r WOl'kS .-music photocrnPf\y a1Kl wrtlln& -in order t~ understand why she does them. "I found th t I like photo1r11pby bt!cauae I want to preserve r;omething that I have aeen ao.I un write abc>\it it later.) want to preserve a moment." Debtile Whlte, a Cal State LOnai Beach atUd nt who ls wrltinr a Muter's tbealt on Jou.rnal1, ascettaJned that Journal keepert ln colle1e tend to develOp ~ttter aell-ima~es. "Bul I need a larger group to study, ' be said . . M.s. White beUevea ~ournals are mtnsuln1 because of the fact that a per on can make himself more vislble to himself and hence become more visible to others. "People reallio that they have the capacity within tbem elves to enlar1e · their oW11 lhes," she said. NONE OP ntE leaders advertise their workshops but more peop~ seem to be coming all the time. "I'm not interested. tn selllnc the journal, 0 l:>oman aaid. "lt'a part of my professional commitment." He plans to explore the posslbllity or using journals tn tbc teacblnc of literature. "I perhapa will stlect the ht er ature that refiects the growth of Ute and basic patterns of human 1rowth to see how nrUsts are refleclln1 tho 1rowth patterns we experience in our own Uves." Some leaders SU11est that~ be uaed tn lieu o,.therapy unless there are serious problems. The thought behind this. one leadtr sunest d, ta that "people don't need therapy -they need a process for 1etttni their lives in order." Journal workshops will be ortered at Orauee Coast College and UCLA the weekend of March 17-19. Information ls available .trom Doman at SSS.Sl.T7, I>r. Beusaen.stamm at fn.3> 829-7407 or Dr. Whitcomb at Cal State Lona Beadl, <m> -..5287. sla red connectinc links (amll~ pollUcal dynasty. Rose Lema was named to the Senate in 1936 to aucceed her husband, Sen. Huey Lona, D· La., who bad been assasslnated. Their aoo, Ben. Russell B. Lons, D·La .• is Uie pTeSent chairman ot th Senate Finl.bee Commit- tee. • Irene Balter wu elected In 116' to succeed her husban~ the late Rep. Howard H. Baker sr .. R-Tenn. Their son, Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr., I• the' current Senate minority leader. The younger Baker'a father·in·law, the late Sen. EvereCt McKinley Dirksen, R-DJ., held that po1t himself tor aeveral years. In Mrs. Humphrey's case, the conditions exist !or another family member to win election to Coniiresa. Hubert H. Hum· phrer Jr. is an active Minnesota politician and a member of the state leetslature .. Maurine Brown Neuber1er was not app0lnted to succeed her husband, the late Sen. Rlcbf rd L. Neuberger, D·Ore. She ran tor tbe seat anyway and waa elected. In all there have been 11 senators who also were women. . The nnt woman senator was not appointed to succeed a re- latl ve. Rebecca L. Felton, a Geor1la Democrat, was named to replace popultst Tom Watsco after hi• death in 1922. Sbe served only two daya before maklnf way for Sen. w.iter Georse; D-GL, wM had been elected. One womlll\o Winnifred Mason Huck, was eJected to tho House in 1922 to fill th• vacancy caused by tho death of her father, Rep. Willlam D. Mason, R·Ill. So far, no husband bu 1uc- ceeded bis wife In the senate or Hous • A" '",..,.,. ... CHAMP GESTURE Jimmy Connora IMPERIOUS SIGNAL Nelton Rockefeller Digital Uplift Fingered, OK'd By lll'Gll A. MULLIGAN Al> S-1•1 cw....,...,. HARTFORD, CONN In one of those les~ than landmark dec1s1ons, but one that could point the way our society 1s headed, the CoMectlcut Superior Court has ruled that giving someone the "dleltus 1mpudlcus" legal lingo for "the flneer" 1s not punishable as an obscenity The case involved a high school student, not necessarily a Latin scholar. who wiped o(f the rear window of a school bus to deliver an upraised mid die ringer to a state trooper pulled up behind at an rnter11ecUon SMOKEY SAW RED EVEN AFTER the driver r:>tartt.'<i up and turned off his flashing red lights. lie turned on his siren, pulled the bua over to the side or the road 1and made a collar. u they !'lay . down at h eadquarters, of the finger gesllculator who had been fingered by hi!i dasi.matei. The Court ol Common Pleas convicted the \OUth of having made an obscene gesture On ap· peal, the Superior Court overturned the dec1s1on unanimously ruling that an obscene gesture bad to be "erotk . and ap P••l to purtent mtere>l on r~ J 'ex ... while the linger at • ~ most could only arouse Stew anger. not "i.exual de sire " "Dlgilu.'> 1mpud1cus' 1s Lalin for teJ.d finger and reputed lo have been the doomed gladiators' answer to Nero's thumbs down The learned judges, however. noted that 1t was a disrespectful gesture of even more ancient origin, citing the cai.e of Diogcnell, the fourth century B.C. cynic. who gave u <li~ltal uplift to the great orator Demosthcnc~ THIS PUT 1111'1 ALMOST TWO and a quarter m1lleniums ahead of Nelson A Rockefeller. who ~imilarly signaled hi!\ disapproval or platform oratory at the Republican convention in Kansai. City a while bock. "Cot o probi~m" fhcn wnte tu Pat Du!UI. Pat will <'Uf red tape, (Idling tht antwcn and oction ~ou nttd to olt~ mequirlu m gouemmt'nl and l>ultntu /\fad your (lW"-llWM to Pat l>unn, At Your Servict, Orangt Coo.at Ooilu Pilot, f> O Oor ISfiO, Corra Mtltl. CA 926%8 Al many uttn1 o.t poamblt will be cmiwertd, but phon.td 1nqu1nt1 ur lttfn• not including tht rtodrr'1 full namt', oddreu ond IN.'1Mss houri· phone 11um r>tr cannot bf conndertd This col umn apptoan do.I 111 (ZC:.-pl Saturday.1 " Pfed ftpn-tor Gap~!' DEAR PAT. WUI you tell me where l can aet some good tnformaUon on ridd.tng a lurge lot of gopher11 and molt.'S, and keeping them away? My lot udJOl.nS an undeveloped pit.-ce of property. and this probubly contributes to the problem E.W , Costa Mesa PUBUC N011C! PUBLIC NOTIC Your m«Htt practical approach to lhls problem u. the ~gu.lar use of pollOD or traps, acconlln• &o NOTICUOCHOITOltt l'ICTt'10USMIMN•• William Amllni. depaty atrlealtaral eom· JUl'llltC11t~~0,.,.,. l"-ftl==~."!,.._.. ml11looer •Ith the Ora111e &)' Acrtcaltaral STAHOl'CAUf'OtlNIAl'O• --. PVBUC NOTICE Center. Amllns i;a"• &bat "amart 10..-n" a.re &oe THICOUNTVOl'OllANOI tA1>1tsr111v 111•1>011rs OP " ........ ........... Hl[Wl'OIU, P 0. 90ll ~JC-. Al tJ14 clever for the "as extermlDaUoo snetbod. They ... ,. .. "OSCAll Al.I.EN MILi.Sit, Trohti.10 .... , •• •u••• ,..,. •OTICI TOClllOITOU Imply fill up the hole• belag trea&ed and barrow ,, .. ,. 0tceuec1 c:a111tt111d1u1 sul'1•1011tC10U11TOnM1 to 11fer ~tory . Call lbe cenwr at n4.fZ84 for ln· cr~~!~'.,1~.::.:.S:.=~= .... ~::"~ .. ~~ ... -z-=::1 • 0 •;:~~~:'O:~~· stdrudctl~s on effective copher c.rapp1D1. Amlin~ PU8UC NOTICE ::::i..,.~~':,.'r;:',~~i:r.r! ,,.::;1::..L.~~~':~::W· ..._.....,. a I t .. at Ooodlnl wltla water can llelp, but doD' , .. .,,. ;."' H ftl(Myry ....... _lltrl,... ,. .. ,, "'I-• It <OIMMIHI .., • r.11 ..... JllNNIE IRINC Of.RAV dtlu1e nd&hbortnc property. You may want to 11onctTOc11ao1TO.. .. .. ,,11c .. t•c~tt111ubovt-,._.1,..........,. .u.11HH1e1 o1uv.o.t••- hlte a proftsslonal pest ex~rmlnator, but the eost ,:::::,~~.0:.:~. 1•t1M•o.wt.er•PfllMll•.....__.,_,111 l'r-.c.-~nce 11 .. euav G1v1EN to l• prohibitive unlea la ,. • ls ""--lnl tNI COUNTY 01' ORANO• MctU••1 _,,...._to.,,. t.w>fffJIGl*I -.. I.. GeulO !ht CfMif9n d .. ~ ,,__"" I very f are """ U Ille Of lee tf ~ Pr9tC:t, 101.. 1'1t ·~--tO• Wilt> Ille ~Ill tllet Ml --NWlnQ cl6'M• treated. AVS was told by anoUlcr aoarce about a '"•t• .~0~-~~E C.LARK Mo1111111Hti D••v•, 1t1w••••••· eou .. 1, c1 .. 1o o1 °'_,. c-1.-111 1911n11 ,.,. w1• -.c.-.,1 .,. , .. very effectlvt" poison called ''Gopher Mil." RAf,uAv 01 CLit.RtC RAMSAY Cell1tr111•. llNdl 1• H "~·., -•· J.ii.,.,., s, "111 . 41u1re11 " 111• 111em. w1111 11 .. A II bl 0 C F S I 0. i.et ' MO Of IM ~lgnetl In Oii 11'41tltrf lllltat __ ,., ~ .. tll tM ofhte of v a a e at ran~e ounty arm upp y la cu """~11'11 10 1111 .. , ... ot ._. cN<., •..-11"*' o--ciw.. °"''• 1>w.t, '"' cttt\ of.,,. -t111t1tt<tc1 court Orange and at other a&rltuJtural supply stores, <•~~~~i;,·~=:.::-:c~·:. ""'· w1111111tourman111 .. , .. , iM llnt ,_,.,,, 1.,~», 1'1• u-1• ,,. •• '" .. "' tntm, w1111 th• thl11 product b very Htrong. A sta&emenl must be ..... •II..,_ !Wiving Cl•lml ... 11111 Pllbll<tllCHIOflNtllll4tO ftt(tlUry vouch•••· •• , ... ""· signed upon purchase that It will be used for DODI· :::~~1;1~._:;:.,~:...:~~1:~ D•t•d~~'.2£~~~-" PUBUC NOTICE :;~1:-"no~ ::._ .. ~~: .::,,:i:;~~ grlcultu.ral pu~"l'S. ,,,. otfl<t o1.,. ctn of 111t alfovt '" •1MC.utioto1u.w111o1 "•'"· CalllWN• '°'"· w111c1111 ow • r-I I II ltie .... ~0--1 l'ICTlnouaaUStNHS ,iece .. -i ......... Ulltlen~ Bal Ung tr1p11 with cotton balls soaked In t t1ec1 '°""· "" '0 Pt"'*"' Nm, • 1 1to1111T ,..••<• NlWHTAT9MIWT 1n 111metM1,......111111910 tne .. ,.1 .. perfume II another method a number of AYS re· ::11i;,-~~~ ~C:;,'0::0~~ ... ~: ,., ...... ...._"°",,. l11tto1!Mlftl.,.,...i.-..--., ., .. , • ...-c. wlttlln ,_ '"°"'"' ad.-fl have au•ceated. . lit.CHit.llY AoMnltlo NltVtr 111d •twtr.lft1calllwtlltt21ff p , tll., tlle fl,.t llUblketlon ol '"" ,.. ~ ' · ""-Yt«a..wtw Al'Pl.lllUTTl!lt, 901 &.lt"H Mtkt Sus men. -.01 Wllallltt e.111evard, Pullllthed er...,. (MU 0.lly l>lf01. Qn~ ltll., ~ ._._, c.fl'-"I• O•t .. ,,_Y "· !'71 Elderlfl Mat1 8Uf1 M~d~are .... ,,.Hills, c.11'"'"'•· w111e111t i11e '•""''v• 14 U.31 '"' st-1• t2U1 a.rt""'"'' piece of builft•UOI ... ~llV"ed In ' ' wtlllMIM.U,.._Sr • .........., e:-......of-Wtllol DEAR PAT I 'll be 6:1 years old in a few •llm•tt•n-'tlntnetotlleMl•t•OI -"""'·L~llM<fl.t.11tWlllet:111.S1 ........ ..-o.c-.. 1 Hlf dtct<Mnt. •llllln tour lll'Oftth• PtJBUC NOTICE Tiiis ~It ~IM-.,.,. !ft-DAVIO ltADfN montha and plan to enroll for Medicare medical in· ~:~;. •h• ""' p11b11ce110ft 01 1111• .,,,tue1 ,,., ,.,.. .,.., suranco. I won't be cnUUed to the hospital ln· O••HJ•" ... 01~ "" P1cTmou1iw11Nu1 wu11.,,,M.LA~'-,...,,..._....._CA""s surance part because r never worked under social OOHALOT. 11os£H,.no NAMISTAt1MeNT Tiii• .,.._••Ht• ••111 t11e 'Te11uu1-..1 _. -llLIOTTWITT H•elol'-1"' __ ., .... ,..~. c_,, Ci.rti Of°' ... c-., Oft ""-"""._ .... 11ecunt)' Can I by that Medicare coverage' J R c.t-.-.cutono11:11ewm ,...._, J-'"·'"' "'*1&11M &-.. c-.1 C)ej'" ........ Costa Mesa. o1U.-llllf'nedDt<•"-• 1s11, "" Mltll4• ,,,..,,co••• .,_, J ... u .• ..,.,....,,,,,m Y Pe ed .5 1..a....-.__ b , GSOllOll C. U.atit.llY N>ew, C•IM ...... t»» "1nll-Or-. C.-Deily .. u.t. JM rt ell. rson ... , or 0Ml'C'I Wuv ave• t ltOSIN,•LO,MaVlllt&IUIMAN ............. 12t7,,..,.. Street J•'I tl .• -....... 1J,l'71 ,,..,., ___________ _ v.orked lone enouih undeJ social Heurtly &.o be en· ... , w1,.,,.,.~.,.. c,...teM•s..CM••«Nt•»• PUBLIC NOTICE titled to Medicare hospital luuran~ can buy &llh T~"1 <'1'!.",21~•11 Gllkrt ••~. •n st. 1•~ PUBUC NOTICE ... •• ~-H••port 9Mdl.C11t1onll•t»~ pro~tlloo by payln1 a moat.bly premlom. The Au_, 1w """._.... ~·· ......... zm ~ $V91. basic pttmhnn 11 $$f a month ~&It Jone 10.: 1.~:i::':!.~u~::'1Y ~~ Ceet~:':;.~~.~1• ,...,."· 1t78. In order to buy hotpltal Insurance. bowever, tt-i~Callfwml•ttU• you alao must enroll and paw the moa•a.ty pre· PUBUC NOTICE Tl1" MWltt' I• ~onfi<1" _., • J .... ttflt••l Nrt.fttrVllll mlum for medical buuraace. The baste premium ____ ........ _____ , PMAllooms Is •1. 70 a month &llrou. .... June 1'78 su1>1111CM1 couu o11 TMI n.,, ,.,,_ ..... "' ... wi111 the ... • SfATll Of' CAU"°•Nlit. 1'011 Ct11nll' Cltr• of 0r•"9t COWllY ell ~f~larv I• •pie 't'ea rM•cou:,v..::.:"""01 Je1111•r,s.m• """ NOTICa 01' HllAltlNO 01' ....-i16"ittOr .. C..IOel1¥l>lltC, DEAR PAT Who would t(et my Ure inaurance 1>nmo11 "'°" 1>110u.H o,. w1L.L '°" ... 'Y, it.. n ~ "" •H• money If my benerJclary dlea before l do? it.No Lii"'"' THtAM•"'"""· · · 1'011 AUTNOlllUTION TO it.D• J .R., Fountain Valley Mt N 1sTr11 u,. o • • '" • ----------AccordJn• to la • all mOM, from -ur me ln· INOOINOtlMT ADMIMllHit.T'°ll PUBLIC NOTICE " _,., Ol'lnit.THACT. surance polJcy wlll 10 into your es&ate wht vou Ettlll•ol 01>•1. F CO\.£, o.c-... die. II you want &o m•ke sure vour m,_.., &oe• NOTICI is Hl!Reav GIVl!H 11111 " -"".IT Lit. Vll.Lf GllAB£1t MAGNUS Mid dlnctly to someone In parttcU.lar, you c•n name a £•LEEN c;11Aol!R GRAHAM "'"'' contingent benenctary (a M'C!Ond penon) to re· 111..i 11treln • 11trt111on '°' l'roo.1. o1 I I Wiii •114 l~Wlft(t of L..ifen T .. 1_ ce v~ al or part of your Ille lnaurance money ury •• '"• P•lillo""' en11 1or should the lint person you name die before you do. •utlllf•11t1<1n to tc1m1no1er ..,., ,,,. \' I r to be H Incle .. -tclmilll\lrttlon .. £ ...... ou a so are tee name a new neuclary at it.ct, ,.,.,._. 10 ""'oc" ,, '"-'°' any time. Urtltas tbe beneficiary 11 lrr~vocable or '""' .... .,.,11c"'"" •"" t1111 ,,,. '''"' Ir di ttle t l d h •11• plaCO of -lrlO t"9 "'"' NI vorce ae men prec u ea c aniea. """ Mt '°' ,...,...,., u ,., .. 11 10 • m . '" .,. courtr_,, of 0.Pt•'-1 PUBLIC NOTICE PtJBUC NOTICE No a et Mol c-1. o11 IGO Civic Geflter N11,. l>11'4flflff °""'* <.Mtl O•llV Pllol Jel\U••Y•. t .. ia.». ,.,. I 1l PUBLIC NOTICE C"'ml 5Ul>Sllt°'1 COUltT CW l'4 I STATI Of' CAUl'CMtlllA 1'011 tHl~HTYOf'OllANOC .... A-MIU ln England the upraised middle digit 1s known u the "Harvey Smith," uftcr the great equestrian star of the sume name who saluted the Judges at a •---------- horse sbow with what ever after he insi5ted was a "0~~c:N~u~~A~~~1~~n "CllTIOUS aUSINUS NAM.a STATllMaNT Ort¥• Wttl, lft ... C.•11' o1 ~"I• An41, C..hfOttH• OtlM J-y1', 1'11 WILUAMa.W~N c-110. .. MOTICI 01' Nlit.•INO OP NTITIOlll PO* HOIATI ~WILL ANO 1'011 LCTTllU 01' AD · llllllUSTltATION WITH Wll.L AN· •aJCIO A .. O AltTNO!lllATIOff TO U>MtNllTI• u11oa1t TMf[ IHOll'llllOCN'T AOMIHllT•ATIC>tt Ol'HTATUACT. Victor)' lign l>11ouM11lo~hon610olldl ol CM In A royal connotation also altaches 1'tself to this tH"•1 11•-c-, "000 "M••Dr tlVH tlWll lhe ·-r-t 10<' t ... imperious if not imperial gesture, since Pnnce vur ~J-~. ttn o1 -Lllrov Philip, Pnnce Charles and Princess Anne have all •ncl Mike sctUu ScNI•""• Tr .. c. • prtv•tf' ,......,.. .... , Ii ..,all*• .i U>t been thought lo have greeted their subjects, 1ounc1etloft'• sw"'<1.,.1 ofll<t ,., 111. especially photoeruphers of the realm. with It on :=-'':'.c::'': ~~ ~~Y"t~~ ceremonious occasions. ,..,_. ·~-" ... 111111 1t0 ci.n •fl•• OTHERS ASSOCIATE THE UPRAISED mld· dte finger with the game of tennis, a championship ge1ture favored by Jimmy Connors and Ulle Nastase to si&nify their total unconcern for the pronounct!ments of the llne judges. Orten it is followed by rude noises from the gnllerY\ which m tum is treated to further pan- tomine from the stars in the center c:ourt. Al Wimbledon such scenes are rarely followed by cries of ''good show. old chap." Durtn1 the 1973 Yom Kippur War. Israeli paratroopers down on the Suei Canal front deviaed a double dJgltaJ affront to their Egyptian enemies on the opposite bank. The ritual called for holdiDI aloft t.he middle tinter In vertical thrush and then in horilCOtal jabs. followed by the lnstructlona, 111 Hebrew; '1'hat'a tor you, and that's for your camel.'' ... Nit fl INt .... leetlen T ............. lctrl~ ~nc:i.,.I office it NIUttd et 1111 Quall Slt'wt, Ht•PD<t ll•n~. Cefllorl\ll Tiit prl11c1pa1 tnene~r d IN! loufld.tt-le WHte<n Or-trt it.tt1<i.floll l"uoll'hed Or-Coe•! OtllY !>Ott. J1n11ery f()1 t'7t llt-71 PUBUC NOTICE "CTI nous •u"NHI NAMS IT4'TINlllHT Tiie follOWlflO Per-.1 ••• dOlflt l>v" l\llUH l>llNGUIH LIEISUR• HIRE. St) l>•ultrfflO. • E·tU, Colle Mt1•, Celllomlt"6M l'tfllWt T-., lllC., • C.lllOl'lllt < ..... , ..... H.S Pmultrlne, II •·ZOS, Celle MHe,C.IUor .... flt1• • '1111 llu"-I• <Oftdllcl .. by • <or• ···-· ~Totn,lllC. ·~ .......... "~ Thlt &llC ...... wef ftlte wOll Qle C•Vllll' Ci.tic ol 0r•"11t C9tlflll' °" J•l\ilafV J. 1'11. WllSINO•lt.l'lllO•lltc.ICI ••asoc. ,_Wlltl!!IN 1 ..... ,.11 fllew .... Alltlt,~Mt• ... ,.., ""11ti ...... ~ Ct<KI 0.lly l>llOI, Jt'lllfrr t, 14. u. 311. Ifft ... ,. PUBLIC NOTICE . .,.. OIAlfOI CIOUlfTY IUNllCMlC:OUltT Th<' '°'-"" ,.,..., h eoono l>v•i· l\e'' ., "All WEST llEALTORS. '°" H Ht•eort tlve . HeWPorl Beech, C..lllornle JA(ll G. MAGNUS UM Wll .. lre ........ ,. l.ffit..,.lft.CA•11 r.1: uu1 •ua JOlll'I t..•MontaoM, 101 O"V• it.n_,. fw: ~-.. Sir.et, B•'boe hltNI, Ctl•fwn+t tlMJ Pvt»tl!llled o-.,,.. C..u Otlly 1>1lnl di!::;:.~· I\ COlldUUed llY ... I~ Jlfl, •, 31 ...i "'9tl, t, tt71 1)6.11 Jol'tlll.A-- TIU• 1111-t •M llltd "' ... l"9 County Cltrk ot Oreno-C-!ly on J ........ , •. t'11 .. _, PUblll""" er-Coe•t Delly PllOI. J9ft )Cl end l'fob • IJ JO 197' *-11 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE "l(TITtOUS aUllNHS NAMIE ITATIMSNT PUBLIC N011CE l•lllt of CRYSTAL O. HEHOltY. o.c. ...... NOTICE IS H£111!9Y GlVllN tNt JOtCN C, H£HOllY, JR., Mi flled lltr'tlft 0 "9ttliefl !qr ,.,.... .. tf WIH tf\41' fff I-ca .. 1.tlle.-of Acf. l!llnhlretleln '#llll Wiii """9•H tt "" 1 ~-~~ ....... (~~~ ....... ~~~~ .. ; ..... ~~~ ........ Gnert11 I OOZ G...,... I 002 G1•1.. I OOJ G__.. I 002 ..................................................................... ············~·········· A. COIHER OF EASTIWff On a corner across from a park in beautiful downtown Eastbluff stands a 3 bedroom, 2 bath home for only $137,000. It's probably one of the best buys in town. You s hould see it ! U,._IC>UI: fi{)Ml:S REALTORS'. 675 6000 ~ WAUC TO THE IEACH DUPLEX Close to the beach, cleal'\ 3 & l Bedroom, carpeting. drapes, built-lna, 4 c ar etc. IEAUTIFUL l 1• 4 IA HOME LIDO ISLE on wide lot, large courtyard entry with tile fountain -includes separate guest quarters. $268,000 JACOBS REALTY 675-6670 -· 2443 Ea't Coast Highway. Corona del Mar also 10 Me~a VPrfll' •• 11 546 5990 2 9 19 Newport ll•cL corwer 3oth ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 ChMral I 00~ G.....-al I 002 • •••••••••••• .. ••••••••1 ••• •••••••• •••••••••••• General I 002 GtMt'al I 002 __________________ ,, .......... ·········~···· ...................... . MANAGER-REAL ESTATE NEWPORT BEACH A pr\me opportunity with a n outstandmg real estate organization + high earnings! Ex perience is a mus t. Prestig ious location . All a pplica tion s held 1n str ict est confiden<'e Please reply to Ad #68 . Daily Pilot, P.O. Rox 1560. Cost a Mesa , CA 92626 LIDO ISU Newly r emodeled 4 bdrm .. ·de n, 4 baths. hving rm. w /cathedral cethng . Lgc mast er bdrm. suite. $224,950 ltG CA.MYOM 4 BR. ram . .rm .• 3 baths. Beautifully decorated Broad moor Plan 3 w / patio views from each room. $125,000 IA.YFROMTS Sc\cral fine bayfront homes with pier & slips BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR JH Buy\1dt•D1t11•• N .B b7S ·ol61 I ...... for5cft THE VA lVPAIKIM~ 2Story.a~m. nampo• •dinlne room, f\feplace, bullt·lDS, tHtefully dt• cor•ted. Much, much more. A1kln1 SH,800. C&llNO-Ull - .,..._f. HERITAGE • • REALTOUS FO~ESTE OLSON -............ .... •·c--e-. CORONA DB.MAR macnab/ lrVlne alty ~COATS & WALLACE 'CJ:Il7 REAL ESTATE, INC. A tOCMLV OV.'HID COM PANY SIRVINC THI sour COAS I AMI A Sl~Cl_1961 HA:RIOR VllW HOMI -This 5 bdrm, 3 bath home JS beautlf ully upgraded in· side and out! Near new carpets, extra built·ins, paneling and view to the West. Ready for move in. Call scs-nn COMMUMlfi LIA.DEIS .:.&. find this an outstanding neighborhood in which to live. Join the leaders and enjoy thls lovely tree lined street with that back hQme f eeUng in this 3 bed rm for only $135,000. 64CM 16 I WARM FAMILY HOMI -for the ts>eclal f amity who likes to entertain, formal dining area, casual dining or veranda enjoyment. A Beautiful 4 bedrrn home in Mesa Verde. Carpets and atorage galore. Separate maids room $139,900. Cal 14'-414l. Serving Costn Mcsa·lrvinc Huntington Bcach-Nc wpo n Bcm;h CAMIO SHOIH-Sl I 0.000 A real thrilling ocean & sunset view from this lovely unusual home with 3 spacious bdrms, den & formal dining room. Beautiful private pool & patio, 3-car garage. Extra laree step-down living room, 4 baths. WESUY H. TAYLOR CO., RIALTOIS Z 111 S-Jooquf" Hiit ltoed MIWPOtn' CEHTEI, M.I. 644.49 I 0 10020 ........ IOOZ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• H W ENGLAND BEAUTY On Of the lovelie t hom in Coron Cl l !nr! ty 4 doors from the best ach. boaUng galore & Lhosa cool P cific bree • Custom built, only l~~ years old, llh c thcilr l c Un • 3 bdrma.. t.ormal d.inina rm.. kitchen e_aUng area & much moret Shown by app't. $62,500 -R·2 -3 BR Owner will help buyer finance this fine irlvestment property. Hom has family rm. & dbl. attached arase. J.arae lot will accommodate an addl- tlonal separate unit for rental income. 759-0811 ---~ It \I-~ 11 1 \I I' ,, <# • • • • ' ...... OCEAHFRONT Byowner,4 Br •2 Br, on Hod, ar B1lboa Pier. Make offer or 1ubmlt tnde. 548-7219; SSM22l . • 01 COMl!ll BAI Ptnln. Ju t r• ducodl I Valla, fly 2 bclnns. A one 1-bdrm ., on 2 Iota. Ju1t 1ttp to be1eh. O•n r modv tedl ta..msE•tt, FIXER UPPER Bartl.Ill t11.1nlen, ,_ thi• di • • .e.dnn, 1~ , bath. uteda pala\ and n.c. U'a • mtne)' maker at _,,IOO. Call 540-1151 .. ~~ HERITAGE • .• REALlORS HA.CH Rm!AT $57, too VIEW Steps to 1>0'ID<linf surf snd crystal 11ndl Back yard ls bay area play. crawuS. Whw!lnt wooden wllkways to secluded en· t.ry I Gourmet kitchen. &ep-down convenaUon area plu1 flreplece ! Sunshine bre•lths t patio. Poo1·jacun i· voUeyblll. Garden llvln& at Its finest. 841-GOlO OllfN Ille • II S 11/N IO II Nl('t • 1:•11111 MODOWM HO CLOSING COSTS Ally VET can own Uus 3 81\ home w /DO money out of pocket. Juat move- in "enjoy ~our home. or. lered et $S.1.SOO. . 540-3666 Wltclc-.11 llAI UlAll 5BR&28A • Wood floors, wood 1hln1le roof, fireplace. dble 1sra1e. S64,SOO. OJ/FHA llnancln1 1vsil. Sant• Ana near Wimer. Ro~cCrile 111 Owport ll•cl. Cotto MeM SU.772' • • r • . ) • f P.APllliURIAJluc; OCUN & ISLAND y w Raft S 8drau.i.n1l Wty Lu.alt home in llarbor Vlew Hlllt with lovC'I)' C'Ollrtyard entry and S car prose on tree hned low tratnc 1trl'et.. C411'44-721 I P'OR DETAlLS JUSTUSTB> Harbour La.no ' Br. I~ b9 end unit •t:IA' boat QUllTLUXURY •hp. Super 1hrp' t"u.lode1l1tc w pnme arH. ~.OOOCallnow Air (Vftd1ttoned. 1araae PURCB.LllALTY door o~ner. ucurlty --~<'1:!,!1~4!_;,) !!!~::!_ __ windows It door1. ccw· erect pauo. 1pnnkler11 4'1•-1• •• -~-.-__ _..-~-- li&Jttini. llurry ! ~6-2313 --- OPW , .... HIJl'llOIH/ f• 4 u d rm. 3 b. lb blQgo lllld9rcS..1.-t 2DUPLEX~Lt'!1"'T N ar S.C. Pina Bkr 55T"'710 /JD.NIGEL GAILEY & ASSOCIATES I I walet'front with u· dock. ~ ltVIHill ~:.~~!~~~, red hill ~.:.:. 552-7500 PERFECT WEEKEND HIDIA WAY -Sea TllT'CIU townhome. llri•c:M _... In- cludes beocll met t .... 1.. Air ccinditloMd --~ ...t... __.fl ...&I OCEANVIF.W Duplox, -vi..-,_. c-.Ofl syshm. Aufotpri • ~h'ombeacb. Upper PLAND·Prlde ot frotlt end ...... A .,,,. no maLwhnmc• J bedroom. lower 2 ,.. .. ~ •• "'" U YIOMTOP h ~ 05000 P.-.....-.40r. M N om•-~I , . MINI HORSE RANCH. 2 bedlroom. 6 Car 1ue1e, Uta, bt1 pool. A AGER '"'-1044 Excer.:cmal v1ow from 495-1720 Br 1 Ba. ll1bted arena, lw&e f t'ed yard. Aall· :,U,. ownr. 25~ ll!l--------1 Mu st be membt'r vr ••••••••••••••••••••••• this .areest bom~. hlah UANA SOUTll t.AOU:'olA tac000k rm. pony run. illl 1190.000. MU\!! an of·r---------CHAIMER Newp<>rt llarbortCosta WOOOIRIDGI H£ in i:urtluoc,k J>Ol~T l~\GliNA REACH $72, 642·47SS hr! World Wide ~ ln old Corona ; i m· Me11 Board with a h~· PATIO HOME ba~~·a5 ~{':;:·~!~~ 4V8 Klll2 499·455\ 497·!331 Be CAPTIYATED by this Brolten.S7MS'5 Gro.ff 2700 maculate3 bdrm .. 2 l>ath wry ol 1ucc:e1>ll 1n real pool ai achool clo•c by. $6400 pnce re~ucUoo. •2Trf•••* ••••••••••••••••••••• bome; ideal for home or e&tate~ules-lordetail~ Large 4 BR & family OrandnewatSZ19500 Comternporaraly de· NearLak Pule.Kin.to HORSllAMCHIS to add unit for invest· call Cbutk N·ai.h at room, sunken ltvin& ' l.ogllnoNlgyel 1052 Ntwporf hodl 1069 cor'd, central air, S. Cst bch.1-4B1l,Sb&;l.JB&. T'wo to choose from. merit. Oub!tandtn1 buy ~7700 room ai d.inln& area. Mir· ~-••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Plau area. Sacrifice at z~ ba; l-3 BR. I ba. s ~ !\\Ba. Faml· at$138R,oooED HILL SUPIERIUYI! rared wardrobe & many 552·70 Cbarmingoew3Bedrm + WGCANYONSTI-:,\L =·Jb~~N*~TR !~C1~11'?!~;,!1t':._~, t,_~:~.~!:::': REALTY 544-4900 ~":ra~ljll~~~ P~~= :r :~~~oUvated aeller. THI:. !~C'. ~-r~~~~ ~~~·Tp'ei ~=ti:~:f~a1?.r;:~: ~ ii':nt.''ich:"S'H-ii'ia ='rf:'a Ba Dew ~~~~~~~~I ownership 3 bdrm. YAU.EY 640.HOO VILL trontcourtyard,$123,YOO. $132,000 By ownr. SoalflL.agma IOH Oner. tcie..f lcar -home. move-in cond1· ~ . Rf Al TORS Owner.831·7098 64.().~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 7 Units e • 2Br • 1 ,.,....Jltoker Costa...... I 024 Uon. ~reat Mendel ?tfar ~a•¢ p P\09!..~ --· UDO ISLE -Macnlficent 180 de1ree Bache~. pool, atepe to m.5117 mo ••••••••••••••• ••• •• • •• tocaUOn.183.000 -SA YE Lake Forest I 055 oceu w 2br, U4ba apt, bcb, "50.000. ~ dowla. OB m..2080 SAVESSS MEWPORTIEACH Grunttel'. llampton ••••••••••••••••••••••• 109YleWa.len nrbnch,adults.$89.SOO. OwoerMS-0721 ..... Plllnt & e1rpel to your REALTY 675·1642 GIHMTRl! model, 5 bd 3 ba. many SELUNG at COST' New "--Dally l2·6PM Ownel''99-308o& 7 UHITSc.M W..a.d 2900 taste. Own«!r 6 allowam:l' 16 UNITS 8) owner/agent. 2 Br + up er ad e ~. LI st e d Warmington tn Wood~ a .... .:t.. 5 I + °""" .... Es.... Be ut.1ful b nd ~ .. cl ...................... . orfen. rare baraam for t * * romily, quiet street c:l~e $109,900, buy from owner 2500 s.f, under warr. 4't ~· .J._,: ....................... br •loft ffp ':a br 1"' ba • lba pref own t. :No BR. 3 BA, forrnul dmmt:. ti ~ONTHSNEW '' lo park Newdrp9 icordr $1~.000 5561-664<> $14$,000 Covington RE w/2 ..-•-•• ~ ....... ..._. • .b' · 1t 'bit flxeruppe.r. fuauty, near .Mesa Vt>rdt· Pully occupJ~ opnr. b~clc work;, morti. • --IHclil 1041 768-810tl moorlwcJ a.an. AtlllacJ l'or s-. 1100 = ':;.e.. Ju.er :uY 840-8301 ~~u:M~~~~ t'n~TJ'~~F'IHEml Dys 833·8405 ; l'Ve:., ~•••••••••••••••• Ntwporileocll 1069 $325,0l>O. ••••••••••••••••••••••• now: Iii -2'oPHC. I 551•5238 RmlfMEMT ••••••••u ••••••••• ••• • ly Owaer 20' KENSKJLL. Treasure Tom Lae, Rltr, f0.1~ REALTOR -REALTOtt 631·5454 -WOOOIRIDGE HA.VEN WHITEWATER 67J.7'77 675.4137 Island. South Laeuna.l-!:~~~~~=::..111m .... VA hvtrs $69 500 2 PRESCOTI'S 2 Hdrm. 2 bath Condu·a OCEAN VIEW ~aylor Made Rlty. NEWPOITHGTS .,._ CHECK TliIS OUT , • Largest Woodbridge short walk to beach, re . MontC1fo 4 br + ram rm, "49M486 AIR UPPER 376 Broadway SH,900 Aff d bl I hom~. 2600aq.rt.+3 rur Urement & downtown. 2 Story duplex, choice ~ crp~9: ~~~~ck lx40. 1 BR, nr 19th Ir 4-PLIX 3106 All.5116-4856 __ _ Or G e • gaz:. 5 or 4 br+den. 3 Ilo, $79.950. ~est Ne.wJ>l?rt location. --. Sl ' ' Harbor, CM. O>v'd patio, Nicely loca~ R·Z ro-.. -.. •••••••••••••••• EASTSIDE CUSTOM Huge pool, pat:o areu for atrium, air cond • fully NORINS REALTY Fantastic investment adult, oopet park, $7,000. pertf w/alley acc~u. -U110U1 IBr. •Ba. N. summer fun . Lots or lndsc, bJ&hly upi:r. Mex 49,. e potentUll! $300.000. BAYSHORES By0wnr.6'2--0832aft.5 Old but WOW wbat Bayt ro n t ho m., RB>UCED $9500 tlcckma &ri.'a, freshly lean Pavt.-n tile. l.I~ lot * .-v057 * YA.LUY 640·tf00 Bdrm obU potentlalt Jf you•ro ban· w/Jaeuul. yrly or short Take advantagt> of this painted 3bedrooms, din· Nr Park & lake $1116,000 ~ Cleancozyl M e dyf Callo • lut tum $1500 mo A.ail CJcanltc savings! Bci;t mg, ram1ly room Trall1:r & $196,000. Lse S826 mo HEW HOME ~~ P\OC~~ $ 170 000 home. To come see call tJU.72:21 now, "on t • now.' Lora Vance mtr Ea:.u1de location + purkmg BKR 540.1120 Bkr/Ownr 552·4121 01 PLUS IHCOME Rq<l\ E,sto'CZ • • 541-9513 ~ ~ everything yuu l'XPi.'d in wkdays83S-3S35 Cuw 3 Br cottage. form . .__...__r_._ 1•00 a custom home Sepuutc Tl 3 lid.nns., 3 bath~. with din rm Ceotral loc~lton. _._,...___. 6 '••llll11m .. • 3107 entry, trud1tl()~al hvinl( Aftl!LL ~1eld. Aspen. 3 BR, <'hararttt fr bit: view + NEWPORT Ownl'r anx1ou-1, mukt• or. •••••••••••••N~··•••C~··• room with .:roo\'cd & IU• 2 "2 ba . gas BBQ, en~ of l>ePIU'ate 1'"2 bdrm. cot fer?645-7l21 SIO .Acres, ev. 1ty, peggt:<d "'oud flour~ -----cul de uc Open Sat, tage, dO!ll' tu bt-aH·h HEIGHTS Calif. 80 Miles No. of Brick fireplace & mold•·d MESA VEIDE SUn. l 2·5. By owner . Giveaway priced b> Charming 3 BR. :! HA . Ontu Sacrament.o. RPduced lO t·ornice:. l~ge ramll> mr. fllm rm. ~eparate '98.500 SS2384.t architectatSlll9,SOO family room home "' $1250peracre.Go~mlbe room. br1iht chet"r(ul din rm. uperadcd . WOODBRIDGE PLACE McCORMACK WJllt'ood decks & 1ar.ebo, ~'''21.... :.tarted 1955, timber, J + lutchen, breakfast nook S97.500.546-.u73,547·7066 Special oflenni. 3.5 REALTY 494-7551 new carpt"t & really .... ~eaut. b~d1f· s(l7t::) ~olderunll8iDLont &c i.epurillc ort1ce bdrm.Contemporary de· FUMILES-11harp. Offered at .,_:r11Z1ma. ,._..!,u Beacb. poaltl•e ca.ah Dell&btful rear yard S..inqis tached family homtw in $1.35,00U. W"tdfffRedty ....,. or ........... ,... Oow. ll'~at atarter ID· w RV Acccu. llurr.)' lefle•b•9! open, woodsy de11gn ... can be c~U)'! I>on't 540-3666 RYE ACRES v..im.tat$35,000. Callnow6"8·7171 Beautiful 3 Br 2 Ila, Just shortwalktolake& nuu thla Opportunity to CHAMPAGNE SoutholOoronaOllpaved D.ltk:lll'ttlltttr ' · • '• • 1" '' t'am1ly Rm, fplc. :.hake parka m Village or Wood· !ICC our new liltinJ wath TASTE road. Good for tol split. 95S-Oct'1 "2·3283 [a I roof & 2 car garage. Just bridae. }'rom $115.000 fantiu;tac City " ocean BeauUful 3 bdrm .. 2 bnlh ~ ll~ftHJ1 listt~. $74,S()J. MZ~llOUl ILDER'S ertv ~·necwalouan"c; ..3.bcirprr•a~~h. uomsmaine".· ~;:t~~re:e~~=.~~~~~e; Broker~=~) 4 rw.t=~H · ~---··-··-"' ~ ~ OCEAN YllEW by & have a taste. OJM!n ...,,..,..,.,..-='_,....,-____ .,,,...._1 Xtra abarp Co•lnstoni----------- IEAUTIFUL CLOSEOUT SJW.SOO COfCDO, REDUCED today 12·l . 27112 Circle OWNER ANXIOUS ::i.exi~"!~ ~!dic::t1111 ...... a..c11 3140 MESA VERDE ~1 ~~:~~~~' 11eAm IH IRVIHE m"\:1~trm S THOUSANDS $ Dr Present alJ otters on this we. SUS,000. 752-1700 or 2 STORY HOME ~\~ 11t1:10o·~~e eoo11M•... Only .a patio homes 1crt ~~~~ ftt.'<lucl'd tor a tast i;11lc C. f. COISSWOrthl 1 !17 acre fantutic view 7~17~ Charmin& fmly home 111 ' 645· ::*161 One 2 Br, two 2 Br+dcn. Vacant & seller is anx Rl!!.uTORS 640•00 0 property. Xlnt m lol O'fN ,,, ... ,, .,.,. rDl!INl(t• move-in rondition 1 & one 38r µlllll, all w/2 1oos. Beautlful i br end 110A1o r~ch11lte. Broker. bdrmi., rmly rm w /frml $58,900 baths, frplc, rerrlgeruted II~ VIEW wut w/fplc Community 00 Ft bayfront, 4 .un. den, 676·5717 <no d I" hJ .• 1 air condttionin". mir Catalina i;un!tets, & city pool, aauna &jacu 0 z21. Al, pier, 00 "nn"'IUla OR522·2080 m rm uK Y up)(rauet 2 bdrm. Brk. "''1·2246 • ll .. h•~ b i"bl 3 b 2l •'-·-t I .-~ "' THE REAL ESTATE RS in i. 1 de out w B It in --~ rored wardrobe doors. 2 ...... Y n • · rm ~ u"" Pree It won a!lt Mar~hall Rltr 675·460Q Elltnore a.rea, The 1100 "=== bookcasc&pcc:kyl't.'dur $77,777.77 car ear w /auto bu. By ownr. Only Hurry.Call6'5-0303. -Acr• Hammock Ranch -TUmM SBrl~Ba.fmn. panelling Out of town opener .. plusfullrecreo SlJ4,:IOO 49946H5even!! 4Plex,IOOrt.fromoce:an, at .$1200 per acre. WID. mric. 2 bib oft ~lier IS mouvall-d. Sub 3bdrms.Brk 631-2246 lion facilities meld'& 8 Do Your Stuff $248.000W/land! PartiaJly sub-divided, IOD&UXEUHITS lakoatWoodbrtdae.$C70 -- nut.anyreuonobleofft>r DCMOPoint -.oi6 lighted tennis court1, 4! MarshallRltr. 6754llOO 173 ea l~ acre lots Six-2 Bdrm. a ba, mo.558-lm;559oW/tatt I • • ' ' • "'-Unow "··"''-""'"! pools and a pair ol ln th1s unique arc:hitec 8 1 G C A N y 0 N +laraer pea. Haay Two-3 Bdrm. 2 ba, '~ ...... • .,,_,.,.~ • ••••••••• •• •••• •••• •••• . 11 b d jacuntS. A t 11 an tural triumph in wood ~·c--c-TOWN ll 0 M f: 2 u r , w/v1ew. P'amJly &late Two-\ Bdrm1 . l ba.t---1-Mc-da---.-1-4-. -OCEANVJEWDUPLEX lrvlne too! On Irvine and clan. It'• aot 3 Greenbriar. up"r•ded. nl• w/term1. Allan PrideofOWIHnD.IP. 7u,..!fm• • Live ll1 l lel your tenant Center Dr. <Moulton bdnm., • bi& den " II SEA.VIEW Security 6'4-4291J Williams, ea .. Paclnca •helter appredaUoD ...................... . c::I Walker & lee paythetaxes.Jo'lreplaces Ptkway)justeutofJef· senine ocean vu. Ahhh' Upgraded, New Bedford Rlty'rnMm2 $317,500. u,;. D•WD. ANYON. 1 Bdrm & balromes. 331166 Diana frey Road. s:z.ooo (624) 38r. den. fam. rm .. \few. San ca.-• I 076 A luwals L IEATTT W/fl"ple. ion.;. beatn ceil- EMTERTAIMMIHT $13.S.OOO S66,!195to$76.995 .ltaktiz S245.oou. By owner ....... •••••••••••••••• Mfl.a......~....11-. l"llOO l.talton 64M095 lnt,lfetncdyd. UUI pd. CENTER ' Call 551-1263 days .-.. wen ,, .t. uoa &MIC nw-~ ~ AvaO Feb 15. $4.00/IDO. I Yt'l•qel\Jlnrl\ or 551·1341 eves '"'' MAR "" ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• -..-1 ... Cll, .. cn.,ooo ~l / Pre:suge hvmic Sparkl· 1714) oc~.a. .... VIEW ............... ._, 1n1 pool & Jacum. Largo uw1.o SPACIOUS UVIMG 'i,"'" • 2~U:69·~· Two F=ex CM, 1113,000 wport heclil l 169 family room with NEATS~4~:~l~lan 5: 4Bedroom,2bathinprc R·I LOT J>P 831•8081ee bdrm, 10 hltaSA.$185,000 •••••••••••••••••••••• fireplace & v.et bar 4 nicelylodscpd:onculde st111ous Wei.tcl1ff. SfflromDanaPointto · · • JDUnitaSA.Sl90,000 l33VlALIDOSOUD Bdrm. Seller hua moved. sac. nr. Irva.ne Hlih 41 Formal entry open to La Jolla. urice estate ~/ 23 UDib, Tustha $525,000 DRIVE BY 2 bdr Make offer. Cull today! large living room with sized parcel. Call for OnffsS. 1100 '2Acres,Rancho.Calll eleaantt)" f'U1iusbed C:1• 546-2313 HlaatlNJfon leach l040 ~~J!:!• Park. Super IMTHISHOalS brick fireplace, luJly up· more information ........................ Avocado/aubdlvialoa or TV. deck. view 0 ( t ·~•·nHuHro~1N1Cr• ••••••••••••••••••••••• EVaYNCOPELAMD TOWNHOUSE graded k1tcben, PricecHromStU,000. • !W4PLEX• SIS$,OOO.$t0.3850Act. wat..$700/mo. I~ lf~~'ll ~11 s&S Resale Specialists. 2 Bedrooms, 1', bath1. landscaped yard, fenced, \l HARBOR BLUFFS ANEXCELLENTBUYt WATERFRONTllOllES ' i 3,4 or s bdrm models RLU.TOR 552-0434 Very private and •unny fruit trees, vegetable AHCHOUGI HUNTINOTONBEACB Two four.plcxea. Coat.a 831-UOOfouppi. ·V j ~ :!a}1.,. some w /pools la 'OW M"'ll<ET patloa with wood deck· garden, 2 car garage. 'YESTMDITS 960-4370 Mesa. p.u,ooo ea. Com· 1.....__1 ....... ~ . ----· ·-·--. ............, ._, "" Ing. Move-in (Qndltion; $140,000. 01Nner/Aeent. ble ___., ... ba VWlWlll- --Pennington Properties Must s-ell new Creeltalde in 1 aatc guarded com· 673-7460 1714• 496-7711 Duplex 2 Br 1~ Ba, each. :!:: f~i{ii,500. A~~ n••••••••M••••••••••• HANDYMAN1S -GLll!.LIM"'R--Wlllows 4 bdrm.,3 baths. munit1.0nlySSM.450 SEAVJEWBESTVWW -good Coat& Kesa loca· 6'5-ll03 G11•• 3202 "'""" w.r-conditionln1.0pento New, upgraded 38~ + IEACHDOLLHOUSI! lion. $92,500. Alt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• DREAM HOME Exec. Home. ' Br + offers. FR al builders price Walk to ljJvlera Beach. 8'M).3900 Sacrifice, ownr reurtnf, 3 BOKBFINDEkS fo~n~~~n3:,:~t'!:~~ ~a~~U:.~·~~~~l~t~~: Exch=~~~l761 3MonarcbBayPlaza $250.000.644-459'7 ~=t:r:!.c;nl~~2w~~ DUPLEX. So. ot Hwy g.~!~~~B:4~:!i ~=~=~· .ini a lar.1te workabop at Total A/C. Vacant & Lo1wiaNi11uel BALBOACONDO with extra "' lot. Nover CdM, cedar ahlnete. lge area. CM.. $91.000. S.mple: llome. Bia separate wa.ltin&.S94.950. Rancho San Joaquln. 3 49'97222 111·083' Elegant, la.rge lbr condo atatnatonly$125,000. rroot houle, 2 81' l Ba 545-'"8 •Bacbcottqefrteut. buildin& ln flack 1ultable Agent 6-aO·S560 Br, 2~ ba. laund rm.1•-------•1 on bay front Pool boat --+new back unit. 2 Br l , -L-for~~-2200 $La2brkiaJpet.aok for mechanic, wood wet.bar Fantuticparlc & • ' PRIC-.. RIGHT Ba.dbl-P.873-48$1 _.. -••kldalPeU&reat worker, electr1clan. or SEAWIND, • Br. 2~ Ba. lake view. Uperaded. alip avail Full aec. bldg. --, .-••-••••••·--.. •••••• Ui'ETIMESERVlCE "'??Better bUIT)'I Call +den.Famll.)'Rm.Dm· S132,SOO by owner. IHOMl~LOTS Mayexchanielorun1u. SmClemente5forem01t llcoaaProperty 2000 Readytobuildontot.fan· H7.ot22 1n1 Rm s 109 900 .....,1~ao: $99,$00. Owner/Ast. vaJuo._ "C.nt.amar"4Br, ••••••••••••••••••••••• .-.._,__ _ _._.._••' .. "5-0303. • • · ...,... ...,.. In de1ira le Wood" 675-1520 .....-;.,.._, ,,_.. .. Real Eit11te • 1 ; 1 J ' FORESTE OLSON 1163-13778kr. By Owner. Umv. Prlt, Vilt ~•: cha.rmln1. clean UDOIYOW .... ER !~~=-ell~ c:i~:~ N!DIOF co=La~'TZM *Ym* Executive home in super 1 condo. 4 br 2~ ba, 2300 borne wtlb oalr firs .. on " the city. Call for lon1 liat OWHBSHJP &I Yoa fOQlbt for tt. own• ~ nel&hborhood. 4 br. form 1q tt. id local., immac P&tk·llte cn>unds, only 3 4Br, 4Ba 673 7208 of outatandln& fHlurea. make this WJ.lque tzi.plex Billtop lot, flat. bul.Jdablo, P.. ol lt now. no dowo. .................... ··--c..-· LUCIMIW COUEGIPAllC Oomplet 1)' red . 4 br, 2 ba pool home with new equip. All nt carpet, custom paint, dbl rrplc " many IMIW .llt!'H. tll.900. .. Prtncet.on, By own r SS1~EVH. I dtn rm, wet bar In fam cood. ex pen. up1rades, bib. lo th beach· Could Trauten.t, uttlnc onl 006 ol the t.t values in ocean view at 2Dd atoty V.teran Rou.llJat A&t. I ' rm. Alt. 963-5002 bu 1 e rd w d deck. =bly bu.lid 2nd house. QUICK SALf $154.SOO. l>ana PoinL Ex~ent leveL New area. Gr.at 141-0100 CHE•-STt !!?.177.~20. Pran. only. Mclia~eo'RS1M9.,:~ SBr, riew,HVH, 111c.soo. B!!RntA HENRY tu lbelts wrua Capital Ol'lltY.-.-.G-7m _,-m; ....,. "" ""-By owner 759·01'3 or REALTORS GahlpotenliaLSZl.5.000. Condo ln H.B. 2 Bdrm RIAi.TY 494-7551 644-7788 215DelMar 4112-4121 MORINSl!ALTY •SU'lllUYI• w/frplc. FHA terms, ARIOILAKI IOSO 22t4PortCarlislePI Sanlr .__ * ,.9,. •057 * SANIUAN J\lettt548-03SJ Prl me waterfront &..jlila • -""' .... town h ouse, below....................... IYOWNER C111Fbt1.o • 1071 market. Br owner. LBSUllWORLD Sp1ciou1 Jtxccutive ••••••••••••••••••••••• MIWP.ORT ~ •wll~t ~ chance to get hom.e. 5 Bdrm1, • ba By Owner. 2 brm· 1 ba. HBGHTS tnl s uarm., 2 bath & w/v1ew in pre1U1lous 1arden homo priv. & DUPLEX Ml ,,......,. Ptaae.elnatorlf ... brand aew hilltop unit. Dover Shortt on Galaxt comfortable.' $67,900. :;1. • 1.-t • 2400 bootclock.-i am._ Ex.i>anaive Vlt!WI or the Or.8'8.2333 4N·I0$1 dya, 493·5618 QU'1l ahafP 2 BR unU., ... -..... -....... -· valley. $8S,IM>. NIWPORT HTS. ev•. ~ ~~'jp ri=: Sil•ercl'est lfOblle Home.--..,.~-----... HORINStlEALn Don't m1u thl1 a bdrm. Por aal• or tra~• (A7UB> •• Udt Ot7l)~ll'CllNI * 494"8057 * Clift Haven homo: it baa $119,S>O. $421 ~00. Beantlfully a frplc. m '•mlly rm., CALL HS..0350 Ja""'CQcd. bl -ftcrw lot, pesced oat nrs., 1nut· pas,.'·~· Call ror t~ni • a brick patlo1 --.. JWr. (714) M0-11Z7 $11'J,OOO od1Nt74. •1 r •I•,• I•'• · i 1r.•••"' ..,_ fl, fl. a ' " 'I 1 • 'o • • ~ .MARIN --~ ........ --~---....--• RWTY me: 810111 ILllKS CD. OVER 5b Yi S OFSERV'ICE IW UST &o ... DO.-. .... 631-1800 .._.., __ ------ SPICIAL Sharp 3 Bdrm, 2 ba, DW. 5 Br 3 Ba home oo icolf crpla, fed yrd. S39S. roune. Opt avail. now. ~Agent-No fee f195 mo. M0-2881 m> aq rt, 4 brm, 3 ba, tri· New 3 Br 21,., Ba. 2 ca gar. fplc cpls, drpa ..:....---~----1 1-: Side, $..\50. 631-0303 &~7085 WFSfCLIF1'' area 28 2ba, frJ>lc, patio. pool $425. 6'4-8184, 752.7799 Clean 2 Rr w /gar adlt.s no peta. 773 W. Wllaon. 642~ -------~ Availoowl sbr,3ba.S'750. Also 3 br, 3 ba, $410 548-5120 ~ Br, cpta, drpe, 2 enc ~·8600 porches, fncd yd. $300 Wlrpd. 675-51tO; M2-0393 '1523 CAMPUs~ht/M fo:aatsde 2 be'1room1 Call 898..0771 ORSTOPBV 1401W....-ster SPECIAL 3 Br 21.A, Ba condo, oewly decor'd, ()pt avail. Near Hoa1 lloap. $495 mo. 64().2981 GardcnPr Incl. No pet.I Turtlerock 4 br, ram rm,1~~~~~~~~~ Waterpd.673·5638 dinnn., 2 ba, vtewof UCI.1- LM. Grdnr, water. as-MESA VERD~ 3 Br, Fa IOI!. duee pd by owner. Rm. 2 rpt.s: s. nu CUii SS7S. 18971 Antioch. Ait. MEWSUYIEW 3 Br 2 Ba, pool. tenola, jac, $M5 yrly. 675·0562 drp11. S47S-1erdnr inc SU~ 83&-0IS 1---------INWPT TERR exec condo Ideal 3 br, 2 ba new 1>1.or)'. $585/mo. Will la opt. 835-3437, eve 673 8484 Unlvtnlty Park Terrace 3br, 2.,..ba, eocloud twnhme, 3Br, 2ba, frplc, patio, pool. Park area. dbl 1ar. $'60/mo. U95. Avail. Feb. 9. M2-119S e::n • 14'15 sso wn• a. ur Studio, 1 bedroom Maid 1l'rv1ce. pool 2316 :-Jewport 81, C M. 54IJ !1755 or ~1967 SUS CAStT AS .ADULT COMDO 2 BR. 2 ba. yrly $45() STEPS TO HACH 3 BR. 2 ba. uni. '475 2BR, l ba. uni. yrly. ~ IAYRlOMT CONDO Sec bld1. 2 BR, yrly $800 associated· IROKEt~S -REAl TORS lJH W 1..,1,,.,., 611·lU l 3124 ....................... SHARP 2 bdrm. 1 b'lh apartment.. One with pvt 1ar, l w/carport 1r1...;.--------1 encl peUo. S280 Ir $295 + dep. 548-5880 aak tor Woodland Village Be Paularino Beautiful, new, adult ••••••••••••••••••••••• apt&. Oreal location. 2 Panorama view, new cln l pools, 2 jacuula. Ii z Br 2 Ba + den 4-plex. Moveinirpmediately Nopeta. Mar498-109"1 Duplex, s pectacular ocean ;r,riew. New IMO aq. ft. 2 br + conv. den, 2~ STOP LOOKUSTIMI 2 Story, I Bl', 2~ Ba, ....................... TH'£ EXClTJNG PALM MESA APTS. MINtnES TO NPT BCH. Bacb, 162 BR. from $220. "up. Adults, No Peta 1581MeuDr. Beautirul new 3 unit bullcwigs. Xlnt Jocallon near So. Coaat Plaza. CbildJ"en welcome. No pets. Rent.al office open dally 10-5. 840 Baker St, I bllt W. of Bnst.ol. 0 Bib East of Newport rrplc., laundry boot-up, Blvd.> dbl 1ara1a. $395/mo. 54&-9880 Child/pets OK. ,\leot, 84&-1311 orleG-t181. a.... SS7·621S ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4000 LOWEST ............ letT.0."t.dto WT.D.t.e.s. hlNllt Termt e.lilce lMI Wtttr Mfg. Co. '42--2171 14M6 I I .. - VOLT If ..... '•r •••• • ' ..... ~lllJ Jack ............. En&li•h 11pHk1n1 who are also nuent in either P~tt.l•n. Japanese, Tba1, ChineH or Hmong. 2 Jlr11 dally. S3. 71 per hr. Apply h1 peraon, Founl•ln Valley School District, no 1 Llchlhouae Lane, Jl'ount.a1n vane, (eomer Newland ~ Tal~rt Sta) No later than 5PH Fri· day, Feb 3rd. LEGALSlCTY IDt h \ r ;at 1 .. 11,l 3 ''" ... C'ahf k·1al e\( r II lut t) pt.ng ak Ub Bw) &. dr m.nd1ni: II H nHic:c PQIJJtlOO r~wr-ca tkh:&.a lion top t 11rt·t \' rnu11t bt nbll• to Uttll or lit' • lllln tu lc;arn '1.11( ('11 rd I machlnt' Salary t•om meni.urute with 1·-1111.:r 171 tllM7 0011 LUG -AG TAGS rrom )'®r bu In catd. Plan Rd IM r/J SJSK-+ eud r'-lt ett'b "M CHA.MIC 1.carn haw w motnt in Srey;Coristnat' Sl2K wa 1>lu onl! •Pill'• We w l'Cr gor ~acht plllJlta from th expni.. Otdt:h1tr/l'tl1unt "24K Ol&r b\.i&yJCmptoytt .11nd return p ermanertt ly t"urp. l'3l l'liacrnU1 c,; l'lant rental Cc>. hu Arcni/Cunltr SlGK Cummunltt ltel1itlon11 ~/Typist "11 attracUve tq • MlOCtlANICAL OJ~rungii for •Cit bl&rtina ll'\'tne Pt>nionnel Aa:t'nry ~rnt<nt n~• an In· Real &t11lt' ln\'«'lltmmt trap, meeUnt alrilne ASS~-'tliU;R rttliabl~ 1ndlv1du•I• who •KlllhCoilaM"1ia d1vldual with ~xct•lll'nt Compnny In UuntinMton l.D. n1qUlrem0t1ts. p,.._ ,..,.. RY '"'IT ll"' aren't afraid of hard &lite~ 64!·14'70 derkal and organlx.1 Bi:uch loc>klna for a vent toa A lhclf\? for a Rva \ Sn t• r~"i work l'.lCJ~r prC'ft'rrCd ~~ tlonol lliklll11. t'M"~r lo 11-..1 I lla'lle 1m1ntd. 01>e11inll'I 11 1, 1 hl ---------" 1.1h11rp gal Ty~ 80 plu?> peniona _.,. \al tnc O'Jc 1n our hnwl a111cmbly but \\I tra n t i: KOl:JBEH PR1*>S OJ'R -.ork harthnd lurn litlh' shorthond . .Otc wallpaper. fabnc or tleµI Hcquiro i;oud ~a"'ud-; .. ~~,.;~25(1tll 40hr wk,\\1lru1n.Sulury laphont! toworktn:.mull "D<a)' Glo" papt'r fr Wt' h1Wddei..tcr1ly \l1n2 yr H "'' .. .. c:ommt'ftlurate w1c.-x~r Ab &-crt't•r)' ~ou will he compan) with icood 1~~~~~~~~~~IDenut. OoreJ IOH!IHlltt , wilt blldt & rim your exp m .. m111l m11c:haok11J l'nnli.ni Colla"'-'r. p/t1n\e fl\ill Co bent!llt11 C1all ~~e:;!~'.-n~t:~t ~~ ~ri~ ~orlrn1i: co11dlllon"I l\fui;t I l~e J11llow ll&lfa & lo\c titt,l:C. Or try lwo Ul'\b I L·( \I ~L'•'KL"f\l'Y a1111embl~. ('oh• ln1tru Now accepuoa: appllca· 1~ ~l'nior clt•ric:al rei.ourci• bt'fncndly ~alur) :>tart• ~'TEWi\RTROTJI uat. g11m e t•bh• & biu:lt to~J~cES: .r. • ,,r,"' ... • ' m1.1nt <.:oq> t14:l·llOMO tl<>M for Mon & Tues -;---Jt $llO()'; 1·ommen11urutt-A.'1J1'1QU&'\ mstch wull un1tii.. wlnll Un&hl . 1hhgcnt. t·~ix•1 'tl 1-;o 1': 1ll1tht i.h1fts Ap1>IY !*am· Salwi fol' thrc•· otbcr pro with t'l(Pl•f Cull Mr:.. Amerh'an011kD~alt:rll bACk chr':I, l11mpi., &lJlll> $2horJJ$S p ~ r II u n a!> I 1• "d ·1pm, Pt•nnyi.aver. 1660 ft•nional1> re:.~ni;ibl~ Turn11r.1163-45U7 iSO K Oyer ltd s,,\ '\\ood c<>ffed ti.II.' rnli.c ~(St~Sl.CO\ta, .ecretury ai111t/bkkJ•r for Meclcal R.c..,tionl1t 1>1uct1ntia. Co:stu ~·~11. A.G>GIESSIV! fur all pursonntll rnatttirs iut Newport Jo'w~l tbl~. d~k. ~~I £'9taic1 Sl.~4tu. al1h~ ~tl"Jl(lrt Ctr l.H\\ posaOon 11\1111, l.a11u11M -sALUrBSOH Ill lUI ll!'IO J.ltJor!iOn or SEC'Y·RECEPT. 751 tw2? 10ormQre$1.40ea uHtrt' Goud i.al,1ry. area. ~Ill train Mu•trnnl ~hup n~ helper WAMTEO! .:11.nJ11.1tionTh11tpos1t1on Dr Wllltrotn Ooodtyp. ---------1'\Jllai~bedtramtt,mal· Si.tl~T:u:lnrluded bomL' a\a1I T\'lltllll{ & tynoo ~WPM send rtl· ror vanf.'d duties 5 dy:. olfer1 aood \lslblht)'. · ... s 1 1---------•l t1b011. Xlnt cond. Great NO CARI>'! refi. rt!11 'd 64-1·6400 11 u~m" Lo ''I a." 1r1 "d drv he. 64tl-407il sula.ry and benefits Cu11 5 1~G0·0001N1·:1mso"'aetr <"a ur~ WllOLESALt: cocd. $US. Ph 642 6271 Dr'aw your own or fiend ... " " -~ c 1\ care~r opportunity s J·-.. -• ... "J27 " o .rov,. n"-addr-• pho .... •-- - -•d""' D I" t•11 t PO -.,.,.,1.1on. ·>->v·" or Employm .. nt Ao•n"Y TOTlU:TRAOt-: ..... e, ..,..,.., .... -"' LJ-;GAL THAlNtl': 1-·o "l:t0x'i!'XW111 [.<>St "Me Ynnt Shop net'<ls arusuc wnh national AM 1 riAt 11pply at 1211., llro"okhu;~"t ~2 NOW OPEN Hondu ro mah oeany -.e'll mu~o one ol'tl per N"Pt U>nter Lu" f1rrn, (' ,,..., . .., ' a 1111 ' pcn11>11 to do blutipnnt· ed company No trav~I. ' Armoir.1. Mltt0r~ door. lll&.Add:?:l<Hrh t)pe 6.5WPM 759 0431 u .....,,,.... ing, typmg & pute-up e xc e 11 e n t com P 11 n Y Oweni; :~1:::1~9 $!00. 631-1842. J ohn, to-~. Send check or moni:y nr ). rt MOVJNc; URIVJo;RS for 333 3rd St l,aguna bcnefi~ plw. profit i1hat· MSI TO PUBLIC der\,O. Liquor l•h,•rk U\ t"'r ~5 f J hshJd a()f)(Js, tl\rwr'd on· Beach •nK a.ad bonu•es Cun· ------(.41zy.Boy RecUn~. twin PILOT PltMTIHG t1men1~ht.-, Iv ,..,~1~s l drl~~er• he. te.ts tor you and rour D.&.J.&. Service Sta. Allendunl OPJo;N7DAY~ bed. !ik1 boob N1rnc~ PO Bo b42 6.'i3i 7~ ::.,'.:3~ u 1---------1 spciuse can be won to A "' t!xper d Full ur Pill mt• A WI::~ t).6 ODY:> UO J OtJti E ' u • • x l 500 ....__.. ProcluctfonCOfttr'GI llawau. lit>rmuda, ur CORPORATION AvPIY Arco Station. 17th SundownAntl ... a Ltd 6446333 ~tttMe:.a.Ca.92626 L111~m Molht·r·s lwhwr. 1•h1ld l'art· hou~'-'wurk 'ipanltth i.peak 1111: OK ~ l'l time studt•nl 01\ I»& 5l 7b LOAN PROCESSOR with t1ccy ~kills fur morti;a.:c brokt'r firm l,oan bat:ki:rouncJ pn•f"d N e a r I'' 11 li h 1 o n I :. I e 714 '644 1182-1 LOT ATTENDANT f'\111 & p lime '\lusl bt• 18 Plea~tl l'all 5;,7 05:.W LUNCHTIME PREP. Salacb Sundw1chei; i-·u II time Country Cuisine ti7~ 6220 LYM 11·7 Country Club <on\ Home 549 3001 MACHINIST I l>ay 40 Hour "'l'l'I. <:eneral machmt· ~ 11rk on quality .scr11..,~n11·1· romponenls .. \: a:. H'mblll':; Mui.th•· ,1blt· tu work from dcl.1111·11 pl;1n runi; sht.•d:. & hlu.·prinh \pply In l"•rson '1on<lay Thurscl.1 \ Eel"° lndustriH Inc itOl Dovt' St N II New$pClllMf' Delivery Mature re!lp atlull for ~urlv AM dell\ Mu»t h11vti tr an 840 :..r'7Stl NURSES AIDES Xlnt 1>enl'f1ts inc: lud in~ 111ck lt•avl' li11yv1cw Cum·. 4!\.IS!i fhunn Ave, CM642·3505 NURSES AIDE l'rl\ ate Uuty. expcr'd only l':ldl'rly mun 111 conv ho!.p Sal Sun llnm· llf>m Call \'Ollt•t·L 1213 > <.'75 ll(OO al .. h • F .... &lrvmc,C.M Moteri nelftMf' 83 amas ~ c promutt' 3't0 isc • ...,r Ave 15192 lolta Chico 4 Sturdy Capt Chain. $30 Crockpot SlO. Puh1~old I Anafyat from within only H you Costa Mesa. CA 9'.!ti21 Service St:ition Allen -H.l. l7 I 4) lta.7509 ~ch · i.tep s:?O. CApehart Sl~tW Elt'ctro mtichu 111cul have u yeKr or mort' ol rlant. exper'd Ouy & · Call~3S3.5 w/8 trk & BSR turntable switch manuf :.eeks m· successful selling ca II Bqu:il Opportunity Jt:ves Full & p/llm4: AP· · · $20. Dr a fh '!' 1tn t b 1 div wt background In BOBBJo:~DINGlll . (:!l3J f;mployerM /l" ply,Shel1Stal1on lilh& ..... ClftCC'I t010 Caf'P"lnrnew21xl41f'.1t w/stool $40. Elt!c wall pnx.luct1uo or inventory 538-978.~ COLLECT lrvUle. NB •••••• •• •• •• • •• •• •••••• Chnrtreui;e pl\l:.h $95 1-'r clock $10. &42·!1672 Terry control Will 1>erfor m "ftl I' s 1 ore '-.------•• --• , -1'' JtG HT O AM AG t-: 0 Prov burtct SlSO. II' h·ory G l C b ~ t!S >US)' a t'!l ll't' ln1• ·<r--y'• & G-Ofc Set-Viet• Sl:i Nl)(ht Attend llO'rPOINT SALK 3308 doWUliOfa ~.5-i8·5556 90 a .• ~t It aqua. n um. analys111 Ill production. I rvine rieeth hel p _.... .... :?OrSnitei.uwk Apply. W '""rn•r nr Jt~rbor _ __ l'<'lmpv.1rilt~l"!..Cl:1h.eh' purchasinl{.& mvcntur} w /phone,, typ111i: & 1-..a•a &..t II h•·t I NB .... 11 " Ed d h Many xtr s •400 11yatems. Knowled.:e of euJ1lomt!r St'f\' C3 II ·~ • • 5:a She 17t "' rv Ill', Satlt:i An.a 97'J·2921 Steven Wl\r s yout • • .. u _. "' . !!:DP & clencal skillli dt!· 56t>-2'730 M t'. II S •Accotantont bdrm st!t dsk. 3-<lrawer SS2·36ti8 1>1raliJe -to $14,400 Survm• Stu lion Atten CASH P All> chest. bkshlf unit. hdbrd. SHELTlE t'e~Uias STACOSWITCH IHC Salcs·Cwntcr Must know t:mi>loy«Hs l'ay All l'\·l'~ tlant. rull llmt!, ,Chi:vron !-'or Wshr/Deyrs/ttefr1g 2 twn bdi.. rollaway bd. shots 1 \'r old Well 113!1 Baker Costa Mella llatlboat parts. M/t' New LIT. ne1nders Agcnry ~~llUO, 3000 I' islrview. WQrklng or not.i5HH33 ~Tf[N:~'r'~~". llN \~ twhavoo doe 6734712 549•3041 Atlantis. 697 RandolQh, 4000 Birch. Sw .llM --1-'rigiduirc wushl'r $65. 75!HS9S t-;qual Oppor r-:mplciyt!r Costa Mrsa Newport Beach 11.:13 11190 Service Sla Attendant Fr i flld a i re purt n blt''•----- s .... .is C ... ltEER 1~c~:::u~lll~ ff~cor~A~p~p~t/~Ei~·s~ta~b~'~tl5~ l'/tlme Exper'd. Neat dshwi.hr $50 Whirlpool URSES IDES Al.C A 1~ uppear & hundwrlling. washu $95 979 4734, G-. Sale H A ---------1 Orange Co :J Yr tram1nc Appl);, 2500 Nllwport Bl, 546-867'~ ••••••••••••~··•••••••• 'hlte Zig Zag 1ewlni: m ach ine in map l l' cabinet SOO G4S-S072 7 3 & J..11 exper prl!f'd. program Unlim ited c~t .,, F b 4 < , ll ewport Beach Tennli. C l Cl b C PRODUCTION " --Satt ... un e " ;,n\ · Club {"mlly mem ... ·rsh1p oun ry 11 un v I eaminp. Xlnt oppor. for SECRETARIES --8'c:ydes 1020 ques, o(( equip , bdrm ... """ Home. s._19_.300_·1_ _ l(rOWth, Send resume to Si:tv Sta Help needl'<I 1m ••••••••••••••• ••. ••••• st.a. cstm pool tbl. boa bl. $1000. Call an 5, ~9·74711 MUltSESAIDES i Jack Pinto. 1380 S & TYPISTS med Ful,1 or Pit Apply, USED BIKES misc boat equip. A/C. 10 l>)'s,640·5000. Ed & ORDERLIES TYPIST Anaheim Blvd. Ste l05. 990 F.. Csl llwy, Nwpl Recond. Buy. sell. trade spd bikes. motorcycles. BEAtrrlFUL Handpaint Anaheim Ca !12llOS or rail ~k temporary employ-Bch _ Cycle &Co: 2488 Newport lafnl)6, pror hAlrd1yer & ed gray ceramic poodJ~ "1•t.'ilcd to giv~ tt!ndl'r IBM 771·7260for 1nterv1ew menl where we m11ke 11 S'OLOERER '-.'. Blvd. C.M 642·7910 much more 213/~!,2-2534. $4~. Manual port abll' loving cure to the e lderly worth your while .., Hunli"°'OI\ Harbor S50 I er pal1t•nt1> Will t r111 n SELECTRIC II s.IH-D.U•ery llequ1res min l! yrh lulldtncJMahriofil025 .... typewr iter o er quallhcd pto"ri.onnel All Expt!rienced aCt'urate tr you really need a cl~ TOP JOI, 'IOldt•rmg & w1r1n11 cll'.p. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2l6S Rost' Lo. CM Van:.. Xlnt \'ond. K46·85i!l stufts avail /\p1>IY 14-1!; Ty pis l n cc d tl cJ 1 m cent paying-1>/l1me Joh TOI' PAY l'mnt to point soldenn~ 2 Sets 6' Sliding Glass a utos. antique~ bout. O\.i:s/wknds Su per rnr A \t'. N II mecJ 1 al cd y 7 0 wpm cvt"li 5-9pm we may h:ivl' You'n• Your Own &"s or. rol•!r>' switches Nol doot'S TemJ)llred gliu;i; '!'lrs. ant -..·d. snk etc: 0.12-2410 cmustJ whal you'rl' lookm.: for ~Q~ o ff l c e • Pell Some cabling exp Si5/l'u 752·5444 Dayi. Sun /Mon after HIAM Mi tUoneou HURSlS AIDES ~t~;::rt~~Al~~~l.~:,~· s.s +-per hr 5:Jl-<l84Z Q ov e rload ~~uk~ 1K~ut'f ""t 8331845 Eves_ _ hwelry----.010 ;_..d 1 1011 i .1 & 3 11 F.xpcr prt>f'd SALES -;-----2.000 Rt;o H1UC.:K. good ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••U••••••••••••••••••• Wtll train Mesa Vcrdt' WOltK OAY OR NIGHT FASHION SHOES 557-0061 Spray painter helper l8 cond very reasonable wA~TED Church aroup needii lar~e Conv llovi. tit.I Ccntc•r Slll"'TS h .... 1 }rs Clltf or oldf'r, no f'X ' M4-8714 " SJ.Nigheltlpot. Pleusecull • ~:xrellent Workini: Rt>spon1111Jle younit 3'i23Hirc St .. , 4 l>t'f' n~·c Mu!>t h<l\t' car TOP CASH DO LLAR 631·3474a1Wr5PM ~l CM Condit1on11 womun. 18 ~ preferred ~~~~!'-·-~~-~-~-768-llH!I DOCJ$ 8040 p A l D F O R Y 0 t) R ------- Nursmit Apply 1n Pen.on wifash1on expcr to sell ••••••••••••••••••••••• JEWELllY. WATCHES. WANTT<? BUY SIEJl..llOR ... IDES ORANGE COAST youn.: fashion ~h~i. & , Supervisor DOG T RAJNINU ART OBJECTS. GOLD. 4 ticketa to Kina t ut ex '1 rl l " I ti ~ "' D ... ILYPILOT ac~. Appl.v in ru•rson Secretary 1-:xpt!rlt!Ol't'd~ri.on lo • ,<'JLV""'R S'L'R Vl''E, hib1t .6'5-0llOl 11\6pm .. 31 . p I mt• ·'1 ar .• "'"O """· lllO"'" uvatlabl.. ,... .. ~ u~ SECRET ... RY f 'our Plac.: or Mint• " r. "' "' -.,., 00 '-'"' "'"' '"" • lt~S al Dale II Footwork. '"'-· A 11uperv1i.1.• pr ucllun o L'fNE FURN & AN·1---------~ Pt'r_ .. r I 1n our 1\dult Oa)' ''ar~ 330 W. Bay St Th I II u 1 t I ~1 h John l\tortm 5411 0059 .-1" I l"t '-' • M So. Cst Villa"e !n'l IY.!~2 e. 11 Y .. 01wr_ nt· 111~ i.ai roH•rs ,, usL ave ____ __:___ T\QUES. '"S·'"""' .._.._1c_. ... " 0 Health c~nlt.'r l'art tlffil' \sk ~~':.nu«r'~arrl ... .in openinl[ for an C'I( uh1hty lo 1les1~n & pro Rare Black Schnau.ecr. JO '" ~ '"i:s.;;...... 1011 MAIDS I nori.1· ;11cJ1• or ordt•rly 1 1 Equal Opportumt) Salt'Sgirl. culltom h1km1s. ix·r cl wcrl'lary to report dU<'l' ~atlerns ror produc wkll, female AKC shol.ll, UYMtoclt 1075 •••••••--• .. ••••• .. • full & p liml' c:oo<I ,\hlc lo rclalt• & "ork Jr \PQrlSWt•11r l'lt•asc lo thl' \'iC'c' l'rt''> 1-'rnant·\• tton (100<1 potentlul Call SIOOeu 494.367i ••••••••••••••••••••••• bend1tll llulidJy Inn. ~ith ph}.,,1t·ally lmpll~r,..d Employcr apply "' person ThP & \ d m 111),., Ir d I Ion IH5 ol51JI - - -Reg Morgun mu re. broke Dynaco ttetto pwr Amp l.;i)tuna Hilb, ConlaH·I t•ltlcrly spt'rsons \ lrlon ---------1 Persimmon TrC'l' :!:rn ()\lblamhnl! S~l & tYl'lnl! :---' Dob1c pu1>11. AKC. M & F. to r1dt & drtV\!, blk ~watts. $300, Ma estro Personncl.JH65000 t:H·I c:nior. 1 1 t•s Proofr eader 1>/l for Marin~Avl'. BI ... kills are n•q cl lor this Swttrhbo.ir~I Opr Full. or rerli. & t>lks. Champ parade Morgan gelding, &IJ'-echoSl:>.5.839·$394 l',mpln}m1·nt I roicram, n •creationul boat ing pus Xlr11 work1111! t•onds l?'!1m!'., \\ill lr.lln Call s11't'd.shots.!168~rl5:1 F.ni::. Wt<ilern 17l4l H.oilr~ 1090 \!AIDS !loJo;1-.01-:u ,., !7llrli.14 lt>ll 1 mn.iazine cuntac:l SALES/Jr Apparel 11tb ... n1•t11 p.1e·kal!l'wh11·h li4.>"71-J38.lOJI •• ... ••••••••••••••••••• (lt'nt'm't~lornot W1•w11l0ffit·l':\Llnai.trrwunh'clto Shedu Lawlor, CliS Fulltime&pllml'pus1 111dud1•" \aru11" i:ro1111 TECHulCl.a...a ---N Br ndN Pl 1ra1n SIJrt1n1t wu.i• Pub l1 cat1on!'t 1499 Uon!!. Mui.t bf' e:<pd'il 1ru;ur bt•nt•f1t-. '-profll " "'" forHtoYou 8045 Modtifttry 1071 (!YI 1~ v:r~l uno' ""75 hr Mui.t tl'a1I manai:t•busya1·neprac ~·o \'1 1 Npt Bch TIIF.PLACt-:1>+1H!#l2 ,h.1r1nl! ~;11 t:om \1111111 Y.~pt•r apply ... •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.••.• o-.. c._ .. o1 .. ri""'Anter ·-· · lll'•• Wllltnl! tu work ,., nru •' · I •• s I & .....,. ••" ""''""""' wrll1• & s1>1•ak 1-:n.:hsh & s t hr . t>lt> 4451 nwn:.urah•" '''f>t'r, Ap :\t anhl' ... u:sit• • u l's l.Jwable cat hlack. yng Luthe Lt'·Ulond 15)(:12, l'1il()t lieach Blvd. JI 8 \pply at 14-11 .So (',I ~ml' "'1'" · 11 s • SALESLADY pl~ 1n p~r-.on x .1fl111. St-n·itc:i.C \I 6'lfim1!15 spa)ed ••or 11 pec1al $11)()0 Wilson 1ix24 34 N l536 Hw\· La~un a 111 .. 11'11. Sal11r) t•om~nen:.ur1Hk· p timeEvc!>&Sats Jo:arn for matem1tv hout1f1111• :\ton Jo'r1 lllH:! <ltllt•lle home 646·709liaft6 $1300 Punch press30ton. IW·il.~ w t•xJ>t•r 71-l·0.15 7510 ;1i.. $">-S7 J>t!r hr taking or· Mu'll be t' \Pt•r " Sa I /\\'t' In llH'. T I .. S I - -1!174. $3:IOll Press bruke AHl'JQUE ORGAN lurMr,\ulL·tl.• tlers /rl1.!livery Mui;t +commll'.»1"1:1:Jtl'xt:11:; ---------1 t!t'Pi•one.at''I l"JU.:1':11monthC1ldGreat 50 tun,i2"$."i000.Milllng Goodrondltion M/\10 "Hntcd Scal'l1lf '\lotcl 11161 So Coasl II\\} IM· 189~ Molntcttumct Mon Jo . lime, mature. c>.J>(!r m upkl-cp & minor re p:nr~ to build mg & equip. Apply in peri.on to Gen 'I \lanager. San Clemente IM, 125 Espland1an, San Clem \l:Jmtenance Man Jo'/t1me for apt complex Al110 I• lime cleanini: lad\' c all 199·:?835 \lamtenance -person. pt I 11me must work ''"t'kends Sailboat hus1 llt'SS 6-15 71()() 'lake money nt home ... 1ufftn~ envelopt!s, earn s:ll per 100. for ln(o iwnd -.elf addressed envelopt 10 Mays Enterpt lllet', Box 226. San Clemenle, !'Y.!b'72 Mana11er RecepUoni11t Female Only 631·5080, 847-6520 ~IAn:ai.:ement Tl'ainec R.-tall Store ORDERLIES Xlnt bent'fils inrluchni: :sick leave. lluyv1cw Conv .. 205:i Thur1n i\\c. CM642·3505 havc dcpentluble t'ar & $10.34 Dane. w pu~r!I. hont $1500. (213> 9fil·!U34 $400/ofr 846 02'Jl phone Puller Urush Co. SECRETARY 645·~777 ---·--- 75-t-64'11 SALlt~ P T for Rt•al f:<.tall' 1111· Mlsctl~s 1010 Wurh\1.er Spinet p\uno n~al &late SALES Ac 11\'e con~t'ntnl C :\J. of fire has desk avail for 10-4 BulbcM bland lol' Call PER HR. !!'..-.LL. •. --0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• w/bench, map le xln t. ti73-K71XI .....-mlllnl' I SO cond. ~.6'2·1744 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WANTED ----exp. person. Super con· verul'nces to free you for prod Call the Personal Service People now~ ROYAL PROPF.RTIES 642·1830 Parts Stock Person t:~per df'sired. but not req'd Will tr:iin. Musl paM1 l'O. phy-ilcal includ bock xrays. Call for appt. :H0·7639. EOF.. ON THAT SALES JOB GOOD BUDDY! &.wc:1arv to Sltl.000 STOREWIOESALJ.: TOP CAS H DOLLAR Thomas Call(. T heatre AOMIN.ASSIST. b wha1 our bc..,t rep New&usedfurn.appls. PA ID FO R YOUR !.1ode!J287,ptrfeccond, Animal h011p1tul. J'crson eurnt'd lai;t wt•i•k This m111c· Wilson's Bar.:am J EWELRY. WATCHES. le!;jtha1Uyrover $97 mo nl'I & Manai:ement. N H. kind or hourli-incomc is Nook S..15 & 814 W Wth. ART OBJECTS. GOLD. p:iyments. Coat. new ReplytoClasslfiedudno possible lo anyone whu CM b42·'7930&M8-32.!;l S IL V E R SER V l CJo:, $4500 Aft.er 683t.12lS 142 c/o Daily Pilot, PO likes to talk on the phone F INE FURN & AN C & has some p1u~zn12z. Wroui.iht iron, custom · · 1918 •t cPhall baby 1 raod ....... I ...... _ t I Box tSGO Ca1t3 Mesa, a . d .. & 1 ,. n QUE& 645-2200 _,_., -stor-" PART TIME EVENINGS Adults wlth outstandinl(. attractive personalitlei; who enjoy workinl( with kids. Start. at $3.50 per hr. Phone 642··1321. '*250 . between 3:00-$:00 PM Ask for Jlnt Eq ual Opportunity Employer --------! Real Eltiste Sales PeoJ>I wonted Up Lo 90/10'~ 1'0mm. split Nwpt Bch 631..0000 11111 t •nr mot "" 92626 Most of our calling 1s ma e uar serv ng .. art. m., ... .,.any CHe •• .., cu ht •sting & fun soles ---. -. done long d1i.tance & our NEW! S75 Htgh back Ntwport Beach Tennis It 0\-erhauled. Atst sell 1...a. 1... ~Co We SECREtARY T rainee/ product 1.s thcbest rasual chair fneeds re· club membt!ri.hip best F lut '1300 t a k lls. ~.-.-.,-...,... • lkgal Newport ('.enter SOUNOGOOD" t'ovu1nJ!J $35 Call ofr&t().1793 ' 98().185% offftfo •. lMue pay, a R~1 Good ore skills :\11 (i1w Us A Cull Al 642·01311 j;~~~~~;;;;i;i;~~;;=;ii;i;~~ii Real 1'"}itateSalts good 'omm., a lnt lcgtil t•xpr nkes~ar~ 833-8095 ------1 ·-~----- NEWPORT BEACH de· boftus a canal at· Cal1Cathyll44·5421 SMILE!! *•I BUY** 'eloper has openlncs fo .. ....,. to ~°:9 S ECRETARYJ L.cial 1'1me·LlfeL1brancs ln1· Good used Furniture & I n v e ~ t m e" l s a I es w/OAll' 1toff s. 1be corponile ofrlce of a Equal Opp Emplyr m/f Appliances-OR I will per ,.,ons. Top ~o m Ho cloor to door. Our leadlne NYSE corpora· ---------1 sellorSELLtorVou · misi;ion Cal I St ev ofc spoce Is beoutlfut tion has an opportunity Tow Truck Drivers ex· MASTERS AUCTION 56643l!O • W for a legal secretary with ,_.'d. Tnn pay. Apply, 64W'86 Ir IJJ.9625 • ftO 4txper MCflS. e 1 to 3 yrs of corporate ,,.... -,.-· Aecepffonf1t-P /f .,...., legal expr. to work m it's ~W To~ing. !000 lrvme S~'t ft. Jonie custom padded CJ/ea~ of CLo-ve Thcs Valentine's Day send your love a greeting all t he world can share wtth a Daily Pilot Heart of Love. Telephone & lite tYJ>ina. SOUMO GOOD? Newport &ach law dept. Ave, NB ~2-1252 por t ab 1 e b er w H h Part·time sitter for re· art e rooons Fa&hlo n 1'hltt Cati Xlnt typing f& shorthand Trainee/Oper Vitamin en· . multiplex t1&ner, 8 track larded young i:lrt. Stu-Island a r eo. Ca ll skillseuentlal 1-'orappt. capsulalion m achine &tutnl.able·all arebullt· dents OK. 640-1311, 9.5 ~. RUllUDUCIC pleuecallMar~o Hartle Days F/tlme. Enullsh ans·plua t wo c us t om 644-S3251!ve At AMCO•D INC. speaking. apply R·lOAM, wrout1h t tron bar stools. --------• R:=.1st~~~:ef :o'J UJ.8095 f114J64o. 1900 M·F. Llnwilco Labs, 2148 Sb•J'P._58_1_·7_,446,__· ---11 Part·tlme help wanted. o(fice appearance. Send TIME>llFE Newport Blvd. CM. CASH PAID exper'd in mArine ind nee. Muat 00 avtul ror n.-sume or phone l or In· UlllAltES Secretary, eitper 'd. Start For ed u5ed rum. antt· lmmediatt open1n" in wknd•. 18 o r over terview 673-8J11. 212 EqualOppE!nplyrm /f immediately 3 Day wk. qoes&clr TV'a,957.fU.33 our area tor manager 831·9333or493 4~ NewPorlBlv4,NB. ----•----1 Type. bkk~(t. ledgerll. TYPISTS It's easy. co mp ose yo ur personalized greeting & we'll set your message 1n type to fit the border of your choice or your own handwritten thoughts may appear in the border you select tralnH. salts ctork & ;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;~;;;;:~;;;~;;~ phones. fa linit. Reap IP umesnletperllOn PBX Al'llwer. Ser v 8"t.aurant SALES N.B loc.C&ll 548.o280 Appl)' At 6ti4 N. Coast llwy Lqunalieach RADIO SHACK A Tandy Corp. Compuny 1',qual Opp Employer OperatOt'a. lmmed OPtn· Sm.all craft & artifact SECltETAIY 1ngs to work varied hra & COOKS wkod.<1 ¥xper. pref 'd. . s hop n eeds m ot.ure Challen"'111 po$. for 8 but will triain. Apply In W AIJRESS!S woman Thur.s un• Do-pel'IOft who Ukes variety ~. 165 ff()(hetkr St. cent ellpet tlelpCul. ?or. B. Some eaper lo penlODJlel CM HOSTESSES 968-ml,9:30·5:30. & Insurance work d•· Si.red. Sb 80, t)lphtf 60. PIX Answw. se,..;. ALLSltlrl'SAVAlL. SALZSTRAtNtE Irvine 1Dduat1 Complex Gra-vf',yard 11hlft avail. EX.PER. PREFERltED SALESh.ISOM call for appl. 540 7639 Tu t.hru Sat10pm 6arn TOP P AY E.O.E. MA,..G!ll ~~r. prefd. bUt wlll ~ Ynexpcir. r.,quJr Bu.su\eU Con•ultant train. Call tor appl. eeka. uaoda~ In dla· SS7·7i'1'1. EOE. trlbutor consulting bual· ~-:-~~~~T-:"-.- hCSI, Offcrina en opport. to reap ~omroensurat.e rewards of unUmlted ln• rome ill your c;wq bua. panorf/t.~1989 Dkffll/ltoM/Stot llM&.c. ltp'O Ir TKhnlccrl Work temporary & make xtr a m ono)'. Lo na: & short i.rm assignment~ Rohd•Y & -va~ p uy. llo•r.ltal1111 t1e>n pl u n aval. VOLT Yl.--Jit';lill&.P~IV"ft'tl•-• •• 3841 Campus Drtn 546-4741 <AcrouFtom Borders come in 3 sizes: $15. $10, & a special c hlld's size for $2. (You must be under 12 to qualify for this one). II you wish to create your' own greeting. use a black pen & write your message 1n the heart below or draw your own Valentine of this size. •••••••••••••••••••••• JVC JT·\' '71. ,, M·l"M •tereo luner, $170 DRX 119 SU5 Afl 7pm , ~u 9150 ·• Qwv. l owner, C.S.T. 10. c . rab. P.S. r .u , air. ituto a,; lon, 12·14 M.¥ C , ramper ahell, i.pe d (k $1800 firm. ~ - CREVIER t If A lt<MOWA T m iracle rnazda $2150 U.tc. HOOPCY> DAILV PILOT Lowe $4195 1462 RSOl 540-5630 lonsso~ & ~o~ • UNCOLN·MFRCUAY 2626HARlOR llVO. COSTA MESA ' Cl• CWLY OT 7' 7 ~ • Lighter in taste. Lower in tar. And still offers op the same quality that has made Marlboro famous. Also available in king size. I .. ,, Warn ng The Surgeon General Ha Determmed Tl T at C ga ett Smoking I Da gerous to You Hellth ' ~ I ' 7 \ l By Tbf' AuoclatM Press Scattered can and trucks lit· ter snowy hiahways. Runaway tiara:es clog rivera., hittin1 dams and endangerine other water traffic. And many town remain unwilling fortresses a1ainst the outside "orld behind enormous sno" banks. Still, Ohio· 1s d1gg1ng out or the bhuard that paraly1ed the state for four days and killed ut least Strangler Strikes Again? LOS ANGELES IAP ) The body or a woman was round to- day in Hollywood neur un area where t "o \ iclims or the Hillside Strangler were lust seen ahve. and th<' Strangler Task Force was on thl' scene, police Lt. Dan Cooke said "She's a hltle old to fit the pat· tern of the strangler," Cooke i;aid, adding that she was 35 to 40 years old. The body was i>und on La Mirada Avenue, just a few blvcks from the Tamarlne •Apartments where victim Xim· berly Diane Martin answered a prostitution call Dec. 13. Miss )tartln Is the lu~t known victim of the strangler The apartment h<'ltse is across the street from the Sdentology I Celebrity Ccnll'r where Jane 1 Evelyn Kinr. an aspiring uc· tress model . was lust seen alive Nov 9 Further d<'latls were not im· mediately av4lilublc. Police hnve ctedlted the strangler with 11 dozen murders ln the lalit five months, al ot them young women. Jarvis Could Save · '$4ll.~ M:ililion r/!ax By GARY GRANVILLE Of o.11r ... ,.. Mttt ... PaeTel ays 'fop OCTax Pacific Telephone Company bas dislodced the Irvine Com pany as Oran1e County's aumber one property taxpayer, according to ticuru releaecd to· day by tax collector·t~uurer Robert Citron. While cllmbinc Into the number one slot amon1 county taxpayers, Pacific became the lint taxpayer to lacur a $14 ml1llon liability. Citron said. The previous high was paid last year by the Irvine Com· pany, a $12. 7 milllon payment. But in 11TM8 Paclftc's tax bill increased 12.7 percent to reach Sl4.1 million while the Irvine Company's 2.7 percent gain In tax ltabillty boosted its tax bill to $13 million. Citron's ranking or the coun· ty's top ten taxpayers put the Southern California Edison Company ln third place with a $10.9 million property tax bill. Next in line were the Union Oil Company ($4.2 million), Rockwell Jnternatlonal ($4.1 million) and General Telephone Company ($3.7 million.> Ranked in the number seven spot was Standard Oil Company with u 1977-78 tax liability or $3 s million. Citron'• listing showed that the Southern Calirnia Gas Com· pany's $2.8 million tax bill earned it eighth place on the top ten list while Walt Disney Productions and Disneyland fell into the ninth spot with a tax bill just $43,000 Jess than the gas. company. · · In tenth spot am.ong the coun- ty's lop property taxpayers wu the McDonnell-DoueJas Corpora- tion whose taxes ficured at $2.3 million. "'ollectively, the top ten will pay $61.8 million in property taxes. That Is $4.S mllllon more than the same ten companies paid in 1978·77. Baja Search May End/or Ktiyak Victim BJ-TM Aaodat.ed Preal The COut Guard 1ear4h f W a North CaroUna tnan all ln a kayak ca~ a Califo a cout'"wln--n e y end tonlaht when Mexican aovem- m ent clearance for the U.S. searcA.en explrH.,. a Co11l Guarcf 8'0dal 111d.' The tnlssln1 man, 18-year-old DavUI Schwimmer of ttaleilh. fell intdO>Ugh seal tlait;hlt a stu- dent kayak expedlUon Tuesday. Two other students werfJ. found drownect.Saturday off ttio west coast of Carmen laland, about 750 mUea southeast of San Diego. A coaat Guard hell~opter searched more than >iOO mltes alone the east coast of Baja California on Sunday but saw no signs or the mi11Sln1 student from Duke University ln Durham, N.C., said Lt. Cmdr Don Hasler. • The drowned 1tudents were identified as Tlm Brelde1•m, 21, of Kutztown, Pa., and BrendA Herman. lJ, of Clnchmatl, OIUo. Bre1de1am w a student at Moravian College lil Belhl~hem. Pa. and M1ai Hehnan attended :Bennlnatoc Coll &t 1n yermont. ScbWlmmer, Brtlde1am iD4t Ntss Hennen were amon1 ilih• studenll taldnl a throe.week eea kayaklnl coune offered by the Southweat Outward Bound achool. l'he 1roup l ft Tue.day from a Point north or LOt to, Mexico. MnsSrroll Diane Keaton hugs N.Y. Film Critic's award as best actress for ''Annie Hall" Sunday night. She grew up in Santa Ana and played• Maria in ''Sound of Music" while at OCC. Her parents live in Corona rlcl Mar. E',..,.PageAl SPY •.. ton tor tests, while the other !our were flown to a hospital in Yellowknife. The team consists of five Americans and one Cana- dian. Davidson said the search team talked wlth the wildlife sur- veyors at their camp and then went up again in the helicopter. Ualnt detection equipment, they located a source of radiation about elcht miles from the camp. The helicopter landed on a rock outcropping about 1,000 yards from the site. The team moved forward on foot through deep snow, taking continuous radiation readings. "We kept moving forward and dldn 't find any excessive radia· tlon and we were able to go right up to the edge of the crater," Davidson reported. A crater nearly 10 feet across had been blasted in the Ice by the heat of tht object. About a toot and a half of water had refrozen in It. Around tt were 50 to 100 puncture marks which Davidson said may have been made by pie~ of metal or by ice thrown up from the impact. "It's quite possible there's something under there but we couldn't see lt," he said. Tom Crites, a U.S. health pbyslcbt, and Davidson reached the crater first. Nert came Murda and Pvt. Mona Wilson, a female member of the Canadian Forces nuclear accident survey team. The team was on the site for about two houri, returning to naker Lake about three hours after dusk. Meanwhile, a team of paratroopers were sent for, to cordon of( the creter. A nuclear accident team tn- apectetl two other sites Sunday where W'USual radiation was re-~ft!d, k ~,.,lnformetlon on theln lli>dlnga"Was avellable. Both were near Rellancc, a weather community of 20 penons at the eastern tnd of Gre t Slave Lake ind about 200 mtle1 west and sUghUy south or Warden's Grove. The latounted Police were ordered to cordon them off. F,....P-AJ DEFENSE ••• · Leaden ot a mechlnlata union al McDonnell Dou1las Astronautic• Company in Hunt• in1ton Beach today called for an lR)medlate meetln1 et\ 1 th company'• lat contrHt offer was rejected Saturday. Ted Nelma. spoke1unan for th• International Astoclation of .Maebinlsta UAM), said unJon leaders were to meet either to- day or Tuesday to anal)tie the weekend vote and to develop a successful proposal. ' Union members rejected the Douglas offer ln votes taken at four location in Los Angeles und at Vandenber1 Air Force Base, Palmdale and Cape Canaveral, Fla. McDonnell Doua:las reportedly oCfered a 5 6 percent wa1e in. crease in the first year and tbree percent increaees in tbe second and third yean of a three-year contract. Improved health care and pension benefits also were in· eluded. The propgsal was tUrned down by a 51.0 percent margin. Dou1l11 spokesman Don Hanson said that about 1,4.50 members af the IAM are employed at the Huntington BeJch plant. Other IAM workers who rejected Ute contract are employed at Totrance. Cape Cana·vcral, Palmdale and Van· den berg JI anson said the Huntington Beach machinists are employed in component fabrication and space vehicle assembly. "The company will have to wait and aeo what the next steps wlll be of tho IAM," Hanson said. The contra~t expired ·iast Oc· tober but work ha• continued because of aut.Omatic extension clauses. Hanson said the union served a notice or contract termination two weeks ago at Huntington Beach bul withdrew it a abort tame later IA M members at Douglas now average $7.23 an hour. Members of the United Auto Workers C1TAW) went on strike recently al the Douglas plant in Long Beach. The strike hu no effect in Huntington Beach. NaVyN~a Mar.ine Bme As LNG Site BY The ASSOCIATED PRESS The Navy says there Is no way Camp Pendleton wut be used as a site !or a mammoth liquified natural gu terminal. Jt wu one of five sites proposed by the CaUfornia Coastal Commisalon. Navy 0Cficlal1 tohl the com- misalon Friday that auch a terminal would be "lncompatl· blo with tho mlssiop of C•mP Pendleton" in tratnlhf Marines for amphibloua landings. The coastal commission bu identified the sprawlln1 Marine base ~ miles north of San Diego as one of the sites where tauen could offioad the 1uper-coole4 eas tntO stora~e tws. On Tuesday, the staff will pre· . sent the comml.ulon lta order of preference tor the pro})OSed terminal sltea. Tb• Pub to Utllltlt• Com· mla1lon ieta the coastal a1eri-cy'1 research report.a. May 81 and wlll m~e the final declllon on where tli llqulned natural aas terminal will be located. Provo, Utah, detectivea.1. Dave Adamson (without coat) and Bud ulllman cheek old clocks tourtd along with SOO antiques in the Provo home of rape and burglary suspect Gerry Curtls Branagan who was arrested In N wp0rt Beach. Newport detectives want anyone who hns Jost antiqu~ in a burgla in the past 18 months to cnll them at 644-3765 or 644-3763 to see if the it~ms cm be identified. SNOW ••• Became Ohio w declared a 1ederat emergency area, the federal aovemment will p~ for ~percent Of snow removal work contracted before mldntsht Tuesday. Crews from the Army CofPs or Engineers. the Army I\ sen-e and the Ohio National GU.rel - more than 3,800 men lr\ 11 - were working tQday to clear road• and hi1hways of drin~ as high as 15 feet. , Miserable road conditions failed to deter weekend siehtseers+ and their atuck vehicles added to the chaos ln areas Uke Toledo, where the Hishway Patrol was· forced to close ma,Jor roads. Similar havoc led police in several rural communities to threaten arrest of travelers not on emeraeney tnPS. Some emeraency run5 could be made only W sir. A ftlY and Na ti on II Guarit heltco.pters are flytne mercy missions In Ohio in weather that normally would keep them grounded. Hostage-holders Demand Transfers NEW WESTMINSTER, Br1Ush Columbia CAP) -In· mates bOlding seven women and three men hostage to:day at the British Columbia Penltentlary met race-to·face with Royal Canadian Mounted Police negotiators and demanded tra sfcra to another prison. The meeting late Sunday came more than 30 hours after the incident beaan. Earlier bargaining was on the telephone. dent at the pri!ron since 1963, glv· ing the "8.(. Pen" tho reputa- tion or being the worst in Canada "and perhaps all or North Am ricn," said Jim Spears, a reporter for the Vancouver Provmcc who has been involved in negotiations in prc\'lous c Crontut1oni;. Thlrle<.'n hostagci; were t~ken originally two inmates, a. mo.le visitor and 10 womenai Jtor~. Three women have be released in exchange for f • cigarettes, coffee and druMS. The prisoners claimed to be armed with a pistol and twQ 1rt'nades, but olhcials could no\ contlrm thl . "-A prts0n guard. Roy Yasudf, 32. wa~ ,itabhl'd in the tbroat when the ho. t~s w rt Uk about JO a.m. Saturday and wu reported in serious . but sijlble cond1t1on. l New space-age equipment enhances the 11stenab111ty and e tends the effective r•oge of the statton. Help us tost the new coverage. V'"' Ir VOL. 71, NO. 30, 3 SECTIONS, 2A P.AGES :Doctor's Defense:,, Fetus .Not UDlOD By TOM BARLEY Of .. De< Pl..C IUH A defense lawyer unsuc- tenfully argued today that Dr. WHliam Baxter Waddill of Hunt· ln1ton Harbour was merely C'OmpleUng the act of abort1on hen he allciicdly strangled an Infant in Westminster Communa 1.Y Hospital Attorney Malabour Watson. who holds def(rees in Jaw and GamePl011 medicine. told Oranee County Superior Court Judge James K. Turner that the fetus wa no more human wbtn bOrn last March 2 than it was antiid the mother's womb. Referring to the iux-month fetus as "this creature,'' Watson argued that Waddill, '4, could not be accused of murder for any act taken aiainst the child, an or out of the womb. And he told 'the judge, In the ju'ry' absence from the courtroom. th l the state' th r peuUc abortion law does not clc rly st te that a doctor c nnot complete the act of abor· tlon iC the tetus leaves the moth r' body. "It'' o I can tine le1al ariu· ment," Judie Turner com· mented. "But rm more concerned Irvin<.· Poh<'l' Lt. Jerry Bo) d briers mem- bers of a s1wcial burglary suppression task fon·t.· that started concentrated effort say ar.c committed by Santa Ana narcotics addicts. Police believe becf ed up Santa Ana Police force is driving the ad· diet • who support habits throui:h buralan•. into Irvine. • lo rcdu<:r .. professional" burglaries in North In ine '' hich Police Chief Leo Peart No Link Seen to Hillside St;t(Ufg1er-Case LOS ANGELES <AP) -The body or a woman who had been beaten to death was found today lo a Hollywood apartment ffnral blocks rrom where two vfotlms or the Hillside strangler ere last seen alive, police said. The woman, between JS and 40 years old, wns found on the .. An improved method to onitor development In lrVlno tad assure that there are city acrvices to support it, la scheduled for debate by the Irvine Planning Commission. The commiHlon meel11 at 7:30 tdftltht at city hall, 17200 Jam· boree Blvd. • Tonight's public heartn1 con rns the re5identlel develop· nt permit procedure and a opo 1 that slmU rpermitt be oqulred fol' commercial and tn· ustrl l projects. Both must be approved by th ty Councll before they will bathroom floor by the apart- ment manager and tentatively identified as a reaid nt or the building on La Mirada Avenue, said police U. James Troulmao. However, police would not re- lease the name until they were sure. r:i ht now with the state' clear- ly defln('d law lhat 1t i1 unlawful to tnkc th llfo of a human bC· ng." Antlctpatlng dden e argu. ments, th judge conceded th t it has nM yel been proved in the trl1il that the alle1edly murdered infant had the statu of a human belng. .. But lf the evidence shows that the inlant had life, then we are d aling w. th n ch r or murder." Jud Tum r ruled "Motion d nied," The rejection of the second motion for dismi s l m d by the defense since the trual st rt· ed last week meanti that te tlmony will resume in th trial of th ccused Huntington Harbour physician. It I irgucd by Deputy Di trict Attorney Robert Chatterton th t High-speed Fall • W ddlll tranaled th baby •ni after t Un to end llf tin th \lo om b y the lnje(:Uon or a aallne soluUon. The prosecutor alle ed th t testimony will prove that Wad· dill contemplated other acu of murder before decldinc to thriJt. tie the infant. Among them, he said. were drownin the child In a bucket. ol (Sff DE•'EN ~E. Paae At) Searchers Locate Satellite> Wreckage BAKER LAKE, Northwest Territories <AP) r-A Canadian· American search team struc· gled 1~rough waist-high anow to the 'tile or a crater nearly 10 feet acrolis In the ice on lhe TheJon River nd found wrecuiie from a runaway Sov· iet nuclear satellite. Lt. Col. t>anald Davidson of the Can ian Armed Forces told a new conference today that tubing and a perforated metal canister were round protruding from tht ke Sunday. Paul Murda, leader of a r1ve- m :m U.S. aclcntiftc crew, !>aid the caniste.t wa "sort of like a By GARY GRMIVILLE OI CINI._., Pittt It.tit Orange County's top 10 prop. erly taxpo:v.ers collectively would have aaved $40.8 million .this year If the proposed Jarvis- Gonn tax reform Initiative was an effect, according to Tax Collector-Treasurer Robert Citron, Top tax dollar saver if the in- iliatlve, calling ror a lid on the amount the assessor can value real prqperty, wowa have beeo . • the county's number one tax- payer. Pac me Telephone Com· pany. Accordln& to Citron's tigura. Pacific's 11m 78 tax bill is $14.1 million. Under provblon1 of Jarvis- Gann, the company's tax btll wowd hove been $4.4 million, or $9.6 million less, Citron ald. cylinder that got smashed" while the tubing "looks lilte structuul tubing.·' "Something has ~ally gone· througb that ice at 'a high speed," said Davidson. "This ls all thal'I• left atickinC out, or maybe separate pieces. We don't know. We didn't pull It apart." · A Chinook helicopter took the l3·member crew from Balter Lake to the crater 180 mlles to the southwest arter it was found by two or the six members of a Canadian-Ameracan team win- tering in the area on a wUdlire liurvey for lhe Northwest Ter· of run mar'ket value Jhnltation on what a county aMessor may value real property. will be Otl the June ballot. No matter what CalifomJa's voters decide, the Initiative will not affect 1977·78 county tax bills Citron's comparison was s imply a device Intended to show the impact of Jttrvis·Gann had it been in ertect this year. The county's number two tax· payer, the lrvlne Company would have a tax liability or $"7 million rather than the $13 million blll lt now holds. Orange County's third ranked taxpayer, Southern California Edllion Company, would save $6 7 million under: Jarvil·Gann proposal. Citron pointed out that the 161 8 mUUoo tax liability in- curred by the county's top 10 <See .JARVIS. Pa1e AZ> The, Jarvis-Gann initiative .which WoUld place a one percent * * * ritories government. The debris trom the nuchtar· powered Cosmos-9$4 satelllte that feJJ from orbit Tuesday wa found ei ht miles northeast of the landing trip at Warden's Grove, a " ther outpost in the Dubawnt Lak area 1,000 miles north of the North Dakota border. • Davlcb(>n said .tho two men made a sled trip up the Thelon River Saturday and encountered the crater on their return. He said one of the two touched the metal with a atoved hand. Both were llown Sunday to <SeeSPY,PaseAZ) CUiver Drive Work Under Way T.4XJNC CHORE M.4DE E.4SIBR a1.-.,ap aOSMAaJ ... ....,,.. ..... ~··.,.."1 road .. or PacTel P'actftc Telephone Company ha& dblod"ed the Irvine Com· pany as Orange County's number one property taxpayer, accordjq to l11ure1 releaud to- dar by lax collector-trea.surer Robert Citron While climbin1 into the number one slot amon1 county tu,pnyers, Pacific became the first taxpayer to incur a S14 million liability, Citron said. The previous high was paid last year by the Irvine Com· pany, a Sl2 7 million payment. But in 1977-78 Pacific's tax bill increasl"d 12.7 percent to reach $14.l million while the Irvin~ Company's 2.7 percent 1010 m ta~ liability boosted its tax bill to.$13 million. Citron's ranking of the coun· ty's top ten taxpayers put the Southern California Edison Company in third place with a S10 9 million property lax bill Next in tine were the Union Oil Company ($4.2 million), Rockwell International ($4.l m lllion) and General Telephone Company ($3.7 million ) Ranked in the number seven spot was Standard Oil Company with a 1977·78 luK liub1ltly of $3.5 million. Citron's Usling showed that the Southern California Gaa Com· pany':, $2 8 million tax hill earned it e1Rhth place on the top ten list "hilc Walt Disney Productions and Disneyland fell into the ninth !!pol with a tax bill just '43.000 less than the gaa company. ln tenth spot among the coun· ty's top propt'rty taxpayers was the MrDonnell-Dougtu Corpora- tion whose taxes niured at $2.3 million Colle<:ll\ ely, the top ten wlll pay S61 8 mllllon In property taxes. That is $4 5 mllllon more than the same ten companies paid In 1976·77 * * * Fro,,. Page Al JARVIS ..• taxpayers "is equal to eight per· cent of the (county's) total cur- rent tax blll of f792 mlllion, "This points out that business .ind industry has the greatest amount to gain by passage of the Jarvis-Gann initiative," Citron said. He noted that buslneee and in· dustry "-'ayA close to 82 percent of the county's tdtal property tax bill while the homeowner pays 33 percent." The tax collector-treasurer said he based his comp~rlaon on the currtnt full market value aa determined by county aHessor Bradley Jacobs and then placed the one percent tax rate pro- vision <1f Jarvis-Gann on that current market value. He emphasized that his figures w~re baaed on inform&· tlon gathered from ta~ bills aent. to the county's top 10 taxpayel'8. Hau Plague1 Northern State Br Tbe A oelated Preu . Stainant htah pressure con· tmued to trap haze and •make near the 1round Jn CaJifomla'• inland valleya and parts of the San Francisco Bay area today, the NaUonal Weather Servlce re-J>Ort~d. The hor:e and 1moke combined with dense local momlnf toi to create drlvin1 haurds and caused the crHh of a Ught aircraft In Martn County SUn· day. °'"' ...... ,..... ., .......... By A fated Pttali Sc ttued ca and trucks Ut-ter nowy htlhwaya. Runaway t>arg ~l ifv rs, hlttJoa dams and endan1erln1 othor water trurnc. Arid many towns remaln unwUUnc tort.relies againat the outaid• world behind enormous anowb&nka. Stlll, Ohio la diHiDC out of the bllnard that paralyzed the state for four day• and lrtued at least JO people. ''ThJn11 are aettjof better everyda.y,''DennisKwaitkowaki, head of the Fed ral Diauter As· sistance Admlniltration 's snow removalproj lriOhlo,aaidSun· day. Ohio expected 1 to 4 inches of fresh anow today, with ttm· ~ratures no hlper than the 205. and offidal• expra ed hope that federal emer1enc:v area, th ledoral government will pay for 6$ percent Of snow removal wor contracted before mlelnight Tuesday. Crew11 from lhe Atmy Corps of Engineers, the Army Reserve and the Ohio National G~ard - more \hon 3,800 men ln all - were workln1 today to el.ear roads and high" ay of drUt as high a 1$ r~t. M tier.able road conditions · la ll od to deter weekend siehtaeera, and their stuck vehicles added to the chaos ln areas like Toledo, where the lliahway Patrol was forced to clo e major road11. ' Similar havoc led police in several rural communltlea to threaten arrest or travelers not I on emer ency trips. IRVtNE'S TALENTED YOUNGSTERS SANG, DANCED, PLAYED TO FULL HOUSE Guttart1t Wendy Spitler, left, and Dancer JUI Freger, 10, Competed it would not create new cleanup problem•. Other states 'al110 struggled to recover .fro01 the devaataUng storm: Some ernergency tuna could be made only by air. Army and. National Guard hellooptera are flying mercy missions tn Ohio in ' weather that normally would • Irvine Kids Perform ••• -I tchlpa, where 18 dled and 10.000 travelers were 1trand6d, many roads are .Wl keep them grounded. 300 Watch Animal City Talent Contest ·under12.ro0t drllts. In the I.ans· ine area, tome ah rltf'1 deputies made thelr rounda on abowshoe#. nt roots on at l~st five bullclin&s bave collapsed. Michigan Sta~ Unlveral!.f planned to reopen today 81\et two days of canceled cl laat week. App~intment Announce d By UC Irvine A standins·room-only crowd of more than 300 persons watched 50 Irvine children compete in the city annual talent show Satur- day at Rancho San Joaquin School. Among the judges were two Wall Disney Mouseketeers, Scott Craig and Allison Fonte. There were 40 separate acts. First place winners in the category 8 years and under: " . i"irat place wiuners in the category, 9 years and older, wure: Dianna Callison and Emily Zavarella, both 9, tor their vocal rendition of "Singing in the Rain." -Yvonne Alexander, 10, who Woman l n j ure.d dllnced to "Get Down Toniaht." -Darren Skllton, 10, and 9· year·olds Robert Wardrop and Brad Morton. for a variety pup· pet ct. -Jennifer Malone, 11, a harpist who played "Greensleeves." ••• -Jlllaolj offices. schools and road• were 110pened today. O'Hare Airport was open but runntnr behind schedule. ••• Two UC Irvine admlnlalratlve appointments have been made. the university announced. -Jason Hoffman, Monica Schaffner. Lori Crosby and Ashley Rathbun, all 6, ·Who teamed as ''The Cabbafes" to sing "Papa Do Run Run." -Shelley Berger, 7, for her dance, disco-style, -Heather Haase, s, who was Little Miss Oranae County, for variety, a balon dance tilled "Saturday Night Fever." NB Police See Abductor's Trtick -Not1hwe1tem lnaJana re- Jel ed 2 tO • inches or new anow • Supdlty. Scattered power out· a1es were rCJ)drt.!<f. ••• -In Vlr1inla, where snow and driving winds preceded weekend floodJne in almost all sections, the forecast was !or more snow toninbt and Tuesday. Guy J, Sircello, professor of ph1losophy, was appointed dean of underiraduate studies. A Tustin man, Ramon CurteJ, was named asalstant chancellor for administrative affairt and af. flrmaUve action. Slrcello, a faculty member since 1966, will promote under· graduate academic interests in campus planning, and oversee· undergraduate administrative mutters. The Job is a new posi-tion. -San Yoon Lee, 8, a pianist who played Beethoven 's "Sonatine No. 9." Dogs A ttack Woman, 63 EL CAJON CAP) -A 63-year- old El Cajon woman was hospitalited after a pack or dogs attacked her while she was crossing a street near her home. Dorothy Varney suHered numerous bites when 19 collies ranging in age from three months to full grown escaped from a kennel owned by Donna Banzhof or El Cajon, police suid. The kennel owner told orncers someone had cut a hole in the fence surrounding the dogs, al- lowing them to escape, a police spokesman said .. F ront Page Al Newport Beach police were looking today for the driver of a white pickup truck, who is ac· cuscd of trying to kidnap a hitchhiker at g\.lnpolnt Saturday night. The victim, ·a 20·tyear-old Newport woman, suffered. abrH10l19 on her arma and legs wh<'n she leaped from the mQv· 1ng vehicle to get away from her lbductor, pol~ said. According lo police reports, the young ¥.oman was pickf.'d up about 11 p.m. whi1e she was hitchhiking a ride near Pacific Coast Hil{hway and Main Street in Huntington Beach. She told officers the ride was unevrntlul until the driver got to Newport Boulevard, where she wanted to get out. Instead or stopping, she t.a.id, the driver turned northbound on Newport and pu1Jed-a gun. She said 11he was ordered to sit on the floor or the truck and the man pulled out a pair of handcuffs that he demanded she put on. CULVE R Froa Page Al • • • wanted it done right. SPY• • • When improvement.! are com· pleted -on the San Diego C~ek channel, the flood drainage system which includes the San Joaquin channel Is supposed to handle the rainfall from a storm of an ln.tenatty ex- perienced on the average only every 100 years. The San Joaquin channel was supposed oritlnll!Jy. according to countt fl6od control recotds, to have been deslaned tO accom- JQodate a 25-year storm. Flood control 6tflclals said the recent storm waa of only a seven to 15-year frequency An lrvl n e Company 11pokeanian Hid the improve- ments befnt done this week "wUJ c~lnly support a storm ol treater f ntonalty than the one w Juithad. The woman said it was at this point, as the driver was alowina for a red light at 17th Street, that she leaped Crom the truck. The l'Oung woman ran to a nearby Costa Mesa motorcycle officer who summoned ot.her police units to the scene. They were unable to Joca~ the truck. ••• Curiel, a UC! affirmative ac- tion officer since 1974, succeeds Elola;e Kloke, who is retiring after 15 years at UCI. P r o. Page Al DEFENSE ••• -The woman described her ab· ductor as being about 30 to 3S ) ears old and weighmJ a~l 250 pounds. Police eald ahe w una· hie to supply rurther informaUon at the time of the rePort. -In KentQck.Y, 208 Nat\onal Guardsmen who had helped with rescue operations were deac- tivated. Schools were to remain Closed, lttd the forecast WU for more snow tOday. The bigeeat. problem wu on the Ohlo Ri~r. where JOO wayward coal and icralD barJtes"had broken free from moorings between Pitl5· b'largh Ind Louisville -aome had slarnlried into dams. Because Ohio was declared a water or the nursery ainlc arid' the 1njecUon of a fatal dose of in-· sulin or a chemical into the baby. Ride the BIG WAVE coming to Southern California from the beach in Orange Coun ty •• ~ THE somL~ND'S NEWEST RADIO STATION . at the crest of youC'. FM radio dial •f0t..,••l1 ICAPX Come on up to Sounc:J Wave 108 and en· San Clemente. All to the accompaniment Joy the best of the btight, beautiful music of the refreshing sound~ of the seal~ 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, ><·WAVE with. 28,500 watts from New space·age equipment enhances the listenablllty and extend1 the effective range of tha station. Help ua teat the new coverage. y-- ' 7 7 By TOM BA&LEY Of U. o.lf¥ -U<tff A d efense lawyer unsuc· ce.tsfully urgued today that Dr. William Baxter Waddlll of Hunt· letcton Harbour was merely completing the act of abOrtion when he allegedly str&neled an lnfont in We tmlnster Communl- ~ Hospital. Attorney Malabour Watson. ho hold. degrees 1n law and (Jhess ~Im Defense: ' medicine, told Orange County Superior Court Judge Jamei K . Turner thot the fetus was no more human when born last March 2 than it was Inside the mother's womb Rderrine to the six.month fetus as "this creature," Watson areued that WaddlU, «. could not bt: accu.c;ed of murder for any act taken against the child, m or out of the womb. And h told the judge, in jur)"'• absence from the courtroom, that the at te'a \herapeuilc abortion law does not clearly tale that a doctor cannot complete the act or abor· lion if the fetus leaves the moth r's body. "It's :n fascinating leial areu· ment.'' Judae Turne! com· ment d. "B11t l'm more concerned LBFomm :set Tonight The Laguna Beach Tax· payers Association has scheduled a public forum for City Council can· didates at 8 tonight in city hall. Candidates wlll speak for five minutes on any toplca they wish, then respond to questions from the noor, said association president Trevor hman, who will act as m er tor. ar dcollng with char ol murder," Judge Turner ruled. "Motion denied '' The rcJecUo'n of the second motion for di ml al mad by the d~fcnse sin th trial tart· ed I t week means that testimony wlll re ume In th trial of the accused HunUngt,oo HarbOur ph) lcla11. It ls areucd by Deputy 01 lrict Attorney Robert Chatterton that WaddUI str :gted the baby arl fter failing to nd life tn the "omb by the injection of Uno solution. . The pro ecutor alleged that le timony will prove that W d· dlU contemplated other act.I or mur$1er before deciding to.ithrot· tle the infant. Among them, he s id, w re drowning the child in a bucket Ol (See D FEN E, Pa1e A!) High,.spee~ Fall Searehers l:Jocate Satellite ·Wrec~age BAKER LAKE, Northwest Territories <AP> -A Canadian· American search team slrug· gled through waist.high snow to the cda:e of a crater nearly 10 feet aero s in the ice on the Thelon River and fo1.&nd wreckaae trom a runaway Sov- iet nuclear satellite. Lt. Col. DOnald Davidson of the Canadian Ar~ Forces told a news conference today that tubint and a perforated metal canl1ilcr were round protruding from the ice Sunday. Gas Station li>ses 82,000 To SC Thief Police aald the allcnaent was preparing a rnominc bank de· posit at the ga~ station at 1201 S. £1 Camino Real "'hen the phone rane. He lelt the money on a ta· ble while he w nt to atuwe!' the phone, police said. FolJowing the call, several customera drove throuch the atation, occupylna the atten· dent's attentior\. When the attendent returned to his orn~. the money was mis· sing. Police ei.timate the money · was taken between 6 and 8:30 a.m. There are no s1.11pecta. FumaceCawe Of $51,oo.o· ~Fire one Paul Murda. leader of a five· m an U.S. sclenltftc crew. aid the canii.ter was "M>rt or like a cylinder that eot s mashed" while the tubing "looks like structural tubin11." "Something h¥i. really gone throuah that ee al a hlth speed." $aid Davidson "This is all that's len· sUckan& out, or maybe separate piece5. We don't know. We didn't pull it apart." A Chinook helicopter took the 13-member crew from Baier l.ake to the crater 180 miles to the southw aner It wa found by two or the six members of a Canadian-American team win· tering in the area on a wlldlife ur\'ey for the Northweat Ter- ritories cov mment. The debns from the nuclear- powered Cosmoa·9S4 satellite that fell from otblt Tuesday wu found eight miles northeast of the landinte strip at Warden's Grove, a weather outpost ln the pubawnt Lake area 1,000 miles (' SPY,PageA2) Jarvis <Jr>ulH Save $10.6 Million Tax By GARY GRANVILLE Of ... '*'' ...... ·~ Oran ~nt1' top p er y t xp w ht oolle ti Y>ould h4ve aved $40.6 ml1llon this year If the propo ed Jarvi:.· Gann tax rrefotm Initiative wu.s in efCect, according to Tax Collector-Treasure r Robert Citron Top t•x dollar sa\'er ii the in· ttiative, calling for a lid on the amount the assessor can \'atue real prope,rty, would have been the coWlly's number one tax· payer. Pacific Telephone Com· pany. According to Citron's fieures, Pacific's 1B7'M8 t x blll is $14.1 mUlion. Under provisions of Jarvis· Gann, the comp ny' tax bill would have been $4.4 million, or S9.6 milhon less, Citrons td. The JarvJa·Gann lnitl live .which would place a one percent of full market valire Urhltalion on whpt P county assessor rnay * " value real pro~rt_y, wiU bo on • the June ballot. No matter whi.t Callforni ·s voter d cad • tHe initiaUvo wm not affect 1977-78 coupty tu 4lls. Clt'l'on' compotison was simply a device lntenctea t1> show the Impact of Jarvis-Gann had it beeri ln effect this year. Tbe county's number two tax- paf er the Irvine Company would havf' u tax liability of $4.7 million rather than the $13 million bill it now.holds. Orange County'& third nnked taxpayer, Southern Calltornta Edison company, would save $6.1 million under Jarvis-Gann proposal. Citron pointed ut that the $61.I mllllon lax UalilUtY. in· curred by the county's top 10 · taxpaye~ "is equal to eiaht,jfCr· cent or the <count)''•> totntGur- rel\t tb bill of $792 million. •"This point.a out that busineas and industry bas th• greatest ($ee JAllVJS. Pase AZ) * Chart Indicates Tax Differences Pacific Telephone Company has dislodged tho Irvine Com- p an 1 as Oranao County's number one property taxpayer, accordlae to neures released to: day by tax coltector-treasurer Robert Citron While climbln1 into the number ooe alot amone county taxpayera, Pacific became the first taxpayer to Incur a $H million llability, Citron said. The previous hi&h waa paid last year by the Irvine Com- pany, a $12. 7 million payment But in 1977 78 Pacific's tax bill increai.cd 12.7 percent lo reach $14.1 mlllion while the Jrvine Company's 2.7 percent gain in tax liability booi.tcd Its tax bill to $13 m1lhon. C1tron'i. ranking or the coun- 'ty's top ten taxpaycn. put the Southern Call(ornia Edison Company in third place with a SJO 9 m1lhon proJ)f:rty tax bill. !'<cxl m line were the Union Oil Company ($4.2 million>. Rock well International ($4.1 million) and General Ttlephone Company <S3 7 million.) H&inkcd m the number i;even spot was Standard Oil Company "1th &I 1977 78 lax llablllty or $3.5 million. Citron's ll$hnt showed that the Southern Calirnla Gas Com· µany's $2.8 million tux bill t•arned it eighth place on the top ten lis t while Walt Disney Productions and Disneyland fell into the ninth spot with a tax bill just S.13.000 less than the gas company. lo tenth spot omong the coun- ty's top proP<'rtY t:ixpayers was the .Mcl>onnl'll·Douglas Corpora· lion whose tu-C:l'S figured at $2.J million ~ ollcct1vcly, the top ten wiU pay S61.8 million in property taxe~ Thal is $4.5 million more than the same ten companies paid In 1976·77. * * * Front Page Al JARVIS ... amount to 1£aln by pasmqe of the t!r;Jii;-Gana folllatlve," Citron I le noted that business and In· • dustry .. pays close to S2 percent of the county's total property tax bill whllo the homeowner pays 33 percent." The tax colleclor·lreasurer said he ~&ed his comparison on the current full market value as determined by county assessor Bradley Jacobs and then placed the one percent tax rate pro- vision of Jan·as·Gann on that current market value. He emphasized that his figures were based on lnrorma· tion gathered from tax bills ffnl to the county's top 10 taxpayers. $115() Stolen InArch Cove A La Mirada womiu, beachwalklng in the Arch Cove area, reported ~so worth of ca1>b and camera equipment stolen from her car Sunday e\'cnin.g. Police said a tamera and several lenaes plus the woman's purse were taken from the un- lockt>d car parked on the 100 block of Pearl St. Mo-ped Stolen A $325 mo·p~d was tahn Saturday from Emerald Bay's north e)(lt aiate on DOiphin Way. poUceaaJd. The mo-ped, own"4 by Ivan R. Greenep of Laguna Beach. WU left lCK!lted wtth .. cable wrapped around lt. DAILY PILOT Oumers Sought ~enbelt Photos Go OliDisplay Provo, t:tah. detectives, Dave Adamson Cwithout coat) and Bud Gillman check old clocks found along with 500 antiques in the Provo home of rape and burglary suspect Gerry Curtis Branagan who wns arrested in Newport Beach. NewPQrt detectives ''ant anyone who has lost antiques' in a burglary in the past· 18 months to call them at 644-3765 or 644·3763 to see if the The Lasuna Greenbelt, Int. ls holdlna a photo conteat next morith, but there won't be any caati prize.a, blue ribbons or JudieJ. E'roaa Pag~ AJ REVOLT ••• forced out in an unprofessional manner. He also said he does not foresee significant policy changes at the hospital. Lambourne. who nominated the new slate, could not be reached for C()m ment today. Carr's position was filled last month by manaaemenl consul- tant Louis Petrie. Appointment Announced By UC Irvine Two UC Irvine administrative appointments have been made, the university announced. Guy J. Sircello. proressor or philosophy, was appointed dean of undergraduate atud1es. A Tustin man, Ramon Curiel. was named assistant chancellor ror administrative affairs and a(. firmative action. Sircello, a faculty member since 1966, ~•II promote under· graduate academic interests in campus planning, and Meri.Ce undergraduate admin1stratin• matters. The job is a new posi- tion. Curiel, a UCI affirmative ac- tion offi~r since 1974, succeeds Eloise Kloke, who ls retiring after 15 years al UCL items can be identified. Navy Nixes Marine Base As LNG Site By The Associated Press The Navy says there ts no way Camp Pendleton will be used as 3 site !or a mammoth liquified natural eas terminal It was one of five sites propOsed by the California Coastal Commission Navy omcials told the com. mus1on fo'riday that such a terminal would be "ancompat1· bit• With the mission or Camp Pendleton" in truanang Marines Cor amphibious landings. Thtl coastal commission has ldt•ntiflcd the sprawling Marine b&se 25 miles north oC San Diego us one or the sites where tankers could offlwid the super cooled ~as into atoragc tanks. On Tuesday, the staff will pre· sent the commission its order of preference for the proposed terminal sites. The Public Utilities Com· rrriss1on ~cts the coastal agen-cy·~ ~escarch reports May 31 and ~•II make the final decis&Ofl on where the hquified natural gas terminal will be located. Commission spokesman Pat Wein:.le1n admitted the Pen· tagon has never been contacted about use of the base as a terminal site. He said it was as· ~umed there would be a "major problem" in acquiring access to the land. Fro• Page Al SPY ••• north or the North Dakota bord~r. CHESS ••• ing chess with his 24 youna•crt more than he does with 1rownups, but admits he's been beaten at his own game a half dozen limes in the ch1s$room. Ron's rookies don't restrlci their pla~ilng lo school hour either. It '1 a form of fun homework for some. "How many of you guys play che11 with yoar parents?' he asked. and more than a dozen hands shot mto the air. \ "And how many of you have· beaten your parents?·· The ume hands remained an the air. "Aw, that's simple;" said one small girl. "I just pick them to pieces." Soldier Escapes FULDA. West Germany (AP) -A uniformed Ea:>t German soldie.t eJicaped ac.ross. the border n>ine field» and bar- ricades to West Gcrmanv Sun- day. It'• o photo exhibit comprised of l~al 'J)hot.ographers bowlria off tb~i,.abota Of the Greenbclh The e>(hJblt wtU bi on display t the Lacuna Beach Winter FerU•al becinning Feb. 11 to Mareh 5 OD the FesUval of Arts 1round.t, · More than 20 local photo· arapbers ..., tolpg to be ahOw- lng tbCc '1'ffJlMlt photoa and Gre~titlt pres1dent Tom Ales· andet' says any 81S\ateur or pro- fessional ptiOto rapher can enter the non.eompeUtion. •'We're ust· Jqinr to ahow people the ~auty or tho Green- belt," Alexander uia. Photo exhlblt coordinator Bob Pa1ne warns·~otentlal 1but- terbues tp ,3Ydia tretpaulna dn posted Gt~bclt land , "U you can't take It from Ute street. or In unposted a~aa. don't set in trouble by trespass- ing," he said. The Laauna Greenbelt, which surrounds the Art Colony..! ia rouahly bounded by Muddy c.;an- yon, Moulton Parkway and Allto Creek. Meun_i.ed photographs abould be d,ropped orr at The Da ~m. 214 Broadw y, no fal~r tbun t'eb. 15. o more information, tall neat•~ ' from the beach Fro.ePageAJ DEFENSE ••• water or the hunery 1tnk and the lnJtttlon of a fataJ dote ot Jn. sulln or a chemical Into the baby. Two Men Arreste In ~a T.lleft two younc men were arres Sunday in Lacuna Beach alter they allegedly took $300 worth of plywood to make a akateboaM ramp, police said. Gary L. Suma, 20, or 21JS Park Ave., and Michael Jl, Nielsen, 18, from Honolulcr. Hawatl, were charaed with irand then in the incident at 2~ Temple Hills Drive, whei'6 a house is being built. in Orange County .. ~ •F.,•erlt ICAPX Come on up to Sound Wave 108 and en· San Clemente. All to the accompaniment joy the best of the bnght. beautiful music of the refreshing sounds of the sea• 'V you've heard on K·8IG1 KJOI or KAPX, · plus the mellow sounds of KNX-FM. To-New space-age equipment enhances day's adult music IN A NEW BLEND on the hstenablh1y and extends the effective the m°'t powerful atat1on in Orange range of tt'le station. Help us test the new Coul'lty, K·WAVE with 28,500 watts f;om coverage. V: • Oran By GARY GRANVILLE OI the O•llf f'li.t lleff Orange County's top 10 prop- erty. taxp_a-._ers collectively would ha\'c saved $40.8 milllon this year 1f the proposed Jarvis· Gann tax rdorm initiative wu in effect. according to Tax Collector-Treasurer Robert Citron. Top tax dollar saver if the in· * * * itlaUve, calling for a lid on the amount the assessor can value r(!nl property, would have been the county's number one tax· payer, Pacific Telephone Com· pany. According to Citron's figures, Pacific's 1977-78 tax bill is $14.1 million. Under provisions of Jarvis· Gann, the company's tax bill * * * would hav been $4.4 mUlion, or $9.6 mlllion les , Citron aaid. Th Jarvls·Gann initial\\' whtch ~'Ould place a one percent of full market \'alue limitation on what a county assessor may value real property, wilt be on the June ballot. No m er what California's \'Olera d cide. the initiative will not aft ct 1977-78 county tax Chart Indicates Total Prolailritfon1 Tax Differences Chart 1nd1tull•s lax suvin~s that would have occurred for Orange County's lop 10 property taxpayers bad the Jan· is ctunn 1nitiullvc been m effect this year. A<'TUAL UNDER C'OMPA!'IY 1977-7KTAX JARVIS·GANN REDUCT P:H·1ftt• Tl•lcphon<· $11.1 m1lhon $4 .4 million $9.6 million Jrnnc Co $13 m1lhon $4 7 million $8.3 million Southern tuhforniu Ed1~on C'o Sl0.9 million Union Oil Co $4.2 million Rockwell Intern $4.1 million Gcn<.•ral Tl'lcphonc $3.7 million Stondard 011 $3.5 million Southern California Gas Co. S2.8 million Oi:.ncyland S2.8 million !\lcOonnell Douglas $2.3 million * * * $4 .2 million $6.7 million $992,000 $3.2 million Sl.6 mlllion $2.$ million $1.4 million $2.3 million $1.2 million $2.3 million $881,000 $891,000 $788,000 * $2 million $1.9 million $1.5 million * * 1 Pacific Telephone Number 1 Taxpayer Pacific Telephone Company has dislodged the Irvine Com· pany as Ornnt(e County's Company ($4.2 million), Rockwell international ($4.1 million) and General Telephone • Company ($3.7 million.) Carter Favors Satellite Pact WASHINGTON <AP> -Pre&i· dent Carter said today he favors an aareemenl with tbe Sovi t Unlon to prohibit the laupching of low-flying satellites carrying radioactive materials. He sald uch a pact should be permanent unless a fail-safe system can be devised to pre- vent recurrence of the episode In which a Ru!slan satellite plunged back into the at· mosphcre over northwestern Canada. "H we cannot evolve those rail·aare methods, then I think there ought to be a total prohibi- tion acalnst earlh-orbitlnc satellites with nuclear materials aboard," Carter told a nationall1 broadcast news conference. Carter also told critics ln and out of Congress that rejection of any phase of his tax, Jobs, and inflation·fiihting programs could auravate the nation's economic problem. He said the success of his pro· grams de.pends on .. a very careful balance" between con- flictins needs and priorities. "To modify one element or a balanced plan can often destroy this balance and can a11ravate our economic problem." Carter said. Carter also defended his handlinc of the ouster of Republican David Marston a~ U.S. attorney in Philadelphia. He said there was no conflict between the Marston flrin1 and his campaign promises to take the appointment of prosecutors out of politics. At the same time, Carter not- ed that the tut Republican ad- m iniatratlon dld not appoint Democrats to those posts. ' number one property laxpeyer, , according to figure:; released to-7 day by tax collector-treasurer Robert Citron While climbing into the number one slot among county lta"payers, Pacific became the 1 1irst taxpayer to incur a $14 milllon liability. Citron said. Ranked ln the number seven spot was Standard Oil Company with a 19T1·78 tax liability of $3.S million. Citron's listing showed that the Southern Ca:Jifomia Gas Cotn· pany 'a $2.8 mlllton tax blll earned it dgh place on the top ten list white Walt Disney Productions and Disneyland fell into the ninth spot with a tax1bill just $43,000 less than the 1as company. :NBW011UU1 Injured Carter sa1d he acted routinely in nlaying to Attorney G.neral Griffin Bell the r~est of Rep. Joshua· Eilberl. D· a., that lhc Marston ouster be pedited. He said he did not know at the Ume tbat Ellbcr1 was under in· vestigation by Mlrston'a office. although he had been told that the congressman's name had been raised in connection with . an investigation. 'fbe d • o n1 -,~~~ mef\L seemc a rebutt to cntlcs in Congress wtio aro Cll&· satiafto<l wttb h~ income tai cut and reform proposala, anO to business and labor lead~ skep- tical of the voluntary rage-price restraints be seeks a a means The previous high was paid last year by the Irvine Com· pany, a $12.7 mlllion payment. t But in 1977-78 Pacific'& tax bill I increased 12.7 percent to reach $14.l million while the Irvine Company's 2.7 percent 11in in tax liability boosted Its tax blll to S13 million. Citron's rankina of the coun- ty's top ten taxpayers put the Southern California Edison Company In third place with a $10.9 million property tax biU. Next In line wete the Union Oil In tenth spot amon1 the coun- ty's lop property taxpayen was the )tcDmmell-Doualas Corpora· tion whose t.Uea figured at $2.3 million. CoUectlvely, the top ten will pay $61.8 mUllon ln property taxes. That ia $4.5 milllqn more than the same ten companies paid in 1976-77. In Robbery Newport Beach detectives to- day pressed their search for a young man who Injured an elderly woman during a robbery in Corona del Mar Friday. Helen Clark, 7~. was listed in fair condition today at Hoa1 Memorial Hospital where she ls being treated for a broken hip. According to police reports, Mrs~ Clark was injured at about noon Friday while walking near her home on Marguerite • of cQ11trollin1 lnOation~ Carter said hls f2S billion ln· come tax cut plan 1s deai&ned to lead to the creation of nearly 9 million new jobs, and to cut un· employment below 6 percent by the end ot next year. He aa)d hll tax reform pro· posals will save $9 billion to off- set the cuts, and without them, the government cannot atrord the entire $25 billion reduction. nnd ind~tr.)' J\ the realest amount tO guln by passage of the Jarvfa·Gtum initiative," Citron said. He notoo \hat busin~s and 'In· dustry .. pays close to 62 percent of the county's totol property lax bill \\hile the homeowner pays 33 per ('(!l\t. • ' The tax collector-treasurer ( ee JA VI. , Pa1e A!> ,. .. ..,........... SOVIET SATELLITE FOUND NEAR ARCTIC OUTPOST Otflelal Views Debris From Nuclear·powered Craft --'-"'~~ilW--~ ~.,.,,...ca)u :Discover I' Satellite Wrecl&ige BAKER LAKE, Northwest Territories <AP) -A Canadien- Amerlcan sea~h team stru,.. gled through waist-high snow to the edge of a crater nearly 10 feet across lo the lee on the Theton Rivet and fqund wr,ekage ftom a runaway Sov- iet nuclear' tatetlite. Lt. Col. Donald DavicJson or the Canadian Armed Forces told a newa conference today that tubing and a j>erlotated metal canister ·ere Jound protrutuni from the lee Sunday. Paul Murda. l dcr er a five· man U.:S. sclenUfic crew, said th c ni tcr was "aon or llke .a cyHnd r that ot 1mashct11' while the tubing "loolcs like structural tubing." • Avenue. SM told police a younir man ran up behind her, shoved her to the ground and arabbed her purse hlch contalned $3 in cash. 'This Creature' •'Something has really gone through that ice at a high speed, .. a id Davidson. ''This fa all that's left aticklnc out, or maybe aeparate pieces. We don't know. We didn't pull it ·apart." lfXINC CHORE 114DE MVER 10 Mr:s. Clark'• 6creama brought n~l~bon to her aid and ofle, • Thornos Bandel of 319 argu nte Av ., chased the bandit for several blocks before 1 inl 1\1ht of him near Ocean Boulevard and lrls Avenue. Detedive Sat. Ken Thom~ Hid thll morning that police believe Uie eue with which the usp ct evaded first Bandel and Ui n tho contingent of patrolmen who arrived on the acene, may be an Jndkation he lives in the neighbomood. The u pcct was described as· b Ina tall, about six feet three or four Jnchc!. and quite thln WiCh.. stralght, should r length: datk blond or Jlghi brown hair. Traae Nixed Deficit Blamed on Oil A Chinook helicopter took the 13-mem~r crew from Baker Lako to th q;ilcr JSO mlles to the south t ;after it .,..as found by two of th e1x membcn ol a Canadlan·Amcrlcan tcani win· terin1 In th area on a Wlldllre survey for t~o Northwest Ter• rltori .. goverament The debr11t from the nuclear· powered Co!mos·9S4 satelllte that fell from orbit Tuesday was found eight miles northeast of the landiqg trip at Warden's Grove, a weather outpost in the Dubawnt Lake area 1,000 miles :aorth of the North Dakota border. Davidson aaid the two men made a slocl trip up the Thelon River Saturday and cncounterecl the crater on their return, -=---""'!c ---.. -----~ -----......._ --- To Death '. ' LOS ANGELES <AP> -The body or • V.'Omtn who had bffn ~aten to death \n found lodaJ t'n a Hollywood eparlmen\ i.everal block11 from where two victims of tht.• lhlh.1dc strungler were last $t'en ulave, polico said .. The woman, bulwc\ln 35 and 40 Years old, wus found on the · "bathroom floor by thfJ apart· ment manager und tentatively jdentificd as u rci.1dent of the buildina on Lu Miruda Avenue, said police LL. James Troutman. ;»~ever, Pohce would not re- leu!>c th1.• n;imc until they were .,ure. Police Cmdr William Booth told rt-portf'r~ she had been bound and beaten with a blunt instrument. . •·we do not believe this hwi a.n.> connection with the ~trangulut1on deaths being In· 'es ti gated by the Htllslde Strangl('r Tusk J<'orce. '' Booth said The tai1k force has been called ore the case and the case been assigned instead to tbo Police Department's Hollywood Division. "She's u little old to Ill the pat- tern of the strangler." said police Lt. Dun ~ooke. M o 11 t or the ·12 H 111 side Strangler victims had been in their teens or early 20s. The apartment ls three miles from the Tamarind Apartments where victim Kim- berly Diane Martin answered a proi.titut1on call Dec. 13. Her l;ody "as found next mornini on a hillside ovcrlooklna downtown Los Angeles. Mis~ Martin Is the last known victim or the '4trangler. The Tamarind Apartments are across the street from the Scientology Celebrity Center where Jane Evelyn King, an aspiring actress·model, waa last seen alive Nov. 9. Her body was round in shrubs along a freeway onramp. At least om.· of the 12 i.tranglcr virllm11, Jill Barcomb, had been healvn 1n the course of her strangulation death, coroner's ann•slli.tators have said Iler body \\US round Nov. 10 In · 1''ranklyn Canyon off Mulholland Ort\e in Wl'st f..os Angeles. Jff11•~roll Diane Kl'aton hugs N.Y. Film Crilic'8 award as best actress for "Annie HalP' Sunday night. Sho ·grew up in Santa Ana and played· Maria in "Sound of Music11 while nt OCC. Hea· P.arentJ hve in Coronu dcl Mar. 1 DAILY PILOT ---- Owners Sought B1TM a Pr 5<li nd trucks I t. ter !lOW)' hlpw ys. Runa 111 bart clO rive hlt\ln1 d m11 and end n1enn1 other water tramc. And many towns remaln unwllllnt fortresses agalnat tho outside world behind cnormoua 1nowbank1. Still, Ohio 11 dit1ln1 out of the bllnard that paralyzed the 1tate for four days and killed at least 30 people. "Thtn11 are aetUnr better every day," Dennla Kwaitkowskl, head of the Federal Dlaaater As· slatance Admlnl\(ratlon's snow removal project lri Ohio, said Sun· day. Ohio expected 1 to 4 incha of fresh snow today, wjth tern· perlltureti no hl1her Ulan lb • and officials expressed hope that ll would not create new cleanup problems. Other ates also stru11Ied to recover from the dev111tatlng storm: *** imilnr h\VQC l«t, pollc in 1ever I l'Ural communities to threaten arr t or travelers nOl on cmenicncy trips. Provo, Utah, detectives, Dave Adamson (without coat> and Bud Glllman check old clocks found along with 500 antiques in the Provo home of rape and burglary suspect Gerry Curtis Branagan who was arrested in Newport Bench. Newport detectives want anyone who has lost antiques in a burglary in the past 18 months to call them at 644·3765 or 644·3763 to see if the items can be identified. -In Mlchl1an, where 19 dled and 15,000 truvel ers were stranded, many roo.ds Jt• still under 12·foot drifts. In the Lans· ing area, some sherlrt's deputies marle t h elr rounds on showshoes. The roofs on al lcai;t five buildinss have collapsed. M lchigan State U nherstty plann~d to• ~pen today after two days of canceled classes last week. Some emergency runs could be tn e only by cir. Army und Nation!ll Guard helicopters are fiyina mercy mlstlons in Ohio in weather that normally would keep them 1rounded. Hearing Set For Suffers Seal Beach Land Sold A public h~arln1 will be held Tuesday on whether or not parts of West Newport should be set astde for all-day board surfina and others for body 1urfin.:. ••• Lots Average $85,000 Each in Auction -IUloola offices, schools and roads were opened today. O'Hare Airport was open but running behind schedule. Bidding was spirited -and expensive -Sunday as 23 buyers paid an average of $85,000 for 35 residential lots carved out at the old city yard in Seal Beach. The bids, ranalng from $80,000 to $90,000, surprised rnany ob- servers. Caty Nanaaer Dennis Courtemarche said city oCCicials had expected lo realize only about Sl.S million Crom the sale, but buyers 11hellcd out $2,973,000 for the lots. They are located Juat three blockt from the beach and two blocks from the Long Boach Arena. Pendleton Opposed. As Oil Terminal RyThei\saodated Pr eas The Navy says there is no way Camp Pendleton wlll be used u a site for a mammoth liqulfied natural gas terminal. It was one or five sites proposed by the California Coastal Comm1ssion. Navy orticials told the com· m 1sslon Friday that such a terminal would be "incompatt· ble with the mission of Camp Pendleton" in training Marines for amphibious landings. The coastal commlsslon has identified the sprawling Maririe base 2S miles north or San Die10 as 011e or the sites where tanken could ornoad the super·cooled gas Into storage tanks. On Tuesday, the staff will pre· 11ent the commlssion its order of preference for the proposed terminal sites. The Public Utilities Com- mission gets the coastal agen: cy's research reports May 31 and will make the final decision .. on where the Uquifled natural gas terminal will be located. IJ4ja~arcb­ May Endfor "l(ayak Victim Commisi.ion spokesman Pal Weini;tcin admitted the Pen- tugon hos never ~en contacted about UH Of the base as a terminal site. He said it was as- sumed there would be a "major problem" in ucquiring access lo the land. lsra.el, Egypt Talia Resume JERUSALEM <AP> - 11rael•Egypti11n military tnlki; aimed ot working out a formula for nn Israeli · pullout from the Sinai Peninsula will resume Tuesday night In Cairo, Israel announced today. A government stale· ment said Defense M lnlster Ezer Weizman •nd his negotiating team wlll leave for Calro Tues· day, where Weizman will faee his Egyptian coun· terport. Mohamed Abdel Gbany GamJssy. The military talks re· ceased Jan. 13 in deadlock over the future of the 20 Jew 1li settlements established oy lsrael in ihe Sinai l>Caert. The 3.5-acre site, formerly the city public works yard, is near Pacific Coast Highway and Marina Drive. Tho city has re- located its public \\Orks yard. A bout 700 b1dder11 attended lhe auction held in a tent pitched near tho Seal Beach City Pier. Courtcmarche said the city could have sold the land as one parcel but decided lo ~ubdlvlde 1t into 36 by 86 foot lots to max- im lze profits. The funds from the land sale will be placed into city reaervc and a huildmi depreciation ac· count. Courtemun•he irnid. The city will pay about S'100 000 rur streets and other public worki; improvements bc.-forc the ~1nglc family houses arc built, he added. Tht> city will al. o pay a report· ed $24.000 plus a percento1e lo Kenncdv· Wilson Auctioneers or El Segundo "ho conducted the sale Sunday. ••• -Northwestern Indiana re· ceived 2 to 4 inches of new snow Sunday. Scattered power out· ages were repOrtoo. ••• ·-In Virginia, where snow and driving winds preceded weekend fiOOding in almost all sections, the forecast was for more snow tonight and Tuesday. • •• -In Ken&-.cky, 208 National Guardsmen who had helped with rescue operations were deac· tivated. Schools wer~ to remain closed, and the forecast was for more snow today. The biggest 1,toblem was on lhe Ohlo River, "'bere 100 wayward coal and iraln 'barj(es had broken free trom moorings between Pills· · bwch and Louisville -some . bad slammed lnto dams. Because Ohio w11 declared a The hearing before the city's Parks. Beaches and Recreation Commlsa1on is aet for 7 :30 p .m. In NewPort Beach City Hull . JARVIS ••• suld he bn5ed hit comparison on tho currCT\t full market value as determined by county assessor Bradley Jacobs and then placed the one percent tax rote pro- vision of Jarvis·Gann on thal current murket v~luo. He emphasized that his • figures were based on inform•· tion sathercd from tax bills sent to the coisnty's top 10 taxpayers. Ride the BIG WAW coming to Southern, ' fro m the beach in Orange County .. ~ THE somlAND'S NEWEST RADIO STATION . at the crest of your FM r dio dial • F 0,,.,.,1, ICAPX Come on up to Sound Wave 108 and en· San Clemente. All to the accompaniment joy the best of the bright, beautiful music of the refreshing sounds of the seal~ you've heard on K·BlG, KJOI or KAPX, plus the mellow sounds of KNX·FM. To-- day's odult music IN A NEW BLEND on ttie most powerful 1ta1ton in Orange County, K·WAVE with 28,500 watts from , New space--age equipment enhances the ltstenabihty and extends the effective tango of the station. Help us test the new coverage ""'/ ........... VOL. 71, NO. 30, 3 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES .:svusn By LAURI KASPER OI .. OM l'lllt IYff " The Saddlebeck Valley Unified School District could lose $20 lo $22 million -more than half of its current S36 million budget -if voters pass the Janas property tu)( initiative tn June · "It would virtually eliminate TO percl·nl of our income." satd G.11 be rt Moreno, the district's bi.tsiness manaeer. "It "'ould ~ de\111taUn1 to thhi du;lrict." The initiative, if puased. wuuld limit property taxes to one per· cent of market value. Under the current taxing system, the dis· lrict could ~xpect to receive about $24 million ln ptOl>'rlY tuxes . But if the initiative pas:ws. the district would be "lucky" to get $2 million, Chart Indicates Tax ·Differences Chart tndtcatcs tax savings that would ha,·e occurred for Oranl(e Count) s top 10 property taxpayers had the Jarvis-Gunn Initiative been in effect thls year. ACTUAL UNDER COMP~NV 1977·78 TAX .JARVIS.GANN REDUCT Pac1rtiTelephone $14 l million $4.4 million $9.6 million lrvinP Co. $13 milhon $4 7 million $8.3 million Southern California Ed~on Co. $10.9 million $4.2 millton $6.7 million $992,000 $3.2 million $Ui million $2.5 million $1.4 million S2.3 mtllion Sl.2 snillion $2.3 million t:nion Oil Co. $4 .2 mtllion Rockwell Intern $4 .1 million General Telephone $3.7 million Standard Oil $3.5 million Southern CaJirornia Oas Co $2.I million Disneyland $2 8 millton \1 c Donnell Douglas $2 3 million * * $881,000 $891,000 $i88,000 * $2 m1Jlton $1.9 mlllioo Sl.5 million Jarvis Could Save 1$40.6 Million Tax By GARY GRANVILLE OI .. Dell' ~Se.ft , Orange County's top 10 prop- erty taxp~v.ers collectively would have saved $40.6 tnilli n lht1 year if the proposed Janit~ Gann tax reform initiative was in effect, accordln& to Tax Collector-Treasurer Robert Cltrnn Top tax doHar saver if the ln- itiatlve, callina for a lid on the amount the assessor can value real property. \\Ould have been the cc>unty's number one tax- payer, Pacinc Telephone Com· P.,:iny. Accordini to Citron's figures, Pacific Ii 1977-78 tax btll is $14.l million . Under provisions of Jarvis· Onnn, the company's tax bill would have been $4.4 million, or $1.6 million less, Citron said. · The Jarvis·Gann Initiative :,. hicl'I would place a one percent of full market \·alue limitation ~n what a county use or m y value real property, will be on lhe June ballot. No matter what Californ1a·s \·oters decide, the Initiative will not affect 1977-78 county tax bill ~· Citron's comi>ar on was 1tmply fl aevlce Intended to <1how the tmpact of Jarvis·Gann h d it n eff~t thi&.itt•r. The county's llumber two tax· payer. the lrVin• Company would have a tax liability of $4.7 m\llion rather than the $13 million blll lt now bolds. Orange county's third ranked t.expayer, Southern California Edison c;Qmpany, would snt $6.'7 million \lnder Jarvis-Gann proposal. Citron pointed oul that the $61.8 mi!Jion lax habillly In· curr~d bY. the count3(s top 10 t axpayers "ill equal to eight per- cent of the <county's) total cur- rent tax bill of $792 million. "This Points out that business and Industry h lh JerPtt!$t JARVIS, a TAXIN6 CHOU JUDB £.ISIER Moreno said. Moreno 11 id he and lhe dh>· trlct'~ other administrators cur- rently are stuilying cuts which may be mude if the initlaltve passes. "There are just many, many thinga we have to take in· to coni>ideration and weigh," he said. If the initiative passes and the legttlature doe1in°l come up with a ddttlonal helo, the district '"••Seroll Strai@.er Ruled Out ID Deatli Jarvis ~ould ha\O to cut lUi budaet by 10 perrcnt. Even if the difitrict i;top~ buying supplies rutd didd'l pay utilities. the resultin~ cuts would not be enough to offset the re- duction of income. Moreno aaid. Since 80 ~rcent of the dillitrict'a budget ls salariea and people- reJated costs. he e"plaintd, they would ha\'e to find a reduction in people. , Satellite Wreckage BAKER LAKE, Northwest Territories CAP> A Canadian· American search team stru1· gled throul(h waist-hilh snow to the edge of a crall·r nearly 10 feet across in the ice on the T h elon Ri\·er and f o und wreckage from a runaway Sov· iet nuclear satellitt:. Lt Col. J>onald Davidson of the Canadlun Armed 1''orce .. told a )'lews conference today that tuburg and a perforated metal canister were found protruding from the ice Sunda~ Paul Murda, leader of a flve· mun U.S. scientific crew, s~ud th~ canister was '\ort of like a q ·linder that got smashed". while tM tubing "lookllli like structural tubing.·· • ·soniethini ha rt: ally &Q!le throuf.h that ice !Jl a hlah speed, said t~aviiliiOn. ":This is II that' left 1tl1ckUlg out or m11yti s par te piece~· • dop't know. We didn '.l 11ulr tl apart.'' A Chi~ helifopter took the t3·memt>er crew from Baker Lake to the crater 180 miles to the outh'.'cst after it was found by two of the i;ix member of a Canadian-American team win· terang in the area on a "ildlifo survey for the Northwest Ter· ritor1e' government. The drbrb from the nuclear· powered Co:..mo:.·954 satellite that fell from orbit Tuesday was found etght miles northeast ot the landing strip et Warden's Gro\.·e, a weather outpost 1n the Dubawnt J,akc area 1,000 miles <SttSPY,PageA?) I Def eme: Waddill Corppleted Aoortion Act ed last week means that testimony will resume in the trial of the accuiied Huntington Harbour pey,siclan. IL i argued b~ Deputy District Attorney RObert Chatterton that Wodd11l trJQt&led the buby girl after fa ling to nd liCe ln the womb by the Jhjechon of a saline solution. The pro. ccutor alleged that te tlmony wilt J>roVe that Wad· dill contemplllted other acts or murder before deeming to throt· tle thu Infant. <See DE••ENSE, Paae A2> . 'Pacific Telephone Company hfS dislodged the Jrvme Com- pany as Orange County's iwmber one property· taxp yer, according to figures releued to- day by tax collector-treuurer Robert Citron While cl1mb1ng Into the number one :;lot amona county taxpayers. Pacific became the first taxpayer to incur a $14 million liablhty, Citron said. The prevloWi high was paid lai;t year by the lrvme Com- pa ny. a $12 7 million payment. But in 1977-78 Pacific's tax bill increased 12. 7 percent lo reach Sl4.1 m11Jlon while the Irvine Company's 2.7 perl'ent guin m t iiX liability boosted its tu ball to $13 million Citron's rank1ni:: of the coun- t> s top ten ta,pa)ers put the Southern California Edison Company in th1rcl place with a $10.9 million property tax btll. Next m line \\l'rc the Union Oil C ompany <S4 2 million>. Rockwell Jntcrnationol ($4 .1 million > and General Telephone Company ($3 7 million.) · Ranked in thl' number seven spot was Standard 011 Company with a 1977 78 tux liability or $3.S million Citron's listing i.howed that the Southern California Gas Com- pany's $2.8 million tax bill earned it eighth place on the top ten 1i s t "'hill' Walt Disne y Productions un<.I Disneyland fell into the ninth spot "'ith a tax bill JUst $43,000 lt·ss than the gas company. In tenth spot among the coun- ty's top prupt•rty taxpayers was the Mc Donnell· Douglas Corpora- tion who~c taxes figured at $2.3 million. Colleclt\ely, the top ten will pay S61.8 mtlhon in property taXl'S. That 1:; S4 5 million more than the same ten companies paid In l!.176-77. * * * Frona Page A J JARVIS.· .. <•mount to gain by passage or the .I arvis-Gann initiative," Citron :.aid. He noted that business and in- dustry "pays close to 62 percent of the county's total property tax bill while the homeowner pays 33 percent." The tax collector-treasurer :.aid he based his ~omparisoo on the current full ft'larket value as determined by county assessor Bradley Jacobs and then placed the one l>ercent ·ua• tale pro- vision of Jarvis-Gann on that (•urrent market value. Ile emphasized that his figures were based on informa- tion gathered from tax bills sent to the county's top 10 taxpayers. Fro•PapAI DEATH ••• Apartments where victim Kim·· berly Dian Martin answered a prostitution call Dec. 13. Her body waa found next mornina on a hillside overlooldn' downtown Los Anaeles. Mias Martin is the lasl known victim or the :;tranaler. Th& Tamarind Apartments ure acrosa the 1treet rrom tbe Scientolo1y Celebrity Center where Jane Evelyn King, an a.spiring actrea1-model, wu lut seen alive Nov. 9. Her body wu found in shrubs aloog a freeway. on ramp. At least one or th• 12 stranller victims, Jill Barcomb, had beeo boalen in the course ot her 1trangulatlon death\ coroner'• investlRators have H d. Her body was round Nov, 10 tn' Jt'ranklyn Ceeyon off Mulholland J>nve in W t Loe Ana 1 o.lty """Swt ,,_. UCt APPOINTMENT Ramon Curiel Appointment Announced By UC Irvine Two UC Irvine administrative appointments have been made, the university announced Guy J . Sircello. professor ot philosophy, was appointed dean of undergraduate studies. A Tustin man, Ramon Curiel. was named assistant chancellor for administrative affairs and al- flrmalive action Sircello, a faculty member since 1966, will promote under· graduate academic interests m. campus planning. and oversee undergraduate administrative matters. The job is a new posi- tion. Curiel, a UCI affirmati\e ac- tion oCficer since 1974, succeeds Eloise Kloke, who is retiring after 15 years at UCI. Navy Nixes Marine BtJSe As LNG Site ByTheAssoclaled Press The Navy says there is no way Camp Pendleton will be used as a site for a mammoth liquirled natural gas terminal. lt was one oC five sites proposed by the California Coastal Commisalon. Navy orficials told the com- mission Friday that such a terminal would be "incompati- ble with the mission of Camp Pendleton" in training Marines for amphibious landings. The coastal commission has identified the sprawling Marine base 25 miles north of San Diego as one of the sites where tankers could ofnoad the super-cooled gas into storage tanks On Tuesday, the st arr wl 11 pre· l>ent the commission its order of preference for the proposed terminal sites. The Public Utilities Com- mission gets the coastal agen- cy's research reports May 31 and will make the final decision on where the liquified natural aas terminal will be located. Commission spokesman Pat Weinstein admitted the Pen- tagon has never been contacted about use of the base as a terminal site. lie said it wu as- sumed there would be a "major problem" In acquiring acceu to the land. EroaPageAJ DEFENSE ••. . Among them, he said, were drownin1 the child in a bucket ol water or the nursery sink and the 1.Qjeetion of a fatal dose of In· sulln or a chemical Into the baby. Leaderw of a mll'hlnlst.s union al McDonnell Douglas Astronautic• Company In Hunt· in1ton Beach ioo.y called ror an Immediate meeting after the company's latest contract Offer was rej cted Saturday. Ted Nelma, spokesman for the International AssoclaUoo of M achlnlats <IAM ), said union leaders were to meet either to- day or Tuesday to analyte the weekend vote and to develop a succe11ful proposal. Union members rejected the Douslas offer in voles taken at four locations in Los Angeles and at Vandenber1 Air Force Base, Palmdale and Cape Canaveral, Fla. McDoMel1 Douglas reportedly offered a S.6 percent wage in- <:rease in the first year and three percent Increases In lbe second and tblrd years of a three-year contract. Improved health care and pension benefits also were in· eluded. The proposal was tUmed down by a ~us percent margin. Douglas spokesman Don Hanson said that about 1,450 members of the IAM are em ployed at the Huntington Beach plant. Other IAM workers who rejected the conttact are em ployed nt Torrance, Cape Canaveral, Palmdale and Van- denberg. Hanson said the Huntington Beach machinists are employed in component fabrication and :.pace vehicle assembly "The company will have to wait and see what the next steps will be or the IAM," Hanson said. The contract expired last Oc- tober but work has continued because of automatic extension clauses. JI anson said the union served a notice of contract termination two weeks ago at Huntington Beach but withdrew it a short time later. IAM members at Doualas now average $7.23 an hour. Members or the United Auto Workers (UAW) went on strike recently at lhe Douglas plant in Long Beach. The strike has no efCect in Huntington.Beach. SNOW~ .. -In Kentucky, 208 National Guardsmen who had helped with rescue operations were deac- tivated. Schools were t.o remain closed. and the forecast was for more snow today The bigaest problem was on the Ohio River. where 100 wayward coal and )(rain bar.zes had broken free from moorings between Pitts-. burgh and Louisville -some had slammed into dams. Because Obio was declared a federal emergency area, the federal government wlll pay for 65 percent of snow removal work contracted before mldnlght Tuesday. Crews from the Army Corps of En1lneers, the Army Reserve and the Ohio NaUonal Guard - more than 3,800 men in all - were working today to clear roads and hi&bways of drift as hlgh as 15 feet. M.Jserable road conditions failed to deter weekend sightseers, and their stuck· vehicles added to the cbaos in areaa like Toledo, where the Hiahway Patrol wa• forced to close major roads. Slmllar havoc led police ln several rural communities to threlaten arrest of travelers nol on emergency trios. Some emergency ruu could be made only by air. Army and Natlonal Guard helicopters are Oyin1 mercy missions in Ohio in weather that normally would' keep them gl'Ounded. E,...P.Clflte.AI , seHOOL CUTBXCKS. J north Nor~h Dakol rd r. vlmon • d the t-.o n m d trip up the Tho!On RI r turd y and encountered the crater on their return. He said orio ur the two touched the metal with a aloved hand. Both were flown Sunday to University Hospital In Edmon· ton for tc.,ta, w.blle the other fO\lr were flown to a hospital in Y tllowJtnife. The team r;.onsisU or five Americans and 011e Cana· dian. Davidson said the search team talked with the wildlife aur· veyors at their camp and then wenl up aga1n in the helicopter. Using detecUon equipment, th y localed a source of radiation about elaht miles from the camp. The heUcopter landed on a rock outcropping_ about 1,000 yards from the site. The team moved rorward on toot throulh deep snow. takln1 continuous · radiation readlnga. "We kept moving rorward and dldn 't flnd ny excessive radl • tlon and were hie to 10 right up to the eda:e or lhc crater," Davidson rePQrttd. !i\ crater nearly JO r t across h d been bl tCd In the lee by the he,at of the obJeet. Aboul a foot anti a halt of water had r~rrozen in it. Around it were ~ to 100 puncture marks whlcb Davidson said may have been made by pieces of metal or by ice thrown up from the Impact. "It'• quite po115lble there's something under there but we couldn't aee it," he said. Tom Crites, a U.S. health physlcllt, and Davidson reached the crater first. Next came Murda and Pvt. Mona Wilson, a female member of the Canadian Forces nuclear accideot survey • team. Tbe team wa1 on the site for about two hours, returning to Baker Lake about three hours atter dWlk. Meanwhile, a team of paratroopers ••tre aent fo't, to cordon ott the crlter. A nuclear accident team in- spected two other sites Sunday where unusual radiation wu re- ported, but no information on their findings was available. Both were near Reliance, a weather community of 20 persons at the eastern end of Great Slave Lake and about 200 miles west and slightly south of W arden'a Grove. The Mounted Police were ordered lo cordon them off. Cosmos·95'4, a spy satellite fueled by 100 pounda of enriched . uranaum-235, feH out of orbit and plunged into the atmosphere over northern Canada on Tuea- da y. settinl orr a joint U.S. Canadian search for radioactive debris from lt. Woman injured N·B Police Seek Abductor's Truck Newport Beach police w~re looking to(lay for t_\\e driver of white pickup trilck, who ts C· cuaed or tryin1 to kidnap a hitchhiker at gunpoint Saturday nlaiht. The victim, ·a 20-year-old Newport woman, suffered abrasions on her arms and legit when she leaped from the mov- ing vehicle to get away from her abductor. police said. Acc!ording to police reports, the young woman wa& picked up about 11 p.m. while she was Saddle back Bowlers Aid ·Dimes March Saddleback Valley bowlers are being orfered a chance to show their skills. contribute to a cause and have a chance at a· Las Vegas trip -all in the same frame. Be,innlng Feb. 5, Forest Lane s Bowling Center, 22711 Center Drive, El Toro, is to o!Cer bowlers an unusual way to donate to the March of Dimes, Bowlers signing up to bowl a March of Dimes frame 1et a chance to win a Veaas trip, A bowler who strikes donate$ nothh1g. Should he spare, he'll donate !"."dime. But It pins are l It In hi• alley, said lanes manaaer Dick Bingham, it'll mfan a ~nt donation. The contest luts through Feb U Dd "Ule gift of health to Ule next eenerltion is what it'a all abOul," aaid Bin&ham. Instead of stopping, she said,• the driv~r turned northbound oi\ Newport nd pulled a liJUn. , . 1-i She said she was ordored to sit on the floor of the truck and the, man pulled out a pair ot. handcuffi; that he demanded she' put on. The woman said lt was ot thia point, as the driver was slQwin1 ror a red light at l7th Street, that she ~e1&pcd from the truck. The young woman ran to ,. nearby Costa Meu motorcycle officer who summoned other police umL') to the scene. They were unable to locate the truck. The woman de,cribed her ab· ductor as being abOut 80 to year old and weij:hina about pounds Police said she was un ,. ble lo ~upply rurther lntormat.loo at the time of the rePOrt. Emergency Stated MANAGUA, Nicaragua CAP> -Faced with a dcepenlne polillcal and economic crlsk President Anastaato Somoza thre,atened to beeln enforcing the state ot emereency declared • during the earthquake or 1972 and use it to end a nalionwi~ strike which was in its seventh' day Sunday. Ride the BIG WAVE com ng to Southern California from the beach in Orange County.-~ THE SOUTHLAND' ERSJ RADIO STATION * at the crest of your FM radio dial • Fouurly ICAPX Come on up to Sound Wave 108 and en· San Clemente. 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 BLENP on th& most powerful station in Orange County, K·WAVE with 28,500 watts_ from New space:age equipment enhances the hstenablhty and extends the effective range of the station. Help us test the new coverage. V-- WIN ATRIP OVER lHE WAVES ·~oiK~WAVE ~ . "! SACTIONS Major Chang,__..,_ Make It Easier 78 VIA PO ....... tu rdw'ns wlU be UNUKB m• OLD STANDA D DEDUCl'ION, tt'a computed automaU~ally 1n tho im tax tab.I• a.n4 tax rate acbeduJ• ~which you find JCMa tu. Penonal exemptions and' exemptions for clepen· dent.a and for bolni 65 or ove.r or bUDd hav. been lD· corporal.cl in the tax tabl • · (3) Tho tables alao ukt into account the aeneral credlt, which II '35 ~r exemption or 2 percent or taxablo Income up to te.ooo, whlchenr 11 larger, but not more lban JllO. You don't do thl• arithmetic. Tb.o tax tables da. MOneys Worth (C) FUUn1 out Form 1G40A will be a cinch thla 7ur lt your income ta 144> 000 or leu and )'OU are married fllln1 a joint return, or $i0,000 Ol" lea for any other fiUq stalUI, and your tncorno ii solely from wqtt, salaries and Ups, plus not more than '400 ol lnterest or $tOO ot dtvldends and. you do not item.be your deduCtJou. ALL YOU NEED DO IS EN'l'Elr TBS USQll tnrorma- tfon on your marttaJ status, the number ol exempUons to whlcb you are euUUed, and JOU' ••Pt. lnttresl and dividend.I. Total up ad)uated lfOSI l.ncomo -lheD tum 1o tbe table that conesponds to Jou.r marital atatus, and llnd your tax. The only other atep la aubUact.lnl the amouut wtlbhelcl from wqea. , But there are compllcaUma !or thole who tile lonn 1040. IF. roa INSTANCE. 'fOU ITElllZED deducti(ma and then pick your tu from tbe tables, )'OU would be taldnc botb the Itemized deducllona and the 1ero bracket amount. To eliminate th1.a duplication, Form lotO Schedule A requires you to reduce your total Jtemlzed deducUons - lhua lncreaslns your income. -by tho araount. af tho Oat standard deducUon built into tho table. • Filing will be more complicated II yvu can't uao the tax tables because Cl) lncome runs over tho $20,000 or $40,000 limits, or (2) exemptions are 1reater than tho tables provide fOl', or (3) you are married flllnl separately and 7our spouse ltemlzes deductiona, or (4) you can bo claimed u a de~t. on you.p.,parent.a' retum and have S750 or more ot .uneamed income'and len than 12,200 of earned Income U you are &fntle <SUOO lf married Cllln1 eeparately). Everyooo must complete part or all ot a HW tax computatJon acbeduJe. Nat: llOMV·IClViftg lips on u1 '4r lcblt1. Aerospace Finn Reports ITrerea,se ST. LOUIS CAP) -McDonnell Dou1lu Corp. bu l'e· ported that earntnca tor 1m reached 1122,958,138. or $8.m a aha re, fl.lllY dllot.ed, OJ\ eaJes OI $3,.544,7119,161. Jama S. McDonnell, chalrnWl al the aerospace rtrm, said the results com· r&Nd wllh earninat of. C T1• v "NG J 108,w,au, or $2.86 a n..n..1 ab a re, on 1alea of STOCK · $3,5'3, 713.215 last yeat'. Mc.Donnell aaJd the year'• •al• included 23 / percent. commercial and 77 ~ent government bullnela. Employment for t.be ni1D ended ·tho year at 81,577, compared with S7,861 lut year. t.be fti'lt tncreuo In employment ln 10 JUn . .Mc~l nld the mOlt allnlfJcet ev.nt ln the com• pany'1 put year wu the U.S. Air rorce'• aeleCtlon Of a modified DC·lO conter\lble lrellhter •• tt.s advanced tanker cargo aircraft. Tbe eelect.1cm broupt JlcDolmt1l an lnJUal $18 mllllon contract for the start of •DJ'Oduction enllnMrinl and long. lead procurement aetlvtlfes. The nwnbet of aircraft to be 10ld to tbe Air Foree ii not yet known.. •alllc.4...,.,_ ._ .... BankAmerica Corp., hu reported that conlGlldat.cl ln· come before ..curttlea transactlcnt !'OM 17.8 percent ln 1m to sau mlWon, whlle net income lncreued 11.1 per· cent to $398 3 anllllon. Per •hare tanllnp ach'aDced 12.t ~rcent to $2. 71 on Income before aecurftlt1 tramactlona e'Dd to *2. '72 on net Income. Nonperf onolng JOans (eanilnl no lnterest or tntetoct at reduced raw) at year~ 19'7'1 amount.f4 to UIS mDUon, ~~ 1rttb m1Woa • year earner. Tbeae loan• ndUc.ct Pl'fllU Umlnp bJ sn.a mlllloo tD 1m and '35.8 lnUlldo ln 1978. Alter taxes, these rtch1cUou amount· ed to 10 centl a 8h•r• lD lt'n and u cents • •tiare m D78. For tJit lomtb quwr, pe.r hare lncomo wu r ucod tiy 3 c ta m bc:Jtl> • y PU.OT ~ar•m•dl4• O•e• •• Ml« ltd 10 lnOOel .. Ille ldealllf-0 MOVll! •••• ·~ ... (196$1 Stanley 8•ker, Juliet Prowse. An a11orne1 detencl• a,..,, ... _..., of c:omm1111ng a mutd« 1n t~ lor the dNtll Of h11 dauolltet (:l "''·' m THE BRADY BUNCH Greg end Marcie 1>abyalt the , .. , ot ll>e kldl Cl) TME AOOl<IU fJll ELECTRIC COMPAIN '11) FUTURE OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY IYITEM Oue111: Jam•• 8 Cat<fw9U. c;ommi.SIOntlf' ol the S~ Security edmtn• 11u1t1011; Aep Bar~r B Coneble Jr. the r•nking mltlOfUy member or tne Houae W•yt end MNn1 Commttt••· Rep Al Ullman, c:hawmen or tne HooM Waye And Moens CommlllM, and W Allon w ellle, Cllairman of tt>e Saved From Terror 10111.ory commtllH 10 AEL 1 Proj«t on Social Securlt)' and Ret11-1 Policy Z1ppl :\laimon. a hostage of Arnb tcr· ronsts. is rescued bv hl'r brotht•r Galil m the l:;racl town of lls'slot. The inci- dl·nt is examined on an ABC docmcn· tary tonight at 10 on Channel i. Ql A8CNEWS 8:.30 U MOVIE wll•n brother Ernie 11c:cu... him of talung a vali.abl• 1>9nny from 1111 coon cotlec:llon fD OllER EASY Guell. Sammy CoNln ct) UNTAMEO WORlO • • * "Str•t>Oll Bedlel· 10w1" ( 11165) Rock Hud~°"• Gig Young. Aller con11oer· Ing dlvOt~. 1 corporete a11•cut111e 1111mp1~ 1 reconclf11llon with h•I llery-tempered wile 11 111 • 30ml11.) m MY l'HREE SONS Chip demand• 1 Jvry trtet 0.§) MIRV OA1FF1N Gu•ll Or. W•lllam Reder Lavonne Brown, M•rty Roat, Oon Edinger. 7:00 CJ N8C NEWS 0 LIARSClUB Q A8CNEWS Channt"I Lbt in gs f) KNXT (CBSJ Lo~ A11geles O KNBC (NBC) Los Angelus D KTLA (Ind) Los Angules D KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angures fl) KFMB (CBS) San Diego 0 KHJ· TV (Ind) Los Angeles 9 KCST (ABC) San Diego m KTIV (Ind l Los Angt1les U) KCOP TV I lncJ l Los Angeles f£I KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angelos Cl) KOCE· TV (PBS) Huntington Boath Demond's 'Back,' ·But Why? By JAY SHARBUTT LOS ANGELES CAPI Demond WUson lert NBC's .. Sanrord and Son" becau~e Redd Foxx left It for ABC. -Toni&ht, Wilson reappears in a new sitcom -on CBS -ap-propriately called "Raby, J'm Back." (Channel 2, 8:30 p.m. > lie now plays a guy declared legally dead after he d1i;ap· pea red seven years ago from hi~ home , hh wife <Denl.Sl• i':icholas) and their two young kids <Kim Fields and Tony Holmes). If tonight's premiere I!> typical, he should hnvc stnyt'd AWOL. m ILOVELUCY lucy conv11"1Ge1 R•cky th•t lie a.l\ould litgh·pr•-· 1111 boas 1n10 g1wig h•m I re1M 0) AOA~A-12 W MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT B'i) COLLECTIVE BAAGAINING GOES TO SCHOOL (I) TO TELL THE TRUTH 7;30CJ LATINWAVE The rapidly grow1n9 Laun popul1t1on'• 1mpac1 and 11\llu.,nc .. 011 tht. Un119d Sta lea "• 1111"""nfld, 0 NEWLVWEOOAME 0 ON TRIAL: A CASE OF TEENAGE PREGNANCY A htgh achoo! boy I-a m•nS111ug11t• c.ll••o• l'>hon ho delend• h11 g.,uu..,d 1 repvt•llOtl by atr1k1ng • reacher. Q) THE BRAOV BUNCH Marcia get& a crui.11 °" ho< nf'wdent ~t CD AOAM·12 MPaC:IC«ftd -~CHD' '1"9 WllOle Flth S1ory .. (R) ()) 1100,000 NAME THAT ~ ~OfTHI WILD • 00 • ()) 0000 Tlt4Ea "I Had A Of•m" When JJ·a 1Homott0n 1a tlvNt· ened by P19JudlClt. hia .,..,. t)', etld.,JI few too many c:hlll ctoga, Cl-IWM a "'lid dra.n In wNc:h M II a 11whole man. Sorrell Bool<a Q__~lllar U UTTL! HOUSI OH THl!!PAAIRJ! "Be My ,riend" ~joy> tulty becomes a turrog111 mother when Ille dteco;r. .,, an a1>611donld Infant. (901111n I D MOVIE • • ~ "Croucurr1nt" ( 19'.' t) Roben Hool.a, Jlr• my Slete. Two &In Fran- CISC.O Clel9ChYAI "'-ti- gall the murder of a youth 1b01td 1 ~ble car. (2 hr& I D \1~ SIXMIWON DOU.AA~ ' Tiie Lost liNn<t" A llU<.,. l•M young woman lrom a PDQhO i.ianCI inhabilld by dnc:endan11 of being• from another planet, etek1 Steve Autlln'I help In - 1ng her peoole ll'om .,.,ono- hon (2h<s) 0 JOKER'S WILD Q) CAROL BUR .. ETT AHOFRIENOS Q) MOVIE • • * "Force Of Atma" 11es11 W1111.1m Holden, N1ncy 01,on An Army lieutenant end a WAC fall '" love In World Wat II Italy (2 hrs) fl.;) THEPRISONER A. B. & C" The Prisoner !1 the ..ubiect of •n elCP'lfl· ment 10 manipulate hit drNms B'i) SPECIAL Inner Vl•OI'•" Beall Rietl- atd• don dr'1'hallc f9ad. 1ng1 trom her bOok "A BIM:k woman SPM1t1." u well as dlaauulng -·· llberltl!Otl Wllh hoal 0.\lld CnppoM 1:30 I) (I) 8A8V, l'M BACK (Pr•rnlere) A l•gally dac••••d husband (Demond Wiison) IUddenly IMPpeaf• and ltiaa to revive "'8 dN<I manlage before 1111 ""'''• (Oenl .. TtJBE TOPPERS of conynllllflo A murd« ID rrt91100 lot the OMlh d Illa dauglll-' 12 fn I 6:00 -... Future of the Socs I Securit)' S) tem." Public offaciul di • cu:,s thl! outlook or the system. NEWON.EA LfT'6 MAKI A OE).\. DOC CAV!TT ~IL ~ E) 8:00 -"Little House on the Prairie." Laura disco\.·crs an abandoned baby. Episode was written and directed by Michael Landon. Ninety minutes. 1t:a&> 8 CJ) C8S LAT MOWt * • "Tiie Wll*IMI Dr-.in. Ot PMt~"( I lli• ISonwl'er, Gob Ct&M An ..... GclnMn a~e poi9 VW!t -lttlll\ Wal #!d lel'dll In Ille etme 01 a e>rofn.., ~ cant ~ wl\al to do w.111 ti.r, (RI fJ 8:00 -"Six Million Dollar Man." A ~ oung woman from a South Pacific island seeks Steve Austin's help in sav· ing her people. New time. Two hours. G TOtOOHf Ou.t l!Mt: 8ob "'-haft. OliHta: 8hl1ld1 1nd Vat,_, ~. l.~ Crnith, Skip Slepl\el\90ll • ~f 10:30 -"Woman os Painter." Feminine m1ists throu~h the ages are profiled. G lOVf. AMavc.u. STYLI Hlctlola11 tlel tile nuc>llAI lcnot With'* current buu 0 COHC9fTRA1lOH CD t1n.ooo CM!STION CD ovtRlAIY Oueat: 8.wM\y COIMlll. H08 (I) M'A"l'H Wiien Hot Upe thlnlla ..._., pregMnt, Hhltl~ wanta to UM ~·a rabbit to -II .,.,..a f1Vhl. Mean· wNle. a 1--ic:k $>41N!fll hOIOe Charlaa and B J l'>Oltago 0 EVAHIAHO~VAK "Waah•nglon And The SALT T aiu·· Arnbanador Paul Weml<e, Clliet SALT neootoator, i. 1n1~. m Ma.YOAl"1N Gu .. 1s. Dr. Wiiiiam Rader.' Lavonne 8fown, Merty Ra.s. Don Eo1nger. Oerren B1anket11h1p, J1111 Blanker• slup, fD THE OUTI'EAIHO PRIZES "A PHI Ula" Adam •11jO)'ll the 1u11 Of proleeslonal •VCC:-and atttrnpla to publicty dlb•t• l!llth one ot lhe main Engllllh IUPl>Ol'I• -of tl.ICllftl. m DAVID SU881</NO t:30U(I) ONEOAYATA TIME JMloul of Julie and ,,.,.,. Ing tor alltnCIOl1, 8ett>lfa o~ 1r1 lime for a ch.,,oe and 1tart1 by changong hit reoutalleln. 0 COUJM80 "Mwder Under Ola..'• When a re11auraleur (Mlch1e1 v. Gano) lilrMlet\S lo ellpoee e blllllk~ food or1t1C (LOUla Joufdtn), h• blocMMI the YIC\tm In • Mat_:i*ftct crirN 10.00 II Cl) LOU OIWIT A 111an'• (Robert Eatf Jonea) .,, --· p8itlted on hill wat, le tttrMIANCf liWl1h ~ ..... the building ill IOMduted 10 ~ ra:ec1.. 8 =-Nfft# OU)S(UP ··~1~ All ••lll'Nrla- t>or1 °' 111e rrlQflttlWIQ ~ flOtMllOI\ of t ... 1870'w • ~denll of terror11nt 111<1 holt~t1klng In Ewope. IM Middle E4'"1 and Africa. U>WONlYMOONtRS 1~30 CD a> NJWS fD WOMAH Al PAINTER Among Ill• ollen·OWr· loolcld lamlnlne artllla extmtned In thl• pro0ram ,,. Renal11ance ponr111u- r111 8oph0nllba Angullcto- 11. 17th C9111UfY ltaly'a Arlernllla Gentu.cttl; alld Llaellt VlgM-LebNn, Ille dar•ng of pr•Revotutlor... ary F' renclll tc>Oety 11:001)0 0 (1)9 NEWS 0 LOW, AMeRICAH S'TYL£ •·t.o"9 Md The Greet C.teh'' Adam W•I dtopa w-. on HarfYClum)llft 10 buy MMM atemps. o MOVte ••~ "O;og.iia·• t t965) Stanley 8alcer. Juliet Prow1e. An allor11ey · dllendl a nal..,.• 8CCUMcl "LO'We And The Mautllld MOUMM levwfy Arid Wallef tall• lllelter Ill • l\aunted hoclM I "Love Md Tho Alhlete" 0-ga bMr\ tOld by hit bCle9 10 .... __,,.,.. tNt IN II a man. D Ill 'l'OUCE•TOAY -Tiie Big Wllllt'' A -anhy OlrC (Lynda 0.., Oeotve) ChallenON a top'• (Don Murray) MWfy.-tatllWM!d authortty (R) m H!WS GETS~"T CAl'TtOHEO A8C NIWI MORNING 12:00 0 lWIUGHT ZON A 91*•1!1 lalder IUC(itod1 1n OY«lhrOWtnQ the r9g1tne or Ille corrupt go-nmant ot '111 country. CD R>AEVliR FEN4WOOO Cl) MOVIE * * "Ferry lo Hong Kont" ( 1961) Curl Jwgene, Orlon Wlllta A dt1ller on • Mr1}' bcMI tum1 llefo When llMt lhlj:> II lllacl<ed. ( 1 tv. 30""") 12:30 D 09'2 AIJnf'( "Men From Mu•ic Mountain" m CAOSS-WrT• 12:370 8TARTIM! "Slorlft CrOlling •• Barbara Ru111. Jo lord. (ti IFIOHS10£ An avant..gtrd• theelO' gfoup'I new ptOOuction 18 stllllad whln a ceat -. bW Is murdered. T •dafl' Daytl•e Me., MOANfNQ 9:30 0 •• ,. . OperatJo.i ' ~ertnalcl' (1Mt) ~ Wynn, Mal Z4Ca.11fto. Nt A~rt0•11 command.,, lddlng --o d • MCrltfMC).~ t'w• BrttilA u-ooi;.nWl'lil dot tot U. lllOden ot • top Nm on tM ol ~-(t "'""• m&l'I) AFTERNOON u:oom •••a"&ornva.1 day .. (1950) Judy HOlllQ William HOiden. Wlltrl b4Mlutt1ul blonde Clllc~lf1 th1t her boyfrl1nd I lnvOlved In aorne prett underhanded deallt\gl. fUl\ll -lly With '* ' queue fnttructor. (2 rn.,: 20min.) I 3:00 Ill * * * * ''TN Car!Bo ,,.. .. (hrt 1) '::s Tf'YO", Romy • Afl American pnaat back Ofl hie r•lig19u_a. ~ 11 he rtcet•llla; card\Nl'a rotiea. (1E! .. "*') uoG•••"How..._. ,.,.. ( 1961) O.bb ~. JatnM wnen a boy lollcrill9 OirffrMnd to Eut<lpe. par91119 fOloW him, '1 30f'l\ln) California Latins Examined Tonight~ LOS ANGELES -KNDC. Channel 4, will telecast a 30· mtnute tta~entar:y which glves a positive look at the rapidly growing Lalin popula· lion and its impact and in· lluences on Southern California.. ··The Latin Wave/La Onda Latina," tonight al 7:30 with a Spanish language simulcast on KALI Radio, l430AM. Actor Richard Yniquei. will narrate the documentary. He is best known for his performance as a heroic Mexican·American policeman in the docudrama "The Deadly Tower," most re- cently, he starred in the special two·hour episode or "Police Story" entitled "River Of Promises." l lion. <4) l~os Angeles b the firth largest Laun Ameiic populal1on of any city in world, (5) tho benefits of WS pandlne population ai: stimulation of economic g the creation or JoM, and a b urban revitalization, as we increased political 1trenath Southern Calirornla. Among those featured ln documentary is Vilma Ma • President or Mexican-Ame~ Legal Defense Educauon HE STARTS IT by uneicpec· . tedly barging In on a ceremony m whlch his wife, flanked by the k'ids and his batlle-u of a mother·in-law (Helen Martin) Is about to marry her boss, a stuffy Army colonel. 'DADDY' RETURNS TO ASTONISHED KIDS IN NEW TV SERIES 1BA8Y, l'M BACK' Demond Wilson (center) Stara With Tony Holmes, Kirn Flelda In Comedy SOME FACTS presented in the documentary are: O> Chicanos number one·and-a-balf million In Los Angeles County and more than half million in Los Angeles, (2) the Latino population is the youngest in the country. with a median ace of 191,; as eompared to about 29 for the general population, (3) In Loa Angeles Latinos are 33 per· cent ol the $ludent popula· and a Governor Brown • • poinlee to the Unlveralty r California Board of Regentt. who discusses the Impact of ''The Latin Wave" lrom the point or view of the American census. She stat.es that the Im· portance 1n tho accuracy of tho census is reflected in reapPQr· -tionment, political empower• ment, representation, revenue sharing funds, schools, as well as quallflcatlons !or aoc;lal benefits prosrams. The shock causes a temporary delay In the proceedines. It's quickly established that Wilson still loves her, but she doe• nol lo\le him any more. In fact, she and the colonel plan another attempt at 1ettine hitched the next Cfay. But first she hires a shyster lawyer <Timmy Rogers) to eet an injunction barring WIJaon from bar&ing In again. Biggest Gross LOS ANGELES (AP) -Oh, God!" has become the tJI g t· rpsslng comedy ot ll time with gross Of more than $45 mllllon to date. The ltJm, Jitarrlnit George Burn and John Dcnv r. waa written by Larry Gelbart and directed by Carl Reiner. It opened Od. '1, and ts playln1 ln more than 000 theater . IF ANY MORE barging oc· goes "Oooh" and applauds. curs, mother·in-law vows, "he'll And then Wilson frantically at· see a close encountl'r of the tempts to foil the wedding by go· fouTtl\ kind -my f1i;t in his ing to court and having himself face." declared legally olive -which A fr-iendly studio audience would make his wife a bigamist howls at this. But tht>n it howls if she wl'ds the colonel. at everything, even when Wilson It's laborious. but there are asks his mot.her-in-law: "Isn't it sporadic flashes of humor. One Ume you Ced your bats." occur~ whenever Roeera, as the Jawyer, breathea lite into his fee. Ia rt-wooing his wife, he ex· bl Ji ·th rt · plains he ohly left home because e nes WI expe muegint he couldn't find • job, kept los-, and cries of, "Oh, yeahhh." Ing at the track and worse. He AN011tER GOOD tum comes demands to know how she can from Jack Fletcher, east u a Jove the colonel. prissy court clerk with whom J'And what's love?" she re-Wilson wangles a fast appoint· torts. "Once t thought it was a ment. As ho aees Wilson. be Te· bcauUruJ man who knew what t coils slightly and inquires: "Are waa thinking even before l said ,you a terrorist?" a word. But all that walked out. .nut moments like th•e are on me $~Ven years ago. few and far between ln the script by April Kelly, and Tom ~•later, who work from a series lC!ea cooked up by producer Lila Gar- rett nnd veteran ea1writer Mort L chmlU\. TEFIEO Maybe In futute shows "Baby, I'm Back" will make a come· back from its limp commence· ment exerclae. But It'• a bad omen when only the visiting players -Roeers and Fletcher -manage lo be runny. 'llaxi' Drama Sheen, Saint Starring LOS ANGELES (AP) -Eva Marie Saint and Martin Sheen o t« a rtdo ln ·~qJ t 11 •• on the Hall of Fame on NBC on Thursday at 10 p.m. He'11 a rough~ldng cabbl• from BrOoklyn and abe'a a sophisticated woman who reacb out to each other durinl a. ride to New York'a Kennedy International Airport. They hav th only speaking roles in the two-hour ~ram a by Lanford Wilson. Joseph Hardy cli?ffi.d.. DISC JOCKEY Chtco Sesma_ or KALI Radio, hu been broad· casting ln Los Angeles for de· cadea. In giving his opinion of the impact of ••The Latin Wave," ho compares todaYi to the Los Angeles ot twenty yeia;; aeo and observes that we ~ now experiencing a "cultural catalyst." ' Daniel Lopez, publisher of Nuestro Ma11:r:lne, a netltttal publication for Latins, dlsc ... the alanlficance or auch a ma1azlne where others oab. learn about the Latin culf and ulidemand the LatJn • ot pride and heart. The documentarr further' elves a review of lmmlgrlU~ trends from t.he turn·of·the· century throuah tho 70'• and the projected Increases for 1980. OUNDS OF THE HARBO )