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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-01-31 - Orange Coast Pilot1 not an • e1st. ·Ohio's ~t of Beer; Milk Goes in Half Pints TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 31, 1978 VOL. 11, NO. Jt, J HCTIONI, • PAG•S • • • • Nurse Details Attempted Seal Beach Store Jeweler Killed gHpldup ~ Huntington Harbour resident Wayne Golin, 41, died Monday from gunshot wounds he suf. f ered during a holdup at his Seal Beach jewelry store by two ban· dits who are still al large, police said. Investigators said two men en- tered the Leisure World Jewelers shop, 13920 Seal Beach Blvd., at 2: 15 p.m. and attempt- ed to rob Golin nnd his wire, 'Barbara. Witnesses said they heard four shots. As the two bandits bolted from the shop to a parked yellow sedan, one or them threatened a witness who had emerged from a nearby flower shop lo see what had happened. Gohn couJd be seen lying in a pool or blood bleeding profusely from apparent head wounds, witnesses said. A small handgun could also be seen lying on the floor next to Golin's body. Mrs. Golin ran screaming from the shop before police arrived. witnesses said. Gotin was rushed to Los Alamitos General Hospital where he died al 4:16 p.m .• Orange County Coroner's or. ficials said. Seal Beach police Sgt. Virginia Black said the amount or loot taken in the robbery 1s not known at this lime. Police said the getaway vehi· cle, which bore New York license plates, was last seen nortbbound on Seal Beach Boulevard. Polj.ce said they believe the jewelry store bandits may be two of the three gunmen who held up a pair or markets in Westminster and Fountain Valley Saturday. No one was hurt in those holdups. The suspects in all three holdups were reportedly using an older sedan with oul·of-state license plates. The gunmen are believed to be in their 20's. Funeral services for Golin are pending. Owner Dies ID o.lty N.a Slelf ~ THIS WAS SCENE OF MONDAY AFTERNOON ROBBERY AND SLAYING IN SEAL BEACH Huntington Harbour Resident Diet After Being Shot by Bandits In His Store Pity Ohio; It's Out of Beer ' . Fourth Mesa . Bank Robbed lnlJne Week COLUMBUS, Ohio CAP) -Stores are out of beer, bread and milk. Shoppers come anyway, some wearing skis or pulling sleds. Farmers say thelr meat cattle are foing without water, their dairy cattle without milking, because power OQtages have made machines useless. AGRICULTURE OFFICIALS ESTIMATE that Oblo farm losses could exceed $60 inlllion. State official• forecast over the weekend that the losses would surpa.sa S48 million-. These are among the hardships Ohioans a11d others tn the Midwest face five days after their worst blluard in history bu.ried them in snow and whipped them with brutal winds. Some arocery stores report short supplies or no supplies or milk, eggs; bread and produce because delivery trucks have been • uck in drifts or stalled in the tr11id temperatures throughout the ldweit. FtSHER·FAZIO FOOD STORES said they had no shortages. "But we did ask customers to llmii themselves to one-halt l(allon of D\ilk, ·•said Milt Kantor, southt.iem Ohio division president for the chain. The highway patrol escorted truck of mUlt, e&gs and meat from Detroit to stores in snow-bound T edo, said Richard Bere, a vice president for the Kroeger erocery chain. ONE STORE WAS UNABLE TO get Its milk from its usual In~ dianapolls supplier but found a dairy. al 'f'.orl Thomas, Ky., that had no market for thousands or half.pints of milk pacltaeed !or schools that are closed.· .. "We bad several hundred customers who bOu&ht milk by the gallon in ball-pints ... an official ror the erocery aaid. With str~ts and parking lots Jammed by snow and lee. at.are managers repoi:ted shoppers coming with sleds and b ckpack11. Testifies Infant 'Alive' By TOM BARLEY Of .. o.ltr ,..._Sc.ff A prosecution witness testified late Monday that the baby al- legedly strangled to death by Dr. William Baxter Waddill was alive and breathing at the time he was informed that the planned abortion had misfired. 1 Registered nurse Pat Olvera told an Orange County Superior _ Court jury that the infant born last March 2 in Westminster Community Hospital had a slow and irregular heart beat and • could only breathe in gasps. But she repeatedly assured prosecutor Robert Chatterton that she detected signs of lire in the 28-week fetus and she re- fused to amend that statement under heavy defense question· mg. Dr. Wadd1ll's two lawyers said they intend to prove that there was no hve birth involved in the delivery or the fetus and that murder charges against the Huntington Harbour physician should be dismissed. Mrs. Olvera testified that she went to the room of the unwed, 18·year-old mother last March 2 believing that the patient was about lo deh\'er a fetus that had been ab<>rted by the use of a saline injection . Instead, she said, she found what she believed to be a live bab~ girl. She said the baby moved. gave what the witness described as a "weak whine" and tried to breathe. The witness testified that she immediately removed the child <See DOCl'OR, Page A2) Coast Partly doudy tonight and clearing partially Wednesday 'af\emoon. Lil· tie warmer. Lows tonight sz. High Wednesday 67. INSIDE TODAY Finn{J o loafn' or an incom~ petent /rom th• /ednal 11nvict con be . at fim•• cm impolti~ t<Uk. For. a look ot th• "bureoucrotic ~." •ce the Hcond in .o MriH on P.a(lt .itt. • . -I ' •> 0AllYPIL0f .-s Tuol!d!y. J nuary 31 . 1971 Battered Wo1nan Cries Out f6r Delp WASlll.'.'\CTON <Al'> "I ha\'l' ha~ ~lussl'S lhrown at me,•· wrote the abused wife who said ~ht• \\ l'lll 111 lht• pollt'l' for help. "I h•nt· bt'l'll kicked tn the ah· domen wht•n I wus v1~lbly preg· nanl." and slw souQhl help from hl'r pa~lor l h,I\ l' ht'l'll whipped, kicked ,1n1I lh1own. pu·kt•d up and thrown down ugain," and she a:-.ked hl'lp frorn h<•r doctor, fr1t·nc1s and a counselor. The battered "'ire, u white, muldle-clus ,.om~ with three children and a professional husband, was writing to Marta Segovia Ashley, who set up a C'enter for buttered wives m San Francisco. "Everyone I have gone to for help has somehow wanted to blamt.' me and v1nd1cate my husband ... l know that J have to get out, but when you have no where to go, you know that you go on )Our own and with no sup- port..·· lhti woman w~ Her letter was presented in a paper today for the first national conference on battered women held by the U.S Commission on Civil Rlgbts It was called to ex- amine research on wife beating and its perpetrators, on laws protecting battered wives and their enforcement and on the need for short and long-term services for the women. Chavez Ends Boycotts leader Cites Functioning of Labor Laws K f r. "\ F <A I» -Saying C.d1lorn1J s 21 ~-ye.Jr-old farm l.1hor l;m was "ahH' and rune· t1c>01ng," United Farm Workers 11••.t<ll·r Cesar Chavez ended mun· than seven vears of hovl'<•tts tnclav agu1nst the s t.ill• :-. ll'llllt't', tablt• grnpt· and '' 11w industries 11 was the se<·ond rnund of pro- 1r.1l'led and l>1ller but largely OC Fertile Area for Rams Fans? II L 11 s ,\ n gt' l t· s Count) Supt•n 1s1w Kt•nn(•lh Hahn wants to k nu\\ "\\ hu"d go sec the 1\nahe1m Hams or tht• Orange Hams ... let him ask Orange County Supervisor Ralph Clark. ··Football fans would love to 'it'l' t hl' Rams m Orange Coun· t)." Clark responded ~tonday to rem ark:-. llahn made last week • 1 bout the Hams· possible move to AnahL•1m. "There <Jrf' 10 million people Ii\ 1ng wilh1n 40 minutes of ,\nahl·1m Stadium." said Clark. .in ,\nahc1rn resident and the t 11) ·.., fmm1•r mayor "l'l·oplt• s1•t•m to forget thcit Oranl.!l' Count\ 1s un<• of lht.' na- tion':-. rn.11or ·urban population t·enkrs, ' ht• continued £h·s1<ll's. Clark <:ontendt>d. II ahn 's rl'fl'rcnct• lo a change m the Hams' name "1s really ci lit· tie off base." "The Los Angeles Lakers play 1n In glewood and the Dallas Cowboys play in Irving, Texas,"· Clark noktl. In add1l1on, he continued. Or<• nge County already has shown il can support maJor h•aguc teams , includin~ the California Angels, Anaheim Orangl· World Team Tennis and the Californrn Surf soccer team. Front Page AJ DOCTOR •.. to the nurc;ery where hospital :-t aff began resuscitation efforts in a bid to aid the ailing infant l t 1 s allC'gt'Cl that Dr Wad dill halted those efforts and then M'nt the hospital staff from the nursen while he strangled the unw;intcd hahy to death. A coron<·r's uutopsy led lo the finding that the child died as a result of manual strangulation. IAS . JIEGAS UFE 'UKE ANYWHERE' I..1 v mg next door lo casino ~ambling is no different than llv· 1ng anywhere els<', say residents of Las Vegas Residents by and large pooh· pooh thl' notion that gambling, drinking or other s inful en· terprise 1s a problem lo the ma- jority. "We JUSt don't have any prob- lC'ms assOC'iated with the gam· ing industry except growth'" they say. Story Page AlO. DAILY PILOT :i;uccessrut boycotts carried out by the union leader. ''The Agricultural Labor Rela· lions Act is ahve and function ing," Chavez said in a statement . released by his headquarters in Kl'ene. 120 miles north of Los Angeles. "In California, farm workers m some places are now able to vote for the union of their choice Super Savers Expanded? WASlfiNGTON CAP> - United Airlines s aid today 1l will ask the {'1\ 1l Aeronautics Hoard to ap· prove expansion of 1b dis· <·ounl Super Saver fares to ti II L nited routes longer than 900 miles for a 2• ,. month period: beginning March 18. The fares are 30 percent to 40 percent lower than regular coaC'h fares. de· pending on what day of the week lhe passe nger travels . The fares would be nvailable in each of the 110 cities United serves in the 48 U .S mainland slall•s and in Canada Honolulu would not be included Woman Faces Murder Rap LOS ANGELES <AP) -The District Attorney's office filed a formal murder charge today against a coed at Cal State Northridge in the death of her 31-year-old college tennis coach. Carol Welch. spokesman for the District Attorney's office. sa id Lori Andersen, 21, of Granada Hills, was to be ar raigned today at Municipal Court in Burbank. Miss Andersen reportedly led Burbank police to the body of Susan Hyde on Friday. The women's tennis team coach had been buried in a shallow grave in Sylmar, officers said. Committee Meets W ASlDNGTON CAP) -T he Senate Intelligence Committee recommended on Monday the confirmation of former am- bassador and Nixon administra· tion aide Frank C. Carlucci as deputy director or the CIA. The recommendation came after two days of hearings on President Carter 's nomination. and come to the bargaining ta- ble to ncgoliate with their employers. although there is an average of 16 months between union election and contract s1gn- ing," he said . Cha,ez's action, after a vote of lhr union executive board. t·ndcd international boycotts .1gainst non-UFW grapes, head or i Cl· berg lettuce and table wines produced by the E&J Gallo Wine Co. The lettuce boycott was called 111 SC'ptember 1970 to continue ('(:onom1c pressure on growers after a UFW strike in the Salinas Valley was broken by C'Ollrl inJunl'l1ons. "ThC' only way we could con- tin uc economic pressure was through lhl' boycott," said CFW spokesm:m Marc Grossman. Tht• l 'FW's first strike-bovcott in 1965 hroughl national acclaim 10 tht• little-known union -then <"alled the> ,\gncultural Worker'> OrganizinJ! Committee. The boy colt started 1 n Delano against several growers. includ- ing Schenley :rnd DiGiorg10 forms, went nationwide in 19fi8 and ended in 1970 after mosl tabll' grape grower s signed U l"W contracts. Popular support for the fledgt. ing union burgeoned after the 1965 Delano strike. The strike ht•cam(' something apart from lrad1t1onal labor strife Callt•d La Causa, il became a symbol of justice for the poor and powerless. Farmworkers were u primary focus because tht•y had been excluded from the National Labor Relations Act and had little \01ce in dealing with powerful agricultural in· teres ts. In March 1966, Chavez led hundreds or supporters on a 300-mile march, half protest and ha_Jr pilgrimage, from Delano to Sacramento. Two years later. Chavez fasted in protest for 25 days until doctors warned his life was in danger The late Sen. Robert F. Ken- nedy, D-New York, offered Chavez bread at a special Mass when the fast ended. Kennedy's support was typical or backing that Chavez received from the powedul Eastern liberal establishment and from church organizations throughout the na· lion. In· October 1975, the na· tionwide Louis Harris poll found that 12 percent or the public, or 17 mUlion adults, had stopped buying table grapes; 11 percent, or 14 million, were boycotting lettuce, and 8 percent, or 11 million, were boycotting Gallo wines. The massive table grape and Gallo boycotts began in 1973 after UFW contracts expired and m any growers signed with the rival Teamsters Union. Jn 1n article coming out next month, Dr. nrw . tlD· metz or the Univera.ity f D~laware says seven percent f the cowit.ry's 47 m1lhon wiytlt are victims of SP\·ere physi61 abuse by their h~bands . The article will appear in a new journal called "Vic· ttmology," which 1s published jJ\ Washington. Miss Ashley, who included letter frocn the battered wile Watching for Spill Coast t;uard oil ~pill L'XPl'rts .ire standing b~ a :l 10-foot oil barge that split in half :\londav night. The Houchard 105 b hold- ing about a m1ll111n gallons of fuel oil, hut lit I IC' ot 1t h .t!> lt·ak~cl out. The barge was hl·tn~ luaded c.tl the Atlantic: T e rminal Corp. ch)(:ks 111 Newington. ~.11. Slellllllons Facing Rap Aide Also Named in 'Illegal Campaign' Former Assembly candidate .James Slemmons, his campaign co chairman and William Butcher. his political str ategist. face fines of up lo SS.000 1( found guilty of allc~ed illegal cam- paign practices tied to the 1976 Republican primary campai2n. The allegations were listed in a press release made available Monday in the Sacrpmento of- fices of the State fo'air Political Practices Commission which wall hold hearings on the charges in March. Neither Sl~m­ mons nor Butcher were availa· · ble for comment this morning. The allegations came out of a probe launched in October by ~e state Attorney General's of· rice. Investigators aUee~ that John R. Young, co-<:halrman of Siem· moos' successful campaign for the GOP nomination in the 74th Assembly District. gave Butcher $220 in cash to pay the filing fee of another candidate in the same race, Dale Scott Lucas. The release further alleged that Slemmon~ "knew of the cash payment and approved it." According to the news release, campaiRn disclosure laws were <ii I e g e d I y furl h l' r vi o lated HOLDUPS. • faster." A local businessman who w11s in the bank at the time said, "It a ll happe ned so fast and s o quietly that no one knew <about the robbery) until the bank manager announced it " As in the three other rob beries, no weapon was dis· played. police said. A bank employee gave chase as the suspect fled on foot, but was unable to catch Mm, police said. The bandit has chosen dif· ferent financial institutions in all lour robberies. The FBl has been call~ in to assist with the invesU1auon. ·Rifle Fired In Robbery Just to make sure he was get·, tins hls measa1e across, • ban· dtt flred three shots Into the cell· lni of a Buena Park motel berore maklnc off with $350 Mond1y night. t CAMPAIGN REMEMBERED Former Candidate Slemmons because ''the transaction was never disclosed by the Siem· mons campaign and Butcher never disclosed hi s role as an in- termediary" The FPPC release said a hear· ing will be held sometime in !\t arch before the full com· mission with Admin1stratl\ t' Law Judgt• Robert Meher pre siding Lu<·:as' rol e 1n the 1971> Hepublil·an primary has been C'ontro\.ersial because Siem m ons' polit1 cal opponents claimed that Lucas only entered the race to bump Slemmons .. c-hief opponent. Marian Bergeson. out of the bottom pos1 lion on lhc ballot. Polit.cal :-.trateg1sts h~·e long h eld that the top or bottom pos1- t1on on .i ballot can mean more voles to a C'and1date. Lucas. who never ca'11- paigned. got 1,915 votes. Mrs. Bergeson lost to Slemons by 869 'ot<•s. Afkr the primary campaign. it was chsclosed that Lucas was a one-time employe at Siem· mons' Newport Beach car de- a lerh1p. After winning the Republican nom 1nat1on in the i4th, which :-.lrl'lchcs from Newport Beach to Oceanside, Slemmons was de- feated in the general election by Democrat Ron Cordova. Mrs. Bergeson re-entered that general election campaign at the last minute and finished third. polling 35,000 votes. She is seek· mg the GOP nomination again this yt•ar in the 74th District 'Bait and Stritrla' BB Auto Dealer Faces Fraud Rap Beach City Dodge of Hunt- ington Beach was accused Mon- day of defr'auding customers by participating tn what the Orange County Di5tricl Attorney's office describes as "bait and switch" practices. Paul Lustie, general manager of Beach City Dodge. refused to comment on the case today. It is alle,ect in the Superior. Court action Cited by the con· sumer fraud divlsion or the of. fice that th firm advertised cars for ule utter they had been sold · t action 1s Howard Abel, president of Muynowcr Motors Inc. the company which controls Beach City Dodge. Youngster, 5, lDl.e Suruivor Oran e Coast Toda,-·"s Closing • Stoe VOL. 71, NO. 31, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 31, 1978 c TEN·CENTS l : Stormy Ohio Drinks. Up Beer Supply COLUMBUS, Ohio <AP) Stores are out o( beer, bread and milk . Shoppers come anyway, some wearing skis or pulling sleds Farmers !:>ay their meat cattle are goin& without water, their dairy cattle without milking, beeause power outaees have made machines l.l.'>ele!:>s. • AGRICULTURE OFFICIA~ ESTIMATE that Ohio (arm losses could exceed $60 million. State officials forecast over the weekend that the losses would surpass $48 milhon. These are amone the hardships Ohioans and others in. the Midwest face five days after their worst blizzard in history buried them m snow and whipped them with bc.utal winds. Pair Held Four in a Week Some grocery stores report short supplies or no supphes of milk, eggs, bread and produce because delivery trucks have been stuck in drifts or stalled in the frigid temperatures throughout the Midwest. •'ISHER·•'AZIO FOOD SJ'ORES said they had no shortage&. "But we dtd ask customers to limit themselves to one-half gallon of milk," said Milt Kantor, southern Ohio division president for the chain. The highway patrol escorted trucks of milk. eggs and meat from Detroit to stores in snow-bound Toledo, said Richard Bert, a vice president for the Kroeger grocery chain. ONE STORE WAS UNABLE TO get its mllk from its usual In · dianapolis suppUer but found a dairy at Fort Thomas, Ky , that had no market for thousands or haU·pants or mllk packaged for schools that are closed. "We had several hundred customers who bought milk by the gallon in half-pints," an orric1al for the grocery said. With streets and parking lots jammed by snow and ice. store managers reported shoppers coming with sleds and backpacks. ONE COUPLE SKIED UP TO a grocery in Indianapolis, 1oaded their purchases into back packs and skied away. <See SNOW. Page A2) as Communist Spies N-M Trustees Hear Citizens It's the fifth Tuesday of the month, so Newport- 1\lesa school trustees will conduct an informal meet- ing at 7·30 tonight in Costa Mesa City Council Cham- bers. Another Mesa U.S., Viet Citizens Cliarged A short presentation on tbe expansion of the Orange County Fair- grounds will be given, hut the main purpose of the meeting ts to allow parents and students to of. fer tht•tr views or concerns to trustees. .Fairview 7 Gets Pay Hike OK By JACKIE HYMAN 01 ..... PU9' ..... Fairview State Hospital fn Costa Mesa has won state arr .Proval to hire licensed personnel at 20 to 25 percent above regular beginning salary levels, hospital Executive Director Frank Crinella announced today. "We feel that we are reasonably competitive now" with private hospitals, Dr. Crinella said. He said the plan for fourth and fifth step hiring was approved :Monday by the state Personnel Board. It will also mean raises for licensed personnel already at the hospital who are receiving lower pay. .. This means that we are hir· lng beginning psychiatric techni- cians at right around fl,100 a month," Dr. Crinella said. Beginning registered nurses will receive $1,200 a month and nurses with some experience more than $1,300, he said. The. personnel board approved the more expensive hiring for Southern Californla gtate hospitals because they have had difficulty filling their posit.ions, Dr. Crlnella said. The new higher wages will ap- ply to psychiatric technicians and registered nurses at the I ourth step or 26 perQent hliher level, he said. At the fifth step or 25 percent blther level, included are physi· clans, speech patbolo1l1ts. audioJoiPsts. physical therapists <See PAY, Pa1e ,U) Bank Held Up A bandit struck a Costa Mesa bank for the fourth time in a \\-eek Monday, handing a female teller a note and a paper bag, but showing no weapon before e!:>c·aping with $985, police said today. The latest heist occurred at l · 12 p.m. at the Security Pacific National Bank branch at 196 E. 17th St. The branch is on the cor ner of East 17th Street and Orange Avenue. Police are matching descrip- tions from three previous heists in an attempt to establish if all four robberies have been pulled by tbe same man. In at least two of the rob· beries, including the latest, the s uspect has been described as a male about six feet tan with sandy blond hair and a mustache. There have been no injuries in any of the robberies, all of which have occurred in the early afternoon. Security Pacific bank teller Nancy Lee Redman. 19. Westminster, told police that the bandit approached ber and handed her a note that read: "Put the money in the bag, fast." The man then pulled a brown paper bag from the left pocket of his blue windbreaker, and as she was loading the cash into the bag, be told her "laster, faster, faster." DodgerChUf To Get Mesa 'Heart Aimrd' l .. Dodger manager Tommy Lasorda will be honored with the Costa Mesa Chamber of Com· merce's ••Heart Award" in ceremonies Feb. 15, it was an· nounced today, The annual heart award Is the chambe.r's hl~hest honor. bestowed upon those who "dem· onstrate outstanding leadership in their field and also an outstanding benevolent at· titude.•• Past recipients include Jtmmy Durante, George Putnam, Sugar Ray Robinson. Dick Lane, Norma Zimmer and the Segeratrom Famtty. The Feb. 15 banquet at the Mesa Verde Country Club ls open to the public. Resenations must be made by noon Feb. 13, at the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce. 2900 Harbor Blvd. Coat It $12.50 per person. A local businessman who was in the bank at the time said, "It all happened so fast and so quietly that no one knew (about the robbery) until the bank manager announced it.·· As in the three other rob- beries, no weapon was dis- played, police said. A hank employee gave chase as the suspect fled on foot, but was unable to catch him, poltce said. The bandit has chosen dif- ferent financial institutions in all four robberies. The FBI has been called in to assist with the investieation. Hazardous Fragments U>cated EDMONTON, Alberta CAP) - Canadian and U.S. search of- ficials said today they have elee· tronlcally located two potential· Jy hazardous pieces or a Soviet nuclear-powered satellite on ice in Great Slave Lake in the Northwest Territories. Roger Eaton of the Canadian Atomic Energy Control Bocµ-d told a news con!erence the two pieces were located near Fort Reliance, a weather station on the northeast end of the lake • about 240 miles east of Yellowknife, the territorial capital. He said a Canadian Forces nuclear response team was go- ing to the area to pinpoint and recover the pieces which are ••very small and can be measured In inches." Eaton ••Id the fragments were giving off radiation that could be dangere>Us to living be- ings if they were exposed at close range for a nurober of hours. In addition? a few more radia- tion sources nave been detected near Warden's Grove, a remote arctic weather outpost where the first debt.is was found Satur• day. the Cllftclala said. Mabton Gates, a Nev•d•· based nuclear sctentiSt with the U.S. ener&Y department. said a few more radiation sources were detected near Warden•• Grove but .. their charactertsttca hav~ not yet been confirmed." DESIGNER SMfTH (LEFT) AND FRIENDS MODEL SHIRTS Custodian Mike Miiiigan, Susie Schllltng are In Style School Spirit Mesa.'s Killybrooke Popular I I By MICHAEL PASKEVICH Of U. DllUY ...... SW! The kids at Killybrooke Elementary School in Costa Mesa are leaving little doubt that they love their school. It's right on their chests. EACH WEDNESDAY, teachers, custodians. and secretaries join the majority of the school's 333 students in wearing school spirit T-shirts created by 10-year-old Kristi Smith .. Kff}>lng with the tradition of the school's mascot, a leprechaun, the desjgn features the lucky symbol halfway up a ladder, putting the finishing touches on a big white ''K11 forKill~tirooke. Of course, the backdrop is green. The sleeves are white, emblazoned witb gold stars bordered in green. ••f THINK l'l"...has created a lot of school spirit and idenUty wbfch is i-eally important," said sehool secretary Joyce Kasparek. · She s.ald Krlst.t's creation was the staff's favorite out or 20 or so entries during a T-shirt. design contest sponsored bv the ~hoot's P1' ~ . Demaiid has been so great that the school is in the pro- cess •Of ontering more ahirts and sweatshirts so that nobod1 feels left out. ICBISl1, DAUGBTE of Joyce and Steve Smith. 3146 Sharon Lane, can't pln down what inspired her to come up with the design. But .she admits "it feels neat" to see teachers and fellow ~udtnta earing her creaUon. •'I want to be an &rtlit when I grow up." she said. It looks like abe alr~y is. • WASHINGTON (AP) -An ~mploy~e of the United States Information Agency and a Viet- namese national were arrested. by the FBl today and charged with spying for the Communist government of Vietnam · A federal grand jury m nearby Alexandria, Va., returned a ~even-count lnthctment charging Ronald Louis Humphrey. 42, and Truong Dinh Hung, 32, with con- spiracy, espionage, stealing gov- ernment records and being un- registered foreign agents. The indictment said the two delivered to the Socialist Republic of Vietnam "docu- ments. writings, notes and m· formation relating to the na- tional defense of the United States • • • having reason to believe that same would be used • to the advantage of a foreign na- tion." Humphrey, of suburban Ari· ington, Va., used his positon as a USIA employee to gather the material and deliver it to Hung in various places in the Washington area, the indictment said. Humphrey and Hung were ar- rested today at their places of employment In Washington, not long after the grand jury in Alexandria handed down the sealed indictment, the Justice Department said, Na med as co-conspirators but not indicted were Huynh Trung Dong, Nguyen An Huynh, Nguyen Ngoc Giao, Phan Thanh Nam and Dinh Ba Thi. The grand jury charged that ·Humphrey, Hung and their co. , consolrators gave .. aid, comfort (See SPIES. Page A%) Clear Skies Due for Coast On Weekend A drizzle that brought to an end the Orange Cpast's wettest January in more lhan 20 years should give way to clear weather Wednesday, the Na· tional Weather Service said to- day. The forecast is for less than 10 percent chance or showers tonight. partial clearing Wed- nesday and fair weather through the weekend. Low temperatures should be about 50 degrees tonight and blghs about 65 degrees Wednesday. The rainfall wasn't much - only .09 lnchcs ln Santa Ana - but it w~ enough to edge 1978 into having the fourth wettest. January since 1916, said John Gietzen of the Orange County Flood Control District. This month's total rainfall° in Santa Ana of 7.98 inches is the wettest since 1956, Gietzen said. The all-time record-holder. 1916, tallled 11.18 inches for the month. Gietzen said Orange County hos also had the third wettl!'!lt ataaon to date since 1908. He said tb total ao far Is 12.40 in· ch 1. comJ)ltNd to e.sa Jnches Jaal 1ear tO date. Santl P k on Saddlebaclc Mount. n. wblch uaually .-.. c I most rain In Oranie a Oouney, .3 inches during the p tM ,f a asoototal Of 31 compll' to H.8 in.- ell l Y! l Or t l>Ort~"-.~-'- ( Z DAil Y PILOT c T Sleinon For nwr AssL•mbly t•1md1dale Jami·~ Slc111u11s, t11s t•ampaign co-chatrman and William Butcht.'r. his political slraleg1sl, fact' ftncs or up lo $8,000 1{ found guilty of alleged illegMl cMm· pa1gn practu.·cs tu .. "<i to the l!J76 Repubhcan primary campaign. The aJlecaUom came oµl 'ot a probe launched tn October tlY the state Attorney General's of· !ice. vote&. After the primary campaign, it was disclosed that Lucus was a one-time employe at Slem- ons' Newport Beach car de- alerhip. After winning the Republican nomination m the 74th, which ~tretches from Newport Beach to Oceanside, Slemons was de· feated. ln the general election by Democrat Ron Cordova. Mrs. Bergeson re.entered that general election campaign at the last minute and flDJahed third, polling 35,000 votes. She is seek ing the GOP nominaUon agwn this year in the 74tb D1st.rlct The allegations were listed 111 a press release made available Monday in the Sacramento of- fices of the State Fair Political Practlct•s Commission which w 111 hold hearings on tht! l'harges in March. Nl•1ther Slem- ons nor Butcher was availa- ble for comment lhis mornini.? Investigators allege that John R Young, co-chairman of Slcm· mons' successful campaign for the GOP nomination in the 74th Assembly District, gave Butcher $220 in cash to pay the filing fee of another candidate in the same race, Dale Scott Lucus The release further alleged that Slemons "knew of thf' cash payment and approved it." According to the news release, campa1~ disclosure laws were allegedly further violated because "the ·transaction was never disclosed by the Slem- ons campaign and Butcher never disclosed bis role as an in- termediary." Viejo 'Neophyte' Seeks Senate Seat Super Savers ~ W ASIUNGTON (AP) - United Airlines said today it will ask the Civi l Aeronautics Board to ap- pro\ e expansion of its dis- count Super Saver fares to all United routes longer than 900 miles for a 212- month period hcgmning March HI. The fares :ire 30 percent to 40 pcrcf.'nt lower than regular coach fares, dl'- pending on what day of the week the passenger travels. The fares would be available in each of the 110 cities United serves in the 48 U S. mainland states and in Canada. Honolulu would not be included. The FPPC release said n hear-. ing will be held sometime in March before the full com- mission with Administrative Law Judge Robert Meher pre- :siding. Lucus' role in the 1976 Republican primary has been <'ontroversial because Siem· ons' political opponents ~!aimed that Lucus only entered the race to bump Slemons' chief opponent, Marian Bergeson, out oC the bottom posi- tion on the ballot. Political strategists have long held that the top or bottom posl- llon on a ballot can mean more votes to a candidate Lucas, who never cam· paigned, got 2,034 votes. Mrs. Bergeson lost to Slemons by 2,393 Gregory Kuczynski. 31, a Mis· sion Viejo glass company owner, has announced his candidacy for the 36th State Senate seat held by Dennis Carpenter, R· Newport Beach. Kuczynski, a Democrat, said late Monday that he is a political neophyte. His only work toward political campaigns was for President Lyndon Johnson in 1968 when the Lake Forest rest· dent was a student at the University or Arizona. "I am a little unhappy with the way the situation is going with this county and this state." he said. "There ii too much gov- c r nm en t spending and in- terference ln our nves ... But Kuczynski, an Orange County resident of eight years, does support planned growth control in the Saddleback Valley through government control. The candidate, who says he weighs 100 pounds and ls five feet, one inch tall but "roars like a six-footer," said he is ·Gale Wimls Buff et Florida Yacht Race • launching a .. crass roots cam- paign" by picking up Democratic supporters "here and there." He said the campaign will be "the best I can afford and still Whole gait• winds Jnd bitter cold weather off ti.c west coabt of Florida made a virtual .shambles of the first race of the Southern Oc('an Racing Con ferencc (SORC), according to reports from Florida. The open· ing race was a 50 miler from St Petersburg to Boca Grande. ll started Saturday and did not finish until early Monday. Skip and Scott Allan, formeriy of Newport Beach, described the race as one of the most destruc- tive they had ever experienced. Both the brothers have crewed in m aJor yacht races all over the world. They are the sons of Robert M. Allan Jr. of Newport Beach and Pebble Beach. Jn a telephon(' conversation to- day with their father, the Allan brothers said six yachts suftered dismasting and a number of others had other major damage. They reported winds or 60 knoLc; and said crews had to wear ski clothing to keep warm. There were no reported in· juries. Skip Allan is crewing on a 28- f ool half-ton yacht Mercury owned by David Allen, San Francisco, whose previous boal, Imp, was the overall winner in last year's SORC. Scott Allan is <:rewing aboard Wildflower, a two tonner. Both yachts finished 'MAD' R4NNED JN ARGENTINA. BUE~OS AIRES. Argentina CAP> -The military JUnta or· dered the Argentine edition of Mad magazine removed from newsstands because of a satirical cartoon showing a . priest makln& h11J church lux- urious at the expense of poor parishioners. An official decree Monday· said the humor magazine's cur- rent issue, on sale here since Jan. 2, "presented an unfounded and malicious• appraisal of the priestly f unct.ion.'' ORANOI COAl'f l DAILY PILOT the race without mishap. The second race of the series, from St. Petersburg to Fort Lauderdale, considered the most rugged under most normal con- ditions, is scheduled to get under way Wednesday unless weather conditions worsen. Mesan Held InPaqcake Housel Holdup A Costa Mesa man was arrest- ed Monday night in Garden Grove and charged with robbing a pancake restaurant or $207. Police identified the suspect as Carl Ray Davis, 24, of 501 Hamilton St., Costa Mesa. They said two ofncers chased Davis about one-quarter mile on foot before capturing him and charging him with robbine the loternational House or Pan- cakes, 9741 Chapman Ave • Garden Grove. A~cording to police, money believed taken in the 8:20 p.m. holdup a few mmutes earlier was found stuffed into the sus- pecl's pockets. A cashier at the pancake house told police the man who robbed her of $207 first drank a cup of coffee, paid for the coffee and then returned to the cash register. There, he simulated a gun and demanded that the cashier give him "all the bills.'' the cubier told police. C:Ommittee Meets WASJUNGTON CAP) -The Senate Intelligence Committee recommended on Monday the confirmation of former am· bassador and Nixon administ.ra· tion aide Frank C. Carlucci as deputy director of tho CIA. Tho recomrneildatioo came after two days ot hearings on President Carte~s oominaUon. • Frowa P..,,e Al SACCO •.• conflict with the idea "beyond reasonable doubt.'' The papers also show that two early drafts of the commission· report which sealed Sacco and Vanzetti's fate are dated before the commission's investieatioo was complete. A first draft ls dated July 20, 1927. So ls a second draft. but in that case the date ls crdssed out and July 27 is substituted. July 27, 1927 is the date the report was submitted to the governor. Michael A. Musmanno, a lawyer involved in the Sacco- Vanzetti defense, and Robert A. Strauss Feuerlicht, a historian sympathetic to the two defen· dants, said defense arguments before the commission were not delivered until July 25, 1927. And Mrs. Feuerlicht has written that the hearings did not end until Ju· ly 21. Harley Holden, Harvard University archivist, said there is no explanation of the date in the papers. Thus, there is no way· to tell whether it was a sim· ple mistake or whether the drafts were being prepared before the hearings were over I',.... Page Al PAY ••• and occupational therapists, Dr. Crinella said. The hi&her wages would also apply to 250 additional positions propoaed by Governor Brown for Fairview. The Legi1lature has yet to &PJ>rove those .PG&ltions, part of a $27 million package for the 11 state bo.pitalJs. Currently, Falrvtew ts authorized 1.159 licensed po1l· tlons, Dr. CrineUa said. He said only 1'3 are filled by permanent licensed employes. Non-credentialed employees fill most ol the additional posi· tlons, \¥Ith 121 posts actually va· cant, he aaJd. • • make my house payments and feed my family." His family, which resides at 25402 Shoshone Drive, consists of hJs wife Kathleen and children Lisa. 5, and Neil, 16 months. Senator Carpenter announced in December that he will not run for re-election to his senate seat tbts year. f'ro91P-,geAJ SPIES ... and· advantage ' to the Viet· namese by furnishing mforma ti on touching on political. military and diplomatic rela- tions and intelligence assess men ts. The conspiracy count li~ted eight overt acts that detailed meetings and deliveries of docu· ments beginnlng April 19, 1m and eP<l.ing Dec. 23. The indict- ment said the conspiracy began sometime ln 1976. Another count charaed that in April 1977 Humphrey and Hung deltvered a number or docu· ments to Vietnamese agents, in- cluding a cable from the American consul in Hong Kong to the secretary of state marked secret; and cables to the secretary of state from U.S. em- bassies in Tokyo, Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur and Vientiane. marked confidential. Humphrey has been employed by USIA, a Slate Department agency smcc 1961 and his over seas tours of duty included one in South Vietnam in 1969-71. He is a fourth-level Foreign Service information officer. Hung, of Washington, was ad- mitted to the United States m 1964 and graduated from Stan- ford University with a bachelor's degree in economics and political science ln 1968. The Justice Department said he 1s employed at the Animal Health Institute in Washington and that he has applied for permanent resident alien status in this coun- try M ax1mum penalty upon con· _v1ction is life imprisonment. Woman Faces Murder Rap LOS ANGELES <AP) -The District Attorney's office filed a formal murder charee today against a coed at Cal State Northridge in the death of her 31-year-old college tennis coach. Carol Welch. spokesman for the District Attorney's office. said Lori Andersen, 21, of Granada fills, was to be ar- raigned today at Municipal Court in Burbank. Miss Andersen reportedly led Burbank police to the body of Susan Hyde on Friday. The women's tennJs team coach had been burled In a shallow grave in Sylmar. officers said. Doing tlae Can-Can I Clare Ritter, knoY. n arnund St. Petersburg, Fla., as the aluminum can lady, pedals her bicycle in search of more cans. She earns her living collecting the cans. CM Water District Soon 'Consolidated' It may not be the Costa Mesa County Water District much "longer. The district's five-man board of directors 1s initialing u name change to ''Mesa Consolidated Water District." The switch could become effective Jan. 1, 1979. District General Manager Ed Schnabel said today the district will rely on the Association of California Water agencies to carry the proposal to the state Legislature. Legislative action is required because the district was formed by a special act of legislation in 1960. The primary reason behind the new name plan is to end con- fusion over the district's non· existent ties to both the city and county. Schabel said the switch to ''Mesa Consolidated" could cost less than $500 because the time lapse until next January would allow the district to use up sta- tionary and other documents bearing the old Costa Mesa County logo. Schnabel also predicted no financial impacts from switching decals on district vehicles. The decals are generally replaced at least once a year due to normal wear and tear Before unanimously approv- ing the new name last Thurs- day, directors considered "'Fairview" or "Estancia" as new titles that would renect the historical aspect of the area. However, "Mesa Consolidat- ed" was the winner. It refers to 1960 when the district was formed. Four water agencies were consolidated under the Costa Mesa County Waler Dis· tnC'l banner at that time. Schabel said he expected th<' name change to come befor~ h.•J!islators in about 30 days. Fro.PageAJ CLEAR ... OCC began· measuring rainfall Jn 1955. The 24-hour total was .12. hrmging the mottth's ralnlall to 9 23 10ches and the season's to 13.37 inches compared to 6.16 last • year, hesaid The Orange County Harbor Patrol in Newport Beach report- ed rec~iving .11 inches, for a season total of 11.61 inches, up from 6.04 inches last year. At the Moulton Niguel Treat- ment Plant in Laguna Niguel. the 1;um was .17 inches. bringing the season measure to 14.17 in- c hes. more than twice last year's 5 89 inches. Bill Shields at Laguna Beach Hardware meJ&sured .08 inches. for a total of 11.69 inches. Last year's sum was 9.14 inches. Rainwatcher J. Sherman Den· ny of Huntington Beach reported .1 inches. for a season total of 13.15 inches, up from 9.47 inches last year LNG Chiefs Blast Report YES, the Answer For Roman Feast WASlllNGTON <AP> -Ex· ccull\"es of the natural gas· in- dustry charged Monday that a dra(t report by the General Ac- countinl! Office seriouslv ex- aggerates the dangers of transporting and storing eas as a super·cold liquid. George H. Lawrence, presi· dent of the American Gas As· ... ociation, told a news con- ff!rence the GAO report ln its present draft is "misleading" and "seems to ignore the safety record over the past several de- cades." Harbor Area residents will have the opportunity to benefit the Youth Employment Sel'Vice and eat aU the spaghetti they can hold Feb. 9 when YES holds its annual fundralsing dinner Irvine Forum A copy of the draft report's conclusions, obtained by the As- sociated Press. claims that I• quefied natural gas poses the· threat of catastrophic fires an'1 ,explosions, which could hf• causf'd either hv art-ldents or fl\ .sabot<JRC. . March Assailed WASHINGTON (AP> -Presi- dent Carter sald Monday he deplores plans of Chicago Nazis to march wllh swastika armbandS in the Ptedomtnanlly Jewish .sub~ of SkokJe, JU . US YECAS UFE 'UKE ANfWHERF large poon- 1am6lln1. r stnrul en· mto th ma- r l ~, -.. ... . . Tu.day Janua~ 31 1978 CAIL Y PTLOT _.t3 rtion 'Attenipt Detailed by Nurse By 1'0~ KAKU:\ Of -o.u, P'ti.c Sufi A prObt!t:utwn w1tnes'i tl'-;t1hed late Monday that tht! tJaby al Jegedly stranKlt"d tu death by Dr. Wilham Uaxt~r Waddill was alive and breathing at the.• Lime he was informed that the planned abort111n had misfired. R~g1sten•d nur'ie l'<ll Olvera ;,u EXECUTIVE SUCCUMBS Wellwood Beall 71 Last Rites Slated for W. E. Beall Fu n l" 1 .1 I s 1• 1 1 1 < 1 ' ;1 r ,. . hcdull•<I 'l'hmsdu\ 111 " ... .,.,port Ht•ath fo1 11•t111•d .1t·rr1s1n11·1· I' n g I n l' I' I a n ti •• \ t· (' u t 1 I I' Well\\uotl E U1·.ill , 71, ,,f La..iuna ll11Js .,., ho pl.1} l'd nrn111r rolt>s in tlw dt·H·loµrncnt of th1· B 17 Fl~ mg Fort 1 c~" :1 nd B ~I .Superfortre ... s of World War II B c.> a II d 1 t' d S" turd a ' 11 f pneumonia m a Santa M;mu .1 • hospital follm\mg .. u1gr•1\ \\\11 \\ f't•k !> Jgn I h• rd111•tl fr11m \I d>onnl•ll Pougl.1~ ('mp .11!1 •1 t·1J_!ht )Cars .1 ... a !'i .. 11w1 ,.,,.,.ut111 rnt•mhc•r rtf 1h1• lio.11d 1·11q1111.1lc• 111 t' pn• 'llknt clllll l '\t'\'lllll I ' \It l' pre•" 'll-nt ol 1>011gl.1 ... A11 < r • .rt l 'orn pan\ cl1'>1.,11111 \\lll'r" tw \\nrk1·d upon rl'l1n·nwnt lfr;dl IOlllt'<l 111111~1.ts in 1!.H~I after spc•nitin~ .In) 1·;1r' "1th lhl· Tlol'lll)! Comparn While· ~ti h l>ouglas, he "'•ts 111\ oh·ed with the l>C 8, DC 9. und DC 10 II<' Joined Doe1ng <Js Far E<Jstern manager in I 934 an<l was responsihll' for selling Lhf' company's f1~hll•r and transport .urcrafl to lht• Chinei;e govern- ment. In 19:16 lw ht·t•anw t•h1cf com nwn·1<il prn1eC'lS t•ngine<>r and heaclc•d all 1ks1~n \H>rk on Hr)(' mg c•nmmt>1 ('1al tr;insports, in e l11t1111l! lh" f.trn1111" < 'lipp1•r fh 1111! b11,1t.. hillt1\\111~ \\odd \\,11 II llt' "·"' 111\ 11h1·rl 111 ""' l'lopmt•nl 111 I h•• Be11·1n1-• I\ i.! I h•· nation s l'llll'f ..,tralt'g'I• llomlwr of tocla\, 4h1• KC' !fl .ind !-;(' 1.1:-, lankPrs. lh<' Ht1<'llll-! 711i f1r<;t l' S Jet in l om m1·r<'tal "'r' 1111• and th(• Boc1n~ 727 Tnt<'I Beall wa!> born in C'anon Citv Colo . atlt'odcd th<> University of Colorado and first moved to Califormn in 1929 as an engineer with a Pasad(>na asrC'raft com pany. He leaves a wife Martha Laguna Hills: a son , Alan of Honolulu; a daughter Barbara Beall Cope of Newport Beach brothers .Thornton of W alnul Creek and Gordon or M ora~a and five grandchildren ' Sen recs are c;t•heduled for I I a m Thur~cta~ at the Pac1f1r \' r<' '' J\f" mo r i .1 I P .1 r k and M11rtu.1n. ;'l;M\port Bl'a<'h ll)ld <lh Orangl' l ounty Supt•nor C'ourt Jury that the infant born last March 2 in Westmrnster Coromuruty Hospital had a ..tow 4tnd irregular heaart bent and could only br~alhe in gasps. Dut she repeatedly assured prosecutor kobert Chatterton that she detected signs or hfe in Victims Cry Out For Help WASHINGTON IAPt "I have had glas:.es thrown al me.· \\rote the abused wift• who .,aid "hr v. ('nl to the polln for lll·lp 'I have \J1.•(•n k1<"k•·d in lhl' ali rlona•n \\ ht•n I "a:-. \ 1~1bl) pr t•g 11.1nt " ;rnd . .;ht· s11ul!t1t hc•lp frnrn h1·1 Pi.l'tor · I hll\ 1• 111•1·11 ""hll>J>l'cl k1t•kt·rJ ~ind lhr<J\\n 111d•t·'1 up ant.I \hr<m n 1101.1. n :J~ain, and 'iht• .1~kl•d hdp from h1.•1 d111'lm, I rit•nt.1!'. anti ... counst•lor Tht' battered .,.,. ire, a wh1t1· m1ddlC'-class woman with thn.~· ('hlld rcn and ~ professional husband, wa~ writing to Marta St•govia t\shlC), v. hn ~('l up ,1 t•enter lor hattt:rctl v. n t•.:--in San Franc1Sl'O "E,er~om· 1 ha\P gom· lo for hPlp Oi.t" ~nrnt•ho\o\ ";rntl'd 111 hlame ml' <1nd '1nd1cal1· "'' hushand I know th<st l h,111• to gc·I 11ut but \\ hc•n \ 011 h;n l' 1111 \\ hl•n• lo~., '"" kn;>v. th.11 )fill J.:O Oil \Our O\\n .ind \\Ith 1111 "IJJI port '' tht• 1\orn;111 \\ r<1l1· 11 t•r lt'llt•r w a.., pt c.·-.c.•nll'lf 111 ;1 paper tod:.n for the first 11at10n.1I ronft>rencc on lwlll·n·d wonwn hl•ld b\. thl• l S Comm1s.,Hm on ('1v1l Rights It "a:-. «alll'd lo l"< "rn Ull' n•searl'h on \\ lfl' hl':tllnJ.! .ind its perµctrator~. on la"'' prot('l'llng ballt'r NI .,., l\ t's 11nd their t>nfon:cmcnt dOd tin tht• need for "hurt and long tt•rrn 'l'I '11·es tor tht· \\Olllt•n In ;in artil'lt• l'orn1ng out rw-ct month. Dr Su1amw K Sll'tn m1.•l1 nf the· l n1\'Pr'ill\ 11( l>el.1 \\,If•• .... 11' '>f'\ e•n 111•rc•t•11I ol the• 1·11unlr~ ... Ii rmll1on '>\l\t'' .1ri: \•1d1m-. ol '"''''f<' ph'"'' .d ,1hw,1· h.\ th1•11 hw.h:ind-. Tlw arl1clP .,., ill aprw:11 111 ,, Ill'\\ 1ournal 1 ,1llPd \ 11 l1nJ1>lng~ ... wh1!'h 1.~ pulill!>herl 1n \\ .i., h 1ngl11n :\l 1ss t\shf<·}. who in duded th!' ll'llcr from th(' batterl'd w1fl.' in h('r prepared address. said tht• \\Oman has summan7.ed the in ddequacy of all ex1slm J! s1X·1al service agencies. She said there are manv reasons a woman remains with a violt'nl man who has beaten her and probably will b(>at her a~ain Economic ne<'e.,sstv :'li11 "hert> to go Fear Dept>ncknr\ Children " -.he ~:11d. keep the• \\om" 11 n11 r .. d 111 the ;1 h11"1• ,rnd dr•.,111 Rifle Fired In Robbery Just to make sure he was get ting his message 11cross, a ban dil fired three shots jnto the ce1l ing of a Buena Park motel before making off with $350 Monday night. Police said the robber wanted to convince a clerk at the Farm de Ville Mote l, 7800 Crescent Ave Buena Park. that he "meant business" when he fired three bullets from a nfle Convinced. the derk yielded S350 to the gunman and agreed to remam ·•quiet'' while the rob her made hrs gelawa~ from th<' 9 30 p m rnbbt'ry ::;tene Musician Dead -. . Heroin, £ocains Diactmered the 28 wt"ek fetus and she r~· fused to amc.·nd that statement undt>r heav)' defl'nse queshon · in.:. Dr. Wadd11l's two lawyers saJd thcv intc:nd to prove that there was no hve birth involved in the dehvt'ry of the fetus and that murder "harges against the lluntll\gton Harbour phys1l'lah :-hould be d1sm1ssed. \1rs Olvera tesllhed thal she· went lo the room of the unwed, 18 year old mother last March 2 bd1evmg that the patient wa~ about to delt v~r JJ fetus that had been aborted by the USt! Of a saline injection lnslt!ad, !>he said, :-.he found '>lihat she believed to be a live baby girl She said the baby moved. gave what the witness described as a .. weak whine'' and tried to breathe. The witness testified that sht' immediately removed the child to the nursery where hospital "taff ht•gun n· ... u:-.<'1tal10n efforts in a bid to aid the a1hng infant. II Is nllegt•d that Dr Waddjll ha ltcd thosl' dforb and then st•nt the hosp1tul staff from the nurserv while ht! strangled lbe unwanted baby to death A coroners autopsy led lo the finding that lhe child died as a result of manual strangulation. Store Owner Slain ' f ---------------- .. t Bird and His Friend~ ll,111\ l'tlCJI pl111lugr ;q1ht•1 H11 h.ird h<whlr·t 111111.; t11 ., t:11J11I~ t11 tht· h1-.1d1 S1111d~I\ ~111d , '' luli· pl.1' 111µ 111 thl' p,11 k 111·.11 th1· Hall111.i P1t•1 Kl·t 1'1t• l\01.•hler :1, <ind lw1 111 otlwr. Todd :1. Ii.id a < lo~e <·m·111inlt·1 "II h I hi:- fr i"11dl.' ("Io\\ ]t \\ ,1:-.11 '! dl•;1r to photo f.:' aplw1 K1whlc·1 \\ h~11 the hint '' d" ~·" ing h111 hl'I t 11• ~1pp.11 <·r1tl: l111111)!111 ti \\a., " p1·l'lt \ J..!tlC>d 111h.l· Hearing Set on Oustin~ I' h •' I ) I .1 II g 1 (' 0 ll n I \ Ir .in .. p11rt.1l1rin ('11mrn1.,.,1•1n ha., 111·1·11 111d1•rt·d lo ... hn\\ t clll"t ;1: (t \I ,111 ·h Ill l11·anni.: v. h' Carol H1 •11.,11n llw c omm1 ... .,1011 ., ou..i 1•d ''"'' 1111\1• d111•l'l11r :-.hfluld not he• I l'10sl.1tl'd Or.1nge l'ount~ '>upt'nnr I 'nurt .I lldgt.• llarn11111 ~e'O\ dlt· rirdt•n·d lhl' h(•;fflOj.! 111 ri·o;prinsc• to <i s111I flll'd Monet tty hy M ri:; Jh•nson St·ov11J(' t'arlil'r had dPrnPrl h<'r r1•ques1 for l1 prellminar) in 111ncllon blocking the d1sm1s ... al · In her suit. Mrs fit•nson al lcges that the comm1ss1on s rules \\Cre violated because her dis m 1ssal Ol'curred at a specs al meeting She also tuntends thal none of Lh<• reasons g1 H'O for hE'r c1ism1ss al \\('re ~upportPd t" f:tC'h . Jn adtl11111n lo :1 rulrni.: th.ii th1• cli s ms~~al "'-'" 1m111opcr \lr., llt•n!>on I" .1 ... l\1ni.: ttw court In ·•" ar d lwr ,l!l'nt'ral .md ... p,.1•1;il cl.1m.ig1•s fc11 th•• l'ffC'd of thl' d1 ' rn1ss:.il on her n·p11lat1on After her Nm I d1.,m1:-. .. al th1• ,. o m m 1s"1 on h 1 r" ti Thom .1 ... ,lt•nkrns. former plc1n11in~ rlnec· tor for the Orang1• C'ounh Transit D1<dr1c·t for thP $32,000 a year 1>xrrut1ve director post Union Talks Stalled; No Voting Due Raq~aimng and negoltat1ons hetween the lnl('rnallonal A., ... or1at111n of \1ach1n1sts anrl ~ l' 0 ti n n c I I · D o u .I! I a s Astronautics Company in Hunt 1nglon Bea('h remained at a st andRlill toda~, pend in~ further union study. The 1AM membership includ· ing 1,450 employees amon1 the west county aerospace facUlty's work force of about 5,000 voted by an ~tremely narrow m,_rgin Saturday to reject a contract of- fer. Spake.man Tony Leima of the JAM aafd followin1 the Sl.6 per· cent reJtdlon vote. cond•cted at four locaUons in Los Anceles over th~ weekend, that officials 6uld mfft aealn -to think th~ situat1on out. 'Orange Rams' Get Supervisor's Vote l r I. n ., \ n g I' I t'., ('II u n I \ .Supt•n 1sor t\1•nn1•th ll;ihn v..;.ints to know ""'ho <f go Sl't' lht• \ni1hc·1m Ham..., or lht• Orangt· Ham ... · lt•t him .1s k Orangt• ('1111nty SllJK'f\ 1sor Ralph <'lark Foot hall (Jn-. \\.OU Id 1111 c• 10 .,,., llw H<Jm ... 111 Or,ing<• <nun t 1 <'lark rc .... pond1•cl \1onday lo rPmarb ll;1hn mad'· last "<'Pk .ihoul lht• Ham., po ... .,1hl1· mo\<c to An.1h1•1m '"fh1•n· an· JO million peoph• 11\ln~ v..1th1n 40 tn1nu\1•s of Anaheim St;idwm." said (.'lark. ;rn Anaheim resuJcnt and tht• nt' 's former mayor ··People seem lo forget that Orange County is one of the na tion s maJOr urban population center:-., he continued Resides, <~lark ronlended. Hahn', r<'lerPm·e to u l'hange m tlw Ham., n<iml' "1s rcallv a ht Ac; ,, a trip to lhP B1q City ''" 1 P•c•lt>nwnr enouqh I h;id to P•Ck the 11mp ot thP b1q snow' I arrived in New York thf' clay alter lheir heavy snowlall that was a thghr that usually takes about l ive hount and ended up using the better part ol two days and an un- p tanned 011ern19ht stop 1n Washington. o.c The weekend was to be strictly social anyway and I managed to drop oft my lug- gage and get to the theater about the middle of the firs1 act. The play was Nell Simon ., Chapter Two which I Qrn!ly en1oyed My host h11d planned lhe theater party tor thf' women guests while the men altenc:led the 24 Karat Club annual ban quet Betng a private club and memberwup by 1nv1tat1on only, the male exc1us1v11y has b~en preserved and 1s probably the last bastton being held agamst the females of the Industry Personally, even given my Choice. I would h..,. picked the plll)I ovflf the t>anquet enter• tatruneot Wh1Ch thll year wH Alan King. Aft., th9 P'tY Wft lolned ttt• oenttemen ct the Waldorf '°' partlH hotted by the major finn In ditfentnt .ult• or ttw hotel. It i. 1 good time to grMt .old fflendl Ind meet new 1>90- P'• who PNMt mutual lnt•..t• The iNlll'Y lndustl'y la • ,.... t1t1vely amalf one and after u many ~ • I have been ac- tive In thll bUll 1 I find I t It· off base · Thf> Lo:-. \ nl?l•lt•" l.ak 1•rs pl:i~ in I ngle .... ood ;rnd the Dalla!' (.'o.,., hn;.s pl;a\ rn In 1ni.:. Tt"1:as. ('I ark notl'd In ,1cld1t u111 . fl•· 1·on1 ir1uNI, Or a n g,. <' o u n t ' .ii n• ad \ h ;1 s "ho~ n 11 1·an ... upport m,q111 l1•JJ.!Ut' team:.. 1nrl11d1ng th1• < alllorntct i\ng1•h \naht>rm <>range World Team Tr·nna!> an1I lhl' Cahfrn r\Ja ~.urf "IH'ter team Talks Productive LOS ANG~LES (AP> -Go\. Edmund G lirown Jr. and a spokesman for a v1s1tlng delega- tion of Soviet offio1al!. expres~t'd what they descnbed as a pro ductl\le meetin~ to discuss tradr and the progn•.,s or .1rms llm1ta tson~ l<ilk., ~) EiEM WISE Two Roh Jewelry Seller llu11t111gt11n ll.11 hour re..,1dertl \\cl~ IH' <:111111. 11 rllt•tl '.\1onday lrom g11nshol \\oUn<h he suf l"t•rt•d !luring •I holdup al his Seal lh>ad1 Jl'"'t'lt ~ .. tori· h) l\\o han 1lil s \\ho .1r1 ... 1111 ,11 l,11g1', poltC(' ~.11d I 111 ··~t11.~at11r., s;11d t v. omen E'n- t t' r "d I h 1• l.1· .., 11 rt• W or Id J1'"'l'ln., "hop, l'.19:!t) St'al Beach Hh 1! , .tt 2 15 p m .ind attempt· t•tl to r CllJ 1:01111 .1ncf h1'i .... ,re. IL11 h,11 a W1tm·-.-.t•., :-.aid lhl'\ hl·ard four !->hots i\s tht:• l\\O hand1t" bolted from lht• '>hop In ;i parkt>d \PllO\\ St>t1an, on11 of tht•m thrPatened a w111ws~ v.hn had t'ml·rged from a lll',I rll\ rlt> .... l'f shop lo .,E'l' ~hat hac1 h.1pr1t•m•d Gnlln l'1111ld lw s1 ·t·n h 1ng In a pnol of IJl11od bl1•c·dltll! prufu~t-h fr cim app;u·<.·nl h1·.1d \\ 1111nrb. 'w\ 1l1lt"•Sl'S S;Jttf A small h.11H.IJ,!1111 t •>llid .ii.,o rw st•t•n lvmg 1111 tilt' f111nr nl·xt tn <: o I 1 n ... hrnh \I r ., <; 11 l in ran s<'rt'<1n11ni.: ir11111 th1• .,hop hl'for•· poh1·1• :il'fl\ l'cl "1tnt•.,•1•., t'tld. (,ol1n wa ... 111 .,hc·rl 10 Lo., \ I a rn 1t11 s <; 1•111· r ,, I 11 o" p 1 la I \\ ht•rt• ht• d11·tl ;11 I 16 p m . <ha ngl' 1'1111111 \. l 'ornrwr ., of IH·1at... 'a"I S 1· :i I B" ;11· h p 11 I 1 re ~gt \'1q~1111.1 Blad ... ;wJ the amounr o( loot t.Jkl'll in the r11hh1•n " not kr11m11 .1l lh1-.11mc· · l'olll t' ._,1111 !ht• J,!l'to\\ ,I\' \Phi 1 11• "h11'11 li11r1• '\ t•\\ Y•irlc 111 1•11s1• p l.111·., ",,., lJ .,, '1>1·n nor t h Ii 1111 n ti 1111 '-\•'.ti Hf' <H' h llou II'\ ,1ril 1'11111 I' "'·"" lht•\ 111'111·\ (' th1· Jt'\\t•ll \ -.11111· t..111d1h lllil\ lw t\\11 Ill lilt' thr1•1• J.!llllnll'O \ .. ho lwld lll' ,1 p.11r of rnarkcts in \\ , .... t m111 ... t l'r anti F'ounla1n \. .Jiit'} Sar11nl.1) '\'11 0111· ~a.; hurt 1 n I h11s1• hold 11 II" 'I ht• Su"IJll'l'I " Ill al I thrPP holdups ""' .. rt•por!Nllv using <in 11lcler <,t•<lan "1th out 1,f ~latl' IH•t•nsc plait'' Tht· l!U1111Wn ell I' lwl11•\ t>rl tn hf! If\ lhf'I r 211 S Funrr.11 -;1•n1<·1•<; fnr 1;11hn ;irr 1wnrl1ng Iha f r.1nlll1n f"JIOlhPrs n 1ne1r 10,,,elv nomP on F 11ln Avenue 011Nlook11111 lhP par1< a vr>ry wh•ll' CPnhal Park "'•th fhP f0if'1'i !.loll C:IO<;P<I by all that c;now Th" Fnnkl1ns havP hPlped me qather lhl' nice 1ade collec11011 wruch we have in our store over the years Thi': past week has been spcn1 shopp1nq tor customers· special requ~ts and hunting down rt>placements for their lost treasures (The most d1f· ticurr ot lhesP is locatrng sources 01 hall patrs ot ear- nnqs out 11 is less ex· pens1vA than hanomaking a mAtch I I truly <lo work during office hours 1ust 1n case you wPre lh1nk1ng lh1s tr•p was all socializing I d1c:I tallf! the weekend ott tor a family ouling 1n Ma•ne wnerP. I v1s1tec:I my daughter Ginny and ner husband •n lhe•r n1>w no me ~onday through Fro<Jay this week I am work1no wilt\ a com· m1ttee ot tour oth8f 1ewe1ers on the planning and preliminary selections tor our Chrtstmas book We gee maoufacturers and 1mparters on a schedule of halt hour &pp01ntments lrom I a.m 10 8 p m NCh day (w1t1'1 I lunch N"1 1n) It 15 a ve,Y 'treouous ~ule but the on· ty way we teel we can realty 1 cover th9 ~et tor oursel"9S and the Sixty ott'l8' J91Mllert ecroa the country who use out book et Christmastime It doet ...m Nfly to be working on Ctwatmas bUt to be effect1v1 •ft th• 1ewelry bWIMSS we mutt pten theed to kMP ahMd. hav• l7\ll'Y wondlftul friend8 frotn all &Al th• «>untry who .,. 'tllO lrwllfef 10 '""" tradl•' ....... CHARLES H. BARR tlonat glltNlttng. ~A,. you QIB't· That thought brinos anothaf to mind . . 1 d Ilk• to t•• th1t opportun11) to thank all of our wond9t'lut cUltomert for mP::· ino 1tn 1UCt1 a ten111t1c Y'er ror c~ H. Barr ..,...a.,. We ho the Y'lllf .tlMid WIU be as or• t0t you and that wt may continue to uae our t""9\ll and captlblhti. le> ~ tino '"' I on that 1 rHlly -"!:, m Attl ateh COmpanr. ll ¥fH t ut VJ ,tiUff °llfl .. 8QC1on. I DAILY J'!l.01 NATION I WORLD Palestine Cited as Peace Block TllE I.OST SOlll.: Wht•n th~ i::reat m111cb uf our govt•rrimcnt gathl r tht:!>l' day-. to d1:-.cuss what taxes !>h;ill be lt•vied upon the populacc, you have to wonder 1f thev ewr think about ~ood old Thadd1us T Tattered Not ltkttly. Mo:-.t rct·t•ntly, tht• gu\ crnmcnt peopll' have hct•n hluliht:nng 111 their cQmg to\\cb and wringing :.weal\· hands OH·r a Junl' ballot meas"ure calll•d the Jarvi ... Amendml'nt If µassl>tl , this htl11· nwusuri> would '' h:H•k dow 11 pro1wrt;:. tax t•s statewide by Pl rhap., mon• th.in !°>0 J)t'n·ent Orani::1• t"ount) Tax C'olkctor !lob <.'1lrnn 1-.suc•d a stud\ cmh 'c·-.terd<.1\ :-.uggcstmg that ou·r r£>J:?1on s 111 top property tax- pa) t>rs \\ould s.nt· mavht· mon· than $-IO m1ll1on 1f ltll' Jarn:-. ·\mendmcnt 1s adoplt•d in June Thest' sa,•crs would tnC'lude '.'>lH'h nobll' inst1lut1ons a'.'> P<ll'1f11 Telephonl' the lr\"inc Com pan)'. the Edison Compuny. Cnion 011, Standard 011 and otht•r b1~gies of privatt• t•nh'rpn-.1• NOTING TIUS. you might he left with the 1mpre:-.s1on that on ly the rich will inherit the tax break Thuc; 11 1c; that ~o far. nobody has c·nnw up w 1th ,1 .Jan·1~ tax c·ut chart for good cild Thadd1u'> T Tattl'red. And this 1nd(·ed may br. bPcau!>e nohody g1Hs old Thad murh thought 1n th<' mighty '>tall' hall ... T .1 t ll•n·d 1:-.1 door to door en· C'\ t"lnp\'d1,1 .. all'"nl:.tn 111· ., prt•t t y good at 1t lit' s h<•<'n peddling I hos(' boob for the past 19 nar<; on P\ ery front port•h from Seal !lt'.trh to San l 'l<·m€'ntC' LISTEN. OLD Th~1c1 ht'tlc•r he pretty good at 11 Ill··., making paymPnts on a thret· bedroom \osta Mt>~a honw lns1rl<' that plaC'l'. h<'"c; i::ot lhrre kids, N1ch om' Y.1lh a ::.terco, two cat::,, ont.• do~ and lY.o TV '-tls, one broken. lie ubo has ont.· wile. whom he "<'e's :-.omd1me:-. \\hen she isn't work1nJ,! part llm1• clo .... n at th<· .,hoe slort• ~o cverv dawn, Tattc•red loads up the bat·k of h1'> l1red old '67 l'h mouth :-tataon w. agon w1lh en· 1 'lorwd1a !'>am pit's 1rnd h1l!> the ro<.1d. praying his ha I ding tire:. hold up unul h1• can peddle a coupk of mor<' hook S<·ts to thl• lilt'rall· populat•1• 0'1( t. \\'EAR, ·r altt•r<•d gets that wnndt>rful property tax hill for lf't s sa\ SI .ROO of the Tat fl'red f.imily s <':lrnings from t•n· <'.\ lop<'c11:1s and '.'>hoc•s Tatten'd do<•sn l o;ay much. Ills e~e-. ma~ 1.wt damp lie might gripe to his nc>tJ::hhor or k1l'k the !lo~ But he pays. N 0 w l" 0 m (' s I h I s J a r \' I !> A mendmrnt '' h1ch th<'Y say rould cut his tax hill from $1,800 to ma1>h<' 111st $900 THAT ISVT BIG hke Pacific TPIC'phonr or lr\'lnt' or Standard Oil But lo Thadd1u:-. T Tattered, 11 m 1J:ht look like br:ttl's for the 12 year-old':. lt•l'th, or that nev. ~ofa for th1• wife or a SC't of .1'"1restoni•s for lhe old Plymouth Thac:td1us T . TatlNcd. of course. isn't a real person. Rut hr may he wh<'n th~ polls ·open m June' l"A I HO. l-:gypt I A I'> Presa dent Anwar Sadat declared lo da) the issue of Palestinian seJl- determinat1on remains the ma· JOr obstacle in the way of peace "1th Israel and said "u heavy .111<1 d1ffitult Job" lies ahead ·wl' must hnd a way or every thing will <'Ollapse." the Egyp tian president said Just hours hl•fore the resumption of Egyp t1;cin Israeli m1li~ary talks on an 1-.ra t' Ii w1thdra wal from thl' S1n a1 Pen1nsula SADAT MADE HIS remarks .1fler mt?eting with a peace del- t•galurn of American Jews and l'hr1!>llans led b) Rabbi Jos~ph H Ehr~nkrani of Stamford. Conn. Earlier in the day. Foreign Mlnl!>ler Mohamed Kamel refused to itccept an lsraeli·American draft of prln c1ples for peace "There are many points on Y:h1ch we don't see eye to eye.' Kamel said after dlscusinng the draft. whil'h C'OUld lead to an Arab Israeli peaC'e treaty, with l r S Assi&tant Serretary of State Alfred Atherton Despite his disagreement with some of the Israeli points, Kamel said Egypt is willing to ··continue these negotiations, Tobacco Industry Regulation Asked NEW YORK <APl The National Comm1ss1on on Smoking and Public Polley called tooay ror government reeulation of the tobac <.'O industry as a key part or a broad new program to reduce cigarette smoking It said its primary goal 1s lo cut the loll of "more than 320,000 de- aths annually related lo 1·1garette smoking " E:-.tablished by the American l'ancer Society, the Comm1si;ion declared the tobaC'<:o industry was "virtually unregulated" and "unaccountable to any depart ment or agency of government for the content of its products. or the health consequences or their use .. IT SUGGESTED THE Food and Drug Administration or Consumer Product Safety Com· mission should "hold the in- dustry accountable for the safe· ly of its product." The federal government has done little except to warn of health hazards m smoking. and "the failure of the executive and I e g 1 s I a t i ,. c b r a n c h e s t o s;Jft•guard th£• public inll"rl'M and public health could he dl'~cr1bcd as u national dis graC'('," 1t sa1<1 William Klopepf<.·r .Jr st>nior '1t•t-pres1dl:.'nt of the Tobacco Institute. said the comm1::.!>1on's suggl·stlon "1nd1t·ates tht· ig noran<'<' of the Am<'rican CancC'r !"! o l' 1 t• t v o \ l' r l he fa c l l hat ('1ga n·ttec; <ire the most he<J\ ii} r1•gulated produ ct on the markl·t .. "NO OTllER PRODUCT is forbidden to advertise on television and forced to carry a health warning on every pack and in every advertisement," he said "The Cancer Society has used a group of distinguished citizens to parrot its views, which con· stitute an insult to the public in telligence and an apparent re· gard for the public as having a child-like mentality," Klopepfer said. Com m1ss1on rec om menda- llons presented to the Society's board of directors included· -PHASE OUT OVER 10 years the present tobacco price sup- port :-.ystcm Set up a C'abmel level Com m1lll'e on Cigarette Smoking and the I le al th Status of the Na t1on That the F'DA study poten t1ally harmful add1t1ves being used in many newer brands of t' I~ a rl'ttcs The rl'commendal1ons were h<ist>d partly on testimony from mon• than 300 ('1l1tens from all 50 slates during eight regional forum meetings last year Teen Sex,Pregnancy Increasing-Study NEW YORK IAP > -A survey shows that the percentage of white teen age girls having premantal intercourse and getting pregnant increased by one third over a hve·year period The new figures indicate that 37 2 percent of white teenage girls between 15 and 19 years of age in 1976 had engaged in premarital sex and that about a tenth of them got pregnant A similar survey an 1971 showed that 26 3 percent of the 121rls in that category had pre marital S<'X and that a little O\'er 6 percent or them got pregnant THE RESEARCHERS noted that the pregnancy increa&e roughlv paralleled the 1ncrea&e 111 the percentage of gir'6 ex· per1encing premarital sex despite other reports of "1m· pressive improvement in con· lracepllve use .. "Why this improvement did not result m a pregnancy decline requires more detailed analysi5," they said. But it found that the propor· lion of rirsl pregnancaes term mated b) abortion among both white and black girls almost doubled from 1971 to 1976 -from '17 7 percent to 30 6 per cent T HE STUDY, DIRECTED by soc1olog1&ts Melvin Zelmk and .John Kantner of Johns Hopkms University, was published Mon- day 1n Family Planning Perspectives, the journal of the Alan Guttmacher lnstitute. an affiliate of Planned Parenthood. The 1976 study was based on 2.193 mter\"lews nationwide and the 1971 study on 4.392 The percentage of black teen· ag,e girls between 15 and 19 hav· ing had premarital intercourse was 64 3 percent m 1976 com· pared to 54 1 percent in 1971, the report said Showers Hit Gulf States Florida Panhandle Posts Travel Adviloriea T~peratur.-• Tiit llQllt f•lll wllidl Ith .. rliet to-• .. ., •lld -· .. ~ ... <•..,.., HI L• Pre 9\' I flow ti WOlt#IUI llt INVlllQ AINny 71 • 4M1t Of U. PllClflc wnl<Ao It en lb wo Albu'Qu• w. ,. ,. ,. Ort11011. fore<Hten Wld p.,11., Amerlll<> )() ,, CleudY 1•1• l/loulel ,re11•ll IOlllOllt, Anchor•~ \0 u wltll 911ly e 10 119fCtllt CllllN:e ef A~vllle l\ ,. mHMlf'tble re!fllall. Allen•• " n Tem"rehw• wlll remain n111• .. lllmou l) u wllll llltht In tM low to ml., ... •• .,,,.,Ck IO·U WeutllW ...... f ~k ., JO Tlltro wtll.,. ""'°* flf -.. '°' aetton " ,. In~ '--.i wallen 4lft4I Ill._ •llfftlo 10 10 14 mo1111telnt llnuOll ~. Clltrlsln SC '° ,. MIOll l~Mlll'ft will lie In tlle CMrlltnWV i> H 01 __., '°' .. ~ hi \lie ....., Cloltt90 u • °' MtH wltl\. ewt ...... ti C$. In CltlCIMaU It " 02 .... !fie meuntll!N, ltflo\llttlltlll'tt wll1 Ctwel.n41 11 2 === rehet fNfft 4t te i$ wltll • .,."'"'" 0.l·l"t,Wtl\ u n .01 imifi .,...,._., O•t~ ................ 0.-r M :it --.... , .......... wll Hl(I\ • llllfl .. U. O..Mol"" 11 -4 OS O.troU ,, • • 01 Mllw.ul!• 1t s .et c: ... c.t lt'e11Claer O"'llfll .. , ~al'1M11'111 " 4 Mpl.-st, l". .. .. .Ot M«tforel tt • ..... on_ 41 .. ... MMtly <IOUI\< Yftlll CNMt Clf IC ... ...... " ' N••YOftl .. '* ..,...,,......_... MOM!ulu . , .. 0-lt CltY " " Lltllt Yllf'llMt wl!Wt 11ltflt end H-tff q. " Om Mt 20 " .ot m4"'nl1tt ......_ Kltfll ~' 111 PllllM'lliflll II IJ ttltml4• IM'-41t 11 ., .t2 CMUal """""'..._ wfh ,._ .J.lllU .. ,. 12 l'lloeftt• ~ ,. .i. 1C1n'1C1tr ,. t "llt411Ut0f\ n ) ••h•"" ,. •llf u. 111ta1111 t•m- u.v .... .. 4J ""II••·'*· H ' IMt'llUHI Wiii , .... l.cWMtl U ..... Lltllell•tl ,, n ""tltlld, Oril •• ., 6S. TM•.-~t.ttnwllllllt,., \.Wlallll :u ,, .. i.._id City 11 I Mltn\I ., ~ •t1c11monc1 .,. u 111.wts u IS oa kit ..... 44 IO '*' """ .. " 00 &.•tll• 41 " 1.1 ...... ,.. ,, ,. 0llll•t111ntt• ,.. ,, u ... ,.,, 1.0 and ',I; e hope that with the help and effort of the United Stale& we will eventually reach the com prehensl\·e and lasting peare we are looking for · · THE IMPRESSION conveyed by both Sadat and hlb foreign minister was that tough bargain· mg lay ahead with \he Israelis despite braeli Defense Mlruster Ezer Weizman's arrival here for renewed military talks with Egypl1an War M1n1stcr Mohamed Abdel Ghany Gam- masy. W eizman said he hoped to "achieve 1ubatantial things. not just talks" when the negotia· tions begin tonight. They re- cessed Jan 13 in stalemate o-.er Israel's insistence on maan· taining 20 Jewish settlements m the Sinai even after the peninsula is returned to Egypt. Egypt abruptyly broke off parallel negotiations between Egyptian and Israeli foreign Theater Burns n11n11>ters an Jeru.s&lem lbe next week, and there hat. been no JO· d1cation when these talks would resume. SADAT SAID EGYPT would <·onhnue to insast on the concept of self·determmat1on or in dependence -ror the 1 1 m1lhon Palesllnlans living on the ~ cupied Weu Bank of the Jordan River and Gaza Strip "Without solving the Palcsll man problem we cant establish perm anent peace in the area." Sadat told newsmen after mett· 1ng with Ehrenkranz's group at his villa in Barrages. about 15 miles north of Cairo Ehrenkranz said he came to Egypt to express appreciation for Sadat's "bo ld and courageous peace initiative." Another member of the group, La!> Vegas publisher Hank Greenspun. said Sadat '"filled a \acuum m world leadership and everyone who lo\'es peace \11.int:ans lrncd lhl! strt'l'l '.\Jondav d<i fl<tme:-ton· th1 ough the h1stu1 k l.01'\' ·:-. Grand Thcater. where "Con1• With tlw \\111d'" pn·m10rc·rl in 1939 and \\hert' Lillian Ru..,-.1·11 and !-.~irah B1·1 nharclt pl'rformed II\ l' Thl• blan· "e\'t'l'Ply d:..imagecl llw lop thrce floors of the hutlrl • mg and c·1·0 ... s<'<I an :illt-~ to at! ack Sl'\·cral floors of a modE.•rn otl1n: h111ldm).! TheTeam should !>Upporl tum." THE EGYPTIAN leader acknowled&ed that some :,ea· mtnts of h1~ country are criticiz· in.c the Carter administration for lack mg "a clear position." ·'They are right ln this But 1t c1oesn't mean my people don't know o r appreciate what thE" 1 lnited States ha:-. done." Sadat nokd Cops Kill Wrong Man In Search NEW ORLEANS <AP> Plumber Donald Herkes crawled from under a house and met a hail of police bullets. He was fatally wounded, mistaken ror a man wanted in the slaying of a deputy moments earlier, sa 1d authorities .Jefferson Parish Sheriff Alwynn Cronv1ch said the depu- ty who shot at Herkes -whose name he would not release - has been relieved of duty. HERKES, 25, WAS repairing the heater at the home of Elise Kennatr when a police dra~et swept onto the quiet suburban street monday morning. Mrs. Kennair said a neighbor telephoned to warn her that dep- lJlies were looking_ for a man who shot down their fellow of. fict'r at the Mela1rie Bank and Tru~t Co "Don't let anyone 111, tht•;:."rc searching for thci man in this neighborhood." the nci1ghbor sa1tJ llerke::, · brolh<'r. Robert. was \\ orl\ 111g ln!>ldc the house. Mrs. 1\cnna1r said she told Robert lll•rkt•s about the deputies and suggt•sted the~ "arn Donald ~HE ~AID THEY were almost ut the back door of her home wh(•n she ht•arcl the first c;hol. "Oh. my God." she screamed ns s hci ran out of the door. "Oon't c;hoot m) plumber · \ nt•1ghhor said he heard eight ur nine shots, then heard someone exclaim. "I think we just shotthewronf?man .. The shooting occurred eight hlockc; from the bank where ll<'put v Sh<'riff Robert Cochran. • :l:!, was killed. The bank has twcn the target of armed rob- hE>rs five limes over the past t>Ao 'ears Wants to Arrange A Loan ... For You. ~1l~f~SS ,,,,~ •. 8e•nara Brown Whether ifs a busine::.~ opportunity or a new investment, an Equity Loan on your home or other property may gave you the cash to lake advJntage of 1t We specialize in ~econdary real estate financing for peopl~ who already own pnme residential property and have a better-than-average income. If you qualify, ask a member of The Team for details. We may be able to arrange a loan of up to 80 percent of the market value of your property-at attractive rates. Call now! 'Newport Equity l=unds • legun1 HUia 25283Clbot Aoed. Suite 107 (7 U) 83().5 700 HtJndnoton I NCh 1e'68 aen etvc1 .. Suitt 281 (7• •>~a..22t, CALIFORNIA Brown Meets Firm Leaders SACHAMENTO CAP) -Gov. Edmund Brown ,Tr. and a panel of top Cahforrua b~messmen dis· agn•ctl Monda> on nudear pow~r and taxes, but tht>v t•alll'<l lhl'1r d1sru!>::.10n "very productive." · Thl· bu ... uwss panel tnduded presidents or hoard d1<11rnwn of firms sUl'h as Banlt of America, Soutlll'rn Pul01fH' C'o, Pal01f1c Telephone and Stan· d<.11 d Chi ot L11lfor n1a l>1·.,p1tP tlll' d1"u~rt•Pmt·nts. hoth Brown and th\· t>us111l'S" lt· .. ull•rs "<.ltd llw:i-will hold more llll'\'llllgs 111 thl' future. 11.tM"tRblg Approre• BUI ~ACRAMK!\i 10 <AP) An environmentalist- backed bill sct•kmg to preserve 15 million acres of agricultural land <rnd to curb urban sprawl won Assembly 1Jpproval Monday without a vote to spare. The measure, by As· [ J semblyman Victor ~'1,YF" ,,,.r... Calvo, D·Mounlain View. 1ini.:. cleared the lower house '-----------on a 41·36 roll call, the hare majority needed for passage m the 80 seul Assembly. Flu Clo•f"• 2 School• SAN f. R,\NC'IS\0 (J\PI Two Catholic high .... t hooh '"''I l' t'ln'>t'd '\Jonday to San Francisco l1et'a1t!'>E> of an outhn·ak of influenla Off1t·1als !WHI tht·y hope to resume classes to· d.1\ at Sal'ri>d lll•art and St Ignatius htgh schools. S;w1 t•d I IL',1rt l'lu., .. d Friday afll'rnoon alter 275 of 1 ts H:!O l)(l\'S fallt'd to romt-to class St. Ignatius r l·porll·d 1,, p< n ·t>nl of lhL• .,C"hool .., 1,200 students \\ l·rc absc•nt Fml,1y Mlh the nu bug Girl Pret1uatf"d Droum~d PACIFICA <AP) A 14-year-old girl was llst- ~·d .Monday as missing and presumed drowned <Jller being swept o(f a beach by a huge wave. Police .ind Coac;t Guard said Debra Simmons '\.\as earned out lo sea by the wave which engulfed hcr 1ust .,outh of the Pacifica pier Sunday after· noon T\\O l1111th1•rs ~l're also hit bv the wave but manag1·d tu S \\ 1m lo the p1t>r. lht• Coast Guard "Jld Sf"Or• to Entf"r Pay T\I LOS .\:'-:<~ F.Li':S r AP 1 Sears, Roebuck and ( 011. lhl' n.1111111·., lari.:cst retatlt•r, 1s entering the pay tt·lt·\ 1!-.111n industry in the Los Angeles area, <"om pan:v spokl•sml'n said Monday. • \\ t' n · t•onvinC'etl that the demand for sub- ... enpt ton 11 IPv1swn '" Greater Los Angeles ts ... 1ag~<·nng, · ... a1<I Eugene W. Weldon. general rnanui.:cr of St'ars' Los Angeles-Orange County re· t.ul district. "St·ars has the marketing capability that blankets Los Angele'> and Orange counties :111d \\cha\'(' a large force or techn1c1ans able lo in- ~t all the systcm." '2 BeeJ.s OK Judge Orders Limit SO:"'OHA 1,\ (> > H s OK for Arthur lkd .. \.•tt lo quaff a couple of beers after work But l\\O '" \he limit, says Tuolummne County Superior Court Judge Ted R. Vilas. Tht• probation orrace wanted to bar Beckett from drinking as part of probation for a t·onviclton of finng a weapon 10 a car \\1th four J><..>Ople inside. nut lhe logging truck driver's lawyer pleaded that Beckett h.kes to relax with a gla::.!> or so of a;uds after work. · I rccogniL.e lhal a person may need to rclax a bit, just as long as he doesn't drink <'xccss1vely," the Judge said as he ordered a two beer limit. CHARGED IN SLAYING OF FIVE Richard Trenton Chlse Arr•lgned NEED A LAWYER? \.ow Legal Fee •Divorce • Bankruptcy •Criminal • Wills-Probate • Incorporation •Accident-Injury • Eviction 640-2507 Ya HR. CONSUL TATION-110 HOMEOWNERS RABBITT IMS; si.c. 1957 1'14HMIOI llVD. COSTA MBA 548-5554 ANNOUNUMl!NT, My Income Tax Preparation Office Is Now Located At 1491 W. BAkER (At Harbor) COSTA MESA ICll* of Costo M"a "4ne For Appointment CALL 751-1980 I t4ftr 5 r .M. • 97'-ISUh John J. Fagan Tueeday January 3 t '978 DAILY PILOT 11 - ltlan, 27, A rratgned ' \ . . • . l .Murder Motive ProhedJ SACRAMENTO (AP) -Twenty-seven-year- old Richard Chase stood quietly Monday as he was charged with murder in live brutal slayings during the past week The vict.J.ms were two women, a man and two children, one of whom has not yet ~en found but JS presumed dead by sheriff's deputies. SHERIFF DUANE Lowe called the killings .. the most grotesque" he had ever seen. He said he does not know the motive Chase was held without bail, and the heanng ~a!> continued to Feb 14 He has not yet entered a plea. J f.' CONVICTED of all the murders. Chase l'Ould be sentenced lo death under California's new death penalty law that covers multiple first-degree murders. The proseeution has not yet said whether 1t will seek the death penally. Chase also is char&ed with kidnapping and armed robbery. THE f1BSl' charge stems from the abduction of 22·montb-old David Ferrell'a. who is missing and presumed dead. The seeond charge involves the taking of a car and a wallet belonging to Daniel Meredith, one of the victims. The first victim was Theresa Wallin, a 22· year-old pregnant woman who was found slashed '" the abdomen at her north Sacramento home a week ago . ON FRIDAY, the bodies of Evelyn M1roth, 36. her son, Jason, 6, and Meredith, 52, who was v1s1t- tnj:l" them, were found in another home about a mile away. Deputies said Mrs. Miroth had ab- dominal wounds like Mrs. Wallin's. All three were also shot In the head. Mrs. Miroth was babysitting the missing child, who lived at tbe home. Lowe said there was enough evidence in Chase's apartment to conclude the child was dead. OFnCERS SAID Chase. a slender man with . .W-1 long hair and a stubbly beard, was arrested Sal• day night after he rushed out of bis apartment car·A rying a cardboard box. containing bloody rags, ~ also hol<ling a .22.caliber automatic pistol. Bailey Views 747 Disaster S\N DIEGO <API Attorney-pilot F. Lee Hailey says a co pilot's reluctance to question the decision of the aircraft captain may have con· tributed to the collis1on last March of two Jumbo Jetliners at San Tener1fe in the Canary Islands. A Pan American World Airways 747 was taxi- ing on the runway when another chartered 747 owned by K~'1 Royal Dutch Airlines began its takeoff and smashed mto the Pan Am flight. Both jets were loaded with vacationers. BAILEY'S LAW FIRM 1s involved in the first lawsuit spawned by the fiery crash, which killed 573 persons in a'·iation's worst disaster, when it goes to court next month in New York In an interview here, Railey said the KLM co· pilot could well have questioned whether the jetliner had clearance for takeoff "IF THE CO-PILOT hesitates just seven to nine seconds it can be too late." Batley said, ad- ding that co·ptlots may monentarily be reluctant to question the aircraft captatn's acuons even though that is what they are trained to do. •·If the co-pilot at Tenenre didn't hear the clearance, the whole thing could be diHerent, .. he said "'When communications are so vital, tbete has to be repetition" or spoken commands. The attorney, who is a pilot and president of Enstrom Helicopter Corp., was in San Dieeo for the Hehcopter Association or America convention. 1 • '-------------------"" ~ ........... . Police Theory: Strangler Dead? LOS ANCa:LES <AP) --After SIX weeks with no l<illmgs that fit the mold of the Hillside Strangler, poltce asked help Monday ln mvestigat- ·rng the possibility that the strangler maybe dead. The llills1de Strangler Task Force, which <>arlicr Monday said the case of a Hollywood .woman bludgeoned to death was unrelated to tile' 12 strangler deaths, issued an all-point& bulletin· asking other law enforcement agencies to notify the task force if any male homicide victim fits the descriptions of two possible suspects in the case. POUCE CMDR. William Booth noted that six weeks have elapsed since the last strangler victim, Kimberly Diane Martin, 17, was killed while ~nswering a prostitution call at a Hollywood apart- ment house Dec 13. "It 's'the longest period we've had," Booth said about the long silence. It may indicate the strangler has left the area, is in custody someplace on anolher charge or is tlead himself, possibly murdered by an accomplice. "IT'S A POSSIBILITY that we don't w'ant to over Jook in tovering all the angles," said Booth. "It's not that unusual for persons who have con· spired in capital offense to .•• to turn on each other." The bulletin aives the following descriptions: A male Caucasian, 30, 5-foot·lO, 160 pounds. with light brown hair and posslblY a mustache: and a male Latin, ~ss. 5-foot..e, 135 pound.a, with black )lair and mustache. The descriptions are the onea nleased with two composite drawl.nas Jan. s. ClergyJ\UlD Freed .. As they taught in echooJ, It k• the cnitents warm. heat rises. It still does. ·it's a aimpte job. You can even So when you heat your home, do it yourself. Just a matter of putting in heat the rooms you live iii. NoUho .. • a layer' of insulation that keeps the heat empty apace above. down where it belongs. . Insulating your attic is much Inexpensivt., too. The dollars the same as closing a the.m)QS of cdfce. you pay oat wfll come back in the saving . on your heating bills. And your attic? The teruper- ature will drop. And so will the amount of en<>rgy you're using. I E s Make every kilowatt couni:. SovthtJrn C.lifomi11 Edl«>n • I I I I I ' I I I I orange coa.1 D••'v Polo• Editorial Page ____________________ .................................... k .18 Tu.aday, Jar1uary 31 . 1978 Robftrt N WHd /Publlsher B.lrbara Krelblch I Edlt0tlel Page Editor Grand Jury Must Receive All Facts Orangl' County Supt'110r C"u' l Judge Ro bet t Krwt·lnnd last week quJ~lwd Grand Jury murder mdil't ttH·nls brought agamst Sl'\Cll ~uspt•('ts m last Octobt-r's :\1·\\ port Bc;wh murder of Stephen John BO\ an. l'lw quashing turnt•d out lo hl' ~tn almo:-.t momt·nlar;-. t ln11g ht•t·<1ust·. afll•r tll'anng adcllt1onal l'\ 1cl1•1H:l'. tht• <; 1 :ind .Jut\ quickly 1 <' anchl'tt•d lht• suspects ·\p1rnn•nlly the mtert-st of JUst1ce \\as sci vt·cl ''hen till' s1•\ t•n <,uspc<.:ls \\'t'l'l' rc-indtclt•d '\'.cml'lhcll•ss. tht·rc 1s a huunl1ngly chsturhang tom• about the Jn('tdent. Th.it's ht•causc Judge Knel'lund quashed the original murder ind1C'tment after s<.iymg the Jury had not been told ahout t•vidence the Jud~e tell might reflect favorably on some of llll' defondants. Jud gt· Kneeland 's ruling was based on a state Supreme Court finding called the Johnson decision. That dec1s1on makt•s it dear that prosecutors must tell grand 1unes 1.ids that tend to point to a prospective indictee's snnoccnet· .1s \\ t>ll as facts that point to an mdttlt'e s guilt In tht• Bo\'an casl·. Judge Kneeland ob\'lousl) felt thl· prost•cut 1011 failt•<l in that clut~ Another .1udge lasl ) l'at t'Jffil' to thl· -.aml' l'ot1l'lu:-.1on \\lwn an tnd1ctmt·nt aga111st poltttt•;il l 1gut'l' Lor an '\orton \\as d1sm1'>sed And <1 yt·a1 t•arlH·1 a li1·1hl•1 y 11ulictml•l\t .igamsl Fullerton ard11tl'<'I I .l' Ho\ Ho:-.l· \\ ;1s to:-.st•d out !or llll .... umt• rl•ason ,\.., W:t'> tltt' t':tst• \\1th tlw Hm an suspl'ch. tlw ehargl'S "l'r1• rdilf'd agamst ~orton and Ho'>t' Ht• tll<il ,1s 1t may 1t gO(''> '' 1lhnut "..I) mg that th(·rl' ,.., nn·1·1t in th1• .John ... on clP<:is1on that makes it nect·:-.s;.irv lot µrosc<."utor:-. lo g1\ t• a:-. mu<·h as possible of both sides nf lht• (•ase \\'ht•n :-.t•ek1ng t·rimmi.Jl 111d1ttml'nls bt·hmd dosed doors. The fatlurc to do so onl) <·asts added susp1c1on on a grand 1ury md1clment system that many persons aln:ady behc\ e to he patently unfair at best Practical Counsel In th<• field of medicine. it's not too difficult for a pa- I 1cnt \\1th a SJH't'ific mjury or disease to locate a~physt· c1an "ho's sppc·1ally qualified to mend a broken leg, treat an alll'rgy or cit-It\ er u hab'r Wlwn 1t 1·omc·s ti> obtammg legal counsel things are 111011· ohs1·un· ;\l :111~ pcoplt• IH'\ l'r lhtnk .1houl choosing a l<1wyt•r un· I ii sonwtl1111 g UIH''IH't'tl'<I happt·n:-a de:.ith tn the l:.im1 I\· k.i' , ..... ;1n 1•:-.I .ilt· 1111· prohalt'. a di\ nn·t· ,.., ('Ontcmpl;1- 11·d .1 1':11 .H·1·1dt·11t rl'sttlt.., 111 ;i law:-u1t .\ la\\\t•r t11ghl) cxpent•ntt•d in prolJdlt' \\Ork might 1101 he· ht''>t q1111llfwd to cll'fcnd thl' la\\ SUit. or \'tc1• \'!'rsa, :-.o .1 ltttlt· gu1danee would help At pn·sent the state har recognizes only thn·c legal :>pcciallt<·s -atminal. probate and workmen ..., <.'Om· pcnsat1011 Hut now the Cahfornia Trial Lawyers Association plans .1 program of cc·rt1ficat1on for la" yers who have ht>cn rn practice for two years or more and who apply ror l't'l'ogmt1on ot tht·1r t•xpcrtencP in trial practice'. general lll'r:-onal m.1 ury. 1>roduC'ts liabili I\'. v.ork men's compt'nS~I· t1un. c·nminal lnab and I am1lv la\\ Arter \'Cnhcalton of lht'ir cxpcnence, "Uth la\\ycrs will he ahlc to notify the public of their CTL.\ specialiy n'cogrntion and tht• assoc1at10n will prepare a broehurt.' 11strng categone!' of specialty cert1f1ed lawyers Such ml ormallon h.1s alwavs been reassuring to the public in the .sclectton of medical s1wcialties. It should be Jllsl as helpful for pt•rsons needing legal assistance. Bigf oot's Safe Then' an• ~omc folk tn th(' \; S. Fish and W1ldlafc Spn ttc· who might p1C'k up a little income on the side as st't('l1Ct' fiction writers. Thl·~ 'H' come up with a fascmatmg news release ex- plaining just what they plan to do if anyone succeeds in loeat 111g and captunng the legendary Bigfoot monster ~otmg that such an event could generate hysteria. pantl' and throngs of curiosity seekers. Fish and Wildlife .says Bigloot would be protected from "the same kind of l':xplmtalion as the ,:!iant movie ape. King Kong." · l le, or 1t . \\Ou Id be entitled to 120 days of temporary proll'ct1on undt•r the Endangered Species Act. while the gm crnnwnt tncd to determme the extent of the Bigfoot population. whether or not 1t is in danger of decline, ahd \\ hel her its hnhitat as secure. Then longterm protection of the Bigfoot species would be considered. It .sure is nice to know that Fish and Wildlife is so well prepared for Bigfoot. But it's sort of a letdown to learn that one of its directors says he doesn't believe "there are any of the things around to be discovered in the first place " He probably wouldn't make it in science fiction . • Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is invited. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. ~ox 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 . By Boyd/Writers By L.M. BOYD That Mark Twain did a lot of his writing in bed bas been reported. Likewise that Ernest Hemingway did some of bis later work in lonahand on a mantel while 1taodine up. But how French playwright Edmond Roat.and Dear Gloomy l did "Cyrano de Bergerac" is even odder: He wrote it in Lhe bathtub. Noteworthy, is it not,. that of the 535 men and women now serving in the Congress of the United States, only one of them -Sen. Thom11 Eagleton Of 'Missouri -bu ever been c-eitifled "sane" by paychfatrlsta? The .average new York CltJ p111en•er eleva~or travels Just about es far each year utbe average Americu possenaer car. Approximately 10,000 mi1e1, tobeapedftc. Client ki hOw m ny Um ionea ChiDi spam. J.l'i ... But lt nnly es 0ot ata.nd di Ume. Jack Anderson 'Selling' Chemicals to Public W ASIUNGTON Monsanto. the giant chemical manutac turer, 1s about to launch a high powt'rcd pubhc relations of Ccnsivc to convince America that :-ome l.'hem1cal products arc good for you even though they are suspected or !11during t•ancer With .sales revenues of S4 billion a year, Monsanto is easily able to pay for a combined television and magazine drive to gloss over scientific findings that the chemicals which pre- ~t·rve your food <&nci :>afeguard aops may ht• hazardous S 1 n c 1• m o r c a n d m n r 1· l\mencans an• gro\\ing warv or tht• manmadt• <'hcm1cals the.v 1n gt•st. Mon:-..into will pull out <Ill the slops It \\ 111 recruit 1t5 own \\Orkcrs to make speccht·s .ind 1<1bby for Monsanto chemil:ab Th«.> pro chemical advt'rhs1ng bhtz will bt• launl•hed through telev1swn .111d maJor ma~azine outlets THE COMPANY'S blueprint, which wt>'vc seen, calls fQr a documentary movit> and a pum phlet extolling the virtues of ('hem1cah; Company employees are bemg urged to laud the won· ders of Monsanto's laboratory products A 19-paJ?e report to the E"mployees boasts lhut "each television message will be built around a strong visual dem- onstration that leLs viewers see for themselves how chemicals improve the quahlles of their lives " Prominent scientists and ex- perts are bcin~ hned up to nar- rate a message that Monsanto hopl's will J>('rsuadc viewers to \Hitt• ktlt'rs lo. thl•1r n1•wspupers on ht'h~1lf of l'hcm1('ah; or to state tht•1r \'tt•ws 10 public forums IN IT~ Pl'lll)OSt'd hookl1•l, lht: ~1anl chcmit•al ftrm vows to 'rt.>plaee purely emotional ap· proa<'hes with the best science "e ran muster " Yet, Monsan· to's own report on the coming ud (·ampaign says "we are usm~ television because 1t offers exact ly the kind of emotional impact that can make a lahtlng 1m press ion on the publil " Environmentullsls fcur the slick onslaught may be only the first wa\'e of a well·financed and ::.elf-servmg counterf1re against mo\'es lo crack down on polen· llally hazardous sub!>tances in us"' these days. "It represents a naked attempt to buy pubhc opinion. something public interest J'roups can't do," a spok<'sman for the Environ- mental Defenst! l"und told us. For example". one ad would sho\\ a bab) m a shoppin~ cart with the slogan "Without 1•ht•m1t•ab. hfe itself would bt• 1tn possibl(' " Another !>lu~un \\ould sav. "Without chem1C'als, many more million~ \-\-OUld go hun~Q · The company hasn 't .:.ii ways sel'med <:o careful about whut 1. being fe<l the puhhc The ft'ood.; und Orug Adman1slral1on l't:!cent- ly banned plast\c soda pop bot· ties cont.Uning acrylonitnle, a ... us1>t. clt•d c.ancer-(·a using pro- dut•t from Monsanto The com· p1111y has decided lo contest the t'dlct MONSANTO also produces dlallate, an ingredient 1n pesticides which has been linked to tumors in laboratory mice and rats, and two chemicals. "ylene and toluene. The latter have been placed on the govern·,.,,. ment's priority list of 10 • chemicals that need to be tested first undl·r the r1!cenUy enacted , Toxic Su~tant'es Control Law. fo' o o t n o t t• A l\t o n s a n to spokesman told our nssociate I .arr~ Krafltl\\1t1, · \\C art.' not trying to make a strident defense of ehem1cals. W1>'re seeking a halatH'l' in pulJhc opimon · lie Jlso noh'cl lht• rnmpany 1s tryins.: tu hl'ltt•r the tl'~ting or chemit·u1s I \\.h1ch may bt.• harmful. t I I' ............................................................................................................. Nicholas von.Hoffman D.C. Incomes Not Related to Reality WASHINGTO!': -If the pnmt• rates are down in Wash10~t11n, 1t 's because money 1s too pll·n hful to steal. The new figures art: oul on the incoml! of pc'Opll..' lh 1n~ 111 lhl• 100 top metropolitan nHH'kl'l art'as Washrngton 0 .(' and its l\1a1vland ancl \"1rg1n1i.1 suburbs. thl' perennial lt-adt·r 1i. :iht•all .1ga1n ,\ \l'J«1~1· hntbt'hold 1ncnm1· ia your n,1t1on· . .., l'ap1t,tl 1s $2i 702 Only 11 olht•r m<·I rnpoht:in <11 eas ha\'1• a v e r a g t' fa m 1 l ~· 1 n t'<1mes in l''< r l' s s o I S:?o .01111 . and 11 n I y o n 1· !':assau :ind Suffolk 1·11t1r1 tires on !:>uh urban Long hland 'ew York, cnnH's !'lost· 10 n·al h1ng the in <' o m e I c• \ "I ' :11· h 1 e \.' ,. d 111 W.!!>hington W 1 l h \'I rt u .al I ,. :1 11 " age l':1rner.., e1th1•r emplo\'cd b\ the gO\ crnml•nt d1n·cth or throu_gh gov<'rnmt•nt ('ontratt11r-. <tht ril\.'OIC'<i v.;n• Of h11!ing lhe lrlll' d1ml•ns1nn'> of g11\.1•rnmt•nl t•mplo:.ml'nll . a\.'l'r:Jge fnmtl> ancomC' in the District of l'olum hla and environs is an un- h1·licvahle Sl3,0<H a yt•ar higher than in Los Angl'le!:l. 1t i'> rnort• than $10.000 a year higher than m New York City and more than $fl,OOO a year h1,:!her lhan in Chicago ANOTHER wa\" lo <•xpress th<' rn<1ss1ve overcompensation of federal government employees 1~ lo Jooli at the total disposable income f1gure.s. Th<• Washington metropolitan area with about thn·<' million people 1n 1t hJtl over $28 btllton m disposable in· come while Philadelphia with !:lomewhat less than 5 million people barely beat out Washington with a slightly larger disposable income. In Charles McCabe other \\orch , go\·t•rnmt'nt ''"'k"r" in tlw aggn•i::a11., an• proh,1bl~ llt'ing p.11d :10 10 10 per 1·1•111 m1111· th.111 non fr1frral J.(O\ l'rtllllt'lll \U1f'k1°( '• I h1· 1'1.lt"llC'I' "' l.!I\ Ill).! i:ll\l'I It 1111•111 \\tll l\1·rs 1.11 :-,1·"> to orr ... 1·1 lhl' 11111.1111111.11\ d1·i.:r.1d.it11111 of thl· rloll.11 111s111Ps th.ii lh1• puhllr fl''' roll1•1 s It ad 111 1·11mpt·nsat11>11 \\ill grn\\ 1'11\ ;111· s1·1·lor wag1· 1"1rnt·1·s' 111tl;it111n 1·qua1!1Jt10n raises l'l!ITil' more slo\\ I~ Thus, :.ilthough publ1< payrollcrs arc m.11or con · tnbutnrs to inflation. thc·prt·'>cnl J>aY system tends to g1vt• llwm a mom•y premium. a t•ash prr1l'. for clomg their work 1nefflc1Pntly .ind thert"forc Mn! nhuting to yt•t g11·:.ill'r infl.1tmn f'°l·deral pay at .rll 11•\ l'ls anti 1n .ill 1oh:-. should lw t11·d . not In tht• ronsumt·r prH'<' incit·'· hut to pnvatC' Sl'Clor \\U,1!1'" Ill 11-.11 or non tnflalt·d purd1.1stnJ.! 111n\ 1·1 clttll.u--. l'~OER ~l'('ll .1n a1 r:ing1• m 1•11 I I t•tll'I ,1 I l'nl pl Ct)-l'l''' "iilanes \\oulcl shrink along with "' 1·rvh(>(I\ t•l:-.P'.., \\ r• could tht'n 11011(: Wl' \\Ot1fd h;l\.t' built In -.onH· ,m.ill inc.·1•nt1"' for t.'ffi. c·1t•nry and 1·flf'rlt\ t•ness in th1• J.!O\'l'rnm1·nt ..,,.1\1r1· Although th1• <'11mpar1snn ts unfair in '>Onw n•s1><.•c·ts, 1f you want to know \\hat's \HOO~ with paymg govt·rnm,.nt cmplovees mon• than I hl' worker producers 1n a "oc1ct\ look al the Soviet t'nion. Tht~11• 1s a special de- m o r ;ii 11. <i I 111 n a n d {' v n i r 1 s m \\llll'h comes lrom kno"'inJ? that 01w 1s ht.•inn taxNI so that a par,1-.1t1c:il r•la..,s, wh1t•h rc·rlorms no n·ad1ly v1s1ble, ust'ful fllnrtron. m<t,\' 1•nJO) lux- urit's which om• t·.innol afford nnt"" st·lf wa ... h1ngton and Dalla:. are t" o <.tllt·~ wh1r.h both bave a '.'jl'I m an-:\tarcus l>Pparlmenl Store: Washington and New York t•ach h<1v1• a Bloom · in~dale's, another inordinately expensivt' and trendy depart· ment store: there ts but on£' Elizabeth i\rd<'n heautv salon m London. Part:-ancf Rom<' hul there art' l\\O IO Wa~h!O~lon DC Hy compl•nsatmg government \\ ork en, at thl.'S" astounding rates th<') are put on unolhcr trark m hf<' than the re~t of us must run Gi•:en superior pay, medical and retirement bendtts. they know t.hcy will never nct·d to rely on the pro grams lht•) administer Thry will never l>e on the line of old or sick people queued up m front of their own desks THEY I.ACK the mot1vl' tn h<· cner_gelic and curious and im prov1smg to make \.\hatt•ver they are doing surn•!:lsful. The fruits of their work, \\hether sv. eel.or biller are not for lht•m. and this m~p1res a common at- t 1 tu de amonJ( govcrnm(•nt \\ orkers. a eommon att1tud1· f!Overnment workers have for us others -contempt Why shouldn't they feel con. tempt for us because they havt" come to see us over the years as fools, as persons who may com plain hut who ah' ay.., pay up to supJ')orl lh(•m. and then at lt"nglh. :.tftl'r yc·ars of pa~ ing up "n th•·~ can shop ;,it ;>.;e1man- ~t ar<·us and gt•l their ruh-dnwns at Elizabeth ,\rden's, "" must end our h\'es md1gcnt. standing on thc•1r hnl's. \\ a1t1n,:! for those mut•h advert1st'd govl'rnmen( "t•rv1t•es which don't in fact f'X· 1st Against all th1'> it's art?uable that Jimmy Carh•r nc\er had a c•hanrC'. no maltC'r what he may have thou,:!ht when he was run- ntn~ for office Onc<" m the office he has a('ted more· hke on<' of us \\a1t1nf,! on a governmenl hnc ' than a!'> thl' pO~!:l('S'>Or Of thl' Ill t1mall' big dt•sk heforc which w1• : hm· up. That mav lw hl'cau~e ht! 1s ii p n II l 1 c a 11 y \\ c a k m •rn i n <1 polltrc·allv \\1·ak position, bul \\hat ':-dcprt·ssrng rs th<1l he has nev11 r 1•\·en tned lie of the studtl•d svmbohc gc.sture. he has m;1dc manv a ge!:lturc, symbolit' and 01alcnal lo tht• tnhabttanb of the federal honC'ycomb and they all ('arry but one mei;sage , you have nothmf.! to fear from me Old Money and New Money Divide the Very Rich: One or the more curious suc- cess stones in the magazine field is that of Judith Price and her magazine A\lenue. This is a magazine delivered free to famtlles on and off Park Avenue in New York City who have an- nual incomes of $50,000 and up. The deliveries are made in a chaufteu.t-driven limousine. Since 1976, when it started, the book bas been filled with posh advertisin1. ? u b ·II s b cir Price. the bOtter to ge to know ber audl nee, re· Hntly d1d a realderahip 1urve1 ~ her undeniably amucnt cllen-te)e. 'Sh found out, amon1 other thin , that '8 percent ot them Jt v in flatl or hOu!ea or con· domlnlums ·ith f rorn elght to n d 26 percent b8ff o Jlv ~In help. f of them have taken more than 20 domestic fliJ(hts a year and 45 percent, three or more foreign trips So the rich really are dif· ferent, as Mr. Fitzgerald ob· served to Mr. Hemingway or v. v. The distinction, in that famous and fatuous interchanee, wai; that the rich are different because they have more money. BUT THERE are almost as many dlstinctione amon1 the vanous people wbo bave money. as between the rich and us here just folks. There ts old money. whose attitude toward its tr,Hure is that It ls n sacred and decidedly' private altar; ond new money, which Is ceaael ly at· truct.i.D1 attention by ltaclt. Tbe handbook for th~ new money crowd is that tQwer Of vul1arity, Women'• Wear Dally. P'rom thc.l old money viewpQlnt it lmotl a delintuon of a lady and • 1c.nt that their nam n ver ppear in WWD. Con· verscly. you cu be ty lb t if t.he1r n m are tab • ly bandied about In tts lhey are not I i and en who have money and people who are rich." People who are rich have their birth, marriage and death registered in the pages of the Times. Otherwise they are publicly invisible, except on the rare occasions when one celebrates his taking on another board chairmanship with a man· Jy photo in the financial section. People who have money bire press agents and in increastne numbers. These ·types can spring out of any part of the furniture. All lhey need know Is a couple of edit.ors and/or reporters for WWD People Magazine. or any of the great number of gossip· I based publications that have picked up the slack left wheo f Walter Winchell fell off the hooks I It has to be a considerable in- security that persuades peoplej to hire people to proclaim, publicly that they are Mr. and; Mrs. Gotrox indeed. f l THE DllAWBACKS are ob-I vious and considerable. Tbet publicl~ seeker makes himself, a target for tbe kidnapper. thej l)utglar, · Md even tbe terrorist. I He or she bas to fend off the at· tentlon1 of the army of; moocben that try lo get at some of the 10-tavlsbly advertised loot. What on earth good can it do to I t It be known, a5 one ot the For.J clan bas done, that she -.ouldn't "dream of allowtna berl doi to lap up anything lesaf art toeratlc tban &vian water? Yft 14ittlh1 one's oarne ln t.hel papers 1te1ms co be r.ead~ stutt.I To have your name in the wh n there is oo reason t. hlch is what .. society•· ·~ I all about. is to proclaim youraell ~ulsar by anlU Y e ccmUnue to do It: to ft bt like bell tor tb dub tl , I l who a.re t th r ,arh .-• AT Youn SERVlCE/ NATIONAL Couples Honored 400 Celebrate S<hh Almiversary CHICAGO CAP> -Some 400 clJt-rly couples celebratmg their 50t.h anniversaries this year have some simple advice for successful mar- rrngc wait out the worse and enJOY thl' better the Depression, but "never even thought of :.eparation.'' "WHAT KEEPS A MARRIAGE together? Honesty. love, and hard work," :.01d Mrs Ralph Capolongo, 66, of Ctucago 'When ht• gets 1n my way, he Just j.\oes dowm.ta1rs and stays in the bast•tnt•nt for a while," said Mrs. Jo~cph Deutsch of Chicago "And plenty of home cooking," added her 77 year old husband Many of those celebrating their golden anruversanes agreed on one thing to survive a long-lasting mar- riage, rorgel about the illusions of un· ending bhss SHE AND llER husband were among the couples who braved near tcro temperatures and snow clogged streets to attend a mass in their honor said by Cardinal John Cody, archbishop of the Chicago Roman Cathohc diocese. "TOLERANCE IS A BIG part of marriage," said Mrs Morrell Richards of Chicago "When th~go­ ing gets hard, you've got to try a lit- tle harder and wait for better times -something couples nowadays seem to forget." Featurftf Actress Elizabeth Taylor will highlight a dm1wr in .Mar('h to raist• mom•y for the :\J 1ch1g;m Hepuhlit'an Part\ The couples were honored at a reception later where several offered comments about marnage. "K1ds getting married today want too many things all at once. They rush to gel a house right away. a washer. a $5.000 car. The emphasis 1s on possessions, not each other " she added "Lots of kids go into marriage to- day thinking. 'Well. if it doesn't work. l can always get out.'" said Deutsch. who added that he and his \1.-lfc went through hard times dunng Worn Ra<-b DEAR PAT: Perhaps the reader who had wanted to find a dishwasher rack rccoating source would like to know that I round one Unarco Induslnal Coatmgs, 15005 S Marquardt Ave., Santa Fe Spnngs, did an excellent recoatmg Job on my d1shwasher racks for about $60 This is comparable to the price charged for new rach. but mine were more expensive because a minimum job set-up cos ts S.50 After the set-up charge each tlt•m can be recoaled for about SJ So 1f ~c' <·ral households pooled their rtak1ng racks, 1l would be well worth the tnp lo Sante Fe Springs. J W . Newport Reach Thanks for the tip. Corroded dis hwas her racks are a common problem due to the hard water In our area, so locating a few neighbors ln tlae market for this repair should not be loo difncull. ClaMp• Straighten Warp• DEAR PAT I stored two large boards in my garage several months ago Now that I'm ready to use them. I find they arc warped. ls there any way I can 'Straighten them? M.F .. Mission Viejo One method -that works most of the time -j., lo place one board on top of the other wilh the convex sides c, 1 ,, pritl• f '' I ,h • r nf1 1 ' ' I• ii t /'•II I ii l!of 'J•f J1Jtt •l4tllll•Jllll Jlf.t11 r i1•1•1•l 1fl lj•I• f.tr if ,, ' ,, 1 ,, "'' •1t•d•1 11 '•'", fl ,,u.,11 111 I ,, 1''''' \I ul 11J1jt 1/!lt ''"''Iii f /'1lf /lt.'Hl \t \ 11' • 1 I If ;'It/'• I H!l.\l ,,,.U/t/ /'ll '~ /1 fl ,, •J ] J~I t 1 f I \11 H f \ 1Pt1.'l1 \\ mflrUt fi If, r\; 1J\ pt01('1Mt 11 II' '1 ''''~'' 1 rt11 h1.Jf 11J4'm1·rl UllJ'•tf'lt \ or frtk• t111I ltl• t1ulir1·1 U11' rnact. r 'JtJl nnrw ci;JJ1. ~-. .Hw.1 ln.i..·.ir1t. u /111 '' µlwrt1 r11,rr1h1 r1.·01mot h4·,-,,,u1d1 r1d TJu.,111lurtUIUJ1J1tU' J1'1 ,, , n t'[lf Soturdt:'I' Ma1iHeld In Death Of Wonuui 'I A I P E I , T a 1 w a n <AP) A 24·year-old man has been arrested in connection with the strangling and dismem- berment of a woman Jot seeker who answered a want ad, pohce said. A spokesman 1den llfled the man._as Lin Jls1en-kun. outside so there is an open space between the boards at the center. You now will need clamps, whJch are tightened around the centers of the boards, bringing them together. Inspect the boards every 24 boars by removing the clamp to see if the warpage bas disappeared. If not, reclamp and repeat the process for 24 hours. Boards can be straightened In a shorter time by wettlog them before clamping, but more frequent Inspections then are necessary to prevent new warpage in dlrrert-nt Police said Chang parts of the board~. Mm,::-fengh, also 24 and from t e city o f Flrepla~e Waste• 1t'arJ11tlt l'ingtung in southern Taiwan , was killed DEAR'PAT· We are thinking of Sept 6 after she having a fireplace installed 1n our a n s we r <' d L 1 n · s home, but are confused by confl1 ctm~ newspaper adverlise- clc11ms about heat efficiency We mcnt of h1ghly -pa1d kno"' that the manufactured types work as an accountant provide more heat: but what we have in mind is an old-fashioned bnck fireplace R c . Costa Mesa \our best bet wouJd be to consider using one of the many be at recovery devices on the market. They are de- .,igned to force more or what wasted heat into the home. Ask your contrac- tof to suggest one or these or check lnt6 the various brands by contacting any of the firms Usted In the Yellow Pages telephone directory under, "Fireplace Equipment-Dealer'>." An attempt was made to rape Miss Chang at the employ mcnt interview in Ta1pc1, police said They said when she tried to nee, she was knocked down and choked lo death. ll<•r body v. as cut up and the pieces dumped into a river police said. The great big oversized blouse. Newly qetailed! A gathered yoke that's long and tapered ... smaller shaped collar and cuffs. Altogether, the newest big shape. Wear full, or try a new double wrap beli! Grape or henna cotton, 6-14, $27 "Regina Porter for Porter House", in Town and Travel Blouses ' . \ Tu.day. Jcnu4ry 31, 1978 One beautiful waytosave. Home Federal Seacliff. At Home Federal there's more to saving than just earning interest. Much more. Like our efficient, courteous staff ... a spacious. relaxing interior .. the striking, modem extenor ... and easy access with plenty of free parking. All In the convenient, park-like setting of the Seacllff Shopping Center. And you'll also find a savings plan for practically any budget. There's one that will double your money m less than nine years when you leave your interest on deposit. Plus our Savercard that lets you withdraw funds anytime. yet still pays higher interest than any bank passbook account. Discover the beautiful way to save Home Federal Seacliff. IJOME FEDERAL SAVINGS of Sun Diego \our $2 8 1/110 11 fon11/y I 111ont·10/ (;enter Huntington Beach Office: 2111 Main ~eet · 536-6511 (Al Yorktown A\lellue in Seacliff Cenler) Hours Mon·Thurs 9-4/Frt 9-6/Sai 9 ·1 Home Fedenl Cowmy Your pl.Ke ln the am DAILY PILOT ,4 "; "Better bus service • • ISS3Vl@gllle s100 a month!' Dave Grant, Facility Coordinator. Aeronutronic Division of Ford-Aerospace & Communioations Corporation, lives with his family in FµllertoR. When bus service improved this fall Dave Grant discovered that he could now take the Park-N-Ride Express commuter bus service to work every day. And Dave was glad of that. Several of his fellow employees had told him how much they liked it. Now Dave finds that he, too, is saving over $100 a month over driving.* "I also get to work feeling fresher and more relaxed; he says. Dave's wife has noticed that he seems less tireq when he gets home in the evenings. Tq find outwbat better bus service can do for you. can Or~Q ~~'Iransit·.District at 547-3311 or toll-free ZENITI-I 7-3311 from 6AMto10 PM weekdays. 7 AM to 5.PM Sa~ys. and 8 AM to 5 PM Sundays and boll.days. You may e as impresse~ as Dave is. ; • .,, 1\a DAIL. Y PIL.0 T T NATIONAL I OBITUARIES QUEENIE Sy Phil lnterlondi Firing Federal Employee Fllntasy .. 1 understand a lot of performers take a nap before a show, but this il> ridiculous." Beath 11Wotif"ets Death Notif"e• 8LUMENAV flMDM• Hr~" '"1"" t d•in "'""'"' EDITOR'S NOTE -Is J1nng a/~ tmployee re· ally an 1mpo&nble dream? Tlwt truth 11 that sacking a loaf tr or incompetent Jrom the f ftlnal NTVke con be tough~ cu lhowrt in this second pan o/ o five·part senes. By BROOKS JACKSON WASHlNGTON CAP> -Firing a federal worker, even when there is strong evidenl'e of goldbricking. can be at times an impossible teisk And <1t times the public suffers directly W1tnesl> lht· cast· of tht• unfilled book orders. fht> Ge" ernment Printing Office, :.wamped ":1 th complaints from citizens who ordered publications that neHr arnved, discovered that :.ome employees were simply throwing orders away ralher than filling them THE EVIDENCE WAS THERE IN the trash runs. The question was, which employees were responsible? Investigators struck on the idea of preparing stacks of secretly marked orders wh.ich would be given to designated employees. The marks, look- ing like ordinary pencil notations, were coded in a way that each order blank would be linked to a particular employee M Y R T l l A. D f-l A I (I l '''"' Hdtrl~ drKI AtJ<ht•y Jtn\''' BL\JMENAU ,,.~•Oenf ot litS'lun ... btuttitir\ L toyd l<nul\••f"t 11f'ld Joh" H1'1'. Cd P•'"'° 4wdr nn •~n''"'r '}fl l"nuht-n IV11rrt0na1 't''"'"' ~'flt'" t11 Sure enough. 3J marked order blanks showed up in lht' trash. The markings indicated they all had bl>t>n given a ~;ingle employee, whom we shall t'J II J <imes although that 1s not his real name J U1£S WAS Sl SPENDED AND fired . as \\ ,. t {' :..1 ' t.' r a I other:.. l' aught 1 n s i m JI a r <·11 n1mstam·es Order blanks stopped turning up 111 the tra~h Pubht complaints about unfilled mdl'rs subsided The problem appeared tu be 'ol v t'd 1'118 dt tht6 ~ot 'V' S\JIJP,HtJ '>V ,..,., rn ... r ... cJ .. •t f •rtrl_JJ("; '1 fV,8 11 I tu ,,.,.pt,1·w P•ul £_ 8f'f\,JH not ''"' 1th f.-' M. ·Jt "' Ancir. W" f'f• ~y1rn lH Ar.,ona C,r.t\'tt'!lotdt! -.t'''"''' '' will 1-,.. 1 h•H< fl lK..AJ t,1 A.r~u·w\ hd ""' .,.tAJr t ,,,.,tJ on lue\da'f Jdnu"'"' I\ l'l'Jit d1 tl.-t h ( d In tirv "' "'""""'' th1 '"'"" 1 t 00 A.M "' tngl.-wood M• "''l' '·'' f.•+tr\. 1 t f Pq ut-' t>r•f r 1bvt 101'1\ tu l t•• 1fl ln9lt wt)nd C.t with Ht'~ [Jonctt\J Ame-r1 ~t (Jn,, r -,.,,( , .. ,,.. l)torqpon Of I rw•r.e 0111< t.tlinq Sn11tn FO~ fulh1!1 ldmb (O,ld Mt \a Mf)flVMY MAVOt-ANNt f.0), '"''•d••nt t\t flirt' l(.lr'\ Mh -'1:188 S•nt• And (-\ P.t'"~._.d u,i1111f1y on MOLLHAGE N Januctry Jl 1'.118 JI ""' ..,91:-ot 'J Rut James exerl'1sedf his nght as a federal t•mployee lo appt'al his dismissal. There were two clays of hearings at the GPO, which sustamed the firing James appealed to the Civil Service Com mission field office m Washington. which also up· held the firing. By now nearly a year had gone by. NELSON J MOll.HAv( N ,.,,d .. nl B•lo•~d moth .. ot E ·•iyn Au''"' ot o' Wt'\lmlnster Pd\\~d dWt!V 0'1 S11nt• Anet Cd Jr\d Evf'tf'\I Jumperot }dMUdry 21. 1q79 dt tt"' ~Qfl of 88 MonttfPV PAr~, (.ii) 31'0 ''-''"•Vl!'d t>y Ut>love-d father ol M.ar y Ml'llll'\dQJt',, No 8 Qr an a i: "'Id re n il'J Qr f'" t tormctt tuoeret serv1t .. \ w111 bft held qr•ndthtlor.-n ctnd on•· qt Pt1f qrP,H Cr~m•tlon •nd t>ural 6t ~~ t.onovcted Qrttndchlld No local t1m1 rdl servlctt b~ Smith Tuthill Lomb Costa MU• wttl b• htld 11\tnm• "' Wiii OP at Mortu.,v -.-. Hllhld• M<,mo"d' ,....,,, '" A.Oland\ llEAl.L C• Smith Tuthltl L ,iml> ""nto AnJ WEt.LWOOO E Bf.All., '""dttnl of Mortu.,y dlrttcl<K\ . .,_., HJI ldQun• Hiii,, C• P'"'"° away on AUSTIN J,.nu.try 28. 191'. Surviv~ by his wlle MAR RV AUSTIN, re"d•nl ot Hunt- Ma<IM E.v~ P Beall :u>n Alldn C. 1"91on 6 ... ch, c.. P•H"° •w•y on tlP•ll ot Honolulu. H~w•" daughter J•nuarv )() 1918 •l '"" dO<' ol 6S IJdrb•ro 0.dlf Co~ ot N~wP<>rt 8 .. <h, 8efov~ hu,~nd or Alm_. Austin of (d t1v~ 9rdf'IC:kh11d't"f"I two brolfwr~ Hunt1nQton 8~4(h Cd Funerdl l"<Jrnton ~dll Of WdlntJf (ri ei.. Cd \P-r\>tct~ ,.,.,. Pt-'"ldtnq dt S.mlth luthllt Jnd Gorc:fon M Brolf ol Mord•JO ~ • Ldmb Wf'~f• l1H Chd~' ft.66 4888 Al'-0 \1.,1ryl~d t>y tonn~r ljlrftt J•-.tn &UnEAWOftTH rory llMli ot Honolulu H,,..,, Mr GRACE ALICE BUTl(RWORTH th ,.tll w.H a ll1,.mt r' rorporrtlr y,,,. 1~\1C'H-nl ot N• wPOrt B•iKh (d P4\V:·d f.>rt"dOrnt Ot M r:[)(lnfHll (1\lU'JI_. •• i4Wrtf r,,n ldr Jd'V JO 1W8 ~orv• .. tO by Ct1rporJli(ln otu) n•llfPCI l .. (\JI Yt! ht:r t1d\.HJ~'"''• Alu··· S f1rllmf' ''"o"'' p,, )•de"' ot CKMJ9'..t' A"', .. ,, Cam Wd+;, .An'l > ~nc1na 4nd Mory lou PdM'( ot lonq 8t-d f\ c .. Mtm(lrtdl p,.,,., t 1htr .,,.,...O<tllt<frt:•f'I cU"ld tc-'l .)t-rw1t..-\ "' 1t Oil AM ln,,.·d~y Qr .. dt 9'ul'11 °11dr ... ,, ~rv1(t'., Thur\ f •·brunry 1 l"I~ ..+t p,,, lie \llrN dov Frt>t•ldt Y 2 '"'8 df 7 ('W'J PM .ti Chotptd lntcrrTt• nt ~df 11 Vtt•w A<Jltr l:I"'·,.. '"'Ir" Cn~ld ,y...,,. Cl'\1.U:~I M t'f'Y'l)rldl ""'"-PJr +l•I V•l'W ~f'¥1 ,., ''"''''°' lntfrmt-nt f'at1t1c. M(;rlvrtry director\ V1t'w M~·n nr1-tl Pttt~ N#w()Orr 8f"acl'I 810HOI r11 6-.tllt tiPrtWron ~untttdl Home MA~V ~ 8lONOt <t\)•~ ft 1r\10tt'\f (t..>\td Mt-~d ot th" t1vn\1nqton O•dth f'<et1rf'm~t H'>rnt .... \,.,.CS "way nn Sund•y Jo,,u.uv 19. 1Y78 at P•c1hcd Hosp1tdl Deaths Svrvtvtd b'f two d tWQhtPr-. R ILt Mac:C.,rf'Qor of f'llnt, M IC hiQnn .tnd M••or P~t of Vdn Nuv\ Ca o~ ~on Reno J 81oncf1 o• L~Gra~ 1u1no1s to granochlldrfln "nd • l qrfllt~ qrandchlfdrM, Dn<' of "'"°m " Joyco Elsewhe•n Ot!'dd ol Hunt1ntq1on B•dC~ Ca M" ' c;; A1ondl hctd ~t'n .1 m,.mb,., al lht- t d\tl'rn ~tM-t tor OY•~r \0 yt>ar .. ut\-rrtl .,Pt"¥trP\ w•ll bi• rotHiud••d rn l ,,C",r-tnQto lll1not\ J."u•r• 1• l\r(llf'l .. r-. 5m1tth Mor-tv"'r 1 dtr ,.rt()r, lOOO J€ R RV RORflH TOOO d"" 11 al 11'>6t OJ" Htll' (H f\lOOdltllJ c,, Pd"~<J dWAY on JAnv.u' ]Ii HIB ut Un1""¥tr !.'tY H o\,f1•l..tl '1.on (l1P1:JO Cit Ht' ntid b~ .. n d rtM.1·1'~n1 o' f voncHdo (a for ' YPdf tOtrN-rtv ,,. "l,.wport a~a n. ( d and 11r1or fo tn~t ot Hunt1n9fnn iH !!<fl ( ~• H...-,., )'11'Y Yt'd tJY ht11i J"''llh..-r V<.i'lnu• L fQ(Jfl ot F ullfl'rlo~ r of ~,~ i')dtPnh M l' ' M r\ J d'1H'\ E l odd ot l vond100 {a, ""'° •wo \t\IVr\ Judy ,1r'C1 (mdy Tt>dd t>f l \t-o'ld100 (ti dltd tour brofhtr,., Jim o' f ullf'rlot"I ,Oho Jot' And £\ref ot r 0,( f')nd•OO (ti M f"mon11 ~er \It( .. ~ Wiii r;.. in N .. wl'Yt ~d<h dr to ''° A M 1Jn s ... ,..,,.c:ldy f-fbruary .. _ fq'i, 1n lh., ( nurch ot Jtt-.u\ (J'\ri!iit of LdU,.r Ody ~int\, 801 C>oV'!'r 51 . N•woorl 91'.tCll, (d In f1r-u ot flow~~~ fcttnlly ._,~.,._, ~on\rtl>UltoM be mlld~ lo l"-' Unlv~•~I· ty of (4ttforn1.:t Founcfitllon, San D•~qo, Cd '10 Or H E. Jamu, Pecu ... tr•c ,_.ful'O\ur9ery1 22S W OtlklMO", San Oie9<>. Ct '11Cl:J. OSTASZEWSKI C AlHERINE PAULINE OSTASZEWSKI l>H\Pd •w•y On J•'luary 28 1q19, •oident ol Hunt- ington Beath. C~ 5vrviV9(1 by three •On• I' en P O•l•"~"""I of 0.tM Pn1nt Cd. Rot>er1 A (XldU"WOI Of HunttnalC>n BeMh, C<1 and A1 .. ene1~r J o"""rws-• Of San ~rn•rdll'!O. C• ' O"V9M or Oor" P Pltard ol Hur11 tnr4tOn Ar•cf\, Cl '-1\ter VIOlll MtMMld" <ii V•n Nuy\, C~ ond "9"' Ql'.tno t\lldrfl'n Vl\l\1ft1on lut\dlh' J~nuMY lt 1Q13 '"'"' & .10 PM to. 00 PM .... 111 AO\ery •• 1 00 PM Otlday Brott'lfH\ <No.I Mtt'-\ of (tv1.s.h•n BtH'1d1 Wedntt\.0.y f-fl't>ruarv 1 '~'• ' lO AM 41 St Simon & JuM Church t-f1,n(1nqlon 8fl•cn c ~ 1n1 .. rm""' "''"'urrect1on Cem~h~'rv South Stln (,~brl~I Ca Olr&<l•d b1 OllOdy flrolM" Motlu.ory !Mull & T•IO.rt Hvn11nr11on B<!Mh Ca SA? 1111 &YEAS JUN£ K BYERS IBETH'I ""'"'" eway on JAt•uMy 17 1q79 Survl veo by Odvqhlrrs Beverly Hothtrom and l.Uf%.IHGE•ON FUHH.ALHOMI Corona del Mar 6 73.9450 Costa Mesa 646-2424 HLLH04DW4Y MO ITU An 110 Broadway Co~ta Mesa 642-9150 SMITH-TVrHIU...UMl WESfCUff CH.Artl 427 E 17th St Costa Mesa • 646-4888 Santa Ana Chapel 518 N Broadway SantaAna • 547-4131 ,.IHC! IR0n4HS SMln4S' MOn\l.ARY 627 Main St Huntington Beach 536-6539 PIK FAMILY ~OlONtAL AIMlllJ. HOMI 7801 Botsa Ave. Westminster 893-3625 -P•CIFIC VllW MIWOllAL PillC Cftmotery Mor1uary Cttapet 3500 Pacific View Drive Nelill(pOrt, Catlforn1a 844·2700 - .\ '\ F.: H !\fass 1 ,\ P 1 Tht· Re\ l.eonard l'N•ney, a .ll·s111t 1>riest ''ho pn•arhPd tht·re WiJS n11 -.al\'atmn nut~trl" tht• Hom an Catholit· Churc:h ;.ind "a ... l'Xl'OmmtllllC<tl ('(j in J!).'l:J died .'.\fonda:.. ;1t N~1-.hoha ('ommunity Ho..,pitul Th" <'X('Om mun i 1· :.it 1 on w <1.., re movt>d Nov 22, 1972 BALTIMORE (i\P 1 Dr Alvin Nason, 58, a biochem1:.t for John Hopkins University who contributed to research on enzyme processes in various forms of life, died Saturday. For the Record Dl••olutfon• Of Marriage Fltecl J•n,..r• U WANTOCH Steph•n•P Ann rtod Vlnc.nl Merlo POE TOE Hf NI\ Anne dl\'1 -rr~I SAMP E.dtlh l and Malt~w R HALL Cdt~ri..-A 11nd Oen,,,~ I( ' ICA\JfMAN Phttlp J •M Mon• Ran, WHIT LOW, Oev10 J •nd a •• -. R ' GUMMERSON, Frank L and Oonn• J une RE 'I NOi. OS, Geor9e O•'llel ano Dunne El~ne; CAOWELL. OolO<'tt Jun el>d P..,f JoHpll LEACH, GMy I.aster end Cheryl Lynn; IAZAAR, Jov L eiwl Charltt D.; 81NGMAM. Sil.Iron S. 4ncl W•ll•r L, 111 ; CRUZ. Keren Jeen end Roneld Rey; &AEWER, Bonni• J, •ncr Cl\ert• s . TERRILL, PetnCI• Ann •nd Georo• Shermen, KASPRZYCKI Sandra end Jan S . SCHULZE, Gertr.-F •ncl F r..c! <: .. C.ILL, Jo Alln and Lawrence W : PUCKETT. lrh Gail 1tnd O•vld Mlchul KAUFMAN, Wintord l •nd Mtloelv AN; FOX Ml< .... 11• •no Oevlo Gibb•; SCH.ARTUHG , Chrl•ll"9 Mid Roqer l EHMANN su,.11ne encl TFlome< WILSON. Tl'lel\ FrtlM\Cls •nel Ml,,.,.. Peoer; STOVER. Rott.rte l . and Lynn Al· ltn, THOMPSON, Johr\ F Jr •nd Ct..,dl• Mey; SlERLING, Marve-.1 F,.n(e\ •nd CPIArt•s .t.uoust. CRAD· DOCK, Glenna M ...0 Eric J ; MAO· O(H, Ahd.--I. •nd Merveret A. .. James appealed again. this time to the com mission's Appeals Review Board. He contended in t'ffect that the evidence agamst him was only circumstantial since nobody testified that they ac- tually saw him throwi.ng away the orders TRIS TIME JAMES WON. THE board ordered that he be reinstated al his old job and paid for the 18 months since he was sacked. The board found that the GPO had enough evidence to susp.:nd James for the first 30 days but _____ ·-said there was no con-.._._~~~-elusive proof that the On the subjrct marked order~ had ac of disrri•ina• tually reached him. The t i o n .. o n f1> original packet of 131 naanager said., marked orders had passed through the "'(}nle:ss 9011 are h a n d s o r t h r e e a wldte, Anglo-s uperiors, being count- Sa.ron Male-1111.. ed only onl'e, before he got any of them der 40, you pro-James was re- b a b I y h a l" e in:,tat<'d The GPO now ,,0 me e.r<"use to has telc\'lsion monitors lo il Jd m 1.1,att·hing O\'t•r bring a ,.Ont• l'mployees"ho..,t-Jobil plaint... is to ·as::.emhl<' orders ~~for mailing, ..inti of fi<'ials say 1t 1s unJ1kely lhc•re will he any repeat of the mass discarding of ordt•rs from tht• public But they also s<iy they sol\'ed the problem in spite of, and not with any ht>lp from till' federal pcrsonnd system The syskm forced them, in their attempt to enl>urc that citizens would get the publicalaons they had paid for. into something approaching a full-dress c riminal trial with lawyers. live testimony, \H1tten brief., and motions and muh1ple levels of appeal Jn agency after agency. federal exeeutives say it has become more and more difficult to fire a federal employee for anything but the most fla- grant and outrageous behav1or. Jn the most recent 12-month period for which figures are available, the government fired 226 employees for irlefficiency. It has 2.8 milJion workers. THE MANAGERS SAY THEY .\RE hobbled not only by ba!ftc civil service procedures, which nre complex and time-consuming in themselves. but also by union grievance procedures and by new anti discrimination enforcement rules which give employees u r hotl'e of ::.everal different way::. to appeal the same action Employel's c<in appeal f1ring!:i. demotions, de nt:.il of pa~ raises or other "adverse actions" An appellant gt-ts wh<tt amounts to a miniature court trial. If he 111::.es there. he can appeal to the Ap· peals R enew Board. If he still doesn't like the out- come. he can go to the three Civil Service com· missioners Finally, he may sue in federal court. Forty percent of employees appeal when they can. and appellants win in one case out of three provided they get their appeal ftled in time. When they win they are twice as likely to do so on technical grounds as on the actuaJ merits of their case. MANAGERS COMPLAIN THAT THESE technical reversals are so unpredictable that the process amounts to f game of bureaucratic roulette. Federal unions don't like the process either, saying it takes too long and tends to give the benefit of the doubt to managers because the ap· peals are decided by officials on the federal payroll. "It's like a family fight with your mother·in- law; you know how it's going to ~ome out,•· says Kenneth Blaylock, head of the biggest federal un- ion. ln one case the Postal Service dismissed 3 $14,000·a-year Manhattan employee after he shot u l'o-worker m the stomach during an argument in front of the Gracie Station post office. But the man, who was jailed for the crime, appealed his firing and won re instatement on grounds that his bosses filled out the paperwork wrong. They signed tht' d1 smii.sal letter Jomlly. One boss should have proposed the f1r1ng and anothcr'should have apprond 11, the appeals Judge rul~·d THE POSTAL SERVJCi: WAS forrt.•d to give tht' gunman <1bout $5,000 in back pay for the time IH' had been out of work pt·nding the appeal. Tht•n they fired him all over again. this time getting paperwork stra1i::ht Cases often drag on for ~ears The Internal R evenue Service hred two low wage clerical workers after they repeatedly failed to file their income tax returns on time. despite warnings to do so. The two women appealed, argu- ing that they relied on their husbands to file the re- turns and were mostly due to get refunds anyway. The case took nearly four years to settle. THE WOMEN WON APPEALS AT the first and St'cond le\'el within the Civil Service Com· m1::.s1on . but :.iflt·r l RS Commbsioner Donald Alex andt•r wrote• <t lt'tl1·r 'laying this would create a bad prt'l'eckmt and hurt puhh<' confillcnre in the IRS the full <'Omm1 ... s1<>n rt•opt•nt.•d the ease and upheld th1• f1nngs Tltt• \\om••n ri•pre'iented bv their un wn. sul·d and f111 .tlly \\On in the l ' S Court of < l.11ms, whtt·h orden·ll thl' women reinstated It 'l..11d tltl' firing v, iJ't too hdrsh a penalty for 'tUc:h a minor 1nfr;itt1on by such Im\ -le\ Pl employees The delays .... oak up trm .. of managers and work a hard:o.htp on thl' t·mployees who eventually "''rt rem.statement One of the first IRS employeel>. the sole support of her children, s ubsisted on [ welfare and food stamp:. during the four-year ap-_ peals fight because none of the 82 prospective employers she contacted would hire someone fired by the JR...<;, ac-cordmg to her attorney Robert M. Tobias. 1'!ANAGERS SAY TlfEJll JOBS ARE i:nado even more difficult because of the ease with whJch their subordinates can accuse them of discrimina• t10n on grounds of ral'e, aex, age, religion or D•• t1onaht} · 'Unles!> vou are a white, Anglo·Saxon male under 40 you probably have some excuse to bring a c·omplaint, ' said one manager. who asked not to be namt•d Onl'e ac·c·used of d1 stnmanat1on. manager!j ninnot he pre~ent lo uss1st in their own defense during thl' ht•anng except to give their owq lest1mon) They may not get legal advice frorri go\ ernment laY.yers. but must hire their own. Ir th<' dec1s1on goe!> again!'lt them they stand to Jcjse pay or position. NEARLY 90 PERCENT OF THE d1scrimina-' lion complaints reaching the Appeals Review Board are ruled to be groundless. Still, managen' say they sometimes feel reluctant to discipline bad employees or to deny them raises and promotions' 1r they threaten to bring a diseriminat..ion com .. plaint. : "Whats t.n it for a manager to hang tough,1 even if he's nght," s aid Labor Department official Bert Lt'wis "Tht> "ay the rules are wntten. it ex· post•::. the equal opportumty procedures as a poss1· blc extortion dt•v1c{' agamst managers " • The 1clt•a beh111d the mulllll'v1:lcd appeals pro·· C'l'S S 1s to protel't ft<deral l'mployees against a rb1trnr\' f1rtng demotion for political or personal' reasons Uut 1t has be<·omt• :,o complex. legalisti~· .. rnd tinw-C'onsurrnng that 1t is getting m the way of t•ff1ctl•nt ~o,ernm t•nt , in the opinion of many top ud m 1nistr~t1011 <1fftewb · \. t'It l '11f 1lled )ohs, unpau.1 pe11sions t. \I. BO'\ I> ) INFORMS in the DAILY PILOT The great 1978 take-off! ' t - <!! 51 *=ti' i I \ (Fly Air California to San Francisco, and take $19.78 off your room at the St. Francis.) Why wait any longer? Air California offers plenty of convenient non-stop flights to get you to the San Francisco Bay Area. And the St. Francis is waiting once you arrive. Come for a weekend, a week, or as Jong as you like. From now until February 28th, 1978, the St. Francis will take $19.78 off any individual stay of two nights or more. You get superb accommodations on Union Square in the heart of San Francisco's theater district for as little as $39 a nigh~:u:c 24-hour room service. The cable car stopping at your front door. And all the traditional amenities that make the St. Francis uniquely the St. Francis. And Air California makes it all even easier to take with special discount fares, advanced computerized reservations and ticketing, and an exclusive family plan that can save you up to 30% any day of the week. Just show your Air California ticket when you're ready to check out, and the great 197 8 t8ke-off is on. For St. Francis reservations call 800-228-3000 toll free or your travel agent. •Single OCOJponcy, per night Subject to all applicable taxes. St. Francis Sa.n Franelseo We're easy to toke . .. • ~ • • . I I C Awaits Train Service Rusl,,.lwur Comnwlers Begi,11 iii Fe bruary 8)· KATHY CLAN<..'¥ Ol IM &Uilt ...... ~ If a new San Diego to Los Angeles commuter rain isn't at least 80 percent full six months from ow. th~ man behind what has been called "Bax er Ward's rhoo <'hoo" will consider the i;ervit'e a allure That is what Los Angeles County Supervisor axter Ward said at a press conference in Santa Ana Monday about the new 475·pa.ssenger tr ain which will bc~m experimental service Feb. 14 . Wai·d was with Orange County Supervisor flalph Clark to d1sruss the new commuter serv•ce nd to help make local resident.a aware or the ush-hour tram's three sto sin Oran e Count . ''H E R E I N range County e a re going to be get· og the benefits or Los Angeles action." said Clark. who also serves as chairman of the Orange County Transit District IOCTO 1 Hoard or D1rertors .. Here ~l' ha\ t' a railroad systc.>m goang l through the ~·enll•r of • the counlv." Clark -.aid. "Let.., ust• 1t an<I get p e op 1 e o u I u f t h 1· 1 r ~f uutomob1l1"., ~ • Los Angclco.; Count)' so far hao.; ..,pt•nt $2 1 WARD mtll1on to 1air<·hasc• and refurbish the t.>tghl railroad CC1rs for tht-new t•ommuter hne And the six month <'xperamental program will be subs1d1zed with $375,000 from Loi Angelei Coun-1.J and $250,000 from CalTruns. " W ARD SAID, It' t'HE TRAIN 1sn'l operating At betwt>t•n 811 and 90 percent of capacity within the ~ix months, thr st•rvir1• "\\OUld be a total failure · The Lo.., Angelt-s·bound morning train will leave San Diego at 5 t5 a m and make stops 1n Del Mar and Ot'eans1de before entering Orange <.·aunty It won't stop an San Clt-mente. but will make a 7 03 u m slop in San Juan Capistrano, arrive in Santa Ana al 7 25, in fo'ullerton at 7·45 and In Los 1\ngeJE>s at 8:20 a m ON ITS EVENING RUSH-HOUR return, the tram will leave Union Station at 4 30 p.m arnv1ng an Fullerton at 5 05, Santa Ana at 5 21, San Juan Capistrano at 5.41 Ctnd San Diego at 7:05. There ali>o 1s a 5.30 p.m. Amtrak tram leaving Los Angeles. arriving at 6 05 lO Fullerton, 6.21 in Santa Ana, 6·41 in San Juan Capistrano and 8:10 in San Diego Coming along \\1th thl' new commuter service 1s a 20 percent d1s<•ount program available through July 31 on all Amtrak trains. WITH THE DISCOl 'NT, the Monday through Thursday round·tnp fares to Los Angeles will be S14 .50 from San DieMO. $7.50 from San Juan Capistrano. $5 from Santa Ana and $3.40 from Fullerton The serv1rt· wall l'OSt S3 round-trap rrom San Juan lo Santa Ana and $3 90 from !:>an Juan to Fullerton Fridav antl \\'.eekend fares are 20 per- l't•nt h1ghe1 Clark said effort... art• under way to win ap pro, ill of a "''ntor l'tt11.t>n d1srount rare and atten tinn m<I\ foc·u-.. latN on lowering all commuter farl'-.. 1'1 i\DDITIOl'i, NEW STOPS may be installed lakr alon~ tht' Orunge County route, he said, men t10111ng lhl' M1sswn Vll'JO art>a and Anaheim !"ltac11um as poss1b1l1ltl's If the scn-1<'<.' 1s well used, Clark continued, OCTD off1<'1als also will l'Ons1der operating shuttle buses from l·ounty tram stops to employment cen- ll'r.., Ward said six months should be ample time lo test use of the commutc.>r ~erv1ce. He said pubhc mteresl has b<'en c·,·1dt•nl s tn<'l' ht• first tried to 1m· plement tht> sr.n ire 1n 197.t. HB Man Joins Carpenter Dally 1"11 .. Stall .._. FIELD REPRESENTATIVE Darrell E. Ward FREE 8) 0. C. HUSTl"liC.l.i OI '""Dally P1te>1 Stall St(jte Sen Denni~ t: <'arpentc•r has announrecl Hw ;ippointment of Darrell E \\. <1r<I of Huntington Beach as ht'-full t1 me fi<•ld r<'presentat1ve lie will serve m C'arpcnlt•1 ·, lonil nffi<'e during the rf• mamder or the senator '<> term. wh1rh expires in Deremht•r \\ARD HAS BF.EN a resident of Orange County for the past 20 )ears. working the majont\ of that tame for PacH1r Vie" M<'morial P ark in Newport Beach ~nd Smith's Mortuary in Huntington Beach His previous community ~erv1C'es includes a fi\'e \ear rcrm as dire<'tor and one year a-.. president or the Huntington Bt•,1c h l'ubllt· F:H·11tt1es Commit t t't'. "h1ch hl'lped bring about thr cnnstruct1on of the new lthrarv an<! <·ti\ hall in that citv \A. a rd 1s a member of the '\J,.,, port \mencan Legion, past <omm~111<l<·r of th<· F.ast Los \n~1'l1•o.; post :in al'11ve Rotarian .ind for mt•r prl's1dcnl of the Hun tington lka<·h <'hamber of Com Ill I')'('(' llE \\i\!'\ PR E~JDENT of the l'<tl1fnrnia Funeral Directors As· :-nciation in 1973 Just prior to :ll·rrpt1ng th" position with Sen Carpentt•r. Warct was employed .1 s ;,i I 1 c e n s e c1 r e a I P s l a t e s:.tll•sm:in Ht> \\ 111 be "ork1ng oul of C:1rpentrr·, office al 17880 Sky Park Circle, Suite 103, Irvine. 1 l'l<'phon<' 557 3200 Tuelday, J~uary 31, 1~78 DAIL y PILOT A• Ride the BIG WAVE coming to Southern CalifOrnia from the beach in Orange County. ~ THE SOUTHLAND'S NEWEST RADIO STATION . at the crest of your FM radio dial • F otmerl y I( AP X Come on up to Sound Wave 108 and en- 1oy the best or !he bright. beautiful music you ve heard on K-BIG. KJOI or KAPX, plus thP mellow sounds of KNX·FM. To· days adult music IN A NEW BLEND on the most powertul s1.1t1on 1n Orange County, K WAVE with 28,500 watts tram San Clemente. All to the accompaniment of the refreshing sounds of the sea''/ New space-age equipment enhances the 1tstenab1hty and extends the effective range of the station Help us test the new coverage. Y- WIN A TRIP OVER THE WAVES courtesvot K·WAVE You can be eligible 1or a drawing for a 7·DAY trip on S1tmar Cruises to the Mexi- can R1v1era Send in the coupon below and tell us where you received K-WAVE (If you like. 1111 out the rest of the ques· 108 tionnaire because that will help us betteL serve you.) Entries must be postmarked before February l. .1978 Winners will be broadcast February 14th Valentine's Day '°V • •••••••••••••••••••••••••• I EN TEA MY NAME IN THE CONTEST ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• K·WAVE 20bl AUSINESS CENTER ORIVE, SUllE 21 3 IRVINE, CA 9271'1 I rece111Prt K WAVE at nip to11ow1nq 1orat1on· at work T ~f! recl'ploon ""l'- oooc1 i 1,.,, l poor My comments on 'fOU• proqramm109 arr. . --··- rc11.i11. l would likP morP _ _ I would 111..e le~"---__ _ I like K·WAVE as II 1~.1 l I l•l<e mu:.ic l11les and .irt1c.ts announr1·d :_YES C NO 5TREf T--------------- CITY ---------l•P- 00 TO ALL OUR CUSTOMERS A LOAF OF OUR FANTASTIC OF THE I I I I I J l I I l I l I TRY OUR DELICIOUS CAKES ''SOUR DOUGH" BREAD ui...w-.M 1.1111 .. w ... 1t, 1na CHEESE CAKE ...... 4.71 ONLY 54°0 c::n · 1MllAlltlfOP GOOD ANY TIME 51°0 OFF I I I I BAKESHOP 3444 East Coast Highway Corona del Mar• 673-7310 • 955-1722 . CForw.rty n. SfK!Ck Sltop Weryl * CAKE DECORATING OUR SPECIAL TY * L\DULT CAKES AVAILABUI ALL COUPONS GOOD ANnlME oiiiS11 -- GOOO AMY TIME l ' • • l • WHITE • BANANA NUT •OfOCOl.ATE • MARBLE • CARROT • GERMAN CHOCOLATE and our WHIPPED CREAM CAKES ·10% OFF ANY WEDDING CAKE . ThleOouDon l'MllAll ... 51°0 OFF .ANY DECORATED CAKE • \ t f 0 DAILY PILOT Tue&dav Januart 31 19111 NATIONAL I PEOPLE Just Another Street, It Runs 1'e9as 1 , ~ . , , " • i f W f(J/\ ' '\()If: Durs u 1vdiey pluy lht twnrs ' l>oe1> ttw> t:C1nfer t1vn1•r hut>c' u sut'tl tr1<1ti1 1 l:s the borttnder an alcholtC'., A per.mn .sur rou11dl'd by unothn'.' ,,/ea.sure U$UllllJ1 lolerates 1t rather !hon fndulyt> J<ntdent.~ 11/ I.mi t°<'IJO~ <Jrt' no dafJttrtnt -u.thether thty work m llir , n~m11~ m JU.\I /111ppc•11 111 Irr I.' 111 u qomhlmg llllL'll H\ JOllN I\ \RUOl R I.AS \ [· (,;\S !"1•\ f 1\ I' I H1•lt\ Sdlilnt1•11h.11•h d1 l\t"' jHhl ;,u lt•i-1 ol '1111 ul t 111s1·I .111d gar 1sh -.pl1·ncl111 1111 lwt "·"to ;incl lrum \\ 01' k l'.11 It d il\ H1111lll·tt1 • to h••1 I IJ.!hl hla1 k 1.11 I\ t11 tw1 ldt hl'1 l-.011 1!111 hold I\ '>ht I tth•' ,111cl \\ 1•1l 'tr,1tj.!ht I hrt111gh tlw 1.m , nl h••ll \\ htlf' I h1• n •..,t nl 11' \\ "1111t•1 110\\ ( \:'Ii \:"i' O'\I II\ t lfl th'' " 1 lrt nHHH') nu m h "'orld uf 1 l<1nl-.111g ni. kt·I s lot:.. hi g h 1 oilers with thou!'>.md dollar 1•g11' .ind dinw s 11t•d ,., 1·s. hig h hrt•a:.tc•d i.:1rb \\1th dc1llar pan t \-·hos1: and hundrt•d-dollar drC'ams. tht• rattle• of cards. lht· -..k1lt<>r or d1c·1·. the· long f.ll'l'" .ind tht• shar fl s n11l1·..,·1 llo\\ 1·a11 .Ill\ Olll' lt\'l' ht•rl'" l·:.1..,\ l·:x1·l·pt for th.it '>0 ft•<'! 111 p.1\1'1111•111 , Ht'ltv S1·h.1n11•11 h.11 h , \\lit· m1dh1•r <·htld I'"' d1oloJ..'I. t 1·•1ttld 111-.t JS \\ t•ll 111• It, 1111• 111l>11l>111flll'111 l't·orta H>H 111-.lt .\:\ U rnoq ol the otlt1•1 tlltl tH!il 1nh.1h1ta11ts of th1 .., 'Jilt•\ lh1• \'i'g.1" Strip ,.., two 1l11n g'.'. t I ) tlll' mo"! 1111pnrt:.i11t 11•al t''-f,11t· 111 to\\11 .ind 1:!1 1u..,t .1nulht•1 s t11•1·t to l'fl•!'>" i\nd. 111 thl'1r I'"'"· th1· glanng l'lu..,tt·r 111 hol1•ls and 1·<1:-.111os 1-, lar h1•ltt·r th.in thl' ""~ll'l :ind 11t 11tlw1 tlnwnt11\\ n.., 'I hl'St' Pl'<1plt• hil\ 1• lt•Jrnt•d lo .ilJ1d1• "1th g,1mbltng or gam ing a -. lhf·V t·all ll Now that ,, do /, \.' n or s 11 a 1J1 n g rt' i. or t ~ ··1 :-t•\\ ht'I •' <1r1• 1·111ls1d1•r1n i,: l1·i.:.d111•d i.:.1ml>l1n~ ;.., ,, 1·1111• for AP Woro ..... to ENTERTAINS SENIORS Singer Tony Bennett .111tl I .tlh. lJa ... kl'thall I ht• I ;1bl11 II\ .. , 111·,t door to ;1 dealt't' .ti l '.11 ·.,,ll " i'al:l\.'I' ,ll'l'll'" tilt' ''' .... 1 t111m ;1 pit Ito-.., .ind 111·"1.t d11111 to .1 m.111 \\l1t1 l'ht•1 ks ;1ll lh1 • l.11 J.!1· 'lt•t 1n..1l'111111· pa) ofh But \\ I I h 111 I h • · 1·ti111 llll'., 11 I t h ,ti 11t•1ghlwrhuod. lht•1r II\ t::-. and their t·on1·~rns are ord1nar) Thl•\' "orr} about th1· <'rt m•· r .111· .1n<l air potlut1on, pro..,t1tu t ton and pornograph\ n :-.ing propt•rty t:osts The) 1·urse th1 • rush -hour traffll· <1nd tl11• Caltforn1<1 hcc>n:,e plaks wht'IH"t' t h1•1r hll'S"'tn~s flm, .J 11st lik1 • .111 \ '' hc·n• eh<> Or ..., it " •ff'p .iwct don't ha"P any probf.,...s a.•· ~oriotf"ff 1dth thP ga•ing indautry. • EX("Ppf grou•th. llll'll ('l'Ollllllll( \\(II ... ll\I' q\11' 111111 oJ IHI\\ 1w11pl1• h\ 1· Ill !IH h.1dt1\\ 111 ~·.imhlini.: h.1 -.. .1 l'' "'' Ill).! flt'I lllll'llt I ' \ L :\1 O" I t. \ t. K \ 0 '\ t · s '".., f..i., \ t'J'a' ,.., Ulll'lll•· I h1• rap 1mrl m al·1·omm1Hl:1twn that th .... 1sol.1tl·d dt•:-.t•r t t1l\\ll has m.1clt • with 1t:; ma1or 11Hlu sln m:1> n111 ill· tran:-.ll•rahl" to plat1·-.. hk•· \tlant1c l'tl\ 111 M1:.im1 J11-ad1 \\' h ;.i l l '' 1.· r l 1·.,s11 n s ;11 1 • t 1 • I 11 • learn1•<1 m,I\ 1·orn1• tor '1111· •1thrr" Li.I::. \ 1·g.1s, till' grim ini.: 'lC'droom n1mmumt \ th.11 '-t1r rounds !ht• ('<11np.111~ stori• '(hi' Jlll)llll,1t 11111 I' ~I II\\ lllJ.! .tt ,1 r,111· thal ,q1pr11.1d11•.., H pc-ri·pnt .1 . 1·.1 t In ,., 1•1 't h111 g li11t ,11•11 .. 1i.:1 'I.irk ('111111t> '' 11111~1 ol 1tw -.t.111' 11 -.;,., :1d.1 .111d lf 'j 111·11pl1 · 'i;I> h:1t II\ mg 111•\I door 111 (';1,1no ::1111hl1nc 1s no d1ff1·1·1·nt th.in 11' o11 ~ ~111ywh1·n· l'i-.1· lll'SUANllS ANO WIVES ~o .o work, lht"v' C'h.1uffrur c-h1ldrl'n o pa.mo lt•s..,on' and sO<:<'er ~um t·s. tlwv hi.I rhf•cue st ca ks 'I h1·11• 1 .. no 1111'<1n11• l.1\ no 1r1 lw11l.111t'l' t.1' 1111 s tatt• t<1rp11rat1• t .tX no lll\l•ntol\ t ,1 \ Tht•r l' is ,1 :1 ~\ t.Jl'rt'enl s.tl~·., l.i:-. hut th1· 10,000 toun-.ts •' d:t) µ;1y half ol If l 'nhkt· otht·1 s la!t· l1t«1surtl'" :-.:"' a<la ., ha-. .1 -,urplu:-. ap p1 o;,1t·h1ng 560 mtll1on l'ropert' l.tXt'" an• km a mere S5 p1·r ~1011 111 tlw nty .and more than Sl I"" l'I inc 'lark Count' '1 llE \\'EK.\Ci l-. PRKJo. 111 a houw ht•rc is S-18,000. Prop<•rt) ta ,e.., on th(ll \\ould be less than :-:11111 " '"·tr. I hanks to t ht• tounsr 1ncl11s11 \ \\ hll'h pr0\'1c1r.s up to iO p1•rC"t·nt nf lht· 1•otml\ l:t'\ ,.., '1•nt11'' d1n·1·tl\ nr in<ltrf'l'll\ ('t'I l'ol(ltl.t llll'OlllC' I' <'IJ!hlh 10th" 11;111011 H 11 t nw r I' t h a n g u m h I 1 n i.: dolh1r' l'l'<ll'h 11110 t h1• lt\ t•s 111 l.;.1s \'1·1.:an' lh'bbt<' HP:,nol<l turns out to entertain t ht• Girl Scouts, Samm y Oa\'1S Jr a1 ri\'<'S unheralded to help at ,. ch1ldr<>n s dog s ho\\, Tony Ben nc>tt performs for senior c1t1zrm. People deal in cash more than 111 l 'I t•tht llundred dullar b1lb lht• .1l'l'UU1Ulat1on or lips, Form 1o111 not\\ 1th~tunu10g, t han~1 hands her~ evcrv d&). l'llE TOWN IS OP1':N 24 hours .1 cl.1\. :-01• .. cn days a wt·ek You t .111 huv tmlk ;.It 2 J m and get a hull on s('\H'd on ttt dawn \ ou < .u1 gt•t drunk al 5 a m and phi)' t h l' s l 0 l m .1 l' h I II I'... I n I ht• s upc•rmark1•t anyt1n1l'. alt lhl· t 1r111·, ufln .t~W 21 lllit It'\\ du Ft•\\ 1•.tt1 Cilford to \ n.1t11111al stud) on gambling I 1111 nd I hat i H p1•n •enl of adult °" 1·' .1 ti a rt ., g.1111 h It· .,onH·t 1 Ill!' d111 rni: th1· '1•ar ;11;;,1111'1 ,1 n.1 t 11111 ;ti •" t•rai.:1· ol t. l p1·n •1·nt Hut 111 1 tw 1 .111g1• of -..t.1ltst11•al t•rror till' 1tgu11•s nw' ht 1l11s1·1 th.in I h.il Ht•s tdl•nb I» Jlld large pooh l'uoh tlw notwn that gambhn~ d11nk1ni.: or olht·r sinfu l t>n 11·rpr1st• 1s .1 prnhlt·m of th e ma JOrll\ "PEOPLE l'O:WE HERE I mm, sa\. Los Angeles." say" .ll·..,s t• r mmc>tt. a :-.uccessful real 1•:-.talt• \.\Oman . "and they stay up t\\o nights and drink too rn ud1 and go to the airport Anc1 th1•n lht•y turn and ask, 'My God. lw\.\ l'a11 anyone liv0 here'' · "I 't' ;ilway ... told my l'htldren 1 II.it l<JC'iils don't gamhlt• · sa}s I h.d1.1 l>ondt·rn. rnolhl'I' of fin· .1 ncl 1 ha1rm.1n of th1 Count' 1 '111111111s!'i10ll 'Th1·\ i.:11 l11 hol•·I .. IHI\\~ llw :..11111' .1 ... tl1t•\ \\oUl!l 1111· 1w1ghh111 hood t hl':tll·t <lll<l l ht•\ \1• g rcmn lllJ \\tlhuut pro hll·rn-, I think 11 :-. t·;_1:,1cr lo ~ro" up "1th ~aml>ltng than to 1·ome 1in 11 trom the oub1dc <;amhltng '" toler att'd a-. J 1wt•cssary business YN. Je:,~c t-:m mC'tl fou~ht the ub1qu1tous grol'<'rY ..,lot machtnl'. and both '.'oh<• and Mr-. Dondero foci dt.., g ust st·t•tng ,1 mothn ~luggtnJ! 111t·kf'ls into th1• ~lot wh1I(• he1 <'htldrl'n sit \\ a111n~ 1n tlw shop ptng cart ",\ UYf OF PEOPLE thmk ''" tP~1ch ..,lot rnaC'h1nr n •p.11r .ind ollwr tl11ng-., but \H don t "'.., -.l'lmol supC'nntt:ndent K1·n fl\ (; 1111111 We abo don't l1o;11·h I hP 11dcl.., .Hid pl ohaliil1t11:s 111 \\ 1rt11111i· \.\ 1• 1u-..t do11 t h:I\ l' .in~ pro lil1 111-. ;i., ... m 1.tl1'll ''1th lh1• gam 111 ~: t nd ust n Extt•pt gro" th \\ ht·11 h1· tam1· ht·r l' m tlw mid 50s. the µoµul.i 1111n "'a:-; 1:,.000 and there Wl'rt· l!J,000 !'>t'hool thtldrcn Toda~ lht•rc arc 85,000 student-. Wh1l<• oldt•r commun1t11,•-. i.IP' C'lostng :-.c·hnol~ in the wakf' of tht• poq-World War II hab\ hoom. Clark Count~ 1:-t>utldmg Sin<·•• 1!164 th<• d1stntt has put up ·,o 'l'11 ooh .\:'Ii n wmu .. or.J.>ER ('Om in11n1lll'' \\l'f(' l'Utting tosls b~ , hopping ;1y,a~ at lrf'1: book!-. and .1thlt·t1e program ... ,.olt:rs herP .111thor11e'1 monev lo air , on cl 1 t ion 49 older st hoots W h 1 ll• \'Olers el st•wher e turn do\\ n H hoot bond isl'.ues 10 wholesale lots. they pass them her<> a t a i·ate of 67 percent, in .1 m o 11 n l s a p pro a c h in g $ 6 0 million . Whtie educators e lsewhere are happy if they can retain 80 per- C'l'nt of their students through high school, the rate here is over 90 pl•rcent "which is fantastic · C:uinn say'> · YOUNGSTERS DROP OUT of -..1• honh in L:.i~ Ve.Ras-C lark c '1111nt' for I h1· ~ame reason-. t lw\ dn 1·l..,1•\\ h1·ri· marna~e "' d1 o.;111l1•rt•'1 Hui tht•rP 1-.. a tlt11 ti 11"""" p1·t·11h;11 !11 a 24 - 1111111 t1mn .J0lJ conlhd-. · !"11 \\l' opt•nt·tl <1 s1·hool that -.1;irts .11tl\t•11 c-lot:k 111 the e'en 1ng and gO('S till lO It's callE:'d Sunset llt~h School and tl ha-. -..om<>thm~ like• 800 ... tudents c:urnn says The cosmopolitan draw of the hotel and restaurant industries adds a fillip to county schools - something like 33 languages i;poken al home. "Korean, Japanese, Lebanese. you name 1t. we've got it,·· Guinn says, and all are treated as if English were the second langua~c ~ol a ll is sweetness and light BETTY SCHANZENBAl'H, "ho rart•ly \'1s1ts the Strip ex c 1•pt In cross it. still has to deal \\Ith th1• dft'<'ts of it. Sht• 1 111111-.<•ls dist• arc1ed t•h1 ldrt-n 'I Ill' Strip allrac·h a lot of q uH·k mnnt·~ people c hasin j! 1 .11nbows The\ don't alway!\ makr the best of parents. • One couple left their son at the door of the home for runaways and drove lo ',renneasee. One mother claimed her daughter was unm eabte and sent her to a /outh camp. As soon as the chit was aone, tho mother thanged her phone number and threw out the daughter's ctoth .. .s. YOU DO YOUR THING, I LL 00 MINE 'JESSIE EMMETT'S PHILOSOPHY Regardless. She Fought Installation of Slot Machines in Supermarkets 'l'ht• pn·,·;ilcnt·t· ol 1-;;.1mhling in .. mo r a lJ s l 1 t· t• u It u rt• s l rt kt'" some Cl:-a paradox ('ompubl\1' gamblC"r s OJC(.'l with d1sappro\'al "They .in· n•g,irclccl a-. l<>s' th.in normal,'' '"''" .J:1l'k . "'''" though "our 1•1·onom\ ..., l1.1 s11 :11 h hutlt on g.1m111g T 11 ..: M o n '\I o ' , 11 rri mu111t\ 1sstronJ.! I l'hg11111 ,incl rn llUl'llll<il 11 IS .1~.1111-..1 g,rn1blini.; li111tol1·r:1t1•s 1t lllolht,., \I ormon-. r1l.I\ .11 1·u11nt 1111 11111 \' I;, p1·rc·1•nt 111 I ht• !OU Ill~ poµulat1011 lttJI 1h1•\ .irt· pul1t1l'all~ ,11ti\1• .111d p11d1 · t h t' m ... I' I ' 1 ·... 1111 1 h 11 1 ' "t 111 ~· 11·1·ord So "i.l'-.. Hot. 11111.1dltt'11l .1 \lormon ;.111!1 111u11I\ c111t1 llllSSIOlll'I , Ill :un l.!l\l'll eii'I t11111 th••) ma\ produt•1· :m 111 •1t1.•nt 111 tht· \'Oll'. and llH·11 1ntlut:n< 1· 1 .. '"" tendt•cl IJ\ ,, l-!l l',1ll'r pro!JIH t111n of cl1·1·11·d ,1nd .ippo1ntl'<I 111 fll'l ah \ l"l)hf'"I\ I' -..t ,tl1 )1' f,11fllh llllt'ntl'd \11t1ng hlt11\.. th1· \!01 mons ha\I' h.1d .1 J,!011d 1!t·.1l 111 '•"on 1h1• 11111trol 11f g.1n1lil I n J.! ,\ n d .d I h "II J.! h I I " I l>em11t·r.1t11 · I l.11k ( 1111n1, ,, s1•nt1,dh 1-.. ,1 1·11n -.t r\ .ill\• population :\lor rnn11 C'hrt'-t 1.111 :md .1 t•\\lsh RELIGIOL'Sl.Y, 111E prt• "t'nce of gambling produr1·-. no enigma Rabbi Stcvl'n Wl'tshNJ.! says the only diffe rence bCl\\ecn Las Vegas and other com munities is that here gamblinp 1s controlled. "There is no commandment of the Torah, no rule of Judaism opposed to gambling," he say<:.. ·'Some Christian churches have> very tight s trictures against gambling. M o mlme C hristian 1 hurt ht·~ Ju not Tht lte\ Waltt·1 :'\uwal\ ol th1· I · ruled Campu-.. ~I tnt!'>lry JI th1 · I n 1' <' r ~ 1 t' o I :'\ c \ ad .1 . l • .i ... \'1•g.1s !->;1Vs ht.• ha'-mt'l .... om•· pt•oplt' \\ h.n t•an I l'"fl" with th<' npportunity to gamhh 1 ·," mt'I 111 ht·r~ "'hn 111 ... 1 t•nulch1 1 l <'l'l r nmlo1 lahlt> hrr 1• Som<• ~t>•· ,, h \ p fl C' rl '-\ 111 Ii f• trH' 111 ll I , ti J\ ,1ga1n ... 1 i,:<Jmliltnl.! '1·1 11' 111g 11ft 11 nt I \\ITllOl 'l c. \;\lnl.I:\<,. \.11\\ .1k itdd'-Y. a\ lllJ.! hi' hand .11 tilt' 1 .1mpu' m1111:-.1r~ hutld11w '\\t• \\OUlclrt t k1\l' lhl" l 11d1·t·d. "1lh11ut ).!.1111hl111 ).! ('I .I I k (' 11ll11 l \ \\ () ll l d Ii.. .1 "11uthl1J\\ 11 dust bu\\ I It I!'> t1\1n~ lie>\\ to lurt· nt•\\ 111du .. tr tl'" to ttw .11 t'J !11 lno.11lt•n rt., en1110m1< li.1:-t'. ;ust tn "·'"'' nl'\.\ gambhni.• 1·1>rnmun1l1t'" rtra\\ off -..om1· nl lltt· La.,\ egu ... rnonor>0h l'ht•rt• 1-.. J grO"-lllg tnflU\ of "'llltll 1·1t11t•ns J1a\.\11 b\ lht• <IP .. 1·1 t l'ltmall· and i.:ood publll' 11 .111-..portat111n Thl'1 t• '" a grO\\ 1ni.: 1 ultural h.1-..t· a 2 0(10 ..,p;1t • 111w1·r1 hall on th•• 11n1' pr<;1I ' • ,, m p 11 .. " h 1 l' h 1 ' 11 \ • 1 llh'I l'lhl•cl I \l'r~ \l,ll ,1 ).!Ill\\ 111 u .ind ... u11·t ..,sf11l hallc·t 1·0111 I'·'"' ,111 .1!'11\ 1• l1hrar~ "'" L:r:im l\\11 lht•a11•r .., lor dram;,i \I !hi' 11•.11 11f the Alladrn I loti·l and l'a~mo 1:-. a ... umptuo11., 'I hl•.tlt•r tor tht• l'crform1ng Arh "h 1ch stage~ only rock coneerts. THE SENSE OF commumtv 1~ growing. too U nivers1ly President Donald Haepler was surprised, when ht' ('ame here, to find s uch a friend- ly place. He lived in an apart- ment house and encounte red "a real cross-section Qf Las Ve~as ltf1• dO<'tOr!', lawyt•rs barten tlt•r s. huokt•r c oektatl "'a1tress~. \\ 1th1n ,1 \\Cd\ or -.o \OU -.eem llJ I> no\\ 1•\ en. bodv .. · Thi• town rs still <>nough so that 'nu know a lot of people. have < ont ,11·1 "11h lot".11 polit1c1ans ,1 r1· ,1\\ ,111• of tht• lown'<; prn hl1•m., ('ttl'H: ( O"iTl'l E~ AT what 1h1· popul.11·1• tl11nk.., 1-. ,1 ht~h l1•\ 1•1 liul r att•s tor "l'rtOU' 1 11111C'~ 11u·rall ;11·tuallv ar•· dov.11 110111 I.1st y1:ar llom1t·1dc' .111d rulilw111·-.. art' up l>ccause of \\It.ii poltu· ~J\ 1s ,i g rowing d1 11g p111hlt·m 'l ht\ also sav that .is much ao.; :u pe1l·t•11t 11f ihc· l'rtmes m the 1111in t' l>clall tourt:-.ls. 13 million 11t "h0om '1s1l t•af•h vear drav. 111 g cr11n111:.ils 111 tht•11 mone}('(I ''a kc. Crim•· lt·mh to lw concenlral· t ti <low nto\\ 11 .rnd near a sub· ur h.1 n t-hopping 1·enter. Unhk~ m1111· p;.1ttl'rm·d c-ommunilt<'S, 1t ll111•o.; not concentrate in the black gh1•ltt'. or \\hat usl'd to b<' lht· Iii .wk ,.:ht•tlo Hat·1t1l d1spt>r·s1011 nth• r pla11•s <'all it m tc>J!,ral1on h.1 ... pn•1·1·1'<ll'c1 apa1·p and <i 1111111111 I ttl o,1•hn;1I -.. h ;I\ (' hallt>d l 111 t., 11l g O'E 1'111'\(, UOES"\'T t h.1n p .. l'ht ph;.'-11«.11 atLrihut('-.. •ll l'lark ('ounl~ ahnunrJ -Lake \l 1•,1d lht· C'olor adn River lloQvc•r Dam. towermg ~lounL L'har lt•ston where people flock in ..,umm<>r But m an informal pool ever~· one from the mayor and <.·ounty com missioners to jazz mus1 1·ians, bus inessmen and the dergy agr<'ed If they had to ~ 1ve up one of two things · \fount Charleston or the Strip · lhl' mountnin woulrt have to gn Land Sale Refused Salton Sea Recreation Developmenl Planned? l'rom '\ P Dii,palches 1 he Jmpenal lrnji?ation District refused to sell l ,120 acres of land lo former Sen George ~1urph). R C'ahf.. because he declined to say why he want:- 1t. a spokesman :.aid Murphy, who works for a consultmg firm 1n . Washington, D.C., appeared before the board m December. He identified the group wanting the land only as "subs tantial people of good character." The board re portedly believed Murphy's group wants the land located on the northeast edge of the Salton Sea, in Riverside County, for a recreational development A $35,000 diamond watrh shaped hkt: a grand piano and a full ·len~th leopard-skin coal. both of which belonged to entertainer Isaac Hayes, ar<> go1n)! on the au<'tton block in Memph1" The third <ind Ctn<tl 'alt· of t ht> m usiciun °!\ bt•long111g' v. i.ls orde red after ht• und h1~ \\lfe pet1t1on ed lor bankruptcy in rederal court in :\tcmph1s in December t97fl Al the time Hoyes. who won an Academy Award for his "Theme from Shaft.'' and hi wife estimated they were $8 million in debt. ""vu Altoaetb.er, 11 furs and 11 pieces of Jewelry were le> be auctioned tonisht in the ballroom of th<' Hyatt lt 9ency Hotel. • Loe Angeles City Attorney Burt Plffs. callinR h•mself "hard-liner" on cnme issues and a UlU~J1031U strong civil libertarian. an nounced in Sacramento he war, runnang for attorney general Pines, the first to announce ror the ~t ~1ng vacated by At toroey Ocnero I E \" elle V ngn. said he favored longer term for violent oHenders and ton tll\lllonul proteclions tor d i ndltlltl!. Th 38->·ear old l>tmCX'r<•t, nonk by his wife KarH and da u h nnnun~cd his Jun Ct <'..Y. II d h 1 no in n i1~nc1 \ /.1111<·h 1 ourt hlod .. t•d 1•x1letl ">o' 1ct author- \ It•' andt•r Solih1•nih) n'.., Sw1s-. bank account.., con t .11111nJ.! rwarly S:! m11l10n pend 111g sc•ltl<'ment of tn1·mnP tax 1 la1ms the n<•wspapcr Ta~c., .\n1t•tgl•r reported An attorn ey foE Solz henitsyn confirmed the Zurich district court. issued an 1n1unct1on blocking the ac- counts Hut the lawyer disputed lhc tax da1m. fi e siud Sol1.hc01ts}n. who 11\·es 1n Switzerland from 1974 to souHENtnv" l!li6 before movinr to lh<' l'nite-d Stales" paui "1•\ ('n; JX'lln<. .. nr l<IXPS h<• owrd the Swiss govern m1•nt • Pn•-.1dt•11t C:trlcr "'"d h<· ha._n·1 derided "hl'lhP1 Ill' m1 1!hl v. .tnl to h<>come a Hap11-.t m1.., ~1011 ;11' <1r11·1 h1• l1 ·" l'' tl1t• \\.'hlle Jlou''' <'art1•1 :-..11(1 that 11 ~ ,t la}metn, he has been an .11h ot·.ill' 111 .1n t.•xpandt•tl c·hun·h m1ss1on pro~ram 'I ht• qut.•..,t10n <'amt• up al .i White House news 1 nnfl·rence a rtt-r .1 n •port that Carter told a churc h rnll<>a,::uc he plan!'. to go [ ) into m1~s 1onan \\nrk altt.>r he leaves tht• p rt:· PEOPLE :-;1d en<'~ • A 34·1ear old Canadian man emerged v1<'- tonous from a field of 652 to wln lbe $180,400 first prize al the fint Amateur Backgammon Cham pionshtp in La" Veirns. Mosbe .. Chico.. Felberbaum or Edmonton, Albf'rta, was among 39 people who shared in the $360.800 prize pool billed by tournament promoters a!\ the largest ever in a back1ammon tournament ' • i ..... ,,....... BUSTER CRABBE 'FLEW' SPACECRAFT He Played Flash Gordon In the 1930s Flash Gordon . To Fly Again SEATTLE lt\P) He outwitted Ming the M ercaless, fi lied theaters with scr.eaming youngsters at Saturday matinees, and then cap- tured a new nop of young fans on television in the 1950s and 1960s. Now, Flash Gordon' is getting ready for a comeback. But Clarence "Buster" Crabbe, who played Flash in 40 episodes of the science fiction aerial during the 1930s and 1940s, says that when produc- tion starts next fall for a movie remake of the :.cries he will be playing the role of Flash's father. "KIDS WILi ... LIKE IT BECAUSE kids d<>n't t·hangc. '>aid Crabbe, who was in Seattle as a guest at the X·PO Science Fiction exposition. "If _you haH' a good fight, some wild arumals, a little fright. a lttllc excitement, they'll go and see it just 11k<.• thl• old davs." \t lhL' cxr>os1l1on, Crabbe -who will be 70 on Feb 7 autographed copies of his book on pbys1<.·al fitness for senior citizens called, · Encrgctws," a system of diet, vitami.ns and ex- t•rc1sc• lie v.on· pink tinted aviator glasses. A blue silk shirt unbuttoned at the top revealed his barrel 't:hest. His weight 180 pounds -is unchan&ed from when he was 30 years old. Age emerges only in his creased cheeks and the crow feet running from his eyelids. CRABBE LIVES IN SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. He is execulivedireclorof a New Jersey swimming pool <·ompany, for which he has worked 22 years, with oc- casional breaks for some cowboy movies. ''I didn't think it bad a chance at the box of- fice, believe 1t or not," Crabbe says of the stories that also featured bis co-stars, Dale and Dr. Zarkov, battling with hawk men, claymen and out- er space creatures of aJl lethal descriptions living on and around the planet "Mongo." "I thought 1t was too far out. Three crazy peo- ple fly mg a :-;paceship to another planet In 1936? No \\ ay .'' PICTURES OF CRABBE BRANDISHING a !>pace gun that looks like part of a stove are collec· tor's items now. And some consider him a father figure in the current popularity of such hits as "Star Wars" and "Close Encounters of the Third Kind." "The special effects in 'Star Wan• were fabulous. When I fought hawkmen it wu dif· ferent," Crabbe said of the movie enemies who flitted around with big wings. "You hit blm with one hand then spun him around and held his wings on with the other." Crabbe, who was rucknamed "Buster" by hi• father. made about 80 westerns before, during and after Flush Gordon. "I'D FIRE ONCE AND 29 INDIANS would fall dov. n." he said. lit~ wa:Hhc seventh movie Tarzan, in 1933. "The worst Tarzan was me. We had two animals, an elephant that was retired from the circus and a hon with no teeth. But there were a lot of good fighlc; so the kids liked it." FCC Cracks Down OnIDegalCBs WASHINGTON (AP) -The Federal Com- munications Commission has announced a na- tionwide crackdown on the illelal sale of 23· channel Citizens Band radios. Selling the sets can subject an offender to a $10,000 fine or up to one year in prison or both. FCC rules bar sale of 23-channel sets, new or used, that were approved by the commission before Sept. 10, 1976. But use of such sets purchased before Jan.1 is not affected. Drums Drummed Out Tueeday Januaty 31, 1978 DAIL y PllOT A J J Life Term C.R.A~l=ITI Diet Pill Finn's l•)I "" ,, .... Jobs Cut Back fo'ORT ORD CAP> - More than ll:IO civ1liaa Job~ ut Jo'ort Ord will be eltm 1nated beginning March 13 lo eom11ly with an ort.lt.•r by United States Army Secretary CliCCord L. Alexander, the Army has an - nounced. Drug Sentence Given KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia <AP> -An Auatrallan movle distributor bu been sentenced to life imprtaonment and ordered to receive six atrokes of the cane after be was convicted of traf· ftcking in te.a than four pounds of marijuana. · -.'{ e~OEtr Ads Ruled False _J(Q\) A _L_ WASHJNGTON <AP> -The Federal Trade Commission bas cited a St. Paul, Minn., manufac- turer of diet pills for making false claims in ad· vez:tisemeots for one of its products and is order· ing the company to change its sales pitch A TTOIHEY AT LAW BANKRUPTCY $95 DIVORCE $95 The seven-member jury to9k nearly two hours Monday to return the guilty verdict a1ainst Robert 1 Allen Symes, JO, of Darwin, at bis trial in the high court of Kangar, 330 miles northwest of here. The commission found that Porter & Dietach Inc. misrepresented X·ll diet pills by sayin1 that users of the product can lose weight without 1 restricting their accustomed diet. Tbe FTC said the advertising failed to discl06e that a highly restricted diet is part of the X-11 plan . Uncontesl.t'd 1. 1 Let us do your Income taxes. • Have you seen the new forms yet? Take our word for It; they're a challenge. Why bother? UM our personal fedef'aJ and state Income tax preparation service ••. and let one of our experts fight the battle. You'll have a personal conference. And your returns will be prepared and doubl&-cheeked by oomp"'ter. Figure the savings. We'll save you the tune and the headaches. And we might eave you a lot of tax dollars. One thing's fot sure: we can save you the entire coet of preparatiOn If you maintain a specif led balance in your account. It's a good l"9890f'I to move your savings here. Come into any of our offices, and we'll 1alk about it. Come In soon, thoUgh. We can only haildJe a tlmlted number of reeervatlons. And If ~·re expecting a refund, the eooner )QJ file. the 100ner you'll get IL 640.2507 2 You still have time to open an IRA. • If \O\J1r& sett-employed, or you don't have a pension or profit- sharing plan whera you work, you can start your own ••• with a Fidelity Fedef81 lndJvldUJll Retirement Account. You have until Feb. 14 to set aside up to $1500 of your 19n income in a tax-deferred IRA It'll stay tax- defel'l'9d, too, until you retire. Figure the savings. A lot of banks and savings and loans say you have to pay an annuaJ trustee fee for your IRA. We don't No trustee fee. Period. And if )IOUr spouse was not employed fast year, you can add another$250toyourtotal. You can tax-shelterupto$1750. we·11open ~ IRAs for you ••• witn no trustee tee on either of them. Come in today. Feb. 14 Is not that tar away. \ • AJZ CAIL y PtLOf . , ' I I TUMd•~. 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Now is the tithe to let us help you plan for a secure tomorrow. See how Jost your money grows when you invest in Smart Money Cert ificaJes. DOUBLE YOUR MONEY IN LESS THAN NINE YEARS WITH OUR 7W"' INVESTMENT CERTIFICATES! INITIAL GROWTH IN 7%% DEPOSIT 9 YEARS• Annual Interest $2,500 $5,024 8.06% $5,000 $10,049 Annual Yleld•• 6· 10 year term $10,000 $20,098 $1 ,000 minimum balance 9TWs amount is based on luvinr the interest in the account for the full term. ·~tarty eanunis if interest is left in 1ccollnt lot one~. f*ll reculltlou 19q11lre • sutmJntill interest folfeitvre for u rlJ witWrml tf ""' ICCOUlltL Interest is compounded daily and computed on a J6S·day basis. h11• 11lace in tlie st111. , / j l ' • I i 1 "l. .. . . ) . • ' • . . • • . '] . . ; . . % . . . .• • t . .. . • . . , • ~ 1NSIDE: •Stocks •Movies s t:====::mo:a11·~Cmo~mui~c•sm;·~T~e~1~e~v~is~io=n::s:;;:::11 .. s:;ilt5s&iiif:::.. .... l!!!!!=-sm• 4 E.:3 .. IE:3!!!191 .............. !mi::.ES ........ i .. 0~ts luetday. January 31, 1978 DAILY PILOT ..c. • •l Blue-Reds Ma1~riage Ends in Ann -~"'-'" ·basketball play Monday night. Indiana up· set the seventh·ranked Spartans, 71-66. NEW YORK (A I» Vida Blue is back 10 Oakland and. as a result. baseball comm1ss1oner Bowie Kuhn may be back 1n t·ourt Kuhn's rcjcd1on of last month's deal 1n "'hi c h the Oaklana A's .shipped Blue, a left- handed P1tcher and three times a 20-game winner, to the Cincm· nati Reds for minor league first baseman Dave Revering and $1.75 million 10 cash drew angry criticism frotn both clubs. even though the coJOm1 ssioner did not dose the door on a future deal involving Blue. President Rob Jlowsam of the Reds predicted Mondav mght that "public confidence m the game will ht' d~·slroyNI . v. hen th<.' public· rcaJ11.c•s that the 1·ommissiom·r. 1f he .L"an do what ht• propos<•s to do 1n this case, m t'fft..'Cl would IH.J\ <' tht' ability to d1ctal<' v.hl'rc a lt'am can end up in tht' :.landmgs "I don't think that baseball 1n- lt'nded for the c·omm1s~1oner to decide wh1C'h teams would be al· lowed to win pennants and how often." llowsam said. However. Kuhn argued that "a player-for.cash deal can s ub- stant1all v weaken the com-· pet1l1ve ·position of a club. ~1oreov('r, such deals inev'ttably cause the publJc to question the integrity of the game, its methods and operations and may adversely affect public con- fidence in the game." Oakland owner Charles 0 . Finley, rebuffed by Kuhn for thl' second time in an fltempt to sell Blue for a larg~ amount of money, said that "my future ac· tions will speak for me. At this time, I do not wish to discuss what these actions will be, other than to say I will enjoy meeting him (Kuhn) in the courts once again m round 2." It was not clear whether Fmley intended to go to court to overturn Monday's decision or 1f he was referring to a scheduled Feb. 21 appeal of a 1977 U.S. Dis- trict Court rulmg upholding the t"Ommissioner's right to prevent Finley from selling mue, pitcher Rollie Fingers and outfielder Joe Rudi on the June 1976 trad- ing deadline. However, Neil Papiano. Finley's attorney, called the commISSioner's latest dec1s1on a .. personal vendetta" against Finley and added: 0 Tbere are a numbec of courses of action for us to take. which I've discussed . with Mr. Finley and the Cincin- nati Reds. We're certainly not going to roll O\t~r and play dead " Pap1ano said that from a legal !'>tnndpoint. "We have a far bet ter case than the last time. There was not one word in this case involv10g competitive balance. Jn this instance, the competitive balance wouldn't be upset.•• When Finley tried to sell Blue ' to the New York Yankees for Sl.5 million and Fingers and Rudi to the Boston Red Sox for Sl million apiece two years ago, Kuhn vetoed the deals, saying , they weren't "1n the best in-1 terests of baseball · H e used the same words agam in Monday's 15-page decision. which follow<.'d two <la ys of hear- rngi-. t'llrltt-r this month lit• said the proposed trade "is not in the best interests of bas(' ball," but added· "I'm not saying that I will dis- approve an assignment of Blue under all circumstances. Quite the contrary. 1 urge the Oakland and Cincinnati clubs to review the situation carefully to see if they cannot find some way to structure a deal which will not present the concerns which I see (See Knb.o, Page B·2) l'VE GOT IT-:\Tichigan State's Earvin .John sun (3:J > grabs a loose ball as Steve Hisley holds tum in place during college Sports in Brief· ·~1 0ne Pitch From End. • Smith Selected Best • In LC Irvine':-; 6·5 forwar J Wayne Smith has been selected as Pacific Coast Athletic Associa- tion basketball player of the week for his performances in three games laslwcek. ll marked the second straight --.·eek that Smith has been select- ed lie "'as co.recipient of the av. ard last W<'ek with Cal State (Fullerton) star Greg Bunch. t\ 1-?atns t Loyola he had 38 points. 10 rchounds. two assists. four blot"kc•d c;hots and three steals Overall tn the three garqe<;, two of which were won by l'C'I, he had 8.5 points and 24 rebounds Orantes Upset RICHMOND. Va. -Mark Cox upset Manul'I Orantes 7-6. 6·2 as three o/ five seeded players were • eltminated mtheopeningroundof a World Championship tennis tournament here Monday. In other upsets, Arthur Ashe outlasted Ilie Nastase 3-6, 7-5, 6-3 ' and John Newcombe eliminated I WoJtek F1bak 7·6, 6·4. In other matc hes, Harold Solomon beal Antonio Zugarelh 6· 7. 6 n. 6·4: Balazs Taroczy 1 whipped Cliff Drysdale 5·7. 6 4 i ·5. Eddie Dibhs won over Mike 'Fis hbach 6-2. 6·3: Corrado Barazzutti turned back Jaime J<'illol 6-1, 3·6, 6·4; and ZelJko Franulov1c won over Jeff Borowiak 6·1, 5-l. Borowiak re- tired with a bad knee. Goolagong Rolb ChICAGO-Evonne Goo I a gong needed only 50 minutes to defeat Lesley Hunt ~o. 6-2 Monday in the first round pf a $100,000 women's pro· fessional tennis tournament here. ; .. Jn other first round matches, Florenza Mihai defeated Julie Anthony 1-6, 6·1, 6·3: Yvonne Yer.m_aak won over Virginia Ruz1c1 6-0, 6·4 ; Lea Antonopolis Mopped Ruta Gcrulaitis 7-6, 6-4: .Janet Newberry beat Laura Du· Pont 6·4, 6·1: and Regina Marsikova ddeated Sharon Walsh &-3. 6·1. O.lllla .. 1t'ln• PCAA Rookie o( the Year in 1974, was released Monday by the Los Angeles Lakers. The 6-foot, 18()-pounder came to Los Angeles last Sept. 7, with the Lakers giving "undisclosed considerations" to the Buffalo Braves for him. OngaU Sizzle• DAYTONA BEACH. Fla Race driver Danny Ongais of Co!'>ta Mesa clocked an unofficial record run on the 3.84-mtle track-road course at Daytona In· ternational Speedway Monday Ongais, testing the turbo- charged Porsche 935 he will drive with Ted Field of Newport Beach, in the 24 Hours or · Daytona this weekend, turned a lap at 129.078 miles per hour. Strbtp Sip E1'n-t LOS ANGELES -Tennis star Chris Evert has signed a con- tract to play for the Los Angeles Strings this season, the World Team Tennis club announced to- day Evert, the U.S. Open and Wimbledon champion, played for the Phoenix Racquets the past two years Tqlor Adl'anr~• MEXICO CITY-Roger Taylor upset George Hardie 3-6, 6-1, 7.5 and Steve Docherty toppled El- liot Teltscher 7-6, 3-6, 6-3 Mon- day in the opening day or the Mexican Open tennis tourna- ment here. ln other matches, Steve Krulevitz downed Roberto Chavez 6-3. 6-7, 7-6 and Woody Blocher upset Roger Vasselin 4-6, 6-2, 6-4. STRETCHED OUT-Andre Wakefi~d (44) 0£ Loyela <Chicago) jumps high to block Indiana State's Harry Mor~an during a college basketball game in Chic~o MOntjay night. Loyola won, 79-76. No Letdown ~xpect~d easy 83-71 trlumph over rival Southern Cal Saturday nigtit. The avtt'g& victoif margin •1n the Bruins• flve league ga dropPed 16.2 p0lnts by virtue « Jts 12·Polnt tthniiph. 1 Stanford btinga a rl-4 in· leapo pJay and 1J·7 overall ..matk into Thur1d1y mgM'e u:ame •While Call Uand9. ]olm.Was Given Ultimatum PlllLADELPHlA <A P ) "I came within one pitch of ad1os." recalled Tommy .John Monday ntl!ht before collecting a plaque from the Philadelphia Sports W nters Association. designating him as the Most Courageous Athlete of 1977. John had ruptured a ligament in his pitching elbow on July '17, 1974. His left hand atfoplued and two fingers curled up to his palm. He not only looked lik& a guy who -would never pitch again, but was given that mess~ge by the doctors who operated to cor- rect the condition. The doctors su~gested he look for another way to make a living. - A medical teatn headed by Dr. Frank Jobe removied a ten- don from John's right' forearm and implanted it ut the ltft elbow. 1\ the finst surgical procedure of it.s kmd oa an athlete. ·, Johricid~throw\a b~ll again :, until F'br 'y, 1975:,and ttiat m \ ~ . \ . . . . J l)Oflger ' Sladi11ru: l .. S~Slre? flZ DAILY PIL OT T t • .JMluaf'/ 31. 1'178 ...,. e !J! ... to -~ - CAPO VALLEY HIGH'S DEANNA FAWCETT IS A TOP GIRLS SOCCER PLAYER. Girls Making a Dent In Area Prep Soccer lh DJ\ VF. <T"i'\JNGllAM Of lho 0.11, Piiot St•tt Ovf'r the p.1sl few yt>ars, hnn. sot'C'C'r 111 tht• Orungl' l 'cwst an•a has twgun to look :1 liltl1· hkP thP first <'IF· ~.lllC'I IOllt'cl ('O<'CI <;port \.\'hilt• tlw California tn tC'rSl'holast1C' f'edcrat1on dot-sn 't exactly enl'ourage girls to take up those sports "h1ch were previously all· hoys act1\ities, its bylaws don't prohJb1l an ambitious girl from tryin.J?. An occasional female has popped up on a boys tennis team here and there, but in no sport have girls emerged hke they have in soccer. "Girls want to play because they're started out an 1t with the youth pro- grams. and a Jot of them want to continue," says Mis- sion Viejo •ugh soccer coach Ed Camilo. "But the only comparable sport they have is field ,hockey, and that's just not the same. "I think field hockey should be done away with. Sooner or Inter, we're going to have to have ~iris socct:r teams," Carrillo says. The ClF executive board \'Oled down a proposal to sanction soccer as a girls s port 1n September, hut .Marf,?arct Davis. a CIF ad· min1s trative assistant in charge of J?irls' athletics. says s he expects the proposal will he brought up again, and t?Ventually passed. Females are pla} anJ,.t with hov!> soccer team!; m l'very eorncr of lh<· c ounty . Although none has 1·mt'rg1•d J"i a hona fade \ :ir:-.1ty :-.t .ir yt't . it aµj)('ars that th<• <la) isn't far oft v.h<:n orw v.1ll Dl'anna Fawct•tt, a junior a t Capistrano Vallt'y High, may be one ot Lhe better prospecL'\. A junior varsity center- forward, she r~ently scored the only goals in Capistrano Valley's l-0 victory oveC' Canyon High of Anaheim. Coach Pele Andreas thinks so highly of Fawcett that he has appointed heC' team cap- tain. 'Tm a big supporter of women in athletics and I ad mil l may be a little pre- 1udiced in her favor," An· dress says. "But she's one of the fastest players on the team and she's as good as anyone I've got." Andreas says Fawcett has to endure some teasrng since s he's the only girl on th<' team , but it's n oth ing i.erious. ' "The hoys don't have any animosity toward her It's not like she shouldn 'L be here. She's a good, ag- gressive player." Andreas says. "There's no reason in the world she shouldn't play.'' Another solid candidate for stardom in boys soccer 1s Jan Culp. a sophomore at KUHN DECISION. • • Continued From Page B· t in the presently proposed as::.ign· ment." Kuhn has placed an informal $400,000 ceiling on player-for- cash deals. He suggested even hefore Monday's decision that he would have looked more favorably on the deal if the Reds · t9cluded other players instead of caiih. ~ Noting that Cincinnati has won the National Leaaue West four {Imes In the last alx years, plus world championships in 1975 and 1976, Kuhn said the addition or Blue "would surely enhance the Reds' poslUon" and "promise materially and adversely to af· feet competitive balance" ln the NL West. He also sajd it would "worsen the competitive pns\. tion ol the Oakland club by mak· ing this weat team eveo weaker." That seemed to Conf'llct with Paplano'a atatAmJent cone n mpetitlve balance. 'J{6W • ll\ Oakl•nd l&'W'f. r D\.Ob J>b~ 'Wee rererrln1 to Kubara «· marks when ti blocked th Blue-Pln ·ROcU aA1 lD ma that those deals would destroy the A ·s chances of remaining a contender in the Am~rican League West. "I don't think he's a very ra- tional man when it comes lo Charlie Finley." Pa piano said. "No matter what Kuhn says, he wants the A's destroyed. He's go- ing to do everything he can do to destroy them." FJnley; who sued for the $3.5 million he would have received only to have Kuhn's ruling up- held by the courts, pointed out that Fingers and Rudi played oul their options in 1976 and signed with other clubs and the A's received nothing in return. Finley said Blue "without que8tion, will be playin1 his op- tion out next year (1979) and will. be placing hitnselt' on the bidding hlod: and receive $2 mllUon or more himself and the club that de- veloped him wlll,.ecelve ..,uun1. .. I loet SS16,000 ln 1876 and $1.2 mlUlon tn 1977 .nd needed the pro<!eedl from the •al• ol Blue to ket:p tho •.blp alloal ln •79 ... he added. :J'b• eontrovenlal Floloy, • lona-tlme thorn '" baHball'1 htd-. tried to sell the A '1 to Dtnver oJhnan Marvin Davis for 112,5 mUllon, but the dHl f ~ll thtQU3b last w • uhtt ulcS ho wa '••ym. p th o bla ( l'llev'1) current U -ZM;'• bUt noted that • c ~ valu of O kliod club ihcre m t J>µT'Chlrsed IL I JI rid Id bll II la t 1' m Los Amij.!o<; ll11:h in Fountain \'alley. Culp made the \'arsity ro:-.ter as a freshman and is "ta rll n~ u:; a !>Ophomorc. Athlc•t1 c dirC'C'tor Bill Brady ... aye; :;he's et v('rsallle athlete <s he al so plays girls \ ollcyball and softball) with a lot or potential in soccer. Garis aren't exacUy com- monplace on boys soccer rosters yet, but neither are they a rarity. Dana Hills has had a girl on its JV teams each of the past two seasons, and Mis· sion Viejo plays a girl on its JV unit this season. San Clemente bad a girl on its JV team last year, and El Toro listed a girl on its frosh- s op h squad earlier this st>ason. Capistrano Valley al~o has two girls playing Crosh-soph. Women are even appearing in the coaching ranks. Bolsa Grande High In Garden Grove has had a female coach for the past two seasons, Joey Knox. Mission Viejo's frosb-sopb team is coached by a woman, Lamy Monica. "At first there were some negative reactions to her," says varsity coach Carrillo . who hired Monica. "But the boys are accepting her now. She's been around the sport for nine years and she knows what she's talking about." Monarchs Tangle With Servile Five Mater Def High School (Santa Ana), with four players averag- ing in double figures ln the SC'Or- ing column, will attempt to re- verse a double overtime defeat at the hands of the Servile Hlch <Anaheim) Friars tonl1ht (7:30). Tonight's game will be played at Mater Dei with the Angelus League leading Friars (6·0) favored. The game gets the· second round of play under way and ls a virtual must-win situa ... lion for coach Jerry Tardie's Monarchs, now 3.3 in league play. Leading the Mater Dei attack is Steve McCrea 02.4). Eatancia Trio Shine SAN DIEGO-Tbtee Estucla High School students flnlshed well la the Mlulon Bay marathon nee. They lnelUdod Erle Conard. Ben Armattona and Trbde R«tnlck. BASKETBALLIBASEBALL/~OCCEA South Coa'st Baseh II Outlook . . Fives Clash Tonight Pitching Big Key For Rustlers Nine Mission V1ejo's Dlahlos wall attempt to remam in content.Jon for a CIF playoff berth tonleht (7) when they host South Coast League basketball league leader Corona del Mar in a 6econd- round outing 1 n other South Coast League action tonight, all al 7. Costa Mesa is at San Clemente, Dana Htlls treks to El Toro and University ts at Laguna Beach. Corona del Mar holds a two· game edge over San Clemente while Mission Viejo is tied for third with El Toro, three games back_ With a passibility that three teams could be taken from the league for CIF playoff ac- tion, the Diablos face a must win situation. CdM has a 9-1 reeord and is paced in scoring by Dave Koehler with a 16.8 average. But defense has been the key to suc- cess for coach Jack Errion's CdM ~a Kings. Last m scoring but first in defense, the Sea Kings have allowed league foes only 44.8 points per tilt Mission Viejo as fourth in scor- ing but ranks sixth in defense. Corona del Mar won the ftrsl game between the two schools. fi.t 41 with sophomore Shawn Aht>arn sconng 19 and Koehler C'ontrabut.ang 13. San Clemente's Tratons hold the only victory in league play over CdM and wilJ take on doormat Costa Mesa at home tonight. John Carson is lhe big gun for the Tntons, averaging 18.1 points per outing. Chris Beasley as the catalyst for Costa Mesa with a 12.1 average. Two other evenly matched games are on tap. El Toro b05ls Dana Hills and will be trying to hold on to a probable playoff berth with a victory. The scoring duo of Rick Reid (16.9) and Ron Holmes (16 4) lead the Diablos. Chris Goller 06.4) a nd Mike Samue ls <14.5) arc the Dana Halls scoring lead<>rs. University and host Laguna Bearh ar<> tied for fifth place in the league standings (4·6) Laguna Beach won the first meeting of the two teams, 62-60. and will be led by Randy Smith OS. 7 ). University's Trojans are paced by the sroring of Roger Poirier wtth a 19.7 average. Golden West College had its greatest basebalJ season ever in 1977, winning the Southern California Conference crown and posUog a 30-9 record. And while nearly every post· tion was filled b1 a sophomore. all is not gloom lo lhe Rustler camp ttlis season. While Golden Weat relied on its hittmg last aeasoo C.337 team batting average, SO home runs>. the pttchmg ls expected to carry coach Fred Hoover's club in 1978. And Hoover has a very good staff. The Golden West coach lists five top pitchers, all of whom have t..iented arms. They include right-handers Peder White Chuck Robertson, Steve Slaton aod Jett He..e thcock along with lefty Russ Penfold. White was 12-2 last year, earning all conference and All FHO HOOVElt s 0 u t h c r n California honors. Robertson was also a starter for GWC, posting a 6-l mark. Slaton, a hard-thrower, was the Sunset League player of the year last season at Hwitington Beach's Edison Hieb. Heathcock is also highly touted. He prepped at La Quinta Hieh in Westmmster. Penfold, who will also play the outfield and be a designated hit· ter. is a transfer from Cypress College. "There's no question about 1t, pitching is definitely our strength," says Hoover. •·we hud 27 pitchers try out here and '' c 'II probably keep eight or nine " Most of the re!>( of the pos1· lion ~ will ht• manned b y tn•shmcn Tim Jnne~, from Edison , figures to be the N,,. ! catcher with Brian Edwards <Fountain Valley) backing him up. Rick Clark. a 6-2. 212-pounder from Newport Harbor, will play first v.1th Dave Severin tWestminst.er) as No. 2_ Standout Runner Edison's Hulse Has Ambitious Goals By ERNIE CASTILLO Of .... o.llf ll'llM Slaff Sharon Hulse's goals haven'L. changed much in the last five years. She still enjoys running and she still want.ti lo be the best Jn her field. "I Just love it, that's all," ex- plains the Edison (Huntington Beach) High sophomore when asked why she would devote most of her free time to a sport that ollers few material re· wards, yields little recognltion and yet requires the utmost ln sacrilice and dedication. .. I stilt want to be running when I'm 28, possibly make it a life thing," she says. "l hope to smash every distance record I can." Those are ambltlous eoals for a girl not yet 16 but Hulse has been at the U>p of her sport ever since ahe started running com· petitlvely at 11. The holder of numerous age-1roup distance records, Hulse would llke to compete In the Olympics, ii not at Moscow ln 1980 then ln Los· Angeles in 1984. "It'• a lone tlme but I thJnk it'• worth it," 1he says. "Ever since I was 12., I wanted to be No.1." Her credentials so far would Indicate she bu a chance to do so. As a freshman, she ran a S:OO.S mile indoors and had sp'Ting times of 4:56 and 2:12 for the halt mile before leg problems sidelined bcr. Her goab thil' year are 4:40 and 2:09, times tbaL would make her compeUtlve with veteran women runners. Tbe •tep up from alrls to Junior women'• cornpeUUon bu alao added extra blctmUve tor Hulae. "To b9 Just. as iOQd as they are. yoa bave ·to wor~ more," lhe •11'· .. I MV•r ran at bard u I oOUtd • ,ln the mlle wh<'n I was younger. I only ran as fast as I needed to. In the women's division, there's no playing around." Ironically, it was a shift in running style last year that brought on Hulse'& leg prob· lems. Technical training in which she tried to perfect her stride and arm movement helped her tower her half mile time to 2:12 but also gave her torn shin splints and recurring knee problems. She is recovered now, as evidenced by her fourth place finish in the fall CIF girls Cro6S country championship where she toured the hilly. two-mile Mt. San Antonio College course 10 12 :28. En route. sh~ helped Edison capture the CIF team title. This summer, she wtll join a group of Hunt(ngton Beach area girls who wifl compete in Europe. However, if she had a choice between track and cross C'Oun- try, she would pick the former. "You get to go more places in track,•• she explains. Though she is strictly a dis- tance nmner, Hulse excelled in any race she entered when she first began competition. "When I started nmning at 11 in Dallas. I'd run the 100. 50, mile and even high jump,'' she says. "I won them all so I decided to keep go. ing "A• &OOft as reoes11 came, we would go out and run the 1<¥> and 220," she adds. ''I'd try to beat the guys and I dld.1' After movinc to Huntington Be~ch, 1bc met AAU coach Bob Dickey, wbio encouraaect her to 1Uct to loqer raca. It waa sac· cesa ID 'al•sroup compeUtJoo that lnsUlled ln her unwave.rtn1 conttdt.®O and sent her on the way to the_toi> oUbe d.Ua. The 'Rustltrs are solid at ~econd with the return of Dou~ M ansollno, who sat out "77 w1lb u &houlder irtjury. Mansolino hlt. .417 two seasons ago at GWC, earning all-conlerenre honors. Third base is a tossup with sophomore Steve Nemeth (an outfielder last year) and Jim AJ. 1en (Crespi High) waglng a tight duel. Allen is the son of UC Irvine coach Ed Allen. Freshman Matt Palmer <Newport Harbor) will be Sla· tioned at i.hortstop and Hoover calls him "one of the best field- ing infielders we've ever bad.•• In the outlleld, Penfold or Bdan Desroeier <Edison) will be in left with sophomore John Moses In center and Frank Meraz (Loara > or Ken Hanvey (Marina) In right. Moses, says Hoover, "111 one ol the better ones in the stale. He' has great speed and has a chance of breaking all of our stolen base records." Meraz and Hanvey figure lo be platooned tn right with Pen- fold and Severin sharing the DH duties. "'Defensively, we look very ">Olid. especially up the middle. "We 're going to play pretty good defense and we'll have good pitching. At this point J don't know what to say about the htt· ting. But we've always had good hitters here and 1 don't think it will change," says Hoover. Golden West opens the season Thursday, Feb. 9, hosting Sad- dleback at 10:30 a .m . in the opening round of the Casey Stengel U>umey. ~WIHI -...Wll SCloMwle Tllun ·s.t., Feta. ._11-<•~v !ttMQel ,_.,.y 61 C#olotn Wt~t Cllrst round opp0ntnl. ~ dlt~ .... tO 30."" ). Fri . Ftb 11-Cholom.ln JV( ........ ). 2'l0. !t•t . ff b 18-.1 !Noni. A"'" noon Mon. hb. 20· S.OOlet..<I< ,.....,...,>,noon, l hur ~ . f"eb. fl-.. ~~ Co.•I, 2 lO. S<11, Feb ZS-S.-01•~ lt10nw1 .......... Tu<'• • Feb 21-« I.AH-· 'nu,. MJlrrh1-!t.tnta toMnlu• lhomel. S•I M••C h. ,, Rio Honoo• I Tut•\.,Mdr<hl o .... ngp(nA\l ltoo""')• lhur. .• Mdr<h• ,\l CyprP\\' S.tl. MM<h 11 LACC lhomel t lt.10., M"•Cll 14 LA Soulhwe\I" lho,,,.I. Tllur\ , M-or< II 11..-LA Harbor' lllomt ). s.r .. Nt•rr II 18 s.tn1a Monie•' lllomel. Thur• ·S.·•~ Mat°' 23·1S-+4&ncocll '""""'Y •t !,.1nlA MMI• 1 ut\., M.>rch 78-Rlo H0ttdo• lllorTI<'). .S...l., AprM 1-<n>f'9•' (llOmt), 1. Tue\ .• Apnl • .. 1.ACC". Tl\uf\., ~16-« LA Soutllwfte•. f>•t~ Aiw• ._. ..... Hllftlor'. '· T U<K ., Aptll 11-Sitnl.a Monk••. Tl111n., ""'" 13-Alo Hondo'. T...,., .t.o.1111-ec C~·. Tllun., AC>f'll 10~CC' (homel, !>41 .• """ • n-v. Soull'rwftt' '"°"'* 1. t. Tws., A4!r1l ?S-U .. .._. 0.0....). TltvrJ., A!lrll ?1-.f s..ii. Monka•. !t~ .. AIWll ~lo Hofldo' (-1, 1, T"'1.-.., M.-,4~' Olomel, s.1 .. M•Y ._.. ucc·. ,. ...... _,, ........... ~ .. ·a.notes Southem Cellloml• C0ttl.-.nc• -· All c.•uMs btQI" •t 2;JO, unleu ou.nri .. ,,.. dlut.a_ Anteaters' Smith Keeps Scoring Lead UC Jrvfne•s Wayne Smith has retained his lead In the Pacific Coast Athletic Association basketball scoring race. Sm Ith, a 6-5 senior, tallied 47 points in a pair of games last week lo nm his six-game PCAA . total to 127-a 21.2 average. The No. 2 PCAA scorer. UC Santa Barbara junior Matt Maderos (6-5). has tallied 119 poln ts for a 19 8 average. Madero~ and Smith tangle Thurii;day night ( Santa Barbara) and Saturday night (at UCI>. T9' !"CAA Sc~ • "' ..... Smltll, UC INlnn ' 117 Mol<H rn\, S.V.I • Bar!Nlr• ' 11• Colemotn. Pa<lllC 6 f<!I 8un<ll, F utlff1on ' 101 M•IOYIC, !Min Oi9gO 5'. ' 100 Go<!lt, ~n ot.<}o SI. ' 'It Wll~. (.at Stale ll.8) ' fl ""°"''°"• fll4~on ' 87 A. WllllMM, ,.,_St .. ' ,,, ltoltlll, ~Joie SI. • A 9', Wllli.tfts, Cal Still• ll.9) • a o.od, s... Di.,. St. • ., Anlnclll<ll, s.Ma .....,.... ' 7' S. Wllllams. S. .'-~ ' ,. Cemey, Pae111c ' ?S H1141$, FullHl.On ' 7$ C-11111, P41elflc ' ff Kr-. S... oi....sc. • •• _..,.ms, F,_ St. ' •7 ... "'"· s... Joy St. • ., w1 ... ca1 ~It• ILi) • t>5 "-•w, Paelfk; ' .. LI-, Fllllen0tt C> •l ~It" C.1 S-ace IL81 .. '° t.AcGutre, UC l~N 4 M A .. w.~, 5M!t• 9«~• • ~ 23 Rustlers To Move On 21.2 ,. .. lt.O tU '"' 140 U.J 1A.1 1A.1 ,,,,. IU IJ S tJ I ""' '" n..s 11 .s 11.S 11 t ti t 10• '°. IU '°' IOO TOii A record 23 Golden West Coll••• football player• wlll move on to compete for four. year achooll next aeuoo. ToppinJ tbo U.t are offensive tacklo Tom Formica <Color-6o State) and d~fenslv• tackle Job.n Stenuner CAriama>. Hert'1wbcrethey're1oln1: ~_,...i..:-=\-="=--......-: .... ~-lite--. ,_.,.. ~ .. ......,. ... C.. .. k-T-~ .... 0.. ._ Olll DI~• •lll!C.-..;-.. ~l....., ....... 10. ..... t••··-· "'91'•-411ti: ~,_.,..._IL .. _ sc...-. ..... oe.-........ ..,.., II 0.•_.,, fl*dl Ur9ft ~fl"--.ilftl Mtlt ,~ ... ,...._. ............... '°'"-Sf~t# \lltfMP. $:: ...... ~"-'~ ~. huAN ""-J '90..... ---.:.._ ...,.,..... . ~-11ru~~ ....... ... • BASKETBALL I HORSE RACING I MISCELLANY Tuesday, January 31, 1978 DA.IL Y PILOT 83 Gauchos Average 123 In Conference Play Capo Valley's Charles Saddleback College's scoring :lverages this basketball season border on inC'redablc ·the loss to Palomar and because of lt teams won't be able to set a slower tempo against us~" says Mulligan. Leads Prep Cage Scoring Thus far the Gauchos are scoring 107 2 points Pl'r ..:amc Clops m the state) and 123 1 per Mission Con· f ercnt'e lilt entering Wednesday night's game with Riverside CC And Gaut'hos coach U1ll Mulligan ,.., the first to admit he likes being the No l sconnJ,! ll•am 111 the stale "There's nothing wrong with it, as long as ~ou don't embarrass <rnyonl'," says Mulligan. Southwestern Collc~c \\.as em bar- -CRAIG SHEFF r.1ssl'tl la!>l Satunla) night us the Gauthos rompc·d to a record · l->hatl<.'rang 1 tJ Sa v1<.'tory-hut 1t \\ a!>n't b<.'<"aUSl' of Mulli~an The (;auC'hos coach pullt•d h1fl horses earl~ \\1th th1· tlurd '>lnni.: playing most of lht• M'C'ond half "Wt• took th~ press otf with J t minutt•s to go and thrc.•l· of our starters onl) played six m1nutt•s of the second half" Another sl artl'I". i\t 1ss1on Con ference playcr-of-thc·yt•ar Tim Shav,., didn't suit up because of cr<JC'ked nbs suffered m the Chaffey game three days earlier Shaw is not expected to be out long and may be ready for Riverside Wednesday night. • Offensively, balance has really been the big key for Mulligan's club. Eight players currently average in double figures for the season and nine have double figure marks for ~ conrerence play. Mulllgan has a 75·7 Mission Con Plclu f're•no rerence mark the last six years and figures to get better and better. ··we've got some good kids lined up for next year." says the Gauchos coach. "Mike Howard (a 6-7 transfer from UC Riverside> and Dan Soller la 6·1 transfer from Fresno State> are enrolled this semester and wall play for us next season." And af that isn't enough, Mulligan says he has a good shot at getting 6·9 Dan Collins from Chicago, a highly· sought prep phenom And the rich get richer J There will be no Southern C'allfornla JC baseball playoffs this :-.pring. Instead, the champions of the l>late's eight large divis ion con rerences will meet In a doublt> climinatlon tourney at Long Beach Uty College and Blair Field. First round conference matchup" include: Southern Cal vs. Golden (;ate; South Coast vs. Metropolitan; !\I ission \'S, \'alley; and Weste rn Mate vs. Camino !'forte. TRADING PLACES DEPT.: Jak!' Molina, the baseball coach at Santa Monica College last year, has taken over the head job at San Diego CC while SDCC assistant Enc Swanson succeeds Mohna Other JC baseball coach1ng changes. LA Valley -Dave Snow; and El Camino -Dan Cowg11l Saddleback College quarterback Billy Yan('y. ''ho passed for 1,514 yards and l.t TDs and scored 12 more last football season, has signed a letter of intent to at· tend Fresno State College. Almnitos Racing Entries F9' TOl'lltltt F1nt ..... , 1 4S "llST tlACE e10 yaros 3 yur olds a up C••1m1ng Pu,.~ JJ 200 CtatmlnQ pt'I(~ JJ,lo()O 9• rrl r10 IN i t00.•<1\1" I Mr Su~r Rock .. t CVau<;inn I t( ,., Folks CCMclora I I Mortal lock CBrookl~dl (;<)Oii Tory ICl«IS'WI Roy•I G<> Flt!l!t !C..rt.111 Zlp"nGo (~) Ric..,~ 0.-1 Tow•n CGra<:f'l Ov•rt•• ~ tClrtlOtno.) Un CMr9t 18-lr..s> 117 111 119 117 112 171 171 119 119 Iii SRCOND llAC£ -fOO v.1rds. l Y••r olds a Ut> Claomlng. Purse ~.100 Clalm4ng prKe $2.000 L4tO'S Bally IH•r1 I Woncter How Good (p.,,,,., I Tr.191< Encl IGr11u I 0.octy Moon cca111 Go C•1un IC:O.lonl M1 8udCl1e IAllrsonl 172 119 11' 112 11• 119 C aputrano Valley High guard Bob Charles, a 5.9 senior. continues to lead the Orange Coast area basketball derby in scoring with the regular season but two weeks away from the end. Charles hus a com· fortablc edge 10 total sC'onng and 1n a\'cra~e with 527 po1nts 1n 20 games nellrn~ a 26.3 pace. l n second place 1s fountain Valley High senior Roger Holmes, a 6·4 standout with 446 points in 19 games and a flossy 23.4 average. Also averaging in thl' 20s on the Christian school level arc Hunt· 1ngton Valley Chnstian !Newport Beach) al'c Jeff Frazer <22.8>. a fl.ff senior , and Capistrano Valley Christian stand out Ron Dailey (21 0 >. a 5· 11 sophomore· Ora,,.. C...st ArN Top 10 P•s. Player, 'ktoool 9 Ip ..,9 I Cllarles, C-V•lley ?0 Sl/ l& J 1 Holmes, Ftn V•lley It 446 lJ 4 3 Polrr~r Vnr"'1r"IY II HS 19 1 • C.,$0rl, SMl Clemenlll' 11 JOI II I S McCour1 Ed1win 19 31' II I • Jard1M. Eslanc1• It J11> II I 1 i'lt'td. El Toro 10 lll I• 9 I SIPlnh•ll\, Hunt !kac:n It 711 I• I • ICoat\l~r, CdM 11 1 .. 1' I 10 11~1 G<>ll*<, OH I& nJ .. 4 R. Ho•~. El To<o 10 ll'I 16 4 Sm.Ml'khMll 1 Fr•nr,HllC U3l07le 1SJt•110 2 8•••o,CIK. Mc Court C,ctrr•IY' lut1or\ Bowtn D•\f'I\ Allen E•...,ttUI • It II " ''° s• 1• ll " 1• II l\ 11 ~ 1'I II ~ ll i. 71 I K4nt-m,uu tf'A 10 10 BOB CHARLES Ma<- Eppel""'mer Hiide htd~l\~V E>ptno,. !.•mon McCorlhy !>11111,11• w,.\,.,. (l\rl\lon\on W>ttol\on 11 .. 14 I~ 11 n n 14 IQ 11 H 18 •• lt " n I 17 ii S? 12 11 ~ 4\ 71 19 10 q 11 11 1 1 • A • • I • I 10 ' I l l & I J I 1' I 1 1 & 1l I J Huntll\flon .. Kll IU·61 Ste1nn•u\ WOOt•n P•on•n•t11 PeUOl•\I Tnompson AUi• c ..... MoorhaU'W 01P1rlra Smllfl '''" tp 19 IOI> ID'! 311 19 ., 0 231 19 in J6 200 1• IJ 41 193 19 60 )I 151 ,. 14 12 40 I& t' 9 3' • 10 I~ ]) ~ l T II 3 l 0 • 2 2 0 1 1 . .,, ••a 11 4 10 s tO I • 2 2S 2 4 38 1 l 20 20 20 ,,. ....... (IJ.11 ""•O•nr•1<h l•tt11 H•llon S.o•-1~1 llol>m 01\en 9 19 II 10 llO SI " ~ 41 20 4• )1 17 )I l4 t11 • .,, 311 IS S 221 ll 1 ,.. 1 • '"" e 4 13.4 11 1)4 • 1 121 • 2 But the G;rnchos really doq't figure to need him --until the return ens::agemcnl \o,.1th P0alomar Feb. 11 Palomar <6·0> holds a one-game lead over tht• G<iuchos. having beaten t ht•m, !lfl·~I. in overtlm('. "\\'l'0 \'l' c·h:JOJ.:l•d our defenst• Slnl't.' Basketball player Dennis Smlth. who led Saddleback College In scoring lor two seasons, has left Washington State University. His plans are in· definite. TH 1110 llACE 400 Y••d\ J vur ~ rPu<l•nbt:r9 11 lo I I Ill 319 181 111 IJI I II u &<> n 21 ,. • 4 0o1W\A')n 11 ~· 26 XI ~ :S. ~ II 13 10 .. 20 I\ 1) S .. 48 JI 1 0 9 11 Anteaters Compete CORO:-O:A-l C In inc will bt> among lht• t£>am., c o m p e l 1 n g 1 n t h t• partnc·r·s betl<•r ball championship::. for col- Jegiate golfers Wednt's clay at Corona Nat.t0n<il Go.IC Club. A tol<1l of 10 st·hoots, <"onsisling of four two· man partners. will com- pete in the 36·holc evE!nt including defending champwn lJSC Otht•r sthools t·ntl'rl·cl include UCI.1\, Cal State (Long Bt?ach), Cal Statt' <Fullerton), ('al Stale <Northridgt• ), C'<1l State I L o s A n ~ <.' l t• s > • U C H111ersidc and USIU. Craig Anderson and Tony Sills of USC com bined for gross rounds of 65-65-130 to win tht' lit lt~ last year. They will be back to defend the (.'rown Wednesday. Area Girls Basketball VARSITY M••lna IUl 1401 c:.erone M l Mar M.orln•-Anc1f'•\Or\ ~. Br•tn<::Y 16. W•SIOn I•, Nulter I , W1lll•m1 1 Scnluel•rl lrv1ni> Corona T<>rrr\ 11 Goeg9•I 11 .. endric•~ •. Row•ll I, Kirk l, £\po\llO I H.illlm• ,¥_,,,,,,. 31 26 JVNIOlt VAllSITY M•flN WI tnl CMOft.t Ml M.tr M ul,.a-furlllo l. 8"rry II, Boflm 11, Gllll~m 10. Hu11 7. Sl•war'I 2, ,Kyler 2. Burris l, Br.,,..., 2, eor-, 2. Cot'on•-Splnr1 10. Sto<191\1an 4, Tllompson s, P•llll"IOn •. Bl.Umore ~· H alfllme-M<lrln1 1'! 17. VAltSITY Newl"f1 l"'I IOTI f411 Cypret\ Newport Harbor C.incul t, Eclltef'NCh 2, S!Mlnot•r 2, Woll• o. HOf"ll 16, RU\h I. HKlll I. HalfUmt· C'(PnH, ,. .... R .. utatlon ...... JUHIOlt VAltSITY N...-t 1111 t•> c..--u Newpotl Harbor-Petll•t' I , 0'•1199" t, Conover •, Sn>itll 1. Htn ~·· u. o. Sn~ l • Haltttrno: C~<. »• I VAltSITY Valin°' t»l Utl Ll11ony OI Llllefty Cllrtstten-BGbo S, McJdOlln "6 A~f!et t, Fr-11 • Ore,..., 4 Hilllll"'e Llbt<'IY 0.rtstl .... 1 .. 16. Prep Soccer YAU.TT OIO\ & ul) Claom1ng Pu"t S.C.200 c1.11m1ng l>"IC< \S,000 Pol~I,.~ 11 4 1 • 0 .. l 1 Mltlto:fi' 70 20 O• A1¥.trt I lorn l 70 Cage Standings For Colleges Moon' K rncsa M4n (Nltodemu\ I f-•tnam Go CC•rdoza I Qulc~•n Oal• (P11u11""1 Cnarro'\ Rock•t CROVQn I 1 ·11 Prove II ITr•••ur• l I m Gonna Go IMl•"I Go Tflr•< Aero~' l~rr .. 11 Popp• Jonn CH•rll 117 119 1'1 117 111 llY 11• Ul ,,, Fo4.Wll•1n V•lley CIS-41 9 19 II Ip ••9 19 19J I.II ••• 11 4 .. 114 11 '"'' 10 0 ll•vou Booo1e •W•rdl 009 c..un CKn19111 I "' Los Alamitos "0UllTH llACE J~ yards l .,,._, OIO't &. UP Ft111,. ..... m.tres Cl•rrnrnq Pu"" ,J.100 C•••m1nQ prtc~ \J,SOO N•w-1 H•rbor (10 •I q lq tt Ip 09. 19 111 )1 219 14 • 19 IJ 0 111 11 I Through S unda y's Games 81t Ton ConffnM• c-t AH Gama' W L l"c:t W L Pct M1C1119•n St 1 0 1.000 IS I .'l'l3 MICl1104tn S 2 11f 10 S .t&I Purdue \ l 114 10 j US llllM•\ • l Sii 10 • 615 Mln..,.\ot• 4 J .Sii a 7 .511 Onlo •;, J 4 .419 10 • .i.u Indian• 1 S .796 10 • .1>15 low• 1 S 2" • 6 ,Sl>J Norlllwr\lrn 2 S 216 4 10 375 Wl\COn\1n I • 143 5 10 .J3) MIO .,.,.ricaft Cillll.nMe c-t AllG•mas W L l'<:t. W L P'ct. Mtamr Ofloa \ I 8J3 10 S 607 Tol..io 1 .114 IS 3 .Ill £ M1Cnl9')n 2 l>OO & 9 .400 c MIC n19•n 3 .)71 • 1 .S.1 N 1111no1s 3 .S11 6 10 315 B•ll SI 4 42' 1 '8 .461 Bawllr19 <>rn l 3 400 4 11 .766 Ofllo V 2 4 .3ll 8 1 .Sll l<~nl SI 1 S .211& 3 13 .230 W Mic lllQMl 7 S 296 S 10 .333 S.lllllHll~n COfttef-• C-t. All ~mff W L l"c:t. W L l'ct. KPntucky 6 I .esr 14 I .9JJ Al11bam• 6 7 .1SO 11 S .706 Miu SI 6 2 .750 I I 4 .Ml LSU ) 4 .55'> 11 1 .•11 Florid• 4 .SOO II I> .647 Aut>urn l .37S 6 • .400 C.eor1,11• 3 .31S t • .S19 MIUISS!ppl 3 l> .333 • 10 .4U hnnu~e 2 S .216 1 • ,431 V•nCIUblll 1 C> .250 • II .lS3 AttMt.lc~~e C#f. All 0.mH W L l'<:t. W L Pct. N C•rollna • 1 .750 16 3 .941 lllf9ln1e 4 7 .. , U 2 .llS Duke • l _.., IS 4 .I .. N Ceroll..., SI 3 3 ,SOO 13 4 .16S W•k• Forest 3 3 .SOO 12 S .70. Muyl•nd 1 s . ,., II • .M1 Clem1on I S • 141 II 1 .•11 M1u-.i v.11.., ~· c-t AN~H W L l'ct. W L ~ct. Ntw Mn SI 1 I 115 II 1 .1>11 8radl•y 6 2 ,,,., 10 7 .Sii s 111111011 • J .'67 11 • .M1 lndl•n• St s 3 .US 1l 4 .7•5 Crel11Mon .S 3 •» 10 S .6'1 Wlcllll• SI J 4 .42' 7 ' .431 TVIH 2 • .2SO 3 IJ .235 Dr•ke I 6 , 143 4 13 .US W Te .. \ SI I 7 .12S 5 U .271 s.wtflwft•~· Tuu Af1l•r1Jaf HouslOft Te~UTKll 811v1or SIWIU T .. u A&M R1u TCU c.f. AHG.IMH W l P'd. W t. l>tt. 101.000 1'2.119 7 I .17S 1t 1 ,9'0 S ~ ,.25 IS S ,750 s ' .•25 13 • MC 3 s .. ,, 9 • .- l S .J7J 61l.W ' a .= 10 9 .$26 t • .uo • 13 .llS I 7 ,1U ) 1' .11- ~ 7~• (:eM. "" Ol!M• W L .-Ct. W l. f>ct. flor1d1 St S 1 ..m IS 1 ."2 LOUISvlllt 4 I .IOO It 3 .IOO ~•mP"" SI 4 I .IOO n • ·'" U-9la TKl\ 4 2 ... 7 It • .6'1 ClnclnnaU J S .J1S 10 • .425 SI Lou Is 0 4 .000 4 tt .tJO Tulane O • .000 :S IS .1'7 ··"'"' •llM c-ttnK• °""· ,..a- •• , Slly Co<tt..-eRC• C:...I All G•m .. W L Pct W L l'ct Webll'r St S 1, Ill IJ • 144 ld•ha St S I 131 • I S.1 Thal\ Cl~s ICJ••l\\I') !>he., Hot IM.llrrl MyO~I f .... r11 119 11' 171 Race Results (.Of'IHQ.t • I 900 11 • .SSO MGnt..-.1 1 ... I II • Me 8°'S. !,I 3 .SOO I 10 •u ld•no • 200 • IJ ?JS N0Arr1on• S .1'7 7 10 ,411 Mont..,• St 0 6 000 4 II lSl PM Ilk e C..1..--e CeM. AllG•m .. W L PcL W L Pct, UCLA S 0 1000 14 2 .US Or~on SI 4 I IOO II 1 '" Sovll'M!rn C.I l l 600 10 • S.,. Oro90n 7 l 400 11 • .. , Wl\lll1>91on 2 J 400 10 I \S. C•hlorn1<1 1 J 400 • ' . SOO S1'nlord 1 • XIO 11 7 t.11 W•\11 SI I 4 200 10 I SS• Wot.,.11 ••-le ~IHeMe C.-01 AllG•_, w L Pc t, w L Pct. New Mewlco S O I 000 a 1 1182 Uteri 4 1 Ml 14 I 137 Colorado SI J 1 600 11 S .10. Arhona 3 3 .SOO 11 6 .641 Arl•on• SI l l .SOO 10 ' .S24 Brl9n•rn Y"9 l l soo 9 13 40'1 Wvoml1>9 1 c .100 10 I .s56 Tu El Pno 0 5 000 e 9 fll wut C..st Allli.tlc Ceflftf'tft<• c:.i.t A II G.lmat W L Pct. W L P'<I • S.n Fr.1n S I .13.J IS 4 7t' ~tVM•·A•no s I Ill 1J s .n2 SHllll 4 2 .'67 ' 10 474 S.nl• ci ... a l 3 .)Of) 14 S 762 SI. M•rv'a 2 .333 10 • us Po<tl...O 2 .333 II 1 ... , Lavoc • 2 .333 1 • 4ll Ptpperdlne I S .1'/ • 12 .llJ ... "" Columbia c-11 Prlr>eelOft Brown Marvllfd Vale Oartmoulh Ivy La .... CMf. W L f'd. 4 01000 3 I ,150 , 2 .soo 2 2 ,)Of) , .333 7 lJ3 , .333 0 3 000 P'CAA An~ W I. Pct. II • . 7ll • • 400 s 10 .m • I soo l 9 2SO A 10 216 • 7 4'2 4 10 216 Ceftt AllO-t W L ~· W L ~. f'resnO SI S I Ill IS 3 .'23 FullertonSt S I .Ill If • . 111 P11e1oc s 1 .an n .s .nz S.n Ol990SI 4 2 ... 1 II 7 611 l Ol\9 8HCll 2 4 .lJJ I t ,471 UC lrvlne I ~ .167 6 10 ,JH ucse 1 s . m • n .m San JOH St I .S , 141 S 13 .211 I.Ital\ Slllle 0 0 .000 H 4 ·"' ... ll!IM ~· Qlof AllO.-. W L I'd. W L I'«. IC-6 1 .IJ7 16 l .... 2 Iowa 51111 4 1 .157 11 I .S7' H.i>ruu 5 2 .n.. ,. .1 .lfl Kan.., st a • .A29 n 1 .632 Olllat!Dm• 3 • .'29 10 • ..S26 Ml~rl 3 4 .A29 10 t .SM 0tot•tt1aSt I 6 .143 7 11 ,JI' ColONdO 1 6 .H) 7 12 .3'I Meter I rt F 1111 tltaMlllta AllO.- Im.I Klply Two (Qlll AO. J11v·s Ro.on G.tl IW•rdl Lull Colonna l~rl 11' 11' ,,., '9 FTH RACE -400 t•rds 3 .,..., Old\ & UP. Cl .. mln') Purs~ Sol MIO C1a1m1no l>"•<t\4.~ CneQut T< CC.Ill Oupl1Qu10 IMttcn.111 T •nv CO'\ Jo«! tAllt-.) Aru•• OM !Myles I Mldnll• Spo< I.Ill 1.t.d.lor 1 TrmeloGo IH•rtl GoJtl CC•rclolA I !.otanOQOOd IW.oro 1 B19 •" 9rHry CC.r.t<t I Goin Jts~ tR0V9nt Sill TH "AC£ -3~ v•rd• old m•ld•M """" JJ 400 S•nlanan Wll\Cls COom1n1,1.,..11 Tap Elrvellol\ l"'°<lorl Our Go CTrusurr I Fl,..I Aini !VaUCjl'lnl £~\y Ch•rm l!MnkSI EHY Fllp CMyl~) Anot"er Antic INlcad<'mu\ I LoU• Lenvan !Cardo••> No o Lav IC.II I s ... abell• (F'trnerl llY "' 3 yur 122 •n Ill 117 I JI I ti 171 117 111 ! 11 SRVRNTH ltACE -fOO Y<l•ds l Y•at OI~ Allow.1n<e Pur\e M.SOO Spo<t1n1,1 P.11 IC...-<1o1a 1 111 Sppcl•I l'HI~ (Hartl l!'f Blondes Rtti IC~<19"rl 112 8afllu Jofw\ 10t1om11<o1 119 R.1tt Me Hrgh ITrH•ur•l 111 Lay a Patch lll•ugMI 117 l•mac Blue Mt1\ IPtrntrl 117 Grenttd Wish IN1c~u•I 111 F•rllHllC Gill CROVQM 117 RIOHTl4 ltACE -•OO v~rds J .,.., olds & up FolllM & marrs Al· IOWlnCll. PvrM ,, .~ Acu Count C.t.d.lor I Some Klllda Rllv111m 18.,hl 8198MUOh !Oelomblll 8onr1le 8111(1 l CC...-clotal Coco's Coc>v ICterisse> Three Hula «Rovohl She Wlllcatcner <W•rdl Oii Mlny IHMtl 819 M"'Trv IC-.tl CM1tchtlll I Bella Tv tTr..urel 119 119 "' I 19 111 112 11' 11• "' 11• NINTH RACa 400 y•r~. 3 year old\, Calll·b<'e<I. c1a1m1n;. Pur .. SJ. 100. ClalmlR9 l!f"ke jl.SOO 0..,11 Flentrtr 1T11!a1ure1 WM f'ancy (IJtttlomba) My Pl!Hld« (ClerlSWI Luclly15(llf'oclllfletcll G•lneea1n IWllnll lttbll.,o llMrdl TM Cees Chwetr ICrffoerl ICemanO-IAdelrl lite Cllau"1r1lrt IHMt I 121 11' 122 "' 111 '" 11' lit 122 ""'~Y CloufY, Treca o..- FI ltST ltACE UO t'••d• l v••r olds & up Cla1mu>Q Purs" '2 100 ~;.,...,1 Clly IP.,rn•r I 10 10 6 10 J 10 M•U P"n<ty P~ C8otrdl 1 611 J 60 T "V NOi\• llr•••t1rll'I 1 6() Tom• 214' 41\0 ,.., Rr\P"'Ct Ille M .. n l•D. So" Mr 8 B.w. Fly BM Too 1 vcky IA M•9•<14ll'°"· M•Qnly Ct..lrQ"I '>cr•lr n~d ~o•v Jo1 B•tllr Movnl•n. °'1lh4Jn 'Bo. Mr Bu<ldi• U IEUCU 10.S-I Crly & •Mou p.,,,.V P•99, P411d \&S t0 SECOND ltACE 400 VMd• l Yt"r Old\ M.110 n c ld•mH\Q Pur,._,. S1 400 H•ll a Moon (C.Mdoza I • llO 4 00 110 l 1dy To"' CKnognll 1& 10 t 40 Crtrpln9 Cllarlle CC,,."9"rl I 00 Time -21 I• Air.<> rAl'I ~ tC•V Pcm1n Dorl, Tony Flfft, Cell Me Ton11e. Now w al c n. v a""""90 Scr11t<11rd O"•v , .tlP, lo•tn Babtr. Ouphc•lc O.trl, MoonlrQlll O•nc.Pr TMlltD ltACE -400 v.rds l v .. , olds Claomlng Pur)e ~.400 Mr Cute C.uv CCardo1.. 4 10 2 A() l 70 lorllll• Flat ICl•rl,o•I J 20 1 •() L•~• Old T1mrs 1 KPlly I l •O Time -20 69 AIW r•n -OUQ41(n1ck, L•d1 E "·' Bar, D•wn Orr•lt•r • A14tk•t•m St111t1 · •nQ the 91Ull'• Pro 11'..i, Ima Gu•ln Scnlchf'd -Mo••nq D•nor. J""9 Ten, Br•"' Moon Jr. Atbel•ro U Euct• l~Mr Cute Guy a l · Tertlll• "411, P•ld Mt.SO "0URTM ltACf l~ v•rds l Y•" olds c1a1m1n9 For 1111•••. Pu•s" S3.400 Alar•m• (H1rt) )6 10 1S 70 • 10 NlllVP llll•llly (Clnl\~I 1 00 4 80 Wiii Truckle !Treasure) 1 60 Time -11.34 Al•o r.,. • Llttlt f'v<oblo B11r, Miu Sas N Cl"'· 8ral'IClv Go, Tlllnkl119 of Glorv, Blvtbtn'Y Brandy, Unloolree, B-•tt• Too Scr•lc...o -Mary Can PlfrTH RACE -e10 V•rds. J yur olds & up. Oat"'l119, Pvrw 12, 100 OH·'TlaT~ (ClrtrlU.l OH-Olddy'1 Rotket (C.,doial OllJOCly tPevhnel 3 60 HO 210 S 20 $Ml HO • 40 Area Sports Calendar W L ~ T .... f C.-Jt) W....._T ( ..... II 1' 1 ."41 8111!e1'811-&ama Ana II Esten 8n1<etbell-f'o<1nta1n V•ll•Y al II t ·"° <l•,C«-dtl Mk•1MIS.SlonVleJo, (dlSOll, HUllllllQtan Buen at 16 2 ..., Cotta M.M «San (1-W, Oana Hn•••rt Harlor, M.,l11a •I 16 t ... Miii' 111 El Toro, V11lwrsl1Y at Wt1t"'lni1er, Armv·Navy at 14 I ..., l.l9vn11 lo«ll <•1 al 11; s.n.1 .. at CAtplalrane VallPf C.11at11: Ml ~ IS 2 .-Mll•r Dec, llllert., CllrlSUtft •I l<nlonl• C:OClttt II Or1N10t Coal\ 1' l ."1 '"'lltrJcat1 OlrlltlClll, Oeldtft 'Nut Coll19e 17:H>; "lnf'slde City 1• 2 '" Collf99 a t I.A~ !all at 1:JO>; c.ot111941•t~llCD1teve 111 ,. t .11S CIP1\tt11ft0 v.ii., OWkllln .. T•-Socc .. -a.. ..i11a "' l!:I Toro et l•m" •I II ~tr•IClled -Mr Trqrr Rockf'I. H-••H•n htf"', Mr 8trd~9 .. GOid Polley OH Ot..,....•I U Euct<r s-~1lt Teugh & l·DK G1Hy'' ltCKI<"'-P11f Slt SO U f I.ICU 7·0.ddy"t llocll~ & S- DH "TIS Toutll. P'11d SO.SO SIXTH ltACE. JSO ·urd\ 3 •~•· Old\ & uD C •••ming Pur\fl JI 000 Rt Qn• "Q Siar CMolCfll'lll 1] 40 ~ 40 IO(• Two•orl"""'°"' 1ward1 ) 00 l 61 Cio Cdl tC•nQ cc .. raor•• l 110 T•mt• 181• No ~" atcrv·s \£ V (NTH lllACE •OO yard' l V~M Old\ A UP C1a1mm9 For hllr"' II. m.irP• Pur\~ $4.100 [ .. \tflr f Vf• 81d (Rouqnl 100 s 00 310 Ml\\ Go L•CJlll 19.tnk" 9 Ml & 20 CAii Me Marth" (8ardl 3 00 Ttm,. 70 If 111\o un ~-Miss !>fl• PaHum. Aprrlrna Clll<, T aka Bow, sw~rl RP1rf'al, Lorrial, L..,y·s Red Tr!l\IU!l. S111mmy snrmmy !>cratchll'd-LonqaCo, AooldAnqer LllllP RPpllta.CrtlNI Rockl'l u Eaa<1• l-~11er Eve 110 a •· Mrn Gt L'9flt. l' .. d st27 SO EIGHTH RACE J~ yards J ..,,,..,. Old\ & UP AllowdnC~ Pur\e' st 000 Cl••nH E IMMI (WMcfl 46 llO f••t Judy IV•U9flnl 0•\t•d C .. pn {Ad.airl Time -It 14 16 6() 10 20 neo e10 a oo Aho rttn Go Su., M~, Native Cr .. 11, Fl,..1 N' F1C-lf'. Htl~>mOO<ll', Somp1n L itl.a Jtl, 0•1 Ne•& e~u·, Smooth Ktlly Scr•tc,,..., -Al)OYll'p,)r NINTH llACE 4lllJ yard' 3 Y•~' old\ a up. Cl••mlnQ Pun" U.)()11 Hurlbrr•k KKI ClrPasurt I 7.40 l 60 3 •O Strp end~ <Ci,rt~WI J.40 2 40 Solom•n'\ WorlcS IC.,dora) .1.60 Time -20.88 Al\O ran -S..venoth Giii, CNrllt 81Kkel. s.-r Al...-1, Good ldH, Hot SlloC Cult Bar, Good COPY. Starletlemp Scralth.U -Curt's Caper, Mr Gey Perr n E:ucta , .. 14_....k ICl4 & 4- Slu lftd CO-, P'ittd '76 00 Attend.111te -S,4ff Basketball VAltSITY Hit Vali.,Q.a,~n HllC-l(lng 6. Sieve_. 10, f'rartrf' ?t. Reynolds It. HesM 1, S..y-l, Pal•POfl It. a-1. Hollll~VC'1 ll JUHIQa VARSITY Hlv. VOiiey Qi, ff,......,._ 41 MVC-8urkart 1. T"orp II, ft•u""'" l4, SlllOC111 a. DoooCrlo to, KalJli , Halfll~VCll-,.. StekOI f'refn .. I\ Putman 8ak•r P~ulr1 Ouv;tn SlrHI H•ll C•ldW•ll McCartny H•tllQ•n " as 31 II 1• 4.t 14 441 IS " ,. ,. U II 1 1 11 I ll i I • J I 2 3 I l 3 0 II 201 "' H ,. 4J )t II 1' I • 2 10 s to• St 4 4 u 4.1 I J u u 20 I 0 R1-i. Ut-JJ J•rcUM Price Maclelocl C•rrlOO Cooper C.1mp L.1rlmar 8r.111nsoorl KrolW'lleldl M.1nonay l(eup K•r•m- Roescn ' .. " ti' • .,, It !ft :It 31• 17 I It IH fS 1" IS l It SI 1' 111 • 1 "•s,. 11t •2 11 SO 11 111 •S 11 4S n llS •.1 n i. 21 n • • n 1• 1J f.) J 1 12 ll u ,. 32 I 12 ' ll J. • ' • 10 2 s s J t • I• 2 1 • Is c.~,.r-Valt.y llU> e Cll••les Br'l'•nt R Charin O"H.1llorolft s-110 Fen.,n9.1 Oun1v1" Slr.c~•and Collin• Elli\ Rone" e .. u., !><nu~'' I ft tt .. •"I· lO ttO 147 S11 " l II • 10 116 10 J 11 11 it 111 tS 20 .. 17 IU I .I 17 .a lO uo I. 20 .. l:S !OS S 7 13 7• 21 1' H 1) 18 11 ., 4. 11 • • 16 1 I I I 11 10 11 I I J Q 11 I 0 • I 0 I 1 4 I 0 trvl119 Hiii! CS-U> Rudy Montewrae Odden Mr lier w el)e C•po-rusc 10 Jove• D•~IS I It ft 18 .. ~ 19 u 3' II U Jl 11 SS 11 IS 3J 10 9 II II . ' ' 10 • , i,. ... ,. 24' u' IU tO 11• 9 1 IJI 1 l .. s 1 Jl 3 1 27 3 0 2S 2 s Krf'\.her M•"9•n S••n'-o•t Betts I • 4 ) 1 ) .. , 2 'I 1 I l 1 1 0 I J l.O Mc Cr•• Stttl~ G•rc.t• S•UncM<S Gavl•n ~.cnam Pe•t>odv C.ook Scllu11l Neltwn Altt:-n Mat~Del llMI I .. n 10 101 " 10 103 AO 20 7' SJ 10 ., )ol U SS lJ 20 ~ n 11 so n 11 31 n " ,. 13 I I 1 4 4 0 ., a v1. , .. 11 4 , .. Ill 711 10 s 141 14 143 II' Ill 6' 1n 1 J .. SJ 71 l 1 2) 2. • 10 C<>nlft• Clel Mar n•1 I 'tO<!llrr Ane•rn llurdt'n H•ttllt0< ~ Rarn\ t 19 ft Ip nt. !I Ill ... 2.. , •• 11 71> 40 ,., " t 11 II 2f UIO 10 S 9 l4 llS 811 9S •• 14 76 ~ 1. College Basketball EAST 6U(knell 11, 01ct11n~.i OUQ~\nt 43. S C.ro<1na 61 F.11rtltld It ~Ion U ll St. Bonaventur• tO. SI. Fran<1"- N v.n SI. Jonr1·, "· °"'"d\On 67 W Vir911\111I, ,,...,._SI .. SOUTH Auburn &S, Min SI 14 Flo<1d• 14, iu-.nwr 13 teenluckvto, C::--Qi• 13 M.,\lldll llS, Tf'M·CNllanOO'l• • 1 Nut OrlNM tO. Jtck'.Onvi1141 II N C1r011tw 73, Mf>rcN 10 NE LOUl\I""" ... Of.II• ~I /I ~w LOUt\IMl• 5" LOUl\ljlft.t Ttc" u Val\d•rblll s.. T""nts,,.. SS Vtrt,11111• Tt<h II. Sy•IKU\e II MIDWEST Bull"• <ll e.11 s1. ppd. '"°w c.1n<1nna11 70. Tula"" U Cr,.1qhlon a.t. N1-w MP•lcn St 10 lncllMI• 11. Mlcnl9o.1n ~I 06 low• 19, Wl'K.On'oln /l Loyol .t, 111 "· I,,.,, ..... , SI 16 Ml•ml. Oltlo 71, No llllnol\ ~ Mlnnnol• "·Northwestern II Onlo SI 11, llllnot•M Oral RoOer'tl SI>, Tulsa S4 Purdue tO, Ml<1119a'I 6S SOUTHWEST MCN•ll'S" St 67, Arkans.s SI 4S P.1n Arn«1c.tn Hit, Cllntao•rY '1 SMU 11>, Rice n Tuas73.~n 1 uas A&M SI. 9•Ylor 56 h•41\ So SS. GramC>llnq ~ Tues T«ll SI. TCV S$ WEST F•tr1>an4ts '6, L.,.I\ & Cl11rll 65 C.on•~ ti, •cs.non Loyole, Cal 19. Cal Poly IPomon•I IA, Z OT Neved• (Raool "· S.C••menlo St SI • Pu~I Sound •• 0rt'9"" T•<" S6 SI M11rtln°t a Rechnch 41 W lllll'>CH\14, 0.-11 Wutm1mler 103. 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" !Mlldlv1r Jal>n\t!n M Bower~ Ntl\On P Bow•" ROclrtqUll'1 e .. ntll He.cs I '-•Vt 1S 31• 11.0 14 , .. 111 13 nt '·' 8 •I 11.J 11 " •. 2 10 66 •.• 9 ~A 5) 9 ~1 s 2 l IS 5.0 J 10 J) 3 s I.• I l JO Ll..,,y Orilti8" IJ.tO G-rllQM l09ar1 "'""'' Hoplllrl' M•rt1n PU(lll Hllclom 8urkltOIClll'• H ert141 ''- W 1111• m• ....... ,. m i•' ,. ., s.a 12 91 7S U 74 S.l • 41 • s II 41 3 1 11 3' l 7 6 JO S.O J 1 a.o I 2 2 0 Hllfl .. ntt•Vet ..... CIWHti. (If.SI Frarer IClrlQ SlfY<'rlfr P•l•poil Reyr10ldl Brown HHW Snyder I tp a'ft. 14 l20 22 I IJ , .. If 1 IJ tlS 10.1 ' n •~ 12 10 s.- 1 ., 1' • 3S 3 t s ,. st Large and Small- "Sea"Tilem All al .. ~ ...... .... ···- THE rsH ce.11 MIN IO 111 o ... Mllll C:.tlt~tlff 0-Hlllt-u.ytOIL t4atn~ w l. Pct. w l. ""'-v 111.,...,. • o 1.000 u J .rn PllllburOll t I .W tO ' .. u 0.. Wt a, J a .SGt 12 & .116 If J n• '" Cll,1111111, lellt,_,.,. Calltott1i• Mis~°" Vceie t.s·JO). 1' I ,.,I C-'l ... atUCIM~lllotllMI). GI"' blt91etlaall-<.Mta Mo.a a1-------------"'4 NICMt~AHtTV ......... ft) •> °"""Met.a O.,,.Mll 'foml,0..IML H&l,.llN-f .. OUQvetllO J J .100 t f AO Rutl9tt t I MO U • .1" w "1ro1~1e t J ..-• t ..- Mluac.11\attt' t .. • ' Ma ""1JI ltlllt 1 " • "" s " .ttt 1' J .ti• NewJIMt HlrW Qt, Ill .11M*N ot u • .. ., lataMI• lt11 hn Cleme1tto at I• • .)'11 C.llfllt,_ 'Valley ti· m. u • .m 01111 ttMl~c trv1111 at k1t '' • ,.,...;~·~ ........ ""f" ..... ~-..~ .... ~----~ ..... P!ete--....... •e..-..t.;..;:;tt:~.1~s~•·'-------~ 1s ' 3111 ii s .m ti t >1Dt tt ' .... "J .. u' .... 10 s *" fl • Al) 11 I " J 11 .. '° 'IO " Jl.j DA.IL V PILOT Tu.illy, Janu.y 31. 1878 Business Local Businesses Report Utility, Airlines List Quarterly Results Edbon Earning• laerea.e Southern California Ed.isOn Co. bas reported earnings in 1!117 of $3.88 a share, compared with $3.70lo1!116. Per-share earnings were based on a weighted average of approx.imately 54.3 million shares out- standing in 1977, compared with 48.7 million in 1976. Net int'ome for the year just ended totaled $257 million, compared with $222 million in 1976. Operating revenues ln 1977 were $2.1 billion, com- pared with $1 8 billion for the prior year. Air Cal Hqort• l11erecue Officials al Air California have announced a slight increase m the number of passengers using their airline to fly into and out of Orange County Airport. Ongin and destination figures show 1,395,475 people got either on or off Air Cal jets at Orange County m 1m. The figure for 1976 was l ,234,H2. Although the passenger figures reflected only about a two percent increase, Air Cal spokesman' Bob Payton noted thal passenger use of the planes, ~specially during the summer months, has caused a decline in the airline's freight shipments lnto and out of Orange County. In 1976 the airline handled 656.4 tons; in 1977, it was 6234 tons. Payton said that jets usmg Orange County airport arc restricted by weight. The increased numbers of passengers -and their luggage means the planes are not able to l·arry a!) much freight, he said. Golden Wnt Set• Rerord Golden West Airlines, Newport Beach, has an- nounced J record of 510,449 passengers carried, representmg 28 19 percent growth for the year end· ing December 1977. The earner ':> load factor for the year was 57.70 percent, ~1th a schedule completion factor of 97.46 percent. Airfreight carried during 1977 showed a 4 per- l'ent growth in general commodity and a 102 per- cent growth in small package service. Golden West recently initiated the wide bodied 30·passcnger Short 3·30 aircraft into service. New routes into Palomar and San Diego through Santa Ana, Oxnard and Santa Barbara, were started on Dec 4, 1977. Burlington Northern Gains Burhngton Northern Air Freight Inc., Newport Re ~u·h , has rc•purh•d rec·ord earnings for 1977, based on .1 n •cord volume of business. Nt'I 1m•ome was $2,342,1344. compared with the 1976 profit of $1.750,:189. a 34 percent increase. Net o perating mcom1· totaled $4,550,525 in 1977, com- pared with $3,43:1,558 in 1976, a 33 percent increase. Revenues fro m domestic and international operations rose to $103,410,343 last year, 43 percent above tht-$72,213,862 of the preceding year. Ship- ments handled by the freight forwarder last year totaled a record 1,374,850, compared with 1,109,326 in 1976. Bugh.rs 11 f ruie•t Gain• I Hughes Airwest has reported a preliminary radio pager WIDE AREA COVERAGE ORANGE CO.-L.A. •11.10 • lllOlldl teCal ee.t NO DEPOSIT ON APPROVED CREDIT Ort.\"Gr COU'iH' fl\l>IOffllPHO~t SI 11\lll'( ,,, ~ •Uft! •~s430s AMC Hikes Vehicle Cost DETROIT CAP ) Ameriran Motors Corp. has become the latest a utomaker to raise p ri ce~. announcing a $10-0 increase on its sub· compact Gremlin cars and Jeep vehicles. The increase will be t-ffcctive next Wednes- day, AMC said. The price increase by the nation 's No. 4 ;iutomaker will raise the ba s e price of the Gremlin to $3,399, a boost of six-tenths of a percent. Custom models with a four-cylinder or s ix-<:ylinder engine will be raised to $.1,649. net profit of $8.2 million for 1977, more than double 1976 earnlnp of $3.6 mUlioo and the highest in alx consecutive profitable yea.rs. Revenues ln JJm climbed to an all·time hi&b ot $2S3 mlllloo from $202.2 million in 1976, up 2S per- cent. Thia was primarily due to a record •.85 million passengers who new 2.04 billion miles. Passengers produced $223.2 million in re· venues, cargo $8.7 million and charter operations $7 million. In 1976, passenger revenues totaled $178.5 million. cargo $7 million and charters $3.3 million. OW.• 'l'nule Fl,.. Fo.-..ecl A Ch1n(!Se trading company called Smith Das· ing Ltd. bas been formed by Smith International Inc .• Newport Beach, and the Da Sing Corp., Jerry W. Neely, Smilb International president and chief executive officer, bas annoWlced. The company, with headquarters in Hong Kong and lb primary liaison office in Newport Beach, is 60 percent owned by Smith International and 40 percent owned by Da Sing. Smilb manufactures drill.i.ng tools, equipment and related services to the energy industries. Smith Dasing will offer a China trade program lo Smith International divisions and to other in- dustrial clients. Flttar f'I"" Stq• llp Aed1'ltle• Fluor Drilling Services, Irvine, a subsidiary of Fluor Corp .. has expanded its sales and marketing activities, effective immediately. An FDS sales office in the Houston area will be opened under the direction of 0. B. Persful as vice president·sales. He is former vice president. operations, Western Offshore Drilling & Explora- tion Co., an FDS subsidiary at Irvine. Edgar D. Turner will assume lbe position of vice president-operations of Wodeco. Cl~siC Cars Star at Slww B> CARL CARSTENSEN Of tit• O•llY Piiot SUH An ('Xpandct1 auto !.how -nearly double the size of last vc·ar's c•xhib1l is scheduled at the Anahl·tm Convl·nt1on Center, F£1b 17 through 20. In its 14th year, the Orange County Auto Show v. ill han· manv innovations in 1978, including use nf the entire ArC'na by JUSt one major automotive manufal'lurer, Chr} slC'r Corp . as represented by the Chrysler Plymouth Dealers Association and the Dodge Dealers Association of Orange and Los Angeles counties. THEME FOR THE SHOW IS "Movie Cars." and the show committee has obtained the Franklin Delano Roosevelt "Parade Car," a 1939 Packard V· 12 convertible sedan, now o-.vned by Jim Packer and valued in excess of S50,000. Another car once wa s owned by the famo us blond e movie star nf the '30s , Jean Harlow. ~N HIGH GEAR) Cl assic cars us ually are defined as the automobiles built between 1925 and 1941. One of the first s uch classics -and one that will be at the auto ~how is a 1925 Lancia Lambda 5th Series Roadster. It was the so·called "darling" of the in· ternationalset, and Gloria Swanson once owned it. The Lancia is not a bag, fast car, rather a lithe handsome runabout. It cost about $3,000 new and 1s capable of speed up to 75 mph. IT IS POWERED BY AN aluminum V4 with overhead camshaft, connected to a four-speed gearbox. Suspension is the independent slirling pillar developed by Vincenzo Lancia, first used on a car in 1921. Owner Kent Wakeford still takes the car out to veteran car races. Other exhibits from domestic manufacturers v.ill be on display, including Chevy's Astro III and Ford's futuristic Corrida. Summary Financial Statement. CAPITOLIZE WITH CAPITOL -Oeoember31, 1977 ASSETS Cash on Hand and lnvntment Sec:unnes ........................ s 12.481,025 Federal HOfTle Loen BMk Stock • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 880.000 First Trust Deeds on AtlJ E1tlfe . .. • . .. • • .. . • • •• • .. . .... •• • . . . . • 97,817,825 Loen1 to Fadlli.t• s.le of R.., Est•eOwned ••••••• ••••• •••••••• M ,064 ~eal 'E.lt•e Sold on (Jontract • • • •••• •••• •• • • •• • • • • •• • • • • • • • •• • • •• 41.Me Other L..,. -..••••.• •· .. •. • •.. ·• • .... • ••• • •••• •• •••••.... •...... 1.300.1•2 tnterelt Earned 8ut Uncollected.................................. 692,787 CReal EatseONned Acquired Through Forecloeure •• •• ••••• •• ••••• 49,392 ~eal Estate Owned fOt Development • . . . • • • . . • . . • . . • . . • • • • • • • • • • 387,398 Assocl11t1on Premlsee and Leasehold lmprovementa (Net) 811,477 ~umiture. Axturea and Equipment (Net).......................... ?M.718 Other Allets , • .. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . .. .. 1.360.201 TOT~ ASSETS •••••••••••..•••.•.••••••• It 1 &.640. 983 UAll CAPIT(llZATION MEANS TO' ~T CAPIHl TO CASH Capitol: Af'WI,..._• HAPPY JOE'S PIZZAZZTO DEBUT IN CARIO Waitress Tammy Renda O.monatr•tea In Des Moines Shareholders Want New BofA Policy SAN FRANCISCO <AP J -A shareholders' campaign has been launched to convince the Bank of Amenca to stop doing busme::.s with Sovth Afpca In tlnveihng the project in San Francisco, the activists said a proxy resolution has been sent to all bank shareholders, urging the end to the bank's involvement In the racial hot spot in Africa's southern tip. The proposal ls to be voted on at the bank's annual meeting April 25. The Ban.le of America has loaned $188 million to the white re- gime in South Africa aod firms doing business there, the shareholders claimed. "The South African government would collapse without Western support," said Nlva Padilha, a spokesman ror the American Friends Service Committee. "We are working for the withdrawal of American capital as a peaceful solution." The campaigners, which included a black South African exile who was an accociate of slam student le ader Steve Biko, represented an interfaith comm1ltee. Sipho Buthelez1, a black Manost who fled into exile four years ago, 1ns1sl£'<i the bank's policies could play a key role in forcm~ change in the racially segregated country. "Apartheid is basically an economic Issue, not JUSt ra.ciul policies," he said Happy Joe's To Open l1i Cario ~ DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) Horns hook and sirens wail. The fare is banana splits and uuerkraut pizza. On the banks of the Nile? Happy Joe's Pizza and Ice Cre am Parlors 1s :>etting up shop mEgypt. "We servt' pizza, ice cream a nd fun," s aid Joe Whitty, owner of the Happy Joe's chain, now in 17 st.at.es. DECK ED OUT IN straw boaters and bow ties, waiters serve beer with the piua and ice cream. Waitresses in pinafores honk horns and yell who's t•elebrating what, be it a birth- day or a long-awaited preg- nancy. An Egy ptian trade de- legation discovered one of Hap- py Joe's parlors last October in Bis marck, N.C., when Gov. Arthur Link took them out for lunch. Thal same day the de- legation flew to Whitty's home office in Bettl'ndorf, Iowa, to find out m o re ubout the franchise. A few months later Whitty found himself r1dmg camels and touring Cairo, the guest of Mohammed El Batran. a member of the Egyptian parlia- ment who will sponsor the farm ln EgypL THE CAIRO HAPPY Joe's should open by the end of 1978. More are planned for Saud1a Arabia. Lebanon, Sudan, Libya, Morocco. Iraq and Jordan. ··we really didn't want to go mternat1onal. ' s aid Jim Orr, Wh1tty's vice president. "We're r«<.illv a prl'lty :-.m all potatoes t u\\ n firm ' Over The Counlt·r NASO Ustinqs NEW VQql( CAP) HVVn -The foll~ .. C'Gflund 1at10M, ~* «iy ~olnc"' tllt Natl onli At.locl-"'"IM atton ot Stcurltlel 119Pn• O.alen, Inc., are C.11ISl\T Ille prlon at wtlld1 Chall""' these MCMl'lll• Cllarl,.d 16'"' IJ ,. • 19 ''""' ,0..,, llps and DolmlS 1•5,~ '!,_ NEW YOAK IAPJ -T .... fOll-'"I list ' ,_ ~w• Ir. ~' • ,.,.. • Count"' 1;, 217:'.' •IOOl a..O ,.¥ranll U-.1 ,..W -11P • • -IN most ...., down '""' mcKl -Oft ~;,. • • poorcent of ch.lng!P ,.._dlf'U °' YOl-n"' n~ tor M-y :\< JS No wcurtll~ lradl"!I -12 .... '"''' • :>l SS -d N~I ;tnd percent-C-.-Me lite 19 11 d•lll'fence bPI_., '"" prwtous clcKlng g~~ :: , b•d price ~ 100.y's 1 .. $1 btd price. • • • ,., u~ I) I)>, Ne..,.. 1.••I _°'93 • )9 • .tO. Grtt.cJ..t 13 • ..... "'• ".. p •<"Dr """ .. ,. , II ll, AtoCO 3 , : .~: 914 ''• ~ ~~~~I~ • 7~ • .. ,., 11 ' ''~ i. Hunt Bid l + 1 • ,,~ U 4 I P•koCO 11 • • 1'·1 "I'°"' e M oroHf'\ 1 ..... '• 18'• 1~~ 11 Woll)f'tn •av. + 10... 10 10· . 10 Jn,o• ~ • • ._ q" 10' '1 Ll~Roll ?1• + H, ~·~ ~'4 17 R.odlf'o.11 1 • + I• 10 11 13 1 IUnln. 1 ~ I~ + '• JO'• JP., U f tArtl\1 h ...._ ~ 15,,, 1~ 11 Mtcrolo J • • ~ Ul'I 11,, lb Compur,:. : , + '' n~. n•, 17 OO brkC. l> + V, 1,,. 1 18 l~nnrOtf 31-. .. ~ l''I A\\ " WollbfO 1'-+ ... 4 •V• JO TrncllO b 1 + "' 1.,. 31 , 1t Cttncor '~ • t,;, M> • ., ' '' of~·. q'>,!,; • • ~ ,,,, ,.,, .. >l ....-f .,..... ~ ") + 'J .t\\ 4'• u t'.tll\ldd 11 ... '• 1 • A•• 1S N~t<.l,,S P' • + Pct. Up l7 S Up lOl Up 17.J U,:> 70 J Up 70 O Up II i UP 144 Up I• J Up 13.J Up 12 S UP n .s Up 11 S Up 17 I Up 116 Up II S Up 11 t Up II 1 Up 11 I Ub 10 1 Up 10 Up 10 S Up 10 3 UP 100 Uo 100 Up 100 1'I , JO , DOWNS I M~~~~ Ld•~ ?'9 0:''10 o> MUTUAL FUNDS 10.llt 11 ti fl .. llty GnluD: ln¥HIOU Gl"OUP: .. $1( ' .M ' 11 'Ot t n llOftll I S:Z NL IDS Bd S 72 S ft Cap It t2 09 IUf I 31 t 02 Caolt 141 1.16 IDS Grt 543... Equl8 UJ 10 03 1 00 NL Contfd t 2A N IDS ndl 4.51 4.. Munl 9 to 10 00 1.00 NL 0.lly I l 00 NL Mu11 I.SI t U AdAll !.(JO HoO 11 lJ Pst,,., I.GI .•• , PrOll 101 U '7 Id AM S 01 .9 7t 116' IQ Inc IS12 H THEX SOI Sl6 ~ Miit I 00 n 7' 1J.. ~I tl.$2.. . • Stock 16.$3 t77S MONY p I 22 .M111t Bd to Sol NL Select t 1' • 13 MSI Fd 13 OI l PacXE•I 4 I AAIA.-s N l\l\JW>\ (4n!t<>Pt R~wll OrM>nAI\ O.ovldOlt Bfldqffd RAdM Pd (Am~ AmcoEnt MCI ..., Malhi< A M~I~ NTHf'\\11 Vt-Q.tPrt1 ~:;;?.~' Rom Am lPC ArqoPM lu<kOrl f,QO<fy~ MdldUol> lncom • H N Er• ••s N Hofll 7.Sl TxFr• 10 77 0 I f I I . ? A '.19 OH 101 ~ ''1 OH 8 1 4' '-Off I I b • • Ott 7 . ..... ''J Otf 71 JJ ·Off 6 7 • • Olt s .. • '• Otf ~ q 3 1 16 ->-•• Off 5 • 1''o ''o Oft S!> 2 • -•• Oft s b • f ·-• Ott s b • • '· Off s .. 7 .,. • Off Sb ,, '•Ott s• ••• ,., Oft 5 . :. '•Off )l .. , '•Off ~' 1-. Vt OH 50 "" ... Off • e s .. Ott • 8 ) ~ '"" Ott • ~ 2~ ~ Otf •.S STOCKS I BUSINESS Tue day's Clo8ing Prices NYSE . COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS Tu.&day. January 31. 1978 llN DAIL V PILOT 85 Tax Time Footnotes Help . In _Saving Money By SYLVIA POllTEll leClll!fl••a... M lllions will talte ileml1ed deductions on Form 1G60 for 1977. Here's a money-saving tip: Study the footnotes to the "Optional State Sales Tax Tables" supplied with the Form 1040 instructions to learn how much the IRS will accept as sales tax deductions. Jgnorin~ these footnotes can be a costly oversight in three way5. (1) 111E TABLES GENERALLY DO NOT includt> local sales taxes with .the state listing Footnotes cover possible add.Jtiooal claims. (2) You are ~liUed to deduct certain state and local sales taxes in addition to the amount listed in the tablt Add to the table figure any state or local sales tu paid on a car, truck, home, boat, airplane or materials bought to build a new home -if the tax rate on these was the same as the general sales tax rate and the seller stated the tax separately but in· duded il in the total you paid. Money's Worth (3) The income figure that determines allowable sales tax deducUon is not only the figure on line 29 of Form 1040. It also includes such tax-exempt income as Social Secun- ly. workmen's compell!>at1on, untaxed portion of capital gains, etc. The higher the income figure, the higher your allowa· ble !-tal<>s tax deduction will be 1 hghcr state income taxes may result from lhe Tax S1mpltf1cation Act. pass~d to simplify preparation <>f Forms 1040 and 1040A by plugging the zero bracket amount into thl' tax tables and tax rate schedule. The same 18\\ barred taxpayers from using itemized deductions if they totaled less than the zero bracket amount Before 1977, itemized deductions could be taken even u they totaled. less tban the standard deduction. MANY STATE INCOME TAX LAWS say that tho.~e who use the federal standard deduction on Form 1040 must use lbe state's standard deduction too Tbe state's stan- dard deduction may be less than the total of itemized de- ductions allowed on your state return. Where this is so, you could hold down your total of federal-state income taxes with the following strategy. Take itemized deductions on Form 1040 totaling less than ~our federal standard deduction. This would cost you a bit more in federal income tax, but also would qualify you to take itemized deductions on your state return in a much larger amount than otherwise. Congress obviously never considered or intended this result when it passed the Simplification Act. Tell your Congres1;men how this change hits you -and demand that 1t n·medy the lnJust· Ne.It: 11177 Tax Law Cha119es Ajjectmg )'ou. U.S. Steel Actions Actions by U.S. Steel NEW YORK CAP> -The stock market pulled back a bit today, faltering in the lace of a dividend reduction by U.S. Steel. The Dow Jones average o! 30 industrials was down 2.52 points to769.9'l. Losers took a small lead over gainers among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues, after traUing by as much as 2·l<>-l earlier. The Dow rose 8.32 points Monday for its best showing in 19'18, and was up another 2 in early trading today. But U.S. Steel reported that fourth.quarter earnings fell to 11 cents. a share lrom 98 cents in the last three months of 1976. The company also cut its quarterly dividend from 55 to 40 cents. a share. Trading in U.S. Steel stock, which ls one of the Dow·s components, was halted at 31'Ye, down ~ from Monday'& close. Kaiser Steel reported a $7 million loss for the fourth quarter again.st a $20.2 million profit in the comparable period a year earlier. Analysts saia those developments chilled whatever en- thusiasm had been geJJerated by Monday's light-volume rally. SI.orb In T~ Spotllglai NEW Y~K (API· $.ti ... 4 p.m. price M'ld Ml Co.._ of IN fin-moll A<tl .. N-York Stod Eu.1W1n91 1-._ ll"Mll119 ntllonaHy at ,_.. u...n $1 US s1 .. 1.. .... t.o,IOO ~ ~'II& Flbf'eOrd Cil. .... ~100 U -1 Manft Fleld., •• J0,100 »'41 + f\ ~ru~·:::·::· ~:: ,f~ ::·" DotrJlonesA "~ra~• fTr;c;rCAPJ Fl ... 0-.JonH .. ,...,~ Olien MIGi! tL-Cl~ ChQ :io tlld n 4 o na.jt 1.i" ,,,. n-, n 20 Trn 21l't.'4 110 •1 20 S4 :IOI S6 -o u IS Utt 10S 11 IM U 1().1 74 104 77-ei •s s11< no •s 2n ,, ,,, " u• J7-o Indus •••• ...... ..... .... 2,1 14. Tran ................. .... JJI UlllJ •• ................... JOO •• 6S SUit • • •••• ........... .... 2,7Sl.llO oucorp ... • .... 20S,aao 20•· -"' _____________ ,.__ l.111'1' E II • • • • • 112, 790 .cl ~ + It, Am 80C\I........ 17S700 m. + '• Mlaa• Storm Did f G«n MOIOf\. •• • 166,900 51\<o -V, • Teuco Inc....... lSl,SOO U\lt + 14 HEW YORK V.P) Ampex Cp.. •••• 1'3.800 lll't + ~ W-co .... .. .• "'"'GO ·~ . . Alrco •d. ...... •• Ul,200 ~ +IV. INCO Ltd........ 131,000 U + " Eu.Oft • • • ... .. Ul,600 4W + -., IALH HEW VOffK l"Pl MY lOctl ~ APC>r'Ok llnal ............... , l•.17'Pl!' P""'IOUs d9y ..... ,. ...... , ., • 11 .AOl.000 W .. 11 AOO ............. ,. .,.... 1!,• ... 000 Monti! •oo • . ............ ..... ''·~"' Y••' ""° . . . ,........ ...... nt~~ rw. , .... , -. ............ .• 14,~., J<MI 1 IO O..lt , ..... , • «tt. I ,,77 to dlt• • ••• •••• , • 144. a.. 1'16 IO dat.e ......... , ,..... ... •• ~ Due to late transmission today's I isting will not appear in the Dally Pilot. • • OAJLY PILOT Tuesday, J nuary 31, 1971 T.ele1'ision TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS 11 l .~I>.\' EVENING 1:00 II cas HEWS DD~ D EMEAOEHCY OHEJ The J)M81Tl41dlel 11118-In unusual call from a aculp· tOI who hiving encaaecl her model In Quick ·hard· enlno pluter 11 unable to chop him out Q NBA BASKETBALL Clevttllnd Cavaliefl va Loa Ange101 Lakera(clf'l<tY~d 1 lD THE BRADY BUNCH Bobby finds S 1100 whole playing football Q) THE ROOKIES £El ELECTAIC COMPANY ()~ ABCNEWS 8.301} MOVIE • • * '> "David And 81thSheba" (Patt 1) (1952) Gregory Peck, Susan H1yw11d. David, the kmg of 1he Jews, plots lhe dealh ol t111 0-11 to obtain Bathlheba, the man's beauuful wtle. (1 hf , 30m1n) lfl om's Chance CJ) MYTHREESOHS A boy who IOokl Juat like Robbie elmost ruins Robb1e·1 repu1at1on before lhe deception 1s uncov- ered .. Laverne and Shirley series stars Penny :\larshall. c~nter left. crn d Cind\.· Williams, center right, an· joined b\•. real-life mothers :\I arjor1L' :'llarshali. lt'ft, and Frances \\'ill1 ams at x :HI tonight on Chann(•I I Eli) OVER EASY Guest George Stte11r1ng U l 'CBS NEWS @) MERV GRIFFIN Guests· Steve Gorvey Mrs Steve Garvey, Or~on Bean, Phyllis Schlolly T:OO 0 NBC NEWS 0 LIARS CLUB 0 ABC NEWS CJ) I LOVE LUCY 8eltev1ng RICky has lorgot- ten thetr enntvursary, Lucy suspects the WOf'llt. Q) AOAM-12 ID MACHEJL / L.aiRER REPORT (J) TO TEl.L THE TRUTH ~al trip onto tho l'.)ast lo explore the ideas b11h1nd Iha American Revolution. 0 NEWL YWEO GAME 0 M1 HOLLYWOOD SQUARES lD THE BRADY BUNCH Peter lries out for a role on the school play 0) AOAM-12 Eil) LA. INTERCHANGE ··1n111de Straight" a1) NEWSCHECK Ari lnfo<"matrve cotlec11on ol Orange County news, government 11/ld consumtll" affairs. people and sports. Cl) THE GONG SMOW 7:30 0 YOUNG PEOPLE'S SPECIAL ''Common Sense" Young- stera l~e a magle&I, mull· t :OO I} (J) CELEBRJTY CHALLENGE OF THE SEXES Channel I.bring• I) KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles D KNBC (NBCl Los Angeles 0 KTLA (Ind l Los Angttle., 0 KABC· TV (ABC) Lo<.. Anqel~s Ill KFMB (CBS) San 01ugo 0 KHJ· TV (Ind) Los Anqolu., (I}) KCST (ABC) San Otrgo (D KTI'V (Ind ) Los Angele., «!> KCOP·TV (Ind) Lo!. Angules &!) KCET TV (PBS) LPS Anqoll•<; '1:l KOCE·TV (P8SJ Huntinqton Bc.ich (Prnm1ere) Tlrn ~uri+o~ lua. Ill"" top rnov10 and tet1iv1- s1on ~tar,. 1n h1gh-bp1rlltld, nead 10-hf•Od &porls c.ompet11ton 0 BLACK BEAUTY D.lv111 W11yn11 narrate" Anna SAwell -CIMSIC tale about a magnll1Cttnt stal· 1tcin Block Beauty ts born in rurol Maryland and sold lo SquorR Gordon (Cam«· on Mllchelll (Part 1 or 5) D MOVIE * •' r "Play Otrly" ( 1969) M1cn1el Caine, Nigel Oavenpo<t, A Brtllsh com- m1111der attempts to sloe> All180 forces lrom dMtroy- 1no GMman &upphes ao that he can llse them. (2 hrs) 0 IJ~ HAPPY DAYS ' R1chte Almo~I O•e•" While 1,1klng girlfriend Lori Beth (Lynda Goodfriend) out for a !.pm on h1& now mo1orcyc1e, Rlchte has an acc;1den1 and ·~ taken to rhe hospital In a com11 m CAROL BURNETT ANO FRIENDS (()MOVIE • • • ·Thi' Oosper11t11 Hours·· ( 1955) Humphrov Bogurt. Frttdnc March A bu5iness executive's homo 1l 111vlOl<J by thr .. brutal eecaped COIWtc:tl (2 hrl ) m ORE.AT PERFOAMANCE8: LIVE FROM UNCCXN CENTER Tonl9M'\ ll('rform1n<• ol ' Cop~lla •• O.n<ed by the New Yori. City 8611tt on Un. coin Canler, l•W<ln via l•pe· d4tl•Y (21/1hO.I '1l) TURNABOUT lh11 premiere eplsOde 01 th11 series covers 11 wlde r11nge ot l11ues concerning women today 8 30 I) (() SHIELDS ANO YARNELL (Seuon Premiere) Tho gilled hu1b11na-and-w1le mime team bring thelr deft comedic and muSlcal tal- ..,,, to th11 ne... comody- variety aeriea D @) LAVERNE a SHIRLEY "The Second (Almost) Annu1I Shotz Talent Show" The reel-hie moth- 11'1S of Pilnny Mll'lhall and Cltldy Wiiham• )Oln their daughte11 tor aorna antte1 whel'I IM girts put on the Sholz Br-y·s talent snow 0 COHCENTAATION CJ) CA06S-WITS CD OVER EASY Guest. Georg& Shearing 9 00 I) Cl) CBS MOVIE • • • "Chinatown" ( 1974! Jc1ck N1chot11on, Faye Dunaway. An ambltlous, Dul small-lime. private 1nves11ga1or finds himself catapulled lnlo lhe middle ot some shady po1111cat dealings and lend gpecula· lion when he accepts a beautll\JI aoctallle as hus Clltlfll (R) 0 NBC: THE RAST AFTYYEAAS ''A Cloeer Looi<, Patt Two" Onon WelleS wilt narrate 111d Pet« Falt!. Je,,,_. s1-art an<1 Alfred Httci). cocic '#Ill hOSt th<S twc>- hour special pt-ting great dramallc moments from past pn>g<ams. D ®l THREE'S COMPANY Jack In The Rower Shop'' All worlc and no play makos Jack an angry boy when Janel hlros him to work for her and acts like a martinet 0 IRONSIDE Members ol lrons1de·s stall lace barners ol national pride when they • dre sent to Latin Amet1CO 10 check. on a murder su1pec:t. TUBE TOPPERS · KCET@ 8:00 Great Perr ormance~: Live From Lincoln Center. "The Barber of Seville." Bever- ly Sills stars in this New York C'tty ,, Opera production. CBS 8 (8> 9:00 -"Chinatown" <1974 ). Pnvatc investigator finds himself catapulkd into middle of some shady politi{'al dealings. NBC S 9 :00 The 1',1rst Fifty Years. Ol'son Welles narrates two hour special presenting great dramatu.: mo ments from past program:-. NBC S 8:00 -Da\'ld Wayne nar~ rates Anna Scwcll 's c:lassic tale about a magnificent stallion. <Virst of rive i>::irts >. CJ) MERV ORlf'FlN Gue111· Steve Garvey, Mrs. Steve Oarwy, OrlO<I Bean, Phyllis Schlally, Paula Nelson CD MASTERPIECE THEATRE "I, Claudtur. Old Ktng Log" Cl1ud1us· fourlh wile ts hll n1eee and Nero a mother. His plan to rntore the Repubhc 1nvolve1 the loathsome Nero rather than Claudius· own son " 30 D ®l HARVEY KORMAN '· Tiit! One Where H1111ey Gata A Job As An Eacort" An egoc:entroc character i;ctor 111awer11 en ad tor 1 •eeolng man end lands a iob wllh an escort service Miiton Mer~ guett stars 10:00 D 0 NEWS fJ (10) FAMILY 'Lrlellne" Nancy searches frlnttcally tor a ltlencl •he bel-to be avlcidal, wn11e Buddy aee«a waya ol avoiding an overly attached 10 y-Old Cl) HOHEYMOOHERS c;) GREAT PEAA>AMANa:S:UVE FROM UNCOl.N CENTER George Balandllne directs Ille New Yori! City Biiiet In performing "Coppella," 1Htur1ng Patnc1a McBrtde In the lltle role. 10;30 CJ)«!) NEWS Eil) SPECIAL ·u s Ar1 The Gilt 01 Ourselves" An an1matod trtp through the h111ory or Am8flcan art 11:000 0 @) NEWS 0 LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE Love And The Modern Wife" Use M)'I lhal shl I01g1.,.. her husband How· •rd for "1traytng", but he ,_did. 0 MOVIE • • • "Penny Serenade·· (1941) Cely Gr111t, Ir- Dunne. Recent adoptive parents leam that hai>PI· nesa C8"I soon turn lo trag- edy (2 hrs l CJ) THE 000 COUPlE .. Lovers Don't Make House Calls" Q) LETS MAKE A DEAL fE DICK CAVETT 1 UO 0 TONIGHT Holl Johnny C;irson Guosts Henry Winkler Rooney Dangerfield, Los lndloa Tabatares 0 LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE Love And The YounO Executive" An amb1t1ous mail ciorlc falls In love with the vtce prealdeot's daugh- t"" D ~ A8CMOVIE * * '1t "Sistets" (1973) M111got Kidder, Jenn•lflf Sall. A reporter witnesses a murder but cannot find the YM:llm or evidel!ce M'8n Ille contronts the suspect, a woman separal· ed from t>er Slamtl6e rw1n. (R) CJ) NEWS «!)GET SMART ft) CAPTIONED ABC NEWS 11:40 I} Cl) NEWS MOANING 12:00 0 TWILIGHT ZONE Five people are trapped 1n a cyllndrlCal llflClosure and seek an eM::ape m FOREVER FERNWOOO Q) MOVIE • •' • "Wh«ln M, Olby Sm1i. Al Me ' ( 111481 S.tty C1ao1e Oen Dalloy A mar- riage b<Ukl up when on .. pattntw gota a P•'' 111 ia Btoa.tway 111\ow ( I hr , 30 min) 12:10 I)(() CISS L.An MOVIE *•I.; "Trap1>410 • (1973) J-Brolln. Suaan Clark When he ta trepPtt<J Riie• hour• 1n e dflpartm•nl 1t01e that la patrollfld by v1c;lou1 guo1d dogt, 11 m1m mutt d11vl•e lngHniou~ .,11ya to outwit lheon and meke his wly to s1lu1y (RI 12:30 D MOVIE • •'" Sons A11d Love1~ ( 1960) lr1wor Howard Dean Stockwell A dom•· 11atmg moll\&• 1nspire1 h111 aon 10 bypus r omanc;u hl beller h1mM1ll ( 1 hr , !>5 min) CJ) MOVIE • • ••Thd Giant Cllw ' (11157) Jell Morrow, Mara Cord1y A .c1en11st 1ttemp11 to destroy a colon.I bird ...,realo.tng havoc: 1n Ill path ( 1 hr , 30 min) 1:00 0 TOMORROW Guest: Or. Armand H1mmer. nortld lor t11s extensive art collection'\ 0 ISPY • Danny Was A M1ll1on Laughll 1250 NEWS 130Q) MOVIE • * 1-r ' Arturo , 1~11111d · ( t9631 Reg1111tld Ktlrnon, Key Mersman Altur his lather remarne". .1 youth discovers 1111 Is attractod 10 h•a new i.t11p0molh11r. ( 1 hr, JO min) 2:00 I} (U KOJAK Thetapy In Oynam1111 ' Ko1a1t must try to eMablllh a llnk betw"4!n seemingly unrelated bomb voel1ms ~ he can 11op a psyc;hopath· le !<Iller (Steven Keats) (R) 0 NEWS 0 MOVIE •*'.At "Time Lost And Tune Ramembereo" ( 195al S111ah Mites, Cyril Cusack. A common girl returns to flef g1rlh0od home and comes to the 1tar11tng rttal- 128.tlon lh1t her mamsgo 1s over (2 hrs l CJ) MOVIE • • • 1 • "The B•o He111 • (1953) Glenn Ford, Gloro,1 Grahame A detcchve s w1r~ fs k1lll'd In a blaat meant lor htm (2 h") 2:250 NEWS 2:300 MOVIE * * "All 01 Me·• ( 1934) Fredric Mnrch, Goiorglt Rall. A 11angs1er and his g"ll"encJ ta.ch a htgh SOClo- ety debu11nte 11141 meaning ol 1ove I 1 hr • 25 min ) 30080) NEWS 3 301) MOVIE ** "81 ... 01 Sol~e·· 119611 Al'-0 Baron, Molly Mi;Carthv. A prof...,onel kUler arrives 1-. N-YOik to murder 1 local rackel- and 11 almosl persuaded lo call oll the IOb 11 hr • 30 mm I 36&1) NEWS 4008 MOVIE • • ··oest1na1ton Miami" I 1960) Cl1ud10 Ooro. Bella Corttiw One by one, the remaining llve c11m1n111 1>11rlnf'rs rind thi!mSllvet bl'tng murdered (2 hrs ) 0 MOVIE • • '• • Rachel s Man·• ( 107 41 Rita Tus.timgham, Mickey Rooney A vouno laravl.te. iorceo to tlee the ""'•th ol Ills brother, lalls in rove "'1th the younger oaughler or ii -.Uthy man. (2 hrs I CD MOVIE • • "Beyond Mornbllsa" (19<17) Cornet Wilde ~ n11 Rood A man arnvmg tn Africa to locale tns m1ssmo t>ro1her. IS attacked by Loopard Men " (2 hrs ) M'edt1esdor,.# Daytitne 1Hoeie• MOANING 9 30 0 • * •'' · Battle 01 The S~•l!S . 1( 1\J60~ P11ter s .. 11oi. Colutance Cumm· '"9' An effl(c1toncy eJCp&rt 'ourt~ df'atn when She bi>g1ns inv11s11ga11ng a wet1- "~l<1bl1~hed Scottish ftrm. (I nr • 30 min ) AFTERNOON 12:00 CJ) * * * 'The Happy Time" (1952) Charles Beyer, Marsha Hunt. Pup- py love and romance 11e events in the Ille ol a FrenGh·Canad111n famlly dunno I'* 1920·a. (2 hrs., 20m1n > 3.00 lo * * * * "The Card1- niu" (Part 21 (1963) Tom lryon. Romy Schneider. An Amer1cen priest IOOl<s back on his rehgtou• carf't!f as he reoeoves nrs carC11nars robes. ( 1 hr., 30 min I 3 30 D • • 1 , "Watermeto" Mt1n" ( 1970) God Irey Cambridge E ~telle Parsons A bigoted white rnan 1s shoeked to wake up ono morning and discover that he hu turned black. ( t hr .. 30 min I TV's Friend Ret1•rns Comedg Premiere Pantomimists Robert Shields and Lorene Yarnell star in "Shields and Yarnell," new comedy-variety series pre- miering at 8·30 tonight on Channel 2. 'Black Sheep' Adds Regulars LOS ANGELES (AP) -"The Black Sheep Squadron" re- turns to NBC Wednesday with two new characters played by Jeb Adams and Denise DuBarry. Adams, 16, son of the late Nick Adams, plays an underage pilot and Miss DuBarry plays a nurse who is an old girlfriend 'Of Pappy Boyington <Robert Conrad> and the daughter of General Moore <Simon Oakand). - 'Leapin' Lizards,' It's a Libera£e Special By 808 THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (AP) -One of telev1s1on's oldest friends re- turns to the tube Wednesday night when CBS presents 'Leapin' Lizards, It's Liberace " <Channel 2, 8 p.m > Could it be 26 years ago that TV viewers become acquainted with the smile full of teeth, the syrupy voice, the ever-present c·andelabrum and brother George? Indeed, it was 1952 that the syndicated half-hours of pianistics began to establish a national institution LEE SEEMS TO have changed little since those early years. The hair is more bouf- fant, he owns more houses -10 at last count. But he retains the same zest and wonder about his l'areer as "Mr. Showmanship." For an interview, Liberace drove from his Malibu house to the Sunset Strip showplace that he tried to turn into a museum. "We ran it for a month," he explained, "and we had 17,000 reservations. But the neighbors complained. Not because of the tours; we ran three limousines from Sunset Boulevard and parked them off the street. The problem was that people drove by to see if they would be able to get their $10 worth." .. LEAPIN' LIZARDS, n•s Liberace•• ls bis first network special tn 10 years, the last be- ing a London broadcast for CBS. Why the lapse? .. I never like to tamper with success. I appear on an oc- casional talk show, just to let people know that I'm around and alive; some people have no contact with show business ex- ON TV SPECIAL Pianist Liberace cept what they see on television. "My main output is personal appearances. I play about 32 weeks a year, 16 in Las Vegas. four in the Reno-Lake Tahoe area, one-nighters and week concerts in summer theaters, tours to Australia, South Africa. England -I'll be returning to the London Palladium April 17. "I REAL12E THAT I must do som e television, but too much can hurt the box o!fice for personal appearances. That hasn't been my exr>erience, but I've seen lt happen to other en- tertainers. r I For the Wednesday special. Liberace will have as guests Debbie Reynolds, Phyllis Diller, puppeteer Barkley Shaw, pianist Vince Cardell and the Chinese Acrobats of Taiwan. The show was taped at the Las Vegas Hilton. with a "teaser" look at Liberace's Las Vegas palace - "the next special will be done entirely at my home." The Liberace homes appear lo have taken over as an essential element of the legend. More than half the entertainer s souvenir program is devoted to h 1s homes and collection "Liberace's Las Vegas Villa . . . The Hollywood Home ... The Cloisters <Palm Springs I ... Liberace, the Incurable Collector . . • '· HE COMMENTED: ''I HAVE this house, the one in Malibu. another at Lake Arrowhead, two in Palm Springs. including one for my mother, five in Las Vegas -two for my personal use, one occupied now by my ac- countant. two for celebrities ann guests. Stars like Shirley MacLaine and Ann-Margret pre- fer to stay in a private house In· stead of at. a hotel when they're playing Las Vegas." Predictably, he also collects pianos "the way some people collect old cars~ I keep them in mint collection." Among his 18 pianos are one on which Chopin reportedly played at Versailles. another used by Georg<' Gershwin. When possible, he travels with his own piano, otherwise he brings along a glass top, "which has more or less become my tr ad em ark.·· LAS VEGAS IS where Lee spends most of his time, and that's his legal residence. But he is contemplating a penthouse apartment here to replace the ·Sunset Strip house . At 58 be shows no loss of en- thusiasm for collecting houses. pianos, or audiences. "I'm just beginning to enjoy it," he smiles. Celebrit!I Debut Tom Brookshier stars when film and television pt•rsonalltiE.·s part ic1pate in premiere of "Celebrit~· Challenge of the Sexes," at 8 tonif:!hl on Channel :! Stars Signed For TV Movie LOS ANGELES CAP) - Pat nc1a Neal, Eleanor Parker and Donald Pleasence have been signed for "The Bastard," the t wo·part television series herna made from the book by .John Jakes. M lss Neal will play the French mother of the JI lc~1tlmate son of an English nobleman, Miss Parker and the nohlcman's wife and Pleasence w111 play the owner or an ~:n~hsh print shop. The four·hour movie will be d1strihutcd hy Universal Pll'· lures to independent stations 3., p:irt of Operation Prime Time :OMICS I CROSSWORD MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson " ... my broken chair, someone's flat tire, Billy's old wagon, Winslow's broken rake ... " FUNKY WINKERBEAN BOOMER MISS PEACH GIJE.55 WH~~J"oE GARAGIOkA HAS AGRE.ED TO 5P£AK AT OUR A~llll.JAL 5FbRT6 --. wow/ NO KIDDIN&! z 900 MEAN. f~E .JOE GARAGIOl...A!~ AWARDS BANOOE.T I Cl)) ~'-t - /; CASEY MOON MULLINS GERIATRIX GET~Fll-£ 5-0ZE~~ AND INiO 114E Al,..l..GY~ ! GORDO JUDGE PARKER YOU SAY YOUR NAME'5 RU5 TV DOWELL ANO YOUVE AAO EXPERIENCE WORKING ON A FARM? OK.AV. STOP 6¥ TO/NJ MORNING t ....------ • by Tom Batluk by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson No. t ~GO'T' ~ 1 f'IJT 1H£ ~El by Mell D ,_,, • DOOLEY'S WORLD DR.SMOCK WHA-reveR 'TURNS YOU ON, cowe>oY by Gus Aniola by Harold Le Doux by Tom K. Ryan SOMeTIMES t11AKES HOORS FOR MEi HORSE: iO CATCH OP. _______ ..._ ""-=---..-~-..."""'"'~""""~~ ~ 1 A bye T&mdly, Janulry 31, 1978 PEANUTS HOW COME l()u DON'T lli\NCE WITH J(J{ ANY MORE WHEN I eRtNG OUT '{OUR SUPPER? DAK.Y PILOT .. ' j 1-. __ .;;;;;.i....._ ____ ~~___..__.__ ______ , J by Roqer1SradfhHd -LETS fbPE Hf ~INKS OUT I OF ~PflDN GlASSES . I by Georwe IMftant ~ by Templeton and Formn WARNlNG! ~ ~ . . ' 1 TODAY'S CllSSIDID PVZZLI . . 1 Emlt1oud pufte 5 ... ,.... '°°"'' tP!gm9nt 1'Fr..-nc• 1581ueteena' Ct..tor t8S~ 17 Unt.lnted 18 Trena'9r Cl'OC*tY 19 From tt11a IOOfCe 20No•d vlOllnlst { ' "CLOSE ENCOUNTER~ OF THE THIRD klNO" (PG} .. WORLD'S GREATEST LOVER" (PO) .. OPENING NIGHT" "BOBBY DEERFIELD" "THE DEEP" (PG) "LOOK IN~ 'FOR MR GOODBAR" 'HUSTLE" (A) 'SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER" CR) St.a<1"1rn 'W'4l T O•:>NEY S ' PETE'S DRAGONS" (G) "GNOMEMOBILE ' CHILOSPRICfS "THE HEROES" PG "THE STING· • ·OH GOD" (PG) 'GUMBALL RALL V" "WHICH WAY IS UP" "CARRIE" (R) THE GAUNTLET" (R} 'FREE BEE & THE BEAN" ALL Dl'ltVE·tNS OPf.N 6:301'.M.HIGHTLY Chila Under I l Fru Unleu 1t K1cfd1e Ptay9round \••~:~·~ Mmi,~:;7~o ANNI t.UCllO"etf!faUT MCI.At .. THI ru•~ JIOfHr (l'OI I l 1Je-.:leS1Mel: 10.)0 "WI lljltl HOf ALONI" oflfUI Mi~t',!o, iown. MO MSJ«s 'OUTUl)RjUj If Ult Allll" . THl CHOfHOYS111 l'WI rAXI DllYH 111 """~p;;-====-:::::::~~~JOHfCTUYOUA SATUll)AY NGHr n\111111 IOftT, NO ,_HU ·-&&Nn0ffe5-UT MACUI .. fHI fUININO JIOfHr ''°' 81~ IUIMlelOMft OINVll O+f 0001 (llO) .,.._,. .... u&11U So\raS4.IH 2•• .. •••tO ~ MIHllUelOSJ. OINllO HIW YOtuc. NIW YOIKtl'OI PUii OHi OH OHi ll'OI lHPORlRIL Y CLOSED •PUHU OH ntt MO'llt" CIUISIH HUJH111 l'lllS CUZY MAMAIJl>OI "TCW'U COMI OVT ._UNO,, l.SIHGU GllLS111 2.WOllCINO GllLS(tt) i.GltOUI' MAHIAOI (II Few American musicals possess the inspira· hon al 'i\altly and the raw staying power that are the heart and 11ouJ of "Man of La Mancha." This is u show that is a theatrical experience on the sixth viewing and probably will be so on the sixtieth. 1 Intermission Tom Titus "La Mancha" is an excellent choice for the baptism of the new fine arts complex theater at Saddleback College, where the fine arts depart into her vocalizing. ment has gone all out for this auspicious occasion Another veteran. Rudy Tronto, skillfully and recruited three bona fide professionals fol' the handles the lighter, more rational role of the skep demandjng leading roles. This results ln 8 mixed lical but sub:scrvient Sancho. His comic byplay blessing, for while the core of the production is tn· with Quixote and the others contnbutes toward the deed sohd, there is a noticeable gulf between the pros and the largely collegiate supportmg cast. show'i; exceptional balance. Ncverthdcss. the Saddleback show is highly OF TH£ NON·PROFESSIONAL supporting effcctiq~ etnd involving, albeit a bit contrived in players, the strongest is Mark Clark as the some of the more physical aspects where violence vitiously pragmatit Dr. Carrasco. Monte LaBonte. 1s warrantt'<i. D1rt•ctor H . Wynn Pearce and his director of the Saddleback fine arts department. staff ha\ c crafted a rousing and compelling rendt· · does a credible JOb as the padre. while Garv lion or this ::.uperl> musical, highlighted by some Adams is effective as the innkeeper. intt!rt·sting t'xtramural char acterization. most Hoy F1lzell's pulsating choreography sustains notably in the h1~hly comic barber's scene where a the frenetic tempo o( the s how, notably m the pro- formt•r Sanl'ho Panza. Carl Ndson, deftly alters duct1on numbers by the muleteers and the gypsy the pace of the proceedings. dancers. JN THE c•:NTRAI, ROLE of the demented "Man of La Mancha" is sold out through the bl h b I balance of its run, Wednesday through Sunday at no eman w 0 ecomcs a alter-day knight errant. the new Saddleback College theater on the Mission Da\ 1d Holladay (who has played the . role on \'ieJo campus Broadway) ts out st and mg lhs nounshes of em- phasis add extra dimension to an already superior · BACIC:t,.AGF. -UC Irvine will present Luigi musical score and his involvement with his du:il Pirandello's "The Emperor" Wednesday through l'haracter 1s total. -Saturday at 8 pm. 1n the Fine Arts Village ENTERTAINMENT /THEATER 5p.wc-lol L lmll«d f.liJl<l'fO'm,.nl Starts Wednesday A1 Spcc1.Uv Select~d Thtaln!. And Onw·ln~! ONLY SUNN COMPLIMENTARY PASSES ACCLPTEO SEE DIRECTORJES fOR SHOWTIMES AND 2NO FEATURES MESA. Costa Mesa • &4&-5025 EL CAMINO. Tustin• ~4-1&96 CENTURY 21. Anaheim • 172-8902 MIRAMAR. San Clemente • 492·005& CINEMA WEST. Westminster • 892-4493 FOUJIUIJI VALLEY. Fountain Yalley • 139-1510 SADDLE8ACl. El Toro • 511·5810 ORANGE MALL Oranc• • 637-0340 CYPRESS, Cypress • 828-1&60 FOUNTAIN VALLEY OR.·IN. Fountain Valley• 962-2481 BUENA PARK DR.-IN, Buena Park • 821-4070 NIGUEL. Lacuna • 49&-1253 Tt•ra Ralston, a Laguna Beach native m one of Theater . . .. Stuart Duckworth is directing the her frequent homecom1ng appearances as a play about a man who loses hi s sanity and im --- Sl'asoned professional. is one of the better ag1m.·s himself a medieval German ruler. . Aldon1as thi s area has witnessed She is intense <ind J!ntly ratht·r than raucous and bawdy. and this sustained bitterness is transferred beautifully "MAH 01' LA MANCHA" A mU\•t•I by 0~1• W•\\Mm~n. Mote~ L<.'•9fl .ind Joe O•rton. <llrttl~O by H Wynn PH1tP, mu\ltel d"ector Tury H•wman, tl'IO•fOll•14>1'4'• Roy Fiii.ii. YO<.i aorrctor Mauro<• Al l•rd, prtt..,led WtdnnOr( lll<OUOll 5.flu•d•V ••''JO· s..no.v jtt Jo m •• ~ddltt>etti. Coll •• M•UIOl'I \/1t10. THE CAST Cerv•nlff/ Don Qul•OI• ••• ., •• •••• , ••• , 0.•ld HOlllll.l"f' AldOnzai ••• , •••••••• Tero Ael~l<>rl ~ncllo PeNA ......... Awcly Tr-.o Or Cirr1uc.o • . • • • .. M•f11 Clarll IMkttoer • • G•rv AO.ms P~r• • • • • Monlt Lal!IOnl• Berbo!r., • • ... Cati Nels.on Govtrnor • • c;e,... Cole Anion•• • •• 9...,,.,. A•NK Houw""S-' .......... JUM Buford "WAGES ,Of FEAR" a·OOONLY 1561 W SUNFl.OWEI• W. OF 8AISTOl CM. S•O 05M A "WOtlLO'S GrHA TEST V LOYEA" ll'GI "ACIOSSn41E .. HAT DfVIDf" IG) THE CITY SHOPPING C(NlRE ORANGE •532 6721 ~CITY CENTRE CINEMAS S,A. FAWY (MANCHESTEA EX.I 0 .0. fRWY lCtTY DR. EX.I .. "OHG<>Ou "GUMIAU IAU.Y" lf'Gl • ..,_OIS .. . '"THI STIMG• lf'Gl • "MAHIAc• CKJ •AHMltHAU" . ~ "ACIOSS'T'tiE .. GUAT DmDI" C•J .• . ~ .. ,.._ 12.30 to 2 00 p."' 1.41 cm CINTIE CIHlMASI Tll111llig pomt WOWIBOWDIG . LIDO TREAnu: lfewporl leach 71411na5C) NCl" rn 8 Q) PM £.<\ T $IJll l QI 6 8.00 PM IN LO&AHGUrs--- 1.ADOUES ~ TREArRE W-.ooct •77~1 DAll.Y200e1~N HEAR BOB DTLAN ON ,,,, • COLUMBIA RECORDS & TAPES Hi. I'm Miu Santly inritin/( all of you to t'tall me and ref(illlt>r /or our C"ln1111 lf'Hon• notr. Lt>111101tA in oll lf>t•eb and all Ol(t> group• fomiinf( /\OW. JOIN THE FUN -LEARN TO ICE SKATE AT TWO BEAUTIFUL CHALETS IN COSTA MESA. JOIN THE FUN-ICE SKATE ICE CAPADES CHALET AND SKATING SCHOOL Costa Mesa Harbor & Adams . 979 .. ssso ALSO BASIC HOCKEY LESSONS Costa Mesa Bristol & Paularino 979-1750 • tn~ S-. li,tWi4tly•I Sl.U Open Doily 12:30 P·!.!1.:_ lffl!ATAES-ORAHGE CO SENIOR CJ0:ZENS $2.00 SO. COAST PLAZA l'lt lrlltll Sls.2711 ,., .... "'SEMI TOUGH" llJ o~,lfW•·I .... ._., ......... ~ SO COAST PLAZA Starring wards UDO INCMA .... "Oet•"9••···~ ~f .. CM UJ..t)U CHARLES I.EE llAONSON REMICI< ,~-l PlUS(PQ) 'THE EAGLE , HAS LANOEO" DIANE KEA TON UHHilXG t'OU llH. GOOUHAH ·-- Sl.50 Anytime l1u IX.1lf:llJ MINNfW Vf NllXJ ~ . NfWl'(Q(. Ntw YORK" . --Riii• (PQ) .. ,,,.Ir ~.,..,_ llftkM~n .. ••New YOik, NewYont" Plu1 (PG) "Pln1c Panther Strtkea ~~~~"="=~Agaln" i, . ~ • I \ • INSIDE: •Erma Bombeck •Horoscope •Ann Landers •Classified i uo:adlly. UIJIY :u. 1178 OAILY PILOT Der Own-Shingle Linda Krol, a dental hygienist, cf.ecided to go into business for herself and is fighting a legal battle to maintain her right. ISy JUDITH OLSON CM lM O.Ur l"llel 5Utt l>bysical therap1sts can do thelr job in a pa- tient's home without a doctor present, and private duty nurses, licensed by the state. can seek their own clients. So why can't dental hygienists hanr out their own shingle? Linda Krol, a Torrance hyglenist, did so a little over a year ago and is now fighting to maintain her right to have her own office and practice as an independent contractor. Ms. Krol, a 35-ycar-old graduate of Loyola University in New Orleans, talked about her struggle dunng the third midwmter conference of the Southern California Dental Hygienists' Association at the South Coast Plaza Hotel. She is mainly interested m preserving the right for other hygienists to become indepen- dent contractors, she told the members and guests. "It should ht! an option to you. I want to you to have the choice to do 1t. Never say never." MS. KROL unfortunately has had to spend a Dousing Designs If you could have house built to order, would you change? By ANDY LANG A,.~ ...... your what Recently we asked homeowners to give their preferences in 10 situations that might pre· sent thetnSelves if they were having houses built to order. The first question we will deal with: Do you prefer three bedrooms about the same size or one large bedroom and two small ones? Would you want the laundry room next to the kitchen or in or near the bedroom wing, assuming that the hause had no basement? If the overall square footage permitted only a family room or only a dining room, which would you want? With each of these questions, as with the others, it was assumed that there would be no appreciable cost diHerence whatever the choice. On this question, 65 percent said they would rather have one large bedroom and two small ones than three of the same size. • On the second, 67 percent said they wanted the laundry room near the kitchen. On the third, 76 percent preferred a family room to a dining room if only one could be bad. Surprising? Not on question one. Only slightly so on question three -and then only because of the high percentage of family room advocates. But the rephes on question two about the location of the laundry room raised some eyebrows, especiaJly among those who have seen the letters that are reeeived occasionally . by those responsible for the selection of house designs for newspaper readers. These letter writers have asked why arcb\lects don't stop placing laundry rooms next to kitchens when families prefer to have them near the bedrooms. They have pointed out that most laundry emanates from th~ bedrooms and not the kitchens and that it makes common sense to have the la\Dldry appliances there. Or, u one oman said in re1panse to the questionnaire: ''Of course I prefer the Mdroom area for the laundry. That's where the dirty clothes a.rel" Yet 61 percent of the respondants want tbe laundr7 near the kitchen. Why? .. BecaQSe,'" said one householder, ''most of the time 11 spent Jn the kitchen and I can coordinate my cooking '1nd wuhing aotlvitles.0 AnOther reuon liven for tbe ldtdlera choice was that a bedroom loca- tion .. would make" it too noisy for Di8bt wubing, which I do to conserve enera." And still nnother: ••rm coacemed about wuber erllow ruin1n8 adjacent carpetin,. It doesn't BpPe ofteo. but it would have to happen ODJ7 ODC tO too much." Tbe survey of =erencea In houses people mlilbt llave built 1 · cd tliat 61 ptrcent would )tlier hDve 1one larp bedroOm and two 1m.:U than thnle of medium • , • tbat $7 ....... cent )>id the la"'1drY. the '~~ ather tiMroozu. ~ • that 78 &*'.- " a f•mll.Y roo r• than a~ ,jt,_. .... i-ailJ COUid be bML 1a1e~) great deal of her flrat-year prorlts on legal fees and she ian't fU>Jshed yet. She is be.tng investigat- ed by the Board of Dental Examinet5 for allegedly violating the Dental Practice Act. The act was amended on Jan. 1, 1976, to al· low hygienists to work under the "general supervision" o( a dentist or m an "equivalent faciUty" approved by the state board. Ms. Krol obtained approval from David Milton, an attorney supposedly representing the state board, before sbe made her move. Milton told her, she said, that her "equivaient facill· ty," next door to the two dentists she formerly worked for, did not need board approval. The board beUeved otherwise, however, and is disputing the mterpretation of the terms "general supervision" and "equivalent facility" and bas '1.hreateped'' to inve6tigate her. THE HEARING HAS not yet taken place, Ms. Krol said, and she believes the answer ul- timately will come from the state legislature. The ramifications of the decision are impor- tant, she stressed. If hygienists were allowed to set up their own practice, they c<'uld go to The New The Old, Papua New Guinea is a world in flux that maintains a last frontier spirit. By JUDITH O~N CM UM o.llr l"llel 5Utt Papua New Guinea has been called "a world in flux." It as caught in a dilemma between the Stone Age and the modern world. The n.ewest s tatus symbol in \he southwestern Pacific nation is an outboard motor for the traditional carved canoes. A de· cade ago the natives' hfc expectancy was only 46.8 yl'ars. Office workers sometimes do paperwork Monday through Friday and participate in tribal ceremonies, or sing-sings, on weekends. As late as 1970 there was only one newspaper and only 63 out of 100,000 people were college graduates. Because of its "last frontier" spirit. and because of its abundance of primitive art. Papua New Guinea has become a favorite destination of art collectors and travelers in· terested in the unusual. Many expeditions are led by Keith Buxton. an Australian who began his fnendship with New Guinea in th&.:-early 1950s as a worker for the Australian Public Health service. AFTER A FEW hours with Buxton, it•s easy to see why he is a popular leader and lec- turer on the art of New Guinea. Buxton, a bearded man with piercing green eyes and skin weathered by the elements, visit- ed Balboa Island recently to show some of bis collection at Elaine Schlup's new gallery of primitive art from New Guinea, The Eager Eye. . He is on a two-week lecture tour in the west and has spoken at rnuseums in San Diego. Los Angeles, Vancouver and Pasadena. Buxton represents Society Expeditions. a tour group which uses its profits to restore and preserve archaeological sites such as Easter Island and support other projects including the Museum of Papua New Guinea and the Darwin Research Station. Buxton, an easygoing and talkative man who is considered an expert on Sepik River art, . owns what be says is a "small" colleetion of ap. proximately 4,000 pieces of primitive art from New Guinea. 1 I public institutions that are not now being served and offer many more citizens the opportunity for preventive care. Hygienists could even go to shopping cen· ters in mobile offices to catch people who have no regular dentist, she suggested. In her own office, the difference is that she now works with her former bosses instead of for them. The fa~ that she has her own name on the door seems to be the stumbling block because it raises questions about whether she is working under the "general supervision" of a dentist. Ms. Krol empabsizes that she i!. "I have never taken patients from any other dentlsts ex- cept Dr. (Richard J . > Steiner and Dr. (Curtis) Martins. Each patient comes with a prescrip. tion from them each time." SPLITTING the operation has been beneficial to both Ms. Krol and the dentists. They have an additional chair for patients and she has the opportunity to earn more money because of increased volume. <See HYGIENIST, Page C2) Linda Krol: 'Never say never.' Keith Buxton: lec- ttJrer on the art of New Guinea f - .. ('% OAJL V PILOT T y, Januaiy 31, 1! .. 7a History of a Lie DEAR RBAOERS . Several weeks aao I pranted a pot.•m i.ent by a fan (author unknown) about lies. I remarked ' "'hen I ran tl that l re· Aaa La•den Then lhl' crowd camt' i.tt' rosb it, And never once lost it, This monstrous lie goaded Tall al last 1t l'Xplrn1t•1l, In i.in and shumt• i\nd kalh:d has good 1i.1mt• H 1-:ADEH OJ<' ANN [N Tiii-: MONETT TIMES I' v l' iust rece1 ved a lt•tlt•r from the dcpart- nH'nt of lhghl'r Educa tion Missouri State l.abrar) informing ml' that th~ correct title of tht.> POl'm above is What Became of 11 La• ' by M A Kidder • membered the poem from my high school days it made a big impact on me, but I had the reeling the reader "ho r,ent 1t had left off four or six lines. I then asked If anyone in my n·uding audience could t.upply the m1ssmg links Well, lrma Henry of Stark City, Mo, did jui.t that. I was almoi.t right Eight lines were miss· ing. Here's the poem m 1ls entirety -I beheve it's worth repealing. In fact, it's worth framinR li u t to:.sed it and Hut rrom mud and < ONFIDt.:NTIAL to J<;xhau~tcd and Sack of It but What Can I Do'' The way to get out of the rat rate is sample Just quit runrun~. tossed at, from n11n• Till at grew long and Th c pt I! t' C's f It• w wade higher, This lie brought forth Till lhC!y tut the sad others. har, Evil sisters and brothers, And fathers and mothers, THE IUSTORY OF -A A terrible crew, e e As headlong they bur· Hygienist LIE First somebody told it, Then the room wouldn't hold it, So the busy tongues rolled 1t Till tht'Y got at OUt· ~lJ<' ried, The people they flur- ried And troubled and wor- ried, As hes always do So. cval·boded , ••• Art· Wrom Pa~e Cl> ''One missionary was the biggest destroyer -and exporter -of native art," he recalled. "One missionary. three years ago, even came in and ordered the people to destroy their spirit houses and native idols." This woman was deported, Buxton said, when her actions were reported to the pnme minister. HE HAS HAD many hilarious experiences as a tour gwde, most dealing with the overlap- ping of the old and new m the country. Once he was taking a small group or tourists to a sing sing and their bus got stuck in a rut. Nt•arby was a-large group or men with spears v.ho Mffe on their way to fight in a bat· lie. "They all put down their spears, started sing1n~ and pulled the bus out of the rut," Bux ton relat~'d. "Then they went on to the battle We arnved a short tame later and saw all of the same men fighting." Another time he was amused when he came upon a man with a padlock neatly fastened throu~h the hole m his nose usually reserved for bone ornaments •'Someone had thrown away the padlock because the key was lost," Buxton said. "He had found it and locked it into his nose." The poor man had to lilt the lock up lo eat and it Wa! heavy, but he refused to have it sawn off because it was earning ham money and mak- ing him famous. "He was known as the 'Lock Man,' "Buxton said. HE ONCE TOOK A German group lo film an initiation ceremony. which required some payment to the head of the village. When the cameras were rolling one of the young men be· ing initiated asked, in perfect English, "what the hell" the crew was doing. It turned out, Buxton said, that he worked in the city and wanted to get paid individually to be filmed. Buxton said that while civilization is en- croaching, It will be many years before the peo. pie of New Guinea all wear Western clothes and drive on freeways. ·'There stUl are isolated areas where other tour eroups don't go," he said. Buyine art works and artifa\._. is an adven- ture in these remote as areas as well as in the larger villages. HE SAID IT is easist lo find replicas of ceremonial maska or other religious items and beautlfully carved contemporary items for everyday use. such as tools. "All their tools are beautifully designed ... he added. . Traditional materials. including wood. feathers, shells and bone. still are beine used, so at least the encroachment or modern sub· stances such as plastic and metal has not yet lowered the value or the artifact... "Quite a few people are buyine today for ln· vestment, .. Buxton said. "But you have to be careful. Some or the New Guineans are adept at aging items." (From Page Cl) After 12 years of working for them, Ms. Krol had found herself at the top of the salary scale Smee she worked on commission, as most hygienists do, she could get money from Just a small number of patients, limited by the hours IO tht• day r-..ov., with three chairs and several l'mployees of hc·r own. Ms Krol has enlarged her st:opt' from around a thous<1nd patients u \ l'Ur to nt·arly 1.000 She shared cost t•sllmates with the hyg1cn1sts al tht• ('Onft•rt•nce. From an income or around $18.000 lo $22,000 a year, a hygienist with an independent practice could expect to make upwards of $30,000 to $35,000 annually. THE MARKET in Cahfornla is not anywhere near saturated, according to Ms. Krol. "Only 34 percent of dentists use hygienists, which has doubled from eight years ago, and less than 50 percent of all people even see a dentist." Ms. Krol's dream began three years ago when she realized that she was al the top salary.wise and tired of working ln the same cramped room with no view. She heard a talk about independent contrac· tors -at the first midwinter conference and realized that self·employment could be her next step. "I ~lood up and said. 'I have a dream,'" she recalled. "I went back to my oHice and talked to the offtce manager The doctors and I had lunrh and discussed it. They thought 1l was a great idea and told mt• to 'do it if it's legal."' After cht.>cking with an attorney and obtain ing Milton's approval she borrowed money, knocked a hole an lhe wall to empty rooms next to the dentists' and set up her own office, which 1s totally independent of theirs THE ONLY CONNECTION the three share 1s that the dentists examine each patient who 1s seen by Ms. Krol or her hygienists and she in turn works on all the dentists' patients. They share X·Ray facilities out of convenience. "I wanted no one to have more than a three· week wait," Ms. Krol said. "In the other office I was booked 10 months in advance.'' She believes that dentists have the wrong idea about the hygienists' expanding role. Instead ot losing their patients and their in- comes. as ~me seem to fear, she thinks den· t1st1 would gain more patients if hygienists were allowed to be Independent contractors and even sole practitioners "If we could allay fears we could get people to see the dentist," she explained, adding that a big part of her job is education and prevention. Each of her patients leaves with a new toothbrush and dental floss. WHY IS THERE so much controversy over th~ fact that Ms. Krol has her own name on the door of her office? Aside from worry about loss ol practice on the part of the dentists. Ms. Krol Isn't sure. She thinks it may be just a fear of the unknown, a fear of loss of control. "Dentistry as it is known today is changing," she said. For one thing, dental hygienists are, for the first time in their 65·year history, murmuring about being independent and are a force to be reckoned with. They will be dictating the terms of what happens lo them, if Linda Krol ls successful, because they will no longer have t-0 rely on den· tl5ts for their business and lncomea. "It bas been very frustrating at Umes," Ms. Krol sald of her battle. "But I'm not an alcoholic or a pill taker yet." ( Horosrope ] WEDNESDAY, Ii £8. 1 By SYDNEY OMA R ARJES <March 21·Apr1J 19>: Get beneath surfact• -rheek undercurrents. Be sure you are on same wave length as partner, close usoctate, or male, TAURUS (April 20-May 20). ~ave fine points. det • .uls for another timc Circumstances lend now to dirtnt<• events GEMINI <May 21-June 20) Practical ef forts. afh1lrs dominate. Employment, pets, de· pendents vie for i;potllRht Individual from your past makes n•appeurancf' Despite romantic fantasies. this is not likely to be constructive Don't lead with your right, your chin or your heart CANCER <June 2l·July 22>: Good moon aspect come ides with variety, excitement, creative edge, affair of heart, yoWlg persons. Relationship no lonier mild. LEO lJuly 23·Aug. 22): Home, adjustment m domestic conditions -these areas dominate. VIRGO <Aug. 23·Sept. 22): Emphasis on trips, relatives. messages. concepts, feelings which can be translated Into ideas. LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22): This can be your productive, money day. Get organized. bring 1JflOril1es into fOC'US. SCORPIO <Oct. 23·Nov. 21): Cycle h\gb - brush aside dissenters. Adhere to your own stvle, dance to your own tune Finish rather than begin. SAGITTARIUS tNov. 22· Dec. 21). Stress tn· dt!pendt>nce. trcalivaty. You arc able to al· lum mak al't•a y, h1th h<1d been dark with fear .incl doubt CAl'RlCOllN (l)cc 22-Jan 19). Stress un· derstanding of friends. personal desires. Rela· t1onsh1p 111tl'ns1ftl'S You have a dded re-. pon ~•hi lit~ AQUARIUS <Jan 20·1',eb 18). What bad been bl0<·kmg progress Is removed. Element of surprise present in form Of VISlls PISCES (Feb 19-March 2{})· Good moon aspect coincides now with journe~. communiea· lion, subm1ss1on of manuscript or format. It's an Eddie Every household is v1s1ted at one tame or another by an Eddi~ Jlaskt.>11 ly.pt' You re· mcmht.>r him. The kad on lht> old "Lt·~l\'l' lt to H t' a \ l' r · ' s h n Y. '~ ho l'lrn rm ed his \\:iv an to the family with t·ompli mt•nts and a line thut was a-. phony us a 15 'rl' a r o I d · s l I> :i t a singles bar Our houst• had ats share of Eddil' llaskclls, from thC' toddlers who rushl'd in, grabhed my skirt and snitched, "An dy's playin~ in the water an his good shoes," to, "Mrs. Bombeck, I know how the mud got all over vour clean clothes. but I promised Betsy I wouldn't tell on her." As their friends got older, the Eddie Haskells becamP more sot>histt~ted. We had one in particular who I called Tony Sparkle. The first day Tony walked into the kitchen he frowned, chcked his fingers Impatiently and said, "Your mother. I've seen her somewhere before. I got it! It was last month on the cover of SEVENTEEN"' The kids looked to me to (a) laueh (b) cry or < c) wash his mouth out with soap for lying I loved it. Nothing missed Tony's keen sense of ob· servation. My cookies ..., ere a religious ex· perience. My patience was right up there with the stained glass crowd. No one could wear loarers and still have trim ankles like me. Had 1 been diabetic, Tony could have thrown me into shock. He stood up Ernaa Bombe~k walked into the room. !''ought me to carry out my garbage. Wiped the corners of his mouth with his napkin and said, "Excuse me, please, thank you" and all those other ex· pressions mothers print on cue cards and carry in their purses. One day the kids could stand it no longer. They confronted me as a group and said, "Tony 1sn 't what you think he I!>." "lie blows hls nose without a handkerchief when no one's around." "He talks about you behind your back and says your slac.ks ought to have a zip.in floor." "He's basically rot ten.'' ''I knew that all along," I smiled. "What gave him away?'' "When he picked out my picture in the yearbook and it was Mr. Sampson, the year he retired from the philosophy depart. ment." ERMA BOMBECK I ANN LANDERS ••• Douse <From Page Cl l NelCt came questions about ltvina rooms, garages and bathrooms. Would you rather have a large living room and a ~mall dinin& room or a medium living room and a medium dimng room? Do you prefer I one·car garaae that would allow an extra room in the house or a two-car garage·~ And do you want one bathroom 1n the master bedroom and one outside it or two bathrooms outside at? There was almost a dead heat m the replies about hvang room and dinme room sizes. In fa\ or of a largl' living room and a small dinina room were 50.l percent of the responders. Sup· porting a medium sized living room and a medium-sized danma room were 49.9 percent of the readers This can be called a moderate sur- prise, since several architects who were ques· honed were sure the large living room-small dining room concept would get the most votes, although all admitted it would be by a small margin. A t™ar garage ran tar ahead of a one.car garage -87 percent to 13 perc~t even thau&h the smaller garage would medan extra room m the house. "Whal nearly everybody needs," said one man, "is more space on the outside to store equipment needed for upkeep, toys, etc. - Also one· sided was the voting about bathrooms Nearly 80 percent said one bathroom should be an the master bedroom, one outside 1l. as against almost 20 percent who thought neither bathroom should be in the main bedroom FINAL CLEARANCE 30%-50% OFF WOMEMS IETilR SPORTSWEAR Slzet4--12 NOTRE PLACE 170 L 17tll ST .. COSTA .-u Uo1un lft C:.t Tlwlft & l_. -·----n.... .............. 541-3035 60-70%011: SALE ENDS FEB. I st oruJon~ cmrnroru women's sportswear Cacharel. Daniel Hechter, Cygne Saint Tropez West. Carol Horn Christian Dior 21 0 IHCh St., LOJ a 494-8055 Opett DCllty I 0.5:30 pa Part of Buxton's cotlecUon and some of· Mrs. Schlup•s Is displayed at The Eager Eye. where other art objects from New Guinea are for sale. . ESCAPE TO THE. • . exclu!Mve club for WOMEN on1y1 ;)> • Diamonds are no mystery to us ''I'm really amazed that only one treatment removed the lines I hated so much. I cal)Jt .wa.tt for my next treatmentt" '~ORLO NATION .. l Bue so ran·: "IC 11 UOU\ &VS1Nt S\ N"Ml St.foll Mt HI '"" I ,.. .. J IS 11\~l.\'f' fJ I l>"01w ll.- Hut\l1n9ton ht>•< n 1 • fOtf' .. If~ J"<J1t'1 A 611 ,.,. c.11 111t.n<uv1ll1t \4wnt1"'Qton .,... .. ,,. < •l1fo•rn• •·•"' r" " OU\IOl ~I\ cUNJv< , .. .., by •n ,,, 1'1\ftCSU•I J ~J· '" • .,, 10\•" 'F\t\ ,,.,.,..,,....,, ... , ... ..., w, ,., ttw t ()uMy <-•••• •'' '1'•"\1"' lount1 on J•n~,., 1 10 l~/I "'"" •'uOh'lll\ot•d Or"""" t...o•\I lldlly PUOf J •n 14 11 4f'\l.1 t rr1 I U l\IUf Ill/' PUBLIC' NOTIC £ NOTICC TOCRCOITO~ SVP(lllOll COURT OP' THl \T.foT[ OP' CALl,OHNIA fOll TH( COVNTV Of OllAHC.l No A •.1&H '"' u ../ ' f r A l>1 Irr P'lt ~ ,,, y y Uf f''U r O• ,._., rJ .tt '"r llHP 'f 0Ar<lf l OP< '.1 t1 All< & OA>I bl~ ' , IOWl'f ~.,. ... c MO.ii I~' _,.,nQt'IP\ ( ttl•f.)fl'll • \;U.)U whi(f\ i\ 1ht- pl,Ut' ut tJ\'\1n.-llot Int undrr"~ 1n 411 m••tW\ 1.• tl•l,_•nf.} le; ,,_. ' l4lr ol 'ioolil Ch r rd• nt. w Hun fou' "' nfh\ .atl .. r lhtt tirr.t pvt1t1t ctt•vn 1.)1 lt•I\ " flft 0Jlt'O J•Oi~y \ h 7i .... ,tof1 t r.,11 A<1rn1'1 'Ir tin• Off ht W fl ,11n. ~tJll••t" """" 11 l>• • • tidrt't\ OAN1ll$0~ \l CLAllt & OAVIS ")' •lo•w Slrttl a eoJ LO\ •nqtl..,,. C..iihtor"',. 900'1 l'l BUC NOTICE J ICflllOUS aVSINlU NAMl l!ATIM(NI t ht' 1011 •111, Pw•-.On\ •'" Ou1no li<.1\' ....... I ~F lll<t'All II.fol< t !IS H60 ... ., co•°"' &vt•'4.lt" '°''• ~, •. {;eilfvtn•• tUl• F 000 ""° 11•••"9 ln<IU•lr t In< 1"'° ,,.nOOlpll A••,_, '°'"' Mew. c .. utorn1• ~-.... Thi\ tiu\lntt'" conOucled D\I • <Of puf"elK>n t--41nd8•k•nol""u'''Y. In~. Kt..nH•ntr.e, Pn-.1aen1 f "•., \tdf.,nent w•~ t1ltld wtt9' trw- <01Jntv Clrrk ot Or1tnot-Count1 on J•nu•• v 21 1'11 Ft~ f'ub1,,n,.o "'d"q.o tod'' n~11., J.>llot J.,,, ti ,.nd f>t"b 1 U ti II.II~ Jll II Pl nuc· !\fOTIC E YICTITIOUS IUSINEn NAME !.T.foTEM£Nl 1£ flffYlll"ir"I r ., "Jf.lll 111 JlttUJ t •-'\' •H•IAI •PAklMI '<I .. 7111' 'N to1lk~ A.n•fltu't f'A "'ll!U)1 fHAr>MAN A~~OCl"H~ P 0 I tu 241)1 1fll -.1nq' Fro.tct Nt 1'1tpc..fl Uf"d(~ (A "7~l l r11 .. l.#v\rf••'\ I tru!IQ "vnOv< f'tJ 0¥ .. l1n11tf'O f1Gr1rtt·r\f\1p 1>"9lhf'I t Aooutt 1 ht\ \t••~mc:-nt •• , t llf'd ••th ln.t (ounly Cl•H C.I O••n~ co .... tv on Jdnu•r., • 1971 ...... Pul>ll\rw<t 0r•"91" COA\I O•lly Pilot J "' It ,_f'b 1 t• 1t 1911 ~I 18 Pl18LIC' !'\OTICE PUISLIC NOTICE • '1JI NOTICll 0, Dll,AUL f AND l(Ll(CTI°" TO SILL UND&ll Dl(lDOfl TllUU f S HO 2t,,._1 NOTICE IS MUl£8V OIVCH Tlltl l 0 ~E RVIC( COM .. AHV •• Oulv •P. POlnl•d TNll• ~ "'°' fooo,.lnt dnulOM -ot tnnt TllUSfOll NICK MLAGENOVICH 8ENEFICIAllV• SMITH HALL CORPORATION, • C•lll0tnl• COl'-1• llOl'I RttordHI Ck~ If, lt77 ~ Instr NO 1141'1 In llOGll 12•11. P-.e Jll of Of lie tel Re<onl~ In lhe off IC.• of Rec.order of Or•nQt• (,aunty, wkl -of lru•I Cl<,.Ulll«'i 1111' lollowlt19 l)rop«ly lol 11, of TrK1 IS?O •• per ~p IMr•OI r t<OrOl'Q In [loo~ 1• P•~\ t •M 9 of Ml\Oll•lleOU\ M•P\, 1n ,,,. R•<O•d• o! CKenor CounlV>C•llforn1,. ~•1d d.,,t>d tit hU\t \tC\U H (,.tt•ln Qt> H~at1cm" tnc..h."J•nQ Ur• not• tut tN ''"" 01 H 071 IO l h•I Ille i...nrll<o.ol 1n lt-t .. \I wl\drr 'liU\fl '1t•'1 ul It~'' llr\0 ""' '>blt<.11t'ton\ "!• ( \Jtr-.1 tht-r f Oy •"' P',. .-n\lv ""''>hr tf\t ~~.,1('1&h}ft'ld '"•' .. ti''-"•'" ol 1"'"'1 dt latVH •rl, lh• tlhllQ• Cl(O\ f(lt wt11(f'I '\r.Kh lt..0 Of lf"\t I\ \rturit'/ fut\ ncturrf"'d '" th4I pAymrnt ti•' not t~ n m&<Jt c,.t f Pt• brlllt'I(.,. t>I ow ~'int 11>•1 """' ot \b J$1 31 ""'"" f\ bf'< •flu dUt C~t.t'nlbt' l\ 1•11 -.¥•ttl 1ntrrr\t dUif' l,,_.rc-u" lfOf'T\ [)..(•tnC>f't I ••11 f ""' by r~•\on t ""'' ~ot u ... "" dP•\•9"""'· P'•'ll'nt bo>nehc1ary _, \utn Cit-ltd of ""''· h.11\ unutHI •rw:t Of.'flv•r•d to \.•td Ouly •PP<Unted Tru\t•e-. a wrlttf'n D•<t•r•t1on of 0.f•ull -O."""'° lot \401«" .ono h•i del>O\lleCI w•lll >••Cl ouly •PP<I'"'.., rru\IM, wen ()ot<I of lru\t •no ''" oocu,.,•nl~ ~v11kn<1r19 obh9•11or1, ..._.<urtd IMrtb,, -tw\ ck<l•na •nel Cloo ""••tw OW<I••" •II ,,..,.... \l'(U••d thuebv 1mmo-a1.,.f'iy auo .nd p.oy•bl• •nd hu\ ~lt<.ll'd """ """' ho:rrby ••~ct tor diU\f" lhtt lru\I ptnprrty to t.w ~Old •o ~ttlt'lty lht <1bll1,Jt11fJOf'\ 4't·~ UftG thnl>b\ F It TITIOUS BUSINESS Odl" J.1nvJt, 7} 1•/ij l•I •H 11\I AllorfteV\ tol' Adrmnl\tr th•• Puhl h1 of l W "'1· ~ 0 I , r14'1 f ''''I 1 Hf l l I/ 7• ti ) t it NAME ~TATEMENT °>ff'liU\ ~·•II lnt110r,tru1f\ ,,,. d11•riql d'itR1rhdtdJ ~milt\ 'll'(.ftl.\f'f' t>,..Nt NOflC~ ")uh l'l HLH' 'OTH'I. ''I 't C.\J ,,~,., n.1v• 11'1 ru11tl tu utl lh• Jtlnullt1•\t.ft,.. 1 ''' 1trH1111mt1h ... ,, 1'1CTITIOU\ 8U~IHI \\ NA.Ml \TAr(M(H1 fr t-to '""'"I ~· f ()I h\,11io1nt '\ 111 't 1 I, • 1n1 !Tl0'11Ht I" 1 cit td '1 h11"t 'H:t !Ion ''•• l"'1tt ~· !h• \ ,.,, f ( txl• St•fnHI 11t.11n ,11 ,, •• ; r J; 1• 1 11111 I \ l A q 110 JJ ,._ I '1: t r 0 U I ' f ·IH"hf I lr,111't I\\-~ ,..,,,,Mt1t ,1,n II I If\ --.111lt'rtlf"1'-Wt· I 11-cf tlfdlt ltu t.;nl., ( lt•ft. '-'' o'-'"IJ' tr.unt" 01 M•1lnr «.,nrpo1.tl un ,, (.tl1lo1n1 .. Jdnu_,, M I'll!? <.id I 'Ju ft llfl•t ·•1·~· •c.rpQr.1t1on 'le,~ tut I ./ t • llf•11.u• Fll•U t "'''""•' f:h•..,,.f\ l,.A •16\1 Pubfl\l'li(oC1 °'"".,... (t.M\I 01t 1..-Pitvt "' t1v\•tW'\~ I ( n()U'(lf"rt by. tOf 1.-n 7• JI va f.t·h ... IYTCt t '"" n 'lllAlllOR C 0111"()1<.A T 10•; th nt ,., k • Otn. r V11t-Pr~Klt'nl fl'H\ ~ldl...-rtt"nt WJ\ fl t."(1 ft1I,, ,,,.. < ou"I t ( h·n ot Or.tn ,,.. C aunt" f n JAf'\IM' f 11 1'11 BlNTON II FONNEll All• 1100 s~" voc ... 11 e1.o .i:TOO Lot .. ,. •• '""· (4il1t"'"'4 '004• l'MOl i uhll hrrJ Or ti1?• (1'1.HI f "'' f 1101 '''1~.tH .~ I 1"1 l1tlt1.t't I U ,, "' rt BLll NO flC'f-. •IC T!TIOU\ tl\IC,INf ~\ "AMl ~lArlMfNT .,.. "' 1··· ,,, 111& ;1,"' • 1, II f 'I ,.., l , l 1• r,;1 • t'''" .1r .. 1 It• 1• .. 11P. y, • ,, • ', 11111 th I'. JfJt'\t1 j1111 I I• lt:'I'°' \lrt1 I ' 1i M• • it'" J ..,.,, t lhp t "l:J '"' l!• 1 Mu A"'""~ l0"\1d M1 ... t l 11 t '" , 1 t, fr.t"t f)U llU I 1\111,~ I ('j l• t;t It I p rft• r I p Jt1hn t '1nK..1rwt ., tr lnlt'f'Ht"'tl ...,,,\ f '' w U •tu < unit t•~rlo 'l)tdn(tt" • tunt., Jd,ll..tdf' 10 111111 FHUI J" tJOll\ht t:J ()r 1 kl' l.Ct• t ll 1 1., Pil f J<4n 14 )I, t1n 1 t #!) I I• ft ! Pl'Rl.I(' NOTIC'E •ICTITIOU~ &U~INESS NAMC STATEMC NT Ir 0~1"'1 (Jft ,.If\• 11n 1 Qt ~All lt41\; M fl ~J /41,.,potl • fytJ '·· ... r-,, , ..... r r •• ,,,,...'I.; ttrl o 'l 'H>n ,,,on \6111 tu,•t hl1<I ~lH'f ll"I•\ Dtf"' "''' '4. •t'll,~H hit h; ,,, " f1!V1rt111'I J lM•"-l fH•r•''I r1n Tr11\ Uftn1•1ll °"'•' fi 'f1 y,, It th1 ... 18 Pl'BLJC NOTICE FICTITIOUS aUSINESS '"' NAME STATEMENT tnllbw1n1J pf•t!»Cn\ d,.. do1nc,., Ou 1n1 \ .t\ 11 l l\f It J lOPU lbH Moynl "" ~tJ,H1 l u,11'1ti.t lw J t\ ( ,tltfi\ri"lt I '7t 11 11 • ")''' •!·11Jl"I M· f".nn,. 11 '41 ,..."' ( •'""'' l.t"}" 1 I Jl"M ~ur11t l .i h1rn1 1 ft,bll ' rodLHhtJ t..,. ' n • U ...... t ,,, )t '11)1 L .oly " Jtt"..i ,, -,r I 11 M ',, t • • 11 •1101 ',, '-''' t i•ll·•" '''" '" ,. '• IV '" 4>4Jt11 "',, O'"rlri()' , •n '24 ]If• t' I 14 Pl'BLIC ~OTICE I II NOTICE WPElll041 COOllT Of' THE HA TE 01' CALIFORNl.fo FOi< rH E COVNTV 01' ORANGE Ho A·t4JU '"'' ' ''" rof Or.H~l• l t)lHHY C\n NOTICE 01' HEA"ING OF PE:TITION FOR PROBATE OF Will .. , .. ,, A N 0 L E f T E R S 0 IC A 0 J .. n•t.11.., 1 \ ''~ f'1Jb11t'wdOr1n1~ l-1 t 0111, f'1tt'll MIHISTA:AftON WITH Wt LL AN Ji'n ,. ll ,,,,,.,It•~ 1 '' H H[X(O )I J ,, (\loll• <>I MAHLON Ml L TON l'lfAO ~k" .V.AHLON Mil lOH 1'1(110 '>A at<dMAJORMAHLONM R r I\ 0 C>r<r•\l'<I Pl'BLIC' M>TlCE NOTl(f I~ HEl'IEOV GIVFN thAI MAIHQr; M READ JR hd' '""" CP SM6 ht"''"'" " ~•~lion tor J"'r()b.Jt~ ot Wiii SUPElllOll COURT 01' THE .tfl<I h\u,.nt~ of LrllP,.of AClm•nl\lr• ST ATE OP' CALl .. OR~IA .. OR llM Wiii\ Wtll Anrlf•f'CI rf!lrr~nc• lo THE COUHlV Of ORANG[ who<h I\~ tor fur1~r p;irl•CUlat\. No A 92111 Md 111~1 '"" hmr •nel J>l.t(~ OI hurl"Q NOTICE 0, tNTCHTiON TO $CLL '""~•mt M~ l>N-ft \d lor F'PbnHry I llf.foL PllOPERTV AT PlllY.foT[ 1911 •I IOOO•m,t~I"' courltOOmof S&L[ CH'P•tltntr.t No 1 ct \tttO '°'''' .u 'OC f \I~'" (t AUNA. '>4M1( ",.,_ISl f .,-(1.,,t( C,.ntr,. Or•vr-Wl,,1 1n tM (1rv 01 o ..-na~n ' "'"~" M ., N:tll\l f " ~.,"'"An• C.~lttO'"''' •., "" t"rt O~tft(f )lfflUAt'f '' 1•1p •IOT I( I I~ 1•r Ill llt IVI •I 1'1.,1 WILLIAM E. SI JOHN , .... Uf\CJ•, nrn Vt I .. ,, Cl' •41 ~OUl'\ty ,,,.,.~ "•lo'"' "'"""''d"°"' •tr>•I I •II'"' GUSTAVE S Cli.foBllE "•b • I In teir1f rnt,tf10tt .JI 11"1• 1Attwftey •• l.Aw ~boo rn•11 .. n ~u(ll 11or Coun oo ""' IJISU M~<Arthur &out•w.1rd, Su•t• '7J Rtn o •y 1 MdJ h t9 8 .11 10 (Jt.t , ,,. 0 , trv•n•, C•tltWN• •11 U tht r~rlfl"r """1th1n ,,...., ,,,,..,.. .\lln..,.,.r11 r,y Tf't •U ooi1 '"""' ctt th"' ,1tr1<"' nt ~'''"'°'•II A 1•Uwne, •cw P•tihoner Plunkett •u •)11¥tt A•• tt.mttn.,to" f'ut>t1\hfod ()-_.,..er CnA'il l'lA•'Y ttHoc 8.,dCh County at Qr.trt~4' ~t.tlf' ot '""udr• 1' I) Jl l97JI Cal1torn11\ "''' '™" , tQ'1:t t1t11 1nh '"~' .,iind •\t Ah• o4 thl-dt e.-f'OOf'\t .u t".-ltrn,. 1&7 18 of t\f'r "4'1Hh Mid .tll ltM" rlQht, t1"• 1lnO 1nttrf"\t ttwt ~"'" ~qa1 ... ""'\ .w nu•rfl'J by ODrrMI~ Of 't•W. ,,,. Ot~rwn,., Olh•r IMh or fh .ICldll1on to INll llf ~Id PUBLIC NOTICE dM"°"nl •I IN-1,,..... ol Mt °""'" 1n SIJl'ElllOfl COURT Of' THE •t1d to All lhet vrto111 rul prOOfrty STATE O"CALlfOllNIA ..011 ••lu•lod 1n 1M County o1 °'""II"· ~l•I• lHE COUNTY O,.OllANGE ot Ca111ornu1. •nd mor~ NOrlltul•rlY No A·94Jl6 ""'"""a.,, IOCIOw1, 10 w•I H 0 f I c E 0, N I( A" I NG 0 .. Loi\ £1t'Vfn and lwt·I.,• In 81..Ck ptl.flTION FOii .. llOUTI. Of LOST N1"9 Hulld,.., S" Ol lli<ld Otl M1tr WI LL AN 0 '0 It LETT E II S T••<I Hunt1n111on R••<ll C~cllon f I S TAM l NT A II Y AN 0 St•I .•• ·-on. M.•P ·~<°'ci.o '" ~UTHORCZATIOltl TO AOMINISTlll Qi)o-"· l>•ll• l~ of M••ctll•r1eou\ UNOEll THE INO&l'UCOENT AO Mops R~cords af Dr1tl\Of' Count\'. MINtSfltATIOltlO,l.STATESACT ul•loml• Etl1tl• Of S.-OA M OPPENHEIM Sub It'< I lo 1,,.. '""' ••l•an ot '"" 0.C...,\•d U\P ilflO co .. 1ro1 nf rt•n~o•• .,.d NOllCE 15 H{ REBV GIVEN ,,,., n•lur•I •l•••m• OI ..... , 11 •nv (ONA M Wl\TERMAN. Ila• f1lod ,...twr•llY VPOn t1ow1~ ,,,,0 , i,,t0 "' ,.., ... ,""' ptot1t1rin tor PrOblteof tO\l WtH dt<-l•u•t\ ID~'"''" \,,~ .. (I !ho• ~.,-,.mrflt • 1t\l'I :11f1t,i...,HI '' llU"• J l..1• 1n.11 ,.,.\ lp_,n ""'Ht<iut ,, ,u.r "" J .1.,11 t f'.I Of ff'lftl f-.Qt I 1or, Qt pr,,. 11'\t'J ,,.,, ,,.,, 1, ~• wnlC f'I -w-i>v•tl ""'' t,,. du• hd•J no ti"'"" t '" I U' Ft 0 Wru rt rt 1n l th OtPMI f' J:1<.>\!t lllt tf lht dt t•u1I '°' r1()t '"''od "'ltt'l11~ thrr.P month\ tollON•no Inf' ft \Otd•Flc.I Of fht~ notit._. 11'W ttQht ('l't tr•1"\1•t< m~n1 w111 t...-tnHl'Mt' •M 1~ "'v~r1., m .. y~ \Oki To dtl•rm1nit •• ,.,..n,t•h·tnct'nt I\ OO\Ubl• .tno '"' .ttn0L1nt 1f •n.,. nfCf"\c-,ary to rwt WWI dttf•ull <.ont•tt tne be Mt 1<-tMV 01 mot"fQ-t,.,,,.. ~ ft'lf'lf Wtte\•or in int•rf\1 -~ nam,. •fld ..tdditi..\ ... ot IN-rt.II• ot tt'11\ noh<tt I\ !;rruth H•tl Cot'POt•thOf'I ' c. Vtrtyn N J•n\tn, Altorni-y di l ,..., (rQ( ""' N~ l•on<ll ea"• Ou•IOtl\() '>u•I• ~ 1100 North Mo·" c,.,,, t ~nnti1 And r Jltforni t 'nM• T 0 SE llVICE COMPANV o ..... C1ly Boult•~r<I Wnl Su1I• 1110 Or.in"c C•tttor"•• •1..,. Publl'.\t\L<d Or.V19f (04'1\I 0111lv Pllnt J•" Jl.1n<1 ~tb I I• 11 HI" JI\ 11 PU8U(' NOTICE ll Pdvl N.,.,,,.,. No1ma H,.r11oq Voh tot two Vnlf pot 1'0'\ 0drr1tyn fO..ur 1 I n• wt, Arlenl' SclWll• r GMnf'I Gooftl''t' ';,"nO' ''" (f\r•c;t .pn.-·r M1\9f,. "''"•·I M•lll.ttl 0 fllt< Thorn .. \ E l(rif't•·' Oon !lull Carl N. Mt·r~l1 Mra\urt to br \fotf<i On (Proy,.<tor Pf!' t:\MI '" votar<ti ·r,,,. l>l<>PI~ nf Co"•""''• CIO ore1 ... n l"•I lllt IOlll>W•"O llr\<nl>rd l•1>d Within ITll' Ct!Y OI (Q\I~ M#\11 ,,, ... !-. roMCI R·I Sonqh· f_,m•tv Al'\ld~n11_,1 Ot\lt1< I end thf" u\ofi' tNorf"Qt r•str 1( tf"d lo S1119I• Fam•lv Owr1i.n9 Unll\ All th•I t•,,O tO<.ttt•d w11htf\ thfl' _.,,.,. bo;,nO.·d bV !ll>•r 'itrH'I on 111• E •~I Sunllown A""'""" on '"" Ni)rfh. S.Oulh (<>"\I Ot1W' on tl1ro !>oulh. -lroKb ftUMbforf'CI /~\7 -7111 r>n 100 ~\I Urath HSJ ""° 1711 ••• comrnoniy known •' ··r~ GrM~rao~ Tr&<t' J IOQtlllN ••Ill .;II 11\dl •• ,,., f\i)rtll Of Ill(' S~n 0••90 ,,.,_.,.O .... a Wt.I Of ~·' \lrt-r-t lnch,,...d w1th•n tnf' l,.nt.tt•v• M•p ol frAtl""' tor ArMI ~~·OP "'•nl Com"""v I "LO\ "lb•l•"IM. Ge (Ml• MrH or d#n•n Qut el lerr"'° Qui! •meQu•cl• ,, GUtrlllt' """'"' di' 11 C;ud.O OI' Coil• Mes. Mt• lon.I " t Oiilt•IO R•\•Cl•n <••I de Femill•• lndlv1du•IH ~rt tu\ <lf!nlro Cl• lllo ,.,l••nQlfto • U nHliKlr> <I• VfvlenclH dt f•mll •~' le a1vlClll•IU fOCIO .,., '"""° ubl( .. clO ""nlro •• •••• ti)il".o" •• ~''"'' por BIM Sllr•f't IC.•11" f19 .. rl. •I Norlr POr 'iunllowf'r Avonur IAvttlld-' Sunllowt• 1, •I ~ par Soulll Coa.i Ofllftl, y .ti f'onoPnll' Por '°' f'rot<tN>n•· miHllM • ...........,-ISU y 7111 (lo& lr1><<10t1ol(nlenl~ IHI y 7711 comun m•nlt ~la conoc. como "Fraction• ml~IO Tht Grl!IH>OrOOlt") 1unto (Oft lodo ti ,..,,...,. .. l'Oflt dt S..n Olt90 F•H••v y Ill Ponlenlt Cle 8Hf 5,,,,., ICell• 8e.,I incluodl> denlro d<ll Mep• • Pru&D.t ~I Fr«clonlttftlf'nlO tt~ 1>••• I• Cornpanlo Atl'Mll OevtlOI> fTM"nt ••) 0•1.0' !f'Kn.11 Jtt11wry l• 1'11 E•IC>ef\ P Ptltl\My c11v c1eni of'"' City of ~t• l'H ..... CA IS.CretMIO Muf\ICINI dt I• Cludtd de CMI• Me\<I, CA "ulll"lltd 0r"'9'1 Coe\I 0"1ly Piiot Ja" ll -Ft!> • 1'11 ll• 71 tly ~·0 dtt<rlb9cl lt9'1, •nO •ul>i•ct 10 ..,., IN ''~u.lnt.c ol lfllers Tut•m•n '"' rtQlll of ••v lor ,..,., 10 <or>'I"'' 1 " l•rv ood •ulhorl1ot-to ..imln•119r 1---------------- rioollon or .,,..,,._ dll<""' ttirouql\ """~' 1tte ,,,.,..oonde11I Adm•N•lr•11on PUBLIC NOTICE M•d lr•<l loirr~IPor °'"'" lhoo .to111 Of £•1~1~ Art rttlrrence lo wltlcll Is '""' ••no •• .i '°'111 '" c.r11nt DHO m•o.t for ,.,..,_ p.or11eut•"· and lll•t ., ... .,Ju ... 10 ""·'"°"'I\ 0 P•r~ ... ,,_ 11m .. M>Cl plA<• OIM•flnQ I~"'"* r•<oroto J-JS. 1'21 ""' bfo~n sol'°' Ftbo'u.rv 7 1'1t, •I 10 act•I •II ad, Q•• •"Cl em .1n t.,..<O<Jrtr-..OIOe011rlman1 llydroc1rt.n tflO m1ner"1 w~1•11 .. , Ho lot ""'"co"''· 11 100 Clvk. c.Rler IYlllQ In, llftdH or llWI m.ty be l)rO tHl\I .. Wi,,.I Ill .,,. Coty ol Sltm• All• duct<J f"'"' w14 1-bul ,...,_. tr• (alllGrnl• !!!_1111 .. ot1 •urlpc~ ""1•Y •llO,.. 1 dt!Mll.. Oatetl J-r It. 1'71 .,.,., WILUAAl\LM.IOt4,., Co,.,rnonty lu1nwn •• .at Jol1•1 Courtly CWll A ... MWllllROIOf\ IHCh C.illfornl1 AlltAHAM OOTTt'IUIU> S11B)KI 10 Curt•t11 I•••~. con• "IOfllSSIOHALCOlt" 11e11t1, <-lllont. rHlrltlllll'•, ,,. ltt .. S..Ml~ll'4., •14M MNll-. tltMS. tit.JN• ot w•r, fll>d LnA......._CA_., ••w""11n ot nlCOl'O Toi llUI ~.., _.II bid• Of often l\'t\ISI 1111 111 •r1t1119 Att-'I" •: "'4•'- •1111 wlll M Nallltel .. IM~· "111111"*9 Or-. COtHt 0•11'1' ,..141t, Ito ... •!flea W nll'I' lie lllM Wllll t,_ J11111.ryt4,tt.,1 1t7' 1~11 , '-"" ..... ~ ... , .... C.IOl't •t ...... tUM ~ h 11n1 ildil9'111• ot tlll•I------.:...;...;.. ____ _ "°''"·...,. ~"" "'4'1'!11 ..... .. ,. T ltMI AND (0f1Dl.110NS Of!' SAL t ~In '-"'l,,,,_v 114 tlte Utw.... """'le• 1.-. 119•0"' J'°"'t et... l:!ld '"Ult fltfm of o Ulll tt'I ..-~(llfltO Clljth lo Ac ~~n1 -"'llla••-.10 ... ,. ltlllOll t9"!111Ml1tr1 ......... tllf f)lif ""'" s..i. ~ t y , ... •. #. 'k., .. 1'!'111. ..,..., , " 1'• r••"~ DAT 0 yto I WALT KNll UM ··~l!Nd~ KITT "CTIT10UI 8USIMIH NAMa STATl:lllllHT Th4 loll-'"' perton h do<"IJ bu\i. '1USH PEP .. EllTltEE A .. AllTMl!NT'S, '1191 \. liOldtr 114,.fl, CvprfU, CA 'Ot:>O CV .. IU!SS II ... 0 B0119A. 1'21 11.1 .... tttiN. ,..._. 9-11, CA '*3 Thl1 NlfltW t. Mln9 r!!"dllet .. _., • llmlllCf .. llWf 9fllo li'Nlllp ~ • .-...11 Tiii~ 1~411Nftt '¥•\ fll• wtlll IN! Covrtty l;llt~ *f ()fMI~ (6..,ly efl Ja11i..-ry t, "* "tin l"Vllll•Md 0rlftlflll CN•I o.l•v r-uot, J•fl a1. "" '· 1C "· ,.,. PUBLIC NOTICE \Ul"llll<HI COUllT 01' lHE STATE MCALIFOtlNIA '011 t HI COUNTY OF OllANGE NO.A..-..e MOTICl Ofl HEAlllNO 011 f>ETITION llOtt "tlOaATE 0, WILL AND Llnl!llS Tl(STAMlNTAllY, flOll AUTHOlllZATION TO AO• MINISTl.11 UNOlll THI INDEPINOIEHT Al>MJNISTllATICHI 011 I.STATES ACT. hl•ttotOPAL f. COlE. O.Cee~ NOllCE IS t1£RE8Y GIVEN ltwat LA 'YELLE GRABER MAGNUS Mw:I EILEEN GRABER GRAHAM llew 111.0 lltAln I "'"''loft ,.,.. Pr-I• 0( Wiii l!WI •Swanee ol L~tltt-' fn\1rnan· tery to lh• P•llt1oner\ and tor a11th0rl11l 1on lo ..c1m1nl\tw uhder 1r.. lndepeodtnt _,11n1•tr•Oon CM E•l•ll'\ A<I, rthiren<.• th ~nlth t\ mttdP for lurtll~r Pii•IKul•" aftd lh•I IP,11 limo •n4 pl•t<• o' "'""'no lhto >3m< Fl•• bf.•n \f"t tor f!'tb• w.1 v '' 1'1A •• 10 ii f1"I • .,, ttw court<oorn ot Ot•pdrlmt-f'll No Jot :t.••<S toYrt ,,f /lfJ (•v•C (..-nh·• Or•'¥l' Wt!tl 1n lh• < ,,,.,. (1t '-.•nlft Ar1..t C•l•torru.-. ll•tf'd J4"'\io•'• ~ l1t1A WILLIAM E SI JOHN \,.,vUNy (lt-r., J.ilCK G MAGNUS ISM Wlhhlre 9oulo•Ard L•• A .... la, CA 90011 Toi. IJlll 414-lJOl An .. .-.y fer. C.-oeilh-'1 PuDll\IWO Or .. t\Q<' Co.o>t 0d h P1IOI J•" ll) )I -"<·b • 1~18 l:S-la PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE TOCllEOITOllS SUl'ElllCHI COOllT OF THI( STATE OF CALlfOllNIA ,011 THE COUNTY 01' ORANGE No A t"4J In Ill• Metter i)I •h~ (,ldl~ a1 11\'Al fEA HOCiARH4 0.-ce<t...O Nol•t-" '' h .. r .. by g1.., .. n to cr"'(f1'0'' h.tvl"Q r ldlm' 4'Qtlln .t th(' \did dt•<.t dt•l\I 10 f1ft 'dlcl ChHm'\ 1'1 th+-OtfH t Of tht Clt·H ot 1hl• oJfOfl:'dH1 (0Urt or la IJ" "it't•I tn.t'rn to th+-uride, .. 1qneo .u th•• viii" of I l <)~Alf YOU NL I' tJ 1.1 f I< I ~ II f A A t> ~ l r t HVf,l(Ql[ll t. ~(MtHt &•IV. Su• fh ')I >Ulh-l llv I , A. nq"lt ., CA ~)(10 -Nhl('! I +lltt {1tf1 I ft,. f"l.t t OI t1u\•flt 11• ~,... Wl'llttf •iJ"' 11 "ttll 11\,•f , .. , ... fot•r ltHOHIQ lo t CJ I fctl• u h ti_.t1m Wftf'\ 1"-° ,_.l" 1UJ ...-Cu l1o·f P Bl.IC NOTIC.t. II Ult HOTIC( TO ClllOI TOllS Ne A~ \Ul"l!llOll COUllT 0' THE '1 AT& CW CALl,OllNIA ,011 'THI COUNTT Of OllANG( In tnr M•U"' ot the l'\1••• 01 llMOTHV f RANCIS SHl'A o.u ... a Holl<• '' htr•DY 91••" 10 CroCll Ion navlno cl•lm\ •Q•ln\I I"• ••Id d•<-1 lo Ille Will c •••mt tn Ill• ofll<• of llW <l«k of lhf1 •forew1C1 court or lo P'•1oenl thtm 10 tllf "" °''"9n\'CI at IN olllco of WAl l l R J OESMONO ~1~ HEARl'fl/ELL B~OG, lONt. llLACH CALIFORNIA wP,1<h IAll•r Olllco » the pt•<• ot bu\tnf'\\ ot thtt vn 041r,1qn...d 1n oH M9't1flt\ P' rt•m1no to \dt(I tt\h•ttt 'Jut.ti tl•1m ... ~tfh U1• ri~tt"'J\•r '( vuv.. t'w•f .. mu .. t bl flltKt "' Qf\ )l nh•O ,.t\ of0f'tf''\Cl1d w1tt11n ll)u1 mon&h\ ttftJ>t It• fi''' ' m11 "'""' t lh1', rit+ ' c ·•" 11 , ... ,.~ ,, ' IJ 1'1tl j •rlflt-~fl• I f H' UIN Of Uh ./111 I ''d•d (-.1 01;r I 1 WAl rE II J OtSMONO Atlort1U·at uw •14 "~•rlw~H •klll PubH\r\rd CJr1tn•Jt Co.t\t o .. h r 101 l••" J 1 1tn4 ft t!. I 1• ' " a I Lor11 Buell c...111°'"'• PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS BUSINEU NAME STATlMENT Jo\ II Tn~ folh.rw•~ perJIOf" ·~ <Jo•~ bu\• MU d\ REALTY ~ousr 1111 M1.-ourl SI • Co\I• M• ~ C...llforh•.t ~)ol" f. llli)tl H•ri"'.I ltMyon I Ill M" \OUfl SI CO':ll• M ~· C 4llrort11J •l•I• Th•'). bu\lnr~) I\ t~J(h·d b.,. .. n '" a1v1dvdl t "'"''ti .. '""'''' ltt1'\ ·''''''''''"' ,,., ''"' (CHJfl1t (hr• f u ... 1•Hj• t Jdl°'Udf J /fJ l'#IJij J.'utH .. hr(1 fW1H\ ,. ' '' Jon j 1 "' 1 t ,.f I~ • ..... ,.,, '"'' " Pl'RJ.I(' ~OTICt•. flJ05day Januaty 31 1978 DAILY PILOT. C3 PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS 8USINESS N&ME STATEMENT Tt-.. lot1ow1nq pwr~t .,,, dotnQ t>u\l,,., .. ~-. ~ 0 o; AS5'0CIATES •II• II El IABLE f.MlEllPRl~ES IJB Sl•l•t A~tn1>•, t111<11l,.Qton 8~•<11 C•lllMll•a ,,._, , 51ep ... n 0 Wt"ll" 11'11 IS•rOI' Cir., .. unll1>9ton 8uth, C.olllOrftll 92 ... 7 Otl>r.o ~ w.,.. 17,.l B••on Cu Huntlnt\can 8«.t<ll C•lltor"•• '1•41 Tiu• bu11,.. .. " <OflCluct.o bV • ll•Mr•I tMrt,_""'P Sl•_.O W•~ Thi\ !.t•lem..,-.t iA•\ f•lt'd with th" Count'; Cl•f~ ot Or.tnut1 County on Jdnu•• y 10 1Q/8 """° ~ ut111,l'H."'d 1.Jr4n0t-(.o•'' LJ411.-P11ar J.-n I• JI Jlll•KJ .._,.t> J " •v $ JI\ If! PUBLIC NOTlCE· F iCTi TIOUS BUSIHE S5 N.foME: ST.llTEMEN'T It .... 1Li10~ nQ r• "0f\"t '"' DY\l'lf'\ tt ~U'<P< ""l ACV" U •0 V•h .; fLl\I,.. (A ff'tM.0 • y ,,. (.1 ,t~11on n,..,..,., on ('ttC (t ta11torn,. tOfl'.>o'•"°'" 11r: '' ... ,..,. tt1 .. t;1 \Yflt 4 tut n (A <t4b-~ • tn .. Jor.n M.ut ,, <01T ran., .. l6lllOrn1ct coroor•t•on 4101 Wr 1rr•~ Pl•<ft ~\l•t• ·c.11 Nt'#OUf1 9,.4Un CA 11..0 r f'\f\ bU\•¥\4' •) lOtiOUClt'~ t>'I • Q,.""'•' Otftncr-..h•P f~• J<>nnM.n1,.Comp.iny JOM T M4rfln PrPIS•ck"nt Tt11\ ~t4lf"'"t'f'li! Vlfct\ fit~ with t~· Cou"IY Cl•r~ of O••no--Counly on o .. c .... ,, F._ Publh,,.<I O• ""I'· Co.I\! O•tly f'lli)I J"" 10 !I H II 1018 " ,. l'l'Bl.IC ~OTJ('f; \Vl'E lllQR COURT OF THE \T .fo TE OF CALll'ORHIA FOR TH( COUNTVOF 01!.foNC.f NO A·IMjlO Until Mid-1978 ... Index Points To U.S. Growth W ASJllNGTON (AP) -The government !>81<1 toda} &ts index designed to signal future economu: trl'nds incr<•ased by a substantial 0.7 percent m D t' l' e m b t• r . po 1 n l 1 n g t o p rob a b I e s t r o n g Pl rformanl'l' of lht· economy in the months ahead Thl• 1ndt0'< ~a~ tht· finnl s1gnific1rnt ec-onom1t• I l'µort for 1977 and 1l c·unformcd with other public• .incl pr!\ c.111· l11n·1•asls (or '' ron~ t't·onomit· growl h .it l1·a~1 u1111I 1111d 197H 11 \\a~ lh1.• Sl\lh l'1111 .. , c 11\1\1' rnoothlv ill ( J ( ll',l"l' Ill th1• 111Ul'\ '' .~lllJRT "huh ,11tl'mpts 111 .1!\scss __________ _. I h1· 1•1·11110m11· pr o:.pt•t·t 1111 t hl· I utu11• nn tht· h.1s1!-t 111 tht• pt>rformanl't.> of the economy dunn~ thl' JHl'VIOus month. The composite index of lead· 1ng tnd1t·ators. ~s 1t 1s called. stood 1n December at t:l5.3 o' the 1967 average of 100. Whit~ Bou~ Ga•~ Cra•laecf W i\SllINGTO~ <AI» A Washington m an, Robl'rt S Hoyd, 3-t. 1s undt>r arrest after crashing his C'ar into an t·1~ht foot h1ph Whttt? House gatt• \\Ith hi' ti ~ 1•ar old daughkr c.1s u pasbengt·r. Ltw ~1·t·rt"t St•n 1n• .,J\ s l ht· ~·11•1·n·1 S1•n 1t·1• 'iatd the nt>w. n·inforl't·ir '' rnught iron .r.:.1lt· s11.,lt11n1•d minor d.1magt• :\ton d:I\ 111ghl hut llw .111tomob11'• dJrn<1g1· v. a... 11111r1· ~111i .. 1.1nl1.ll '\rihmfy ~ "" in1un-.I f'lu l tu•c•itu' Studifl"d \\\~Ill:\<: J'()!\ r,\P l \ p.tn1'l of medical,., lt'U)I b.., f1lrd Oil Uf" ... -.. nhti d't .lf(lr1 •utiit #llh1n tour monu~ tit • ti•• ' ,,, c.1ubll,•t1tit1ot l"-\N•"•' FICTITIOUS 8V\IN~ ~) NAM~ SlATEMENT l t•t ft.I IQ11'9 HQ C f f uu\1f1t , J N()ll(l 01' HE.foRINC. 0, PETITION FOR PROBATE OF WILL ANO l ETTERS 'TESTAMENTAR• FOR AUTHORIZATION TO AO I MINl~TER VNOE'R THE iNOt.PlNOENT AOMINISTR.t,TIQN 'Ii OF lHATES.foCl t I i '.. I !JR p1•11-. '•')'an 1•pHhm1t· ul Hu!-tsr.in flu 1s lrkcl~ ''' 'I"''·'" 111 lht• l 'n1ll·d SI ,11l•s t•1Lht•1 !111., Y.111tl'1 or 111 '' .111d .1 ',H 11ru· l'<lll he dl.'\'l'loped th:.rt would lw ill 111 !JO pt•rl·1·nt d fl•t·tn l' in prt•\ entmg 1t f'•l•d J•n ) "'" SECURITY ~A(ll I NATIONAL l\AN~ f M"CU1W'° m lhfo WllJ of~.t•d~Hff.nl HOllll'E VOONG llOBEllTS Allwnev·•I uw BlAllOSLEV HUFSTEDLER & IU!MBLE 11 W. Sl.sth St .• Slo ?UO MA .... lft.CAt0017 Publi\lloel 0rM'91! C0.t~l Oo11I, >'ilOI, ar1 10, IJ 2• JI 191~ .. ,. Pl'B(,J(' NOTll'E f'ICTITIOUS llVSINESS NAME STATEME"T DH\lru '4'\ MAr,1 r1111of '.I l>yl(l < • 1 < 1911vor 01 l ,. fM M • t r A I , ~' tfl f 1, .... !11!f I jll II /I (t1f 'l/OO(.lr ( t,1M1 • ftlf~I HOOt ,,,-. t-,,. •, v\I•" Mt''" (.A ""O I~ /JI l." , u th "'°'fl ,1tr1 ""U fo in D1 Cv\t"""''" (A,./~) f "' \ Ou'IN\. • ~"''ttlC_..llffrwr\hC Mull"'ll ~\Ii (~4'"' • t ttlo ut 01 .,-,i.,. •1 ,.,, I w'I "-U fhoi nul"ll f on ;,.n Pynh\l"lt 0 ()r14n.1" ( t\I p,. 1• P1•ot "" t1 1j Jl , .. .., .... .. 1) ,,. PUBLIC NOTICE C~·S74' NOTICE TO CRE.OtTOllS SUPElllOtl COOllT Of THE STAfi'. OFCALll'ORNIA FOR TMI (pUHTY OF OllANOE Ho A·tl'U f '' tt• a• l.fQ\f Of·u .,us f ~ l NOl IC f I~ h( fll !IV <·IVl '< In'" 4: rPditor' ,,. ,,_. t4t>ov .. n.:1'1"l<'d t)f'; <1• ,,, ll'Mt ''''Pf'"°"'· n...v1nq ctr11m\ .:vJJ•n\t lht. \i•c1 dP<t"(k\nl ·""' ''"tlu•r• r1 ,,, '"f't thr'm -w1tn IN ,,,.., 'i. •-'fY >lout,. ... ,.·. "' fhl Ctft(f' of lhp t 1,.,.lr c)4 th• •!DOY .. t•n t• tlf!'d < our1, or 10 fJ" ~t·nl rt"·m. wtth th.-n-tfl\\•ry '#0\1~~''· to Hit• un dt'r\1Qn4"d di thf'I hrw ottu·t.; nt tctw1r W C~•ffN'. tb() Ay,.n1cta (,ran•O~ Po\I Oll•t~ Beu \•8 c,.,,, ( '~""'nl~ Cat1forht •• •1•n. wf'\1C'1 ., 1hf· 01,,,, (If bu\tnt-· \ of f~ vno,_,.,..Qnf'C1 1n .t1i mtlttf"r \fl'_ rt.Alr\•f\ll IO t~ ,a,t.,.tt of ._«t•C1 dtof•Ol'nt ..,tf"1n •our month'\ .. ftpr fl't• flr\t pubh< •t10"1 Of trus noHcf' O .. le<I JMU.<y) 1'11 LOIS LOClt.WOOO Wiil EA~ E.,<:ulrl• of llW Will ot It. oilboYP N~ Of'<_~d•nt EDWIN W C"AFFEE 160 Ave,., .. Gr .. nHI ... 0 ••• \41 Sin Cltmt,..t, CA tZ.72 (710 01 "" .a.uw"•t •er E•ff...,._,.,. HAlri It I\ ):JI J (;,°"''" k•ci t klvel. L• H.-Wit l 111ir rn .-liOitiJ L II!.-AdVt'f'! 104. • ( "'''~'"1·• lO' 001'•1 tO'\ '~1 J 5oulN Hf'rH" hlviJ Loil H•i><• (,Ool 'Kltll Tf\1'\ c.u\uw•\\ u c.on<IW< tt"a o., • Corpor•t•on &obotf"f'M (OC*V 'If Prr'l.t<h·,,1 Th•\. ~t.11.,,.,f"'nt w•-. 11riod ...,,,h 1rv- Co..,ttt1 Clerk ot Ot ~9"" C..oun1• on J4" 11 lqlf BlllAN 11.CAllTEll AtlorMY IS.O~ Pro1PK1Aw Tu1l1n, C•lllorn<• t?..O hi Ill UlJ FU?l7 J•11n1r ht-.J <'1t th l .. t 0, 1., I' I Jd" '1 A JI f 1 U I tr t!: \) ~ Fl(TITIOU\ 8U\1>;( '' NAMf \t.t,H ME NI ,,,, . '"'' .. , .. J., u llJJ Pu!>I ,_.._, ) nQo '~" '1 l4 JI ft r PtIBUl j I r 11111. .. I [l tQ/ .. fltl•I t. I lul ~\I 18 ~OTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINC\S N.foM£STAT[MfNT f 1"!•• fOllOw·nq l)rr\C•t'l't 1•r• C "IQ Ou\•l'\f \\ tJ\ MOR(jll>• J.<UOOI ~ '""EC,Tllfl "f t tO 7'01' ~""' o" o" ,.., \ . '" 1 J N ._-, oo.t "' • ti 1 f ,, ·~, fllf'I (o•r10r 11 ''" H,,,, r.ql " Ju dt,.,,,., n ... .,..,, rTu•n1\ lrH 1 ("~ ;""'•' 1orro•dl10n )•"10 Mic 'iit l\Of"I Or1V• ~u to t) NtcwptJrt Ut., n 071\ l riit ov .. •n4'\ 1 Jf•fH ,~I r1.Hln.' I'·• /f,iiitHH MntQ~tn J1hif>tlt, '"' 5'1fh.t"'..Jl MA re ,,. Harr ~ton £1ruum,•n I"" W Rot. rt rt. t ll1')4tn vu.• p,,,,~Wl'lt Tn;, \tat~rot N_.\ t•'•<I *'" H111 .::oul'\ty Clt'f'+t OI o'""'"> (~uni, t'tn '"'" •1. "'9 "1170 P1.1D i\Nd o.,,'ill tod • n .. '" µilOf J.an11 .U ll f•"I IQ'" ''~ P Pl'BLJC ,!li;OTIC'E J~~u~~l\~Cll•°'.i·:~.~ O.O\I l)~o•y Pokll H 0 TICE T 0 C 0 N r 11 AC T 0 RS CALLING ,.011 BIOS PUBLIC NOTICE FICflTIOUS aUSIHESS NAME: STATEMENT t ., l ,.,. fotlO'tllrll"tQ P"f\On' ,.,,, no1nq l>Uill>t'H IS COSTA MESI\ AUTO eoov A PAINT SHOP. lJU. N•wparl Rl•d C.M , C•llt '2677 M l<;h•tl O•vld Glle•ucl• Hlb Newoort 8tvct , Costa M•u. c ~•If .,,,,, C:1tt1ora W Llnil\.t• l"6 N~W'POrt 81~ , Co•t• """"·cam 92627 Tl>ls Dus1rwn Is CCMldUCled by • 9t""'ll tMrtNrsf>lll Mic'-! O G!Mrerdi Thi\ slal-t w .. lllec1 Wll" lti. County Clf!rk OI Or~nQI' C.OVOI)' Oft J•n U, 1'71 fMU• Pullll•IW<I Ora1>qe c.,.,, Diiiy Ptlol, J•n 11 l• J11 ftl)1 1•11 IOI II PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITlOUS 8USINISS NAME STATIMl.NT f II• IOI!-."' -JOI\ I\ Cloinq but• \c t\ool CJ"'' ic t COt't\1 Commun• ly Co• •Q• f' d 01-Adill'W" 1 "' C.'" M~.t¥ Pet>1ulH'f 11 t'78 Pldc f ot hl(1 ,..,, '11)1 O•hc .. e• •~,. r>1Jrcn1\1ng AQf'ru C04H (OIT'mur11., Colff9" 01\lr'<.t Adm,n1\1r n1~ 8\ttld 1no '310 AO,.m\ A"' nu-(i>\I • M,. ,. Or1tnQft (t)UP\tl r t•1tf'\ln1. Pro1f"Ct ldtn•1t1c11f tJrt N,.m,. AVOID Vl!>Vl'l •,y\11 M C~EMISTllY (llJILOtN(, 1!10 '"0 751 "'l ISf HMAf'of~ o.. )\f. «OHi.i ~ ><l A£ ll> i.. \I('< 11\dl l tr•OA Ar~""( f-lf Mi'•'• t"lct\ flh<t Mr,.i+n 4 "'-\•l11:J'I to,. rrO().lot .. of Wt .. .-nd 1\\UM'Kf' t l• ftt>F\. 'l • .,f.uTtt"nt.trv fo,. «hlll\ont •lion to "1m1n.~ti r unof'r ,,.,,. •ndrp.ol)d~r'lt M1m1n1'itdt1on ot l: \1ttll' A< I rt:tf"rf'rt<• to wPu( h , .. "'~" tOf '"''"'" p.,tlt<v•.tr\ .lno '"'•' '"" t•m• ""'l P*.V• ot f'W-4onq thr ,.drnt.' l'ht\ bt ton "'t IQ" J....,ttru..tty '' 1 .. /(1. •l 10 00 d m ~" ,,.... cc.u1t10t>m ot 01 Pdrr '"""' No Jo• \«t•U toun ctl ;oo CIY•l r,.nh' Ur .,,., W't'\t 1n th-e C.1r, or ~nto A,.. .. (a tornt-t Ct•tceJ JJN,._.,.,, ~ I• f WILLIAM E SI JOHN ( ,,.,,,,.,. , .... ~ ICf;ITH C WELPV'TI 1111 M•rt1n !.u1tt \4C ''"'"~ (•lllorn1111 Ol•f ltl TU 0110 Attorn~r tot P•t1t1uftt'r 1 j' 1 ,,, o ft , .-t , 1 r "' '"d, tl I '•IJ-' ~ . ' ' ,, ·"' Pl HU< !\OTIC E. II 136/ NOllCE 'TO CREDITOR ~ OF llUll\ TRAN\l'EI< t~rt\ (.101 •101 U ( (I I•'' l Q "' ' !h I 'H(JN/I l~UflA "'-'0' I l.>0"'''" l. I 1 '1'1'1t-ft"t'"' wno\ .. rf \ 0-Nr ddOrt\' '?,t-.;.) H.1.,1 ; ~ltf"t't frvofW lOWflft '°'t 0f.t ~ \li"h "' C•l1to,, , .. Tt->t V'OOt''" 10 ht h"'"'1..-,,,..o(j 1 tor ~t,.d .tl 1~' ~ H ~.,., lO\l-l ,.,.., • <"""''" tO'""'q.-S•<il •C.1t•r,.,,.,. \ct•ll'tt•tof•"1r i.l•' ffhtn n(.#•n.r .... - • A11 tt)l'.:il tn tf ~ t •'U•• , qu S' 'fl•,,. '*"d ~ .-..• '' '"~' l • m.tr. tJui .,,. ~ Iii hQtl!Jlt '" ft <'• f l {" e. Ir l ... s, .. rv1C• IP'\d 0t '°''' :1 I '(191 q t A•d (.O\I t A.•F' ..t 0Uf'll'f' gt 01 ...,,J I tfr (ti (.-•1fQtf\ • '#It I ti• on um I~• th d·IV r i)J 1 t'Y' ,,, i< \ M f '"" • 0• _,.,~ t IM' d tinirJWh '· P'f ., tn••e,t•'t •lfl P'U"'"' ., OArflf"' olOd "ddff''io'li '\ \J'f·ff n, 1 • '" '•""n' ''"' tr""t" '"°"'""" '" "' 1.1 .. 1 .~ t ,,, ~A.Ml: I "It 1f J.tnu.1rv ~ l"'M ''"~flt\( t•..lllfturh'I r1r-,,n l l H.tll1borto., 1 f .tn• ft rtff'"t IC & M l ~CROW CORPORATION I US f I 1111 St,...-i. Suite IC S'lll• A"•· Clhlorn•• '7701 Pub11\f"w d ·';Jtf _.."Qt ,-o.t t c"' '• P1 ot JM• JI I> " lb• 19 PUBLIC SOTJCE NOTICE TO CllEOITORS 011' BULK TRANSFER IS•n ••Ot '107 V C C I Uot ,,. \"' ,_ty Q ,.,.,. t f"• ( hd '0'' t ">lJ""'"4Y ~ l JI( ;.1, (.. .tnrf \U (Ht N • ,., At• I' ,,.,.,,,' •' """0"1! t)u\1t'U h dO'f'tl't"'\ \ lt,J] fVMQ...,..f It ( ty (,t ( Clf(,n" '1• I Md• \.0""'"' I 0rttng• '!,,.,,,.,., t.i.l torn•• 'h.-• tt rw1, ''•'"'If 1 \ ..-tw Yt r t,. .. rn '<1•--' M-'t' .,..,, f, W,.r{1 H'ltj V1r 1 t ~ .. W ''ff ''""~t1·r .... tJWM..,., lfu\1nt -..\ 9'~f1r, ~' .. 19131 Vllilt C fy I -,,..-"" t An• uni.; ot 0• ttntJ• ,1..11i ot ca11torn1t4! Th• l!'OPf rty It> bl" trdn,,o'trfl'd I\. o,..", bH1 In (lil!'tWra• "' Ail \tcx:-. ,,. trttdf' h•h,,,.•!t t-Qu1omftnl -.tnd QOOd will of tnat '''" on<3 L"'" rP\favtAf"lt bu''"'"·' -nown ~-\ ~lr F1<h ~d Chre><" •M In< ~1r.i "' tt31 E P~ rt IC Co•" Hwy . C.•IV ol (orMA ""' Mt.,, County of 0•4na• Sllltrol Cal1fi)rt1111 Th• l>Ulk lrM\lr< will t>to con\um· ''hftf"d on ot ""''' ow 10th ddy ot • Ph•UMY IQ/I !I 10 00 4 m •t Am,.n<. .1n Ou\tl\f'\C. & C<'lmmflfC•• wM'• "°"'~' " •STO C•ml>U' Or Su•lr l, Nrwport a..ac11 C.1tlllornl" So '•• •' " • no•h lo 111 .. lr•n''""'''" •fl Oli'oln~" n.am..\ •·M aOt'Jr•t\f-\ U\fod by IN. Trdl''iiff!rOr\ IOt tt\,. oas.t '"''"" Y••t\ .,, \AMF O•••a J.,..,.rv 1• "'~ M~,..,,,,c,, Wf4td \f,rQ•n~~ R Wt14rf'f r,., ... ,.., .. P\. AMl.lll(ANBVSINESS &(OMMEllCE 4J10 C.mpu~ °". \"''' l Hew .. rt .... (II, C..ltlor,.1• UMO IE\crow Ne 7 .. Pubil~ ..... Or.onq. (N\I O• 1, Pilot Jan1Mry ll 1q711 36.4 ii PUBLIC NOTICE But till' l'xp1.·rls urt• ll•ss certain about what Lht• ll'th-ral go\l'rnmenl''i role should beman inocula· tum campaign und who should hear the liab1hl\ for the• 0('\.\-" nu \'af'l'IOI' M1\N,\Gl',\ '\1cara~ua CAP> -National guard!>mt·n hurting tt•ar ga::. cambters broke up a dt·m onstral1on by :.>oo womt'n at the l' N. offJrl' ;\londJy to prolt:~t d1sap~warJOl'l'S of go' L·rnml'll' oppon1•nti-a1Hf dt•mand 1l"11·as1· of pol1t1<".d prt~ntwr:- '1 h1· \\llll11·11 l'liant1ng thl• Lord., Prn)cr . .,, ,,, '• 11•d .1~ tlll' 111· ... 1 1·.tn1stt•r l'xploded shorth :Jfll·1 11111111 on tlw 1.m nm front of thl• ht11lding loc<ilt.'11 m .I I I ldt•11!1;d ~llhlll Ii Tron11ifio11 Plan ('halle>ngrd '. J 11\11\f \l ;dl.1 r \I' Blal·k gucrrill:.r !t ,1111·1 1.1llul 111d41~ for .,h,ormg p<Jv.l•r v.1th Bri t,1111 dun11g Hhrnh'•.a.1 ·, 1ran~1llon to blad..; ma1or11r 1111 .. 111 .1 m•\\ pl.111 rt\ .11lrrl! i\ml•rt1·an British 11r11. 1111.,,tJ, 1111 .1 ~C'I lll·rrwnt Huhl'l t \I ugalll', 101nt ll':ickr v. 1th Joshu.1 ;-.;komo of llw 1'.1triot11· Front. explained thl· hlad,.,' ;.ipproar.h, r1rnmpting liritish spokesman IJ.1rn1ltcm Wlntt• tc1 acknowl('<lge the ex1stenn• 11f · \t'I \ 1·on-.1clf•rahlto cltff1•11•nrt•., · h1·1\H•1•n th<· t\u1 ,.i.in ... \icaragua 1\id Cut 011 \\' \Slll'\G f'O:" rAP' Acting under ::r 1971i l.1w n•qu1nng human ru:t.t., v1olat1ons to be con -.1<ll'ri.:1l ,,. allol'ating m1hlurv aid Pre~1dent l":11 t1·r 1, 1·u1t1ng olf mll1tan a~'>1sl..tnl'l' 111 :"1l ,1r.ig11.1. but r 011t1nu111g 11 10 ~nuth l\orf..'<1. th .. l'h1l1pp111t• ..... tnd lndnnes1.1 I lw dt•1·1~1on.,, n·\ ,.all'd 11\ St.1te IJt!p<trt nwnr )'our,., ..... irt· c·ontmm·d in Carll'r s 1979 foreign .1111 h11dg1·1 Tht•\ ;ir1• ltkely lo d1sllppmnt somt• .sl· 11\l'ih \\h11 tont1•nd mil1tarv ass1s1ann· lo n•prt· ... sn 1· goH•rnm<·nls ckstroys the t:rcd1b1lrt~ 11f t ht• l'Xpn·~!-.c•d l' S comm1lment to human right-. Pl'BLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS aUSINESS HAMf STATEMENT f'lft\\ """' A J 4. ASSOC.IA•(<, AO'Vf ~I l'i.INl'.t 4 Pl'i "'°' Lap .. ortn C re.It HUnltnglc;,rt Jl1 41<" fAllforn1..t ·1e•6 A'' "c"ll A l40WO'IP\ (.ir 't (.dtlOf'f\•il-'}~ 'h' t.u-\lfot '\ ' I VI'( l'f"n I JQ' ••untinqtgn Ht cH"" of'\du<h d th Pt!BLIC' NOTICE f'ICTITIOUS BUSINESS> NAME STATEMENT T hf' foltowu'9 ~rwn d'" 11 ,.,'1 bu nt\~ °'" CML PROPEATtl~ "40 .. Ml• Borr~ '>I s..n1 .. And C.i 'r/1(11 JOll A Stuhlr1. MO NOtlh ... ' " ~· '><l~I~ ..... c.o "7•01 l 1""' R S,,""'1t·y 8A) ~.,,,., f\ • '1 ~I -..nl• A"4 (4 11101 't'it,, b J\1nf .. , ' ?t'f"lt t•I OMfre t"-•o•O JC.n P ~HJf'Ht'1 l ynn.-~ ~fvl"ih ., ,~., ' .... A Cf\drd A. JU•(h(t\ 1"•" l•l .. n1("' 'llllld" I 1 :(I {1'..;IJnl y <.ltt" er Or "f'l,.. C .-nu.u" 1' ''""' 1 f\t\ t.ttf'f'V"r.t w I\ I 1'1 .,.,.1n. t~ ni., n (Ovrtt' (I~'• n• O...,.,t.>1 (tH•"h rin '" •1 J'1•11 i:nou ..... ... P1,bl \flt ,t Or-tnOi (O.t\t O~''• P lrot Jdn Jt '"n r •n ' 11 11 t01fl PUBLIC NOTIC'F. FICTITIOUS IVSINl SS NAME STATEMeNT 'hf" tollow1nq O('f\On' '"' cta1no but,ln1·~1 a\ C.ALIFORNIA T·SHIRT't, 100! 17tll Slrf'~I C0\!.'1 M•~A CA 97621 Mire Sl~vl'n W•1\• 1101• P1,,..nur\1 Huntu>alOl'I Olt,'Kh CA t~ l v.in Clft11>rd Wl'I\,, .llHl c~anolllU\ So l •qun• ll••<h. CA 97'~7 1Can ... •111 ~ Au\I.,., 1160'! ""'°"" SI,~ l4'QUn.t 8'1 .. <11, CA "16\/ Th•> bu\'"'" 1\ llPl'1Q < or•ch.c trct t>y ~ o•n•ul N,_,..,,,., , (Y6nWH\\ Tf'H\. 't•tM'14'nl W4'\ 11•~ wttl\ t"4' r ounty C••rtl ot Or41nq. < (tul"lh o" January J l•lt ""'" WMIHy, ........ & n.•tcNr L••Ytrt 19ff $.tll J ..... 11Holl•11..0 Ntw .. rt a..cll, C.lllorftlil •-Publllhl'<I Or-COUI 0dtl• P•lol, Ja.,uary 10 11,7' 11 197A PUBUC NOTICE NOT1C& TO ClllDITOIU SU .. Rlllotll COUllT Ofl THC STATI Ofl CALl,,OllNIA "Vtt THS C:OUN'TT 0, OllAMOC. ... A-tJlat 0 18 E\l•I• of (ONA Y fAAl l(K, Otc..>9't4 NOTICE "H£ft£11Y GIVIN IQ I"' Cf'Nll«I fl/I Iha._"'""" •odtllt 11\ot ei1 .,.,.... ....,,no t1<Mt11\ ~'* • ........ ~-N<lllllfMlollle lllt"', wltll N __ , VOii(.~"-Ill IM ~ltct~tN<l«llef h ....... _ lllMd Cll\lrt, ar to Ill'-• tiw,,,_ .. 111 lllO 11KIU¥Y "9\l!:W'-.. tllt 11'1 ""'IMf •. "" ..,~ Of l>ltoOetlCll ' fo11, • I.•"' coroor•ll•n, J1Slt H•wtlltrnt 111\ld,, Suitt IOlt, Ter- r•"U• C1hlcrftle. litli<l'I it t"t P'IC• of bUMl'ltln Ill IN~'" •II fMI• "" llOtl.-fl'llfll 1• ........ °' Nftl-=. c.-nt, wllllifl ...,, "'°"'"' .r'" IN ""' P'll>llC9\19" 'II 1111\ f'Otl(• on.-.:1~,. 1•11 h-A r rllld JT DOMrc.4NWlllM tN.,,..... DK..,. DllO&ltlUtt f'Oll ...... (~ ,.,,, r.·.,,.,. ..... T-itllH, Coll fH: ltUI . ...., ......... l'HZAf Publ1ir,f\I d Or .,q.: Co.it\t Q,..11" f'1IOI ,." '1 14 'lt .. t>O •'11t'i 1\1 '°' rt'BLIC' NOTICE '4n f' ICTI flOUS 8USINESS NAM£ SUTEMIENT T,... fotlOWlf\O l)l'rWrt\ <tn· do•nq b4.l\•ne\'-.n IVERSON RANCH ltMITEO Oil Ntwport Ce"'•' Ottvf", Nf!WCh>"t 8~'< h, CA 92660 Wiflt•m It Co1por•t•on 1 C•lllornl• rorpa ... 11on. ~ Nf'wPofl Cf'<'l•r On..-.~ Be.Kii CA Lou1~ Stetllam. 1~•i w~,1 c.~, tonl. A,_.~U'r\ CA t7IOI J hi\ bu\tl'W'\' I\ <ondut.CHf n., llmlll'd P•rl""'\"'O w1111.., t 1 CortlOr•l•Of• Wttlt..-n 0 foot• Pf'r\10f!'f\I l Mi. 't•tf''""'nt wr. t1fed W•th t~f' County C••r .. ot Ot•"Of' Cou,.h ~"" J•ftu•ry 'r It/I AllA 01 .... .fo LAtooft. IE"I P4CHT. llOS$, WARNE 11-N"AllO&SEAllS INC Att•rM1' ft ~W I-A••-el llW s~-. Svtto IOI Let A~a c.I•-• _, ..... Jr P111>11\""" Or..._ COtt\I O•llv P1101 ''""'•'"" 7• lt ""° Ff'C)t~ry ' u ,.,. l•t •A PUBUC NOTICE .... 0..,. -~~·· .......... . "" ,..,, Cl DAILY f>ILOT t ft • The IJd'st ....,_plk9 on the Orwlc• CO&lt DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You can Se41 tt, Find th [ 642•5878) One Call Service Trade tt With a want NJ ~ast Credit Approval ""' hlatt I.mah ~.~~ ............. 1 ~~!!!!.~~~ ........ ~~!!!!.~~.~~ ...... . G.-rol I 002 GeMroJ I 002 EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY Publlsher's Motfce: All real estate advcrt1!!ed m this newspaper 1s .. ub Ject to the 1''£'<lt-ral Fair llousang Al"l nf l!llHI which makes \l 1llegol to advertise ·•any pre fereoce. hm1tallon. o ruscnminat1un b:.t~cd lll race. color, reli.i1on, :.ex or nauonal origin, or a 1ntcnt1on to makl' <1n) ~uch preferenC('. 1tm1ta uon, or dt!>cnminalaon " ••••••••••••••••••••••• DUPLEX J bedroom units $105,000 Pride or o•nersh1p. Excellent Costa Mesa Jocat1on Owner aniuous. 642-5062 C........, 21 Crocker MESA DB.MAR SPARKLER Completely redecorated and remodeled 4 hdrm home. Llke new kitchen ~1th trash compactor. water sortner :ind 1n tercom Asking S!r.?.500 To see lh1:. love!~ home call 546·5880 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• WALK TO THE IEACH DUPLEX Close to the beach. dean 3 & 1 Bedroom, carpeting. drapes, built-ins. 4 car el<'. BEAUTIFUL 3 BR 4 BA HOME LIDO ISLE on "idc Jot. large courtyard entry with tile fountain -includes separate guest quarters. $268,000 JACOBS REALTY 675-6670 2919 Newport Blvd. cOf'M'f' 30th SUPER STARTER Whv not start with an almost new home~ for UNDER SIX FIGURES? You can begin now by checking on this 4 bdrm near BEACH in lovely area. Ready for immediale O('t'Upanry ICoH 640-6161) HEW HALECREST LISTING Corner Jot \\. tth R\' storage. 3 Bdrm horn<.> on huge lot. Trees -trees S74.950. ICoU 546-41411 Serving Costa Mesa-Irvine Huntington Beach-Newport Beach ~!!!!.~~.s.'!': .. : ..... ~~!~!!.~~~~ ........ ~~~!.~~~ ...... J~:.~~.~ ....... ~~!.~~~~ ..••.... ~!.~~~ ...••••• ~ ...... tal t 002 G..-rot I 002 G ... rtil I 002 G._..el I 00 GeMt"ol I 001 GtMnl I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• A TOUCH OF NEW ENGLAND .you'll lo\'<' this n(•arly new home. JU~t & houst•s n·moved from Ocean Blvd. 1n CdM . H's an exceptionally sharp Nt•w England style 3 bdrm. & tormal dinmg rm .• also brkfsl. area There's a cozy frplc & all roor1JS have cathedral ceilings. It's fun. to sit on your patio & Vlt'W the blue Pacific. with tht• heaut1tul sailboats passmg by Oulv SIB9.~)()(). 759-0811 Fiut lba1t Guat Wr4ft11Jl 'BUg 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ESL EY N . ~YLOR CO REALTOHS sinc:L' HM MEW TOWNHOME FOtl LEASE Heauuful Big Cyn location! At end of t•n<:lost•tl c.·011rtvar<l with waterfalJ. 2 Bcclroorns. clPrl & dining room all ovt•rlookmg the pool. Cptd & draped. Tl'nn1s <"ts. pool & jacuzzi, $750 Mo. WESLEY H. TAYLOR CO., REALTOllS 2 I I I San Joaquin Hiiis Road NEWPORT CENTER, M.I. 644-4910 ~! .......... !?~~,~~~ .......... !~~ MANAGER-REAL ESTATE NEWPORT BEACH UCJd ISLE Newly remodeled 4 bdrm . den. 4 baths. living rm. w cathedral ceiling. Lge. ma:,ter bdrm. suite. $224,950 llG CAHY<* 4 BR. fam. rm., 3 baths. BeautifullV decorated Broadmoor Plan J w patio \'1ews from each room. $32.5,000 IAYNONTS Several fine bayfront homes with pier & slips BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 3 ·'1 Boy'>1d" 0flvt• N 8. o/•,. 6 161 I 00 GeMNI 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• WHAT A IARGAIMI Lusk Realty has to otr~r to new and experienced salespeople. •Receive top comm. •Incentive program •Guaranteed Sales prO· gram · • Ph.&1 much more .Ab M>M'd 2 Story 41r +Pool $72.950 Beautiful Surfside Garden home. Walk t beach. Take over $326 per mo. payments. No new loan costs. Hurry! Ca.ll 963~67 COZT, WITH LUDB> GUSS Newport Height~ pool home on a 75 x150' lot that 1s comty, cozy, clean and only $138,500 This 3 bedroom home I t·atun•s leaded glass windows, outstanding landscaping. a formal dining room and a covered patio. All in a quiet, family neighborhood withm walking distance to schools. A new listing at ju:-.t si:~.500 (Owner is a Realtor>-- U~IVUI: li()MI:§. REAL TORS"': 675·6000 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar alw m Mt>Sil Vt!rcl~. di 546-!>990 I call today for confiden uaJ tnterview. UH".I 111 'l•/I ~ llJl<l lt>HI fKI' THE REAL ESTATERS [~ VETS ~-~ ............................................. . l002GetteraJ 1002 ~ Ll ... l\.ll t<l\11\ 'f I • \ t!I • "• ' •• ... •• t °'"'' ........ ,. FIXER UPPER ~~-b':1~'d·r~~ t~~: *FREE* bath, needs paint and 11£. It's a money maker at $00,900. Call 540-11s1 GI II.LL INFO ~~.~ ... HERITAGE •• • REALTORS W&COME FHA-VA IUYBS UstofHome1 Credit lllfo -OM&. Y SU,500 Fresh paint. c1ean & Move in Free HARBOR VIEW LUSK PllV ACY -PRIVAC Y-.ntVACY This 4 bedroom haH•n 1s an executive reward green hills. blue Pacific. a home lo make 1t all worthwhile. Corona del Mar at it's best! 1436 Keyview. Open daily till sold. $259,000. 675·3411 L lJ S K '1 R E ,\ LT Y a .!11'111 n. l.usk & Son Co. 2') IS E. Coast Hwy. Corona de! Mor 1002 GeMroJ IOOJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• neat 3 bdrm, fmly rm bomeon tree hoed street. All Prices COROHA Good area. Close to SC'hools & shopping. All Areas DB. MAR After all the recent rams. 3 Huge BR. 3 ulc BA, ,\· pr1,m1• opporlunily \\Ith .111 you'UenJOYknowingthe TH£ den. dininl( rm. 2 '\ly. outstand111g real estate organization roof 15 NEW' Call quick· w/26' open beam rt>1I + high t•arnings' ExpNtt•nc:c is a ly ns this cao't last! mgs, tile entry, frpl<'. must J>n•sl1g1ous loeation All 545-9491. HOME STORE wet bar. laundry rm. I h J d oversized dbl gar. JOOI> ~HERITAGE • -· REALTORS .1 pp 1 t' .t t 1 on s (' t n st r 1 c.· t l's t Sq rt or very uniqu~ hv A DREAM HOME SUPER HOME t'onf1dl'nt'<.• PJ(•;.ts(• reply to Ad ~68. (coll 24 hours) wg space . MESA WOODS Bi~JlOOsq ft homew1th Dally Pilot. p 0 Box 1560, Costa 964-2455 $149.500 IMVESTOl'S SPECIAL $47,500 Guarded gateway pro· ll•l·ls lavish J:rounds with pool Secluded entry to l'xecut1ve l1v1ng room. !Sun:ihtne gourmet k 1 t t· h e n o v e r I o o k s private courtyard. Sw(.>epmg master bdrm & child's retreat. Owner LS anxious. Subm1L any offer' 847 ~10 NEWPORT lliCH HEWCOHDO SAVE $4,000 Spacwus living area central air, Cl!otral Mes,.1, ('J\ ~J2t12fi J"'COIS RE"'LTY Large kitchen family vacuum . .;1otomatic IUCHRETRliT "' '"""' Listen to waterfall in bur~lar alarm, ex $57,900VIEW 19461 Brookhurst 675-6670 atnum of( lan~e master pen:. 1 \' e u pg r a d c d Stepa to pound mg surf H B h '..JrlN 111y.11 (, 1ur-1 ro Al N:rt • Qrand new con · OOrJUJUUffi, JU8l \.!1 m1Je from ocean. !luge ma!>ter swte with warm wood cathedral ce1hng and bonus space for hideaway room w1lb possible ocean view. $9,000 Moves )·ou 1n. Hurry and tak<' advan tage, pll'ase rall 962·77118 bdrm, 4th bdrm is office carpeting & drapes G.Mrol 1002 G...eral 1002 and (T)'Stal sand' Back unttngton eoc LOOKING [® or easily converted Localed in fane area of ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• yard is bay area play· --------111 ror the best selection or .. lilliii"'61ii#IMI Profess1onallydecorated newer homes. fairly ..._.,..........,..._..~ --------•I ground. Wmdmg wooden homes. call the hec;t '=~~~~~~~ and landscaped. See to priced al $149,500. CALL CATALINA ISLAND S&S er•urv walkways to secluded en Serving the Newport ..::: believe 751-3191. Super view lot on•rlook· ~ try' Gourmet kitchen. area. ·---------• ' • inii Avalon-flat and m, • am rm. area plus flreplaC'e ~ 400[.1..,,.~fORlll. .SELECT 4Bedr 2balh f St~p-down conversahon 1• C.M ...... #. _ -• -.AIW PROPERTIES bwldahle. Pnced for fast ~o;~:~ <lj~1~~ ;ma. n ~ Sunsh1n~ break fast ..-=r . • --sale $41.500 patio. Pool·J· acuizi · landscaping. Sell~rs · · Investment Pr9perty PETE BARRETI t.ran.sr . must sacrifice voll('yball. Garden living Of"f~t11'>•1I ',,ri)N~.J t • • KEY DaUXE TRIPLEX Sales 1 -REALTY-for S96.500. at Its finest 841.$>10 spacious 2 BR. 2 ba . ~~~isa111~~n:~da1~s~~~ &4z.s200 lY11J6ffiaifEl§fllt\1 each with laundry area. Some college & sales ex· ~ 962·44n(r.::)546·8103 [~' .. ' . lo • ~ t.am all offers. Asking Balboa l~and Really $72,500. Ca 11 now! """ ""''• ,.., .......... " 4 IDRM + FAMILY J35x54' Lot. completely remodeled kitchen with DW. trash compactor, refni. Laundry room. • P• bath. $79,500. Call 546--5880 REALTORS ii patio, frplc .. & enc I. per. pref. 838-4921 garage. Co!'vement loc .. BRUMFIELD&ASSOC. ---------m East Costa Mesa. -IRVIMETERRACE Pnvale Beachel>. go with tlus 3 Br 2 Ba Carlsbad By The Sea Home. Cozy fplc, nire Family Rm. .and DlSTRESS price of $15,000. Call. WALLACE & Co. REALTORS 7 l4-729-59'6 $185.000 BROKER <Hea11$ of CLove This Valentine's Day send your love a greeting all the world can share with a Daily Pilot Heart of Love Its ~asy. compose your personalized greeting & we II set your message in type to fit the border of your choice or your own handwritten thoughts may appear m the border you select Borders come In 3 sizes: $15, $10, & a special child's size for $2. (You must be under 12 to qualify for this one). tf you wish to create your own greeting. use a black pen & write your message in the heart below or draw your pwn Valentine of this size. associated B PO KERS--R E~lTORS 20]~ IV 8olbon O' I lf)t., Custom family home Wllh Spanish na1r on rec land. 5 Bedrms 4 bath. formal dining room. family room. brick fireplacP. swimming pool, large corner tor $244,!IOO 644-7270 ua .. 101Df!thin1 to s~ll? aa.tfied ads do it well. POOL HOME!! $58,9001! VA TERMS Tremendous 3 Br home w/overs1zed Cam rm & massive brick (pie on quiet, secluded St. Seller must move in a hurry & will entertain any reas. orrer. SEAVIEW IYOWHSt New, Comer Bar Harbor 3Br, aba, 2 atriwna Family rm & ? frpJc '• 180Deg. view. $250.000 ··- ~ ,. 1 · I I~ ' .• ' . J.C. Mcnlt R.altors 673-8700 ~ ... HERITAGE VIEW 4PlEX Spaciou.-. units w /btfl m- te r i ors Low main · tenance Bit-i n ap· plianc~. Redwood ex t.erior & attractive cedar int.erfon. Ocean VIEW from2 units. 646-7711 54CJ.510 I NEW FHA NISIDEMT HOME Huge family home in the hills of Turtle Rock. 5 bedrooms, family room, large yard, sprinklered & lighted. Near recreation center with pools & tennis. Night lite view across Santa Ana Valley. $215,000 ~ 644-1766 2111 Mlf JOAQUIN ttlU.S AO • ......... ,.c:unu ,,. REALTORS Open Daily 1·5 I 526 HlcJldaftd. MB Sir S 184,500 107 "A" St, lal Petl 3 Stry $265.00() 4604 s~astMwe ..... Dphr s 175.000 WATf.RFRONT HOMFS REAL ESTATE 631-1400 mecnab I Irvine realtg SUNSHlME HOME! HAUOR VIEW HOMES! Palermo model featuring enough upgrades to make it a Great Home in a Great Community' (G-102) SUPEAB MOMACO LARGE lot in HARBOR VIEW HOMES. One of the best streets in Phase II(I Don't miss this if you're a Monaco buyer! <G-103 > CARL BUTLER 642-8235 '42 .. 23S 901 Dover Orlw Set:~}A-&"E~s· Thal l•trlgulng W Old Game witlf a Cboclle _____ ,.... ... a.T t. toUM----- 0 ...,... ...... "' !tie ,_...........,_. .... f. low lo ,_ ,_ ..... _... .1 I. KEICED I . I I' 11 I I _ 0 IL AT I I' J I TUOAL I I J' f .. • Hew.Ht for s HowsH For s• Hoc.tHS ~ s• Ho.ia•s For Sc* • HOUHI For s-. HouHt For Sdt DAILY PILOT •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• G..-.. IOOZ C..... de04cr I 022 •• .. •••M.•••'°•••••••••I ~~.~ ......... 0 .WJt••••°"•••hoc••••h•••'•0•4•0• LOIJll'O ho~h I 041 LOCJ11fto .._h I 041 ~4!'!~~.~~.~~•••••••• ~~~.~~••••••• •••••~!.~.~•••••-' •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• S6S Resale Speciah.sts ............................................... LogMna HlC)IMI I 052 Hewpwt hoch I 06t s..t.AIMI Io&• "t FOUR,LIX Seit s~odable in gn•al Coe.ta ~e:\a hx:1tl1on All 2 bedroom urull> with new punt & l' arJl4)ts l''u II y 0t cup1~d . Full prire $154,900 CAU. SS6·Z660, COtl~=::~:AI CH;~ ~OllT 3,4 or ~ bdrm models ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• t 2 Ddrm .. 1 t>.lh houae 378 Broadwi.y $7-t,OOO !!-Jl;,.,some w/pools Cbannio1new31kdrm+ LOWEST "!!_Nl~~RSliE .... R~CH. ! h AJtSM-4856 ........_ den. 2 bath, tam-rm. PRlCF.lNNEWPORT .. l °"' ,,,..,.. eren ! C:SELECT T' PROPERTIES --- CAPE COD ~53.000/$2.1 so TOTALDOWH W1ndinf! roadway t~1 :soann.: z story rt•treat' P'nvate !(rounds prolN'l ~eluded enu·y lo lav1'>h II' 1n room (;ourmct k1tche O\ l·rloob liUn· '>hlne c urtyurd' Wmd 1ng st· rway kad~ to SW«*PI ~ m1:1Sll'I l>drru plu:. t tld '!> rl'lrt•at ' flurry' · •lll'f I'> 11nx111u~ 847-601 ., ' w1l " "ue11l u111t1t P~on Properties A C, French drs. pvt 2 BR. 1 BA, dbl. Wltle lack rm. pony run.., • 5l7~.uoo. QUIET LUXUIY front courty•n1. $123,000. mobile ad u It park. $72,000 642--nS& • HORIHS lli.L TY Cul-de-sac in prtme •ru. GLEMMAR <>wner. IG\·7098 "'6.~ Call 67S-U:J2. Be CAPTIVATED by t.tu * 494-8057 * Air condltloned, ear•&~ Exec. Home. 4 Br + HA.LPIHCHIN M(OO prtce reduct lo1t : d t "Gentlemen's" den Sup---L a~· I. REALTOR d oor opener, secura Y Beautifully appointed. c..-v Comtemporarlly e-~ Soutll of H windows &: doora. cov· L 8 h 2 cor'd, central air, S. C1t • wy ered patio. sprinklert> &: Tot•I A/C. Vacant " OCEAM VIEW ~~ ~ith ~lltand A 401 IOAT SLI, Plaza area. Sacrifice iUr' S 139.500 lighting. Hurry•~ 2313 ~~ti~C· -'·950· ,w, tr•" -0 li""htf I I d at d h 11th 1n., view or ocean & city comes w Ith th i a $19.500. Hurry "call: V: An ahllolutely charming C"''"'' 9 '''''v"''0~1 "' '' ,... ... n. ,....,.;>;JVV 1 .. u' newiy tcor • CJ li~hts. T"t1tlly r" waterfront home over Vl!:RN J OHNSONRLTs • bed.r p t [ ! Tudor wtth sptetoc.-lcr North cooatol view .. v "' ~1th :a~Ju.n1 h~~!~ ~ 1m~:U;1l! 8~~~~~~11~r it~~~!: I n h I 9 h I y d • • I r a b I • n • I 4J h -!~~~~ &d!r:'a~•c01:~; ~~!i. V' ;;.~8~ fa1rg~ SCMlfh L=646 1016 OooM Owner occupied ~ ~~!!1'!! ing Rm. S 109,900 ~ • • • $152,000. $164,500 <251 patio & close lo liChool11 ........ ;;';;';-; ....... . Cortver and in xlnt cond 963-8377 Bkr. • 497.333 f too' thru·uut. 2 f<'ull double -, -----,JOliift · Magnificent 180 degr gara~t.-:;(Notllmdt!tnl.A NewCondos,2Br.2·"lHa, CHEAHST• C\Ot'Tll LAGl'N\ !MN\ IM aauail ~ ocunvu2br.1"4baa rl'ul doll housl• offl"red 2 frp1c·s. cerami(' tile Cond H 8 2 • Bd rn LAGt'"-JA !':IGl'~:r. l'OINT Plac• . nr beach, adults $89,500 for the rmit llnw Ill oHr lutchef)S & bath. Pool & ' f 0 ,in r'H ~ l mr -t!l!l -4551 !fl.).)720 111:18812 Pr Owner499-2004 spa 67lMIH28roker "' rp c " er s. Dp•rti•a -------l2 Vt•ar!I. -/\gent 546-0051 7.52-l920 T1atill I OtO' c~:,:~;~;~,11 HAHDYMAN·s t4000U•tlST NIWP<>tfll•CH •••••••••••••••••••••• IY OWNER I iM 1044 l"IM 1044 WHITIWATER 2 Br I'~ Ba condo, eood DREAM HOME Pr1d~ of ownershlp " • ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lalw~t 1055 ., ...... VIEW Tustin Location. Cntrl, home. 1ood loc atlon, ••••••••••••••••• ••••• ••••••••••••• • •• • ••••• • OC110A...... dbl u 1 • l . fo~n~aes~~nd:~~~l~:~~ 3Br, n.Ba. dbl garage. JUST USTID! WOODBIUl>CE PLACE SELLING at COST' New ::·v~in·~~~ Xhft e::~ "C m~ a large workshop at pnced below market. at Very de!IU'able 3 bdrm., Special oHering. J 5 Warmmgton in Wood!!. 2 Story duplex. choice focil. for children. -h 8 $65,000. 5021 Pheasant familyrm.,Planlinone bdrm Contempor.1ryde· 2500 s.f, under warr. West Newport location. $56,900. Ownr/Agt. -ome. lg separate Q.rcle.~S74S of best areas of tached family homes 1n $145,000 Covington RE Fantastic inveslmeot 832-8752 L =~~~~~~~~ 111--------•1 building m back t>utlablc 0 ,....n, woodi1y design. 7,,., .. 106 potential! $300.000. ----------: PANORAMIC for mechanic, wood SI l.400DOWN Turtlerock. Deh&hlflll .. ~ I l k & uo-o VAWY 640 9900 worker, elcctr1c1an, or terraced yard• inner Just short wa k lo a e .......... rt•---"' I 069 -OIMt' RMI Estate . TRIPLEX 'PRESTIGIOUS ..\REA Rare Jn\'CStmenl op porturu1ty. Easy to keep rented as tenants can w.ilk to all lihopp1nj.(. sehoob dose by /\II un its ha,·t• private pul10~ & ~l'paratc laundry rm'> Ownt>rli unit has frpk OCEAH & ISLAND ASSUMES VA alrium with waterfall; parks in Village of Wood· rwwpoi ~ 1• ii] VIEW ~~t.er hurry! Call Ocean close-beauty. close to pools & tennis. bridge. f'rom $115,000. ••••••••••••••••••••••• \<t~ ·;;,;,;;;;::,:.~••••••••• Hare 5 Bdrm sm.:le story Shi.Ile roof, near new Asking $112.500 S52 1101 BALBOA CONDO . R~\ EstO For Sale I I OQ Lu~k home '" Harbor ~ ~~~·R~·t;;~7s1~~ea,nd C. F. CoJ8SWOrth~ BUILDER'S :e~:"ytf;:;et~1.c°t::,~~ •••••••••••••••••••••••, \'ww 11111:; with lovely nr., ....... VllW CJ 1 Bdr M b"le C'ourtyard t:ntry and 3 • !>.11-5800open eveningi; REAL TOIS 640-0 20 CLOSEOUT slip avail. Full sec. bldg. ._,.._" ean cozy m o I t·ar "aru"e on tree lined lnt1 RE Network IN IRVIHE May exchange for units COHDO, RB>UCED home. To come see call " " ~ ..... IOR 1 .a.111E $99,500 Owner/ A~t STHOUS ....... DS $ 541·95 __ 13 _____ _ low truff11· stn.'el ... c-.. --Only 4 pal o homes left ~" Call 644-7 21 I Pr i me w at et fro 11 l One 2 Br. t'wo 2 Br +den °15 7520 ---Reduct:d for a fast aare. Acreocie far Sal• 1200 FOHDETr\ILS LIKENEW OPEHIYOWHER townhouse, belov. & one JBr plan. all w 2 QUICkSALE Va<'anl & seller 1s anx ••••••••••••••••••••••• COUEGE PARk Seabreeze condo $75,000. market. By owner bath!!, Crpk. rt>fr1gerated 58 HVH Sl7.J 500 1ous. Beaullfllt 2. br end 510 Acrei., Nev. City, Completely redet 4 br, 2 3 Bdrm <Master Down l 494·0536 air cond1t1onini.:. rn lr a:-~:::~r 759 o1<1j 0~ urut w/fplc Community CahL 110' Miles No. of ba pool home with new Cumt•I color cpt thruout ------rort.>d wardro~ doors, 2 644•7783 pool, saunu &jacuzzi. Al Sacramento. Reduced~ eqwp. All new rarpel, Ga!! log Cireplate. 2 Very AVAILABLE tar g 11 r w / a u to 2214 Por*Carlisle Pl thLS pnce it won't la11t! Sl250per acre. Gold miqe custom paint, dbl frµle & pnvate encl. patios & al· opent>r plus full rt.'('rl!a Hurry' Call64.5·0303 started 1955, timbe~.,. Mo'< oo thu. 00< Cull to ~ day 54~·9491 S I (~l\'lfi!i!JiitiJj ~ manynewxtras $8!1,900 tchd 2 car gar. Sauna, NOW t1on facilities incld'g II BY OWNER beaut. bldg. sites . • 024 438 Pnnreton, Ry owner pool&spa 962-0224 lighted tenrus courts, :! 'fermll. Rllr (71.fl CostoMHa 557-3344Eves L pools and a pair of Spacious Executive 640.1127or568-3974. FORE ST E OLSON ....................... -HmituMjtcwt A beautiful Bnarwood jacuzzis. All this and home. 5 Bdrms, 4 bu OCEANFRONT MESA DEL MAR MANAGER Hc:wbiw' 1042 Model in lbe Woodbndge Irvine too! On Irvine w/view 10 prestigioUli By owner, 4 Dr & 2 llr, on Lowe:;t pnct:d 4 BR + ••••••••••••••••••••••• Patio Homes. HJgbly UP· Center Dr. <Moulton Dov~r Shores on Galaxy ._ .. ~-~ """r fl•A1 •0M• FfVEACRES ... South ol Corona on pave4 road. Good roe lot spilt.• Broker. sand, nr Balboa Pier. <kn&: check t his new Mu"l be member of JUSTLISTB> gradedingoldtonesand Prkway)JusteastofJcf. Dr.646-2332 --------- "'1tbke oHer or su~m1t paint.ncwl'arpet,trailer Newport Harbor/Costa Harbour Lane 3 Br, 2'B immaculately matn· freyRoad IMf Monaco 3Br, 2Ba, SE.AVIEW Jrade. 548-7219, 559-4221 acccs:; wlslab. A must Mesa Board with M hlli· ba end unit w/'lA' boat t.ained. 4 bedrooms, 'tn· $66,99Sto $76.995 xlnt cond, else to scb.l & Upgraded, New Bedford :>l't! this one. Offered at Lory of success in real !ilip. Super sharp! level. Priced right at Call551·1.263days pool$1J6,500.&40-l440 3Br,den,fam.rm.,view, 6T1 ·5691 (714) · or 522-0530 Corona del Mer 4 022 $81.900 &oiler motivated. estate sales-ror details SlSS.OOOCall now. $119,900. or 551-1.341 eves. $245,000. By owner.•--------- ••••••••••••••••••••••• Open ~4~:l666 ~::h~huck Nash at PU~~!fl"~~LTY fjl $74,000!!! BAYSHORES <m·~ OWNER ANXIOUS NEAT 4 BR. Plan 5. SEAVIEW BESTvtEW Present all offers on this CHARMER SUPER BUY!! I nicely lndscpd: on cul de New, upgraded 38r + 1.97 acre fantastic view In old Cobdrona.2 b1mh ~:rs~lta;~~gp~~~! :i lllcMdLocaffon ~nc. nr. lrvmekllS1gh & $170,000 FR at builders price rpanrocphesr1.ttey.BrXoklnert. mint• -4Tlaculate 3 rm.. al 4 Bdrm • 3 b a t h Heritage Par . uper C t 3 B tt g Fo m $250,000. 6444597 "' homl', 1dl'al for hom1• or ownership 3 bdrm · waterfront with 45 ' dock. location! u e r co 3 e. r · ---------671).5717 (714) ~ -.stld unit for in\'t•sl E.a.STSIDE home. move-in condi· $329.000 EVELYMCOPELAMD d!Ownnrmr.aCexn1·oturals mlo~uktJeoonJ. S.CNnwnte 1076 ____ 0_R_S22_·_2080 ___ _ ment Outstunding bin ~ tton. Great Mesu dl•I Mar PURCELL REALTY WOODIRIDGE e n . . • $1 000 COST"' MES"' local.ton $83.000 REAL TOR 552-0434 fer! 645· 7221 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Elsinore area. Tht" 1100· <it 38· "' "' T BEACH (7141846-2848 RE.ALTY IEACH DOLL HOUSE Acre Hammock Ranch REO HILL UINkrCondrvction HEWPOR 551-3000 Ran('ho San Joaquin. 3 Walk to R1Vlera Beach. at $1200 per acre. flE.AL TY 544-4900 BUYEHS' CHOICE OF REALTY 6 75-1642 --I 044 Br. 21, ba. lauod rm. ,...~ •"' On natural canyon with Partially sub-d1vidE: ---------1 COi.OHS' Custom 3 -16 U .... ITS * ~':':~••••••••••••••••• SAVE w1 ektbar. f<'antaU~tJc padrkd& \...l"l 1IU1r'21 ocean view. 3 Br, 2 ba, 173 ea 11.-. acre lo bt>droom, 2 bath home * " G t H m ton u c 'll'W pgra e · -cr:mrn-with extra ·~ lot. Never +larger pcs. Ma VINE'S r een r ee. a P $132,500 by owner. COZY 3br. 2ba + ~uest with Circplan• & ft.>ort·d 6 MONTHS N l!:W" JR model, 5 bd 3 ba, many 0.,., poc: TM again at only $125,000. w/vtew. Family Es tloust.-Frpl, 2 patw~. R 2 yard rn lovely area' Fully occupied upgrade 15 • Listed _°""""' __ ...,.,_ WHtdiff lieattY sale w /terms. All...,. ·fot Pnn. only $1~7.000 $9'<!,500 Under $41,000per unit BEST BUYI $1~.900. buy from owner PRICB> RIGHT Wll.liams, Casa Pacifi~? Uwnt!r, 640 7030 STUART FtME • $105,000. ~ LCICJlllMI Beoch I 048 60 Ft. bayfront, 4 BR, den, San Clemente's foremost Rlty770-0882 I IQuail ~ TOR 631 545.a ~--'--------••••••••••••••••••••••• pier.on Peninsula " B .aEDUCED! Xlnl cond. Each unit 2Rr. tba. $156,000 by owner 49'7·3516 I Terrific Two~me t ' \ r . J, ( . I ..... vs 9045 lOY2-24~ "" 1fT Mi '-··Tlf "-1\j'._ lUNl IN lo the lrte, relaled feel1111 of • IOOle tun~ °"" pull oe1 pa•ts. Use Sime COIOr « contmt bindtfll. Pnntld Paltlfl\ 9045; Hall Sim tOK. t2~ 14~. m~. lH, 20*. t2*, 24i.. S111 14~ (bust 37) -1 114 ' yatdt •s.-.; 111nis 2 311 ~ ... 11.11•• ....... ................ _ .. lrtMllll ............. -· M1AllAl'nl Plac• 1-REAL ______ • __ ., Beautiful Plan 106 in tbe RmREMEHT Mar&hall Rltr. 675--4600 value. "Cantamar· 4 r. C:UW rcial p ...-t" t: a 11 r or n i a Homes . LEASE OR HAVEN family home on cul-de· ,..;p.rty 1600 rap1s2-1!~• ,500. Jo'eatures incl: Added LEASE/OPTIOM 2 Bdrm 2 bath Condo a 4-Plex. 100Wnl. frdo~ ocean; = Jt°yrnf!u ~~~~:O~~ •••••••••••••••••••••••• 1400 QUAil ST HlWH>At 1uc14 forruly room, central air. t ·• · $248,000 I an · oC outstand..in' . g features.•11"~•-..,., ... ..-t Beach. Owner.. Aff d bl I ,. Live in Uni versl Y short wa''-to i..-acb re M hall RI 67" ~""" ,....,,...,.... Two-Ways Smart! Or a e Mw;t see to appreciate. ... .,., • · ars tr. ..-.vuv will"-·-2 ere • °'""'Ced at only $83,900. Park's Village I JI m a Urement & downtown. Transferred, a.akini only .......,nextceto. ~°:i':iroat • Huge pool, patio area for ,..., super condition Oxford $79,950. B I · G C A N Y 0 N $154 500 prop. • summer fun! Lots of ~ townhouse. New paint, .... ORl.,,.S RE.AL TY TOWN HOM E 2 Br. BERTHA HENRY l950,000 " $500,000 hit decking area, fres hly carpets and drapes. " " Greenbriar, upgraded. REALTORS pr. Both have oll•lreet painted.3bedrooms,dln· ~ FeatUN!S4 BR. 2~ BA, •494.8057 * Se<:unty644-4.298 215Del Mar "92-Cl21 ~j=e=9'71M9M~-lng, family room. Traller . minimum yard care. ---- parking. BKR, 54(H720 Owner will take 2nd TD I 80de«Jf'H VIEW A STEAL! SEASCAPE CONDO Dudftes/ .,( or lease or lease/option Catalina sunset~. & cit> Newport Beach Condo, 2Br, & den or 3Br, highly Oalh Sale 1801)• TARBElL property. $600 Per month lights by night. 3 brm 2t, $83,500. 3 Br 212 Ba. up gr d • d. Owner •••••••••••••••••••··~ lease,Sthousandoptton. ba. Dy ownr. Only meadow-hke surround· purchased another & •NEW 4 PLEX• ~ RANCH REAL TY Offered at$114,500·fee $134.500 499 4685 evens mgs. Beautiful i.un!'ets, must sell now! $99,000 HARBOR BLUFFS 551-2000 seller motivated, call Lockbox. Hurry call HUNTINGTON BEACll $58,900 WOODIRIDGE Masterpiece _494-8035 831-9411 960-4370 2 bdrm. Brk. 631·2246 PATIO HOME Breathtaking vu of t·vn & i.ea Pool rm, 1acu1.z1. 1 _________ 1 garden entry & mon·. :J $77,777.77 3 bdrms. Brk. 631·2246 BOND REALTY Duplex 2 Br 1"'2 Ba, each, good Costa Mesa loca- tt on. $92,500. Agt. 960-3900 bednns. Ideal for family & entertainment. lncwProperly 2000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• EASTSIDE CULVERDALE SlSS.~000 (625/liii) WESTCLIFF $11 950 OWN stig1ous area. 3 Bdrms., ,_ c...-f"llWW"lllflnl •2 Triplnes• CONDO OFFERS ' i Beautiful home in pre· .... _ t.--~ .... __ ..... _.,. 2 Bdrm End Unlt, 2 car1.,..;.~~~!'!!!!!!!~~===~i 111· 11'1 den. 21h baths ; Jge. B ho i h NearLakel>art. Min._. gar. Pvt yard. Almost ~.....1~au4Ufbedul Plan 4~ • ,' service porch. Tastefully Big 3 Br, 2 a mew t bch. 1 ~so 3 ba,· 1 .. B~ new. Owner very aox· .eal.Wwg rooms ... -----·-... ~. ted •· I • 0 CE A N VI E W . ~ • ., ..., f ll ~a ... super c ean. Co let I remod l d 2' .... ba·, 1·3 BR, 2 ba. ious-very motivated separate am y room mp e Y e e . Ta and very mad cause tt al110 has decorator $1.~EW,ORTIEACK ownerw/carrycontract, garages, frplcs. $185,ootl hasn't .sold. Asking carpets&drapes.Asking ---------Sll,950 total dwn lnchld· each.1709-1713Alaba~, SHJ.900. LIV£ IN only$97,500. 4 IB>ROOM REALTY 675·1642 ing closinlJ costs. See to Huot. Bch. 636·171 ~ Newport Pier RJty . tlJ· PLUS LIDO ISLE. lmmac 4 BR. d~~~Tot~I ";,':r~e 1~0t~ Owner. :., C .. 673-2051 UNIVERSITY PARK IOHUSROOM JBA.Largelot.Termsto S119.500ormakeoffer. 7UHrTSC.M. ;i Sensationally loc~tcd :.uit. $249,500! Agent Tff( HOME SJQR( Beautiful brand new 4-1 near ~chools, one mile lo 548~ bt. lotl. £/p. 3.2 br. 1 VA t>.J Asking only $89,500 for beaches & manna. Open ---------b 11 bl S' , CUSTOM th1~ 2000 sq ft .. 4 feehngw1thlotso£views. Charmmi:NewportHts.3 96j2455 town ouse, • tn :'_~f & I blk tt" crpta, drps. Hurry, b~. USTSIDE bedroom.2storyhomein 3 Car J.?aragc arge Br. ram .rm. 2 ba, 2 s ---------now . lsl user depre~I 3 br 2 ba. New kitchen. t he Pres l i ii o u s RANCH REAL TY family room. $139,SOO to N _e w Port dB a Y . s-Ju. Tom Lee. Rltr. 6'2·1603 ~> Stainglass.Oak~.F.P. Umverts1tyParkareaor 5512000 Tropical gar ens. Capistrano 1078 Super lot Trees. l>eck & Irvine. • i:ar.ebo. Ask for Dan or •••••••••• •• •••• •••• ••. 4 PLD-IUCH • t b Q C Frank, agt, 540·3666 F ... ...,,. ... STIC $115,000 \ hot tu . uiet otr ~ DramatlcExechme.3BR """'"" S99.SOO. OwnerM2-1730 2 Ba. Dining Rm & 3 M~:~~~~:e11az.a days. evs 545-2549· OCEAN Is MARIN~ Xtra sharp Covingtost• On Private Lake Must ~ Library, prof lndscpd 496-7222 131 0836 $129.000 VIEWS 4"plex. Prime H.B. loca,-• see, nr So. Coast Pl\lza. 2 w/ligbta. Close to 30acre1------··-1111111 GOIMG OVEISEAS from this large S BR tion. lmmacl N~ fa; story lake front, pro-lake, fl11b, swim, boat.iii, ----------i MootegoH.V.H.,4brm,2 borne. Located on ~1·705$185,000. 7SZ.17004t fesaionally decorated,· & pvt l>!ath. Ca GllAT ESTATE ba, ram rm, nu crpta, lg private lot ln preaUgiou.a 't:fN1119•11 rn.1Nro1tN1CJ•, central air. 2Br, 2Ba. Patrlck,n.a .. 5524'14 o~11o.1r-1 yd wooddeck Al c l • ~ ~;~i:~;~{j~c!~:i"t ~~=TY s,c!:t.': Br+ ~ ~~~entl::~ :.::;..~~;.:: ~.~::HOs·:::~· 1fB.· .-.. ·.]EIJ~ll "" ~ clbh se. By owner. ---------•1am1J.y,quletatreetclose plore,nlcelydecorated, ~ _.,... -----·-·-~ iut-ftl.d, O~ $125,000. S58·4187 or top&rt.Newdrpe eardr near beach. Now 4 Bedroom,2bathinfre· IMYISTMEMTS -, S56-042l If You're opor, brick wort6more. $175,000. sUgious West cl f f. tumM T I t ...... •--------• lk l D aaa e~os SCHULZ"LEER E Formal entry open to 17141496-7711 IODELUXEU..a~ • M mt 5 OP inoton new! MANSION & INCOME .. .living aloa.e and 1 e t )'S ., • • ; e\IU, • large living room with "" ~ Hpecially '" bold multlcolonl Eastaide huge old redone that way, then you11 love ,_m_-5Z38________ 31616 Coast Hwy ' brick fireplace, fully up· ---------1 Slx-2 Bdrm. 2 ba • ... ~~~lu~he': .::~~\0 Q:~: 3 br, den, 2 ba. Bach apt this 2 bdrm .. ~~a .• 2 S. Laguna 499·2281 ft rad e d kit c be n. llG HOUSE! Two-3 Bdrm, 2 b•. h:ah Of Ion& ~ w1th1w1tll over big 1aragc. Lui(~ or paUo, Peten Townnome. CAUf. HOMES ~ Hlh I OSO landscaped yard. fenced, LnTLE PRICE! Huge 4 Two-1 Bdrm. 1 ba • oul collar use· sftlthet1c "°' avocados ready to pick. Pro<ea~lonally decorated ••••••••••••••••••••••• fruit trees. vegetable bdrm, beautiful gardens. Pnde of ownership. T~ 5ted Pattttn 7!166· MtSw. Loads of character. In colors you ran live POPULAR 104 LSSUIEWORLD garden, 2 car arage. 2 Pat lo~. timed shelter appreciation . Sim 10 12. 14·16 included. $11~. 000. Own r I All wil.h. and hve with. and " $140,000. Owne /Agent. s pr Ink l c r ~ • h u ~ e $37 7,500 15'';. Down 64.2-0282 hve with! Sll2,900 t'\nall)', • chance to 1et 6n-7460 bd HSL IEATTY. l de all" localed 3 in! 3 Bdrm .• 2 bath & _____ __.____ separat~ master rm R--M--64 ... ..aoec 1 brand new hilltop unit. • suite. Pnvacy. All up· ~ _.. ~ .. bedroom with forrnal Expansive views of the 1be fastest draw m the graded. Only $75,950. dlniDI toom Plan 104. vallev. -".900. • West •.• a Dally Pilot R E 0 C A R p E T Asking only $83.SOO . ~1 ....., .. .,. ... tfV'\RS ....., '"775 Burry,Hurry! HORINS REALTY Classified Ad. Phone1_~ __ ,~_v_ ... _ ...... __ •I •494-1057* _M2~·5e'78~-----~-1 -~~~~~~ -------• .Mlwpwt IMdl I 069 Nlwpai'tleoclt I 06t Loveb' ~t lrt l•m rlQ •••••••••• .. ••••• .. •••• .......... ••••••••••••• w/ttpc. uv rm, cUo rm ....... ••••!!llllllllll!ll!!!!i!m••••llllll 8ltn chiAa cloeet. Prof CE deico-I ca.r far. Yf old • OlrDcr'. 'TIM183 . 9t.arbr Homo-Wb1 Con· do? C)irner lot 88? 2ba f7t,OOO Co•lntton RE 1-..i.06 llDBll ILlllS CO. ov~ 60 YeAAS OF SERVICE . Fourple~ CM, $1SO,OOO ~ Fourplex Cl!, $153.00Q:! to Unii. S~ $185.,000 10 Units SA. $190,00C> ~=.~:~ Avocado/aubdl •iaicua $10,000. 541).8) Alt. . I I OAil V PILOT Tueec!ay, JAftull) 3t, 1t7t .._ .. , Uafwal.a.d Hou1t1 Uafunllthecl Apa t .. ta u.tw.. .,_ '*"'' Ullfw1'. .A.parianh Unhra. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1421 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• °"'"'luUst• Mc t•o.wt. Hu1"U.....,st.d BT_.. 3%3 2 ~'-ach 3241 ....................... ••114111 3102 eo.t.W... ll24 l._.114•1Hda U40 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ___.. 24 0 0 • •• ••••• •. • ••. •• • • •• • •• ••••• ••• •••• • ••••• ••... ••••• •••••••• • • ••• • • • • • CK:EA.N"Flt.ON1' J..ae. 3 Br ............... ••• ••••• •••• •• •• • •• ••••••.,.• • • • • •••••• •••. •••••••. •. ••. l rr1.,eiy 1 000 ....................... C.W .. M.. 322 2 New 3 BR, 3 ba., frplc., 2 Ba, ideal for nUred GNewlandSt.(Gal'deo M APIMIS Exctmlve 28rcondo ut· ••••••••••••••••••••••• vc:n:,_t Moblt. Home ••••••••••••••••••••••• Webave allsliesbomes& ocean view; blk. to people. Sml pe t Grove)BeauWulZbdrm tl!rS28S.IBr$3SO.Some edMrell pool lflfln;,1 1,1 Pl.IDI O P (A7'4E>, Ma.SJ (H78) z BR. 1 b•., frpl, be1tm Condot _rrom ~· Call beach. North Lagunu. Bclco:ie· Imperial apt s in .x 1 n t w /garages. Pool, mile to'bch. 'Adil'& Jnly OUA...IBSHIP SU,&OO . Beautifully ceil., pvt putio $47~ A~t Wday Casa_Paclf1ca RI $750Mo. eac • 10 man to nelshborbood. Private jacwz.i. Adults, no pels. ~/mo Mr or Mrs ..,.,. . landscaped, bl view tot, 497•331118 ~ ty. Tl~ Aeeot49t·'1Ml Con?nadc> 11., 15 dwntwn patJo view from lovely ~ d.a11y. ~ Harl• Hat l' h. 8 •1;,. 2 5 ti 3 · makethl.aunsquetn·plex Palm t'H11ert. Call for S.Diego.$450 493-1~ kitchens; eoclad Ave. C.M. (Mesa Verde (213)Si2·1.53lEvea ' uoe ot the beat values ln 1:1ppt. Rltr, t7l•) 6'0-ll2'1 Coodo, nearly new, 3bn>, Tup of World! 3 BR, 2 ba, i a r a 1 " 1 ; p 0 0 1 ; Dr E. on Harbor Blvd).•--------- .Oana Pomt .. E¥l'ellent 0t·568-3l>'T• upgraded:, offere~. for ruceocean view! lmmed. Apatawnh hrnlsllled clubhouse; 00 ~. $3lS M9-26CT a..,..MlglMll 1152 tax aJwltcr w1th Cupit~l · rent. with poss.Ible lse occupancy. $495 Mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo Ca11Carol~7343 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• OIWlpotenllal f,al!>,000 At Snow Summlt, Bl1t opt. C.11 640-6828 art 7 494.3433 day1; 496-9346 e.o.adelM• 3722 • 3Br,Zbaapt.Quiet.art"a. icel'2BRS26S&u .Nu NORIMS REALTY Bear, furn. townhouse ~9'JOOAgt.. eves ....................... P1n1M• 3107 New cpta/drapes. $325. ldda/pelb. $50. otf l st fad.Qi aid alopea Great . . ••• .. ••-•••••••••••• •• l'h 751·9905, 536-41-44 • * 494-1057 * Nltal record. l'~rtners H.tiwgtCllla..ca. J 240 Lace forest 3255 lbrmclose-m,uUl.incld., yrly 2 br 2 bu 2 mosrent.83J-1Til6 :1phttio1&, must s e l l. CLASSY .;:; .......................................... patio, gar, remodeled. ~. 2 ·car ~cl. a~r. THIS JS THE PL~CE! Hewpotl .._.. 3169 NEWPORT ~.SOO. or trade for local GUEST UNIT Elli..IJOY Exec 5 Jlr home .. Woods. 8l5-7"47 BalCOQy. Nopeta. Lge li'oal unit in triplex, ...... ••••••••••••••••• HEIGHTS property.642·9666 Newly complete d , ...,. A/C. Beach teruus club. CostaMe.a 372 4 TSLMont 642--1603 adlts.oopet.s.637-8828 PAIK NEWPORT s pacious & modern. THEIR•CHLIFE lmmedoccup.$700.Casa -DUPLEX ~~o C •11.... -Pacifica Rlty 77().0882 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Br. or 2 +den, a ba. Bltn Quiet newly redec'd 2 Hr 1 Bache I<> r s , 1 or 2 n10uu•1"'111 ,. " Perfect !or adult who New 2 story13 Bir, fadm · stove & d /w Adlts/no Ba. atv.. garb disp, patio, Bedrooms&Townhou:1e11o ~xtra 11harp 2 HHunits, w/view on 2,,..i ac res. wan!.:$ privacy, comfort rm,3&,frpc., aun rY M9wporfhach ~269 SSOWEEK&UP pets-..CA.,..1y·673-2Sl.2 ear, xt.ra pkng. Lndry From$279.60 both w I prv t patios Tongue & groove beam & charm. $350/Mo. Belle hook·up, dbl. garage, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Studio, l bedroom · _,.,,,. • · facil, adJts, oo pets. $290 Spectacular spa, total Owner will help finance. ce11ing, utilities avatla· ft:~) L ee 644·6200 $525/mo. Chil~/pets OK. Maidservice,pool Lux. D~x, Yrly, r&ap. mo . 1970 Wallac e . recreation prol(ram. !.~soos a I e o r l rad e bmlee.ntC. leCaanll aGireoe.nvFtrroeny NIFTY !!!~. 846·1311 or AT LAST 2376Newport Bl, C.M. ccuple. o children/peta. 646·1850; 545·6155 aft social program. 7 puolB, 8 -· DUU"V4u.&.. S48-915.5or64S-3967 Lra 3 Br, 2 ba & xtras. 3PM WOn15 courts. At Fashion CAU.955·03 50 542·3546forinfo. MEAT&HICE LOVELY BR • B A.RtwtalS..-.lce $S35 mo. 615·6590 Island Jamboree&Sun c::l C t/\VL.Or• COMPAN¥ n~ALTOH~ or~CtOPE~fi *** TEM UNITS All 2 BR, 1 BA, located In city of Stanton. 4 V-i YEARS YOUNG. New on the market. $340,000 PACIFIC COAST PROPERTIES 63 I ·0400 Anytime BEN IIlNKLE R. E Inc 2 UR, 2 bath front duplex 3 • .2 a SUS CASIT AS 8am-4pm. 3 Br 2 Ba, $315, upper. Joa w'n Hills Road w/buUt·in kitchen. Ex· w/frpl,DW,crpt,k1d/pet YouC•ffff Nicely rum lge • sml New decor, no pets, 2 ?7'41644 1900 ceptionally nice, newly OK(. $410. 983-4567 Agent. At HCMllt With lbr ClO&ed r>~ Br 2 Ba, or beach & kids olc. 1021 Valencia. • RmteMs. farms, _...._ ··-•t h No ee WE GU .a. n •NJEE . gar • ......,, up. Pavilion ~ mo vrly ...... ........, Oc "-GroYes 2700 n;uuue wu • near s OP· · ARA Adults, no pets. 211 • -,,. • _. eanwb11.rborv1ew.con· pwg & ocean. Immed. 2br,2ba,gar JAmitobch •Wldestaelectlonposs. N_,..,,...Blvd. 6'fs.an8or675-396' ,.._·2Bt2Ba,bl•--,cp•-, do. 2Br, l JA ba, brick ••••••••••••••••••••••• c p $475/M • "'"l"A"" '~ "'"" WI tl 11 .. oc u ancy. 0 · ~ •lobousecomputer sys. l bd uafum condo. Bay drps, $350. Eastside. i>8 o, 2 car gar., a ait. HORSERAMCHES Bell<G·le05aias> e Lee 644·6200 •Dailytelephooeservice 1 Br $170. No children or front view security 83.l-0303or646-?085 conven. pool, sauna, & 'l'wo lo choose from . 3br, fam rm, lrg master •Vacancies verified daily pets. Pref. middle age. bldg.' Boat slip avall. jacuzzi. Wshr/dryr. Yr Ooe-4Br2'hBa,Fam1·l•--------•I bdrm,pool,$475 •Ji)illstaffof counselors M:>-2679orS48-086tl u 5o. mo. 645·4203 Large 3 Br Townhouse lse . Avail immed. ly Rm, Office, Dining •Freet.oaged6S&over 64.5-ll«l with p atio, garage + 973-125Sor 491·2180 Rm. lots of trees, barn & COROHA DEL MAR 4br, pool, 1h mi to ocean, •Freerentalcounseling Hwdiwyt• leoch 3740 pool. Quiet compl x . 3 Br·2 Ba dplx, ,.._ blk to 3cargarage. $625 •Open7days8:00.8:00 ....................... *Decar-alar'•Apt* Adults, no pets. $400 . .__ .. f l · . 7 "' ..,,.75 One-3 Br 2 Ba new. 2 Bdrm. home (not a 114-M&-5666, Bob Graf STUDIO Stepa tobcb. Xtra lg 645-3381or67S.5949 mo'""' ... ·67'! ~~.e,ear new.,.... Jt'l'uit trees, fenced, 2 car duplex), with enclosed RENTIMES eo..;'-1 I ..... itc .. -,,.,,,_v rd 2 & NEAR PARK 3 B 2 B ''W-a.lv R.-.L..-" <UH. HI' c ne.... ncn .,,._ .... ,.. J d ( ... garage. Broker ya • car garage • r a . __ , VR'1I 2lA29thSt 75!Ml90l LW>\alUe ge yar , un~y 676-5717 (714 ) even a dishwasher in the dbl gar, fplc. m a n y 1''or Proressional Service Full kitchen &TV new. 2 Br 1 Ba, $365 m · OWHEtl AHXIOUS! OR 522·2080 kitchen. Lots of trles xtras. $450. 847 -4525 Linens & UtlliUes Capistrmo leach 3118 clds util. 646-0505 bat Estate r.'~· Month. Great Joe a SUPER 4 Bdrm. 2 ba Call 898·0771 MILE TO OCEAN ••• .. •2:•_••••••••~•·••;• 2 br, crpts, drps. Kids ok. Wanted 2900 w,Crpk. t rpt. fed yrd ORSTOPBY RoyalSuit"Mohf r •. ,o;a, ocn view~ g No dogs . S25 0. mo. $425. 963-4567 Agent, no 8401 WHtminst« 727Yorlrtown Blvd patio, bltns, DW, F .P .. ~227• ••••••••••••••••••••••• To lease new 3 Br 2 'h Ba. 2 car gar, encl patio, fplc. walk in closets. Childre n/pets submit. 645-:.>00 or 646-8688 Agt . *** SSMILLIQH -2br, lba pref owner . fixer upper fee _ _ _ _ __ (2 blocks E of Beach> Beach Blvd at Yorktown dbl gar. 1500 sq. ft. $395 •-------536-0411 mo. 496-4292 LARGt; Ba ch unit, $220,_. _______ _ 3Br2 Ba.D/W,BBQ,fncd ACalif.Corp. SmFee --------CoroeadelMcr 3822 b ltns, pvt patio , no yd, Nr shops, schls pref NOFEE'Houses,condos. SMALL BEACH HOTEL ••••••••••••••••••••••• childrenor pets.lllOV1c BACHELOR APJ. TO SIOMILLIOH In &crow ClosillCJS Per Month OUR IHVENTORY SHOWS WHY! luy. Sell, or Exdlange We're L~ Enough To Ser•e & Small Enough To Care 6468301 fam. 751-0348avl 2/3. dup l exe s. Rent a J ROOMS$32.SO Week toria.6"6-3l91 ALLUTILS PD! 3 llr, H '• ba, pool. Walk to Pavilion, 6754912 Bkr. Apt$1SO/mo. 536-7056 FJSlde dplx, 2 Br 2 Ba, 100' from the ocean. Semi furnished. Avail beach & schools. 9172 WESTCLIFF Logmaleodl 3741 n;-6 ~ --bltns, gar, 1 blk to shop. now! 201 E. Balboa Blvd. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------Mabalo. 642·3595 or 4 BR. 2 BA, fplc, fenced ••••••••••••••••••••••• '[/ ,f " pog ctr. AdJt.s, no pets, Yrly $250 per mo. NO BalMMlls&Glld 3 106 Cute 2 brm, carpet s, (2l3)433-590S yard, fruit trees, 2 car LAGUNA BEACH MTR . "' 'J.1ot-es 1-$.13()_._M_7_-M62 ______ , FEE. Call: Su e at ••••••••••••••••• •••••• drapes, $425 mo met. uttl. 3br cpts drps frnlc dbl gar., spacious, $600/mo. INN. $65/wk. Maid serv · ~ •-..11>.1.w l!Si..L... 556-TI07 anytime ' • • .... • lst&last 673-4545. color TV, heated pool. (iARDENAPTS ...--....... IP' -Luxurious 3Br, 4Ba, N. 703 Jasmine. No pets. gar,patio,fn~dyd.$400. · (7!4) 494--5294, 985 N. CORONADELMAR Deluxe2br.2baloft &2&1 ________ _ B a y C r o n t b o m e 675-0137 675-5810; 642·•3 SPECI • 1 Coast Hwy. den split·level. Frplc, 2brnrocean; sml deck w/jacuzzi, yrly or short ~ ---------• 2 Br Townhouse, Crplc. skylights, deck. Country term, $1500 mo. Avail 3Brcondo,l'hBa,D /W, 3Br2,1h 8acood<?.newly L.agunaMicJMI 3752 Pool,tennis.Someocean setting. No children or $330yrly,dishwsr,rer ••••••••••••••••••••••• A D1v1:.ion of II arbor Investment Co . now. Lora Vance Rltr CostaMHG 3224 lndry facil. Sl ater & decor d Opt avail Near & Catalina views. Close note 180 E 2•~t DAS 9543 31l'h36St ;gar;644-4340 · I d 897 H 1·1 $A95. •••••••••• • ••• • • • •••••• .... ~. · ..... • ""' • UNITS PRICE 673-4062 ••••••••••••••••••••••• New an . ·0586 oag os p. .. mo. S . . 1 to Fashion Island & fine eves.646-426Zdays At the beach. 4 BR, 2 ba, 640-2981 cenic views, uxur y ,., __ ., · · · ·· .$180,000 Balboa Peninsula 3107 MESA WOODS Sharp 3 Bdrm. 2 ba, DW , adult npts, furn & unf. beach . .tU»Vl Br. 6'4·2611 . 2·car gar. Frplc. refrig, ·· · · ·· · · · $225,000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 BR, 2 BA, bag fenced cr pts, fed yrd $395. 3 Br. 2 ba, 4 doors to Near Regional Shopping I•--------2 Br~O. l br$240. Refri.g. dshwsr, wash/dryer. Yr· :! . . · ~!ti7,500 Beachfront 2 BR Cottage, yard. 4 yrs old. $525/mo. 963-4567 Agt:nt·No fet? ocean. CpLc; & drps. 7311 Center Ht.> a led pool. Spotless. Walk to bch. f:.~~~~~7~ pets. nl l~~.e ~~!si~rm~.4~~~2~ " . . . Sl~5,000 $"15. mo. llll June 15 CALL 751·3191 ----Seashore, N.B. 642·08!!1. Jacuzzi. Nr. comer Alicia 48r 3aa Fm rm 2100sqft :1 . . . ... $1..:5,000 552·TI49or675-9267 MESA VERDE <!200 sq fl, 4 brm, 3 ba, tn· Pkwy.& Pasco de Valen· Yrly, 509Acacia 64S·7048 2 BR. 2 ba. month·lO· Mr. Moore. :1 . . $155,000 plex, l yr old. 2 car gar, cia. month, Avail Feb 8. $300 BEACH YEARLY :1 $W,900 Coroftade1Mor 3 122 4BR,2BA,fenced yard. fenced yrd, frpl, $450. CORONA DEL MAR ALICIAPLAZA Luxurylbrw/mini.ocean mo.645·2062dys,645·3S67 ·1 . . . $225,000 •••••••••••••h•••••••• new paint & carpeting Eves536·3964,or960-4648 Charming 2 Br, fam rm. &VJLL1\GF: &jetty views. only steps eves. ~e:~· e.~:.d~~~~~:(1~· I .. Sl35.000 2 Br 2 Ba util & grdnr $.525/mo CALL556-2660. 2 ba house. Walk to 581-6151 581·6130 t.o Chlna Cove. $425/mo. ---.,... I .. Sl76.~00. adlts, 1' blk to Bi g MESADELMAR 1::BLKBCB.charmmg,2 beach$525/mu Sorry,oo pets. 675-253Sor75l·4117 2 Bdrm College Park,_2_13_1_64_9-_5_135 ___ _ :! ·I ~ SlbS,OOOEa. Corona $650 mo 673-5941 4 BR. 2 BA. big kitch~o Br. !pie· 2 Ba • ,425. WALK TO BEACH Pool _____ -garage, upstairs apt. No LUXURY BAY FRONT :J-1hou:-.t· S200,000 ' w bwlt-Jns.Gardenerm 21~697·(l674_ _ _ &ten111s.Exc1tm,,:!stry, Meww-rihach 3769--.W-..W.-------dogs. $280. + dep . 2 b lb f 1 l ... ·r--~ r, a, rp c, sep. e ec. ::. 5175,000 Cha rming 2 BR. 2 ba, eluded. $475tmo. CALL ·iOr 2 Ba,nr GoldenWest 48r 3ba, s undec k & ••••••••••••••••••••••• PRIME LQC TIQN 546·S880askforLeshe garage.Powerboatdock 1i ·· · Sl 60,000 hsdn'g mt'I l''eb 18 Jun 556-2660. &Slater. Lse at $S25-bl atrium$625/molse avail. $550 mo. 673-6336. to •••• • •• • •• · ~35,000 18. $700 mo for 4 mu's .. or HO FEE & las t. call 536·3145 or LA R G E ho m I! on • Bachelor, $165. to $190. 3drpsBr •. 2ga~~· ;~~~tsN~ 642-9666 1, •••••••••••••. $314,000 $850 mnth. D e bbie. 847·029JAvl 2/22 WATER w/boat dock.:! B per mo. 675·2311 AGT. ...~ •--------- ;........ . ...... $357.ooo 675-0000 C:::: S ELECT stry w 14 bdrms. ram rm. l~e Days. NO F F,F.. occ. $310. 751·3600 z Br furn or unf. Yrly $4.25. 7 ....•.......... $325,000 2-B 2-b -1---l. -&--d T'PROPERTIES 3 bnn lh ba.' pool, tt<n din rm & priv a ey ~ ... EWE*SIDE Winter $375. D/W, gar . . ,_.,.. ~'15 000 Ea r. a, ge pa •0 yar rus purk newly decor " "A".t714or639·3615. "', 0 ·' • • • • • • • • -. ' Y.z blk lo bch. 3 Mo rental. --• .·' $1200/mo lse. f f b b U '""' .1 .••..•....••..•• $235,000 $425. 1·5""·604.,. Don SPECIAL S375.5362990 UDO NORD best lo<?a· 3 brdm, S. o hwy, r pl, 3 r, 2 a, 2 story. P· I I $440000 ~ " BIG' garage, refr1g. $500. g r aded. Lge patio. Luxuryadult 2 br.Steps to , •··•········ · ' between95 5 Br 3 Ba home on ~01£ Move in now! 3 Br, closf: tion. Exec 2 Br, d1n1ng 673-5767aft er 6. Children ok. From $390. bch, ocean view. $425. ,1·! • · ·· · · · · · · · · $l.350.000 course. Opt avail. now. to schools & beach. $425 rm. New in/out $700/mo. 645·9543 eves, 646·4262 \lP· 5515 River Ave °"'.,···· ....... Sl ,490,000 tUdingtonleoch 3140 $795mo.640-2981 mo.Brkr.963-8377 ON LI DO. Specia l 2 2 Bdrm, 1 ba, clean w/o· days.· 642.2566 1 lw ••••••••••.. $2,750,000 •••••••••••,••••••••••• bdrm+den. Glamorous • cean view, lnclds frplc, JOO+. · ··• ~.650,000 5 Br. 2 Ba, wshr.dryr, 3 br, 2 ba. D/W, F~P. hideaway.$850/mo. W/D,bltns.crpts&drps. VTLLAMEDERA/\PTS BigCanyonEastlbr,1100 • I 'Quail ~ refrig. D/W, Feb. to Aug. fenced yd. Nea r C!CC. lrviM 3244 Waterlront Homes GREAT RECREATION : Sun porch 6c gar. Asking 2 Br,~ b;a, some util pd aq. ft. 2 car gar, frplc, - W• lmifrocn.kldsok,$480 Child & pet ok. $435 ••••••• .. •••••••••••••" Swimming, sau nas. 2 $475.(poss.lesstocouple Encl. garages. Children A/C Laundry hook-up. Pla~e permo.963-8212 540-0608 RENTALS Call631·1400 health clubs. billiard~. w/dec.furn).675·6061 ~k. $305. ino. 2324 Elden. secunty, etc, etc. $525. Prap.:;r_':~s lagunaleach 3148 HRS.C.PLAZA 2 BR,2ba.. ... .$525 n1ght·lighted t e nnis CostaMna 3824 645-1965. ---&44-0509 ___ _ 14ooouA1u r Nlwl'O.raucH ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Story Executive pool 3BR,2 Ba ....•. $475/545 HEWSUVIEW court.<;. ~ro & pr<> shop,••••••••••••••••••••••• Lge 2br, 2ba twnhouse. 2 Br 1 Ba tnplex, new c AN y o N . 1 D d rm home. 2600 sq . Ct 4 3BR. 2''.I ba ..... S450/495 3 Br 2 Ba, pool, tennis, golf dnvm,g range. party LA MAHCHA APTS New drps .. paml. bltns. thruout, qwet loc. Gar. INVESTORS w/frplc, loft, beam ceal· Bedrm, 3 bath, includes 4 BR, 212 ba .... $625/850 jac.,J845 yrly. 675·056"..! room. Large 3 bedroom garden cpts & pat10. No pets. l Adlts, $295. 548·5306 DREAM ing,lgefncdyd.Ulilpd. pool service 5650. mo. 4BR,3Ba ..... $6251745 FU~ ACTlVJTI ES : apts. Dsbwhr, bltns . s m_I c_hild ok . Nr .~ntshntish.d . SIXTEEN UNITS AvailF'eblS.$400/mo. <Dave )5457506eves. OMWATERFROHT Fullt1me director, fr~e encl. gar, gas bbq. Pool Fa1rv1e w & Ba ker . T~shed 1900 Eight 2 BR & eight 1 BR. 494-8131 --VERY PVT 1 BR HOMES Wes t N e· w p o r t Sunday bru~_ch, BBQ s, Gas pd. 778 Scott P l. 54S·l.882 ••~••••••••••••••••••• Pnme Orange Co loca· ~wport Beoch 3169 all util pd .. $240, $250, g~;:a~~':,~f~l~l(i ·i~ =~r!~~ ::~or~~ort 642-5073 2 Br, 1 ba. Vacant. Frplc. THE EXCITING lion. Pride of ownership ••••••••••••••••••••••• $290, $310, $320. Adlls, no ~tr Br> dbl gar, lge BEAUTIFUL APTS: *3 Br, 2 ba, .w /patio. Cln gar~ge~~t ok with de PALM MESA APTS. units. Seller will tr_ade· 333VIALIDOSOUD pets, dys 548·4135 e ves, deck w /boat dock Singles. 1&2 bedrooms. $310/mo. First, last + ~11·68~. mo. Agent MINUTESTONP'l up. Call for more mfo. DRIVE BY 2 bdrm 646--6423 Comm pool. $950/mo .FU.rn. & unfuro. Models dep .. See mgr Apt #1, 766 ,,,_. BCH. Offered54a~36·00066· elegantly f~hed, cot'. New 3 Br 2.,., Ba 2 car 1st/las t. $500/d e p . apendaily lOto 7. Room· Shalimar.642·5717. $31~. 2 br, 1 ba, Eastsidr Bach,1&2BR. v-or TV, deck, view or gar, !pk, cpts .' drps, 64.5-6646 mate service avail. No COSTA MESA-2140 triples. enc l. gar from$220.&up. ~~1¥Efr~o~TJIOMES ~~~ $SSO. 63l·0303 & Hewport Shores lease required. Sorry' Thurin Street. Br a nd balcony. Near new. • Adults, No Pell. 631-1400 for appt. 't523 CUtPUsD&~IRVIME 3 Br 2 Ba, newly decor'd. adults only. no pets. new deluxe Z bedroom TSLMgml 642.1603 ,5 Bl~~J~~~ g;~rx>rt -WESTCLIFF area. 2Br Turtleiock 4 br fam rm $550.640-2981 · Oakwood unit. Lovely spaci~us East side 2br. l 1h b a . Blvd.) TRIPLEX.c .M. HouwsUftfunriahecf 2ba, frplc. patio, pool. dinrm,2 ba ,Vl·e'wo£UCI'. b I r -Gan:fenApartments townhome t ype wt tb adults. $310 mo. 256 E 546·9860 • .,..<x 644 0 184 752 7799 3 bnn 3 a, rg am rm, 2 ... ___ ..__,.,............. family rooms. $350/mo. 16th P1. 548-3270 ___ . •••••• •• ••• ••••• • • • •••• """"". -o • • Lse Grdnr water as-C I l & t $500 "· --• _,,, ,__ Call C l 891 013 $ b f c:r c at Eas t s 1de loc, . ' • rp • poo enms. . "80 I (' t 17thl aro at ·l . 215. 1 r , s em1 urn. nt'Wt"r 3br. 2ba. frplc. yd. Genenl 3202 Clean 2 Br w/gar. adlts, son. dues pd ~Y owner. 673-~2 ° r~~~~ Dana Point 3826 Flowers, trees. No child l2J2br,1ba.pat1oi.,encl. ••••••••••••••••••••••• nopets.773W.Wilson. $S75.18971Anttoch.Agt. 2 charmers3brm.great He...-ti.aciv~ WoodlandY1'llage ••••••••••••••··~··•••• PBroaetdsw.ayR,ca~p,p , 1 30 ~ar $16.5,000. HOMEFlNDERS 642-8205 54.1·50.12 D t . 1 " Tom Lee. Rltr. 642 160:1 Thousands of Rentals yard for pets & kids. $475 1700 l6th St 845 Paularino up ex· spect a cu a r ----All areas all pnces Avail now! 5 br, 3 ba. $750. Terrace Twnhm 3 BR, 2 &$425. 646-1355 mover at 16th l Beautiful, new• adult ocean view. New 1640 s~. ROOMS 4 000 Builder close--out Sample: Also 3 br, 3 ba, $410. Ba, frplc, wet-bar Pvt 642·8170 apts. Great location. 2 ft. 2 br + conv. den, 2 ·:? ••••••••••••••••••••••• :? DUPLF.XES LF.FT S80 Bach cottage free ut 546-5120 patio. 675-4014 days. Bag Canyon Town home 3 pools, 2jacuzzis. ba. $450. mo. 759·0706. Room w/ k1lchenellt 675-64& eves Br, pool. Convenient loc. · ecr l $50 k & Nea r S.C. Pla7.3 Bkr $1852brkids/petsok 1 B d 2 · Byowner.644.5187 Movein1mm 1ate Y Spacious dplx, 2br, 2ba, wee up. 5.57·9710 $28.53brkids/petsgreat r. cpts. rps, enc. OrangeTree,2BR.new. ADULTCOHDO encl'd gar, deck, lndry 548·9755 LJFETlMESERVICE porches. fncd yd. $300. u?c:.Mooth New Broadmoor Seav1·ew Bachelor*"'>"*"AS f"c ~5mo S29°""c Newport Hgt.s, new 4.plcx. Wtrpd 675-5810 642 0393 ~ 2BR, 2ba, yrly. $450 _...,.....,.. .. · ..,, · .....,..., Ambassador Inn in Costa 557-0822 · ; · Ageot644·1133 Hme,imglsty,3Br3Ba. STEPSTOIEACH lBdrm$26S·S275 IMti.-6 h h3840 Mesa,2277 Haroor.Cen· all elec, bltns, lndscpng. ---------Eastside 2 Br gdnr incl 2 fplc's , dbl gar, all elec unC 2Bdrm$295·$325 i =;:Oft oc trallylocatc· .. ,235rooms. spacious owners unit. VETS · · Rancho San Joaquin de kit h I · 3BR,2ba, · $475 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... * * No pets. Water pd. 166 E. • · c • poo • tenntS, spa, 2 BR 1 b unf I $440 STOP MANY with kitchen. First user depreciation. You fought for it, own a Broadway. 673.5638 luxe 3 BR, 2'h ba., crpt, view of Orange Co. All 1 .,Y.FROa, ..._ .CyOr t 00 Rental Office .,....~ne & TV. Swimming Walk to 17th St. 642· 7752 . r •t ~ drp&, panoramic view of this in 8 pvt grd comm or ~ "• " Open Daily 9-6 ., .. ., d or673-0782 pieceo 1 oow,oo own. MESAVERDE3B F lake.park&countryslde. NB.$850mo.963-3111 Sec.bldg.2BR,yrly$800 TSLManagement LOOKUSTEM! pool, jacuzzi, an rec. Veteran Housing A • f 1 , r, am By golf course. Lse $800 642-1.603 room. Daily & weekly OCEANVIEW Duplex, 541-0800 :m· 2 $Pc s , dnu ~ust mo. or lae option avail. Barbot Vu, Carmel, 3 BR, 75'-008l or 2 story. 3 Br, 2~ Ba, rates start.mg from $48 a sleJll; from beach. Upper rps. 475 gr nr inc. Call 833·9818 eves or 2 BA, Cam rm, gardener frplc., laundry hook·up, week. 3 bedroom, lower 2 2Br , 1Ba BACK BAY on ~ 54().293Sdays. incld .• Smo lse, $545. WEmAYTRIPLIXES d bl. gara1e. $395/mo. 645-4840 ~m.oed6 CarrdgarAagke, ~~ .... ranch, $325 m o. Ideal 3 br, 2 ba new 2 640-1526. P.P. COOTA M~A £l!iludu/peotsr,J?6Kl.61.Agent, Uk, M/F, share batn & ~e 1en ya · s · .,,.......,..., story. $585/mo. Will lse OHGOLFCOURSE BRANDNEW .,._. ,_,.. 1ng~90,000.-Makea1.1of·eoro..adelM• 3222 opt . '35·!l487, eves RanchoSan Joaquin2br 3Br,2sty,A·FramewaUt 2Br·From$305. IUNDHEW ~t~t~~~~~~:~~~=0· fBerokr e. rsw. 67o3rA~~s w l de ....................... 673-8484 & den,. 2JA ba. Great t.o bcb, $600 per mo. Mrs. 3, Br, 2 Ba From $395. Br d ....,. . , $600 R d Jarvis 642·3850 Propertv 3 apt/coo os, conve· W r· ed . 50,. view. mo. ea y • , nient loc, 5 units avl. $400 <?man, re '"· in s now I Ow ner I Agent House BACHELOR APJ. Beautiful new 3 unit up. 984-1S07 S40-l?Sl with modest income de· '": ~= 1fr!:~:~r~{~·r.:: ~.;;~~::~:~~·::.i !'::~E~~~~~ £J:::r~r.~r.:~ ~?2£:+.~1 fo~~ House on corner lot. now! 201 E . Balboa Blvd. daily 10.S. 820 Baker St, 1 $395. MS-36CM, 963-4218 Resp. roommate wanted South of highway 3 blkW.oCBristol. to s hare comfortable Bedroom, 2 bath, large Call: Sue al 557.5215 LlVENearTheBeach ! home Downtown HR. b r I ck fire p I a c e . S56-TI07 anytime c .. ~ Sol 900-1844 $600/month. Vitia Vista Apts Beautiful Adult Apts 2078 Tburin Gas & Water Paid. Vocation...... 4250 Brand new, large 2 br, 216Gl.Brookburst.HB ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ut ba townhouse w /fam ' 96J.66Sl Tahoe O>od(,. Slpi1 8, cir room. Xlnt·area. $3SO. TV, fullT l uru'd, nr re· TSLMamt ~-1603 ew dlx •P lex. 3Br. aorts.Rav.536·:ZT7' NEWZBEDROOM =~·.:rltns.w~ .... toSIMIN 4100 2 Br, prafc, A/0. $315. 11S1M218 .... •--••••-••••• mo.~ ~ .. n.a-el K·'P •bare Llut Park , UIUU.I~ w come, DO Nri'Port apt. Pbol. terr ~l&att1Aa a1$266mo~ nis. neqlletball, elbble. Wltelc..,11 REAL ESTATE 2200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Bedroom & den or 4 lcwtal1 to Skrt 4 JOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• Toor.day. Januarv JI 1978 OAJLY PILOT C7 Male to aharo N wport 8e1H·h. area Apt to p time tac s Znd home 062-o:?lJ Schools and Instruction This variety of fine schools could introduce Call 642-56 78 Fem roommate lo 1barc: ~c>. below hwy 1n SJ50/mo. Av~1l 'J./ •-----------------.. .-r.20ll7, 673 ~ D•Y• & t!V ----BES.:L~CTIV1'; Gain a reUablc roommate. Call Share A Home/ Apt 64.S-74& or 6U·S65H Stbl. fem l<.1 i.harc 2 bdrm 2bt.b upt. w/mlc ~56 21140 Genl' Ocean Vu 2br Sl•t•kin..: responsible yng ludy lo share. 494 210'J M •k~· 4350 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Costa Mesu. nr Nl'wport Blvd. $35 mo. Avail. now. 631·3273 New garages ror rcnl, availnow.C~tu Mc!>a. 646-4382 ~~~-~-~~ 4400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• OfffCE SPACE Prof. Bwldint: l ~h l·J.8 Room Suitt':. Wtl..rg. Parking Lol Jtq W. Yeats Co. (714)499-2237 bec"th·e Row Inc: Ofr spare in N1·wµor1 AJrport ArC'a Hcn•plwn, phone sen . tonfc:n•m•t• rm, kilch, ~ecy :.nv 1hl0 tating & copy rnat•hinc FromS290 <714l7S2 7170 THE EFFICIENT ALTERNATIVE Mo. lo mo. rcnt rnl•I: Recepl . ~l·r~ .. personalized phone t·ov- erage, i:onf. rm, mail serv .. underground prkg & more in New port. TIIE EXECUTIVE SUJTE, 640·~70 COSTA Ml-:S,\ IMTERMA TIOMAL MONTESSORI SCHOOLS For children 2112 thru 12 y._. •Planned programs •Reading, Writing. Geography, Music. Arts Physical Ed .. Arithmetic. Language. Science. Independent Study & Social Act1v11tes Summer Program Also Has Remedial Reading Certified Teachers ~wport IHCh 979.9241 20221 Cypress St. Fountaift Valley 839-1750 I 0551 Mcfoddett A•enue Seta Ana 540.4753 2 51 5 W. Sunflower Itta 529-0321 400 W. Fir SfrMt • BALI..ET • JAZZ • GYMNASTICS • PRMALLET •TAP you to a new tomorrow Ext. 32S • THEATRICAL WORKSHOP • DANCE ACCESSOR1£$ DISCO/ EXERCISE JAU. TAP. DISCO BALLET Complete Range! Of Courses For All Ages Self Awareness ~7.50 HARBOR BLVD. COLLEGE CENTER COSTA MESA, CA 9162' (714) 540-5953 FRENCH & . ITALIAN COOKING Your home-Bring a guest & lets cook together My s1ud10 Bring a guei:.t & meet a guest A Social Refresher Course in Demonstrating The Newest In Cookware. Also. we can offer you cooking by Cassett~ which saves you time with step by step 1nstruct1ons a.... for Meet & w- Cookmg can be social & fun• Why Not En1oy? C411541-1117, 14 How s.cntwy wtl be ......... ,.. ro--C.-. CHILDREH· TEEHS.ADUL TS \ \!N Irvine College ~ of Business lndopendunco and Conhdence afe yours w11n an 1nterest1no well paid 1ob' Al 1rv11Hil we cart• abOut you • • about the good JOb tha1 you want to have We 11 help you 10 get lhf!re Take your choice ol careers• SECltET4U • HCU'TIONIST MIDICAL.l.fGAI.. Sf'fCIALIIATIC>tol STIHOGltA,HElt • IOOkKH,ta TY,,HG • SHORTWA"D HUSH·U' GE,..H4L OfffCE ASSISTAl'n' DAY AMD EVEHIMG PROGi.AMS I\ prOp111 and correct business environment located in the hub ol tne Nl'woorf.lrv1n<1 Bus1nw;s and lnduslnal CompleK Job Placement Ai.s1stance? Most certainly' In 1he 1as1 15 month<> over 400 employers have reauested lr11ine graduates Call HOW for-. lnfGnltlltiOfl .ct llrochlrH. 1700 L GAHY AVI.. SAMTA AMA U70S INeT56:Sti~o' Rd MORE THAN JUST A JOI BEGIN A CAREER FACIALS & MAKE UP MAKE GOOD MONEY LOI H1ChdttJ s Buduly College help you start developing now :.kill~ d::. c1 Co::.m011c1an Alter only 20 wuuks you cdn be ea1n1ng a good l1v1n9 ( COSMETtCIAM CLASSES NOW! L1m1tt:d Enroilmenl-Call Now• Top tn:.tructors give Help and Gu1danctt Plonty of Practical Expenence, Too TUITION PA YING PROGRAMS AVAILABLE PL.AC EM EMT ASSISTANCE MANY OPPORTUNITIES~ • Interesting Work • 1-'ar::.onal Sa11sfac11on • Sucuntv·Jobs not 1100 to t1conorn1c t.1tudll011 LEARMIM~. PROBLEM?' • d1i.lok,. 'rhool or 11'.1111111 t • 1>11comu t<.rnlV'•'<I f!J>tl'f • fcol ltl-.1• 1 t.1111111· ~· • h • .-11 µnor II' .id•·~ • """ n ~luwly • <J,1ydrl).1m in school WE CAN HELP •READING• MATH •GRAMMAR •STUDY SKILLS GET YOUR PROILEM HAMOLED MOW! STUDENT IMPROVEMENT CEMTER 901 Donr. Thre'e Oft' ~Wtl'!> from :!00 '><! fl lo 700 ~q fl now ;nail l-'rorn Slllll to in l'ld.:. ulll . Jlr, mU'>ll'. am pie parkni: 1711 1-; 17th St • DISCO • TRIM TO RHYTHM l)ene [)ance • You piogres~ rapidly 10 become thoroughly sh1il£·d • S1.:lh:mployment Opporlun111ej Newport leach \ (7 '4J 642-9088 1..in Oji81J 250:.q fl dl'luxcofftn". W 19th St. C M $130 SI 50 Cen er-.--------------------------. CAU 962-8831 FOR IMFORMATIOf'C CALL tMMEDIATEL Y' PLEASE. CALL mo Tom, 540 2200 l':r~~~~~v~·~!~!~.ill NOW l-962-5440-f t ypes or bu::.1111•!>:.1·:.· REGISTERllt..JG 9891 YorktoWR A••· H..tllwJto. leach ~TCHARD~ BEAUTY COlLE&E ~ P ho n c 1· o v c r a I( 1• • r""' Just W. ol Brookhurst. ..,,.._ G!-ou 962·11 l I 19060 '"*''*"•· H•tiftc)toe leoch ~cr~an~H"ltcs, re J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~x~t~t~o~~;·;m~n~y~H~~~e~n~R;e~~~~~r~~~t~~~~ t·epl1onisl, much mon· Exi:clltmt location nl.'ar So C:.t Plala & f''rwvs. Call !179 2161 toda) BEA TRAVEL AGENT 11• I. ••• ' ' ~ ... . \ ••• I U/ EXPANDING '78? l'l'mflc rates start al fill rn the dyn.1m11· N U .\1rvort bus area Span• J\ .111 15J;J tu 224 t sq. fl Call l'rnp :\tgr Judy Clark. lUJ IUit:l or st111> b~ Comrnt•rn: !'ark, -11110 BinhM Day & Night Classes For Men & Women PACIFIC TRAVEL SCHOOL 61 0 Ecnt 17th SfT-Ht. S4Nlto A11., Ca 9270 I CALL 17 I 4J 543.9495 l::stat>l1;,1'ed 1963 Financial Aid Program!> Accrodited By The Accrediting Comm1ss1on ol Tho National As~oc1at1on of Trade & Technical Schools Retttats W.ted 4600 lmlness R...tal 4450 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Room & board required • 4 DaUXEOFC'S by young Japanese eonr. rm.. seal 25, all gentleman stationed 1 yr ~ed. sm. whse in re· in lrvine area of Orange ar.1or2yr.lease Lake Co . Pt'efer Arner Forest area. Kent household to further Harkins. English studies. 979.9000 ___ 7_1_4·_58_1·9393 _ HelenShepberd ApprolC. 400 i.q. rt C 2, A/C, at. 130 E 17th St, $150/mo. Doyle $48 1168 ()(flees & stores in mm1 mall from SIOS. 210 Main t, HB. 536-6829 or t&f)..6111 ----· Working woman desires to r elocate residence nearer to her work. Hun· tington Beach to Costa Mella area Trailer or bachelor apt up to $150 preterred Nttd by April l . (213) 598.9966 Retired man. nan smoker req. Dnsta1rs lBd MICROWAVE COOKING CLASSES Learn How To Us~ Yow N~w Christmas P~sent Personal lns1ruct1ons Complete Selection Microwave Accesso11es Learn lo really use your expensive 1nve">l· ment We teach every phase of MICROWAVE COOKING Complele 1•11 Hour - 3 Week Course t>'ow t.i.lncJ l"ftft'YoHoM Ir n•w CJft.,.noon Ir ••nllHJ clonet be9'fl on Jon. I 7th with llniited .... "'4> fof-'-ah11t Inf~ Calf 768·5011 MICROWAVE MAGIC COOKING SCHOOLS PIANO MADE FUN .\II .\f.!t'" Hc•gmnmu 111 ,\cl\ an<:ed STANDARDS /POPULAR to JAZZ/ROCK LEARM TO PLAY THE PIECES YOU LlkE l>1rcc:t approach minim1ws 11nncn•ss.iry dnlls & cxerc1'>e Hefercnces SAMDYOWEH for information 673-160 I Or ~e M~SSCICJe 493-5922 *St? M.wporl Aw Anociattt RiCJht Schoof I. Ryltt9 Auociat1 LEARM TO FLY $BOS Cour .e Includes 35 Hour-; ll1Qhl time m Ce~!>n l 150 S With 20 hour:. du.11 1no;rruct1on lnd1v1dual instruction tailored to YOUR <1b11t1y. 38 Hours Ground School 20 AIR~AFT A VAILAILE ~ LOWFST RATES ll'i OltAl'iGE CO TY L~ to fly 11aw-d hcrn .............. • Sl'l'CIOI A11• 10< Con\1•101C•~ oc '""'""*" SIUClent., For Comp!• .. Orioils Coll t>'OW 979·1155 "711 A~ Woy s-ttl ....... , ........... I 0...,.c....,....,_.. 5150 .............................................. ... •MICHELLE•s * Calif. prof hypnotist. Pvt Outcall Massage coursec;. S40 hr. 631-5080. Newport Academy of Modeling & Acting IOAM·2AM 731·4462 847·6520 by appt only. Emphasizing on-eamera" training by proles11onals Spiritual Ruder 1815 So. El Camino Ren I San Clemente. l<'\illy he. Physical Massage b) 1'herap1sl. My studio. N.B Legit therapy. 8) Appt. only 9 7, Sten· 548 2817 • Photographic Modeling • Hair & Makeup • Wardrobe, Figure Control, Poise ...., For appt. 492·7296 ------• Portfolios 'Compoaltea • Proteaalonal Photography, Ramp, & Comtnefclal Training Pft"ICIMll Ser.ices 5160 RELAXING MASSAGE Bob James· Lie Masseur •••••••••. •• ••. ••. •• ..... __ Ou_tc_a_ll_S.._9~, _494_·5_1 _11_ Ro Ya It l" Li m o us t n e Learn In A Motion Picture Studio That ProducH TV & Radio Commerclal1 & FHhlon Photography MASSAGE AGUIE MODELS ESCORTS OUTCAUOMLY 611·111 ... Service. Dally, Hrly, Weekly rates. Also. specials to Las Vetas or San Fran. "Be A *ing For A Day." Luxury+ in our new custom built Lincoln town car limousine. 714/523-838L • Call for Free Brochure (7 f 4) 546-4g5Q ' ,... " 1.....i.1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Prine. w: w• cu -rut •.--a.•-........... 5300 for partner wlth too -• • .,._ h ... ~. h di ••••••••••••••••••••••• muc vu:Mneaa to an e at. home. Will supply of· FOUND: Larg~. male fice It factory space, Setter/ Lab dog m Ocean ideal for mail-order or Hilla, SC. ~ all 6 manl&factor's rep. P.O. !:'~r anyltme on Doi· -Approved By Calif. Dctpt. of Education • Master charge/ Banf<Amertcard f 645CRey.,oQdsu4uettue. 9~vitle *SANDY'S*. Try something new. Mup· pet shows for birthday parties. Rsnbl & fun. Chns, 963-0362 Lod & F...t 5300 Lost & Found 5 300 Outcall Massage •••••••••••••••••••• , •• • •••••••••••••••••••••• 1----97_3_-0329 ___ _ SCRAM·LBS ANSWERS Bedeck -Tidal Adult -Primal LOST: Nikkormat EL DANCE OF FUN Camera, Lenses & Btf1 nude girls dance & Camera bag. Vic. CdM rap seasion. JOAM to'*~, ....... Bch Reserve on 1124 3AM Moo·Sat, 12PM to u. _ oytM'" Diane '213)392·5457 SPM Sun. 625 N. Euclld, r1pm atlcwl --~------· Anah.. 558-6150 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Found . Australian Shepherd ? puppy . FREESESSlONW/AD _,.W.t.d, 7075 • •••••••••••••••••••••• MIDDLE ,..._a..a • d (' · f Brown. grey. male. Vic . ..,...._ s .. e lnil1on o a,n Yorktown & Hardin~ Ln. adult; Someone whos Huntington Bea.ch stopped growing -ex· .,,.... 1160 ft 5·30 LINDA & vtctU Housework wanted, has ~Message own transportation. Call cept lD the MIDDLE." .._. a er . For tM ,_ of tt! 673-3457 eves Servin1aUOrangeCo. HllpWmhd 7100 ~ 13$-7313 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •SHERI LEE• Certified Masseuse Home Calls· By appt. 83HB38 Acdntr Bktpo1 TBOOIAIY ~ Tod.q to work ---------1 on•ariom aceaunttq Ir bookkeepln1 aul1n-• meats. Work cJoae to • your home. J'iauro Clerk1 to Sr. Accoun· tAats needed tbruout ' OranpCo. FOXY LADY o.tkcillM•-ve 7Jl·H61 Robert Kali's Aet'OUnwm.- 500 S. Main, te 501 N(). Towv, Union a.nk ln 'I1ie 01.J o1 Oraiaic 'IH/13:Ml03 , . . ('8 DAIL V PH 0 T . Tuosd•t· January 31 1111 • Add 1t Butld 1t Diaper it... Hammer it. Carput 11 Ct nwnt 1t...W1re 1t. .Hoe 1t...Cle<rn 1t .Move 11 .Pre5s 1t . Pamt 1t .. Na111t...Plaster 1t. •• F1x it. .. SERVICE DIRECTORY Plumb it Patch it. .. 1pe 1t ~rnode 1 ... Roof it. .. Land~cape 1t. .. T1te 1t...Trim 1t. .. Sewit ..• Haul it ... Add it.. Pldnt 1l. .. Alter it .. Learn 1t.. ~.c• Repoir e.-pet w•lu C11.tredw Roon ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• H & J ApfthiAnt~ SN\ l'RI P t"llAJH.a: $10 ~'\YlSS M111n, S \ ~I~~ !JS7 fllli!l Shampuo & .!ileam clean. llJ.Hulfman .. Son. Gt'n noor & w111duw cover· sauploadt.•r PUllll) lru,•k Color brtahtcnt'~; wht t:.uilllr.Cw.tomAlt&Add. ui1u1, cork wJAll tiler>, Hautan~. tree 1"111k, cptJJlOmltlbleach Clnn patio&, c11h1net-., larltl'll, et1..· 27 yrs grading, demu t.'l\.' Ltv, din rm, hall $l5 Avg fornuca. Nf'W rnn"t. llc:J bc./1ales/t.'Onlr Cameo 8311257 rm $7 50, couch $1U, chr & comm'I. 645·4644 or lntenors. 5:118440 _ -...___---.__--'---- IGbysl+HftC) S.'> Gu11.r elim P4't odor. 548...U.1 Lie & bundcd r---'-1-• ----~ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5 --~ ... "9'S .... .., ••••••••••••••••••••••• t Cpl rep;ur. 1 >'ti. e).pr MAttK SU ~·u <.:ONT ••••••••••••••••••••••• Want a R£At..LY CLI-:AN 11.1by~1thnt(, 111\ wnu·. 111 [>o "ork my~l'lf Heh N t ·.: 1 'I ranl1-hlltl$tl11 ~lUIOI t-wcoiu. l\es comm WEEDCNG ·CLl!:ANUI•S HOUSE? <:all <.;Ingham 5411 ~ Rm add. remodel. p11.t10 Weekly Mamtcnanct.• Girl. Free est 645-5123 Wt· Cam.' l'a rpt't Cle:uwr~ Lie cuntr Cu II !Y7~ H 11 Free est 642·9907 -CabiMt MakillWI s I h -Housecleaning tlorw hy .. 7 • ll'<1m l' cun ors timpuo ,. __ ...... '--Ral . • • •• •• ••• ••• • • • • • • • • • • • • Also uphobtery. All wnrk ~~ ph <.:a bc.tlll!ro & Son s eve co 11 stud c n t . • 1. u"tum 1"111hht'rs · · 6:U1u· Trul·k mount 11n1l ••••••••••••••••••••••• fo'reet.'l>t Clean up·~. lrl'e Depend, own truns Refs. s1;11111ni.: aml 1''11mhtnJ.: 1-t t•st, lt'.1!> r.1trs ,.SYCHICMl:DIUM tnm.64ti1654a!t4PM Aft600PM 559-Ul!)O It\ hanil. .'~··old fa:.h11•11 1;.i.s 1716 Rcacih1gs 527 34CHi Expl't' i:arcJl'ncr. full A Woman·, T11u1·h llousi· ~;"Lil' ~'t•llOO S·l.i!>.ll7 CftMftt/Concreoteo Drapert.s m111nt , lndst.·pni:. & dl.'amng ta1lurccJ lo )our Ccrpente-r ••••••••••••••••• •• • •• • •••••••••• ••• ••• • • • • • •• cleanup C.:ull tor $10 nu llft'tis. 5-ltl O'J:JO ••••••••••••••••••••••• l"u,tom r·oncrl'lt• & Hind, Drapery Fabric Sale L'>lmu.st'n1t•t• 8:Jl 7~Y1 StlHr lf,111111w1 Fr .rumi: \\nrk J'ut10 l'll"t'r~ & 47.000 yd'I an Slot•k must General SHYicei BALHOI\ ISi.,\?\ II lo Cvrn H,., Huom hr1t·k l.1t· & HuncJed ~sold' 70'. s,l\lfll.!S an · add.-; urvwall 551 11w1 M:! ~1 'ent.on n•dul·tion guar 1•l••:;0·Y·:f•AN••••C•••••••••• · l~t quality l\l'n Hull'hcr A., " · or~ntry, & V ll" 1D1 l }' .. ; 111 j.Jl ~ ~ welcomt' Rehabll', rt'as tm0969 lnitr~H.·ndt•nt <'aq>t'nt•·r. wacn•tl', :'11.twnry. ~lab,. DrMPt!l')' 1.510 i-;. Edingl' t>h.'l'trtt'<1I .. plumhang & ll'P;tlrs, rt·rnodl'l1nt.:. founcJatauns, h1ghwalls. Santa Ana !, 11 0203 flours IW7 .!7W7,!157-15C).t Houseclearung with a personal touch llcf:.. rouf1ni:. tn·c rt•nw\ al, & pallll,, l.n l'nscd i-;, es 541 21J10 - haulini: John, s:H ijOli:! ur 55ti !1~11 1>-16 5001 Hwld 1t, 1nstall 1t, n•pJ11 CEMENT WORK 11 Hou~h & (1111.:.h kmcb H~asonable 1·.1rpt.•nlry. 551 18::?ll l~ts Call,7JO-titi25 Bedrical AJJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1-·ree ELECTRICAL s1mv1cr: CALLS $15 hr, & SMALi. JOBS 8'l2..S233 Carpet Set"'•ice l't'm~nt M1rk. blot'k & ----- • •• •• •• • •• •• •• • • • • • • • • • b r I l" k l' a t I 0 " & tiulbbard Sectnc . . drl\t'W<J)S l''rl'l' t•sts Lit-327136 tH5 ti!JH tarpc.•tManw1lll.n\uUr' •.:,i,o;s; 01 rn llH' H t' p .1 1 r-. ,'!,. ELECTHIClJ\N l'rtl'l'cJ NEWPORT 546-2-120or~6728 JIU?\H:Sl'ITJNG When travel t.·alls don't llouse, apt. cleanang re ll'ave your home un· asonableCallCben protected. Call Newport 548-2992 Homl! Sitting, pet care, lroninq plant mamt Bondable. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Member or Nwpl Brh Cham~r of l'ommcn·e. Hd~ a\;sll ..!~ Hr 640 70(;.f) Irorung done in my ho mt· 25c a piece. &lti·Ml:!tl 1·h•Jnllll! too1 t:uur "ork Pac1f1c Cuncrcl1• I.ow •':! .11 1.>11:1:,•r ".1Hng~. 1-'n•t• day & full day rall'S right frt'l' t•st1matt.• 011 Class1f1ed Atls 'ell b1i:: Trade your old stuff for largeorsmallJnhs 1ll•ms small items or new goodies with a Lcndlc:ap&nc) '~/P~ 'alnHncJJP..n.g RooflncJ • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• l.ANDSCArlNG All PROFESSION Al. Pmr paint '..: & p:ap~rROOFS 1ru.talled fi11'lt1r~ Rea!M)ll .. blepncl·:J. Paint1n11: Intl!r l!:~ll'1 hani.11116:, ~ork 1tuar. dire1..1.; fltitab 3.'S yr' (';iji 968-17113or5'47-~llS R.eas,work~uarst:!OJIW Jo"tl'l' l'St ~Jti ·4313, HaroldGunn549:."lt;J Melot• 'f Pa10ung. Extr/lotr E'~ 53t>-47lkl -Roors For l.ess. All ty;;:- ••••••••••••••••••••••• pr'd, honest. neat. reas. Ptos•/Repalr Ul'lbond'd lnsur ... 're~ Bnckworlt. Small JObs uc'd964 HK5Davc ••••••••••••••••••••••• e1il1mate:. 8!H·042l or Newport, Q.15ta Meu & VERY NF.AT PATCH 537>4133 lrvtne.b'75·3175eves. YOUNG MAN. 5 )rs t!Xpr JOBS&'n;XTVlU.: TUe in wallcoverlng. Free Freee:it. 1193 143'J Slumpetone, block, brick ests. 645-8576 Andy ••••••••••••••••••••••• walls & pl11ntcr~. expert --PATCH PLASTERING CerumH· Ttlt> Sper. 1n ly. 1ni1talled Speci&ll)' Paint Your Caaffe A 11 l yr>,. s f" rel' t>nln~ & floor~. 2Syrs ex finced, Lil' & Bonded Average Extr 1 Stry $39S estill\;All!s Call S-10 68~ per. 96:! 1883 klb 673 OU)4 2 Story $S45, lntr $45rm PI.A..'iTl-:RlNC CERAMIC tih::-Nl'w or ri· BRICIC & ILOCK Pnct'll and mall l/IJl>or llonws. ddd1t1ons. re model. Frc·e est Sml JI" Gd uut cheap 645 7307 Guar 'lnsr·l''rel' l''l stucco. free es ts low Wf'kOnll' 536 2~:!ti Jfl I l.Jc32U!St, Ted 636 7085 rate.s 586-4892 Mo•iftcJ -Tutorin9 ••••••• • ••• ••• • • ••. •••• ~USTOM ~· AlNTlNG ~ • ••••• ••••. • •• • • • • • ., •• "'Two Men Will Move Extt.>raor Specialist 15 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,IAMO You·• We handle big yrs local refs Lic/bon HOMESAVt;RS Plumb-IMSTRUCTIOH m "v e •• o ff i· c ~ & tled/ansrd, ~. u~r work ln" & H~aUn•. Free est, XI ,. d . I .. ·' ~ Free ests \\on t b• un " " • nt ... re cnllu !t In household Du.lance & · . · c SlU hr. Hooesl" reliable yQUr hom~ Call 'fi.rry local. also packing. derbid&42·6005 service. BorA. MIC OK SM-7005 Lowut legal rate. First class ext/mt paint· 751·31.50orM7·0383 -------- l.1c/U\Srd. Cal T 111·944. ing Paperhanging. PoolSlniu R i WlndowCIHfthtq Ph847·7Z78 Cabmel! refinished ek ' epo rs ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••-••••••••••••••••• SPARKLING CL • W II d 1·t 2Syrsexp.9'19-S294 P P I S t.:t\N 1 o 1 e mov !Dg • . ara100 oo erv1.ce. Windows & boused~.,11 w /van . Reas. Rick Pamllllg. Homes Jntr & Complete sw1mm1ng mg.900-5844,53t>-7711 S325568, aft3:30wkdys. Exterior Specialty pool maintenance.--------- Pm..tincJ/Paperi'") --Apts. Lo rates. 631 2508 _67_$-_979S ___ ._ ••••••••••••••••••••••• l...-dlf & lepair PETERS PAINTING Fine Exler Pamtmg by ••••••••••••••••••••••• Expr'd Reali Rales R. Sinor St. he .. Ul~. Tr) ,.._ try b t I ~ : • · me 836-5555 24 hrs "'"rpen • ca int• . •· et· free Jo.sl. Call Gene --& plumbm.: rn1a1r~ 552-0458 Quality Painting. Lowe~t Aluminated n•1hn~s 1n -ratc:1 in lown. Free est :.tailed also 1'><p an all -- MOTICE t'!>t, li45 Jli-16 661 24:!.1. or 1).1[, 3257 LlcenM~d H7:1 035!1 any item 644! 56711 Class1f1ed ad &t2 5678 Classified Ads 64.2·5678 Jack 675·8336/675-7280 J. WaJlard 631 22..'il how Daily Pilot C'ld~!'i· 1f1ed ad:. display th,·1r me~sagt's with ll-i.:ih1litv and impact" Our ;i11' ..., ,. are proud tu Sa)· rt·Jlh i.:et rl'Sults. Ph1111e 642·5678 ~f.~~:.~ ..... ~!.~~ ~~'~.~~-~·:.~ ..... ~!~~ ~~.~~::! ..... ~!.o.~ ~f.~~::! ..... ~~.o.~ ~~~ •..•• !!.~~ Help Wanti.d 7 I 00 Help Wanted 7 I 00 Help Wanted 7100 H .. lp Wanted 7100 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• . \ I' \ It 'J' M t: N I \I \N \(; t:lt ltl•s11h-nt managl'r lur Costa M l'Sa lu unit liu1ldm~. m·ar :ill , o n \ ,. n 1 ,. 11 ~· c s • N u t htldrt.•n, nu pcb. <.::.ill •AMtoMech. Barmaid pJrl & f l Ch1ltln·11912 for adverl1S· Cook &t busboy, cxp'd for Deli•e-ry Pe"on Technicians for nt!1~hborhood IJ:ir, day or ang d1striuul1on CM 8cdch Houst.' Itcstauranl P /lime 30 35 hrs per wk. GENERAL OFFICE INSTALLER TIME LOAN PROCESSOR PART· TIME For window t111t1n.:. !.lart wal h secy skills fur ... hr R II • t) ." hr mortnaoc broker r1r111 Person ab I e, we II .. '. • scs '? .., ., ,. groomed w /gen'l ofc within 1 }r. On:r ~l. Tall Loan background prt•l 11. M•wCcrPr~p! mte 641i·5>l-1 area Transp prov)ded, start1n1t 1mmccJ, foll Musthaveowocar.Xlnt from bu.4'ml·ss. 646 6667 time Apply m p~rson, hrs 06 H 0 WARD Ch c , .. s BAR.MAJIJS Port 17, 130 619 Slt.'cpy Hollow Ln. __ ._64201 . ---- ~;-+iii Serv1<.'1! L>eµt. an Orange E 17th St, CM Ask fur CHIROPRACTIC AS· Lag.Bch Dental Assistant, X-ray County A 1 r po rt l n manati:cr, 1>46·31i66. SISfANT. P T. will tr .. m - background qualifies for & neut, ex per. helpful. Near Fashion h It'. this vaned pos. Hrs 644-8494. _7_1_1_1&-_w_._8&24 __ • ___ _ .\pt \ta n.i)!t'r , couple '"·ma rt'l1rnJ 1for 65 unit .ulult t ompll''C in Costa \h•,a Sal.1r} SU7U i.:ross. :-.;u pds, t;Jl :.."J:>I dustn:1l Complex musl -. but mu.st lY"" 64.2·4532 COOKS license required. Laguna dd o.. h t .--llJlls area. 8»-1395 a experienced new car ....,aullc1an v. tl s rong Breakfast, Lunch, din------------5-9pm Moo-Fri. Call Mrs Install Afarms LVH 11-7 Country Club Con'. Home. 549-3061. prl!p & hght mechanical following, 'Int propoSI· ner. Expt'r'd. Apply 10 Dental Secretary bkpr, Cameron, 979-2500 Xlnt Opp'ty For lechn1t1ans.S9:;Qhr. t:x.-lion HU %J.J..IJ3 Clencal person, Ma Barker'., e'pt'r'd or college, Genera!Foctory cellenl working conch· &> ~ 0 t \\. t 1 JR. CLERK Restaurant, 212 E. 17th t·hr:.1de position also Worilef' lions. Opportunity for <.td· au Y pi•ra ors an l'< St C M """'" 54'>-3000 . • .,, __ , Booth-. av.iii l>ilY" -~-~----Sporting Goods C'Om · \n1,l lllu!>trator arh t•rt. I .1)nu1 Or.1n ~e Co i.\11m.111' rn.1~ Ptirl 1111w :!I hr' v.t.. \pply tn 1•·r,on •1 IO\ \I I I :10 \ '1 ll \ \\ ;\ . .!Hll.1' ( .i mino \ancement •• ~ Sl•n1r~ 6-t2 llJHI Eq•s 610 7B07 SR. CLERK -----7 JO PM M Mgr .. Dove & Quail Sh .. N;k f J COOK, Exper'd Dental cha1rside assist. pany, : ·4 • on Newport Bc•ath or oan Oayornighl. Quahf1l'd to N B Plt!usant J.{roup Fri. 5-10-6H2 ,\utomot1vl' Expcrit'llC'l'd P l.l r!'rhc mechunH Ra' Stt•ph,•ns Automotl\t-, 16!141 Pla1·l"n BEUMIQUE IN '78 C>oes tht• thnui.:ht app1·;1I to you " If !\U. t•onsttll•r Jn1nmi: th•• prestai:tous office-. uf L'n1quc Homt·s for a r .. nta,tat· 1!1711 1\1· & CLERICAL ASST run kitchen. Xlnt work pr;irt ice, l'X P n~C'. ___ _ tn!{ conds. Apply 1n Includes lilternlite Sat. Gingham Girl hou1wcln.: C ,1fl1 S I r ,1 11 O l..1i.:ttnil N11!1wl t1a, \ lmt ~\ Costa 1\11•!\a ----------Automot1\ c Varied JObb with & w1lhout t'\Vf'r. 111 good ofc surround tog' C.J 11 Today ~ MO FEES ASSEMBLERS .~I l'ralnt•t• ,\'>°'l'lllh(1•1 !\ ;\1·1,.lt•d lmnlt'd1,1t1·h l,1l0)! & 'ihurt Tt•rm. ,\,~1gnnll'nl" :\t•w lh'lail Shop lll'E'ds ht•lp Top wu.:cs paid F:ngmt• St~amers. t•nJ.! parnttrs. buffc~ & pol1shl"rs. up holstery -;h<1 mpo1Jt'rs. chn·k out. pack-up & de li\Cr}. Apply at ct'lenilt•d 1·11mm1~s1on ~o~ 0 ff ice • H'ht'<IUlc, m ht•USI' !\WIOj? loans, t'rt•l.lllH' Slllt•s 0 OVerload ~ud. .... eumputt•r tl'rmmal & :it.·t1w tra1111n~ & acJ 557-0061 mJn1strat1on He unaqu1• J Shifts 1h a1l,1bh' \lu:.t ha' e own lransp Call Today 556-8520 hf'e Top Pa> Vac Pav m '711 with u mq u€' llomcs __ 37_23_8•1 r•c•h•s.·t •. •N•I•l -• Real Estatr Contact Jim 20591!;.lrbor 81 , C~f 645·1030 Wood at 675·6000 --------- YictOf' Temporary . AUTO POLISH SertlcH &WAX Boat ass't service mgr for Van Nuys & Santa Ana ar€'a. Call 71 \ Mtl-65.'>5 SP<'ak to M 1k l' or Eddie lhv W.tltcr Kidde & Co Ex~r'd. Auto Detail 201~ S t:. Hnstol t Stf' 111 l'o"t•wport ~ach man ex er mter cnttme (l"omcrof Bristol & 1-· timl", gd pay. Busy Campu~ bt•h1nd METRO CAR WASH Boat builder with broad Carl''iJrl Harbor&Baker,CM exper & w€'lldev<•lop<>d ----------AUTOSi\LES v.ood-work1ni.: 'ktll~ Seoted Auto Sales ·Sa m J. · t.1 " r !> c C 0 ASSIST MANAGER Heo~idcnt p time . :? l>.1)"s/11.k al atlrac.'11n• II fl. apt propertv. Ofrln• & minor ma•nt. ,\n1.1 M~mt . 752 1~3 1\b~ot•1ate Rc•p ATTEMTIOM H.S. &RADS & CoUe-ge Trained F/PTIME If }OU are athll'tically m · c I 1 n l' d or p e op I c· · oriented, work 1s ovaala· bll' 1f you arc free from JPM·lOPM. Flexible work schedule. Op . portumty to gam bu~•· nc'iS l':tpt•r. For 111 ten 1ew call 5l9·118l A.-.!>ocHep MEH&WOMEN WAMTED RJLL TIME EMP. IH MEW OFFICE 645-lff..13 hus 1mmed1att' openin~ - for 2 aggressive young Boal mt•\·hantt.· net•detl for :-nl<'Smen cover 21): will Van Nub & Sant.1 Ana llli! to 1€'arn the car bus1 an·a~ l;Jll 7U SIO 6555 nt•!>s Honus plan. r>atd SpeJk to Mtkl! or Eddie. vacation:-.. profit shur-mi.: JcuntheSelt>ctSel Bookk~eper Ser'y full Contact U!> al trmf', d1ctaphonl'. book· 772-9800 keepmt"(, good typing 1:!21 N. Harbor Blvd. speed, knowledge of or ficl' proccdurt'. 1 girl of A~im flee. Pis i:;ubmit resume to Box #150, •'.~ Daily AVON Pilot, P 0. Bo~ 1560, Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626 Clencal person. Mr. (; !>, JIOU mom 6401122 service nds women P/'1'. I nuw. N B n..... 1 · h h top S. car nee 645-512:1 U"C"nlJ A~s t. ort o, c r, ___ _ Copy Control · Clerk Typist NH 11 l dys Ortho exp. & R D A. req 6-12 2626 ---- Dental Asst, x-ray, in i:;urance. to be trained for office management. Medical benefits. 645·2652 MEN WOMEN USB> TO EARNING *$8.50HR No €'Xpcr net•. Wt!: tr a an •INSTALLERS •SALES •SERVICE •MGMT TRAINEES F\ill or part linw MACHINIST 4 Day/40HourWeek General machine "orl. on quality aero.:.pa,, components & a s ~mbhes. Must be able tu work from <.leta1le<J pLtn· rung sheets & blueprint Apply In Person Monday-Thursda' Ecler Industries In~ 2101 Dove St. N. B Call Mr. Majon Maid. p ltime. Start •ti •957-8189* $300per~·J481 ------------ MAID wanlcd Sucltff Motel 1661 So. Coast H-..' 4!»-4892 Maintenance Mao F/tim• for apt complex. Al.,11 F /time cleaning lady eau 499-2835. Maintenance person, pt time, must worl.. weekends Sailboat bu!-1 ness. 645-ilOO Management Trainee Retail Store Immediate opt>ning 111 our area for mana,1!1·1 tr:unee. sales clerk ,, p llmesalesper~ Apply At 1164 N. Coast Hwy .LaiUSla Beach ' . ~.~.~~·.·.~ ..... ~!.o.~'~-~~~ ..... !~~-~ ~-~~.~~ ..... !~~~ ~-~~-~ ..... !!.~~ ~~~-~ ..... ?~.~~ !~'r.~~ ..... !!.~~ Tuesd'.ay,January31, 1978 D~llYPllOT " Mtclul ltec.,+lonl&t SALES SECRET A.RY DoCJI 1040 flQ;rMwe 1050 tii4hnl•••• 1010 JIO!llllOr'I &\ llll. 1.a.:11110 Muucr. Katliuranl FAStaON SHOIS 1'ashlon Island Ina. ore TYPISTS .................................................................... . un·;a, wlll tn1n M11l>1 MOLDING MACHINE COOKS Kt>!i!Jonsl bit> :. nun a needs part0Un1e iial, e:\· MaJe SUkit Terncr. e yr1 Honduru maho1any LUGGAGE TAGS l)pe MWI'."· ... ·nd r• OfJEllA.TOlS ""mim, 111 ZS prererre-d ptr'd fn typ1n1 & letter old. AKC Ru. Lovee Annol~. M1nwed door •um~ to Clu ICtc•ll Furlht•r c'.lpansion WAITRESSES w C1Uhlon uper to aell wnt.in". Hrs. llAM·ll'M. Did ...... /Stot kicb.$7S.M0-020ti S200 63H&f.2.John,105. Crom your bWllneai card Send one card fot uach lllC plus on" •IJ.Ul". Wt' return pl!rmanentl) a.alt!d altru."tlve taf & strap, meetin1 air Int• J.1>. requirements. Pre vent lou & theft! For a ~rt0nalb.ed w1 enclose w11llp1per, fabric or "Day Glo" paper &: wt' wall blll'I' & trim your tap. Or try two c1lrd1> back to back. Ad•l4. Ually l'ilot, I'll <Tt'lll~ V('rm opc-nml(i. HOSTESSES Youn~ fashion ah<>t!s & 768-SMl llM b BOX lSW, c~t lt•i.;a tor orwr'd & lri.tlflt't' an.'t'1i.,, Apply in pt!r!\Oll K. ,.,.... You 1045 Lazy.Boy RecUnera. twln Ca 92S?.16. rnoldml( m•H hine opr-. 011 lO.S ut Dale'~ l"oolwork, SECRETARY General of· Repro & Ttchltfcot ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~. akl boots, Nanry ~w1n1 "h1(t lJ"M lll'M) ~1.1.SIUJt"'l'SA\',\IJ Sor. VU ....., ... ., .. 2 fire akilb, lood typlsl. Lo bl t bl '" Day! S40·1066 Evea MEDICAL RECEl'T " ..-t:Xl't:ll PRE.l"t·:trn ~:n " ~t 1 a&e ~·~·"•" P/time eves. 1n G .G Wof'k temporary" make va e ca · ac.. yn&, 6'4.6J33 lmmt.-d. openln1 Start ~>uu!: llpllr~~.~~fu"r .. m~.r~turr<' ·rm• l'AY 5a1 r.S/J ... ___. E.O.E.-.oo23 xtn monev. Loni & spayed. Fo: !peel al l , N l h • " """'" "':. .. s!> e ~ r ~rr-.... 5 ....... •·rm aa"slanm~nt··. home. 646·7086 •" e. OivorH. Musl 1e l. New ~. Bene il:1 PL Ir rapid advan<:cmtnt tor Full tame & ptlime po9i· nun .... " • llvlng room •rouplno ;area.C.11644·1035 aU "mpluy~ who havl• J\l'l'LYlNl'l-:RSON uortS Must be ul)d'd SICY/lllPI Holiday & vac P•Y·tCGWe mut pu1>9, 2 mot Call ably 1r"'you ap· .......... D.U••1 l'tl;Uure reap. ..dull or early AM dellv Mullil have tr an 840 2756. HURSiSAIDE the bH1c ut11hty & de !ltollam.3loSpm 1llft:PL.ACE 6448982 Small CPA ofc, mu•l ~voair.lt•lluUon plan old. $ bik & 1 l:lrown. pttel1te expenalvo h1aih !>ltl' Good pay + 111i1ht have pleasant tcle mun · 76H'N7 quality, hl&h 11tyle. 1>t11ft bonul>. p1tid lllcll. iofotRHtauront SALESLADY nu. & at'curale typln1 Free kittens. beaut fur:niturc. Wlll aell tor \.At hfeo & dental 1n .. u1 + 27~ Harbor Ul, C.M for maternity boutiqu~ w/aome bkkp'g educ a· healthy to good hbmes cuiol. b'7S·Ol9ti profit shannl( Equal Opp Emplvr m Must be e)l(.per'd. S1tl tion or exper. Sal com· $46-4lOO CIMCO .. comm.8!Ml-433lext315 mensu.ratew/expor. Coll ___ Divore<' Mwt 11ell New PRJC1':S S? ea or 3/"' ...., .. Brl"gs, c·"sta Mes11 759-0511,8-5 Moo t.o Fri. 1141 c...-Drf•• -chrome & glass dlnlnii rnv11te Duty, expel ii ~ h .., 54 .. 4741 I ~ roo s l /vel el c l I BlkS of Haker St Al F..S P/TJM~' -.......... . 0'°'0 m e w v O\ only Elder Y mun 111 Off llL'<lhall RETAIL S • ' Service Sta Attendant, <Acroes From ••••••••••••••••••••.. __ ere<l chairs tl7~08118 4/5 taas SI 00 e11 619 tags si.:;o eu lOor more Sl 40 ea. mnv hosp. Sitt/Sun lh1m 1-·11bnc :.lore in C M exper'd. Full or p/tlme. 0 &pm Call collect l21;j> ~·4460 Cull L1nda6461040 __ Apply Arco St.ation, 17th rl\n1eCo Airport) STOREWIDESALE •Sturdy Capt. Cbairi. $30 Salea Tax Included t'IS-8030 1--------1 Cl[RllS F.Q1.&al Oppor Employtir New le used furn. appt 's. I each - -n SALES &:lrvme,C.M -----mac. Wilson's Bargain Call5116'3535 NO CARD" l>rnw your owo or send n:unt>, address, phone & we'll makl'I oo" card per tag, Add 25' each Rs.,,5 IDES l'rt-!>chool tchr. exp d Nook & NU ii; A & or 1'ert1r·d 11 .£SAM ~mall •rafl & artifact Service Station Atten· Vendln& Route Man must . ~ 814 W. 19th. -1 3 & J 11 ex per prl'f"d 3 15PM ditJIV Al'IU a1dt-UTOTEM • c danl, exfu'd. Day & have tranap. aeml re· C?d. 6'2·7930 & MS·3262 Walnut Med1t lbl-. /6<-hr::. Country Club Conv. . Cot1•M9ftC•Mark•t• ~hop nt'eda mature Eves Ful &p/time.Ap· tired OK. C.11 631·2085 inwalnut&blknaugh, I Homc.549·3061. po~1\1on ilv;ul 2·8-78 . H~l W1nt-..1 woman Thur·Sun Do ply,ShellSt.aUoo 17th& bl "AM&8P.. Wrbught Iron. custom lt>aC, very gd cond Send check or mooey or derlo: 8 :JOAM ·l2PM. CM lwl, ~· &3rdS~hilts t·t'nl t'~per helpful.NB Irvine NB ' wn.. "1 madebar&servlngklrt. $250/ofr. 60·7857 all NURSES AIDES ~ti070 ~ ~. 9:»5:30 ' NEW! $75. Hiah back Spm. & ORD~UES i:::;;;;.-;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~.11 Noexper. req'd. Welraln1---.;,._ _____ Service Sta. Niaht Attend w~. PIT, over 18, casual ctwr <needs re - --------rtLOT ratMTIMCF P.O. Box 1560 Costa Meaa, Ca. 9'262& IP' 1• lhoc.e hired. Applicant:. An&ie • Piu.a, 25280 La Needed to o1ve tender PRESSER apply at 'Utolem Slon·:. SEl"RET ... RY 2 Or 5 ruleJ a wk. Apply, Paz Rd. Lag1.&na Hills. coverlna )·$35. Call t'rench Provtnclal head· .. ....,,,_ • Shell. 17th & Irvine, NB 581.3525 &Q.-0138. board for double btld + loving care to the elderly located at· 1'~ work w/top rngmt. frame $35. 536-5190 Newport Beach Tenn Ii; patients. Wlll train rART-TIME lllOelMarAve,C.M. Xlnt secret1nal skills a Service Station AlleD· WA.IDESS **'BUM** , h club membership, beat qualified personnel. All For Men's Clothing J.390N. Pacific C:>l Hwy mu.'lt Prevlowi ex per. on danl. full time, Chevron Daytime abllt ?:SOam. 'I . Moving, Couc , refrte., oCr. 640-l'193 stufts avail. Apply, 1445 Store In Laguna Beach a corporate level de11ira-Stauon, 3000 Fairview, 2 JOpm M\lst be avail Good. used Furniture &r cba1ra,plant1,lamp1.1--------- Super1ur Ave, N.B F;ishmnlslend Weareanequal ble Some financial, CM. 1' dft .. 11 r t .. Appliancea--OR I will CallanyUme,759·0316 Shnmonsqueeabed,4yrs ti-122410 J•relerMan. opportumtyemployt•r booklceepuigholpCul. w n · u or app · seUorSELL!orVou -old.xln cood Be off --------STACOSWITCH INC Service Sta. Attendant ~5000extS20. MA.STSSA.UCTfOM i:act.ory Direct Pme Liv· SS2·1790t . st er NURSES AIDES AT EASE 1_......,..,.._.......,,,....,..--.,1111 lL39BakerC06la Meu P/time. Exper'd. Neat WA.RD CUllC 64..,'86 Ir13J.t•2S mg Rm Fum1tul"1!. See It --------~~It ~!~n.E~~:u P{~'.~J,. l":ill Tailor Shov Mi:r Hetail MgrtJ<'wt>I s111K + 549-3041 ~=~ ~ h~~!=':Jt Exper'd. Mesa Verde ft 1 made. Call 979· 3 l28 -N0w:rr~reach ~e~~is · 644-5070 Sl>cy/Construc $121<.. F..qual Oppor Employer CM Conv. Hosp, 661 Center 5~11 • oogcustom padded ~rpet, nr nu, 14'8"x27', u 8 Y mem ers 1P Com Hosp. bhl lt'ntcr 1 _________ •1 Chicfl-:n~r .,1,,1nt s;.i.ak. St CMMS·SS85 portable bar with pale apple grn. $S5. SlOOO .. CallaftS,559-74711, !lt. CM Arent Constr $1~K -Serv. Sla Help needed Im· -·-----multiplex tuner, 8 track Down couch bc1~c $200 Dys,ti40-SOOO. Ed l'r,rnlin~ Collaler, 1>1trme lrvint• Pt·ro;onnel A,.:t•nry ii---------med. 1'\111 or Pit Apply, W 0 MAN ove r 4 0 · & tumtable·all are built Fruitwoocf c r cdcnL~ BEAUTIFUL H d I t NURSES AIDES Xlnt bend1b int l11il11H'. !> 1 <: k I e .J \ t· BJ ' \' 1 e ~ <.:on' • ~l~i.'> Thuri11 ""' l'M bot2 ;~l.'i N11w a1cept1ng apphca -'881<:11thCo ... t.1Mf'sa ~ECRETARIES 990 E Cst Hwy Nwpt ch1dlen1png work lna·plu9 two custom $150 ~5556 ed rnpoodpa~ t1un., lur Mun & Tue:-Suitt• 2'l·I IH:! 11711 '1 Bch ' w/future on busy phonei1 wrought iron bar stools. · gray ceram c e. 111ght ... haft.. t\pplv ~iim · _ ----.,....._ With & without sh Work --no soles. N R. area. Jo'lcx Sharp' 581·7446 '45. Manual portablt· •\!Jm l't'nny:-avei 1660 ~----~ when & where you want Sewmi? operator ror can· hrs & wkndi;. Refs nee. -----GarageSCIW 1055 typewriter s5otoffer. l'lal..'1·nl1a , Custa .\k:..1 RUBBER PRESS Ol'H Long & short L1irm jobs vas bags, exp. w/power Slart $3 hr. l''teti ht'allh F ~ASHJAID ••••••••••••••••••••••• Xln~ ~o~d 1146·857!1 Office girl --40 hr wk w train Sahli v uvail. TOP $$$ & \ aca· mactunes. 646-49M ins Call 6-llPM 646407l or g us , Cuen. anll· Sat/SUn Feb 4·S. Anh· eves w n Permanl'nt I' 'T Npt Pnnt SholJ n1>eds arl1!>l1c cummen..,uratt• ""lt~l'fM.'r llonpay SOLOERER'S --- -ques &clrTV s. 957-8133_ ques, off. equip' bdrm Must Sell night stand $20 B h I t . t f rm pNi>on to do blueprint F'ull Co bcnt!f1t:;. l:Jll You can do It. Why stay lllll, cstm pool tbl, boats, Bookcase hdbrd $25 c n\c' nHn 1 an~ t~plO~ & puste-up !1626ti48 Requires min. 2 yrs chal.nedtoadesk,hous 5PCPLAYPEN mlacboal""'WP,A/C,10 n·-too•·,$10ea.Kings1 needs llll•rl, bright & 333' 3rd Sl. L 0 guna _..: ---1denng •· wi..i .. g exp ti-I k., Y -.. u..n "' b 1 u """ .,. ..... • or .ue c oc . ou can (2) 8• SOFAS, 11pd bik•, motorcycles, bed suo. Credeoia $200 ~e ~~n ~~pin~ ~:~I~ 0 ~ _Bt'_ach Sa.ies Point to point solderlni start a bus meas of you (1) LOVES EAT lampe, prof. hair dryer & OUoman w /casters, grn some Oexib1hty m h~. ~ rotary swatches. Not own Cull, p/l without rilk· 2 OTT01'ANS much more, 213/59'2·253t, S20. 2 TV cabinets, $10 & Call L d t t>4S 5111 --....a..-a..t--C I AGGRESSIVE PCB. Some cabling exp. l.ni what eecw1ty yo ""CRIFICE Huntington Harbor P>. 1 Dumont TV, $50 m a e . --~";',.= SALlSPERSON ~~~~~~E.ent ~10:~'. Fs°!e •r: OM~LY $488. Dtning set w/Gchrs. sofa, B/W. divider s20. & WAHTED! 661·1211 yourself how you ca Avon cosmet 2 child• many other items. 144 ORDEtlLllS Analyst 32122Camtno Spray painter helper, 18 make a llfc instead of a 3PCROOMGROUP Leather Jkts. 645·6414 Lexington Lo. C.M. Xlnt beMhts 1nclud1nr. t:lectro-mechan1cal A <'ereer opportunit} Capistrano yrs old or older, no ex· llvint 5PCBEDROOM eves 545·1291 !>tck leave. Uayv1e~ swttch manuf. seeks an with national AAA·l rat· San Juan Capt.Strano per. nee. Muat have car. 7PCLIVING RM --·-------1 Conv., 20SS Thunn A\l', div. w/haekground in ed compan) No tra\CI, Equa10pporEmployer 768-8749 Mlftlatdhe SPCDINE'ITE ~ 1070 l<Hpd bike t yr $150, $200 CM 00 350.S. producl1on or an \•en tor) ~ x <' e J J .. n t r om pan y 1---------$58 8 ••••••••••••••••••• •••• nu. Slng/Rwng pram gn ------~ ~ ••••••••• •• • • •• • • • • • • • • kds bt $75. 962· 7921 rontrol. Will perform bent.'f1L-. plus prohl !'>har ---------i---------~-"---1005 WA..,.JED Peril Stock P~son t:Xper. ~e~1n-d bu! not rcq'd Will train \1 u~I {Ji~S l'O phy,H al 111dud back \r,1)~ (\.di 101 appt 540 763!1 EOI·. PART TIME . EVENINGS ,\dulb ~1lh nuht.1ndin~ <1llrad1vc per!-1m.1hl1t· ... who cnJoY workmi: with kids. Start .it S3 50 p1•r hr. Phooc &t2·4:r.H. II~ between J 00 5 00 P;\1 Ask for Jim Equal Opportun1t) t-:mploycr Part tJme sitter for re· tarded younic J:irl. Stu dmts OK. 640 l31 l, 9 5 &W·5J2SC\e Part-lime hl'lp wanh·d exper'd 1n mnrtnl' 1nrl nee. Mosl ht• a\·a1l for w k n d s . 1 " n r o v 1• 1 831·93lJOr4't:I 11~5 anal)'•~ in production. 1ng and bonu,t>:. C'on STOCIC RM CLERK :;:·.;::-; ••••••••••••••• 4WDIRAtWfE~hCHEST $lS. .....,. New tires, BSR s trk, hst• pun·h~ml( & 1n,cntory tests for mu <ind your For s mall electronit' 1 nu irus TOP CASH DOLLAR hid gds, lyr Keomorl' ~·~~~~r~:.tlt'~1~·~1~~~:ft~d~f ~GJ~:1;1 ,l··~'er~~u~~n ~~ !:<C::.~!.Op~=~ !"i::pfng ~o~e::~~,~~ d~ MUSICIOXES ll~~~M r~rL:V?~Aic<:.~:. elec.dryer <1!ti·H:!O :-1rnbl(· H:iham.1' w .. promoll• Employers a,yAllFees sirable. Req's .:ooll CLOCKS 645-6151 ART OBJECTS. GOLD. King & Twn beds $100 & ST AC OS WITCH INC I rum \\ 1th111 univ II )nu Ltt Rein rs AKellCY handwnllng & apt1tudt: Slot Machines, Nickelo· SJ L V EU Sf~ H V l CE, $30. Sofa & loveseat SJ5 tl:JU B.1ker l'ost.:1 '1c:.J havt' a }l'Ur or mun· ul 4020 81 h, Ste 104 for work in~ w/f1gures dcon:.. phonographs. Fl NE 1o·u RN & AN -Washer/Dryer S25 ea 549-3041 sul'te-.!>ful :.t•lli ng <-.1 ll N1·wport ij<'a1.:h 833-11190 STACOSWITCH INC World's 1 argesl selec· Antq'. Dtn. rm set w /b TIQUES. &15·2200 RoU·a·way $30. 847-0557 l'.qual oppm Emplo) t•r 130B HELOl'll; <ll <:! 1:11 Call for Appl/ F..stab '65 1139 Baker Costa Me-sa l 1 on A Is o g i ft s , chrs. l leaf Walnut. Gd M-an·s custom made l8 u~.-..a Dra"'"'s, like new, ~!:Yi&'>COLU:CT 549-3041 furniture. antiques. rond $650/ofr84G0291 IM:\J ,,,_ Amencan International. · · karat nugget gold ring. gold. Three 10', one 13' PRODUCTION TYPIST IBM SELECTRIC II Experienced iUccurale Typist needed t m- mec11 ately 70 wpm (mll<\tl. VACATION REl.IEF' ~HIST Bk: ~BLl·: TO WORK DAY OR NIGHT smrr::; Exc.-ellent Working Cond1t1ons Apply in Person SALF.~ BULLOCKS WILSHIRE h Look mi.: For lntiJVlduals Interested In An Opportunll) 1 o JoLn An Exc1llnl! F,.sh100 Forward Co Secretary F.qual Oppor Employer 1802 Kettering; Irvine'. NEW Hide·&· Bed. Brwn Cost $1100. sell $500/bst me 6' x 7'1ong. $S0 for all 7541777 OpenWed.·Sat. tweed with specs of col· orr.67S-0898 or$l.2Sft.&W·9828 EXEC. SECRETARY Supervisor The Jolly Roger, Inc. has Expenenced person to <.1n opemn~ for an ex· superv111e production of Jler'd secretary to report sail covers. Must have lo tbe Vit'e ~res-Finance ability to design & pro· & Ad m 1n1 st r alto n . duce patterns for produc- Outstan<linit sh & typing uoo. Good potential. Call .i.lull.s are req'd for th11 645-4501 srEWART ROTH ANTIQUES American Oak Dealers 750 E Dyer Rd. S.A. <at Newport Fwy> 751-8922 pot;. Xlnt working conda 1---------1---------& benefit package which wttcbboard Opr. Full or 1Mludea various group p/Ume. Will train. Call rn.'iur. benefits & profat 1_64S-8'172 ___ . ------sharing. Sal com- mensurate w/exptr. AP· ply in person, R·5pm. Mon·Fn 17042 Gillette Ave. lrvme. TECHNICIAN Audio Exper, apply Atlantic Mwiic Sales & Services C.M. 646-8895 WHOLESALE TO THE TRADE NOW OPEN TO PUBLIC ors. Zlpper cushion cov-Li'ffttock 1075 et"S. Paid $230, 111:1c for ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ $175. Used Wrought Iron W.ted 8011 Patio table with 0 lass Jlee. Mora an ma_re,, broke •••••••••••••••••••••• • top It• matching chairs to rlde & drive, .blk WANT TO BUY V ......... ood au· parade Morgan geldme, ery ..... ,.>: g quau· Ene. Western (714) 4 Ucluu to lOng Tul e:oc-\Y. Ndl patnUDg. $150. 3.'B-lOll b.lbll.~af\6pm Call 980-5&W aft 6 pm or ---------Sat/Sun. U1dih1ry rlJIMllllcllll .. • ..... • • •••• 1Mtf'tmt11 ats Too large for our new 0 _k 11 9 .. home, cstm made teak 11.U" we. parquet drn rm set $125 Mllwault le hog Dynaco stereo pwr Amp 9'x3'h', 8 lthr matching $75. Stanley 21 hp rout•r 400 watts, $300 Maestro chn. $1,900. 495·23<>15. $100, Xlnl · 546-6341 . Slt-«00 $125. 839·5394 1013 ~ 1010 Wgh boy Chest $65. Blk & ...................... • Officer. nlhre & tr vou have a slronl! r~ la1i background & or!! m t e r e s t 1• d t n a d vancement. we would hke tot ;alk with you Bullock~ Wilshire n((er" iln ex«clll'nl ht·rwhl plan mcluc:hnic J libt.>r:il d1~ l'Ounl on store men•han·•--------ia--------- whl TV 165. Baby Crib ............ 8015 $3S. m--0795 WANTED ••••••••••••••••••••••• Part lime ORAHGE COAST TELEPHONE AGT DAILY PILOT d1w f'lea!IP Apply In Per~on \Ion lhru Fn 3 5pm 83 Fosltfon lslond Mewpert leach Equal Oppor EmployPr Telerhone Sales $10.34 PER HR. OPEN7DAYS AWEEK9·6. 5-doww~Ltd 15292 loha CWca H.l.f71 .. l 19J.7509 Beaut. floral loveseat, TOP CASH DOLLAR Arulwenng device, Vox I006e pillow sore & love-PA I 0 to• 0 R Y 0 U R remote. Paid $280, sell seat, game table & JEWELRY, WATCHES. $180orbe9tofr.4!M-813J For credit '·ard Co :i:iow BaySt <.:osta Mesa Strong phone personah A11k For Paul Ward ty. No 11ales or sohc1la 0 •tion We train. Ideal for Equal pporlunrly Veta & college tiludents i----fo~•m•p•l•oy•e•r __ _ 'For appt C'all Mrs Coleman at 83lHS61 ----PIX AMw~. Sen. Graveyard shirt nvaal Tues tbru Sal 10pm·darn Exper. prel'd, but ~ 111 train. Call for appl S51·77Tl. EOE match wall units, wing ~Z v ~E~a ~PcL~: ,..__a.~ 1090 Appl.en 1010 back chrl, lamps, glus FINE FURN. "· AN·••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••• •••••••••• • •• & wood coffee tbls, ml&c .,. tbls d~ .. oua. DUI\ TIQU~. 645-2200 New Brand Name Pianos r • .,....., lll"'IV'o.n\I, 10% over cost. This Valentine's Day send your love a greeting all the world can share with a Daily Pilot Heart of Love. Its easy. compose your personalized greeting & we'll set your message in type to flt the border of your choice or your own handwritten thoughts may appear 1n the border you select. Borders come in 3 sizes: $15, S1 O, & a special child's size for $2. (You must be under 12 to quality for this one). If you wish to create your own greeting, use a black pen & write your menage In the heart below or draw youi awn Valentine of this size. Fer hitp with your ad. Just call &42=5878 & a trJendly alantlne ett-v~r win be happy to aulat vou. ArtlJ, It yqu Hke, you can cttarga your Val nttne ad or use your Maste~ Charg ore nk Amertcard. -- DAILY PILOT Beach Music Center 1740t Beach Blvd. H.B. 8(7..8SJ6 ANTIQUE ORGAN Good condiUon "°°/ofr. 846-0291 Wurlllser Spinet piano w/bencb, maple xlnt. cood. $600. 642-17" 'n>omu Calif. Theatre Model 11J1'7, perfec cond less than 1 yr over $97 mo payments. Cost ne-. $4,500. Alter 6831·1215 Old UpritM Plcmo SD> 873-4786 s,artl•J~ 1094 ....................... Flieller Supergtass Snowakis, 19Scm·$20() new; now Just $'75. (w/o h!Ddin,.>. c.au 642.0138. II-. ,,,at dubs like new Full aet + baa, $25. ('TU)SIM912 1091 ....................... Stereo consolto tn antique reproductloD cabinet, xlnl a~IQ as well as beaut. rl.arG. pMK:e. Jyr-; , old. S3SQ o~ bat. orr. 15J.11'0 z:su RCA Color 'l'V, 1 yr_ warranlJ" 8l Tl. For HrYiH ala~ 142·U•() C.M. • • t · a_, 1rt.d Auto-. l•ported AMtM, l•DOf"hd Autot, Uwd Autot, Uud a! UMCI ...................................... , ................. i•••••········ ....................... ······················· ..................... . 1MW t712 ,,__ . t73Z vci1isw.-· t170 .. di ttlQ c:t.nroa.t tt20 ....... , ttlO ti •• , ..................... , ...................................................................................................................................... . LAST CHAMCIJ ::::.;.;-:. .... u:.:"--~""' 'I) Rncb•ro Ll1h•Jv ORAMCil co•-·s "7S J~naen Healy Coovt, HUGESF.LZCrJON '15 Eldo, •UDf'OO(. sliver ORANGE COUNTY'S i ""'""'--••v • "· v"' 1 n • w mt r, 0 w n • r Nft &rUSED CABS blue. taper aha,,., must :it MIWIST 2 8 ft . u n 111 t. than Sbrl tunnlnJ Ume. mcd1fuid V.f wttb • apd OLDEST des~tA!! $3000/Bst ofr aen. t'l.000/olr, 09-1477 ... • UNCOLN·llKRCURY ~t ~-.. irtl 1 ~.w1netd.Jn, lncludlos l Ht of tl ~~. ~ certbit. Airb $ 6.11 Top cash $$ for your .,. * • Dulenhtp ls now OPEN •wu '-"'"' on "' oa cu· downs, a ramp It a bike .._... tTailor c · VW. Paid for or not. Call c..a = ,.,. I 5 •it * • •y 11!9 •DBOI Custom interior. pilot, at.and.sa:;o.caUatt.u>M ma11, recline buck Maida 9731 K.eitborJerry ••••••••• .. •••• .. ••• •• ,.. ....._ ~ A u F, V H.F • aunloJ. 7~1-3474 • aeett. ods Ute body wort .. ••••••••••••••••••••• a<>B WITHAM vw LlNCOLN·MERCUllY out r I g g er s • AC I O C Ir paint. RadJo heat.er & Sal &l'Vi Le ln "7600 Westmlmter Ave. it * 16-18 Auto Centf'r Dr. natural gas refnger<&Uon '11 Suzukl TM 12.5. GOOd au tauie don't work ea ce-as g 893-TSSl or 638-1880 • Sl>P'W>'·Lakc f'or•t exit & coolung, bimina top cood. Runs 11lot. $2 Bit oil Oftr $600 549-0067 Rov c ........ tac. .. ll\VINE w I enc Io sure , now worth or Fue parts. or 55'1-80CM Rolls Jtoyce BMW VW Bug '71 rebuilt ent. · · • 830..7000 Chrysler manifolds, Total prlce $250. l.MOJambotee Nu pa.int. '6S body $850 • * --------- risers &elbows plWi ~x· t7W830-&.91J v.. 9570 NewportBeach ~ JISOH..._ltvd. Call~·SZH ~ec-fy'• • Jt '78 =t wagndlded tra f~l. Call Dale atHooda'7S360CL4000MI ....................... WJOBMW"Cluslc"2.80() Cost.Mesa64S-5]00 '65VWBua.1000mionnu S.••C....,. ~=~~~~~· ~~l( $33o~1b~s0t'o1f;~ 498-27 · Excellcoad. $650/bestof· '68 Chevy van. sips 'l blt· CS Ooupe-4 speed, sun reblt eng. Great co.ad. • 49~1 • 5 4;,9967 548-8749Mfl..3274 eve 26 ft Thunderbird fer631-5'18'7 Eves. h1a, $1$00/beat o tu. roof, factory air cond., M.rc ... lea 9740 $13)0. 49A-3'191 1976 CADILLAC '+='-9952 Formula (offshore). 351 'lSl·llMl AK/FM ~ electric •••••••-•••••••••••••• _...., V8s, all navigational '14 Yamaha TX500, gna wtndowa, pwr. steering '71 Super Beetle SIVIW ••••••••••••••••••••••• gear & ground tackle. cood. acceas. Ust sell ~m_pletely cuatm 191'7 & brakn, light alloy 1969 280 SB. SJ.250. D,ys 631.(!600, Eve All leather, stereo tape, 1974 Mustang U GbJa, Sleeps four. Under 50 $550/bstolr.631·1358 ~e Van. loaded, lo wheels & only 63,000 If you want an xlnt 1969 &&5-Q6'1 cruise cootrol & aJl tbe sunroof, PS, PB, air, lo hours used since new. 6 ml 1• Alll·FM atereo, miles. MINT cobditaoo! MB from original owner deluxeextru. ('98330). mi, AM/FM 8 trk, auto. wh~t trailer included· Motor tto.. .. S•I AIC. icebox, the works. SU.500/best offer Pri which shows excellent 1970 Bubble Top Bua, $9S8S 98ll.3089 alt 8PM also full canvas. Call a..t/StCMagt 9160 Gorgeowt pailat scheme. pty.Call64Z~J.38. ' · care for $S900/firm call ~000 mi on new eog, John Felter at 642·0010 or ••••••••••••••• .. •-••• Mlll!lt see lo appreciate, 640-i410 & 6"-4684. n w paint, bed, FY 8 (4) '77 It '78 Seville9 Mom's '69, 6 cyl, •uto 540-82ll Rent a 1977 Excutl\'e '8QOO.Calldaya;552·5511 972BMW20024apd, radials. $2000. Andy ToCbooeeFrom trans, P/S, xlnt cond. · Motorbome or Mini-. clean, after 6PDl. '71 Mercedes 250. B/O. 644-6656 $lSOO. 8'1s.ao&a 1978 motomome from Herb 81 Corvair van full call552-5190. Xlnt cood • '76 Honda ---------1 Friedlander. Cell any or camper steelbelt tires. ~ $1200. Ana aerv, lv '67 Baja, 1700cc eng, xlnt. Nabe 68 MUltanl Coovert, PS, SEA RAY'S thesenumbens Nds work bat ofr. ,..__, 9715 mesa. 6'0-l6ll '70 Bug '"8pd, f.9,000 mi. fS 75 Mcmu 2+2 Hlchbk, 1 PB, AT, AM/FM 8 trk., 89• 1t.777 ~1519 -.-• Must sell 552--0528 ownr. lo mi, AM/FM, .h .. -. ~95 496-ll74 -••••••••••••••••••••••• '66 2SOSE coupe 4..spd ' Cadillac $2750/bat. 552-4201 -.,. ~ . Now 537.7777 '72 Dodie Van, wide '73Capri,V6, m1Dtcond$9500.' '167VWBajaSedan,new l972M teCal '68 Fatblr 289, mecb. 82Wll8 tires. cu st a eats. $1650. Must sell 673-8095 6'6-2231 tires, sbocb, paint, oil 2600 HJrbor Blvd. oo r 0 so..md, needs minor bdy ISTHETIMETOBUY & paneled, crpt, AM/FM or640-7133 cooler, roll bar, lamps, C M 540.9100 Auto~atic, pwt steer· wrk. $600. Dan, "2-3:i60 SAVE. OVER 112 BOATS RENT Fireball 23' Self ater., A/T, P /8, P /B, 9720 '77 Ml% 450SL clutch & special sUJp. osl.i cs.a Ing, all' c:ond, vinyl top. aft tJ. JN SfOCK. 18'-30' FOR cool Auto/air. CC, CB, sharp. 95,000 mi'•· $27'5. DClhun Sliver blue ltbr Int, ~ust see. 960-8lB7 mQn· Must sell ('11') 493·1068 --------- JMMED DELIVERY stereo slpe6645-2283 492~1~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• stereo 'caas 1 m wbls mgs OlcknDble 9t55 s b · · I i i · ' * DRIVE .a. ' a ':' · • .1' SeVille, dart brown ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• u stant1a pr ce n· 29 ft. Appollo motorbome . ...._ W..twd 9590 • ""* All xtras, like nu. '67 V Dug, rblt eng., gd exterior, ""'1 leat.b int. creasHe,,,,F;.t:.i.50 'S Must aee to appreciate! ••••••••••••••••••••••• * LITTLE. * $22,500, PP. 499-3613 cond ,,.1000 or best F\all ""'• w/Rolla v-~ce Cor"twtt• 9932 PllVATE PARTY ,......1 N Call John Felter at WI wtLL•UY •• '74 450SEL excell cond 673-'1896.or M0-4J80 Ext grill T~e whla:i;'rof ••••••••••••••••••••••• ?4 OLDS CVTLASS SEA RAY 642-0010or540-8211. 'YOUR DAT$UM SAVE A LOT loaded, s'un·rf stereo'. 13 maint'd, xlnt cood. PP. •CORVETI'ES Z..01. HT 3101CoastHwyN.B. MOTORHOMES PAIDroRORNOT SHOP&COMPARE cruise control•lthr int., 640-5371 19711 Less tban 47,000 miles, 631-2547 FORRENT TOP DOLLAR ';,~~12•500• 497·1718• 1~18~~i.F'°J4'e~a~~~e 76CPl•YIU.I ~~:~~~.:.'.. one owner, very clean. '74 MARAUDER. 24', From$150.wk.77<M>622 FORTOPCARS $1~.'154.clM7 towner. 6'0-6'54 :.v=~;,.Fi~~ MGI 97 44 , DCIVE & QUAIL STS. """""6 Command bridge. Twn '73 Winnebago Brave, lo ••••••••••••••••••••••• a vw pop-top camper "16 CAD Sedan De Ville. <Near MacArthur. Jam· steerine and bra~es. 165, dual station, trailer. miles, air, generator '11 MGB Xlnt cond. Low w/"'12 rblt eag, new tires U>aded. (t&'lPQT) borM & Bristol) vinyl roof •. good l\res, L<>aded-M.int! 841M836 $8500. 495--049t;493-~ Tiie '78s ~ Here mi $2l0o Call c:Ao.2169 & abocu, runs good. ~ NEWPORT BEACH AM/FM radio. S3.200 or T~ 1i ti 9170 All models If colors. · · ...., • Asking $1800. see at. 118 make otter! 644-4M68 1977 Sea-Ray 24 ft. ~ Nl'f 1-diafe 968-6887 47th $t, NB. Lv mso at TS F1eetwood Bro\fcbam, um mna•, a..tr1r loaded,-,--------w " d 82 hours, ••••••••••••••••••••••• WE BUY • El ---·-...,... .., SJ 442 °ood cond except ee.en er. DIUnry Today! Stork forces sale! Late 673-4m5 D' • Yvav_. lDl, 43K, lo mileage. $9899. 2 d :fto Ask tt;/V\ M t depth finder, marine 31' Airstream good cond~ a.UN CARS ,77 MGB, SK miles, v-a..o 9772 $6300. 963-837n 813·76S3 7SJ-0010l'832..01S2 __ ,.en~uc;.., ....,... us radio, AM /FM 8 track tJcn with extras. By ap-un PM DCU ~·--.-stereo, trailer, full cover, polntment only $6900. & TRUCKS Last ebance for fan· Green It an, x 1 n t, ••••••••••••••••••••••• _________ , 1966 CORVfm --·------- trim tabs & swim step. Call646-6006atter4 P.M. tastic savings on all re· garaged. $5125. AM's UFOllYOU IUY ma l!Pe DeVllle. xlnt. )f h 1 11 b 1972 Sta wgn cost. $lS 300 tr 0 d ed m.ai.n1ni '77 models in 83M644 PM's 970.2774 Sunroof & xtras, new _ec an ca Y .. super cruiser, 9 pass, full pwr, • or o er. r er Aldo 5erYlce Pwh CON"Ell stock. 9746 A USID VOLVO, tires & brks. Avl 2/8. ~MINT interior & ex· AM·FM stereo. Priced to ~i:~~~~s::~~ &~" 9400 CHEVROLET ~•••••••••••••••••• ~-.. ~'eounat tys~utVbolern $11M>Oorbeat.otr.643-9!586 =~~>· aell,$1,fXiC>.642-3208 at546-1200. ········-············· ~~---• VO wkda1a -.89-Tax ..... 9957 ---------•'64-'7'1 U1ed Mustang Bl d. '73 Opel Maota, Weber .. _............. ~Ll Chris Craft 25' 1960, Parta. 99Q No. Parker, 2828 Harbor v carb, exhaust. $950. Aft 6 ~UIS VOLVO Beautiful "IC w~ & blk .... cense ..................... .. cavalier, good cond. Orange. c.11997.2000 ~.~=A ~~~~~=:i~rl wkdys, 770.JS62. ION VIEJO ~.:e 'i!1:9~;1PLo $Sl90-Total ·i~~U..:.·r~e~t 0Jevy283,$3000.661--0'738 VW parts, all kinds, Porsche 9750 831·2880 495-1210 ~ • • • mjr overhaul. Gd cond. WE P Y Top DOLLAR ••••••••••••••••••• •••• olr '74 28' Cab Crsr. F/G, CHEAP! A ORANGE COUNTY Best • 759-9.m aft 6 FIB, T /$, well equip'd, 896·9404 FOR TOP USED CARS lWl'7 9US, 1000 mi, sun· VOLVO CltlYrolet ~ee at Htg. Har. 846-3033 FOREIGN, DOMESrlC roof, leather, loaded. 1st or CLA.581CS 77 ClecrC91Ce $1.8.000 takes. 640-8208 EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO 35'CHRISCRAFT WANTED: Hard top for lf)'OUl'cariaextra clean Demo & executive sale '7J European 9141.7 AM· Largest Volvo' Dealer Aft cabin/dual station 1966 MB 230SL. Will pay see us fU'Sl. now going oo-burry ! FM/Mecca cassette re· in Orange <buntyt $1lliO l>r Rll 499.2509 TwinChrysV8's/2beads topdollarforanycolorln IAUEAIUICK 888DOVESTREET corder. Loaded w/xtras. BUYorLEASE 96M9'7S Take over lease •77 • ey, iJt,:;1· surv~/l4l°~ ~ore ~00::1" Mi-7698 ' 2925 Harbor Blvd. (Near MacArthur Blvd. Low miles must see to DIRECT '77 Caprice Claas1c, $6327. Cougar XR7. Beaut ha· PlynlMdh 9960 Collta Mesa 979.2500 J'~B~~~ ~~~~~ ~~~~~ ~·,·~· 01~-f~l~!i~ Loaded.~ ~ ••;:;:n'!. ~:~ •;;;·;~;~·~=:i~:·;~:: loah.Rtftt/ SAAl&YOLVO TOP 833-1300 67~7648 • T • rPmilniog on 3 yr lse. Wae, 9 pass., P/S, P/B, Cltarter 9050 c l · II D,... 1 •R '62 Bel Air • xlnt condl· 668146 Air, Gd. tires, trans. omp. servace on a ~ '75 8210 hatchback, '66 912, s spd, Spoiler. 2025 S. Manchester tioo.$550/Best ff, r c 1 · b k ~;;;;;:;~·~··;~~:;:·;~: Swedish can, latest fuel PAID AM/FM, Air. good cond. New paint/tires. Xlot Anahei 750 2011 m-m e • Dodgl 9935 tr:Ue:rhlt:h.r c5 8 Rcadi~ Yacht, reasonable, hour· ~ten. Call today FOR CLEAN Make offer. 213/894-1061, eood. $5100/bst. 631--0836 .. !Tl . -••••••••••••••••••••••• incl. Good Coad. $1.900. l dail IMPORT CARS or 714/871-8850 '68 Dodge superbee 31s • ~. y or y. 675·2112 or '77 911S Targa, 6,000 mi, Swedish Volvo Mechanic apd. Gd. cond. .Mags•----------- 675-5585 A.tot for Sale ALL MODEl..S '7S BlZ. Stereo/caas AM· Emerald freen metallic now at Ivans Foreign 631-18 '76~ Volare Prem. wgn, ••••••••••••••••••••••• FM, mae whls, silver. paint. 7' Alloy wbls, Carrepairs, 1995Harbor For Id Action· 15,000 mi, immac. loah, Sail 9060 GeMl'al 95 to $ 5 4 5 O • 6 4 s • 1 4 1 O stereo, leetber tot, 5 spd. Blvd. CM. 645-1982 ft '71 {2iarger Super Edi· Loaded! ~.100. 673-3600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••• .... •••••••••• evs/wkods 846·7161 lowered. Mint cond. 1 can I tioo, auto, PS, PB, FUJI. y AMAHA wtd)'a Owner. 9UKSR. $20,900. Aulol. UMd bucket seats $1005/0fr. '61 Fury. auto, radio. DE.ALERS WANTED: Hard top for '74 Dllblun P~p. AM· ~7866 or 7~19 Iv-·········· .. ········· 0-illv Pilot '152.:i620aft6PM great shaJ>il, 77K all~ Yacht Brokerage 1966 MB 23(1SL. Will P•Y Fii stereo, mag wbls, 990 I flUJ "10 Dodie •ID. 9 pass, $23). 846.eM9 • • Listings Wanted I top dollar ror any color In Ult.be Ila radials. ton· '74 914 2.0, 5 spd, .AM/Fii, ••••••••••••••••••••••• an VISOR loaded. "12 CbeV)' Ve&a '74 _Duster. lmmac. 37,000 SOllthwnhnl goocl condition. 646-11198 neau eonr, Mint cond, &apes. Black, app group. IUr ~go. 4·apd. air. $999 au. 18-20 mp~ 1 owner. Yadlt Sdn &efon12nooo. WE IUY . ~aft 6pm home 645·1910, w rk PROPERTY &42-5678 ea& ~1448 evs/wlrdys $2790, Must aell. 7~ 2616Newpoct.Blvd. USllP CAISI Newl7 rebll Datsun &42~Don. hrd 9940'_ew __ lwtnds _____ _ Newport Beach ~!_ 95•0 We're &be..,. Cbnrol• en1l1M for •• Datsua '68 912 Tarea, AM/FM R£DUCJION ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• "15 Oatm ~1'7 cpe, 39,6oo (714) 673-9211 ~ & dealenhip bt the 1rvip, '200. WW sell rest of car stereo cus., $7000. · · actual nu's, A /C, Nu •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• Auto Centn. We need torSS0.83t-OOTS 494-7M8 SALE l~PHIL radials, $3250/ofr. Ne~ 24' AmericanTrlumpb, '62 TR3A. yourusedearl LONG ~ Sailboat. Take over pay. Featured June '17 issue JOE '1S 210 Htcbbck. Lo mi, '77 Targa, under 7000 Pleet replacemnta re-$162 DAY •---------ments. Has trlr. 493-2612 R " T. Mlot cood. All·YM. orig ownr, 42 mi's, fully equtp'd. Cop· quire the Dall, Pilot to • • per FORD ,__ 9965 CAL 2.27. Diesel '77. Sips 714/fllll6.4317 MAC PHERSON mpg. lit air fl'llet $2500 per brown w/faun inter. Uquidate 12 Plymouth ••••• .. ••••••• .. ••••••• s. Well equipped. Part or CHEVROLET takes. 1/639·2744 dys, MtiQg $20,000 or lse at Station Wagons from ex· 'l'hat'aALLyou pa)' ~ 'ID Bonneville, runs 11lnt. N •-~ 6'15·4424, 175·8127 $338mo.i75-9111 ,.,.. .. .,iaven..._ fora very clean. $500/0fr. entire interest. ow~ 21AtatoOenterDriH Jmdl -..,6 ,,. "''••-chartered, tax break, V IRVINE enfW Poraclle!58C,xlotshape. 30t!8J:4 ~ •"' 1-831-·lD ______ _ lo~, :.;.n:a~co111e. ;,;;:;•: .... ;:;;.::;:.. 761-7222 Q&tl'tdroptheballl Geta Xlntsba:.~ul 1976 •eo~: 1975 Pootlac Astre, 2 dt' fr1 or · sea I job With a low-ccwt Daily S?A-314Dw m YOLARES DAILY PILOT ,. hatcbbk, 4 spd, 32,000 36'SEAGOERYAWL =.WJlf• '800. Call Alllal. Imported Pilot CJaaeified Ad. 77112 Pondle 9115 3 to choose from. All u..•-&11-DMtlol,_.,., ~fTi~~ 975-6200 dys; Honolulu Veteran .. ••••••-• .. •• .. •••••• Pbone6C2·56'78. A~ut.ely immaculate. with factOfJ air condl· SERVICE .... ___ ,..._ Deisel, radio, VHF, pilot 4 w...I Drtn1 955 A1fo 1tom9o 970 Sunroof, AC, atereo tiooing, ~~ail e. tJug. 1.========-1·67 Firebird. Atr, AJC. $14,500 AY646·9000 ••"••••••• .. •-•••••• ....... ••••••••••••••••Rat 9725 system, al•rm. xtras on ~age rac .... k~ er OW· DIRECTORY •75 Torino, A/C, Xlnt P/B,P/S. $950. --. ing package, AM/FM 12' Kite w/trailer, bull 1, COSTA MESA '73 Alfa Romeo Spyder, -..................... &on. $1800 auumelse of stereo. 2 equipped with eond, $2250 or offer. StB~ $950 or offer. 552·0899 AMC & JEBt aU•et/green, lo mi°t. 1975 RAT IZI $.Tl8 per mo or purchase. power windows. Priced »O rrROW'I MuatllelL 552--0528 eves&wknds TOO $4800.113/431-4252. SPl'.LCOUPE Chrls, 631·2152 or from: 642•5678 GetGREENcaah 6'1-3390 lWlD Galaxte 500, $800 or for WlilTE elephants 1977 Lancer 25', xtra MANY Ad 9707 ~:J~)AK/FM --------1 $2175 beat offer. 968-3'61 WitbaClasslfiedAd s bar P • Pvt. Part 1. J•S ....................... • . '72 911T, ailver /blk, fresh (J.Jc.n8S8PCW) , betwrn 6-9 PM. Call 642-5678 714/496-7a'17 )(UST SELL 90 "74 Fox. c.dr, auto, sunrf. OML Y $ 1795 eng., nu radl~ls, 5 al· ""'EPSBY AM·Fll cassette. Must MAaqUISTOYOTA loy1, 73K mt, $7800. 1976 Wot.Mew. 9IOOAlllos.Mew 9100 ...... M•w 9800 31' Ericson, pedestal .IANUARY 3.1.t u Feb a. '2•00. MISSION VIEJO _6'5-0785 _______ -l GRAM FURY ··············-····· ............................................. . ~~te~:,~fi;1°~ Paeuecau 131·ZUO 495-IJIO Rois tloyc9 9756 station waaon. 2 to RDF. ·C8sb to loan, gd S49.a02J ••;••••••••••••••••••• cbooee from. '40 ' bbl pymnta. 586-9893 aft Spm 2531 HARBOR BLVD. 1 DEALER IN U.S.A. engine. All/Fil stereo, r-9 CARVER racks and fac\01'7 air DocU · 070 T1Wb 956 condltioalng. Priced ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...................... ROllS·ROYCE trom: WANTED: slip for '8' FElllUAIY tMOJ•mborff $2150 COSTA MESA DATSUN· DEMANDS YOUR RIGHTS TO ECQNOMY, QUAUTY. loatt. Sii-/ Costa Mesa ~ ROY power window•, roo Grand Banks trawler. c&.IAIAMCI \---::' Bt•dl (Uc. HOOPCY) 5•4·7335 aft 5PM/bfr Oil all OMC truck• ClOSEO !t~OAYS 9AM yaaat We're over WANTED·REWARD allp l&ocktdlU ~ IDMI in NB for 42' Grand .... BaDka trawler 6tN208 PllC ... TOSIU. Need slips for rr• &K' aaU boat&. Mr White 675-1881 T1..,.ta1loe ....................... c~~' ... -. I f 120 XLNl'l1UY SbU1) '66 Silver Shadow while. R.B.-R1gbt ha;f dt. Xlnt cond, $15,900. 1975 AllY Custom Su burbab Waaoas. I to cbooae from. All with faetOl'1 ldr, root racb, 880 t bbl. WXURYAND SAVINGS! 1210 HATCHIACIC Dun ington Beaeh Founta • Valley EDITION Afternoo N.Y. St k . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS TUESDAY, JANUARY 31, 1978 VOL. 71, NO. 31, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES • rt1on Attempt Detailed by Nllrse By TOM BARl.f:Y Ot Ille O~I, l'I._. St.II A prosecution witness testified late Monday that the baby al legedly !:itranglcd tn death by Dr. William Baxter Waddlll "Was alive and breathin~ at tt1e t1ml' he \\as 1nformt•d that lhl.' plannl'd abortion h<.td m1shreLI Heg1sten•d nurse Pat 01\:era told an Orange County Superior Court Jury that the infant born last March 2 in Westminster Com mumty Hospital had a slow and irregular heart beat and could only breathe in gasps. Bul she repeatedly assured prosecutor Robt·rt Chatterton that shl' detected !>1gns of hfe in the 28·week fetus and she te· fused to amend that statement under heavy defense question· rng. Dr. Waddill's two lawyers said they intend to prove that there was no live birth involved in the delivery or the fetus apd that murder charge_s against the Hunllngton Harbour physician should be dismissed Mts. Olvera testified that she went to the room of the unwed, 18-ycar-old mother last March 2 believine that the patient was about to dehver a fetus that had been aborted by the use or a saline injection. Instead, she said, she found what she believed to be a hve baby girl. She said the baby moved, gave what the witness described as a "weak whine" and tried to breathe. ~ The witness testified that she Immediately removed the child to the nw-sery where hospital staff began resuscitation efforts in a bid to aid the ailing infant. lt 1s alleged that Dr. Waddill halted those efforts and then sent the hospital staff from the nursery while he strangled the unwanted baby to death. A coroner's autopsy led lo the finding thut thu child died as a H'sult or munual strangulation. .Seal Beach Store Owner Slain Milk Limited Ohio Grocery Shelves Empty COLUMBUS, Ohio <AP> -Stores are out of beer, bread and milk Shoppers come anyway, some wearing skis or pulling sleds. Farmers say their meat cattle are going without water, their dairy cattle without milking, because power outages have made machine:. useless. AGRJ<'l'LTl RE OFFICIAIS ESTIMATE that Ohio farm lassl·s could t•x1•t•t•d SfiO m1lllon State officials forec<.1st o•·cr the \\eek encl that tlw lo!'>!'>t's v. oulcl suri>.iss S48 million Tht>w ar ,. amonJ! the hardships Ohioans <.tnd others an the Midwest fan• f1\ t· cl:iys after their worst blizzard in history buried them in snow anti \\-hipped them "With hrutal winds. Soml' groct•ry stores report short !.Upplies or no supplies of milk, eggs, hrcad and produce because delivery trucks have been stuck in drifts or stalkd 1n the fng1d temperatures throughout the Midwest FISHER· FAZIO FOOD STORES said they had no short.ages. "But we did ask customers to limit themselves to one·half gallon of milk," :said Milt Kantor, southern Ohio d1v1sion president for the chain. The highway patrol escorted trucks of milk. eggs and meat from Detroit to stores in spow·bound Toled?• said Richaut .Bete. a. vlce president for the Kroeger grocery chain. ON•: STORE WAS UNABLE TO get 1ts milk from its usual ln- dianapolts supplier but found a dairy at Fort TJlOmaS. "Ky.. i\ had no markl•t for thousands of half-pints of milk packaged for schools that arc closed. "We had S<'\'Cral hundred customers who bought milk by the gallon in half pants." an official for the grocery said. With streets an1l parktn~ lots jammed by snow and ice, store manager!. reported shoppers coming with sleds and backpacks. ONE COUPLE SKIED UP TO a grocery in Indianapolis. loaded their purchases into back packs and skied away. The Clark County Red Cross chapter bought 80,000 loaves of bread and had National Guard helicopters take them to six cities to be given away in grocery store parking lots. A Mount Vernon grocer sold 1,000 loaves of bread within two hours of delivery. lie had expected the supply to last two days. A grocery manager in Massillon said two customers argued heatedly over who would buy the last half-gallon of milk in his ~tore. t 1'11LK SCPPl.JES HAVE BEEN affected by dairy farmers' difficulties m tending lo their herds. Where power went off, milk· ing ma chines would not work and except in Amish areas, all milk· ·thg is done by machine. • If cows are not milked for four or five days, they dry up and take several days to produce again, according to dairy scientists. Eveo then. few cows give as much milk as they had done. Many farmers who wee able to milk their cows had to dump (SeeSNOW, Page A2) * * * * * * Through Weekend Cle~r County Sky Due by Wednesday A drizzle that brought to an end the Orange Coast's wettest January in more than 20 years should give way t'o clear weather Wednesday, the Na- tional Weather Service said t~ day. The forecast is £or less than 10 percent chance or sho ... ers loni1bt, partial clearing Wed· neaday and lair weather throuah the weekend. Low temperatures llhould be! about 50 degrees tonight ana highs about 65 d•Bre Wedil day. Deltyl'tleCSUlt ...... THIS WAS SCENE OF MONDAY AFTERNOON ROBBERY AND SLAYING IN SEAL BEACH Huntington Harbour Resident Dies After Being Shot by Bandits in His Store BB Planner Takes'Papers Of Candidacy Dr. Frank V. Hoffmah, 56. has become the 13th candidate to take out nomination papers for the Huntington Beach City Coun- cil election April 11. He has been a member of the city• s Planning Commission since last August, and has resided and practiced medicine for the 13 year s in Huntington Beach. He received his medical degree in 1952 from the USC School or Medicine. Hoffman is a widower with four children and four grandchildren. The four-year city council terms of Ted Bartlett. Al Coen, • Norma Gibbs and Harriett Wieder expire in April. Court Accepts Bid -For HB Inn Sale ~· The sale of the troubled Hunt- ington Beach Inn for $3.6 million has been approved after an auc- tion at a bankruptcy court in Santa Ana. Judge A.K. Phelps approved the bid of Mayer Construction Corp. of Downey for the purchase of the 144-room inn, a nine-hole golf course, the Driftwood Mobile Home Estates and a service station. Negotiations between Mayer and city officials are expected to start this week. Certain require· ments have been set for the purchase and the City Council will have the final decision on · the transaction. all existing lease holders. The lease will be effective for 37 years at which time the physical property will revert to city ownership, Moorhouse said. The city owns the land the de- velopments occupy. The purchaser, Mayer Construction Corp., is a residen· tial development firm which owns the Ambassador lnns in the Southwest. Clark Answers Challenge to Two Rob Jewelry Seller • Huntington Harbour resident -Wayne Gohn, 41, died Monday from gunshot wounds he suf- fered during a holdup at his Seal Beach jewelry store by two ban- dits who are still at large, police said. Investigators said two men en- tered the Leisure World Jewelers shop, 13920 Seal Beach Blvd , at 2 15 pm. and altempt- t•d to rob Gohn and his wife, Barbara Witnesses said they heard four shots. As the two bandits bolted from the shop to a parked yellow sedan, one of them threatened a witness who had emerged from a nearby flower shop to see what. h ad happened. Golin could be seen lying in a pool of blood bleeding profusely from apparent head wounds, witnesaes said. A small handgun could also be seen lying on tbe floor next to Golin's body. Mrs. Golin ran screarnJn& from the shop before pollce arrived. witnesses said. Golin wa-s rushed lo Los \lam1los General Hospital wher~ tw died at 4:16 p.m., Orange County toroner's of- ficials said. Seal Beach police Sgt, V1rgu11a Black said the amounC of loot taken in the robbery 1s not known al this time. Police said the getaway vehi- <.'l e. which bore New York license plates, was last seen northbound on Seal Beach Boulevard. Police said they believe the jewelry store bandits may be two of the three gunmen who held up a pair of markets in Westminster and Fountain Valley Saturday. No one was · hurt in those holdups. The suspects in all three holdups were reportedly using an older sedan with out-0£-state license plates. The gunmen are believed to be in their 20's. Funeral services for Golin are pending. Bartlett and C~n both say they will seek re-election. Mrs. Wieder has announced that she 1s a candidate for Orange Coun· ty supervisor in the second dis- trict and will not seek re-election to the City Council. The property has been managed by the Huntington Limited partnership which took over in 1966. 'Orange' Rams Measure Opposed Mrs. Gibbs said that she will not seek another term on the Ci- ty Council. The IM and adjoining prop- er ties have been in re· celvership for about a year. City officials say that.they wiJl demand that deteriorating cop· ditions at the complex on 43 acres along Pacific Coast High- way be remedied on a condition of sale. Thursday is the deadline for candidates to file with the city clerk. The deadline will be ex·· tended to Feb. 7 if an incumbent does not seek re-elecllon. Cost of the refurbish.ment which includes new air condi· ~onlog. repaving of parking lots and co~tion of code violations Satellite Protest HlltOSJUMA, Japan (AP) -is estimated •t $1 mUlion. About 100 labor union members Vincent Moorhouse, a member and others held a one·bOur sit· of. the c1ty'a negotlatJJJit. tea~. down ln trOnt of Hiroehima's said that the pUtthaso price will atomic bQriib monumeJit today. pay off all debtors ~d buy out LOS ANGELES (AP> - Passaoe of the so-called Jarvis tax initiative, which would severely restrict property taxes, would be the "most destructive possibility" ever faced by the state's public schools, City Schools Superintendent William Johnston warned Monday. Partly cloudy tonight and clearing partially Wednesday afternoon. Lit- tle warmer. Lows &onidlt .52. High Wednesday 67. INSIDE TODAY Firing o loo/er or an ancom· petent from lhe /tderol ' aervict can bt . at """' on imposri~ tGllc. Por.4 look. ot th• "buNllWCnltic maza." ~ tu ucond. tn .o m•s on P.oqt Al. l • - • ... -.. t: DAIL V PILOT \ bid that C'OUld h·nd ullimale· l\' to tht' 1 l'fll()\ oil of Hu11t1naton llt•.1t·h tll'Jiart nH.'nl head'\ from ,,. ott·<·twn 11f lht· city personnel ~\ :.lt· ni \\ .1~ narrowly rejected Moncluy night. But 1.1 ll•ading advocatt• for a t·hangl' 1n tht· ~yi.tcm which has het•n cntu:11t•d b~c11use of the d1frtcult:y 1n fmng unsat1sfttclory department chiefs, says he hasn't given up. l\iayor Pro Tem Ron Shenkman argued that a fixed· tt>rm contract for the top city t·mployees is the only way to go . ind that he is planning a com· No Pact Due Yet In Talks Bargaining and negotiations bl'tween the Jnternational As- ~odation of Machinists and .Mt· Donnell· Douglas Astronautics Comp,;iny in Hunt· ington Beach reiflained at a :-.tandsllll today, pending further union 1-itudy. Ttw !AM membership lnclud- i ng 1,450 employees among the \\ l''>t county CJcrospace facility's \\or!.. fort:c of about 5,000 voted hy an extremely narrow margm !-tat urduy to reject a contract of kr Spokesman Tony Leima of the I \M said followinl! the 51.6 per- < cnt rejection vote, conducted at four locations in Los Angeles mer the weekend, that officials would meet again -to think the situation out. Leonard Lnom1s, assistant diret'lor of the IAM's Lodge 720 m Torr<1nce said today there has ht'l'n no dec1s1on on such a meet- in ~ or a revised wage and l>l•ncfib package. Tht• Oouglas A1rt·raft Com paoy. parent organi1ation of the north Huntin gton Beach •1~rospat:c plant. offered IAM workers a 5.fl ))t'rcent pay raise Machinists employed there 11ow make $7.23 per hour at a variety of production tasks in· l'lud1ng manufacture of the ] >el la space rocket. Union members voted :1uthor1Lation for a strike two \\ ceh ago :1 tactic requiring M'\ en days' noltce of the im· p t' n d 1 n g w a I k o u t -b u t n·sctnded it after one day They took that option at the ttffil' because it appeared negotiator!> comprised of eight workin({ members of tho union. not its business representatives. and Douglas bargainers were so llC'ar ai:::reemcnt Don Jlanson, a Douglas ~pokesman 1n t•harge of press relations for the Huntington Beach firm, said today there is no new progr~ss to report on the la hor pact negotrntions. Enrollment Decline Eyed By Trustees Huntington Beach City <elementary ) School District trnc;t<.•es will receive a report tonight that forecasts an enroll· nwnt decline of about 500 pupils in September. Word of the findings has I 1ltt•r<>d out to the community .ind has touched off fears by a m1mber of parenl'> that some of Ow district's lJ schools may h ·" l' to be closed. Superintendent S.A. Moffett ~wd that no action will be taken tonight. The sole purpose of the 7 30 p.m. meeting at Peterson ~·khool will be for discussion and p.1rticipation by the public. Moffett said that the district s-1 ands to lose as much as $1100.000 in state funds and in lpc a I property taxes if the decline materializes. The projected decline is ex-, peeled to reduce the number ot district pupils lo about 7,200 .. ORANQI COUT "" DAILY PILOT promise. m al.id today lb oeul)' all leading department beads - Police Chief Earle Robitaille. Harbor Dtrector Vincent Moorhouse. Recreation Director Norm Worthy, Finance Director Ben Arguello and Pubhc Works Director Bill Hartge -are ex· pccted to retire in five or 10 yt'ars. ··I· m going to suggest that we keep the current directors in the personnel system but institute a new system of contracts for the tr successors," Shenkman said o.11, ~ .. SE..,ATE CANDIDA Vlejo's Kuczynski 'Neophyte' Seeks Seat In Senate Gregory Kuczynski, 31, a Mis· sion Viejo glass company owner, has announced his candidacy for the 36th State Senate seat held by Dennis Carpenter, R· Newport Beach. Kuczynski, a Democrat. said late Monday that he 1s a political neophyte. His only work toward political campaigns was for President Lyndon Johnson in 1968 when the Lake Forest res1· dC'nt was a student at the University of Arizona. · · l am a hllle unhappy with the \\ay the situation 1s going with this county and this state," he said. "There is too much gov- ernment spending and in- terference in our hves." But Kuczynski, an Orange County resident of eight years, does support planned growth c-ontrol in the Saddlcback Valley through government control. The candidate, who says he weighs 100 pounds and is rive feet, one inch tall but "roars like a s ix-footer," said he is launching a ''grass roots cam- paign" ,by picking up Democratic supporters "here. and there.'' He said the campaign wtll be "the best I can afford and still make my house payments and feed my family." Hts family, which resides at 25402 Shoshone Drive>, conststs of his wife Kathleen and children Lisa, 5, and Neil, 16 months. Senator Carpenter announced in December that he will not run for re-election to his senate seat this year. Salary Pact OK Due by Ocean View .. Shenkman said that removal Of the direct.on from tbe penon· net system wJlt increase performance and add incentives to do a good job. •·w~ can attract a larger number of quality candidates who w1JI be kept on their toes," Shenkman said. "If they do a super Job. they can renegotiate their contract.a from a position of strength." Shenkman's bid to remove the department heads was turned back Monday night by a 4 to 3 vote of the city council which was con~idering recommends· Vmley Panels ToStudy3 Sclwols' Fate Fountain Valley City Council members and fo'ountain VaHey <elementary) School District trustet-s will hold a joint meeting tonight to discuss a proposed plan to close three schools. The meeting will be held at 7: 30 p. m. in the school district offices near the corner of Talbert Avenue and Newland Street Mayor Roger Stanton said no action will be taken at tonight's jomt meeting. Officials have <>alled the session bt.--cause of the possible Impact of the school district's proposed master plan. The plan includes the sale of an unused school site near Ellis Avenue and Bushard Street. By law, the city would have the first option of buying the unused school district property. Officials have also discussed a proposal lo use vacated school buildings for city senior citizen programs. Other items on the joint meet· ing agenda are: Possible-Joint use programs for handicapped recreation and playground use. -Use of school district buses for c1ty transportation needs. -Distribution of safely in- formation to elementary school students. Youngster, 5, Lone Survivor ANCHORAGE. Alaska CAP> -When 5-year-old David Draheim leaves the hospital, he will enter a lonely new world as the sole survivor of a weekend <>rash in his father's plane. A hospital spokesman said the Anchorage boy was in "stable but guarded condition" Mon- day David's parents, Neal Draheim, 33, and Linda Dodson Draheim, 34, died instantly when the family Cessna 170 crashed at Anchorage International Airport on Saturday. Davtd's brother, 7-year- old Daniel. was critically injured and died Sunday evening. Fire Safety Program Set Huntington Beach Fire Department representatives will hold a fire safety program tonight at 7:30 at the music room or Gisler School, 21141 Strathmore Lane. Officials wiJI demonstrate basic fire safety procedures and work out emergency exit routes for residents In case of house I ires. A rire department spokesman said that similar programs will be conducted throughout the en- tire city. lion. tor~ cba.rter cban • M 'Ot Patt1nson, Notma Glbba., Richard S1t!bert and Ted Bartlett voted to not place the issue before the city voters on the June baJlot. Al Coen and Harril'lt Wieder joined forces with Shenkman. Coen said that there have been several incidents in whlch the ci· ty had good cause to terminate department chiefs, but failed to do so because they were "locked into the system." "As far as I know, the city council has never acted arbitrarily on a personnel mat· CAMPAIGN REMEMBERED Former Candktate Slemona Ca1npaign Practices Questioned Jt'ormer Assembly candidate James Slemons, his campaign co-chairman and William Butcher, his political strategist, face fines of up to $8,000 if found guilty of alleged illegal cam· paign practic<.'s tied to the 197fl Republican primary campaign. The allegations were hste\1 111 a press release made available Monday in the S:icramt>nto of· fices of the Stale Fair Political Practices Commission which will hold h«!arings on the charges in March Neither Slem- ons nor Dutcher were ila· ble for comment this mornin,z, The allegations came out of a probe launched in October by the state Attorney General's of. ficc. Investigators aJlege that John R. Young. co chairman of Slem- mons' successful campaign for the GOP nomination in the 74th Assembly District, gave Butcher $220 rn cash to pay the filing fee of another candidate in the same race. Dale Scott Lucas. The r<>lease further alleged that Slemons "knew of lht cash payment and approved it." According to the news release. campaign disclosure laws were allegedly further violated because "the transaction was never disclosed by the Slem- ons campaign and Butcher never disclosed his role as an in- termediarv." The FPPC release said a hear- ing will be held sometime in March before the full com- mission with Admin1strative Law Judge Robert Meher pre siding. Lucas' role in the 197fi Republican primary has been eontrovcrsial because Stern- o n s ' p o I i t i c a I o p p o nie n t s claimed that Lucas only entered the race to bump Slemons' chief opponent, Marian Bergeson, out of the bottom posi- tion on the ballot. Political strategists have long held that the top or bottom posi- tion on a ballot can mean more votes to a candidate. Lucas, who never cain- paigned, got 1,915 votes. Mrs. Bergeson lost to Slemons by 869 votes. After the primary campaign, it was disc!~ that Lucas was a one·Ume employ~ at Slem- ons' New1>9rt Beach car de· alerhip. After wlnnlna the RepubUc:an nomination in the 7Cth, whkh stretches from Newport Beach to Oceanside, $lemons was de· f eated in the een il eltcUon by Democrat Ron Cordova. Jira. 8er£e11011 re-en~red that general electlOD ea~patcwi at \he last minute and nmahtd third, poWn1 as.ooo votes. ~· la Hek-inl the GOP nomlnaUon aaain tbl1 year 1n lhe 74tt\ Dl tric:t.. ter." Coen . Siebert sa'ld lhal he couldn't buv the chat\ge. ile said thatdepartment dircl'· tors would be fearful of repnsals 1f they could be :summarily r1red by the Cit} "They would be rl'luclunt to speak out opt:nly of their ron· cems." Siebert s1aid. Personnel Director Ed Thompson said the city does have the authority to remove its lop employees under the present system through an effective performance evaluation system. In other action, the city coun-. . - t•tl \'Oted lo pl:u~e the issues or the t•1ty cll'rk und city treasurer ,1:. ~t·varatc charter issues to be dt>t•1dcd by thl' public in June. Hes1denls will decide tf lhev wunt the-two poi11tions to remain t•lt'<.'11\'t• or become appomtiv<.' Council members previously voh•d lo put the status or ctty at- torney before the vott!rs as a separate item. Other issues de· signaled for a separate vote are n limit on city councd terms and city ('OUnttl pay. All rematning proposals for <:hurt<>r t'hanges will be voted on tn a single package . SatelHte Wreckage More Debris Aim of Search BULLETIN EDMONTON, Alberta CAP> - Canadian and U.S. search of- ficials said y they have elec- tronically loca ed two potential· ly hazardous iece~ or a Soviet nuclear-powe ed satellite on le(' In Great Save l.ake In the Northwest rritories. BAKER LAKE, Northwe't Territories <AP) A Canadian· American team planned to rl'· turn to the Warden's Grove area today lo look for more debris from the nuclear-powered Soviet spy satellite that broke up m flames over northern Canada last week. Temperatures in the area have hit 40 below. Lt. Col. Donald Davidson. Canadian commander of the team, said his group would search for more radiation tn th<· \ icinity of the· 10.foot crater on the ice of the Thelon River where structural tubing and a smashed metal cant!)ter from the satellite werl' found Satur· day. The crater is eight miles northeast of Warden's Grove. a weather ou4post about 180 miles southwest of Baker Lake and 1.000 miles north of the North Dakota border Davidson smd his team would take water samples downriver \\hi ch could g1\'C ind1cat1on' '' hether wreckage was beneath the ice upstream. He said ici> c·orcs would ~ taken so they t·ould be put down 10 the ice. There was no indication when an attempt would be made to rt•· tover the debris already found. Da\'ldson said C-130 Hercules transports surveymg the area w 1th detection equipment had ob- t a 111cd visual and electronic ,., 1dcnce of two other possible sill's tlrnl dl•bns l<.1ndcd. He did not p111(>oint I hem however Tht• tcmpt·rature in Bakt•r Li.Ike on Monday night was ·11 hclow n•ro with a \\Ind that gaH! a c·h1ll factor m•ar 9-1 below The 1nv<'st1gators had to sta:- at Bak<.•r Lak£' on Monday because their Chinook hehcopter was grounded by trouble with the aux11tary power unit used lo start the engines m the field. A Hercules flew in a new power unit and a repair crew. and a backup Chinook also arrived. En route to .Baker Lake, the Hercules dropped four Canadian par.1troopt•rs into the Thelon Rt\t•r s1Le tu ~uard the ''moderalt·ly radioacti\'e" dt•hris ThC' i-.atellite, whose radar was powl•r<>d by 100 pounds of l lran1um 235, flnmed into the al· mo:-phere and disintegrated ovt'r northwestern Canada a week ago. Remnants of the or- hittn~ spy, called Cosmos 954, were found Saturday by two mcmllC'rs of a six-man group nn a wildlik survey retracing an t•xplorer s 1927 route across the Yukon and "Jnrthwesl Ter- 11to1'1l'S. They were winterin~ in thC' Warden's GrO\'(' urea. /\II \\ere <.'vacuatcd to hospitals Sunda\' and rclt•ased ~londa\ The two who found the wrerk:i~t' Wl"T'C John Mordhorst. 28. of Rock Island. Ill., and :\like !\1ohlt•y. 26, of !\lcsa, Ariz. Plane Developer Aerospace Leader Beall Succumbs Funeral services are ~cheduled Thursday in Newport Beach for retired aerospace e ngineer and execut1ve Wellwood E. Beall. 71, of . Laguna Hills, who played major roles in the development of the B-17 Flying Fortress and B-29 Supedortress of World War 11. Beall died Saturday of pneumorua in a Santa Monica hospital following surgery two weeks a~n. lie retired from McDonnell DougJas Corp. after eight years <is a senior executive. member of the board, corporate vice pre sident and executive vice pres1· dent of Douglas 1\ircraft Com· pany division where be worked upon retirement. Beall joined Douglas in 1964 after spending 30 years with the Boeing Company. While with Douglas, he was involved with tl'le DC-8, DC-9, and DC-10. He joined Boerng as Far Eastern manager in 1934 and was responsible for selling the company's fighter and transport aircraft to the Chinese govern- ment. In 1936 he became chief com· mercial projects engineer and headed all design work on Boe· ing commercial transports, in· eluding the famous Clipper fly· ing boats. Following World War II, he was involved in develo1>ment or the Boeing B·S2, the nation's chief strategic bomber of today: the KC-97 and KC-135 lanken: the Boeinf 7f1'1, first U.S. Jet tn eommerc1al service, ancl the Boeing m TriJd. Beall was botn io Camon C1t.y, Coto., attended the University of Colorado. and firat moved to EXECUTIVE SUCCUMBS Wellwood Beall, 71 Californin in 1929 as an engineer with a Pasadena aircraft com- pany. Ile leaves a wife Martha. Las:una Hills: n son. Alan of Honolulu; a daughter Barbara Bcnll Cope of Newport Beach: brothers Thornton of Walnut Creek :wt Gordon of Moraaa. and five grandchildren. Services are scheduled for 11 a.m. Thurscta,y at the Pacifjc View Memorial Park and Mortuary, Newport Beach. Jt'lowers or charitable donatJons have be~n 1u1eested by the family. FremP,..eAI SNOW'S EFFECTS. • • r Ute 6torm ~au.\e tank trvcks couldn't ' r Irvine EDITION Today'~ Clo N.Y. VOL. 71, NO. 31, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORAf"'GE COUNTY, CALIFORNfA . TEN CENTS Stormy Ohio Drinks llp Beer Supply COLUMBUS, Ohio CAP) -Stores are out o( beer, bread and milk. Shoppers come anyway, some wearing skis or pulling sleds. Jf'armers say their meat cattle are going without water, their dairy cattle without milking, ~cause power outages have made machines useless. AGRICULTURE OFFICIALS ESTIMATE that Oh10 farm tosses could exceed $60 million. State officials forecast over the weekend that the losses would surpass $48 million. These are among the hardships Ohioans and others m the Midwest face five days after their worst blizzard in history buried them in snow and whip~d them with brutal winds. Pair Held In Canada Workers Find Nuke Hazards? BUl,LETIN EDMONTON, Alberta <AP) - Canadian and l 1 .S. search of. ficials said today they hue elec- tronicall} localed two potential· ly hazardous pieces or a So\ let nuclear.powered satellite on ice In Great Slave J,ake in the Northwest Territories. BAKER LAKE, Northwest ·Territories !AP) A Canadian- American team planned to re Super Savers E:xparukd? WASIDNGTON (AP) - United Airlines said today it will ask the Civil Aeronautics Board to ap- prove expansion of its dis- count Super Saver fares to all United routes longer than 900 miles for a 21 ·2· month period beginning .March 18 The fares are 30 percent. to 40 percent lower than regular coach fares, de· pending on what day of the week the passenger travels. The fares would be available in each of lhe 110 cities United serves in the 48 U .S. mainland states and in Canada. Honolulu would not be included. Fourth Mesa Bank Robbed A bandit struck a Costa Mesa bank for the fourth time in a week·Mooday, handing a female tfller a note and a paper bag, but showing no weapon before escaping with $985, police said today. w.The latest heist occurred at 1:12 p.m. at the Security Pacific National BanJc branch at 196 E. 17th St. The branch is on the cor· ifer of East 17th Street and Oranae ~venue. Police ar matching descrlp. tlons from three previous heists In an attempt to establish if all four robberies have been puHed (See HOLDUPS, Page A!) Coast turn lo lhe Warden's Grove area tod.Jiy to look for more debns from the nuclear-powered Soviet spy s atellite that broke up in flames over northern Canada last week. Temperatures in the area have hit 40 below Lt. Col. Donald Davidson, Canadian commander of the t e am, said his group would search for more radiation in the \ 1c1n1ty of the IO· foot crater on the ic e of the Thelon River where structural tubing and a smashed metal canister from the satellite were found Satur day The crater 1s eight miles northeast of Warden's Grove, a weather outpost about 180 miles southwest of Baker Lake and 1,000 miles north of the North Dakota border. Davidson.said hi5 team. W"'-!ld take water samples downriver which could give indications whether wreckage was beneath the ice upstream. He said ice cores would be taken so they could be put down in the ice There was no indication when an attempt would be made to re· cover the debris already found. Davidson said C-130 Hercules transports surveying the area with detection equipment had ob- tained visual and electronic evidence of two other possible sites that debris landed. He did not pinpoint them. however. The temperature in Baker . Lake on Monday night was 44 below zero with a wind that gave a chill factor near 94 below. The investigators had to stay at Baker Lake on Monday because their Chinook helicopter was grounded by trouble with the auxiliary power unit used to start the engines in the field. A Hercules flew in a new power unit and a repair crew, and a backup Chinook also arrived. En route to Baker Lake, the Hercules dropped four Canadian paratroopers into the Thelon River site to guard the "moderately radioactive" debris. Ex-candidate Slemons Faces. State Probe Some grocery stores report short supplies or no supplies of milk, eggs, bread and produce because delivery trucks have been stuck in drifts or stalled in the frigid temperatures throughout the Midwest. FISHER-FAZIO FOOD SfORES said they had no shortages. "Bu~ we did ask customers to limit themselves to one-half gallon of milk," said Milt Kantor, soutl;lern Ohio division president for the chain. The highway patrol escorted trucks of milk, eggs and meat from Detroit to stores in snow-~uod Toledo, said Richard Bere, tl \'ice president for the KroegJr grocery chain. ONE STORE WAS UNABLE TO get tts milk ftom its usual In· dianapotis supplier but found a dairy at Fort Thomas, Ky., that had no market Cor thousands of half-pints of milk packaged for schools that are closed. "We had several hundred customers who bought milk by the geallon in half-pints." an official for the grocery said. With streets and parking lots jammed by snow and ice, store managers reported shoppers coming with sleds and backpacks. ONE COUPLE SKIED UP TO a grocery in Indianapolis. loaded their purchases into back packs and skied away. <See SNOW, Page A2) as Communist Spies Watching for Spill Coast Guard 'Oil spill expe a In by a 34<>-Coot oil barge that. split in half • tftfl of it tias eak ou . e Moo4a¥ Rig ~Bouchard 105 ts--~-being loaded at the Atlantic ·corp. docks in NeWington, N.H. ing about a million gallons of fuel oil. but . l Legal Case Mystery Sacco-Vanzetti Documenu Revealed CAMBRIDGE. Mass. (AP) - Documents made public today opened a new mystery in the Sacco-Vanzetti case -was the Harvard Univ•rsity president who helped seal the fates of the two Italian-born anarchists writ- ing his conclusions before the full defense was heard? Harvard provided new docu- ments on the case when it opened the private papers of its former president Abbott Lawrence Lowell concerning the case. Lowell headed a gov· • ernor's advisory commission that recommended that the 1927 executions ot Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo V811%etU take place. Massachusetts set oft worldwide protests by executing the two radicals. The report stirred such controversy at the time that a Harvard-educated. Journalist wrote in August 1927: .. From now on, I want to know. will the institution of learning in Cambridge which once we called Harvard be known as Hangman's House?" At the time a celebrated cause among liberals, radicals and poor immigrants, the case aroused controversy over whether justice or prejudice had prevailed. Historians still cannot agree whether Sacco and Vanzetti were guilty. Lowell's role was as head of a governor's advisory commission of three pillars oC the Yankee Establishment that confirmed tbe courts' judgment that Sacco and Vanzetti killed a paymaster and a guard at a shoe factory. Even the first draft of the commission's report contains the damning words: ". . • The -:omruittee is of opinion beyond rnsonable doubt that Sacco was guUty ot the murder at South Braintree." The draft also states ... On the whole, the com· mittee members were ol opi~ nion. beyond reasonable doubt, that Vanzetti also was guilty, though with less assurance than in the case of Sacco." The clause .. less assurance" was dropped from the final re- port and that is sure to fuel con- troversy among those still de- fending the two admitted anarchists executed for a murder committed during a payroll robbery. The qualification "oo the whole·• did make it into the final report and has been a source of frequent criticism of Lowell's commission beca\J6e it seems to conflict with the idea "beyond reasonable doubt.•· The papers also show that two early drafts of lhe commission report whicp sealed Sacco and Vanzetti's fate are dated be(ora the com.mission's investigation was complete. A first draft is dated July 20, (See SACCO, Page AZ) Tragedy of. Youth Kids Excel in S. County Burglaries U.S., Viet Citizens Charged W ASHJNGTON (AP> -An employee of the United States Information Agency and a Viet· namese national were arrested by the FBI today and charged with spying for the commumst government of Vietnam. A federal grand jury an nearby Alexandria. Va., returned a seven-count indictment charging Ronald Louis Humphrey, 42, and Truong Dmh Hung, 32. with con· spiracy, espionage, stealing gov· ernment records and being un- registered foreign agents. The indictment said the two delivered to the Socialist Republic of Vietnam "docu· ments, wntmgs, notes and in- formation relating to the na- tional defense of tbe United States . • • having reason to believe that same would be used ~ the advantage of a Co.reign na~ tion ... Humphrey. or suburban Ari-• lngton, Va., used his positon as a USIA employee to gather the material and deliver it to Hung 1n various places in the W ashmgton area, the indictment said Humphrey and Hung were ar· rested today at their place!f of employment in Washington, not long after the grand jury in Alexandria handed down the sealed indictment, the Justice Department said. Na med as co-conspirators but not indicted were Huynh Trung- Dong, Nguyen An Huynh. N 1uyen Ngoc Giao, Phan Thanh Nam and Dinh Ba Thi. The grand jury charged that Humphrey, Hung and their ro- cooapirators gave "aid, comfort and advantage" to the Viel· namese by furnishing informa- tion touching on polilical. military and diplomatic rela· lions and intelligence assess· men ts. (See SPIES, Page A2) Irvine Forum On Corridor Set Tonight The San J<>aquin HitJs Transportation Corridor. a high· capacity hiebway that will con- nect the Sao Diego and Corona del Mar freeways through. Irvine, will be the subject of a public meeting at 7:30 tonight. The meeting with county plan· ners on the proposed route will be beld at University Hiah. School, '771 Campus Drive, trvine. Conatrodlon on the route is not expected before the mid·l880s. The route would nm from the tuture Corona del Mar Freewe,y site near MacArthur Boulevard ht Newport Beach to the San Diego FreeWay near Saddleback College In Ml ion Viejo. o.lty f'll.C Staff ....... SENATE CANDIDATE Viejo's Kuczynski 'Neophyte' Seeks Seat In Senate <; rc•gory Kuczynski, 31, a Mis· :-.ion Viejo gh.tss company owner, h:.is announced his candtdacy for !ht• 3fith Slate Senate seat held hy lh·nn1s Carpenter, R- Newport Beach. Kuczynski. a Democrat. said I arc M on<lay that he is a political nt•oph) lt'. His only work toward polH1ca! campaigns was for l'rcs1dcnt Lyndon Johnson in I !l68 ~hen the Lake J."'orest res1- <l (' n t was a student at the U r11 vcrsity of Arizona. .. I am a little unhappy with the way the situation is going with this rounty and this state," he .said. "There is too much gov- t• rn m ent spending and in- ll'rfrn·nce in our lives ... But Kuczynski, an Orange County resident of eight years, does support planned growth <·ontrol in the Saddlcback Valley through government control. The candidate. who says he w~1ghs 100 pounds and is five f\'ct, one mch tall b"t "roars like a ::.1x-footcr,'' said he is launching a "grass roots cam- p a 1 g n" by p1ck1ng up Democratic :;upporters "here ~md th<.'rc." He said the campaign will be ·'the be:-;t I can afford and still make my houst• payments and • fred my family." • His family, which resides at 25402 Shoshone Drive, consists of his wife Kathleen and children Lisa, s. and Neil, 16 months. Senator Carpenter announced in Decemh<'r that he will not run lor re·<.•lect1on Lo bis senate seat I his year. Mesan Held In Pancake House Holdup A Costa Mesa man was arrest- ed Monday night in Garden C.rove and charged with robbing a pancake restaurant of $207. Police identified the suspect <JS Carl Ray Davis, 24, of :;o1 Hamilton St., Costa Mesa. They said two officers chased Davis about one-quarter mile on fool befon; capturing him and <·harging him with robbing the J nterqational House of Pan- cakes, 9741 Chapman Ave., <;a rd en Grove. According to police, money believed taken in the 8:20 p.m. holdup a few minutes earlier was found stuffed into the sus- pect 's pockets. A cashier at the pancake house told police the man who robbed her of $207 first drank a <'UP of coffee, pald for the coffee and then returned to the cash register. There, he simulated a gun and demanded that the caahlei-give him "all the bills." the cashier told police. DAILY PILOT Pay Hike OK By JACKIE HYMAN Of""' o.11~ ,.,. Jt.tft Fairview State Hospital In Costa Mesa has won state ap.. prov al to hire licensed personnel at 20 lo 25 percent above regular beginning salary levels, hos11ital Executive Director Frank: Crinella announced today. "We feel that we are reasonably competitive now•• with private hospitals. Dr. Crinella said. • He said lhe pJan for fourth and fifth step hiring was approved Monday by the state Personnel Board. It will also mean raises for liceru;ed personnel already at the hospital who .are receiving lower pay. 41This means that we are hir- ing beginning psychiatric techni- cians at right around $1,100 a month," Dr. CTinella said. Beginning registered nurses will receive $1,200 a month and nurses with some experience more than $1,300, he said. The personnel board approved the more expensive hiring for Souther!\ California stale hospitals ~ause they have had difficulty filling their positions, Dr. Crlnella sai~ The new higher wages will ap-. ply lo psychiatric technicians and registered nurses at the fourth step or 20 percent hieher level, he said. At the fifth step or 25 percent h!gher level, included are physi- c 1 ans, ~peech pathologists, audiologists, physical therapfsts and oct:upational therapists, Dr. Cnnella said. The higher wages would also apply to 250 additional positions proposed by Governor Brown for J:<'air\'iew. The Legislature has yet to approve those _positions vart of a $27 million package for the 11 stale hospitals. Currently, Fairview is authorized 1,159 licensed J)OSl- t1ons, Dr. Crinella said. He said only 743 are filled by permanent ltcens('d employes. Non-credentialed employees fill most of the additional posi- tions, with 121 posts actually va- cant, he said. Through Weekead Clear County Sky Due by Wednesday A drizzle that brought to an end the Orange Coast's wettest January in more than 20 years should give way to clear weather Wednesday, the Na- tional Weather Service said to- CAMPAIGN REMEMBERED Former Candidate Slemona Fro.Page Al SLEMONS. • allegedly further violated because "the transaction was never disclosed by the Slem- on s campaign and Butcher never disclosed his role as an in- termediary." The FPPC release said a bear· ing will be held sometime in March before the lull com- mission with Administratlve Law Judge Robert Meber pre-sjding. Llls:us• role Jn the 1976 Republican primary has been controversial because Slem- on s' political opponents claimed that Lucus only efttel"ed the race to bump Sternons' chief opponent, Marian' Bergeson, out or the bottom posl· tion on the ballot. Political strategists have lon held that the top or bottom J>081· tion on a ballot can mean more votes to a candidarte. ~ucas, who never cam· pa1gned, got 2,034 votes. Mrs. Ber eson 1 toSleJDQDI by 2,393 vot • day. The forecast Is for less than 10 percent chance of showers tonight, partial clearing Wed- nesday and fair weather through the weekend. Low temperatures should be about 50 degrees tonjght and highs -about 65 degrees Wednesday. The rainfall wasn't much - only .09 inches in Santa Ana - but it was enough to edge 1978 into having the fourth wettest January since 1916, said John Gietzen of the Orange County Flood Control District. This month's total rainfall° in Santa Ana of 7.98 inches is the wettest innce 1956, Gietzen said. The all-lime record-holder, 1916, tallied 11.18 inches for the month. Gietzen said Or&WJe County has also had the tlnrd wettest season lo date since 1908. He said the total so far is 12.40 in- ' ches, compared to 6.58 inches last year to date. Santiago Peak on Saddleback Mountain, which usually re- ceives the most rain in Orange County, got .3 inches during the past 24 hours, for a season total of 31 inches compared to 14.6 in- ches last year. At Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa, Charles Lewis re- ported the wettest January since OCC b~gan measuring rainfall in 1955. The 24-hour total was .12, bringing the month's rainfall to 9.23 inches and the season's to 13.37 inches compared to 6.16 last year, be said. The Orange County Harbor Patrol in Newport Beach report- ed receiving .11 inches, for a season total of 11.61 inches, up from 6.04 inches last year. lAS J'EGAS UFE 'UKE ANYWHERE' Living next door to casino gambling is no different Uian liv· ing anywhere else, say residents of Las Vegas. Residents by and large pooh- J><>Oh the notion that gambling. drinking or other sinful en- terprise is a problem to the ma-jority. · "We just don't have any pro~ lems associated with the gam· Ing industry -except growth'" they say. SCory Page Alo. • The Last Farm Farm workers thin lettuce seedlings on Contra Costa County's last rc·mawing farm, 88 acres of cabbage and lettuct! sprawled near l~l' junction of two highways But developers sec a different green -plans call for 300,000 square feet of office space to replace the cahhage~ Fr,,_ Page A J TRAGEDY OF YOUTH. • • handles reports of 250 to 300 burglaries a month, Luster says. Approximately 25 percent even- tually are cleared through ar- rests, thoueh Ws not often that the loot is returned to its owners. Youths under age 18 are responsible 70 percent of the time for burglaries in the Mis- sion VieJO, El Toro, Laguna Hills, Lake Forest and San Juan area. Their booty most often is cash, citizens band radios, stereo sets, records and tapes or a knife or a gun. Deputies say they figure that when a burglar is arrested, he admits to nine other tJarglaries, on the average. That's 10 clearances for every arrest. So, say detectives, a burglar generally gets away with the loot nine times before he's nailed. But Luster says he figures the young Dana Point burglar couldn't be charged for 70 burglaries, even though ho has been arresteitt'Seven t\meP."' "He's still learning his trade. so he's cau~ht more often," Luster conjectures. Adults, possibly, are more clever. Most of the time. says Luster, they know what they're after and have a lc~ilimate busi- nessman or fence standing by to purchase their loot. · When homes are missing television sets, credit cards, <ip- pliances or jewelry, deputies say they figure the job was done by an adult. "Burglary is the name of the game in California, along with dope, of course," says Luster who reports that theft and burglary at homes provide most of the business for south county deputies. Most of those burglaries occur durinK daylight hours when families are away at jobs or school. "There's one thing for sure," says Luster, "a burglar doesn't want to be seen. He doesn't want to confront his vic-lim s." Business burglarfos, on the other hand, occur at night. That's how it was a year ago when deputies were tipped to a burglary under way in a Sad- dleback Valley restaurant at 2 a.m. , A mptorist with a citizens band radio tipped police to the break-in. Deputies converged on Probe Asked In Abortion OTTAWA (AP) -Ontario's attorney-1eneral ordered a gov- em111ent attomeJ and a Police officer to interview former federal Solicitor-General Fran- cis Fox today abo\lt hi5 con- fession that he !or&ed a docu- ment to help get an aborUoa for a married woman vdth whom he bad an affair. Tho 1ll"OVinclal lnvesti••Uon to determ!M if he should J>e pros· ecuted wu requested by Fox, who announced ln the House of Commons on Monday that he re- 1l 1ned from Prime Mlnl1ter. \P ierre Elliott Trudeau'• aabln t becauso tit.lor1ery .. bu become known~" . Fox, 38. a member of OOm- raon• from a Qu dlatrict ne ~ M , wu yo ea~ member of th eilbtnot nd had beon 10Uclttu·.,eqoral 18 montM. the eatery and arrested a 19· year-old on his first bur~lary at· tempt <for the thrill of tt) and a seasoned veteran in his early twenties. ~ Eventually, the arrests broke up an H-man nng of burglars, most of whom were junior col- lege students with a yen for: fr~e motorcycle parts and lots of cash. Luster says. "They were pretty smart and pretty sophisticated. with lookouts posted and well-laid plans," he says. Two were 1m prisoned. The other nine -most from uppor-middle-incom1• families -haven't been noted as repeaters, he says. While that gan~ took more than normal precautions not to run into victims or deputies. there are the cat burglars who made a nice ltvmg for awhill' from among mobile home resi- dents at Forest Gardens m Lake Forest and El Toro Mobil~ Home Estates. Although those burglars. who stripped sleepmg victims of their money and ~redit cards-~ and even their cars, never were caught, their operations have ceased. "We know who they were," Luster says. "We didn't hav.- enough to convict, so we just told them (an Oceanside duo previously convicted of burglaries) that we had tht>m figured. The El Toro t•at burglanes stopped." El Toro and Lake Forest homes are most susceptible to burglars, Luster reports, closely followed by Mission VieJo. "It's because there are more kids," he says. •'The more kids, the more burglaries." Much of the problem, he con jectures, is caused by ''op portunity." "People still leave doors and windows unlocked," he says. "It's like an invitation to steal for some kid who is a thief but doesn't want to take a big chance." While most burglars are boys, the girls get credit in the shoplifting department. .. Clothing is super impommt to a teen-age girl," the sergeant says. "That's what's mostly taken, along with records and tapes.'• Two weeks before Christmas -and for a week following -a deputy was stationed perm anentJy at the Laguna Hills Mall to handle shoplifters caught by department store de- tectives. .. That deputy handled 65 s hopUfting ca~s. 60 percent of them invol\'ing girls," Luster says. ·'The funny thing today is that kids won 'l rip off someone they know, but they feel no remorse about steaJint from an Jm· personal victim such as a cor- poration or store.'' • And, he Sa)'$, in the vast untn~ corporated area between Irvine and San Clemente, there are many '»ftlpenonal targets. like semebody else's bOUie, a se.rvlco 1taUoo-0r .. en a ball .. ,,.... Pflfle A J . SPIES •.• T~ complracy count listed eight overt <icts thtll detailed m~t'lJD~l> and deUvenes of docu- ments ~a.inning April 19, 1977 and ending Dec. 23. 'fhe indlcl- ment said the conspiracy be&llO sometime ln 1976. Another count charged that tn ( April 1977 Humphrey and Hung delivered a number of docu- ments to Vietnamese agentt, in- cluding a coble from the American consul in Hong Kong to the secretary of state marked :-t·cret: and cables to the seaetary of state l rom U.S. em- bassies in Tokyo, Bangkok. 1 Kuala Lumpur and Vientiane, marked confidenUaJ. Humphrey has been employed by USIA, a State Department agency since 1961 and his over- seas tours of duty included one in South Vietnam in 1969-71. He is a fourth-level Foreign Service information officer. Hung, of Washington, was ad- m ill!!d lo the t.:niled States in 1964 and graduated from stan- f or d University with a bachelor's degree in economics <ind political science in 1968. The Justice Department said be ii. employed at the Animal Health lnst1tulc Jn Washington and that he hus ;1pplied for permanent res1<J~nt alien status ln this coun. lr.v !\t ax1mum penalty upon con- \ 11·tion 1s life imprisonment. F,....PageAl HOLDUPS. • by the same man. In at least two of the rob- beries, including the latest, th~ ( suspect has been described as a male about stx feet tall with sandy blond hair and a mustache. There have been no 1njur1es in any of the robberies, all of which have occurred in the ~arly afternoon: Security Pacific bank teller Nancy Lee Redman, 19, Westminster, told police that the bandit approached her and handed her a note that read: "Put the money in \he bag, fast.·· The man then pulled a brown paper bag from the left pocket of his blue windbreaker, and as she was loacling the cash into the hag, he told her "faster, faster. faster.'' A local businessman who was in the bank at the time said, "It all happened so fast and so quietly that no one knew (about the robbery) until ·the bank manager announced it." '-As in the three other roh b~ies, no weapon was dis played. police sajd. A bank employee gave chnsP as the suspect fled on foot, but was unable to catch him, poltt•t· ~aid. The bandit has chosen d1r- . ferent financial institutions in ;ti! four robberies. The FBI has been called in to assist with the investigation From Page Al SACCO ••• J 927. So is a second draft. hut in that case the date is crossed out <ind July 27 is substituted. Ju!v • 27. 1927 is the date th<· n p111 t was submitted to the governor. Michael A. Musmanno, :1 lawyer involved in the Sarro Vanzetti defense, and Rohrrt ,\. Strauss Feuerlicbt. a h1~tnri:rn sympathetic to the two riefcn dants, said defense arguments before the commission were nor delivt"red until July 25, J9;!7. And Mrs. Feuerlicht has written that the bearings did not end until Ju ly 21. Harley Holden, Harvard University archivist, said ther<• 1s no explanation of the date in the papen. Thus, there is "no way to tell whether it was a sim pie mistake or whether the drafts were being prepared before the hearings were o'·er. I Coumel Endorsed . WASHINGTO N <AP) -· Samuel Dash, the Senate Watergate committee's Democratlc1 counsel, 1s the first cholco recommended bv a panel of lawyers to succeed ousted Republtcan U.S. Attorney David W. Manton of Pblladelphia. s.our close to the panel say. Laguna/South Coast . Afternoon N.Y. Stocks VOL. 71, NO. 31, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 31, 1978 TEN CENTS LB Candidates Debate. Sycalllore Hills By WILLIAM HODGE OftMDallYl'i ... 5&.tt Incumbent Laguna Bea<'h Councilwoman Phyllis Sweeney reacted sharply Monday to sug· gestions by challenger Wayne Baglin that the city de.annex lhe so-called Sycamore Hills area, k>cated w1th1n the Laguna Greenbelt. Baglin suggc!>led de· annexation of the 520 virgin .. r..t acres al J City Council candidates rorum one week ago. At Monday's Laguna Beach Tax. payers Association forum. Sweeney reacted lo Baglln's pro· posal. •'The doomsayers want to move parks down m priority; they would say 'goodbye' to the ~recnbcll," she charged. "That 1 eve<ils an incredible lat'k of foresight or ms1i..'ht .. De-annexation "'111 not make Watching for Spill Sycamore Hills float down the San Diego freeway and out of our midst ... The use to which the' un- developed property will be put has caused con~nlion and litiga- tion against tl\e city. It once seemed that 2,000 dwellings would go on the property along Laguna Canyon Road but the Cl· t y has attempted to either block or minimize residential develop· ment and has urged other uses Coast Guard oil spill experts are ~tandin1! hy a J..10-foot oil barge that split in half Monday rnght. The Bouchard 105 is hold· ing about a million gallons of fuel 011, but little of it has leaked out. The barge was being loaded at the Atlantic Terminal Corp. d<><:ks in Newington, N.II. I I -. .. ~ Witness Says Waddill Halted Li/e-smrtifg By TOM BARLEY Ot IN Dally f'llol IUff A prosecution witness testified late Monday that the baby al· Jegedly strangled to death by Dr. William Baxter Waddill was alive and breathing at the time he was informed that the planned abortion had misfired. Registered nurse Pat Olvera · told an Orange County Superior Court jury that the Infant born last March 2 in Westminster Community Hospital had a slow and irregular heart beat and could only breathe in gasps. But she repeatedly assured prosecutor Robert Chatterton that she detected signs of life in the 28-week fetus and she re- :fused to amend that statement should be dismissed Mrs. Olvera testified that she went to the room of the unwed. JS-year-old mother last March 2 believing that the patient was about lo deliver a fetus that had been aborted by the use of a saline injection. Instead. she said, she found what she believed to be a live baby girl. She said the baby moved, gave what the witness described as a "weak whine" and tried to breathe. ' ·. The witness testified that she immediately removed the child to the nursery where hospital staff began resuscitation efforts in a bid to aid the ailing infant. It is alleged that Dr. Waddill halted thoae efforts and then sent the hospital staff from the nursery while he strangled. the unwanted baby to death. A coroner's autopsy led to the finding that the child died. as a result ol manual strangulation. Premature ludgment't for the pristine acreage. Council candidate James Bishop, a legal consultant, agreed with Mrs. Sweeney. "l oppose the de-annexation of Sycamore Hills," Bishop said. •'The city would be relinquishing the controls of development on an environmentalJy sensitive area. .. The county cannot be expect- ed to support the greenbelt tf the t'tly gives up the cornerstone- Sycamore Hills -to develop· ment." De-annexation would place the area in county territory, a move some observers believe would i DC rease development or Sycamore Hills. But Fluor Corp. executive Baglin !)elieves the area can be preserved through de- annexation. "I think an agreemenl is possible that would make a de· termination of the property for recreational or open space uses," Baghn maintained. "If we keep that property in the ci- ty, It's going to cost us money " Other candidates skirted the Sycamor.e Hills issue with pleas for planned and controlled growth. "'Wt' need a planned program or ~rowth that t'an indude plans for lhe greenbelt,'' graphic (See FORUM, PageA2) mplex Eyed 1,141 Homes Proposed in SC ) . By ANNE COOPER .. Ot tlle D•llY f'll« 5Ull Reeves ranch developers will ask San Clemente planning com- m1ss1oners tonight to approve a variance to the city's hillside grading ordinance, opening the way for excavation of nearly ni~e million cubic yards o[ soil on the hilly ranchland. The planning commission meeting will begin at 7:30 p.m. in the City Council chambers at city hall, 100 Ave. Presidio. Construction or 1, 141 single and multiple family homes, the three commerical sites and an industrial park are proposed on the 762 acres of the Reeves Ranch by developers John D. Lusk and Son. Coast Man Slain in ~~=i.:Jt.~r~bQur=~ resident • , Mondlt from gunshot wounds he suf· fered during a ),loldup at his Seal Beach jewelry store by two ban- dits who are still at large, police ·said. Investigators said two men en· tered the Leisure World Jewelers shop, 13920 Seal Beach Blvd., at 2:15 p.m. and attempt· ed to rob Golin and bis wife, Barbara. Witnesses said they beard four shots. As the two bandits bolted from the shop lo a parked yellow sedan, one of them threatened a The proposed development would be located inland of the San Diego Freeway, extendJng north from Avenida Pico lo the Forster Ranch development, currently under construction. Only 190 acres (25 percent) of the 762-acre site has the 30 per- cent maximum slope on which grading is allowed under the city's ordinance, according to an environmental impact report prepared by Newport Beach consultant Robert Bein, William Frost and Associates. Much of this relatively level land would be preserved as open space under the proposed Lusk plan, the report said Preliminary plans call for ex- cavation of 8.9 million cubic yards of soil excavation, with that soil to be used as fill in other oarts of the development. These proposed cut and fill operations would take place over 405 acres -53 percent of the project site. Jn addition to approving the project's environmental impact report and a use permit includ· ing the proposed variance, plan· ning commissioners will also be asked tonight to approve two tentative tract maps for the Reeves Ranch development. If approved by the City Coun· ('11, the first map would give ten-. tativ<' approval to development un 603 acres within city boun· daries. (See COMPLEX, Page A2) MusiCian Dead -"Heroin; Cocaine Discovered . ~M!iIEltD tJ li bcrlauds <AP> -· egory erbert, saxop ne player for the rock group mood, Sweat and Tears, was found dead today -~-~dam hocel , police 8a1d. The body of the 3l·year·old musician was found by members of the band a few hours after they re· turned from dinner at a downtown restaurant. Police said a search of Herbert's room revealed "significant quantities .. of heroin and cocaine, as well as a number of hypodermic syrini;!es. An autopsy may be held to establish cause of death, a police spokesman said. The group was on a European tour. Herbert and other band members were to perform tonight in The Hague, but the group called off the concert and flew .to London to decide whether to continue the tour. witness who had emerged from hande~=~shoptoseewhat 'Oranne Ra11lS' Get Golin could be seen lying in a • ~ · pool of blood bleeding profusely !:i~~$8~~t bead wounds. Sur.nerv; aor' s Vote • • ' I •J>nder heavy defense question- • tug. : Dr. Wadd1ll's two lawyers said .lbey intend to prove that there :ifas no live birth involved in the :Clelivery of the fetus and that New Mystery Aired On Sacco, Vanzetti A small handgun could also b& ":.r Sl'7 seen lying on the neor nest to Golin•s body. Mrs. Golin s:an 1 screaming from the shop before police arrived, witnesses said. tr Los Angeles County Supervisor Kenneth Hahn wants to know "'wbo•d go see the Anaheim Rams or the Orange Rams:• let him ask Orange County Supervisor Ralph Clark. l . murder charges against the Huntington Harbour physician -Military Aid Asked. ; WASIDNGTON (AP) -The 1 :Carter administration is con· tdering request! for major new • .;n>illtary assistance from Mex· :teo, Guatemala and Morocco, lo!ernment sources said today. Coast ·; Weather Partly cloudy tonight and clearing partially Wednesday afternoon. Ut .. tlo warmer. Lows tonlabt .. :52. Hilb Wednesday 67. re11sonable doubt that Sacco was guilty of the murder ~ South Braintree.'" 'the drift also states. ••0n the-Whole, the com· · mittee members were of opi· nion, beYond reasonable doubt, that Vanzetti also was guilty. though with less assurance than in the case of SaccQ. '" The clause ,0 1ess assurance•• was dropped from the tlnal re-- port and that la aure to fuel con. ttoversy among tbose atill d&o fendlnf tbe two admitted anarchists esecutect for a murder committed during a • payroll robbery. The qualUicatlor> .. ou the -bo1a•• d.1d make lt ttrto the ftnal report and has bem a aoarce ot f~uent criticism of LOWell's comuilsslOQ bOCause it •~ma to (Sri exx>. Page A!) Golin was rushe to Los Alamitos General Hospital where be died at :16 p.m., Orange County Cot ner's of• ficials said. Seal Beach olice Sgt. Vlrgipia Blaclc d the amount of loot taken in t robbery ls not known at this e. Police said the getaway vehf• cle, which bore New York license plates, was lasb 1een northbound on Seal Beach Boulevar4. PoUce said they bellave the jewelry at.ore bandit.I may be two of the three pnmen •bo held up a P8lt Of marnts in Weatmlnater and J'ountaln Valle,1 Satw'd17. No ouo WU hurt ln Ume ~dm. T susp ct 111 at~ thr holdo rted!Y usln '"' old ouW>t.nato license Pl 'MAD' R4NNED IN ARGENTINA BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP> -The military junta or· dered the Argentine edition or ·Mad magazine removed from newsstands because of a satirical cartoon showing a priest making his cbarch lux· urious at the expense of poor parishioners. An official decree Monday said the humor maauine'1 c~ rent issue, on sale IMre since Jan. 2, •"pt esented an unfounded and malicious appralaal of the priest11 function. .. "'Football fans would love to see the Rams in Orange Coun· ty.'' Clark responded Monday to remarks Hahn made Jast week about the Rams• possible move to Anaheim. "There are 10 million people Jiving within 40 minutes of Anaheim Stadium.'' said Clark. an Anaheim resident and the city's former mayor. "People seem to forget that Orange County is one of the na· tion 's major urban population centers," be continued. Besides, Clark contended, Hahn's reference to a change in the Rams• name •is really a lit· tie off base.., •'The Los Angeles Lakers pla}' in Inglewood and the Dallas CowboJS play iil Jrvtnt, Texas," Clark noted. In addlUon, he continued. Orange County already has shown lt can suppOl't major leu?ue teams. C'A.IL V PILOT l Super Savers \ ~d? WASJllNC:TON <AP) l '111ll·d A1rhm.•s ,,Ill! tuduy 11 "ill Jsk tht• l'1vll \t•1011.111l1t·s Board to ap prm 1· '''-l'•Hl'>10n of 1b \lls· 1·11unt Supt•r SaVt•r I arcs tu <ti I U mted routt''i Ion..: er than 900 miles for a 21 ~­ month period beginning March 18. The fares ar<.> 30 percent . to 40 per<'cnt lower than regular coac·h fares, de· pending on what day of the week the passenger travels. The fares would be ctvailable m each of the 110 cities Uruted se-rves in the 48 U.S. mainland states <tnd in Canada. Honolulu would not he included. Tax Help Readied for OC Seniors . Volunt1•er counselors wall be <t\ <ll lahlC' in sn, south county · lcw~t1ons to ~ivc free income tax :1.,s1sl11nce to senior citizens heg1nning Wt•clnt•sday ThL' program, which 1s sponsor('(! hy the National Ht·t1rt•d Tt•achers Association and the Amcncun Assoc1at1on of Kl'l1red Persons, is designed to h<>lp older taxpayer~ understand the various tax forms and taJce <ulv antage of special provisions for r<'tirement in('ome. The counselors, who have heen trained hy the Jnternal Revenue Service and the <'al1fornsa Franchise Tax Board, "tll be available until April 15. In Laguna Ht•ach. counselors "ill he available from 1 to 4 p.m. 11n Mondays and Thursday-. 1n tht• Caty Council rh•·::;·,iiers, 505 I· ore· st Ave Appointments may be made hy calling 497 2441 ( ounsl'lors will he 10 the Teen :\tothC'rs Ct•ntcr at 26971 Spring St . San .Juan Capistrano, from 2 to 5 p m. Mondays and Wt.-d ncsd<1ys. Appointments may be made by <·al1111g 493 1171 They will be in the California Federal Savings and Loan build· mg. :nooo Oohcny Park Road. Cap1str;ino Bt•ac-h from 9 a.m. to noon on Wedne~days. Appoint· ments mav be made hy calling ·193-381::?. In San Clemente, counselors will he m the Senior Activities Center. 100 N. Seville, from l lo 4 p.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays. J\pposntmcnts may he m adc by calling 498·3322. Counselors will be in the Ca II form a F<.'<lcral Savings and Lo.111 huilrling, 24301 Mu1rlands Blvd .. El Toro from 10 a.m. to l p m on Saturdays. Appoint· mt nts m:..y ht• made by calling ~Hli 0!100 As.,istancc :..)so is being of- fc-n•d m th<• Union Jo'ederal Sav- ings .incl Loan building, 25330-C i\targueritt• Parkway, Mission \'1t•1n. J\lthou~h no days and t1m<'s have twt.>n cM<lbhshl'<l, ap- poinl ments may be made by <·ailing 7fi8.780l. ., .• Speed-route . . Plans Studied Laguna Beach residents will ht•J.r plans for the controversial San Joaquin lhlls Transporta- tion Corridor at Wednesday's Ci· ty Council meeting. County planners and consul· tants wilJ outline potential routes for the 13-mile high speed highway, which wouJd ext.end from lhc San Diego Freeway SACCO ... conflict with the idea "beyond reasonable doubt." The papers also show that t"o early drafts o( the commission report which ::;ealro Sac('o ancl Va01.etts's fate arc dated bcforP the commission s investigation was complete. A first draft is dated July 20. 1927. So is a second draft, but m that case the date is crossed out und July 27 1s suhstltuted. July 27, 1927 is the date the report was submitted to the governor Michael A. Musmanno, a 1awyer involved in the Sacco- \'anzetti defense. and Robert A Strauss Feuerhchl, a h1stonan sympathetic to the two defen dants, said defenr.e argumen~ hefore the comm1s~1on were not delivered until July 25, 1927. And Mrs. Feuerlicht has written that the heanngs did not end until Ju· ly 21. Harley Holden, Harvard llnivers1ly arch1v1st, said there 1s no explanation o( the date in the papers. Thus, there 1s no way to tell whether it was a sim- ple mistake or whether the drafts were being prepared bt'fore the hearings were O\er. Sanction Proposed UNITED NATIONS (AP) African members of the U N. ~ccurity Council proposed Mon day that the council impose binding economic sanctions on South Africa to discourage its apartheid policy of race segregation. 1war S.1ddleback College to the \ ll'tnity of MacArthur Boulevard. u1 Newport Bl'ach. The multi-lane highway would cut a('ross th(> Syc-amore Hills area of Laguna Beach, bisecting Laguna Canyon .rnd El Toro Roads A 30-month study of the pro- pos cd highway begins with ~election o( a basic route for the roadway, which would be ap- JlrOved by county supervisors. County road planners will out- line proposed routes for the cor- ridor beginning at 3:30 p.m. in (·ounc1l l·hambers The City Council will adjourn at 5 p.rn .. returning an hour later to discuss an update on plans (or a community center in Laguna Bt•ad1. A negotiating team comprised of se\·eral council members and t 1ty ::;taff members are looking <tt several structures m town for possible acquis1t1on as a com· munity center. The c·ouncll will also discuss plans to purchase the SPCA animal facility on Laguna Can· ) on Road for use as a city· operated kennel In other action, the council will consider a rt>quest from tht· Laguna Beach High School Boostl'rs Club for a license to hold a bingo game at the Village J<'air March 11. Flames Hurt Laguna Man A Laguna Beach man was in- jured Sunday when a plastic pan of j.!a~ohnc he was carrying sud- denly burst into flames. City fire offsc1als said Charles Goodman. 55. of 865 1''en Way, was clearun automobile parts in th<> ga::;olsne. The subsequent f1 r<' dam~1gt•d an automobile and 1n1urcd Goodman when hl' d r opp t' d th t' pan. s p I ashing names onto his clothes. Goodman was taken to UC Irvine Ml'dical Center in Orange where hl' was treated and re· lear;ed. Pro. Pa~ Al SNOW'S EFFECTS. • • loaded their purchases into back paclts and skied away. The Clark County Red Cross chapter bought 80,000 loaves of bread and had National Guard helicopters take them to six cities to be given away m grocery store parking lots. A Mount Vernon grocer sold 1,000 loaves of bread within two hours of delivery. He had expected the supply to last two days A grocery manager in Massillon said two customers argued heatedly over who would buy the last half-gallon of milk in his store. MILK SUPPLIES HJ\VE BEEN affected by dairy farmers' difficulties in tending to their herds. WhE>re power went off, milk· ing machines would not work and except in Amish areas, all mllk- ing is done by machine. If cows are not milked for four or five days, they dry up anrl I ake several days to produce agam, according to dairy scientists. Even then, few cows give as much milk as they had done. Many farmers who were able to milk their cows had to dump · Plane Developer Dana Women Plan New Member Tea The El Camino Real Woman's Club of Dana Point plans a tea for new members and guests at v p.m. Thursday at the San f'lcmentc Community ('lubhous(', Avenida del Mar and l 'alle Seville. Acld1t1onal information on the <"lub's activities or the tea is ;1vuilablt' by calling Allane Bushy, 496-3945. Panel to Meet The Laf(Una Beach Housing Committee will meet Thursday in City Council Chambers. beginning at 7:30 p.m. ORANG! COAST use DAILY PILOT Aerospace Leader Beall Succumbs EXECtlnVESUCCUMBS Wellwood &e•ll, 71 0 .. 1, ~IM SI.Mt - SENATE CANDtOATE Vlejo'5 Kuczyn1kJ 'Neophyte' Seek,s Seat In Senate Gregory Kuczynski, 31. a Mis- sion VieJo glass company owner. has announced hit:; candidacy for the 36th State Senute seal held by Dennis Carpenter, R· Newport Beach. Kuczynski, a Democrat, said late Monday that he 1s a political neophyte His only work toward political campaigns was for President Lyndon Johnson in 1968 when the Lake 1''or~st res1- de n t was a student at the University Qf Arizona. "I am a httle unhappy with the way the s1tuallon is going with this county and this state," he said. "There 1s too much gov- t' rn m ent ~pending and in- terference 1n our lives " But Kuczynski, an Orange County resident of eight years. does support planned growth control in the Saddleback Valley through government control. The cand1dalt'. who says he wt·1~hs 100 pounds and 1s five feet. ont' inch tall but "roars likt• ;1 s 1 x foot e r . " ::; a 1 d h c 1 s launching a "grass roots cam- p a 1 g n" by pickin~ up Democratic .supporters "here and there .. He said the campaign will be "the best I can afford and still make my houst• payments and fN·d my family." . Hi~ fam11¥. which r:esides at 25402 Shoshone 1".>rive. ('Onsists of his wife Kathl<>en and chtld.ren Lisa. 5. and Neal, 16 mon . Senator Carpenter anl\OWlced in December that he will not run for re-election to his senate seat this year. .-..... raeeA1 ·COMPLEX. • The Ree' es Ranch develop- ment, named "Marble Head" by Lusk and Sons, would be con· structed over four years, ac- ('Ord ing to thl' environmental impact report. Construction of 526 single family homes would be complet- ed in five phases, between March, 1979, and Jan., 1983 Building of 251 townhomes is planned between March, 1979, and Oct., 1981. with 364 con- dom inioms going up between March, 1979. and Feb .. 1982. Commercial development on three sites adjacent to the San Diego Freeway 1s planned early 111 the development. lndustnal ('Onstruct1on would begin in l\f arch, 1979, and be completed m two segments. winding up m Feb., 1983, the report said. CAMPAIGN REMEMBERED Former Candidate Slemons Ca~paign . Practices ~~'::in Stil~ ~~r..~~~i~• James Slemoos, his campaign So h C co-chairman and William fll, Oimty Butcher, his political strategist. face fines of up to $8.000 if found guilty of alleged illegal cam Pacific Coast Highway re· mained closed in Capistrano Beach today, as geologists hired by the county studied bluff erosion which threatens the roadway below. A report or bluff slippage was made to the county's Environ- mental Management Agency Fri- day by residents along Via La Ventana in San Clemente, said Floyd Beezell. EMA operations manager. A preliminary check by the county showeq sufficient erosion to warragt closing the highway from Camino Capistrano to Palisades Drive, Feezell said. The Via La Ventana homes arc loeatcd about a quarter mile north of Camino Capistrano, on bluffs overlook mg the coast road, he said. The blufflop homes arc within the city of San Clemente, the roadway below is unin- corporated Orange County. "There has always heen a proh· lt•m of bluff shppage aloni: the pahsades there." Feezell said. "This study is tO d~termlne the best course or action to prevent hazard to people and potent.Jal damaget.Qpropeity." Feezell said he didn't know wben the study would be com· pleted. pa1gn practices lied to the 1971i Republican primary campaign. The allegations were listed in a press release made available Monday m the Sacramento of fices of the State Fair Political Practices Commission which will hold hearings on the charges in March. Neither Slem- ons nor Butcher were availa- ble for comment this morninJ?. The allegations came out of a probe launched 10 October by the state Attorney General's of- fice. Investigators allege that John R. Young, co-chairman of Siem mons' successful campaign for the GOP nomination in the 74th Assembly District, gave Butcher $220 in cash to pay the filing fee of another candidate in the same rac·e, DaleScotlLucus The release further alleged that Slemons "knew of the cash payment and approved it " According to the news release. campaign disclosure laws wen· . allcgeuly further V1olate1r h(•cause "the transaC'tion was nc•ver disclosed by the Slem- ons campaign a~d Butcht·1· never' disclO'ied his role as an in· tt•rmed1arv " The f'PPC rcTeuse said a hear- ing will be held sometime in March before the full com m1ss1on w1th Admrnistrativc Law Judge Robert Meher prt·· sidtnJ?. ' Fr09IP~AJ Lucus' role in the 197G Republican primary has been controversial because Siem ons' political opponents daimed that Lucus only enterL'd I he race lo bump Siemon~' <· h i e f o p p o n c n t , M a r 1 a n Bcq;eson. out of the bottom posi- tion on lhe ballot. FORUM IN LAGUNA. • • artist Adena Gay told the gathering in City Council cham- bers. "We've got "<> consider all the aspects of everything we want to do-now or later." Gay warned that the city should have funds to back up its open space plans Planning Commission Chairman Diane Dike also called for better organized growth plans. "It is time the city addressed the issue of growth management to insure that development oc- curs in a physically pleasing as well as a fiscally ret1ponsible way," she said. "There is no consistent data on which to base planning decisions " She criticized councilmen for relying on a population limit r a the~ than the "realistic growl.-~ limitations" of streets and land conCiguration. Brokerage firm manager Howard Dawson called for sound city fiscal responsibility in budget planning. "I'd like to have a five-year budget and a rive-year capital improvement plan wtth a priori· ty system,'' Dawson said. "There should be a schedule for acquiring parks or open space a little each year. "I'm all for a small town at- mosphere." Other candidates' comments in Monday's encounter ranged Crom critic1sm of government meddling to pleas for control or government spending. Retail busine~u:;man Kelly Boyd cridcized the city's Design Review Board for telllna nsl· dents what they can or cannot® with theJr pmpmy. ••1 think they're overstepping their authority when they tell you where to plant trees or !h.at Canent Mixer 1helt PrObed color to paint your home.·· he said. "I want to see Laguna re- main uruque.'' Local businessman John Gabriels complained about city spending. "We'\e had three traffic studies -$18,000 worth -nd we've ignored them," Gabriels charged. "It's this type of thing we should watch very carefully "There's a lack of stability at the top ot the ship (the City Council) that we should do something about." Maggie Meggs, a Laguna housewife, also criticized city spending und complained about City Manager Al Th cal 's analysis earlier this month of the Jarvis-Gann tax initiative's impact on city government. Theal had predicted personnel cuts in the police and fire de partments. "He isn't telling you that you'll be priced right out of your house." she asserted. "I want to live in my house. "You are seeing the end or private housing unless the Jarvis-Gann amendment ls ap- proved shortly,'' Mrs. Meggs said, citing high property truces that are forcing people to move. Businesswoman Barbara Smith criticized Laguna Canyon Road and South Coast Highway as dangerous to both residents and visitors to Laguna :Beach. "Wa must provide satety for our tourisl<i and resldenL<>," Mrs. Smith.said. She sunested that tourist. be chu1ed in some way to support increased city costs as a reauJt ol Laruna's summer Influx 0£ people. "You can't stop the world from coming wben you have buJJt a better mousetrap, but you can make them pay for It,•• 3be said. Candidate Mike Elko •as the lone councU hopeful ablent from Monday's forum. * * Ckmente Pol"ls ·Residents on Amtrak Stops Residents of San Clemente who would like the newly scheduJed rush-hour Amtrak commuter train to stop in their city can reg- ister their \'iews with the cit,· manager's office. City officials plan lo use the )Pt !('rs as an indication of c1tizp,, support in their drive to connnet Amtrak to schedule a slop m San Clementl'. The new rush-hour servict• between San Diego and Lo., Angeles will begin Feb. 14, with the closest stop to San Clemente m San .Juan Capistrano. The train will leave San Juan at 7 a .m. daily except Sunday, arri\ ing in Los Angeles at 8:20 a.m. The return train will leave Lo' Angeles al4:30p.m. and arrive m SanJuanat5:41 p.m. Additional information on thr city's plans to bring the lra111 St'rvic<' to San Clemente is avail:. bl<' hy calling C aty Mal'h1.:c·1 Gt'rald Weeks. 492·5101. Esko Quits Laguna Beach Council Race Orange Coast ' EDITION Today's Closing N.Y. Sto ks - • :VOL. 71, NO. 31, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 31, 1918 N TEN CENTS Stormy Ohio Drinks llp Beer Supply COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Stores are out of beer, bread and milk Shoppers come anyway, some wearing skis or pulhng sleds. 1''Hrmers say their meat caltle are going without waler, their' dairy cattle without milking, b(:cause power outages have made machines 1.1.')c)es~ AGRICULTURE OFFICIAL'i ESTIMATE that Ohio farm losses could exceed $60 million. Stale officials forecast over the weekend that the losses would surpass $48 million These are among the hardships Ohioans and others in the Midwest face five days after their worst blizzard in history buried them in snow and whipped them "1th brutal winds. Pair Held In Canada Workers Find Nuke Hazards? EDMO:-..'TON, Alhl·rla <AP> Canadian and U s . :-oec.tr('h or- fic1als said todav thl'V have l'le<· tronirally loc<1tcd two potenlwl· Jy hc.izardous p1cres or a Sovu.·t nurlear powered satellite on ict'.! in Great Slave Lake in the North west Tj:!rrilorws. Super Savers Expanding WASIUNGTON <AP> - · United Airlines said today it will ask the Civil Aeronautics Board to ap- prove expansion of its dis· count Super Saver fares to all United routes longer than 900 miles for a 2~~­ month period beginning March 18. The fares are 30 percent lo 40 percent lower than regular coach fares, de- pending on what day of the week the passenger travels. The fares would be avanahle In ea<'h of the 110 cities United serves in the 48 U S. mainland states and in Canada. Honolulu would not be included. Fourth Mesa Bank Robbed In One Week A bandit struck a Costa Mesa bank for the fourth time in a week Monday, handmg a female teller a note and a paper bag, but showing no weapon before escaping with $985, police srud today. The latest heist OCC'urred at 1: 12 p.m. at the ScC'unty Pacific National Bank branch at 196 E 17th St. The branch is on the cor ner or East 17th Street and Orange Avenue. Police are matching descrip- tions from three previous heists 1n an attempt to establish if all !our robberies have been pulled (See HOLDUPS, Page A2) Coast Weather Partly eloudy tonight and clearing partially Wednesday afternoon. Lil· • tie warmer. Lowa toni1ht • 52. HI~ Wednesday 67. Ho~er Eaton of the Cc.tnadian A ton11<· Energy Control Hoard told a nl'ws ('Onfercnce the two JHl'<'es v.ert.' located near Fort R elta nee, a weather statwn on I ht• northeast end of the lake ubout 240 miles east or Y l• 11 ow kn ire. l h c t er rt tori a 1 t·ap1tal lie said c.i Canc.id1an Forc·es nuclear response team was ~o 1ng lo the area to pmpomt and re<'over the pu~ces wh1rh are ' ' v e r y s m a 11 a n d l' a n b c mt:asured in mches " Eaton said the fragments were giving off radiation that could he dangerous to living b<.>· mgs if they were exposed at dose range for a number of hours. In addition. a few more radia· tion sources have been detected neal' Warden's Grove, a remote arctic weather outpost where the first debris was found Satur- day. the officials said. Dr. Rich Wagner of the Un1vers1ty of California's Lawrence Li,·ermore Laboratory said the two frag- ments on lake ice near Fort Reliance were giving ore radia t1on that could be associated with the product of the fission pro<'ess that would take place in a reactor core. Col. David Garland, base com- m a nder at Canadian Forces Base Namao near Edmonton. headquarters for the search operation, said the segments were detected about one mile south·southeast of two probable hit areas reported earlier. The two areas arc both ahout four miles west of Fort Reliance M &hlon Gates, a Nev ad a- based nuclear scientist with the U S. energy department, said a few more radiation sources were detected near Warden's Grove but "their characteristics have not yet been <'Onfirmcd." Ex-candidate Slemons Faces State Probe Some grocery stores report short supplies or no supplies or milk, eggs, bread and produce because delivery trucks have been stuck in drifts or stalled in the frigid temperatures throughout the Midwest f'ISllER·FAZIO FOOD STORES said they had oo shortages. "But we did ask customers lo limit themselves to one·halr ~a lion of milk," said Milt Kantor, southern Ohio-division president for the chain. The highway patrol escorted trucks of milk. eggs and meat from Detroit to stores in snow-~und Toledo, said Richard Bere, a \'ll'e pr~ident tor the Kroeger grocery chain. ONE STORE WAS UNABLE TO get its milk from its usual In- dianapolis supplier but found a dairy at Fort Thomas, Ky., that had no market for thousands of half pints of milk packaged for schools that are closed. "We had several hundred customers who bouaht milk by the gull on in half·pints," an official for the grocery said With streets and parking lots jammed by snow and ice, store managers reported shoppers COQling with sleds and backpacks. ONE COUPLE SKIED UP TO a grocery 10 Indianapolis. 1oaded their purchases into back packs and skied away. <See SNOW, Page A2) as Communist Spies Delly I'll .. Sutt PIMte BALBOA ISLAND'S GRANO CANAL IS SLATED FOR A FACELIFT But Residents Wiii Hpe 1» Remov Dock.a For,Proja~t · _ t ~ Rebuilding Slated for Canal Wall Residents of Balboa Island's Grand Canal are going to lose their s.mall docks while the city rebuilds the canal sea wall over the next three years. The first phase of the rebuild· mg proJect. slated to get under way in March, will affect the area between the Little Island bridge and South Bay Front. Property owners in the area "ere informed last week that their docks will have to be re- moved while the repairs are be- ing made Project Manager Steve Bucknam, Jr. said he has no idea how much the removal of the docks and their reconstruc- tion will cost property owners. but he said he believes there will be no protest because the seawall has deteriorated so badly. ·"I imagine the property owners will just be grateful to have the wall repaired," he said. The new seawall is to be about JO inches higher than the exist- inl( one. Portions of the wall right at South Bay Front were rebuilt last year in a pilot program. Bucknam said the rest of the canal will be done over the next three years at a cost of about $210,000. He said the city has the authority to require the removal of the docks because permits were required for property ownen to buJld tho structures over publlc tidelands. Clear County Sky Due by Wednesday A drizzle that brought to an end the Orange Coast's wettest January in more than 20 years should give way to clear weather Wednesday, the Na· tional Weather Service said to- day. The forecast is for less than 10 percent chance or showers tonight, partial clearing Wed- nesday and fair weather through the weekend. Low temperatures should be about 50 degrees tonight and highs about. 65 degrees Wednesday. ' The rail}f'all wasn't much - only .09 inches in Santa Ana - N-M Trµstees Hear Citizem It's the fin.h Tuesday of the month, so NewpQrl· Mesa school trustees will conduct an informal meet· lni at 7:30 tonight in Costa Mesa City Council Cham- bers. A short presentation on the expansion of the Orange County Fair- grounds will be given, but the main purpose or the meeting is to allow parents and students toot· fer their view:i or concerns to trustees. but it was enough to edge 1978 into having the fourth wettest January since 1916, said John Gietzen of the Orange County Flood Control District. This month's total rainfalf in Santa Ana of 7.98 inches is the wettest since 1956, Gietzen said. The all·time record·holder, 1916. tallied 11.18 inches for the month. Gietzen said Orange County has also had the third weUest season to date since 1908. He said the total so far is 12.40 in· ches, compared to 6 58 inches last year to date Santiago Peak on Saddleback Mountain, which usually re- ceives the most rain in Orange County, got .3 inches during the past 24 hours, for a season total of 31 inches compared to 14.6 in- ches last year. At Orange Coasf College in Costa Mesa, Charles Lewis re- ported the wettest January since occ· began measuring rainfall in 1955. The 24·hour total was .12, bringing the month's rainfall lo 9.23 inches and the season's to 13.37 inches compared to 6.16 last year, he said. The Orange County Harbor Patrol in Newport Beach report- ed receiving .11 inches, for a season total of 11.61 inches. up from 6.04 inches last year. At the Moulton Niguel Treat- ment Plant in Laguna Niguel, lhe sum was .17 inches, brln1ing <See a..E~ Pace A.?> U.S., Viet Citizens Charged WASHINGTON CAP> -An employee of the L'nited States Information Agency and a Viet- namese national were arrested by the FBI today and charged with spying for the communist government of Vietnam. A federal grand jury in nearby Alexandria, Va .• returned a sevcn·count indictment t'harging Ronald Louis Humphrey, 42, and Truong Dinh Hung, 32, with con- spira<'y, espionage, stealing gov- ernment reC'ords and being un- registered foreign agents. The Indictment said the two delivered to the Socialist Republic of Vietnam "docu· ments, writings, notes and in- formation relating to the na- tional defense of the United States ..• having reason lo beheve that same would be used to the advantage of a foreign na-• lion ·• Humphrey, of suburban Arl- ington."Va., usea his poslton as a USIA ~mployee to gather the material and deliver it to Hung in various places in the W ashingtim area, the indictment said. Humphrey and Hung were ar- rested today at their places of employment in Washington, not long after the grand jury in Alexandria handed down the sealed indictment, the Justice Department said. Named as co·conspirators but not indicted were Huynh Trung Dong, Nguyen An Huynh. Nguyen N1toc Giao, Phan Thanh Nam and Dinh Ba Thi. The grand jury charged that Humphrey, Hung and their co- conso1rators gave ··aid, comfort. (See SPIES, Page A2) Irvine Forum On Corridor Set Tonight • The San Joaquin Hills Transportation Corridor, a high- capacily highway that will con· necl the San Diego and Corona del Mar freeways throug~ lrvine, will be the subject of a public meeting at 7 .30 tonight. The meeting with county plan- ners on the proposed route will be held at University High School. 4771 Campus Drive, Irvine. Construction on the route i~ not expected before the m1d·l980s. The route would run from the future Corona del Mar Freeway s1te near MacArthur Boulevard in Newport Beach to the San Diego Freeway near Saddlebadc College in Mission Viejo. Sacco-Vanze~i Mystery Renewed ,\? OAIL V PILOT N By JOANNE E rNOLDS Of o.lty Pt ... Se.tf J nhn 1':vt·r~nn er dt:t·1dtc"d 1971! "11u hJ tw I h•· \ c~r he ~ould b1:ro1111· 111\111\t·d in Nt:wJ.><>rt 1kal·h pol1tu·:-. Bopefid's.Move Just Bad Tllning llnfortWlatcl)', 1t is Oil!>o the y~.1r th<il Eversmeyer decided to muvt· out of The Bluffs to gtt ;.a~ ay from thl' noist• of Jets tak- rng off lrorn Orange County Airport. .t:;vcrsmeyer wunted to run for the city coum·al seal being vac;,t ed by Mayor Malan Dostal. llowever. before the Aprll 11 I cle~tlon. h~ will by movtne out or Dost.al's district and into the dtatnct re1>resented by Coun· c1lwoman Lucille Kuehn, the on- 1 y incumbent seeking re- election. Earlier this month, Eversmeyer had taken out nomination papers to become a candidate in the fourth district Hut when he informed City Clerk Doris George of his pending Viejo 'Neophyte' Seeks Senate Seat Gregory Ku<.'z)n:-.1..i, JI, a Mis- !'>Hlll V1l')t) gla:-.!'> t'ompany owner, ha!'> announced his ccindadacy for the J6th Stale St:nate ~eat held IJ y Den n1s Car pent er. R- Newport Beach. Kuczynski, a Democrat. said late Monday that he is a political neoph) l<'. Jhs on! v work toward politil-.tl t:ampai~n:-. was for Prt·s1dt•nt Lyndon Johnson 10 1968 whl'n the Lake Forest resa- d en t was a student at the University of Arizona. "l am a little unhappy with the w;.ay the situation as going with this county and this state," he said. "There is too much gov· t' r n m t> n t spend i n g a n d in - tcrferencc in our lives.'' Hut Kuczynski, an Orange County resident of eight years, c.ioes support planned growth control in the Saddleback Valley through government control. The candidate, who says be weighs 100 pounds and ts five feet. one inch tall but "roars like a six-footer," said be is launching a "grass roots cam· paign" by picking up Democratic supporters "here and there." He said the campaign will be "the best I can afford and still make my house payments and feed my family." His family, which resides at 25402 Shoshone Drive, consists of his wife Kathleen and children Lisa, 5, and Neil, 16 months. Senator Ca.rpi!nter announced in December that he will not run for re-election to his senate seat this year. From Page A 1 SNOW'S EFFECTS. • • The Clark County Red Cross chapter bought 80,000 loaves of bread and had National Guard helicopters take them to six cities to be given away in grocery store parking lots. A Mount Vernon grocer sold 1,000 loaves of bread within two hours of delivery. He had expected the supply to last two days. A grocery manager in Massillon said two customers argued heatedly O\W who would buy the last ball-gallon of milk in has ~tore . .. 1'111"'.K SUPPLIES HAVE BEEN affected by dairy farmers' d1ff1cullics m tending to their herds. Where power went off, milk- ing machines would not work and except in Amish areas, all milk· mg 1::. done bv machine If cows are not mtlkcd for four or five days, they dry up anti take ~cveral days to produce again, according to dairy scientists. Even then, few cows ~ive as much milk as they had done. Many farmers who were able to milk their cows had to dump milk durmg and after the storm because lank trucks couldn't negotiate tht> roads. POWER OUTAGES HURT BEEF farmers, too, knocking out automatic watering equipment in remote barns. With some farm Innes still impassable, cattlemen can't gel to their animals. Ted Jones of the Cooperative Extension Service, part of Ohio State Uruvers1ty's College of Agriculture, said Monday that many ,• t'<1ttlc may not have had water s1J1ce Wednesday. YES, the Answer For Roman Feast JJ a1 hor Art•a residents will have the opportunity to benefit the Youth Employment Service and eat all the 1.paghetti they ,.,an hold Feb. 9 when YES holds its annual fundr;ii5in~ dinner. Thl' dinn<'r. called a Roman lca~t hy organizers, will be held from 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. in th<' American Legion Hall. 215 15th St . Newport Beach. Tickets cni;t $3 50 for adults and $2 for ('h1ldren. Funds from the event will keep the six-year-old employ- nwnt service operating Ruth Urban, president 0£ the YES hoard of directors ex- plained that the agency 'finds temporary and permanent run and part-time jobs for residents between the a~cs of 14 and 21. She noted that the agency likewise helps employers find employees for all kinds of work ranging from temporary habvsitting assignments or house cleaning work, to offtce and production work. 1\I rs. Urban said both services are supplied rree or chaue. so • 0..ANOI COAST DAILY PILOT ........... .......,"'_~ .a.M Ul. c:.1for Vic. ,.,_,llMI •'Id pr-• .-...W n..;:::,-- ~··--­....... ,. .... , H YES h·as to rely on budget al- locations from the United Way and its fundraising dinner for money to keep going. She estimated that, in the six years YES has been working in the Harbor Area, more than 1,000 job placements a year have been made. Information on the dinner is available at the YES office, 1801 Newport Blvd., suite 201, Costa Mesa, 642-0474. p,....p,,.AJ HOLDUPS. • by the same man. ·In at least two of the rob- beries, including the latest, the suspect has been described as a male about six feet tall with sandy blond hair and a mustache. There have been no injuries in any of the robberies, all of which haYe occurred in the early afternoon. Security Pacillo bank teller Nancy Lee Re.dman, 19. Westminster, told pollee lhat the b°andlt approacbod her and handed her a nOte that read: ••Put the money ht the bag, l••t." change or address, she ruled that the move will nullify his standing as a candidate in the fourth. · Mrs. George said she told Ever::.meyer that he could establish a residency in the slXth district, prior to moving to ena- ble him to run in that district. Eversmeyer said he had no qualms about running in the fourth district where he now hve2', but he thinks it would be "too tough" to Ro up against Mrs. Kuehn in his new district. . ••tt's just a matter or bad tim- ing," he concluded today in con- c.·ed ing that his plans had run afoul of the city's councllmaruc district system. In Newport Beach, council repre:-.cntahon is based on dis- trict. although candidates arc voled on by the city at lurgt.' Eversmeyer. a former Navy pilot who has a h•w practice in Newport Center, said he felt ht: has a lot to offer the city in the way of experthe on aviation. Tbe airport is an especially sensitive topic to residents or the fourth distm·t who live under the takeoff pattern. But he said he doubts his ex- pertise would aid him in an ~let· taon race against the incumbent Mrs. Kuehn, "so l 've decided to forget it." "I really wanted to give some pubhc service," he said ... I've lived here for 10 years and I love Newport so much, I thought now would be the time to give back something for the pleasure I've gotten." 'ReasonafJlg c .... petiti1'e' New Hiring Salary OK'd for Fairview By JACKIE HYMAN Of Ille Oalty Pli.t IQH Fairview State Hospital in Costa Mesa has won state ap- prov al to h.ire licensed personnel at 20 to 25 per(:ent above regular beginning salary levels, hospital Executive Director Frank Crinella announced today. "We feel that we are reasonably competitive now ' with private hospitals, Dr. Crinella said. He said the plan for fourth and fifth step hiring was approved Monday by the state Personnel Board. It wjll also mean raises Proa Page Al SLEMONS. • ons campaign and Butrher never disclosed his role as an in termediary." The FPPC release said a hear- ing will be held sometime in March before the full com- mission with Administrative Law Judge Robert Mehtf pre- s1d1nJ.?, Lucus' role jn the 1976 Republican primary has been contro\'ersial because Siem ons' pollt1cal opponents claimed that Lucus only entered •the race to bump Slemons· chief opponent, Marian · Req~eson, out of the bottom posi- t ion on the ballot. Political strategists have long held that the lop or bottom posi- tion on a ballot can mean more votes to a candidate, Lucas, who never cam- paigned, got 2,034 votes. Mrs. Bergeson lost to Siemens by 2,393 votes. After. the primary campaiim, it was disclosed that Lucus was a one-time employe at Slem- ons •' Newport Beach car de- alerhip. Arter winning the Republican. nomination in the 74th, which stretches from Newport Beach to Oceanside, Slemons was de- feated in the general election by Democrat Ron Cordova. Mrs. Bergeson re-entered that general election campaign at the. last minute and finished third, polling 35,000 votes. She is seek- ing the GOP nomination again this year in the 74th DistricL Fl"Olll Page A J SACCO ••• conflict with the \dea .. beyond reasonable doubt." The papers also show that two early drafts of the commission report which sealed Sacco and Vanze~ti's fate are dated before tho commission's investigation was complete. A first draft is dated· July 20. 1927. So is a second draft, but in that case U\e date is crossed out and July 21 ls substituted. July 27. 1927 i.s the date the report was submitted to the governor. Michael A. Musmanno. a lawyeT involved in the Sacco- Van7.etU derense, and Robert A. Strauss Feuerlicht, a historian sympathetic io lhe two defen· dants, said defense arauments be!ol"e the commluion were not deUvercd unUl July 25, 19'27. And Mrs. FeuerUeht has written that the beartnp dld not end until Ju· 1)'21. Harle1 Holden, Harvard Unlveralbr arChl.v.lst, stld lbero ts no explanation of the date ln Ute papen. 7bus, there b no waJ to Ull wtwthe.r lt wu a aim· plo mlltake or wbethes: the drafts er• betn prepared or w o\'er. for licensed personnel already at the hospital who are receiving lower pay. "This means that we are hir ing beginning psychiatric techni- cians at right around $1,100 a month," Dr. CrineUa aaid Beginning registered nurses will receive $1,200 a month and nurses with some experience more than $1.300, he said. The personnel board approved the more expensive hiring for Southern Cali rorni a state hospitals because they have had difficulty filling their positions, Dr. Crinella said. The new higher waees will ap- ply lo psychiatric tethllicians and registered nurses at the fourth step or 20 percent higher level. he said. At the firth step or 25 percent higher level, included are phys1- ci ans. speech pathologists, audiologists, physical therapists and occupational therapists, Dr. Crinella said. The higher wages would also apply to 250 additional positions proposed by Governor Brown for Fairview. The Legislature has yet to approve those poi;itions. part of a S27 million package for the 11 state hospitals. Currenll)I., Fainde..w 1s aulhon1ed 1.159 licen~ed po'>1- t1ons, Dr. Crinella said. lie said only 743 are !alled by permanent licensed employe!\. Non-credentialed employees fill most of the additional posi- tions, with 121 posts actually va- cant, he said. f'ro• Pa9e Al SPIES •.• and ·advantage" to the Viet- namese by furnishing informa- tion touching on political, military and diplomatic rela- taons and intelhgencc assess- ments. The conspiracy count listed eight overt acts that detailed ·meetings and deliveries of docu- ments beginning April 19, 1977 and ending Dec. 23. The indict- ment said the conspiracy began sometime in 1976. Another count charged that in April 1977 Humphrey and Hung delivered a number of docu- ments to Vietnamese agents, in- cluding a cable from the American consul in Hong Kong to the secretary of slate marked secret; and cables to the secretary or state from U.S. em- bassies in Tokyo, Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur and Vientiane, marked confidential. Humphrey has been emplQYed by USIA, a State Department agency since 1961 and his over- seas lours of duty included one in South Vietnam in 1969-n. He is a fourth-level Forei&n Service information officer. Hung, or Washington, was ad- mitted to the United States in 1964 and sraduated from Stan- ford Untvenity with a bachelor's degree In economics and political science ln 1968: The Justice Department said be is employed at the Animal Jlealth ln1titute hi Wuhlnaton and that he has appUed fQr ~rmanent resident alien st•tus ln this coOn· try. Ma.xlfnum penalty upon con- viction ii life lmpri50nment. Diesel Fuel Tlieft Reported .in NB ( PilotLo(lbook J Tired of Traffic? Try Riding Bike • Ky JOANNE'REVNOLDS OI ttoe OAlly P'll.t SIAll Ask any city official in Newport Beach. He or she will tell you the city's number one problem is traffic conges- tion. City folks spend,a considerable amount or time trying to figure out what to do with all the cars on municipal streets. One city official who doesn't 1s Manlyn Hendrickson • l"hairman of the Bicycle Trails CLlttens Advisory Commit· tee, a group appointed by the City Council. Mrs Hendrickson recenUy told councilmen that bicv cle congestion on the Balboa Peninsula trnd an West Newport rt\'als car congl!S· taon in the summertime. "We on the committee would like to sec pc•uple come into this city on uacycles rather than rn cars. but the problem is that w1.• don't have any place to put the btkt•s. either," she said. Mrs. Hendrickson suggested that the city in- Vl'St .in some bike racks to end lhe clut- ter. ~lVNO~OS * * * POLICE OllE1'' Charles Bro!'>s 1'-fond of talk mg about getting Newport Bc:.tl'h residents to partic1pate with police in establishing an ant1·crame ambiance for the city. Last week he got an assist from bar owner John l\lcMackin, who, pohc<.• report, drove off a gun-toling would-be k1dnup111.·r who was threatening a Central Newport resident. After dome has ('l\'IC duty 10 frightening oft the woman's assailant, McMackin went a step farther and spent the next 45 minutes aiding police in their search of the neighborhood until they found and arrested a suspect. McMackin, who 1s also in the travel business in Newport, said he felt it was his duty to get involved. *** CHIEF GR~. who assumed hls post last falJ, got some good news an the anti-crime department Crom his patrol division after Christmas. Di' ision commander Wa:. ne Connolly reported that from Dec. 1 to l>l'c. 31, there was a citywide decrease of 36.6 percent. in burglaries ~ind thefts from cars. Fashion island, which 1s showing signs of becomang the car burglary capital of the Orange Const, showed a 43 percent decrease and Connolly said that cnme reports in • Fashion Island were down 54 percent in all categories. Connolly 1s not eager to lay credit for the decrease on any particular thing, but he notes that th~ police depart- ment did three things this year 1t has not done before: -Officers held crime prevention classes for employes of all the major shoppin~ centers and all the major depart- ment stores. -A spedal detail or plainclothes officers watched over parking lots during the holiday shopping season. -And police made a point of havmg newspaper stories written about those two programs. Gale Winds Buffet Florida Yacht Race Whole gale w1J1ds and bitter cold weather off the west coast of Florida made a virtual shambles of the first race of the Southern Ocean Racing Con- ference CSORC), .according to -:eports from Florida. The open- mg race was a 50 miler from St Petersburg to Boca Grande. It started Saturday and did not finish until early Monday. Skip and Scott Allan, formerly of Newport Beach, described the race as one of the most destruc· live they had ever experienced. Both the brothers have crewed in major yacht races all over the world. They are the sons of Robert l\l. Allan Jr. of Newport Beach and Pebble Beach. In a telephone conversation to- day \\1th their father, the Allan brothers said six yachts sullt'red d1smasting and a number of others had other major damage. They reported winds of tiO knots ~ind said crews had to wear ski t'lolhmg to keep warm. There were no r eported in JUrH'S. Skip Allan is crewing on a 28· foot half-ton yacht Mercury ownert by David Allen, San 1''rancisco, whose previous boat. Imp, was the overall winner in . · last year's SORC. Scott Allan 1s Fro94 Page Al CLEAR ••• the season measure to 14.l'i i~­ c hes. more than twice last year's 5 89 inches Bill Shields at Laguna Beach Hardware measured .08 mches, for a total of 11.69 mches. Last. year's sum was 9.14 mches . Raiowatcher .T. Sherman Den- ny or Huntington Beach reported .1 inches, for a season total of 13.15 inches, up from 9.47 lnchcs last year. Paramedics Plan NB Slide Show Newport Beach paramedics wall pr~nt a slide show dem- onstration their services to res- identsof Balboa Island Feb. 9. The presentation will be a part of the Balboa Island Improve· ment Association 'a February meeting. The meeting will begin at. 7:30 p.m. at 115 Agate ~ve., Balboa llland. All Balboa Island residents and property owners 11re invited to attend. L4S YEG4S UFE 'UKE ANYWHERE' ' crewing aboard Wildflower, a two tonner. Both yachts finished the race without mishap. Tl'cond race or the series, from St. Petersburg to Fort Lauderdale, considered the-most rug,::ed Wldcr most normal con· ditions, is scheduled to get under way Wednesday unless weather conditions worsen. Police Probe 2CdMHome ·Burglaries Dl'tective~ from Newport ncach arc probing two Corona del Mar burglaries that took plac<.' when homeowners were gom• for less than two hours. Police say so far there is little oth<'r than the speed with which the burglars struck to hnk the two crimes. The first break-in was report- ed at 2:10 p.m. by Pete Jarvis. who told police he was gone about an hour when thieves bur,Oarh.ed tits home. taking the $1. \00 stereo set he had' purchased the day before • The second case was reported 40 minutes later by lane Flood.. She told police tthe was gone from her home less lhan two hours . Mrs. Flood llated her losses at $2,900. Taken, she said. were !!lerling s1J\'cr tlatwaro and some jewelry. c:oamel Endoned . ck EDITION VOL. 71, NO. 31, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGf COUNTY, CALI FORNI A . TUESDAY, JANUARY 31, 1978 Afternoo N.Y. Stoek TEN CENTS• l 1 I ·;Stormy Ohio Drinks llp Beer Supply COLUMBtlS, Ohio CAP) Stores are out of beer, bread and Jflilk . Shoppl•rs eoniu anyway, some wearrng ski~ or pulling sleds. I-:.trnwrs sav llw1r m<'at rattle are f(oing without waler, their dairy rattlt· "1thoul m1lk111g bt•causc power outages have made Jflachirws u . .,l'll'"" t\(,RICl LTllRE OfflCIALS ESTIMATE that Ohio farm losses rnulcl t·xt·<·cd $60 million. State officials forecast over the \\•eekend thal the· lo..,st•s would surpass $48 million. • Thcs1• .in· among the hardships Ohioans and others in. the fidwest ract· r1\l' days after their worst blizzard in history buried hem in snow and whipped them with brutal winds. Watching for Spill Some grocery stores report short supplies or no supplies of milk, eegs, bread and produce because delivery trucks have been stuck in drifts or &tailed in the frigid temperatures throughout the Midwest. FISHER· FAZIO FOOD STORES said they had no shortages. "But we did ask customers to llm1l themselves to one·half gallon o! milk," said Milt Kantor, southern Ohio division president for the chain. The highway patrol escorted trucks of milk, eggs and meat from Detroit to stores in snow-bound Toledo, said Richard Bere, a vice president for the Kroeger grocery chain. ONJi.STORE WAS UNABLE TO get its milk frorn its usual ln dianapolf! supplier but found a dairy at Fort Thomas, Ky., that had no market for thousands of half-pints of milk packaged for schools that an: clos<'d . We had !>everal hundred customers who bought milk by th~ gallon m half pints. · an official for the grocery said. With streets and parking lots jammed by snow and ice, store managers reported shoppers coming with sleds and backpacks. ONE COUPLE SKIED VP TO a grocery in Indianapolis. 1oaded their purchases into back packs and skied away. <Stt SNOW, Page AU Witness Claims Infant Lived .Qy TOM BARLEY Of Ille 0.llJ ~l.C Stiff A prosl!cution witness testified late Monday that the baby al- legedly strangled to death by Dr. William Baxter Waddill was alive and breathing at the time he was informed that the planned abortion had misfired. Registered nurse Pat Olvera told an Orange County Superior Court jury that the infant born last March 2 in Westminster Community Hospital had a slow and irregular heart beat and could only breathe .in gasps. But she repeatedly assured prosecutor Robert Chatterton that she detected signs of life in the 28-week fetus and she re- fused to amend that statement under heavy defense question· mg. Dr. Waddill'~ two law:yers said they int<•nd to prove that there was no h\C birth invoh.ed in thl' dell\ en or the tetus and that murde·r chari?es against the Huntington Harbour ph~sician should be dismissed. Mrs. Olvera testified that she went to the room of the unwed, 18-year-otd mother last March 2 believing that the patient was about to deliver a fetus that had been aborted by the use of a saline injection. Inst<'ad, she said, she found what she believed to be a live baby girl. She said the baby moved, gave what the witness described as a •·weak whine · and tried lo breathe The w1tm.·ss testified that she immediately removed the child to the nursery where hospital staff began resuscitation efforts <See DOCI'OR, Page A%) c ' Coast Cu:ml otl -.pill <.'xpert:-are standing h> <1 ·1 Ill loot oil hargl' that split in half J ;\londa\ night Th<• Houehard 105 1s hold- ~ about .1 m11l1011 ).!<illons of fuPI oil. hut l1ttlc of 1l has l<'aked out. The bar~e was ht·111 ~ lo.irlt'<l at the AtlantH~ T<.'rmrnal < 'nrp dock:-, in :\0wington, N.H. Legal Case Mystery Sacco-Vanzetti Documents Revealed Beaten Wife's PkaBared At Conj ere nee W ASIII~GTO!'f <AP) -"T have had glasses thrown at me," wrote the ahused wife who said ahe went to the pohl'C for help. "l ha\e bc<•n kicked in the ab- domen when I w ;1s v1s1bly preg- nant,'· ancl sht· sought help from her pastor •• 1 have llt'<'n \l. h1P1wd. kicked and thrown, p1tked up and thrown down ap.ain." and she a sked help from hE•r doctor, friends and a counselor. . The battered wife, a white, b)iddle-class woman with three children and a professional bUsband, was writing to Marta Segovia Ashley, who set up a ~nter for battered wives in San F:ranc1sco : "Everyone I have gone to for t )u)lp has somehow wanted lo blame me and vindicate my busband ..• I know that I have I t• gel out, hut when you have no 1"bere lo go, you know that you go on your own and with no sup· 111>rt," the woman wrote. Her letter was presented in a p)lper today for the first national tonference o"n battered women hld by the U.S Commission on Oivil Rights. It was called to ex- ~ me research on wife beating .xtd its perpetrators, on laws Electing battered wives and ir enforcement and on the d for short and long-term ~rvices for the women. Jn an artide cpming out next 0,onth, Dr. Suzanne K. Stein- ~etz of the University of ' 'i:Jelaware savs seven percent of (See WIFE, Page AZ> W ellwood E. Beall, Aero Exec, Dies EXECUTIVE SUCCUMBS Wellwood Beall, 71 Search Halted LONG BEACH (AP) -The Coast Guard called off its search Monday night for a North Carolina youth missing after his kayak capsized off the Baja California during a ·student kayaking expedition, officials said. David Schwimmer. l~. of Raleigh, N.C .• fell into rough waters during the expedition T~esday, said officials. Funeral serYices are :. !heduled Thursday in Newport Beach for retired aerospace f>ngineer and executive Wellwood E. Beall. 71, of Laguna Hills, who played major roles in the development of the B 17 Flying Fortress and B-29. Superfortress of World War II. Beall died Saturday of pneumonia in a Santa Monica hospital following surgery two weeks ago. Ile retired from McDonnell Douglas Corp. after eight years as a senior executive. member of the board, corporate vice pte- sidont and executive vice presi· dent of Douglas Ain:raft Com- pany division where he worked upon retirement. Beall joined Douglas in 1964 after spending 30 years with the Boeing Company. While with. Douglas. he was involved with the DC-8, DC-9, and DC-10. He joined Boeing as Far Eastern manager in 1934 and was responsible for selling the company's fighter and transport aircraft to the Chinese govern- ment. In 1936 he became chief com- mercial projects engineer and headed all design work on Boe· ing commercial transports, in- cluding the famous Clipper fly- ing boats. Following World War II, he was involved in development of the' Boeing B-52, the nation's chief $trate.Cic bomber o! today; the KC·9T and KC-135 tankers; the Boeing 707. first U.S. jet in commercial service. and the Boeing 7Z1 Trijet.. Beall was born in Canon City. Colo-. attended tho University or Colorado abd first moved to California ln 1929 as an engineer with a Pasadena aircraft com- pany. He leav~s a wife Martha. Laguna Hillis: a son, Alan of llonolulu; daug)lter Barbara Beilll O;lpe ~ Beach; brother, Thornton of Walnut .. .add Gotdort f Mora1a. and nv ganddilldren. Servf ar cb~uted for 11 <See JI Pa&e.A2> CAMBRIDGE; Mass. <AP) ·- Documents made public today opened a new mystery in th!! Sacco-Vanzetti case -was the Harvard University president who helped seal the fates of the two llahan-boro anarchists writ· mg his conclusions before the fi4! de~ewps beard? <·omm1ss1on·~ report contains the damning words · " .• Tht- "Omm1ttee is of opinion beyond rL ·1sonablc doubt that Sacco was guilty of the-murder at South Braintree ... The draft also states, "On the whole, the com- mittee members were o. won.:J>eytiif. r on•ble that "\Taniilti also was gu ty, / \ 1 though with less assurance than l in the case of Sacco." The clause "less assurance" was drop1>ed from the final re- port and that is sure to fuel con-_ trovcrsy among those still de- f c n ding the two admitted l anarchists executed for a murder committed during a i "ltanard provided new docu4 m~nts on the case when it opened the private papers or its formtt president Abbott -Lawrence Lowell concerning the case. Lowell headed a gov- ernor's advisory commission that recommended that the 1927 executions or Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti take place <See SACCO, Page A2) J Viejo 'Neophyte' ! Massachusetts set off worldwide protests by executing the two radicals. The report stirr~d such controversy at the time that a Harvard-educated journalist wrote in August 1927: Seeks Senate Seat "From now on, I want to know, will the institution of learning m Cambridge which once we called Harvard be known as Hangman·s House?" At the time a celebrated cause among liberals, radicals and poor immigrants. the case aroused controversy over whether justice or prejudice had prevailed. Historians still cannot agree whether Sacco and Vanzetti were guilty. Lowell's role was as head of a governOl''s advisory commission of three pillars of the Yankee Establishment that confirmed the courts' judgment that Sacco and Vanzetti killed a paymaster and a guard at a shoe factory. Even the firl'lt draft of the Motorcycle Gone A. motofcycle valued by the victim· et b,500 bas been stolen from an El Toro home. Orange County sheriff's officers said in- truders who broke a window to gain entry took the machine from the home of store owner Paul Andrew Larrick. 54, of 22823 Islamare Lane. El Toro. l Dally Plle4 $tall Piiate. SENATE CANDIDATE Vlejo's Kuczynski Satellite Protest HIROSIDMA, Japan <AP) About 100 labor union members and others held a one-hour sit· down in front of Hiro~hima's atomic bomb monument today. Chamber President 'Man of the Year' lrvine, Figeira's first posiUon "' the Saddlebaclc Valley was as general manager or the Lake Forest Community Association, a post held for seven years. The chamber award was pre- sented durtni Friday's annual installation and dinner dance at theHolldayJno,La&UnaHUls. Figeira tifu cited for hi• part in t!M finL 5.uddlebadc Valley D »•· expansloo ot charol>or nJces, ere.Ung a lla1Son With count7 .government.al om • lmaco·ldentity pro rama and nr a ptomotJons and format.Ion or t f<XrCC tudy for i ond obj tiv ~ lht: valley. Gregory Kuczynski, 31, a Mis· sion Viejo glass company owner, has announced his candidacy for the 36lh State Senate seat held by Dennis Carpenter. R· Newport Beach. Kuczynski, a Democrat. said late Monday that he is a political neophyte. His only work toward political <.'ampa1gns was for President Lyndon Johnson in 1968 when the Lake Forest res1- d en t was a studenl at the University of Arizona. "J am a little unhappy with the way the situation is going with this county and this state," he said. "There is too much gov· t•rn meat spending and in· ll•rfcrence in our Jives." But Kuczynski, an Oranj?e County resident of eight years. docs support planned growth control in the Saddleback Valley throuSth government control. The candidate, who says he weighs 100 pounds and is five feet, on<' inch tall but "roars like a ~ix-footar.•• said he is (See RACE, Page A2) Coast Weather Partly cloudy tonight. and clearing partially Wednesday afternoon. Lit· tle warmer. Lows tonight 52. High Wednesday 67, INSIDE TODA 'Y F'arln~a lcafrr or on incom· pd•nt /rom the f edl!ral seroice CGJa be. at hmu art impossible laalc. For. <i loot at Che 0 bureouc:TQ.ttc mGl'f, .. see the 1econd '" 4 1mn on Poat AB. I I 111 rncr \'>:-.eml1lv t•und1date • I ttrlh'!. ~lc111011:., hi!. l'1Hnµd1~n l ' 11 I h J If Ill ,t II cl II ti W ti ( liJ 0\ H11tdw1 , l11s pol1l1t•al slrnlt·~1st , l.tl'1' lines of up lo $H.OOO 1f found ~uall v of ,allc~t>d lllt'gul cum· p.11g11 prm•t1<·1•s lat"d to the l!j76 lh' pu hht·an pra rn arv <'a rn pa1p;n 'fill' allt•gat1ons Wl'lC last~ 111 ;1 press rclcasl' madt.> available Monday in lhl' Sacraml'nto of fH'l'S of Utt' Stall' Pair Political J>r;1ct1ccs Comm1ssaon which ''Ill holcl ht•flring:-. on the t·haq:l's in l\larch Neither Slem· ons nol' Butl'lll'r were availa- hlt• fur c-omnwnl th1:-; morning Tht• alll·~allun:-. t•umc out of a J1rnbt• laum·h1•d an <ktobcr by tht· st;1ll' Allm11t•y (;<·ncr:tl's of- l1t•1._ I nv~st1i.:uturs <.allcgt• lh~tl John J<. \'uung. l'" d1a1rmon or Slem- mons· sun·Ps:-.ful campaign for the GOP nomanat1on m the 74lh AsSt.·mhly Distri<"l. gave Butcher S:!~U an <'ash to pay the flhng fee uf .mollwr 1·at11hd.1ll• in the sam1• J :tc I'. J>alc•Sn1tt J.111·11 ..... 'I ht· n·l1·a...,1· furllwr .llll•J!t!d th.It Skn1ons "l\11t•\\ of lhl' l.'.1:-.h pa~ nwnt ;mil approved 1t · ,\1·1·onhng to th1• 1wws release. ~:arnpo.11gn d1 sdosurl' l<iws were all1·g1•dly furlh1•r violated lweaust• "tlw trnnsac•tion was nc\'t•r cl1sclos('(f IJy I he Siem- CAMPAIGN REMEMBERED Former Candidate Slemons 011,; camp::11gn and Butcher never disC'losed his role as an in· lermediarv." The :FPPC release said a hear- ing will he held sometime in ;\J <trch before the full com- • , f'ro• Page Al SNOW'S EFFECTS. • • Tht• Clark County Hed Cross chapter bought 80,000 loaves of hrc-ad and had National Guard hchcopters take them to six cities 10 he g1H·n away 10 grocery :-.tore parking lots. \ ~ount \'t•rnon grol'cr sold 1,000 loaves of bread within two hnur ... ol th•h\'C•rv lie he.id f'XJ}{!('te<.l the supply lo last two days. ,\ .l.!llX'l'rv manager in Mas.,allon s<11d two customers argued hcalt'dly m t•r who would huy the last half-gallon of milk m his slOrt'. ~tJLK SUPPLlES HAVE BEES affected by dairy farmers' dtff1cult1t•:-. m t1·nd1ng lfJ their herds Where power went off. milk- ing rn~H·h111rs would not work and except an Amish areas, all milk· ing ts dorw by rnJl h1111· If «ows are not milked for four or five days, they dry up anrl t.iJ..l' sl'\'t•ral d;..1ys to produc<' again, accordmg to dairy scientists r:\ t•n llwn ft•\\ t·o~..., gl\ (•as much milk as they had done !\l.rn~ J.unwr..., \\ho \\t·n· ahlc to milk their cows had to dum1' " Through Weekend Clear County Sky • Due by Wednesday A rJnnlP that broui::ht to an ('nd llw Orangl' Coast's wettest Januar~· in more than 20 years :-.houlcl ga-.:f' way lo clear \\t•.1tla·r Wcclnesd<:1y , the Na- 111111.tl Wt•<ilhl•r Scn ice said to · da~ The fon•casl IS ror less than 10 Pl'rt'l•nl chance of showers tonight. partial clcarini.: Wed· nt·sdJ~ and fair wcathl•r through the W(."ekcnd Low temperatures :-;hould he about 50 de~rces 1onai:ht and highs about 65 dej?rt?es Wednc•sday. Thi.' rainfall we.isn't much - only .09 inches in Santa Ana hut it was t•nou~h to edge 1978 rnlo having lh<' fourth wettest .January since 1916, said John Gieln·n of the Orange County Flood Control Oastncl. This month's total rainfall in Santa Ana or 7 98 inches is the \\ t>ltec;,t '>incc 1956, Giet:r.c·n said. / Toro filates _X-Ray Unit A mobile chest x-ray unit will hf' m the parking lot at 24372 Rockfield Blvd. in El Toro 1''eb. 9 through 15 from 10 a.m. to 6 pm. Thc all-time record-holder, 1916, tallil·d J 1.18 inches for the month. Gietzen said Orange County has also had the third wettest Sl·ason to date sancc 1908. He said the total so far is 12 -10 in- ('hes, compared to 6.58 inches last year to date. Santiago Peak on Saddleback :\tuuntain, which usually re- ceives the most rain in Orange County, got .3 inches during the past 24 hours, for a season total of 31 inches compared to 14.6 in· C'hes last year. At Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa, Charles Lewis re· ported the wettest January since OCC began measuring rainfall in 1955. The 24-hour total was .12. bringing the month's rainfall to 9.23 inches and the season's to 13.37 inches compared to 6.16 last year, he said. The Orange County Harbor Patrol in Newport Beach report· ed receiving .11 inches, for a season total or 11.61 inches, up from 6.04 inches last year. At the Moulton Niguel Treat- ment Plant in Laguna Niguel, the sum was .17 inches, bringing the season measure to 14.17 in· ches, more than twice last year's 5.89 inches. mi5sion with Administrath·e L<ilw Judge Robert Meher pre- hidinJ.?, Lucus' role in the 1976 Repubhcan primary has been controversial because Slem- on s' political opponents da1med U111t Lucus only entered I he race to bump !'\lemons' ~:hil·f opponent, Marian Ht.>rgeson, out of the bottom posi· twn on tho ballot. Political strategists have long ht.•ld that the top or bottom posi- t wn on a ballot can mean more votes to a candidate. Luc;.1 s, whu never cam- p:11gned, l(OI 2,034 votes. Mrs. llt-rgl·son lost to Slemons by 2,39J \Ill\';:>, 1\ft .. r the primary campaiim. 1t was lhst•lost'(l that Lucus was a ont.'·t1mc cmploye at Siem- on s' Newport Beach car de- alerhip. After winning the Republican nomination in the 14th, wh.ich stretcht's from Newport Beach 10 On•<tns1<.ll', Slcmons was de IL'att•d in the general t!lcction by .lkmocrlll non Cordova. Mrs. nergeson r·.!·Cntered that t:eneral election campaign at the last minute and finished third, polling 35,000 votes. She is seek- in~ the GOP nomination agam this year rn the 74th District. Super Savers Expanded? W ASlfiNGTON (AP) - United Airhnes said today it will ask the Civil Aeronautics Board to ap- prove expansion of its dis· counl Super Saver fares to c.ill United routes longer than 900 miles for a 2 12· month period beginning Mart'h 18. The fares arc 30 percent. to 40 percent lower than regular coach fares, de· pending on what day of the week the passenger travels. The fares would lH,. available an each of the 110 cities Uruted serves in the 48 U.S. mainland states and in Canada. Honolulu would not be included. Irvine Forum On Corridor Set Tonight The San Joaquin Hills Transportation Corridor, a high· <·apacity highway that wiJl con· nect the San Diego and Corona del Mar freeways through Irvine, wilJ be the subject of a public meeting at 7:30 tonigttt. The meeting with county plan· ners on the proposed route will he held at University High School, 4771 Campus Drive. Irvine. Construction on the route is not expected before the mid-1980s. The route would run from the future Corona del Mar Freeway site near MacArthur Boulevard in Newport Beach to the San Diego Freeway near Saddleback College in Mission Viejo. March Assailed W ASmNGTON CAP) -Presi· dent Cartef' said Monday be deplores plans of Chicago Nazis to march with swastika armbands in the predominantly J cw ish sub_urb of Skokie, Ill. . AMSTERDAM. The Netherlands· CAP) - Gregorv Herbert, sa;<ophone player for the rock group Dlood, Sweat and Tears, was found dead todaty m aft Amsterdarn hotel room, police said. The body or the 31-ycar-old musician was found bv member~ of the band a few hours after they rc.>- turned from diMer at a downtown restaurant. Pohct• ~aitl a search of Herbert's room revealed ''s1gmricant quantities" of h~roin .and <'O<:ainc, os well as a number of hypodermic svrm~e~. An autopsy may be ht•ld to establish <:mJse of death, a polire spokesman said. The group was on a European tour. Herbert and other band members were to perform tonight in The Hague, but the group called off the. concert and flew to London to decide whether to continue the tour. Coast Jeweler Slain In Holdup Slwoting Witnesses said they heard four shots. As the two bandits bolted from the shop to a parked yellow ~edan, one of them threatened a witness who had emerged from a nearby flower shop to see what had happened. Golin could be seen lying in a pool of blood bleeding profusely from apparent head wounds, witnesses said. A small handf?un could :.lso be seen lying on the floor next to Gohn's body. Mrs. Golin ran screaming from the shop before police arnved, witne-.ses said. Golin was rushed to Los Alamitos General Hospital Outer Nixes Bracero Plan WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi- dent Carter laid to rest Monday :-peculation of renewing the U.S.-Mex1t'an "hraccro" pro· gram, which Agriculture Secretury Bob Bergland recent· ly suggested might be revived. The bratt•ro proi;r<im, begun in the 1940s, allowed several rnil11on Mexican migrant workc>rs to 1•ross the border for several months to aid American farmers with harvesting. The program was allowed to expire in 1964 after U S. labor groups ~laimed hraceros were taking work away from American job huntcrs. "We have no plans whatsoever to re101llate a bracero pro gram," Cartrr said al Monday':. press conference. "Our own pro- pos al to deal with the un- documented workers or illegal alien question has already been submitted to the public and that encompasses what we proposed. ll does not comprise a bracero- typc program." Ero• Page Al DOCTOR ••• in a bid to aid the ailing infQnL • It is alleged that Dr. W-a'ldill halted those efforts and then sent the hospital staff from the· nursery wh.ile he strangled the unwanted baby to death. A coroner's autopsy Jed to the finding that the child died as a result of manual strangulation. Fro91PageAI BEALL ••• a.m. Thursday at the Pacific View Memorial Park and Mortuary, Newport Beach. Flowers or charitable donations have been suggested hy the family. where he died at 4:16 pm .• Orange County Coroner's or ficials said. Seal Beach police Sgt. Virginia Black said the amount of loot taken in the robbery is not known at this time. Police said the getaway vehi· cle, which bore New York license plates, was last seen northbound on Seal Beach Boulevard. Police said they believe the jewelry store bandits may be two or the three gunmen who held up a pair of markets in Westminster and Fountain Valley Saturday. No one was hurt in those holdups. The suspects in all three holdups were reportedly using an older sedan with out-of-state license plates. Huntington Harbour resident Wayne Golin, 41, died Monday· from gunshot. wounds he sur· fered during a holdup at his Seal Beach jewelry store by two ban· d1ts who are still at large, police said. Investigators said two men en· tered the Leisure World Jewelers shop, 13920 Seal Beach ntvd., at 2:15 p.m. and attempt· ed to rob Gotin and ·his wif<.', Barbara. The gunmen arc.believed lo be in their 20's. Funeral services for Golin are pending. Ms. Bluinenau Funeral Held Graveside services were scheduled today at the Inglewood Memorial park in lnglewbod for Myrtle Adelaide Blumenau, of Laguna Hills, who died Sunday at 1he Beverly Manor Convalescent Home.ShewaslOl. Ms. Blumenau, a retired secretary of 30 years, was born in Flint, Michigan, had resided m California for the past 77 years. She is survived by a niece. Mrs. P. G. Bentzien and a nephew, Paul Bentzien. of Sun City, Ariz. Viejo Coed Wins Yearbook Post Mission Viejo resident Jody Francesconi, 20, a junior major in journalism at USC, has been named chief photographer for the univl!rsity's yearbook, tbe El Radio. A school spokesman said she ig a member of the university's photo club, a contributing photo- grapher for the Dltily Trojan newspaper and has been named to tlie dean's lisL E'ro81 Page .ti SACCO ..• payroll robbery. The qu1hf1cation •·on the ~hole" dad make tL into lhc fin.ii re(Jort and haa. ooen a source ut lrequenl cr1t1c1sm of Lowell's commiga,1on ~·cuusc \t seems to conn1cl wtth the ldea ''beyond reaM>nal>lo doubt ... The l'ISM'r5 also show that two early draf~ of the commission report which ealed Sacco and V1ntettl'11 fule are dated before lhl' commlssaon's· tnvestigattion w <.u1 ('Omplete A Carst draft is dated July 20, 1927. So is a second draft, bul 111 that cai;e the date is crossed out and July 27 is substituted. July 27. 1927 is the datl! the report wus suhmitlecl lo the govE'rnor. M 1chacl A. Musmanno. a la\\ yer involved in the Sa('('o Vanzetti deft·nse, and Robert \ Strauss Fcuerl1cht, a historian sympathetic to the h\ o dttcn dants, said defense argument:-. before the commission were not deh\·ered until July 25, 1927. And ~trs. Feucrhchl has written that the hearings did not end until Ju- ly 2l- Harley Holden, Harvard University archivist, said there is no explanation of the date in the papers. Thus, there is no way to tell whether it was a sim- ple mistake or whether the drafts were being prepared before the hearings were over. E'romPageAI WIFE ••• the country's 47 million wives are victims of severe physical abuse by their husbands. The article will appear in a new journal called "Vic- timology," which is published in Washington. Miss Ashley, who included the letter from the battered wife in her prepared address, said the woman has summarized the in- adequacy of all eXJsting social service agencies. She said there are many reasons a woman remains with a violent man who has beaten her and probably will beat ber again. "Economic necessity. No where to go. Fear. Dependency. Children," she said, keep the worn an mired in the abuse and dread. . Miss Ashley said the women must have a place to go. hke her :-h('lter, La Casa de las Madres. But also, she said, there must he social change m this society, which hhe srud trains women to lie sweet, passive and self- ~acr1f1cmg. "From birth women deserve to be treated as independent. c.•apablc people rather than as in- complete and infenor beings." ~he said. F,....PageAJ RACE ••• launching a "grass roolc; cam- p a~g n" by picking up De ocr.atic supporters "here an there." H srud the campaign will be •'the best I can afford and still make my house payments and feed my family." His family, which resides at 25402 Shoshone Drive, consists of his wife Kathleen and children . Lisa, 5, and Neil, 16 months. Senator Carpenter announced in December that he will not run for re-election lo bis senate seat this year. JeweJrY Stolen An intruder who entered via the unlocked door took jewelry valued at $1,085 from a Mission Viejo home. Orange County ~heriff's officers !>aid the theft was reported by nursing instruc- tor Sybil D. Orr. 53, of 26645 Avenida Deseo. She was away from her home al the time. X-rays of the lungs arc :inalyzed by a doctor for any de· feels of the chest or Jung area. Ji'<'e for the serviC'e is $8. The cost includes examination of the x-rays by a doctor, proc- essing of the lcslc; and mailing QI the results. Preacher-publisher Stands Up to Suit OAANOIECOAST DAILY PILOT ~::.=~;.'r.:::i==~= C.0.>t _,,.,,,,,. C-.ny ,_ .. .,.,....,..,. """'"-......... y '"'""Cl" ,, .... y ,.,.. C.01• """"' --1 ....... M10ttl .......... ac1t1-t•1n Y11tn. lr•one. SMHll-· Yeltey -l-.. •"''°"'"C~\t A ...... ~ .... ..... ,, .............. ,., ..... .,. ..., ~ , ... ••"''°"' llUbll\1\1"9 •"'"' ••• , lJO .... ~y "'"'· Go4•• ...,.., t•tlforftl•'2•2'. """"'"-............ ,_ ...... ,_ Jtcltlt CwtW v;.o """'ldfn' '"° r..-•-.- T-. l(Wllt 111u .. .,_.~~ ~-• ... •lllW Dllf+M ... .... tll<MN~ ... 11 .... ,, .. -,.._. .... .,.. t~llVM!wotnoe 11111 L.• ,.., ~·1w Ofett•.-. Offtcee (llole folltMt UIW.tl ""a.Mt ._ ........... <!. ,,., • ...,........_., ........... .u.1 1•~~ n..__•cn•>l4Mln ··~~MMln I ....._,.,,._.,...,..Oftlfe I -&a10 ' ' • I l' I buildini: another school, the former teacher moved to Mis- <;ion Viejo in 1968. Neither the money nor the school ever materialized. Ile retired from the pulpit when cancer demanded surgery on his jaw and he was told he may nevertalk again. Obvio~ly, the doctor's predic- tion hasn't come true. Howell often speaks up at school board meetings. But when he faced the possibility of being speechless, he decided to write. He said he had also been look· ing for another educational proj- ect and a way to continue his conimuntty involvement. From bis observation oC politics, Howell &aid, he hu de- cided that it is not the qualified candidates who t1eek publlc or. face. Rather, he aaid. they are generally people who flnandll gains or han certain eao needs. Additionally, h saJd, public agendet m to be takine ad· vaataae Of tb 1ituatJon that ex· ista in a new commwllty • Bat b a.id bi.I frle d tar. raway, W'bO plckl up m t of the l b for the pubUcaUons Um t· eCt at five.cents eath, had lot lo do with ht decis on lo 1 unch the newslct~r. Howell re('alled that <.;ar- rawa~·. as a congressional can- didate in 1974, charged cam· paign violations against Andrew Hinshaw. But, said the minister. this was ignored by the district attorney and local newspapers for a long time. Howell said be became con-- vinced then that newspapers have a ••vested interest" and don't always tell the news that should be told. Carraway rtrused to be in· terviewed about this project. or his partner, Howell said, "I sup- po!\e two people could not ha\!e more diverse personalities. Yet . there is a common bond. "He's interested in clean gov- ernment and so am I." Rowell added, "Re's willing to put his money where his mouth 1s. There aren't many of those people around." But some people have ques· tloned Whether the two are using the newtletter to further their o n Political ambition.,_ How 11 uld h~ considers it jlllt • oontlnuaUon or his com· munlly la'Vfce. But he added . .,1 suppose anytlm~ you attempt omcrthlng Uke thl , you're 1<>ln1 lo hav e who quesUon ~ moUv • ' ~ Tax Bill Approved By Senate S\('H1\\H:"<'l'll 1 \1'1 \ • '>lcept·r litll 'll'Wl'tl In so1111· lawmal.;t•r" ,.., tlw ani-.wt.·r to ltll' l.t'gt..,lalur •· s 11t·.1clto1·k 11\lt'I' propl'rt ~ ta\ 1 •·ltl'f 1s ... 1111 ah\,. after SUI'\ I\ 1111: ·'I,,,.,,. t•all Ill th1• .... tatt• St•nalt• Tht• mt',1-.ur ,. ~I\ I Ii\ '-1·11 l'l'lt't lkhr . Ii 1'1111111111 1'11•.111•d thl• uppt•r hoU"'' Moncl:n 1111 .1 '.!7 ti \ 11t1· t lw lo.111• I Wll I h11 cl• rt1'1Jlll II\ llt't·tli•d Tht· hill ... 1.1IJ1·d "" .111 '"" h \Ult• Hui lkh1 twld lht• roll 11pt>n1•d 1111 1111111 • th.111 f1111r hour ' .ind \\1th '>•11111• lll'lp from <:o\ Etlmund BrO\\ll .Ir manag1·d t11 p1t·I\ up atld1t11111al -.up1w!rt St·n lt·n\ Sr111lh I> Sar ,1l1JI!<> thl• 21ith \lllt• 'i:tH.l Blll\\ll0 'i :wlt•s told h101 lht• go\ t'r n111 \\ .1nl1·d l11 l.t.•t•p thl· 11111 ,111\t' "W1· .1r1· .1 long \\ ·" f111m ~:1·1 t 1ng .1 1wrl1·1·t prc11l111 t Srn11 h o,;;11d "hut 1t " a '>la1 I IL IA :i-. llt·lu loo '>t't'ontl .illt'rnpt to gt•t till' 11111 out of th1• ~1·1wt1• \\ htCh rl'll'('lt•d ll Oil ,I l'fllSI' \Clll• I hu,..,da\ Mond;~\ \hi.., lht• 1,,..,1 cl,1~ tll,11 tht• 11111 1•;1uld lw ,1C'lt·d 1111 lo\ lh1· 11µpl·r hnu:-.•· IH•1·.1u..,1· 1t \\ ,,.., 111 I 1ud111°1'll I.1st \ 1·:11 As \\ 11lk11 tltt• 11111 \\11uttl 11111 \ 1tlt.• m111'11 111 th 11•111·1 II\ hoosl 1ng lht• h111111•11\4111 •1 propt•rt ~ \,p, l'\l'rllpt1011 1111111 .1 II.ti $7 0011 111 7:! pl'r< 1·111 "' .1 ... .., .. ,.,,.d 'ahJt' 1111 1111' f11 ,t ~.!00 llHll 11{ ,1 s -.1·..,._1•d ' .1 h1t· Tu ht•lp 111.11<.1 Ill' f•JI I 11[ th,JI l'Ul lht• lllt',I 1111' \\llUld ,l,1p ,1 :_•o fl t• r (' I' ri t II r t• h ·' r g I' II II homt'O\\ 111•1 11H·11n11• t.l\<''i .incl •' :i fH'rt·1·11l 11,111•,f1·r l.1\ 11r1 lh•· .,,tit• llf I J\\ llt I Ill I llfllt•d 11111111 '' I·:\ 1•11 \\ lt1·r1 ,11ld111 g lh1 ..,1 11 t Ii.If J.!t ' lfll' 11\t • l!>\lrt \\lllllrf 'o\tll pr()\ 1tll' .... 1h.,t.111l1 ,1 i I.I\ 11 ltl'f r111 about "'' 1111 1 11 1 1''11 homl'0\\111·1" not UHi\ 1• 111 J\l' h I ,,lid 1h11!>1' \\ho tl11I .1 p.1rt1111la1 \l'ar For 1·\,11npl1· .1 1.111111\ t';Jl'lllrl~ S} 1,()(l(I IA ti Ii .1 houst· would gt'I o1 l ,1, about $10·1 .11·<·111d111~ l•• f1guri·o., •• r 111111 :S•IH.UOO 1·ut of H••hr ., But ll1·l11 .111111111111 t•tl 111'11111• \lond.1'-. t11·1l.it1• tt1al It•· pl anrll'd 111 drop It ... 111111nll' I.I\ ... urd1,1rgt• tf lh1• hill 11•.tl'ht·d ttw \S°'l'nlhl\ .tn<I 111s tt•.td I .ti"'' 1111 propt•r t' t.I\ 1°\l•rllpl 11111 to 11111\ ."10 JJt'rl'l'fll of ·"''''!>S1•d \ .tlu•· lit-s.11d that 1Aooulrl mak1· 11 ·' :-.tmplt·r bill v.1th ,, 11rt1'" lag ''' Jllsl under Sl h11l11111 111' ... aid ht• ,11!>11 pl.11111t·rl llJ tn dwh-;111d1t111nal rt:l11·f two.,1d1· .... tht• 1n1-r1•:is1•d h11nl1 11\4 rlt'r ._., 1•n1pt11111 1111 111\\ 111111m1 horn eo\\ 111•r <; p111h,1 ltl \ I h11.,•• 1·arn1ng $1:!.IKKI ,, \ 1•.1r 111 It·" Olh1•1 prtt\ ISl1tll °' 11 ( lht· mt'JSllrt' th.1~ \\1111ld ft'(IJ,lJll IHl l'li.in).!l'tl \\011ld pr 11\ 1d1· .il111ut S2H:i m11l11111 1n 11·nlt•1 r 1•111•1 .11111 c·lamp " 11•\ 1•n111• l11111t 11n 1·1t11•s ~ind 1·11w1L1t'" Supporl1·r' tit·..,, r tlll'd th• mt·as111·t· .is a hold plan that 1·nuld uncl(.'r<•ut \'OLC'r support for thl· .Jarvi' propt•rl\ ta\ in 1t1,1t1\1• ,, .J11r1t' liallol rn1·.1su11· 1·nt11·s ";" ·,\ould t•r 1ppl1· local i.:ou·rnnwnt h~ taking .1~ "' S7 h1ll111n inn·' 1.·n111· '\\' 1• .1n• 111 ,1 1 :tt'l' \\rt h 111111• -..11d lh·hr Y., 1· h,1\ t' g11t lo J.!l'I sonwt hang dhrll .1round h1•n "" 1t l':tn ht• 1uch.:•·rl II\ llw mr1h.1 ttnd I ht• \)(•opl1· Nuke Satellite Ban Proposed By Carter WAStllNGTON li\P 1 Pres1 dent Carter. wurnmg of poss1blt· nudl'tir d1,aslN. '>ays th<·r<' should ll<' a "tot.11 proh1b1t1on on salt•ll1lt'' with nurll'ar materull aboard Carter told a m•ws 1·onferenC"P Monday h(' favors an a~reement with the Sovwl Union hanntng such '>atellites until "fallsaf P methods" are developed to pre vent a recurrcnc·e of last week·.., incident 10 which a Soviet spy satellite fell rn Conada ·s far northwest Soviet emha:-.sy officials were not available for comment on Carter's prop<>:.al A Department of Energy specialisl Theodore Dobry. said that, so far as 1s known. none of the estimated 4,000 low Oym~ satellites m orbit carry radioac· tive materials. Cartel' said wttb the develop- :rn en t of solar power. such satellites are unnecessary. U.S. officials aald last week this country has one nuclear re actor in space that fllea so hiah it wm nevP.r po~e the danaer th&& lhe Russian satelllw dld. Launcl;ed ao 1965 to d termine ~rtedlveness of space power sources and olbcr devices, the satellite should slay aloft at tealt 4,000 yean .By then, the ura11ium-'23$ fuel wlll have burn d it.HI£ out. and be no lt\reat hen it r ·•at ra lht rlh'a ~ nd bUml Pon pollcte • ri r uU t con-· r ion tamper( Hh of nd lnh SHOOTING FOR WORLD EGG-EATING RECORD Dan Wood (left), Steve Roddick Put 'em Down Yolk's in Him 50 Eggs Gulped for Record "EATTLE 1,\ I' 1 l>an Wood 2;1 ..,ay:-. ht has the '-t't'rf'I · tht' lrtck fcormul<i for t·.11111)..! ,1 rl·t•ord 11umlwr of raw t•gii., IA .i:-. lo expand my stomill'll ' That tlom· Wood ... 1urpt'<J 111J\\-11 ~o rJ\4 c.·1u~s rn \\ h.11 ht· hupl''-"ill h1· rt·1·11gn11t·d a" a 1o1.11rltl rt'eord <.1n hour 111 rin: (.l l!'W~ESS UOOK OF World H.t:tord:-. lists unc man "ho ;1tt· :.!.) ra\\ t•gg-. 1n 9 f, .,,.,·on<I'> .ind :in11th1·r who .11t• 44 hard h11rlt'd t').!j!:-tn :10 rntnUlt'°' I 1rn·urn1·nt:it1on ftf Wood ., ;,<1 t-)!g f1•at '41\nt>sst•d by about 20 Ir ll'lltb and at l•·:tsl 11111· rt•1w1rtN will tw lorwarded to the Guin Ill''-' pt•11µ1l' O'\I.\ <.R \UE \ \ I. \IU,E ci.:gs h11ui.:ht .11 ldndom from a 11 .... tl "lllll'l'fl1,1rk1·t IAt'll' US(·cJ l'ht•\ \\t'r1• ('fill'kl'll tnt•i d C'Up t\uo al ,1 lrr111· s t1rrt·d ;ir11I tht·n gulp~d d1n~n \\ 110<1 .... wl tht· ... 11rnn~ \\o!. important ht:c<iu:>1· ottier1Ao1s1· th1• \•ilk ... t1d; ... m-'\1111r throat .ind ""ll ... 1.irt choking 'i ou t·on l li1lt· 1nt11 tht·m 1•1lher l11•1·a11s 1· the•\ t•xplo<l1• in \our mouth ' FV Principal Heads OC United Crusade 1>1 l';1ul Hl'q!t•r µrtlll'tp:al of Fo1111tatn \';Ille\ ll1gh S1·hool h ,1-. sul01•c.·edc<l C: ardt·n C rn\ 1· rll'IA'~parx•r publ~sht·r Hcrnarc1 ,I I{ 1 d d l' r .i, eh .11 rm an • 1 f th• 1 >r.tO#!l' Count) L'nth·d Crusltc1t· The· l'h<inlahlc· 111 f.!.11111.1t1•111 '>l'I \ t'" Jlunltnl.!ton lk.1ch. ~·m111 1 ,1 1 n \'a I If•\ . S 1• ;i I B , .• 1 c h \.\'1•stm1n:-.tt•r. \11d1A :I\ 1'1t\ .tr11I <; .1 rd en < :ro\ 1· ()lht•I fl('\\ 11ffll'l'I S 1111 lt11• , 111-.adt• .... liuartl of tl1rt·1·to1.., 1n 1•l11d1• Bill Barkl'r , Cardt.•11 I; 1 o" t·. tn•asurer. Pal H1\ c.•nP:-. llunt1ngton He.1th ass1slan1 treai-.urer. LaVl'rnt• Heaf<.nydf'1 (; arden Grove. '>l'l'rl'tar;. Dr Hobert lluntle~, Santa Ana, first , 1 c· e p r e s 1 rl t• n t a n cl .J a c k Wall.1u'. llunlin~lon lfr:.ll'h , "t't ond \'ll'l' pn•si<knl f'j l'"" offll't•rs alsn ~t.·n· t·lt•t•h•cl Jan 1~ to head the hoards of d1reC'tor~ for the \ <1rinus ("Ille!> 1n tht• l 'nilL><I Crusadl' l'hev include Waynt• Osborrll' F11unt:11n \'alley, Bill Davis. 1; ar<len Grove, Wallace, Hunt rn~ton Beac•h . Andv Griffin. Seal B t' a c h ~· n d A r I H o r n t' , Westminster-Mid"" av City The Oran~e Count\ Crusadt.• ll> "md1ng up a succe!;sful cam pa1gn m which a ~oal of $750,001'1 m donations 1s expected lo be t•x (eeded, according tci a ~pokesman Chanlable donation'> go to 32 agencies and 1ndude Bo\ Scouts. Girl Scouts, YMCA'. hovs clubs. girls cluh.., a t.•hildren's h omc and a Ila\ nursery Directors of the local t·11 v boards assess needs for lhetr com munilies The general board of directors establishes pohc1es for the or~an11ation as a whole Police Seek HB Suspects In Prostitution ~1ly P'1I .. s1 .. 11 Ptoo1o LEADS CRUSADE School Principal Berger FV Planner Quits Post; Move Planned fo'ounta1n Vallt•y Plannrng Com1i,s10ner John Knight re s igned today becau~e h~ pl an" lo movt' to La Canada Kn1~ht. 30, recently h1n:d as a Securit v Pat1fic Bank loan of ftccr. has served on the Plan ning Comm1ss1on Sin<'<' 1976 when he was named an alternate member Kmght was named a regular member of the commission last s ummer after the resignation of Comm1ss1oner June Boykin Alternate Planning Com m1ss1oner Walt Hammond will fill the vacancy t'teated by Knight's departure until the City Council appoints a regular panel member. Rape Suspect Hearing Set Tue&day January 31 19715 s DAIL V PILOT Tragedy of Youth Kids Excel in S. County Burglaries fh n :RRY ('I.Al SEN • 01 -o .. ,, ~11 .. \ult ,\t a~t· K. tw was lht• youngest hank burglc.11 l'\ l'r r.aught tn Orani.:l' Count) und µoss1~>ly lht! natmn. sht•nff's dt•putws must> l'ht Dana Point l.1d ttatl tr1ppl'd ii s1l1•nt alarm whllt• l'rawl1ng through Bank of \mt•rlt<i'-, rl'<tr window 111 C'<1p1stran11 B t•at·h Wht'll 1 c.•spo11d1111:: clt•put11:s 'POtlPd him, tht' b<1\ was nfltng drnw1•rs 1n search of C'ash That was fou1 months ;;go Sub-.t•qul•Oll) lht• sanw ho~ wa-. niught red han<.11•<1 unt• ntght hurglarl7.lng a Capistrano Valle~ 'l'f\'l<'l' station lit' had JUSt bt'en n•lt'a!'>t'd frorn JUVl'ntlt' hall that da1 for stall <motht•r ltwft SheriH's lhttrul S(.•rgeant J,H'I\ l.u!>kr sa"' tht•re., nothing un usu;.il ;.ibout the hm othc.•r than h1.., 1k..,1n· lo '>ll·.tl lits 1rnrcnb a lliJl111.1I r1111thcr anti stcpfathl·r Jrt• 1·0111·t•rnt.><I 'l'he" arc rn1dcll1· 1n1·c>r111• famil,\ ffit'rTibt'"· and !ht• ho) dOl'!>O't I t•ally nct•ct lht• mone} ht.• takf's But ht· I akt•.., an~"" a\ ht<')(.'lcs mo pt·ds n"h or "'halt.'Vt'r ht• w;ints ul th1• t1mt• In all, s<ty!> Sgt Lu ... tcr th1• H \e•tr old has 'P(•nt only 10 day" in. JU V(.'ntle hall lit•-. in he.., our .wd he stt.•als ag;.11n The traged\ 11 '>l't'lrls ,.., th.it ht.., antic:-. an l'fp1t·al of mu ... t hurglartt.•s 111 lht· Saddlebaek and Capistrano Valle) an·a~ and ol half thos1• 1.·omm1ttc.>d along thl' unincurporJtt.•d coastal an·as nl ... outhern Oranj!t' Counl", lht' "t•rgeanr s:t)l> Tht.• :-.lwrtff s -outh ( 11unt \ :-.uli ... 1 :it ion tr1 l .. 1gunJ Nq.(u1•I ll<indlt.•' rl'pffrt'> uf :!50 to IOO hurgl<lltt•:-. .1 m11nlh Lush·• so)s \ ppn1\tr11:1tc:h :!5 pc.•rc.·1.•nt t•\ l'rt tualh ,111· l'lt'arNI lh1oui.:h dr rt·sh. though 1t ·, not nftl'n that !ht• 111111 1s n•turrlt'd 111 1ls c11Ant•r.., Youth .., undt•r .11.:t· lK <.trt• r t•spon!>tblt• 70 IH'rl t•nt of thL• t1m1• lor hurf,.!lartt•s 1n !ht• Mis -.111n \'IC'Ju Et l'oro Lagun,i lltlb. l.Jkt• Fnn•i-.t and !-Ian Juan .1rt•:1 Tht:tr hooty mo~l oftl'n 1s , • ;,i..., h 1· 1t11 l' n s hand rad 1 o.., stt·rt.·o st'ts rt•c·orch and I apt''> or ,, kn1l1• or a gun I>t•put1cs s:t~ tht•\ t1gurt• th.it \\ hl'n ,, hurglar '" .irrt''>lt•d h 1 .11lrn11s to r11111· otlll'r l>urgl<fftt.•:- "11 t h 1· .1 \ I' r a g 1· I hat ·.., 111 l'h'.11 ,1nt·1•s l11r ,., 1•1' .1rrt•!>t So , .1 \ d 1• I•· 1· I 1 \ t•' ,1 h u 1 g I a r J.!l'llt 'f:tll) j.!t'I '-,I\\ ,J\ \\1th lht· 111111 n1nl' t1m1•<. ht•for1• h•·" 11:11lt'<l n Ill Lust,., ... :t\ ... h•· flgUrt'S I hi· , 1111 11 i.: I> .1 n .1 I' o 1 111 Ii u 1 g I ,ir 1 ouldn"t hl' t'hargt!d for 10 11urgl.1nes. l'H'n though ht· h:i.., li1·1·n arrcsll'1l st'\ en lJm1·' 'I It··~ still lea1 ntn~ his trJd" "" h1• .. 1•,1ugh1 01111 ,. 11fl1•n I .11:-l 1•1 1'111\Jl'<'I Urf'' ,\dulh p11s s 1hh ,111• mo1 f' ,·It.:\ l'r \lo.,I or ttw ttnll' °'a)' Lu,tt·1 tht',\ J.:n111A "hat they r •· .1ftl'r and trn\ 1• a l1.·g1limat1· hu!.1 nl'Ssm.rn or f Pnt·(.• '>landing b:v 1•1 purrh.ist• th(.•tr loot Whl'n homt"s a11· m>!>s1ng ._. ll•lt•\ 1s1on 'c.•I..,, l'l l'd1t tards, ap plwncl'" or 1t•1A1·lry. deputies sa\ lht•\ f1gun· tlw 1oh 1Aa.., dont' h\ .in ac11111 ··Burglar) ts t ht• naml' 11( tlw game 1n Caltfornta, along IA 1th dopl' or l'OUrSt' 'aY' l.USlN "hu repori... l h.tt theft and hurJ!lar.v at homes provide most As 11 a 1r1p 10 the 819 C11v 1sn t excitement enough I had to ptck the ltme or the btg snow• I arrived m New York lhP. day alter their heavy snowfall . that was a lhgh1 that usually takes about live hours and ended up us1nq the better part of two days and an un · planned overn1<1hl !ltop 1n Washmqlon. DC The weekend was lo be strictly social 11nyway and I managed to drop off my lug gage and get to the theater about the middle of the first act The play was Nell Simon s "Chapt9' Two" wti1ch I greatly en1oyed My host had planned the theater party 10< the women guests while the men attended the 24 Karat Club annual ban quet Betng a private club and member"lhlp by 1nv1tat1on only the male t'llcluslv1ty hes t>ee11 preserved and 11 prObably the last bastion being held egamtt the femalee ot tile onduttry, Personelly, even given my choice, I would have ptci<ed the play over the banquet enter· talnment wt'lfch this year was Alan King. After the play we fOIMd the gel\tlemen at the Waldorf for partlH hosted by the major firms In dlff9fent suit .. of the hotel. It Is a good time to greet old friend• and meet new peo- ple who have mutual lnteree11 The J9Mlry lnductry 11 a re- ltt•vtly lmell one and af'fftr u many ~ • I have t>w.n K· ttve In thl• bu9f'*9, I find I tiav• 1Nf¥ ~ul tr1eno from .all avet thd'oountry who .,. al9o lnlli.S to theM trlldl•' tlon .. g (Are you get• ilng th i on that 1 r..rry enfu1nd rtum ,,., ............... Watch Comp fuJ o( lht.' bU!ltnt•ss (or '"Ulh l'llUlll\ dt•pultl'S Most of those bu1 glarte' (}('t'111 during daylight hours wht•11 tamalll'~ an• aw<1\ al JOb' 111 -.{ hool ''There'!' on•• thing for -.urt>. ...:.ns Luste1 , 'a burglar doel!n t w.tnt to lw seen II•• doesn't "uni to 1·01111 onl his \ 11· t1ms Hus1ness IJurglartl'S, on lht• other hand. ot·t·ur at night That'!> ho~ 11 was ,1 yt'ar .1j.!o "hen depulle' "'t'rt' lipped to ·' burglarv under IAa\ in a Sad dlebad; \'allt•\ rt>,laurant at :! ·' m ,'\ m11tur1st "1th a t•tltLCn!'i hJncl radio t1ppt:d poltn.• to tht· l>rcak·tn Deputies 1·onverged on the eaterv and arn•,ted a 19 \ear old on his first burghll'} 4:11 tempt lfor the thrill 11f 11 > and a seasoned \ l'leran in his earl> t IA en ties I'.:\ entualh tht' o.11 r t·sts hrok1• up an 11 man ring ur burglar" must uf whom "'c.·n· 1unt0r nil lt·~e students 1o1.1th .t H'n 101 f11•1• moton·~ C'le parh ,1nd loh ot t•,1sh Luster sa \" "The.•) werl' pn•tt) ..,rn<.1rt o111d p1 ell\ :o.oµt11q1L'at1•d v.1th l11okouts postt•<I and 1o1.t·ll l.rnl µtan s ht• sa~-. T"o \\t'rt' 1111 prisoned Tht• other n1n1• most f r n rn u p µ t' r rn 1 d cl 11' 1 n t um 1· t.1m1ltt•:-. ltinen l h1·1·11 111111·1! • 1:-. rept'<llt:r.., h•· ...... , ... Wh1lt' that ~onl-! tool.; r11111 t• than normal pn.<1·aul111ns not to 1 un into '1et 1ms or dt•pul1t•s llw1 t ' :1n· th1· 1 ;,ii hurgla,.., ~ho m.Hlt:' rl HI!'(' II\ mg ror ;1v.hll1· lrom <1mung rnohtl<.• hunt•' fl':>t 1h•nts at Fun•st Garden., 1n l.al\1• F11rt· ... 1 •int.I El ·r oru :-.11111111 llomt• f'::-.u1tt·., \!though lho.,t• t>111 l;!l.ars v. lt11 ..,, ri ppe<l .,ll't:pin ~ '1l't 1m' 111 t ht>ll' mnrtl'\ .1n<1 1·rt«lit c,11 rl.., ,1ncJ l'\ 1'1\ th1•11 1•,1r°' 111'\ 1'1 1At•r1• 1·,1u~ht lht·11 up1•1.il11in:-. h•Ht' 1 1•ased "Y.'t• 1\1111\\ \\lt11 lh1•\ ...... ,,. I u't1•1 ..... ,.., "\\'p d11ln t ha .. e 1•11t1ugh 111 l'llfl\ lt'l so Y.t> JU!>\ told tht·m 1 <111 01•1•:.1ns1de duCJ p r " \ 1 11 11 " I \ • 11 n ' 1 ,. I 1• ti ri ( hurglar11•"1 th.11 "'l' h.ul tlwnt t I g ll I l' d I' ht' 1<: I I 111 II t"ll t hu1 glarh.'" .,lopµt·tl El '1'1110 ,111d l..11.1• I 1111·..,t lt<llllt'' .111• mo-.t .,us1'1'pl1hlf' to burglars. l.u..,tt•r 1 t•port..,, Pl11'i:ly fol lowt•d h\ "v1 "'"'on Vw10 'I 1 '.., bt't',lll"C' tht•r 1· ,jJ I' 11\111 t' k11b lw '·'' !'ht· 1111111• k11b, r1t1• 1111111• tiur gl.1111•s :\1 uch 111 th1· pr 11l1li•111, ht ron Jt't'!UI 1''-I S I .IUSt•d 11\ llfl• port un11, 'l't•opl1· still h•J\ t' durn.., .uut IA 1ndo1A, unlol·kt•d , ht• ,,1\1\, It ' 111\1• .111 tn\ 1l,Jt11111 lo SIL<al fur ,111111• krrl \\ h11 '" .1 lh1t•f liut d111·-.11 t ",1111 t11 t.11\1• J ht~ ( h .111('1' \\'htl1• llH"t hut J,:l,11 ' .111• 1111\'°' th1• gtlh /.:t't l'Ct•dtl Ill lht• 'ho pit 111111-( dt•p,11 I Oll'llt c·101h111J.! .... :.up1•1 1mporldnf to .t 11·1•11 ,1).!t• i.:11 I lht• '>t'flH'llOI ::..n " 'l'h<il .., \d1.1t ' mo:-.tl\ t.tlu 11 .111111/.: \\1th I t'l'lll th .111cf 1.1pt•., 1 IAll \\1•1·1-. ... hl'lflll' ('lt11..,t111.1 ... ,IJltl 1111 .1 IAt'l'k foll111Allll! :I d I' ,, ll I ' \\ a ... s I a I I (I II,. ti p1·1 111.1111•1111\ ,11 1 ht• Laguna llllli- \l..tl I 111 h,111dl1· 'hnpl1fl1·rtt I ,flight h~ cf1•1•.lrlltH'llt 'lllrt' dt• t 1•1· t 1 \ ...... . Th.11 d1•plJl\ h.11tdlt·d "I ... hop It ft 111.t.: 1 ·''l'' till p1•11 1·11t 111 th1•111 111\111\ inc i.:111... l.11-.l1•r ,,. \.' Thi 1111111\ !11111).! 11111.1\ I lit.II l.11l s \\ 1111 t I If• oft '"rn1·11111 !ht•\ r..11111A 11111 lht•\ 11•1•1 1111 I t'llllll ... 1' ,1h1111t 'It' 11111~ I 111111 .111 1111 111•1 s1111,1I \1tl1111 ""II .1 ,, 1111 I'"' .1111111111 ... tor' \nd Ill',,,\, 111 1111 \,,...1 11nin , 11q1111 .11 t•d .111•,1 111'1" "'"" Ir\ 1n• .ind ~.111 C'l1·1111·1111 lh•·r·· .11 • 111,111\ 1mp1·r ... 011.il I ,If L;l't:i. hi\• '-11rl1 l'hrnl\ l'l<,1• ... h1111-.1 ,1 'l'I \II ' t .1t 11111 Ill ,., l'Ji ·' h ,1r1i.. No Reeall Authorit:t' Can GM Tell Pope His Car's Unsafe? IJ EI HOIT \I' ll1m cl11 \OU tdl the IJOlll' ht:. I ill ffi.J\ ht lalhble'' Gt•nt•r.tl \l11t111 ... 1·\t'lt1l1\l's f.1("ed that thorn~ problem locfa, ,1fler tht· flodt•ral auto s afrt' .1genn ratsl•d th1· point rcit<Ud 1ng tht> 1!160 C'adill.J• 1n th• \':il1t"an j!arac1· The [)1>tro1l V1 P1 Pt l''" 111 .1 11·port Crom Wash1n~'t1111 ~.111! ttll' !"at1011JI lligh""a' ·11arr11 saft•l \ 1\drn1n1stra111111 ,,.. uni ' Popt• ·Paul \I t11 kno\\ !ht• 1·,11 m.1~ ha\t· .J d1•!t•l'lt\t· ..,t1·1'rtl1J.: lrl l't'han1sm l'he agen< .\ d1..,covn1•cl the tl1 ~t'I 1n 1960 Cad1llH<'" 1n 1!17'.I, hur a t'l' a 11 ""a!-ordt•rt•cl for t ht• l' a r .., 111 th1:-. tountr~ onlv rel·t.·ntl\ "hl'n tht• liem•ral Motor~ <'ori• lrl"t a long lt•gal batth• "The Sall'lv <1dm1n .... tral1011 I.id.:.., lh1' aulhc)nh· lo r~call l'<ifs 1n foreign 1•11untr1t•s, lht· nt·v. ... papt•r sauJ ~ (A(}S ) ~ \ (,\1 -,pol-.1•,1A111l1.Jll l11ll1•t•ll •H1 •ll 1. '·"" th1• .1utomak1•1 r11ut1rr•·" .->.11 •11d.., tl111nt•i.t1c n 1 .111' i... .1111•1 It'll ,111tnmohtlP• 11\ t'l 'l'·'" .ind 111 l '.1n.11l:1 anti th•• ptll)I'., t',tr \\11til1l lw f l\t•tf 1'h1• I HI I~;" pt11 1·tt,J ... 1•t) 1111 l lfl' \ .1111 :11 1i, ftt,. '\11lrP DJlll' t Jll\ 1•r s1f\ \l11m111 '"""' 1at111n V. .11111m1· \.,ltl1•\ 111 Tro\ \111 t1 1 I '1'!.I "\ "' r ,. l>;nTH' I!• ·1d11 .111 .... 11ct h1 .tnd 2!1 or ~-, 11lh1•1 i,:1.itlu,111•' 111 lilt' !Jl'l1rnt .111•a ..t11pp1•tl 111 .111tl IJought the , .11 .dtt·1 ht• 1111111 i·tl th.ti the onlv \m1•111 .in 1·,11 111 lh1• Vat1ran g.11 .tj.!t• "·''a 111.(K ( .Hlillal' \o\1•11 I 111..,1 th11111•h1 1111' llolv I· .1th1 I ... 1w11ltln t It.I\,. Ill !'Ifft• ,1111und 111 ,, liu1.:~' 111-.1· th.11 hi· 1•\pl.11n1•d l'h1· .11trnrn1 e r oup r 11nlrd111t1·rl ::;x ooo tm th•· 1 ·" .111d J.1m1•-. :-01 Hoehl' lhl'n g1•nP1.tl mt1n.•ger n( 1h1· C.icltll,11' r>n:1 ... 11111 'h1pr1·d 111 S7:iO 1111 ... t11ppin~ 1h1 f r,111kl•n brolt•f'r'> n ft\P.1t tov»IV ho'"'' on F tllh Avenue ovr>rtook•nq the nar~ a vrry wh1tt' CPnlral Park with EiEM WISE lhf' r Odds <;lilt clO'>ed ov all th al s no,,., Thi> >ranklon" 11avP llf'lpPrl mf' QillhPI lht• n!CP 1adP tollec;11on which ,.,,. have on ()UI SI Orf' ()VPI lhP vear'i Mary &trr. <Art1fied Gemotogist f h« paSf w('Pk ha'> b~t>n •,pt>nl o;hopp1nq 101 cuslomer~ '>POC1al roquPSls and hunlonq down replacements tor their lost treasures (The most d•f· tocutt of lhf'St' ,., loc.a11n9 sources ol haJf pairs of ear· rmqs but 11 1s less ex pensive than handmakmq a match ) I truly do work du11n9 olflcc hours . 1ust 1n case you were th1nk1nq lti•s lnp was all soc1a1tzm9 1 did take thl" v.<eekend off tor a t1tm1ly outmq m MaonP where I v1s1led my daughter. Ginny and her husband on their new home Monday through Friday thl$ week I am worlunq with a com- • m1ttee of tour other 1eweters on the ptennmq and praftmmary ..oe1~ct1on1 tor our Ctmstmas book We see manufacturers and importers oo a schedule of half hour ~tntments from 8 a m to 6 p.m each dey (With I lunch Hnt m) It 1s a very ttrenuous schedule but the on· I ly way we teet -can really cover the m&f'ket for ourMttves and the suety othttf 1ewelers across the country who use our book at Chnstmast1me. It does seem early to be wonunq 011 Chri1tmas but to be effective m the Jewelry busmesa. ~ must ptAn ahead to keep ahead. That thought t>nng9 another to mmd ••• I d like to take tti•s oppof1un1ty to tttank 1111 of our f wonderful customera tor ma· I 1ng 1977 ~ • tant•lic ve-I lor 1:w.s H Bwr Jeneh111. We hope tho yew aheed will be 111 grMt for you and that _, may continue to 1.1'9 011r tll~tt and capabtht1e11 lo s6lW ~" with t11dact1on l I IJ.A.L '¥ t'1LOt I uHdll) JanuGry JI. 19TI NATION I WORLD Palestine Cited as Peace Block THE LOST SOUi.: When the great minds of our guv<:rnmcnt gather these days lo dtSl'USs what taxl'S shall be IC\ 1cd upon the populace }'OU have lo wonder 1f lht•y cHr think. ahout good old Th<1dd1us T Tattered Not hkclv Most n•e.ently. lht• government Jll'O(.dt• ha\.t' lit•l'll tiluhbt•ring 10 their crymg towt·ls and wringing sweaty hands O\cr a Junt.• ballot m e a s u re l' a 11 t• d l h c J a n 1 s Amendment If passl'<l, lhl" httlt• mt.>asun• "ould "had.; dnY. n pt 01wrty tax· l'S slate\\ td(' by pt·rhap!'I mort· than 50 µt!r<·l•nt Orangl' County Tax ColleC'tor Rob Citron 1ssuc>d ~1 study uni}' vcsterday suggesting that our region':-. 10 top property tax payt•rs wm.1lcl sav1• maybt: more than ~o m1lllon 1r tht· Jarvis Amendment 1s adopted 1n June Thcs<.' sav('rs would in<·ludc such noble inst1tut1ons as Pac1r1c Telephone, the ln ,1nc Company, the l<~d1son Company, Union 011. Standard (hi and other h1gg1es of Pfl\ all' 1·ntcrpnsl' NOTING THIS, }'llU might be lert "1th the 1mpr<•sswn that on Iv lht• 1wh will 1nh1·rtt tht• lax tirc.1k . Thus it 1s that so far. notxxh has come up \.\.llh CJ JCJn 1s la" cut chart rc,r ~O<Kl <1ld Thadd1us T Tattcn·d A n d t h 1 s 1 n d l' l' cl m a) ti 1· hcl'.lllSl' nobod} J.:I\ l'" old Thad much thought 111 th1• mighty -.tale halls T;1tkn:d 1s a dool' to·clour l•n I') l'lopNh;! sah•sman. lie:.. prl'l· ty goocl at 1t lit•'., lwt•n peddling l host• hook'> for I h1· past 1 !I Y<'ars on l'\ (•n· fronl pon·h from Seal Ht•a< h to S;m <'ll·nwnlt• l.ISTEN. 01.() 'I harl hl'ltPr he pretl) good ~1l tl ll<"s making t1avmt•nts on :.i lhn•t• IH'drnom Costi! Mt:'sa hom1• Ins1ck that pla('f•, hl''s got thrt•t• kHh, f;'ath ont' \\1th a stt•n•o, I \HI l'ah, ont• dol.! and tv.o T\' s1·ls, on<· ltrokt.'n flt• ;,1lso h.1-, om• wire. "horn h£· :-.t'l''> soml'I inws \\ h<'n sht• 1sn 't ''ork1nJ.: p.11'1 t1rn1• d1mn al the· ... hot> ~tfll'l' CAIRO. Egypt IAP> Pr~1· dent An\\ ar Sadat dedared lo· day the issue of PalestJnian sell· deter mmatwn remains the ma· Jor obstacle 10 the way of peace with hrael and said •·a heavy and d1ff1cult Job" hes ahead. ··we must find a way or every· thrng \\ 1U collapse," the Egyp t1an president said Just hours before the resumption of Egyp· tian brat.'11 military talks on an !Hael1 withdrawal from the Sinai Peninsula SADAT MADE HIS remarks altN meeting with a peace del· l'JH1l1on of American Jews and Chrastiaru; I~ by Rabbi Joseph It Ehrenkrani of Stamford. Conn Earlier in the day, fo'ore1gn M1n1ster Mohitmed Kumel refused to accepL an lsraeli·Amencan draft of prin· ciples for peace. •There are many points on which we don't see eye to eye," Kamel said after discussing the draft, which could lead to an Arab lbraeli peace treaty. with U .S Assistant Secretary of Slate Alfred Atherton Despite his disagreement with some of the lsratdi pornts Kamd Mild Egypt 1s willing to "continue these negot1attons, Tobacco lmlustry Regulation Asked NEW YORK CAl'l The National Commission on Smoktng and Public Pollc}' called today for government regulation or the tobac· t·o industry as a key part of a broad new program to reduce cigarette smoktng It said it<; primary goal 1s to cul the toll of "more than 320,000 de· aths Jnnually related lo l'lgardtt• smokmg" Estubllshcd bv the Amer1<·an Canl'cr Sodety. ·the Comm1ss1on d<•c·Ltrt•d the t obacco tndustry \\as "virtually unrcgulCJled" and "unaccountable to any depart ment or agency of government for lhl' rn11lt'nt of its products, or tht• hl·alth consequences of their llSl'. .. 1T Sl 'GGESTED THE Food and Dru,g Adm1n1strat1on or Consumer Product Safol\ Com· m1ss1on should ··hold thl· 1n· dustr) a<'countahlc f1.1r the :.<1h: l) of its product. · The fodcral go' 1•rnml'nt h<1s done little C'\('l'Jll lo \\ <trn or health haiards in smolong, and ''the failure or thl' execull\ e and I t• g i s I a t 1 v e b r an<· h e s lo s;,ifegullrd the public tnlt'rc!it •ind public hl'allh could he <frscrihed as a nat1on;,il dis gr a cl'." 11 said William Klopepfer Jr . sentor ' ice presidl'nl of lht· Tobaceo lnsl1lut<·. said tht• t·omm1ss1on's suggl'stion "ind1t·:1t1·s the I)!, norl!nn· of lht· Amcric:rn Can<"t'r Soc1Plv 0\1•r the fact th.it < 1g:1rl'lll's an· lht· mo!'ll ht•;I\ 11\ r e g u I a l e d p r o cl 11 c· l o n t h 1• m;ukd " ''NO OTHER PRODl'('T 1s r o r b 1 cl d l' n t o a d v c r ti s e o n tvlt•\ 1s1on and forced to carry a health \.\arntng on every pack and in evt•r) advertisement," he s.11d "The Can<'er Society has used ~1 group of distinguished citizens to parrot its \'lews. which con- sl 1lulc an insult to the pubhc in· telligem·<• and an apparent re· gard for th<• public as having a t·hlld like mentality," Klopepfer said C'om m1ss1on rec om mend a · t wn ... prest'nled to the ~oc1ety's board of d1n'<'tors included -PHASE OUT OVER 10 years the present tobacco price sup- port system St•l up <1 cabinet level Com- m 1 lt t•l• on Cigarette Smoktng ;ind the llealth Status of the Na t10n That the f'DA study polt.>n t1ally harmful add1tl\·es being ust•d in many ne\\er brands of t•1garl'llt'' Tht· 1 •·l'omrrwndal1nn'> wen· hasl'CI partl~ on tPst1m,1ny from mort• than 300 l'lt1.wns from ull .IO slates during l'lght rc•g1onal forum meetings last' !'Jr Teen Sex,Pregnancy Sn l'\'l'r~· dav. n . TCJttcrc·d load-. up tht· bat·k or ~ts l1rPd~ld 'n7 :.'~~;~~~~~:~ ~t:~~~l'~a;;~ ;11l~~ :~e In • 1i1ad, pra~tng his haldml( tires creasing - hold up 1uit1I h1· 1·1n. peddle a---- ............... .--.. Studx,_ c·nupk nl mon· hotJk St'U to the ltlt•ral<· popul.u·e O~CE A \'E,\R, 1'alll'rN1 gets t hJl \\ ondt"rlul propcrl:r t .. x bill for. lt•l 's S:.I), $1,800 or lht• Tut ll'fl'd rarnll~··s l':ll 111ngs from ('n• c·yh1pl'd1<Js and sho1·s NEW YORK IAP> -A surve) shows that the percenta~e of while teen-age girls he1ving p remarital 10lt'rC'ours~ and gettmg pregnant 10crea::;ed b) one third O\ er a fl ve ye Cir period The ne" figures indicate that 37 2 p<'rcenl of y.,h1te lt!ena~e g1rb ht•lY.et·n 15 and 19 }'ears of age in 1976 had engaged m premantal sex 'l'<tlll'rNI dot'"" t "a} much lits t') c-, may i.:t·l damp Ill• might gripe to hll'I 1w1ghbor or k ltk l hl' dug Hut he pay!> !'liow 1·r1mt•s this Jarvis :\ml•ndml•nt "h1l'h lh(•y say c•ould t'ul his lax btll from Sl,800 lo ma~ be JUst S900 TH \T ISN'T BIG hke Pacific Tt'l<.'phont· or lr\'HW or Standard Oil nu1 to Thadd1us T 1 altered, 11 m1i::ht look hkr br<1<·t·s for the I:!~ ear-old's l<•t>lh , nr that Of'\.\ .sora for lht• \\ 1ft• or a Sf•t of FtrC'slom•..., for lhl' old Plvmoulh Thadd1us T Tallt;red, or l'Oursc. isn't a real person. nut ht• ma~ be ~hen the polls opt:'n in .June• • .ind that about a tenth or them got pregnant A s 1m1 I CJ r sun e y 1 n 1971 showed that 26.3 percent of lht• 1?1rls 1n that category had pn• mant:.il sex and that a hllle over 6 percent of them got pregnant TllE RESEARCHERS noted that the pregnancy increase roughly paralleled the increase m the percentage of girls ex· periencing premarital sex despite other reports of "'im· pressive improvement in con- traceptive use " "Why this improvement did not result in a pregnancy decline requires more detailed analysis ... they said Bul 1t found that the propor t1on of first pregnancies t"rm inaled by abortion amonJ? both w h 1 t t' and b I a ck g 1 r b almost doubled from 1971lo1976 from 17 7 percent to 30.6 ~r cent THE STUDY, DIRECTED by sociologists Mel\'ln Zelnik and John Kantner of Johns Hopkins University, \.\3S published Mon- day in Family Planning Perspect1\'eS, the journal of the Alan Guttmacher Institute. an affiliate of Planned Parenthood. The 1976 study was based on 2.193 inten 1ews nationwide and th<' t9il study on 4,392. Thi:! perc~ntage or black t~n .1ge girls hetwet>n 15 and 19 ha' ing had prem:,irital intercourse was 64 3 percent in 1976 com· pared to 54.1 percent in 1971, the rrporl said Showers Hit Gulf States Florida Panhandle Posts Travel Advisories Ternperat ure• HI Le p~ AINny 11 I Albu'q\lf' S6 ,. ,, Amarllln lO JI Anchou~ )() " A\MtVlllP JS " Atlanl• ,, ,, Balllmor~ )J 17 B•wn•rO 10 .a llCMW " )0 8otf0ft ,. " lluff••• 10 10 u Clwlrllln !>C 40 ?8 ClwlrlslnWV 11 IS .01 ClllCotqO If • • Ol Ctn<lnnetl 1• ,, 07 c1 .... e1-21 , O•hFl.Wtll )7 a2 .01 O.nver ,,. 10 0.sMOlftt'.\ 11 ... .OS O.troH u ' 01 Ovl11th • ·5 ll•lrO.nh t5 ·• Hartt .. o ,. • Htlella II I H~utu 11 .. H~SIOn ., • n Cnd'apollt 17 , 02 JuMau JI 12 lt4111's City u 1 LH VeQa\ ,. 4S Litt .. lto<k *' ,, L.eut•lll• n H 07 Mlal!ll 61 ,. .............. .......... ~IV II ,,,.. to 111!1 ....,. 'ff!'l'-~•30o"'-CJ11•wio.o• ... ,,...., ~ ceor ....... g "'"" .. C!Illl ···--~ .... -=== Sl>•••n s..,,._., Oti".<kl tmiml --• II 1::1 M llWlh.lk" tt s M111s.s1. ,.. 10 • N1wOt1U1W ., " New Vorll ,, 11 0-le City u tt °"'•"• 10 .. ...... ecl'plllll ,, ta """"'" 6$ .. "IU.~ n s "'tl•Nt Mii JS • fll•tl•nct °"' .. • lll11pld Cfly 11 ., 1'1<11moM J4 u St. Loula lJ 1S laltUk• .. '° ""' """ •• 41 INllle •1 1' '-"•ne 2' " .Watlll11tlet1 ,. " • ,., .. , ... ,.,, ·'· OJ ,OJ ThP llOllt rein Whld> fell .... 11er to- cwy and ~t of -..S.y wes ceUMd b'f • 11-ol sublrGl>lc•I air moving o..t Of Ille Peclllc which fs Ofl lb WO to 0•9QOft, tofecH\ers wld. P..-tl'f uouov s-lft U..Uld ~•v•ll tontQflt, wllll Oftly • 10 perce"t ci..nce of -HurebCI re1nfell Tem"ra111r .. wilt rltft\8111 mild, wltll 111011• 111 Ille lo• lo mld-tOf tllreuohW~y T h•r• wlH I» INl<llos _. denu fot I" wme .,_ da«t velt.vs M'41 In tlle INllll'talM llinlllttl ~y, Hlotl fempllfehrn will IM I" tlle ~· SOI 10 rn1c1• In Ille dHert _,,HS Wltll en_,,.,...'-OI 4S. 111 th• mo1111talna. '-•atu••• wlll re119t 1!'041\ 45 fO Ja Wltll -N1111f!t IOwldr....,.IOtlteJOa. TM~ wlll fM<ll e lllgll Of 6$, Cocutal W~at.laer MostlV cllUIY wlttl clwft<e ffl sot• N..cl llQt!I,......,, LIOlll verl.i>te wl11Cfs t110ht end mor111119 llllllrL Hltl!a W..,.,.tel•v In Ille IYlld.O.. Co•at•I l""'ll*t'aturH wlll r..,O" t>elW .. 11 5• and U. llll•llG lfl'fl• l*'•tllro wlll ,.,. llet-11 U •lld . U. ,,,. wet« tltmfefllt!H9 wtH lie" and we hope that with the help and effort of the United States we will eventually reach the l'om prehens1ve und la:, ling peace we are lookmg for." THi: IMPRESSION conveyed by both Sadat and his foreign minister was that tough bargain· ma lay ahead with the Israelis despite Israeli Defense Minister Ezer Weizman's arrival here for renewed military talks with Egyptian War Minister Mohamed Abdel Ghany Garn· masy Weizman said he hoped to "achieve substantial things, not Just talks" when the negolia· tlons begin tonight. They re· cessed Jan. 13 in stalemate over Israel's insistence on main- taining 20 Jewish settlements tn the S1na1 e\en after the peninsula 1s returm:d to Egypt. Egypt abrupt) ly broke off parallel nej!otiat1ons betwetm E:gyptian and Israeli forc•1gn Theater Burns ministers io Jerusalem the next week, and there has been no Ill· dication when these talks would resume. SADAT SAID EGYPT would continue to insist on the concept of i;elf·determination -or in· dependence -for the 1 l malhon Palestinians living on the O<'• <'Upied West Bank of the Jordan River and Gaza Strip "Without solving the Palest• n1an problem we l'un't establtsh permanent peace in the area." Sadat told newsmen after meet· ing with Ehrenkranz s group al his villa in Barrages, about 15 miles north of Cairo Ehrenkranz said he came to Egypt to exprei;s appreciation for Sadat's "bold an<l courageous peace initiative" Another member of the group. Las Vegas publisher flank Greenspun, said Sadat "filled .1 'acuum in world leadership and e\·eryone who lo\'es pE'a<·t! \tl.1nl:111s ll11l'd tht• -.t1t•t•t ~londa~ ,1.., tlJml'' 11111· throuf.!h lht• h1..,t1111t· Lot•\\ .., <;r:.ind Theatl·r. "ht·1·1· "(;nrw \\'1th tlw \\ind pn•m1l'n·cl in 1!'.1:39 ancl \\ht•tt' L1llJ.m Ru:-...,t'll ,111<1 !-,a1 .ih B1·rnh~1rdt perlo1·m<'cl 11\ t• Thi• hla1.t· .... M"l'n•h rl<imagl'CI Lill' top three floors of the hwld 1n:.! ~11HI t 'I o..,..,,.d an alle~ to .itlal'k sl'\ er al lloors 01 .i mo<J~p ot t u·1• hulld111~. The Team hould !>Upµort tum." THE l::GYPTIAN leader al·knowledged that :-ome seg- ments of his country are cnt1ciz- 1ng the Carter adm1nistrat1on for la<·kin~ "a clear position ... "They are right in this. But 1t doesn 'l mean my people don't know or ap1>rec1ate what the tlmll•d States has done." Sadat noted Cops Kill Wrong Man In Search r-.;EW ORLEA;-.;S IAP) Plumber Don~dd Herkes l'raY. IP<I from under a house and mt't a hail of pohl'e bullets. He ""as fatally v.ounded. mistaken for a man \\ untcd 1n the slay10g of a d<'pUl) moments earlier said authontte'> .J e ff e rs on P a ri ' h S h e ri r f i\ hn nn Crom a·h said the depu t v who shot ut lll•rkes whose name hr· would not release - has hcen rel1ev(·d of duty H•:RKES. 25, WAS repainng the heater al the home of Elise Kenna1r when a police dragnet ... wept onto lh<• quiet suburban strec>t monday mornrng ~t rs Kt>nna1r said a neighbor tl'l<.·11h11m'<I lo "arn hl·r tnat aep- \llll'S \\ert• looktnJ! for a man \\ho shot dim n their fellow or. f11•t•r .1l th1· :'\11·la1r1c Bank and Tru::.t Co ··Dun l ll·l <im one m 1 hi•) ri· sean·hing for the man m this nP1ghh11rh11od . · the m•1ghbnr said l h•rkf's· hrnthcr. Robert. \\.as \\ ork 1ng inside lht• house Mr~>. K1•nna1r said she told Robert ll1•rkt•s ahou1 thl' dt•put1es and 1-ouggt•::.lt•d th<•) Y..1rn Donald Sii E ~AIO 1'11 E\' "t>rt' almost .it thf' bal'k door of her home \\ hl·n sht• hl'al'd lhC' r1r~t ~hot · Oh, my <:c)(i shl' '>ereamed .1s ... tll' r.111 out ol the door Don 1 shoot m\ plumber · ,\ nt•1ghhor s.11d ht• ht·ard l'lghl c11 111nt· ... 11111 .... t h1·n hl'ard ''11111 ·on1·t·'-<'l.11111, I think Y.CJU't 'hot l ht·\\ 1 cm~ m.m Tilt' shoot111g occurred eight ltlol'ks from the bCJnk where l •1•put' Sh••nrr Hnhl'rt Cochran. ~ .I:!, "as k1lll1<l 1 hl· bank has li1•en the larj{d of armed rob· bl'r" fl\e time., rner the past lY.o ~ t•ar:-. Wants to Arrange A Loan ... For You. ~ ss 1..1•~1\\; \; ,,,,~. 001111 Bvll~v Whether tt ~ cl buc;me':is opportumty or a new investment, ,m Eqlllty Loan ~111 your home or other property may give you the c.-ish to t.ike adv.:intage o~ 1t We specialize in secondary real estate financing for people wh0 already own prime residential property and have a better-than-average income. If you qua~fv. ask a member of The Team for detJil~, We m.:iy be able to arrange a loan of up to 80 percent of the market va lue of your property-at attractive rates. Call now' Newport Equity_"Funds LJun"d Broktr Laguna Hiiia 25283Cebot RObd, Suite 107 (714) 830-5700 Huntington leach 16t68 Beach Btvd . Su11e 26t (714)848-2211 STOCKS I BUSINESS Tuesday's NYSE COMPOSITE . TRANSACTIONS 2 p.m. ( E D1) p rice.s OUotetlotw. met'* treoitsontM ..... Y~lr.. Mlciw.sl. Pit< Ill(, P8W, ~Oii, OttrOit •nd Clncllln.1111to~i. .. ~ -~ t>v .... N~lonAI Atto<latloftot Secvrlllet o. ...... ...., IMltnel. ... , # ""'' ~ tw1 W.... _. 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Thomln .48b 1 4 10'"'-''°' XTRA .... 4 J'I 25'• '" ThmJW 1.20 I •• 24,._• ~ Y•tes .'10 s q lOl<.-~. rtirlfty S2 9 S5 1~ l't Z.l.Cp .92 1 21 IS -''> Tic or t ,21• S 66 !IV... .. • • Zel t0f 4 .ID .. I 12~ ..... fld11otr .~ • 12 19 • . .. . i.pe1e 30b 26 91 1"--''• noertnt .so 1 S3S 1• ... ,. ZeyrtCJ> J ,, 11-e-•1. Tlmeln I lO t 10 3S -11t ZenltrlR I ,, '2S ll"' 1 ... r:::~Pll.St ·, 1~ ~ ~ luNllnd ..60 I 11 u ""+ ~. Stockholder Sues Field CHICAGO (AP> -A suit seeking to force Marshall Field & Co. to con. sider merger proposals has been filed by one of the company's st~kholders. Richard Weiss, who ~wns 200 shares or Field common stbck, said the company l!i 1uilty or "corporate wute ilnd mismanagement" becaU!le lt baa refused to consider a posaible mer•er with Carter Hawley Hale Stores Inc., a CaUfomJ1·bued de· partmeatatore chain. Tbe suit.. flied In Circuit Court. •c· CUHt h 411 board ol dlrecton of lg· norlng the besl interests of the com· p~ nd tt4 atockholdert. Offshore Leases BICM!ked BOSTON <A~> -The Interior D pattment and 11 oU companies l~t th 1lr 11th-hour attempt to aet the 10- otd tor an auction of ott1bort drtll· rlgbta In th• Georaes Ba.nkl n. bing l"OW\d. The nucUon ha<1 been 1cheduted fet today N Yori C\f1, but. tbt U.S. Appeals ODUrt nj~tl!d a re· t day lght t.o overturn lbe ktna a i lon by U.S. OOtrtc/t Judg w. Arthur Gamt,y Jr. that th I 1hoW putort. TUMdoy Januery 31 1978 s DAILY PILOT BS Tax Time F ootrwtes Help In Saving Money By SYLVJi\ PORTt:lt St-Ill.""- M 1llions will take 1lem12ed deductions on Form 1040 for 1977 Ht>re's a money-saving tip· Study lhe footnotes to the "Optional State Salt!s Tax Tables" supplied wath the Form 1040 instructions to learn how much the IRS will accept as sales tax deductions. Ignoring these footnotes can be a costly oversight in three ways. (l) THE TABLES GENF.RALLY DO NOT tnclude local sales taxes wtth the state listmg. Footnotes cover possible additional chums. (2 > You are entitled to deduct certain state aad locar sales taxes in addition to the amount listed m the table Add to the table figure any stale or local sales tax pa1d on a car, truck, home, boat, airplane or matenals bought to build a new home -ir the tax rate on these was the same as the general sales tax ra te and the seller stated the tax separately but in- Money's Worth cluded it m the total you ' paid '-....Jt~-------- <3) The income figure that determines allowable sales tax deduction is not only the figure on line 29 of Form 1040. It abo includes such tax-exempt income .as Social Securi- ty, workmen's compensation, untaxed portion of capital gains, etc. . · . The higher the meome fi gure, the higher your allowa· ble salt?s tax deduction will be. Highl·r sta te income taxes may result from the Tax Simplification Act, passed to simplify preparation of 1''orms 1040 and 1040A by plugging the zero bracket amount into the tax tables and tax rate schedule. The same law barred taxpayers from using itemized deduct10ns if they totaled less than the zero braC'ket amount. Before 1977, itemized deductions could be taken even 1f they totaled less than the standard deduction. MANY STATE INCOME TAX LAW8's~hat those who use the frch•ral standard deduction en For 1040 must use the state's s tandard deduction too. The s te's stan- dard deduct10n m;iy be less than the tota) of ite 11ed de- ductions allowed on ) our state return. Where this is so, you could hold down your total of rt-dcral-stalt: income taxes with the following strategy. Take itemized deductions on Form 1040 totaling Jess than your federal ~tandard deduction. This would cost you a brt more m ft'<kral income tax, but also would qualtfy you to take 1ll'mm.:d ckduct1ons on your ,state return in a mucH larger amount than other\\ 1se. ,. Congress obviously never considered or intended this result when it passed the Simplihcat1on Act. Tell your Congressmen how this change hits you -and demand lhat it remedy the 1nJust· Next 1977 Ta:c Law C'ha114es AJji>ctlng You. Metric Fit Means Fw;t Suitability CHICAGO CAP> -So you spilled spaghetti all over 'your suit during lunch and have an important appointment. in an hour A computerited fast-s'\.l\t gervice will have you in newi fitted, quality duds in about 30 mrnutes. 1 GO TO BIGSBY & KRUTHERS and tell them you wear, say, a s1w 40 re~ular. They put your name, birth dalt>. weight, height, neck and waist measurement and a rm length into a computer devised by Joe Silverberg, the cloth mg stores president. In 90 seconds, out comes an 8-by 12 inch printout -a picture of your outline showing all measurements m cen timeters. A size 40 regular will be found in a rack full of 102 centimeter suit<>. T ake your pick. try it on. It should fit. nut 1f ( ) alterations are neeci1>d, COJ\.TSVMER like m the "a1st and '"' pants, they will be so minor they can be done _____________ _. in 15or20mmutes "You are m and out in 30 to 45 minutes. and you can't get a suit cleaned in that •1me," said Silverberg. "Normally, lbere are measuret ments and alterations, and then you would come back tt see what 1t looks like. It would take two or three weeks t<> get your suit. You can't get. say a 40~ size -and th~t may be your perfect fit -but you can get lhe half sizes in . centimeters, and that's lhe way we're selling our clothes. "Fl'ITING IS THE BEGINNING, not the end.''. Silverberg said. ''And we are making metncs palatable to the customer, most of whom are resisting the metnc system." The finished product generally costs between $120 and $160. Si]v(•rbt•rg said all measurements are kept m the com· puter memory and can he brought up to aid someone who 1s shopping for someone else. "SINCE OCT. 21, WE'VE RUN 3,000 persons through our computers." said Silverberg. "Sales of smts are up 3> percent and sales of pants have doubled. We buy merchal\i dise in centimeter measurements in Europe and Sout.8 America and now we don't have to convert them int,O inches. The cost savings is passed on to customt"rs -frnrii between $30 to $60 a suit "Tht• mam saving, however, comes in the customers' time - a nd time means big money to most of our client:>," said Silverberg. Fann Output Falls - SACRAMENTO (AP) -Californsa's 1977 farm prochlC· lion fell 4 percent below that of 1976, :.uys the state-rec.Jer'ftJ crop and livestock reporting service. The service added in its pubhcation, Farm News. lh t acreage is expected to rise 2 percent in 1978 The total im crop was 47.6 million tons. Much of t liecrease wa.'\ atttibuted to !iugar beel'> a nd less so barley, rice, wheat, corn, grain sorghum and potatoes . But the deereases were partially offset by lncreas~s"' processing tomatoes, cotton, wine grapes and salnowcl'. Record hatveslt came in cotton, wine grapos, almonds, plums, nectar!Ms. and strawberries, Cross r~eipta for the 1977 crop haven't b~n calculal· M, but they'r~ expeded to compare favorably with t.bt· $9.1 billion ot t97G, lhe 1'tJ>Ort aaJd. Net income wlll ~ lower beca\ISe of hSgher cocsts. especially of irragalioti water, the report said. Burrougfu to Pay Directors ot Burrouahs COrp., Misalon Viejo, have tn - creased l.b quarwrly dlvldind to 35 c t; a sharet from 2S ccntt, p.ayeble May 8 to 1hattholders of~~ Aprils. ll ts Burrou•>11' Wrd c..,h divld nd. continu1nc ate· cord of qu.amrly cash payouta uninterrupted for 83 yea~ Burroughs, opllratina ln CaUfornia aince 1903. empl~ inort than G 000 peopl tn tho atate thro h producllM facllitlcs in Santa Barbara. WesUak Vlltace. Puadcn . Cit)' of lndualr')'. M.luion Viejo, Carl.sh d and San Dl o and •2 mar etina offices. ... DAIL't' PILOI Television TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS 1 l 't.SOAY EVf..NING e 00 IJ CBS NEWS DO NEWS 0 EMERGENCY ONEI The p1r1l'ntl<lica en1,.,t1r an unu11ual call from a aculp· tor whO t111v1ng enc;allO<J hu• mochtl 1n QulGk h111d etnino p4Ht6f 1s un11b1ct to chop him out f) NBA BASKETBALL Cl11vetand C11vallert vs Loa Angele• Lakerhl<lf'l"V .. , 0) THE BRADY BUNCH Bobby find\ $1100 "'hlltt playing tool b11ll Cl) THE ROOKIES fD ELECTRIC COMPANY 11 OJ ABC NEWS 8300 MOVIE *••'It "Oov1d And Bothsheba' (Part 1) t 19521 Gregorv Pttck. Su~i.n Hayward David, tho k•ng ol the J1.,,..s, plots tllu duath of tus qunural to Obt.1•n 8.JlhShubO, Iha man ' beaut1tut w1111 ( t hr , Mom's Cha11ce 30m1n) • m MY THREE SONS A boy who looks Just like Aob1>1t1 almO!lt r u1ns Robbie s rl'put .. uon butortJ ' tl•tt d8<.t1p11on is uncov- ur&d ' La ,·c·rm• an<I Shir IL'\' :-.t•r1es ~t3r~ Pt•nll\' .\ 1 a r s II a 11, C' L' 11 t l' r I et t. <lll d C 1 n cl~· \\'1111.tnb, n·nter n~hl. an· 1n1nL·cl tl\· 1 l'<tl 111 t' mot hl'l'S :\I :1 rjnr1t• L\I arsha Ii. ll'll , and Fran<'t•s WlllJ:ims :1t x :.Ill tonight on Clw11nl'I i . W OVER EASY Guest Goorgo Sheuring 0 1 -CBS NEWS OQJ MER\/ GRIFFIN Guesis Stttvl' C.Rrvey Mrs. Stuve G11rvey 01!.on Bean, Phyll1" Schlully 1 00 0 NBC NEWS 0 LtAASCLUB 0 ABC NEWS ' 0) I LOVE LUC Y Btlllevlng Ricky has lorgot- 1l'" the" ;,1nn1vorsury, Lucy suspe<;ts tho worst Q) AOAM-12 ED MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT t 8 TO TELL THE TRUTH T.hl trip into fhP pa;t lo u~ptore thtl Ideas boihmd the Amencan Revolution. 0 NEWL YWEO GAME 0 (IOI HOLLYWOOD SQUARES 0) THE BRADY BUNCH Pater tries out for a role 1n tho school play. Cl) AOAM-12 . ED LA. INTERCHANGE "1ns1t10 S1ra1ght" EID NEWSCHECK An 1ntormat1Ve collection ol Orange County news government and consumer atla1rs. people and spoils (I) THE GONG SHOW 7.30 0 YOUNG PEOPLE'S SPECIAL ·Common St>nsn" YOUn!J· stl'r~ t.1kl' .i m.ig1ca1, mus• eoo o (a CELEBRITY CHALLENGE OF THE SEXES {.'hannel Lb' hag• 0 KNXT (CBS) Los An l• " 0 KNBC (NBCt Lo An 1H1 c; 0 KlLA (lntJ I Lo Anq • c'> 0 KABC·TV (ABCJ lo. An Je • l)l l\fMB (CUSl SJn 01l'qo 0 KHJ TV (Ind) Los An WI•• no KCST fAUCl San Du•qo 0) KTIV (ln<1 l Los Anqt.>lt", 0) KCOP·TV 111111 t Lo!-. AngPli·<-. tD KCE f TV (PBS) Los Anq1•li·. m .._OCE·IV tPBSt H unl1nqto11 U1•,1c l1 (Prem1ern) T hn s11roes 1e11- tur11s top mov1" and telav1- s1on stars 111 h1gh-i.µ1r1tec:t, head-to-head aports compet111on 0 BUCK BEAUTY Odvtd Wavne narrate" Anna Sewell's clai.s1c tole about a megn11icon1 atal hon. Bleck Beauty is born In rurnt Maryland and sold to Squire Gordon (Cemer· on M1tchlllll (Part 1 ot 5) 0 MOVIE • • •, Play D"tY • ( 19691 M ichael Ca1nfi, Nigel 0dvenport A B1111sh com· mandM ettttmpls to atop Alht."1 lore us from de .11ov· 1nq Gttrman &llppllf!S ~o that h" can Lise them t2 t1~~ ) 0 10 HAPPY DAYS Roch•" Almost Dies" Whnu taking g1tll11ond LOii Be1h (l ynd11 Gooc:ttr1end) °''' for ii "pin on h"' -mo1orcycle, Richie has an occident and Is taken to th" hosp11al 1n a coma 0) CAROL BURNETT AND FRIENDS Q) MOVIE • • * "Tho Desperate Hour!> ( 19551 Humphrey Boqart f r .. rt11c March A bu~ma~• «xecutive & home '' mvao.o bV lhr11e btutal escaped convicts (2 '"' J tD GREAT PERFORMANCES LIVE FROM LINCOLN CENTER Ton•oht ' i»''O"'Utn<r or Co-tie •• CWn<ed bt t"" N•,. York Cllt B•llct in Lin <Oln C•nttr 1' seen vte taPf"• O.l•y (2 '"'', ~TURNABOUT 1 lie prem1t11t) ep1M>c:te ot th•• sen11s covers a wide range ol 1UUtss cuncerntno women today 8:30 8 (I) SHIELDS ANO YARNEU (Seaaon Premle•e> The g1ftec:t huaband-and·wlle mime team bring their deft comt>d1c anu mua1cal tal- ent• lo this new comec:ty- .arlety se11es fJ (10) U\IERNE &. SHIRLEY • The Second (Almost) Annual Shotz Talent Show" The real-hie moth- ers of Penny Marshall and C1ndv w1111ams JOln their daughtets for some antics when lne g1rt1 put on the Shotz Brewery's talent Sl>Ow 0 CONCENTRATION 0) CROSS-WITS ~ OVER EASY Guest Georg;i Shee,.ng II 00 6 Cf: CBS MOVIE * • * "Cn1netown" ( 197 4 I Jack Nicholson, Faye Dunaway An ambitious. hut i;mall-hme, pm1ato investigator linds himself catapulted Into the middle of some shady pout1cat dealings 11nd land specula- tlon when he accepts a beautiful soctallle as his Clil!f'lt fR) 0 NBC: THE FIRST AFTY YEARS ·A Closer l~. Par1 Two" Orson WelleS wllf narrate and Peter Falk, James St-1111 and Allred HltCh· c()(;t( win hast this two- hour special presenting great dramatic moments from pas1 programs. 0 10) THREE'S COMPANY Jack In The Flowet Shop" All work enel no play makes Jack an angry boy when Janet hire5 him to wmk for her end acts hke a maru.et f) IRONSIDE Members of lrons1de·s s1all lace barriers or n11t1onet pnde when they • are sent 10 Latin America to check on a murder suspect TUBE TOPPEltS K l' E T 28 x • o 0 G r c a t Pcrform~llll't•~: LtVl' From Lin<:oln Ccnlt.>r. "The B.u ht'!' of Senllt• " BeH·r· l y Stlb ~tars m thb Ne" \"ol'k City Opera produ<:t1011 CBS 8 (~> ti no -"C'hmato\\n'' ll!J7 1 1. l'rivalt· lll\l'Sl1galor linds h1m~l'lf C'Ul~1p11lll'd tnlo middle of somt• :-;hady pohl1t'al <kalings. NBC E) !J 00 The First Fifty Yl'ars Orson Welles narrates two hour spel'lal prt•st•ntmg gn•at dramal1c mo- ments from pa:-.t program~ N UC 0 8 00 Da\ 1d \\ <t) ne nar' rllles Annu St•wt.•11'!-i l'las'itt' tall• <Jbout a magnifil't'l\l ~tal11on <F1l'sl n l l tH• µa r ts l . 0) MER\/ GRIFFIN Guest1> S111•11 Garvey, Mrs Stev11 Gitrvey O"on Bean, Phylll~ Schfally Paula NPl!>On ~ MASTERPIECE THEATRE • f Claudius Old King log" Claudius' fourth "'''" •~ h1a niece end Nero , mother H1~ plan~ reatorn lhe RepubllC invofvfls tho loathsome Nero rather than Claudius' own aon 9 30 0 (19) HARVEY KORMAN Thu One Where Hervey G11t~ A Job As An Escort ' An egocentric tharactor actor ansW(lra on ad for ,. leod1nq man and land~ ,, job with an 811COf'l M1rv1cn Marlon Mercer gue!il star& 10;00 U (J NEWS 0 0..@ FAMILY "L1lehne" Nancy ""arches frantically tor e l11flnd shA behtives to be su1cldot, while Buddy seeks way11 of <1vo1d1ng an ovetly allachlld 10 year old (!) HONEYMOONERS m GREAT PERFORMANCES· LIVE FROM LINCOLN CENTER George Balanchine dirllC.t~ ttwt New York C11y Ballet 1n pcirtorming • Coppel1a 1aatu11ng P11t11c1a McB11oe 1n tile hlle role 10 30 0) Q) NEWS ED SPECIAL ··u s Art. The Gill 01 Our5elves ' An animated t••P through tile h1111ory of Amencanart 1100 D 0 (JO) NEWS 0 LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE Love And Tho Modurn W1h1" l111.l soy~ that !lhu lorgi.t!S her husbimd How ard for · strdy1ng . but he never did 0 MOlllE * • * •·Pttnny Seren.u1o" (194 t) Cary Grant Iran" Dunno Recent adoptive parents learn tnat happi- ness can soon turn 10 tr ag- eov 12 hrs J 0) THE 000 COUPLE "Loven Don t Mak11 Hou50 Calls Cl) LET·s MAKE A DEAL ED DICK CA \IETT 11•30 D TONIGHT Host Johnny Carson Guests Henry Winkler Rodney Oanger11eld. Los tnd1os Tabatares 0 LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE "Love And The Youn!J f xecuuve" An amb1t1ous mall Clerk falls in love with Iha vlee president s daugh- ter 0 @) ABC .... O\llE • *" "Sisters" (1973) Margot Kidder, Jennifer San A reporter witnesses a murder but cannot find tho V1Ctlm or evidence ""hen sne conl•onts tile w~pect, a woman separat- e<! from he< S•amese twin, (RI 0) NEWS Q) GET SMART tt) CAPTIONED ABC NEWS 1140 IJ ~J NEWS MOANING 12.00 0 TWILIGHT ZONE F1va people are trapped .,, a cyl1ndnca1 enclosure and ...-ek an escape 0) FOREVER FERNWOOO . Cl) MOVIE .. .. .... • Wtl9n My Ibby Sroitel At Me ' ( 111411 Betty Gret>M Den 0111ey A m1r- "11t1e bfUkl up wOOt\ ontt p.ar1ner l)"IS a part In • Broadway at\o.N t t hr , 30 ,,.,,n I 12· IO II (l.) CBS UTE MOVIE • ··~ ••fo1ppeo. '1973) Jemu Brol1n Susan Clark Whefl he " treppt.'d 11110r hour~ 1n H d .. parlmtml &lore that 1~ patrollull hy v1c1ov1 guard d<>Q~ It m4'n mull dav1•a ingM11ou1 ways to outwit lhf'lm 1r1d mak• hla way to s11fe1y (RI 12·30 D MOVIE • • 1 Son, And l overb' ( 1960) T ruvor •iow1u ct, Dean Stock"'"'' A dO•lll· nating moth"' 1nsp1rus ht<r son to bypass 1om1111<11 to b41tter h1m~11ll ( I hr ~~ min) ,. 0) MOVIE * • "Thtt G1.1nt Cl~w' t 1957) Jett Molfow, Mor• Corday A ~C•llnt1ol attemplt to Otl&lroy 11 COIQS58I bird .. , ...... no hav0< 1n Its path t t hr 30 min) f 00 0 TOMORROW Guest Dr Armand Hammer, nollld tor his eatensivtt art coll~tion f) ISPY Danny wa. A M1ll1on Laugh&· t·25 0 NEWS 1.30 (!) MOVIE • * ~ "Arturo s l~land" t t9631 Reginald Kmn .. n, Key Mar&msn All11r hu; 1111ner rt1ma1m111. u yOUlh discover~ he Is a11rac100 10 his new stt1p mothur ( I hr. JO min) 2:00 e m KOJAK "Therapy In Oyn.Jmllt• ' Kotak must try to to~tobh•h J link betwoon a1-em1ng1y 1.nrelatlld bomb victims 110 he can atop .:i p,ychopath· IC k1ll.W (Steven Kuats). tAI 0 NEWS 0 MOVIE • •' · Time lost And Time Rem.,mtw.<IKI I •96ti) Sarah Miles, Cyril Cu\atk A common girl returns to h6r g1rthood home and comes to thtl t.torthn!l rec01- 1za1ton thal her matr1ag~ 1s over (2 hr~ I 0) MOVIE * **1h "Tht' 819 Hl'HI' ( 1953) Glenn Ford Glo11 .. Gr8hame A dt't&ehvfl 11 w1I& Is killed 1n 11 blur meant for him (2 hri; > 225 0 NEWS 2:30 0 MOVIE * * "All 01 Mo' ( 1934) Frednc Marr.h, Georqo Raft. A QHngbter and hi~ gorllr..,.d t .. eh a high llOci- •ty Cletoutante tf'lll meanu'il ol 10v11 ( I hr . 2:> min ) 3000CI) NEWS 3 30 II MOVIE * * ' Bl.nt Or Sll•nce ' (19611 Allvn Baron Molly Mct.:arthy, A prOfttSSIOrtal lull&< .1tr1v11S 1n N-York ttt murd1t1 B local rllci<eteer 11no is olmost persuadtKi to ca11 off thtt 1ob ( 1 hr , 30 m1n1 356 0 NEWS •ooo MOVIE • • Oe&t1na11on M18mf' ( 111601 Claudio Garo, S.lta Cortex One by one, Hitt r11m111ning live cr1m1naf partners find tr111msalv11s beinn murdered (2 nr~) f) MOVIE • *' ' Rachal s Mari" ( t9741 A11a Tush1nghem. Mrdu•y Rooney A young 1s1auhte, forced to !Hie the wr.1fh ol his brotf'ler, falls '" 10-.• "''th the younger 1 .. h1ugnter of a weallhy man. ,;, hrs t m MOVIE • * Bt>yond Mombasa" 1 194 7) Corner Wilde. Don- "" Fltlftd A m 3n, arrlVlng in Afroc:a to locate h1:; missing tHOthl'r, '" attacked by loopard Man ' (2 hrs ) M'edne•daffN Bayt itnf# itlot~ie• MORNING 9 30 O • • • ', B11111e O f The Sexes" 11960 ~ Peter Sellers. Constance Cumm- ing,. An efficiency expert courts. death when she hug1ns investigating a welt- establ1st1eu Scottish tirm. t f hr , 30 min ) AFTERNOON 12 00 0) * • • 'The Happy Time" ( 1952) Charle& Boyer, Marsha Hunt Pup- py lo~e and tomance are f'vont'> in the hie of e FrenCh·Canad••n family dut1n<1 the 1920 s (2 hr!> , 20m111 I 3'00 110' * * • * "Thi' Card1- nll" (Parr 2) ( 1963) Tom Tryon. Horny Schneider. An Amtlfican pnest looks back on his ret1g1ou!P career as he recerves hi' cardinal s <Ol>t!s. ( 1 hr , 30 min) 3·30 0 • • S "Watermelon Mdn" ( 1970) GodtrPy Cambndge, fstetl& Parsons A bigoted white m.in 1s shockoo 10 wake up one morning and discover that ho has turned black. ( 1 hr , 30 min l TV's Friend Ret1•rns Comedy Premiere Pantomimists Robert Shields and l,<n-ene ·Yarnell sta r in "Shields and Yarnell." new comedy-variety series pre- miering al 8 :30 toni~ht on Channel 2 'Black Sheep' Adds Regulars LOS ANGELES <AP) -"The Rlack Sheep Squadron" re- turns lo NBC Wednesday with two new characters played by Jeb Adams and Denise DuBarry. Adams. 16, son of the late Nack Adams, plays an underage pilot and Miss DuBarry plays a nurse who is an old girlfriend of Pappy Boyington (Robert Conrad) and the daughter of General Moore (Simon Oakandl. 'Leapin' Lizards,' It's a Liberace Special R) BOB THO~AS 1101.LYWOOD <AP l ~e of ll'k\"Js1on 's oldest frie11d~ r'· turns lo thf tube WedbeSday n 1 g ht when CBS presents ''Leapin ' Li za rd s , I t's Liberace." <Channel 2, 8 p.m ) Could it be 26 years ago that TV v 1ewers become acquainted with the smile full of teeth, the !>yrupy voice, the ever-present ca ndelabrum and brother Geoq~e? Indeed, it was 1952 that the syndicated half·hours of pianistics began to establish a national institution LEE SEEMS TO have changed little since those early ~ (•ars. The hair 1s more bouf- fant, he owns more houses -10 at last count. But he retains the same zest and wonder about his career as ''Mr. Showmanship." For an interview, Liberace drove from hts Mahbu house to the Sunset Strip showplace that he tried to turn mto a museum. "We ran it for a month," he explained, "and we had 17,000 reservations. But the neighbors complained. Not because of the tours; we ran three li mousinE\S from Sunset Boulevard and parked them off the street. The problem was that people drove hy to see if they would be able to get their $10 worth." "LEAPIN" LIZARDS, IT'S Liberace" is his first network special in 10 years, the last be- ing a London broadcast for CBS. Why the lapse? "I never like to tamper with success. I appear on an oc- casional talk show, just to let people know that I'm around and alive; some people have no contact with show business ex- ON TV SPECIAL Pianist Liberace cept what they see on telev1s1on "My mam output is personal appearances. I play about 32 weeks a year, 16 in Las Vegas, four in the Reno-Lake Tahoe a r ea, one·nighlers and week concerts in summer theaters, tours to Australia, South Afnca. England -I'll be returning lo the London Palladium April 17. "I REALIZE THAT I must do some television, but too much can hurt the box office for personal appearances. That hasn't been my experience, but I've seen it happen to other en- tertainers.'' For the Wednesday special, Liberace will have as guests Debbie Reynolds, Phyllis Diller, puppeteer Barkley Shaw, pianist Vince Cardell and the Chinese Acrobats or Taiwan. The show was taped at the Las Vegas Hilton, with a .. teaser" look at Liberace's Las Vegas palace "the next special y. 111 be do11t• entirely at my home - The Liberace homes appear to have taken over as an essential element of the legend. More than half the entertainer's souvenir program 1s devoted to hts h omes and collection · "Liberace's Las Vegas VIiia The Hollvwood Homl· ... The Clo1stcrs-<Palm Springs) Liberace. the Jncurabll• Collector .... " HE COMMENTED: "I llAVI<: this house, the one in Malibu, another at Lake Arrowhead, two in Palm Springs, including one for my mother, five in Las Vegas -two for my personal use. one occupied now by my ac countant, two for celebnt1es anti guests. Stars like Shirley MacLaine and Ann-Margret pre· fer to stay in a private house in - stead of at a hotel when they're playing Las Vegas." Predictably, he also collects pianos "the way some PL'Ople collect old cars, I keep them in mint collection." Among his lH pianos are one on which Chopin reportedly played al Versailles, another. u sed b y Georg<' Gershwin. When possible, h e travels with his own piano, otherwise he brings along a glass top, "which has more or less become my trademark " LAS VEGAS IS where Lee spends most of his time, and that's his legal residence. But he is contemplating a penthousl' apartment here lo replace th(' Sunset Strip house At 58 he shows no loss of en thusiasm for collecting houses, pianos, or audiences. "I'm just beginnin~ to enJOY it," he smiles. Celebrity Debut Tom llrook!.hier stars \\hen l1lrn and television per<\onallt1cs participate in pr l' m 1 t• r c o I' · 'Ce I e b r it y Challenge of the Sexl's," ::tt 8 lnrucht on Channel 2 Stars Signed For TV Movie I.OS 1\1'.JGELES CAP> - P.it t u·1a !\cal, Eleanor Parker <1111! Donald Pleasence h an• het•n signed for "The Bastard," t IH' two part tele\•ision sen es l11'lng m:.1de from the book by John .Jakes Miss Neal will play the Fre n c h mother of the ii · legitimate son of a n Englis h nobleman, Mi ss Parker and the nnhlcman's Y.1fe and Plcasencc \.\ti I pluy the owner of an English print shop. The four-hour movie will be d1strihuted by Universal Pie· lures to inde1><'ndent stations as part of Operation Prime Time. ,_ t