HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-02-03 - Orange Coast PilotJ
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FRIDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 3, 19f8
YOL. 1', NO. M, 4 Sa CT IONS, 41 ~AOl!S
•PolansIP M1•111 on
• Fonr ·Beld • m
•SC Cop-oul'l-·Saving ·Three
l
'Life in Body'
Skier Hits
Tree, Dies
RENO (A P ) -A
14-year-old Auburn skier
died after crashing into a
tree on a downhill run at
Ml. Rose ski area south of
here.
Was hoe County SheriH's
deputies said Susie Ann
Ferg uson was training
with a racing team Thurs-
day when the accident oc-
curred. Her parents were
al the resort at the lime.
Witnesses said Miss
Ferguson wa s on a
dpwnhiU course traveling
about 50 miles per hour
when she swerved to avoid
another skier. veered out of
control and hit a tree.
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1
iGunman Wires
.Man to Bomb,
\
;Gets $82,000
1 SAN FRANCISCa° CAP) -A
•one gunman escape d with
$82,000 from a San Francisco
bank today after st.rapping the
lnanager into what 'he claimed
was an ela~or e r a d io-actlvated bomb! device, of-
ficials said.
Polle~ said it was unknown
jmmediately if the device was a
hoax or how the robber escaped
'once he left the bank.
Crocker Bank public affairs
officer Terry Mcinnes said the
unidentified manager bad ar-
rived for work and was parking
hb car behind the P'ark Merced
branch early today when a man
walked up and pointed a gun at
him. ~--> M cJnnd"''"lfescribed what
followed: The guntnan forced the
manaaer inside the empty bank
and ordered him to open up the
vault. The robber then tied a bell
•around his captive and dis-
played a walkle·talkle device.
He said there were two slicks of
dJnamlte planted in the belt that
co\lJd be activated by the porta·
ble radio.
Meanwhlle. arrivlnJ bank
employees were warned by the
robber Of t.be manaaer's situa·
tlbn. . • ·~Tbat forced tliem to lie very
cooperative,·• Mclnnu aald.
he robber tMn walked out
wlth $82,000 and police were
111mmc:IGed.
'
$5,400 of Deroin ..
Four Mell Held
• :I. •
In Drug Bust
l
Four men who were the sub·
ject of a two-month investigation
by Newport B~ach and Santa
Ana police, \fere arrested
Thursday night allegedly in
poss~sslon of $5,400 worth of
heroin.
Booked intQ Newport Beach ci-
ty jail on charges of conspiracy
to sell heroin were Claddis
Tripp, 37, Milton Parharm, 35,
Manuel Cabello, 32. and Donald White. Tripp, Parharm and
Cabello all li st Santa Ana ad·
dresses. White declined to give
his age or address.
In addition, police said they
arrested two Santa Ana· women
on charges of prostitution based
on information developed after
they booked the four men.
Taken into custody. at a
Newport Beach motel were
Joyce McAdoo, 20, and
Catherine Williams, 21 .
De tective Mike Hietala of
Newport Beach said information
on a heroin selling operation w4s
first uncovered by Newport
Beach about two months ago.
He said the narcotics ring
worked almost exclusively in
Santa Ana. Police in that city
were called in to aid in the in·
vestigati.on.
The four men were arrest·
ed after allegedly attempting to
sell an ounce of heroin, valued at
$5,400 on the illicit cfrug market,
to an undercover officer during
a meeting near the intersection·
of MacArthur Boulevard and
Bristol Street in Santa Ana.
In addition to the narcotic~, ef.
ricers said they seized a gun
from Parharm, which they al-
leged was reporte4 stolen last
year in a Santa Ana burglary.
BIUY BEER
GETS PREJIJEw;
Billy Beer,•the br~w endorsed
by the president's brother, ts
corning to California, and the
Daily Pllot staff gave it a taste
test. See Featuring, Page Bl.
F~t Radioactift!
..... , ....... ..it,....
SOBS ON WITNESS ST ANO •
Waddffl Wltnesa Griffith
..
...
1
i
'
' I
--Says She Saw ·· J
-Infant Breathe ,,
By TOM BARLEY
OI 1111 o.uy ~11.t ll-1f
A prosecution witness ip the
murder trial of Dr. William Bax-
ter Waddill of Hunting ton
Harbour collapsed and wept on
the witness stand Thursday at
tbe height or a day-long, in·
tensive cross-examination.
Registered nurs.e JoAnn Grif-
fith of Westminster Community
Hospital laid her head on the
rail of the witness box and
sobbed. Orange County Superior
Court Judge James ,IC. Turner
Immediately c3lled a recess in
the trial.
Mrs. Griffth lost her co~posure
after repeatedly answering for
defense attorney Malbor Watson
what amounted to the same que6·
lion: "How can you be so sure that
the infant you tried to revive was
ever really alive?"' .
"There was life in that body,"
Mrs. GriffiVl protested, close to
tears. "Again, I tell you there
was life in that body."
And then she slumped forward
SC Cop Saves
Three Before
1Car Hits Him
.
on the witness stand and wept t
while prosecutor Robert Chat· 2
terton got to his feet to protest.
Another protest, this time
from an audience that created a
standing-room-only sf!ualion in
the courtroom Thurs d ay.
brought an angry Judge Turner
back to the bench after the re-
cess.
"I have been told of a com-
ment made by a spectator and I
a m going to warn the spectators
once again that I will not allow, ~
, jurors to hear comments from l ·
the audience," he snapped. • ~ "r will clear this courtroom •
and charge anyone who makes 1
audible comments with con-·
. tempt and tbat m eans five days i
in jail," he said.
•·And if anyone doesn't believe
that I mean what I say, just try
me." he added.
The apparently offending com-1
ment. audible to many spec-I tators, was: "Doesn't be thjnk
1
.
she's had enough? What's h~
trying to do, give h e r a
breakdown'"' J (See DOCTOR, Page A2)
Coast
Weather
Some night through mid·
morning fog, otherwise
fair but hazy throug h
Saturday. Lows tonight 45
• to 50. Hi&hs Saturday in
mid-OOs.
INSIDE TODA. V
Jau i• en;owing a re-
1Urgence along tM Orange
Ccxut. Mariy area sclaools are
turning out top-rl()tch jazi
miuieiani. Storifl and photo•
on Page Cl '
•
Blasts Fail
Dynamite Can't Cut Ice
WARSAW, Ky. (AP> -Controlled Demolition Inc. nevt!r
tackled ;,inything like ripping up a three-mile ice gorge on the
Ohio River.
Afll'r two days, the Army Corps of Engineers saia Thursday
at would shelve the use or explosives to carve a channel through
un ace gorge behind the Markland Dam.
INSTEAD, THE CORPS DECIDED to revert to the more
trad1t1onal method of using tows to p\mcb a channel for barge
traffic. . . ··we never promised anything," said Mark Lo1zeaux. vtce
president.or the Towson .Md., demolition company. "They called
us .,nd we agreed to try ·~ ··
Loizeaux later said that if his company was asked to move
on the project he believed he could get a channel through the ace
in eight or nine days. . ..
"We just don't want to sit around and collect our money.
Loizeaux said. ·
THE EXPLOSIVES EXPERTS NEVER r~all.y got going in
lhC"ir effort to break up the ice jam. They spent T_bursday test·
mg various amounts of dynamite and sati_sfying Kerih~ck~ state
officials that they would not shatter the wmdows or bu1ldtnl{S on
the nearby shore.
'·The corps
Chesapeake Bay
stuff." Lo1zeaux
called us because or our experience on
Hut thi~ is different. This is much bigger
1d.
Sex With Minors
Ex-Laguna Coach
Begins Sentence
. Former Laguna Beach
'\•olleyball coach Ian Campbell
-Gregory has begun serving a
<>nc·year Orange County Jail
:term imposed following his con·
"vi.ction on charges of unlawful
,:,t'xual intercourse with minors.
• Gregory, 53, was l>cntenced by
Superior Court Judge William L.
~Murray after he pleadeq i::wlty
1"ather than fncc trial on multi·
pie felony counts.
• He was accused on arrest of
:gcxually molesting severnl
lnem bers of Rirls' teams he
.coached while living in Laguna
1Jeach.
: He was arrested in San Diego
:~een BodiFound
• LOS ANGELES (P) -The
·body or a 16-year-old Pacoima
\)oy missing since Wednesday
'was fQund Thursday by
:Searchers in the hills above the
northwest suburb of San Fernan·
ao. Gilbert Sanchez died of
\massive hend injuries apparent· Jy surrered in a fall sqmc 200 feet
from a ridge, sheriff's o!flciala
:lid.
ORANQ&CGASf s
DAILY PILOT
,
a fter Art Col ony police in·
_vestigated reports that he had
sexual relationships with girls·
between 13 and 16 years of age.
This Council
Doesn't Rwi
From Issue
I
LOS ALTOS HILL.5 CAP)
Joggers have sidestepped a
threat to ban their popular
sports in this woodsy San Fran·
clsco Perunsula community by
assuring dty ortlcials they could
police themselves.
The City Cooncil voted Wed·
nesday to drop a propOsed or·
dinance that would have
restricted 'runners on the town's
narrow, winding roads.
The pr-0posal was m ade by
Councilman Davtd Proft last
month.
It ciune on the heels of com·
plaints by motorhlts that joggers
created a hazard b7 running
more than two abreast. 1
But scar.es of joggers trotted
to the Wednesday meeting and
promised to abide by traffic
safety standards.
"They promis~ to work wlth
us to solve the problem," sald
City Manager Robert Crowe.
··All we're trying to do is keep
all those jogiera alive and not
have the town disrupted.''
2 Fairview Emplo'yees ln~stjg~~ lllVSRStl>J: <AP)
Rub your ~ folks. Jef·
frery L . Nash hos won an
award ftom the police of·
tlcer"s association for
beattn.: up two' police of·
!leers.
By JACKIE HYMAN
OI tM Oelly l"Met S .. ff
An internal investigation into
uctivities by \hree Fairview
State Hospital employe~ has
turned up unexpected evidence
that may lead to a probe by
state o!ficials, Fairview Ex-
ecutive Director Frank Crinella
said today.
However, Sandra Udovch,
one of the emp l oyees
who wus a subject of tbe internal
investigation, strongly denied
any wrongdoing. pr. Lincoln
Shumate, also named by Dr.
Cnnella, could not be reached
for commen~
Both e mployees w ere SUS·
pended with pay two months
ago, along with former hospital
director Michael Levlhe, on an
t'arlicr charge thal they uaed
state resources to mail out docu-
ments representing their own
personal opinions about prob·
I ems in the hospital.
Resolution of that case is still.
pending, although Dr. Crinella
has indicated he expects to ask
the three to reimburse Ute state
for some costs.
During that. inquiry, an in·
vestigator came across ~ me in
the office of Miss Udovch and
her supervisor, Dr.Shumate.
Dr. Crinella said the file in·
c;Ucated the pair were anion~ the
tncorporators of ti nonproftt cOr·
poralion culled Fou"ndation for
l''amily Development, Inc.,
which has received federal
funds for an operation called
Oran~c County Advocacy
Services.
He :.aid the services provided
under the gtant ··would be
rather difficult to distingujsh
from those that would be part of
their duties here at Fairview."
That allegatlon led him to
question whethet or not state re·
sources were used for the grant
and 1f the pair were paid twice
for the same work.
Dr . Shumate and Miss
Udovch's duHes include
teaching part:l'ls to work with
their developmentally disabled
children and stand up 'for their
righli, he said.
··we don't know it \i)ere was
actually any dual reimburse·
mcnt !or salaries,'' Dr. Crinella
said. adding that he e1:pects the
stale Attorney General's office
and possibly th~ Inte rnal
Revenue Service to investigate.
M 1ss Udovch denied the aJ-
lcgations except to note that she
had used hospital facilities with
FroaPageAJ
POLANSl(I ••
nothing would be done before
Monday.
The director of such movies as
·'Rosemary's Baby" and
"Chinatown" arrived in'Paris on
Thursday. He had flown to Lon·
don on Wednesday.
He faced a senten~e ranging
from a period on probation to a
maximum 50 years in "prison 'On
hts plea of guilty to fiaving seic·
ual itltercourse with a 13·year·
old ilrl. Other charges of-.rape,
sex perversion and dru1 abuse
were dropped in a plea-bargain
arrangement.
Polanski is a French citizen
and C8MOt be extradited from
France. It would be possible for
California authorities to send all
evidence in the case to France.
and French officials could de·
cide to prosecute the case here.
This was considered unlikely,
however.
FroaPageA1
OFFICER •.•
will be off duty for several days
to recover from the accident,
said Gates.
Driver or the car, Paul An·
thony Coen, ~s. of 234 Rosa, t2
was arrested for f~lcny drunk
driving and booked into Orange
County Jail after an investiga-
tion by the California HighwaY.
Patrol.
TJle CHP is routinely called in
to investigate any accident ln·
volvtng a poUce officer, Gates
said.
Officer Bernardi was hired by
the San Clemente Police Depart-
ment in August. He was former·
ly with the South Pasadena
Police.
Vretimlf~r
St.ate Care .
t.he'knowledae of Dr. Levine, Dr.
Crinella's predecessor, and had
believed that since she was serv·
In' developmentally disabled
persons, the use was justified.
Before taking her position at
Fairview, she had already ap· Plied for the grant tuna.. Miss
Udovch said.
When the money came
through, she then hired 'an out·
iilde employee to carry out the
terma of the grant and assisted
her outside of Fairview work
Ume, Mila Udovch Hid.
n 1 probably put In 60 to 80
hours a week for about a year or
a year and a half," she said.
She said that while she has re·
fused ta let FIJmew otRclala
audit her books because they aro
not accountants. sbe has wrlllen
lo the State Department of
Health requesting a special
a,udit but received no reply.
Dr. Levine, who now dic-ects a
private hospttal In Cerrttos,
said, "Sandy put in such In·
ordinate hours that I think she
probably ought to blll the state
for the extra hours.''
Both Miss Udovch and Dr.
Levine said they believe they
ar~ targets for retribution by
ce~in unidentified state health
officials because both protested
publicly about conditions ln the
stale hospital,system.
Nash thought. the of· tlcen, Tom Conner and
Don <;iaM, were trying to
kidnap a 16-year-old girl
Dec. 14.
But Conner and Gt_nn,
wearing plain clothes.
were actually trying to ar·
rest the girl for drunken~
m:ss.
"llere's a guy who
come to someone's aid,"
Osbot'l'le said.
SA Huge Drug _H~ul • m
Police Arrest Chemist, Son on Angel Dwt Rap
Santa Ana ·police said today a
multi-million dollar illegal drug
operation was raided this week
and a chemist and his son were
at'rested on multiple drug
charges.
Working in conjuction with
Los /.na~les police, the raid at
two warehouses near the heart
of downtown Santa Ana yielded
what Santa Ana Officers
desc r ibed as the mo st
sophisticated illegal drug fac·
tory ever uncovered in their
city.
Ar rested we re chem isl
Frank Cranz, 59, of Tustin, and
his 19-year·old son. Mark Cranz.
also of Tustin.
Father an<l son were booked
into Orante Couty Jail on multi·
ple cbarges related to manufac·
luring a controlled substance for
sale.
Police allege they were pro-
ducing PCP, or "Angel Dust,"
at warehouses in ~e 805 block or
East Civic Center Drive.
The drug is used as a tran·
quilizer for horses, but reported·
ly produces hailuclnatory highs
when lngested by humau uaual·
ly when rolled into cigarettes.
Police said Cranz is a licensed
chemist and that records seized
at the factory show purchases
used In the drug manufacturing ·
opera lion date back to 1976.
Records show that the alleged
illegal drug operation was car·
ried on under. a business license
issued lo Anza Industries. a
license requested for chemical
manufacturing purposes.
Police said the street value of
the material allegedly being
manufactured in the plant and
niled durlnJ the ratd might
possibly be as much as $12
million.
DOCTOR'S TRIAL RECESSES. • •
Watson repeatedly told Mrs.
Griffith before and after she col·
lapsed that he could not un·
derstand her belier that there
was lire in the baby that Dr.
Waddill tried to abort last
Match 2.
She has testified that she tried
to revJve the child after she was
told ot the presence of a
heartbeat and watched the in·
fant; weakened by the effects of
the saline abortion it apparently
&urvived, struggling lo breathe.
It is alleged that Qr. Waddill,
44, strangled the infant to death
after ordering the nursery staff,
Including Mrs. Grlrrtth, to leave
the area.
It is further alleged that Dr.
Waddill resorted to murder
because of his failure to abort
the 28·week fetus delivered that
night by an unwed, 18·year-0ld
mother.
Chatterton said he will obtain
testimony from a witness who
will tell the jury that Dr. Wad·
dill told nursery staff members
that the baby had s uffered
tremendoU£ brain damage and
should not be allowed to live.
W ati;on argued while question·
ing Mrs. Griffith that nurse Pal
Olvera · b)ld only reported a
hea~ and the fact that the
baby cried because she wanted
to create a sense of urgency
among an apparently lethargic
nursery staff.
And he repeatedly asked Mrs.
Griffith to agree with him that
an infant with a breathing rate
of four gasps a minute and a re·
ported heart rate of 80 beats per
minute couldn't be considered to
be allve.
Wals()n referred to the victim
throughout his cross·
examination as "this product or
conception," "this thlni?." and
•1tbi1 creature:"
But Mrs. Griffith refused to
alter the testimony she earlier
gave for Chatterton.
Asked by Watson, while the
doctor-lawyer was discussing
her efforts to revive the child, if
she felt that she had a right to
rule on the issue of its life or
death, she shakily re-Sponded:
"I don't think any of us has a
right to say .who should live or
who s hould die."
And she again assured the
persistent Watson that s he
believed there was lire in the in·
rant that the coroner has ruled
was strangled to death last
March 2.
"l'm sorry," she told Watsoo.
·•tn my medical mind, it was a
live baby. There was life in that
body or I would not have tried to
save it."
Judge Turner called a three·
day, weekend recess in the trial
late Thursday. It will resume ul
9: 45 a.m. Monday in a new
courtroom. Ql!partment 26.
Judge Turner ordered the
transfer ,Jo the larger courtroom
so that the trial can accom·
modate spectators who han
been filling his Department 24 to
capacily:
Immigrant Held
SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -A
17·year-oid Hong Kong unnamed -
immiarant has been arresUld in
connection with the rapes or two
girls In the North Beach district
her:e. police said.
Singer Freed
Tiny Tim Evidence Lacking
DOUGLASVILLE, Ga. <AP> -Fans ·of Herbert
Buckingham Khaury note : He made a command ap·
pearance at the Douglas County Jail.
Herbe1t Buckingham Khaury. to non-fans, js
falsetto singer Tiny Tim.
Tim was at the jail Thursday to post bond on a
theft or services charge. But the charges were
dropped for lack of evidence, a district attorney's
spokesman said.
William Sorrows. former road t,nager for the
singer. filed the charge, which appar tly grew from
a dispute between Tim and S rrows over a
performance, the spokesman said.
After the hearing, Tim sang a couple of numbers
for the deputies and left.
The Junk Business \
Some years ago while addressing the Central
Indiana F'oor Covering Association, an industry
spokesman, Walter. Guinan said: "Too many
people in the floor covering industry are
convinced the public only wants to buy "Junk" carpet."
We're afraid that you might also get this
impression from the ads which specify
unbelievable low prices. Investigating these ads
wi II determine one of two things -either the
carpet IS JUNK. or they will try to sell you
something more expensive!
We don't sell junk at Alden's, but we do have
quality at competitive prices. and the best
Installation In the county.
DEN'S
: iiisililit1iii·: ·custom dr•p1riss
HnOIM • vJOOd flOOr
PHON[ 6~6-.C838 -6.C6·23~~
Orange ~oast
EDITION
VOL. 71, NO. 34, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANG~ COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
MOSCOW (AP) -Soviet scientists say they have gathered "The famous Himalayan Snow Man, YeU. whom many ex-
evldence pointing to the existence in Siberia of a dark, shaggy. plorers believe exists. might prove to have a YakuUan relative, .. •
haired, shrill-voiced wild man resembling in some ways the legen-wrote Tass correspondent Sergei Bulantsev in a story on the ln-
dary Snow Man of the Himalayas. stitute's findin_gs.
The Soviet news agency Tass said specialists at the Institute of The Himalayan Snow Man ls also known as the Abominable
Laniuaee, Literature and History in Soviet Yakuli have been Snow Man. Large -tracks in the snow are ascribed to iuch a ·
evaluating testimony of Siberians who claim they encountered the creature. Some scientists beileve that, ii he exists, He may be a
man-like creature called "Chuchunaa." form or unclassified ape.
THE NAME MEANS "F1:JGITIVE" or "outcast" in one or the IN THE AMERICAN NORTHWEST, there also have been re-
dialects of YakuUa, a vast expanse or forest. mountains and fro7.en ports of a huge creature known as a Sasquatch, or "Bi& Foot,"
tundra in northeaster~ria. whtC'h has been described by yarious people who claim to have
~~~~~~~~-=====-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Today's Clo Ing
N.Y. Stot!ks
FRIDAY, ~EBRUARV 3, 1978 C TEN·CENTS
1
seen it as looking like a bear or an ape.
The Tass story said "there is a lot of testimony of witnesses
who ran into the wild man" In YakutJa's Verkoyansk region, about
400 mites north of the city or Yakutsk.
''The old-timers of highland vUlages of the Verkhoyansk re·
gion warn guests who come from afar: 'Don't go alone in dark·
ness. Be careful in the mountains. Don't go to the river -
Cbuchunaa might appear'," the account said
ACCORDING TO THE WITNESSES, Tas:. said, "Chuchunaa"
was described. as tall and thin, standing about 6 reel 6 inches. w1tf\
'<See 'FUGITIVE,' Page A2)
Bandits ·Hunted
Mesa's Day: 4 Armed Heis.ts
-Dag of the Iguana
A" rhinoceros-iguana takeS' it on the chin
from three youngsters Crom UC lrvine's
Children's Center. a day-care facility used
by student parents. Reptile was part or a
day-long ext)bition at the university
Thursday, by Monty·~ Traveling Reptile
Show.
J imMcGuy
To Run/or
Wngress Post
Newport Beach Democrat Jim
McGuy, who earlier said he
would seek the 36th State Senate
district scat, announced today
tie would ru" for the 40th
Congressional District post held
by Robert Badham, R·Newport
beach. ../ McGuy said his move,...was
prom ptcd by uncertainty as to
whether Assemblyman Ron
Cordova, D·El Toro, would run
for re-election or seek th~tate
senate seal being vacat'ltd by
N~wport Beach Republican Den·
nls Carpenter.
Carpenter has announced he
will not seek re-election.
"lf Democrats are going to
win In that area we must. be un-
ited." McGuy explained.
McGuy is president of World
American Businessmen's As·
~ soclation in Huntington Beach,
an organization which offers
~(nail business members dental,
hospital, money managetneot
apd discount purchase benems.
McGuy said he plans to visit
2,000 lo 3,QOO s mall buslneAs
pperators in the congressional
district In hopes of unitipg lhJ!m
behind his bid for office. ·
•'There Is a real need for tt)em to get involved in aollu~··now
because thef are disco\ll'~Ced·
with the system, .. t\e said.
McGuy described hls 'upcom-1111 campai1n as "fair, decent
and low-budget."
2 Fairview Staffers
Face State Probe
By JACKIE HYMAN
Of IM 011lly Piiot St.II
An internal investigation into
activities by three ·Fairview
State Hos"pital employees has
turned up unexpected evidence
that may lead to a probe by
state officials, Fairview Ex·
ecutive Director Frank Crlnella ·
said today.
How.ever, Sandra Udovch.
one of the employees
Marines,lan
Noisy Flights
Windows may rattle tonight in
some Orange Coast homes when
El Toro Marine Corps Air Sta·
lion pilots practice aircraft car·
rier landings, according to a
Marine Corps spok-esman.
Corporal Michelle Mullett said
the practice scheduled to begin
at 4:30 p.m. and end at mklnlght
"may result in higher noise
le~li. in nearby communities."
FliJht patterns for the aircraft
were not available because they
are "classlf~ed information,"
Mullett said. •
•tThes. li ndlng practices are
cond11cted to prepare pilots for
upcoming aircraft carrier land·
ing quallficaUons," she said.
who was .a subJect of the internal
investiaation, s trongly denied
any wrongdoing.· Dr. Lincoln.
Shumate, also named by Dr.
Crinella, could not be reached
for ~omment.
Both employees were sus-
pended with pay two tnonths
ago, along with former hospital
director Michael Levine, on an
earlier charge that they used
stale resources to mall out docu·
ments representing their own
personal opinions about prob-
lems in the hospital: .
Resolution or that cMe Is still
pending, although Dr. Crinella
has indicated he expects to ask
the three to reimburse the state
for some costs.
During that inquiry, an in·
vestigator came across a file in
the office or Miss Udovch and
her supervisor. Dr. Shumate.
Dr. Crinella said the file in-
dicated the pair were among the
incorporators of a nonprofit cor· pora~lon called Foundation for
Fnmily .Development, Inc.,
which has received federal
funds for an operation canea
Ofange County Advocacy
Services.
He said the services provided
under the grant ''would be
rather dlfficult to distinguish
ftom those that. would be part of
(See P ROBE, P age A2)
Two ·more Costa Mesa busi·
nesses were robbed at gunpoint
Thursday in separate inci·
dents, and police continued a
sear ch today for three men
believed responsible for a total
or four armed robberies in a
24·hour period.
The fll'St bandit, possibly a
juvenile, entered a &lass booth
photo store in a shopping center
on West 19th Str~t and told 17·
year-old employee Deborah Ann
Bolo, "This is a drag, but I need
all your money, thanks."
He displayed a small handgun
lroille's
Montana ·
Site Sold
By JOANNE REYNOLDS·
Of•MtWP'l ... llllff
... Irvine Company Presl4ent
Peter Kremer has announced
the sale of the comJ¥ny's Fbinl
D Ranch ln Moat,ea ror an un·
dlsclosecl sum to members ol the
family that operates I the Kini
Ranch 1n Texas. ~
The Robert R. Shelton famil9
took deed to the 83,158-acre
.ranch near Yellowstone Na-
tional Park on Wednesday.
The Shelton famUv -0wns and
operates the Spanish Creek
Ranches, a multi-1tate raf\Chlng
operation which owns a 31,()()().
acre ranct) next to the ,Flyin& D.
Shelton is a member of the
Cam ily that ·owns and operates
the ont! rtlilllon•acre King Ranch
in south Texas and Js a member
of the King Ranch Board or
Directors.
Rogers Rainey, Sholton's busi-
ness agent in Corpus Christi
declined to reveal the amount
paid for the Montana cattle
raqch noting that "Mr. Shelton
feels it's nobody's business.''
A spokesman for the Irvine
Company said the firm would
not disclbse the sales price at
Shelton's request.
K.remer said the sale was
made as part of the Irvine Com·
pany's plans to concentrate on de-
veloping its 77,000 acres in Orange
County.
•'A larfe catUe ranch tn the
state o Montana was de·
term ined to be outside ot our <See RAN.CH, Pa1e AZ)
BIUY BEER
GEIS PREJ'IEW
: Billy Beer, the brew endg.tsed
by the president'• bto\ber, ls
coming to CallCornia, and the
Daily Pilot staff gave It a taste
test. See Featuring, Page Bl.
• The 10.1ear Newport Beach t rttldent said he has not aouaht
elected o(fice before, but has
bieen active in Democratic ~lltlcs.
McGuy, 45, holds • business
~ 1ree from San Jose State
Uni\tersi\y. He and his wife,
Arltne, han four children.
NeWUmd Home Fwrtd Plan Hiu Thoma
and took $40 from the Photo
Place at 717 W. 19th St. at 5: 18
p.m . Ms. Bolo. or Huntington
Beach, was not injured, police
:;aid.
At 9:20 p.m., an older bandit
who reportedly had liquor on his
breath and was in need of a
bath, used a revolver to rob the
Stater Brothers market ai 2180
Newport Blvd. He got $400,
police said. ,,
After forcing. 20 -year-old
cashier K.evin M. Durry of
Westminster to clean out two
registers, the biindit forced Duffy
Pleads Guilty
to leave the store with him.
Then the robber told Duffy lo
turn his back and fl ed. Police
said they would seek an addi·
ttonal charge of kidnapping if
the bandit 1s apprehended.
ln addition to the two latest
bandits, police are searching for
a man who wore a ski mask
when h& f()bbed two local fast-
rood outlets or $170 Wednes-
day ev~ning.
A man believed to be responsi-
ble for three of four bank rob·
beries in the city this month also
remains at large, as does the
bandit in the fourth bank job.
Seven Year Ter01
·Given· for Murder
Unemployed drifter Donald
James Hartman bas been sen·
tenced to seven years in stale
prison for the murder or a
juvenile whose body wa~ found
last Sept. 4 in an empty Costa
Mesa home.
Orange County Superior Court
Judge William' L. Murray
ordered the prison term for
Hartman after he pleaded guilty
to second degree murder in the
killing or transient Raymond
Jerome Gaspard, 16.
· C'Alontian Hort
Arresting officers said
Hartman shot his companion
twice with a .22-caliber revolver. -
stabbed him several times and
then slashed his throat. after the
two became involved in a dis-
pute in an abandoned house at
1818 Pomona Ave.
PoUce sald Hartman, who had
shared the empty home with the
murdered youth for sev~ral
days, refused to discuss lhe
nature or the quarrel that led to
the murder.
Midair Crash Kills
Unidentified Pilot
A Garden Grove pilot was in·
jured and the pilot or another
pleasure aircraft killed this morning in an apparent midair
collision at 10:27 near Los
Angeles International Airport.
The dead pilot's plane spiraled
on fire, its tail section severed,
into a parked car near lhe
Hughes Aircraft landing field.
He was not immediately iden-
tified.
There were no reported in·
juries on the ground.
The other plane, a Cessna 182 sing~-engine four-seater nown
by student pilot Larry L. Lam·
boy, 44, hurtled upside down into
the sand near DoclCweiler
Be.itch, three miles from the lm·
pact point.
Lamboy escaped v.oith minor
injuries and was treated at Tor-
rance Memorial Hospital, from
where he was expected to be re-
leased to go home.
Just after the collision, Lam-
bo7 was able to radio an
emergency message that was
picked ~ by Los Angeles Flight
Service, a weather and rught
planning business that also as-
sists disabled aircraft.
An operator there said Lam-
boy had time only to report that
he'd beer\ in a collision and was
tumbUn1 wildly out of control.
"It was amuin& he was able
to tell us that m~ch," she sald.
Lamboy ·wa1 alone in his
plane, u repOrtedly WM the
t>ther piJ()l.
Lamboy was ob a cr911··
counll'y run to quaury for his
tolo ptlot's license.
!'""
Death Came Told
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A ll'a~tUiel n«k was dtff Thurs·
clay b7 police as ·the reason
Alvin Wblt.tlead, 14, of !As
An)eJn, died ln hla Jall cell
ml91d8 aft.er beiiic aubdued b)'
allkftl~
A flight· plan he filed at
Fullerton Municipal Airport,
where he began his flight. at
10:01 a .m. showed his intention to
fly to Santa Maria by way of Los
Angeles, Van Nuys,, Fillmore and·
Santa Barbara. ,
Los Angeles Flight Service re·
ported he was using visual night
rules.
Lamboy is owner or ,Aegis
Protection Systems. a Garden
Grove burglar alarm and safety
device business.
F'ederal Aviation Adminislra·
lion investigators said cause of
the air colll.sion was not known.
Coast
We ather
Some n11ht through mid·
morning fog. otherwise -
fair but hazy through
Saturday. Lows tonight 45
to 50. Jlighs Saturday in
mid-60s.
~
I NSIDE TODAY
Jou ii enjo11ing a re·
iurgence along thf Orange
Coa•t. ManJJ oreo 1elloolf on
h1rntng out top.notch jazz
m~. Stortts ond photos o" Page Cl.
•
9 ...
6 DAILY PILOT C Friday: Flbruaty S. 1'7.
'5,400 at Heroin
·Fo1ir Men Held
In Drug Bllst
~
Four men who were the sub·
ject of a two.month investigation
by Newport Beach and Santa
An a police, we r e arrest ed
T hursday night. allegedly in
possession of $5,400 worth oC
heroin.
Booked int.o Newport Beach cl·
ty j ail on charges of coaspiracy
to sell heroin were Claddis
Tripp, 37, Milton Parharm, 35,
Manuel Cabello. 32, and Dbnald White. Tripp, Parharm and
Front Page 111
PROBE •..
Cabello all list Santa An a ad·
dresses. White declined to give·
his age or address.
In addition, police said they
arrested two Santa Ana women
on charges of prostitution based
on information developed after
they booked the four men.
Taken into custody at a
Newport Beach motel were
J oyce McAdoo, 20, and
Catherine Williams, 21.
Detective Mike Hietala of
Newport Beach said information
on a heroin selling operation was
first uncovered by Newport
Beach about two months ago.
He said the narcotics ring
worked almost exclusively in
their duties here al Fairview... Santa Ana. Police in that city
That allegation Jed him to were ca.lied in to aid in the in·
question whether or not state re-vestlgatton. sources were used for the grant The four men were arrest·
and if t. he pair were paid tW.ce ed after allegedly attempting to for the same work. V'scll an ounce of.h~roin, valued at
Dr. Shumate a nd Mi s s $5,400onthellhc1tdr~gmar~et,
Udovch's duties incl ude to an u.ndercover of~1cer du~ng
teaching parents to work with a meeting near the 1ntersect1on
their developmentally disabled of . MacArth~r Boulevard and
children and stand up for their BristolStr~ehnSanta Ana ..
rights, he said. . In addit.1on to the n~rcotics, of-
.. We don't know if there was ricers said they s~1zed a gun
.ictually any dual reimburse-from Parharm, which they al·
menl for s alaries, .. Dr. Crinella leged. wa~ reported stolen last
said, adding that he expects the year m a Santa Ana burglary.
state Attorney General's office
and poss ibly the Internal
Revenue Service to investigate
Miss Udovch denied the al-
legations except to note that she
had used hospital facilities with
the knowledge of Dr. Levine, Dr.
Mesa Verde
Candidates'
Crinena·s predecessor, and had For11m Slated believed that since she was serv-__ _
in g developmentally disabled
persons, the use was justified.
Before takin~ her position at
V;Hrv1ew. she had already ap·
plu:d for the• grant funds, l\f1ss
l "dovch sa1cl
Wh e n th e m onc·y c ame
'hrough. shl' the n h1n'd an out·
sid e l'mployct' to c~1iiry oul the
terms of tht• gr<ml ~ind ai.s1stcd
her outside• of Fairview work
time, Miss Udovch said.
"I probably put In 60 to !!O
hours a week for about a year or
a year and a half." she said.
She said that while she has re·
fu sed to let Fairview officials
audit her book s because they arc
not accountants. she has written
Lo the State Department of
Health requesting a special
audit but received no reply.
Dr. Levme. who now directs a
private hospital In Cerritos.
said, .. Sandy put in such in·
ordinate how-s that I think she
probably ought to bill the state
for the..QU:A.houp.!!.~-. ~
Both Miss umrvcnan<f Dr.
The Costa Mesa City Council
r ace is expected to heat up next
Thursday night when the Mesa
Verde Homeowners Association
holds the first candidates forum
before the March 7 election.
All 10 candidates running for
two seals on the council have
hccn invited to discuss the
following topics : Traffic acci·
dents and noise problems . on
Placentia and Adams Avenues ,
Fairview Regional Park, Costa
Mesa Freeway extension, the
Jarvis Tax Initiative and high
density apartment construction.
Candidates will also answer
other questions at the 8 p.m.
meeting at Adams Elementary
School. 2850 Clubhouse Circle,
Costa Mesa.
Doors will open at 7 p.m. for
refreshments and a homeowners
association membership drive,
said President Jean Robins.
E'ro• Page Al
Levine said they believe they
are targets· for retribution by ROS ES certam unidentified slate health • • •
officials because both protested
publicly about conditions in the
stale hospitul system.
Youth Employing
Address Clarified
A s tory that appeared ii\
'ruesday's Daily Pilot incorrect·
ly listed the address of the
Harbor Area Youth Employ·
rncnt Service on Newport
Boulcva"rd.
The service, which finds jobs
for 14·21 ·year·olds free o f
char ge, is located at 542 W. 19th
St., Costa Mesa. The telephone
number for the service, which
places workers in temporary
a nd permanent jobs r anging
from part-lime baby silting and
ltousecleaning to full·time pro.
duction and office work, as
642·0474.
Man Held in Drugs
OAKLAND (AP) -Jose
Ramon Perez Peinado, 35 a
tnan described as one of the ~a-
. jOr suppliers of heroin to San
Francisco has been arrested by
Oakland police. He is being ~Id in Oakland city jail for ln-
Y'estigation of possession of
heroin for sale.
c
DAILY PILOT
.................. ,...,._..., .... °"_
project.
They claim that their requests
were ignored unlll just recently
when the time to plant the roses
approached.
Causin~ all the fuss is the plan
to plant 238 rare roses in a 40x36
feet plot on the south side of the
old home and in a 24x&6 reet
area in the front yard.
The roses were donated from
the· private collection of a
botanist at the Runtington
Botanical Gardens in San
Marino.
They are reportedly varieties
that Qourished in the En&lisb
gardens at the turn of the cen-
tury and are no longer available
commercially.
The roses began arriving in
Huntington Beach several
months ago. They are being
tended by members of the His-
to ric al Society in their
backyards until a decision ls
made to plant or not to plant.
Shirley Kerins, in charge of
landscaping, said there is some
concern that the roses are
becoming too large for their one-
gallon pots.
"They are receiving excellent
care but ~ time to plant ls
now." she said.
The roses would be planted ln
holes two-feet deep. 'their roots
would extend another toot.
Harder Tlaan It EookS
It sounded easy to Orange County officials
-hook a cable between two tractors and
.. s aw" off a piece of the bluff overhanging
Pacific Coast Highway in Capistrano
Beach before erosion caused a slide. But
it took six hours of sawing and a stream
of water from· a ffre hose before the bluff
fell. Cyclist Bob Lindberg of San Clemente
(below) watched the dirt and rock plum-.
-m et to the highway whic h remained
closed today for cleanup.
Rain's Harm to Bay F ...... rageAI
RANCH •••
Called Temporary range of interests." Kremer
said.
By JACKIE HYMAN
OI U. o.lly Pitel IUlf
Recent rains brought addi·
tional silt, flotsam and part of a
cllfC into Upper Newport Bay.
b'ut caused no signilicant long-
term damage, a State Depart-
,...m en t of Fish and Game
ecoloalst said today.
Ron Hein. who is supervising
the department's restoration of
the bay as a wildlife preserve, ·
said the amount of silt that came
in tbrouah San Diego Creek wW
simply add volume to the
amount to be dredged in about a
year.
and other debris were washed
into the bay, presenting an
eathetlc problem.
"But biologically the visible
material ls not that bad and it's
typical of a watershed where the
debris from upsll'eam comes
downstream, .. Hein said.
The Flying D supports 6,000
head of cattle on its own proper:
ty and an additional 20,~ acres
of leased land on the outaklrta of Bozeman.
The large ranch, biggest in the
Bozeman area. runs from the
Madison River on th.e west to the
. Gallatin River on the east Oil Prices Up? str;id~g the Madlson-GallattB county line.
VIENNA, Austria (AP) -The ...
Organization of Petroleum Ex· A spokesman for Spanish
porting Countriea probably will Creek Ranches saJd the Shelton
raise crude oil prices at it.a next family intenda to maintain it as
regular meeting June 15. a catUe ranch. . . .
By GOV.,._G~"'°"-••-Campal1n disclosure state·.
menta on file today lb Santa Ana
s how that h\ouaabent As-
semblyman Dennis Mao sen <D-
Huntington Beach) has $19,521 tn
his campaisn coffers.
That is wi.at Mangers will
begin his campaiatn with aa be
seeks for the rlrst Ume to defend
the state Assembly seat be
wrested from Republican
l\obert Burke ln 1976.
lt1 angers• statement shows
that since being elected to office
he has collected ~.329 in cam:
palgn donations.
Offsetting those receipts have
been expenses that include
$7 ,813 paid to South Coast Plaza
Hotel last year in connection with a fundraiser.
The Democratic As-
semblyman's disclosure atate-
menll are the most meticulous and detailed flled by any county
candidate.
For ex.ample, included among
the breakdown of exJ)ensea is 36 cents paid to Danis Stationery in
Huntington Beach.
And listed among the detailed
accounting of contributors ls
$2.50 received from Zita Wessa
a Huntington Beach scbooi board member.
Among more major con-
tributors are a number of sav-
ings and loan groups that donat-
ed $1,250 each. Included amoni
those savings and loan donors
are Mercury Savings and Loan.
Great Western Savlnas, First
Charter Financial and the Sav-
ines and Loan eo.mtttee for
ReJponslble Government.
A Republican who bu an-
nounced be Intends to oust
Maneers from hta seat. Charles
T . Gibson, filed a disclosure
statemel\t that showed be re·
celved $6,500 in contributions to
aet hia campalin under waf.
So far, Gibson has PAid Sl.000
to political consulting firm
George Youne and Associates
and his disclosure statements showed he incuued another
$1,000 llabWt.y to the consulting
tirm. ,
In the 74th Assembly District.
incumbent Democrat Ron
Cordova, a rumored candidate
for State Senate. did not yet
have a closing 1977 disclosure
statement on file in the
Registrar of Voters office.
But two RepubUcans seeking
to oust Cordova did. -
Marian Bergeson. who ran a
strong write·in candidacy in
1976, showed she received dona-
tions and loans of $31,223 to
begin her second quest of the
74th District seat.
Top donors to Mrs. Bergeson's
campaign included the Fluor
Corporation with a donation of
$2,000.
Another donor to the Bergeson
campaign was Newport Beach
Unified School District Superin·
tendent John Nicoll. Mrs.
Bergeson's statements showed
that Nicoll and his wife con·
trlbuted $250 to her campaign in
early December.
Another Republican contender
in the 74th District. Lee Watkins
of Newport Beach, filed a dis--
closure statement that indicated
Friends of Lee Watkins took in
$26,470 last year and spent
$22,692.
Heaviest expenditures on
Watkins' statement were $10,000
to the political consulting team
of William Butcher and Arnold
Forde and $10,832 paid to Opi-
nion Research. a publlo oplnlon
survey firm frequenUy used by
Butcher and Forde.
Dredging is necessary to undo
years of damage by silt and now
obsolete salt works, Hein said. •
Much or the present silt ,was
brought into the bay during the
1969 fiood, which also washed
out some of the .old salt work
levees, he said.
The Junk Business
Another effect of the recent
rains was the collapse of some
bluffs ln the Dover Shores area.
•'In comparison to the ailt
from the rains, it's not a slgnifi.-.
cant quantity," Hein said.
Aleo, he noted that flotsam
such u oranges, atyrofoam cups •
Some years ago while addressing the. c..t;al •
Indiana Floor Covering Association, an industry I
spokesman, Walter Guinan said: "Too many
people in the floor covering Industry are
convinced the public only wants to buy junk0
carpet."
E!i-C...• °""' "'"'·""'"'-""-~""C:O-.O"• 5-...... ,_ .... ......._ _,, '"" .......... ..., ... c..;. ~ . ....._, .. ~~. t1....i1.,..... ..... ~,.-~·"·'· 1,..1111, -~-V•llty --"=~=':=--~·~ c::. ... ~..::!'.'t:.:.::..~.:.a -....
'FU:GITIVE' IN SIBERI:A • • •
We 're afraid that you might also get this
impression from the ads which specify
unbelievable low prices. Investigating these ads
will determine one of two things -either the
carpet IS JUNK. or they will try to sell you
something more expensive! •""1"·""' __ ...,..,..,
J.u•.CIN¥ "'°.._.. ........ o.-.i...._
~· .... .....
n::-'.J". "'t1:-
..
I •
.. .,,....
w I> Ffid!y, Feb!'U!f( !, 1878 DAILY PILOT f 1
Crying WitDess. · SaY.S Baby Li¥ed
SOBS ON WITNESS ST AND
Waddill Wltnea ·Griffith
Mystery
Surrou'nds
Slayings
Sant.1 1\n.1 polwt ar(' trying to
unravt.'I the my-.tenl':. surround
1ng the 1>t.•J>i1rate murderi. or two
persons whol>•• bod1t•i. wert•
found Thur!>da}
One :.l:1ym~ \'lt:llm w;ii. d mid
dle -agl·d woman who w<i:.
stabbed to death m ht-r mode!>l
west ~1dl· home i.omel1ml'
helwl'en la!'il 1-·rida) and Wed
nesda~
The i.ct·onll 'l<'l1m wa:. a man
who ~al> blud~coned tu death in
h1:. houM' trailer t-1lhcr late Wed
ne:.day night or early Thursday
morn in~
ldentiftc:allOO or both \'ICtlmS
is being withheld until
authorities can lot:ulc the~ next
or k 1 n und report their deaths
Both slayln~s went undetected
\Jntil worried friends went lo the
v1ct1m!>· residences Thursday
und discovered they had hct-n
murd<'red, police said
In the Ca!>e or the 35 yt'ar-old
man. trailer park neighbors at
200 S Sulhval) St reported hear
mg ·'th<' sounds of a fight" com
• ing rrom his trailer either late
Wednesday night or ('arly Thur:.·
clay morning
It Wa!>n't until the man·s con·
<'erned l'O-workcr-. \\ ent to h1!i
trailer Thurl>day afternoon
however. that the v1chm 's bat
tered body wai. dii.covered.
police reported
They said a close friend of the
worn an viclitn went to her home
after not hearing from her for
several days, that the woman's
body wns tound.
Police reported she died from
multiple stab wounds
There apparently was no rob-
lwry C'ommilted in connection
with ('ifh('r murcl('r, police said
Dick Dale's
SwryHea&
&aulay Pilot
Dick Dale. of surfing music
fame in the '60s, now owns the
best view of all of Newport's
Wedge. His story and these will
appear in Sunday's Daily Pilot.
SKIING DOWN SOUTH
Mam moth may light the eyes or
SUND A y."S BEST
iers. but the southland
lenty of downhlll runs as
well. al operators are work·
ing to ma.Ice lt better. The details
in the You section .
UP, UP AND ••. -The
Space Shuttle's almost teady to
move cargo tnto otbll, but busl-
nes.s Just. doesn't seem to be
thinkln& space. Rockwell's ad·
vanced projects manager bas a
few sugResUOn!I on the Business
pa.:e.
By TOM BARLEY
Of ttlll D .. lr 1'1"4 Staff
A prosecution witness in th~
murder trial of Dr. William Bax
ter Waddlll of Huntington
Harbour collapsed and wept on
the witne!>s stand Thursday al
the height or a -day-Ion~. Ill
tens1'\'e cross-examinat10n
Registered nur:.e JoAnn Gnf
f.th of Westminster Commun1t\
Hospital laid her head on th~
rail of the w1tnt!>S box and
sobbed. Orange County Superior
Court Judge Jame!> K Turnl•r
immediately called a rcces!'i in
the trial
Mrs. Griffth lost her compo::;un•
after repeatedly answering for
defense attorney Malbor Watson
what amounted ro the same ques
t ion: •'How can you be so sure that
the infant you tried to revive wai.
ever really alive?''
"There was life in that body."
~1 r::; Griffith protested. close tn
1ears ... Again. I tell you tltt•re
WHS life in that body ..
And then !>he slumped forw<ird
1111 the witness ~tund and wept
while prost>('utor Robert Chat
t t.>rton got to his feet to prote!>t
Another prote!>l. th•~ t1m1•
rrom an audience that created <t
:.landing-room-only s1tuallon in
the courtroom Thur!>da>
brought an angry Judge Turner
back to the bench after the re
cess
·1 have been told of a rom
ment made by a spectator and I
am going to warn the spectatori.
<1nce ag111n that 1,w11l not allo"
jurors lo hear comment!> from
the audience." he snapped
"I wUI clear this courtroom
and charge anyone who mukcl>
audible comments with con
tempt and that means five dayl>
in jail ... he said.
.. And if anyone doesn 't bellev('
that I mean what I say, JUSt try
me.·· he added.
The apparently o((ending com
ment. audible to many spec
talors. was . "Doesn't he think
she's had enough., Whot'i. ht>
tryi n g to do. gh·e her a
breakdown.,.. .
Watson repeatedly told Mr:.
G'lffitb before and after s he col
taJ>'ed that he could oo.t un
derstand her belief that then•
was life in the baby that Or
Waddill tried lo ahort la1>t
March 2.
She has testified that !>he tned
to revive the child after she wai.
told of the presence Of II
heartbeat and watched the in-
f ant, weakened by tbc effects of
the saline abortion It apparently
survived, struggling to breathe
It is alleged that.Dr Waddill,
44, strangled the infant to death
after ordering the nursery staff,
including Mrs. Griffith. to leave
the area.
It is further alleged thiil Dr
Waddill resorted to murder
because of his ·railur(' to abort
the 28-week fetus delivered that
night by an unwed. Jft.year-old
mother.
Chatterton said he will obtYin
testimony from a witness who
will tell the jury that Dr. Wad
dill told nursery staff members
that the baby had suffered
tremendous brain damage and
s hould not be allowed to Uve.
Watson argued while question-
ing Mrs. Griffith that nurse Pat
Olvera had only reported a
artbeat and the fact that the
y cried beeause she wanted
ate a sense of urgency
amon an apparently letharli!ic
nurser staff
And e repeat.ed.ly asked Mrs.
Griffit to agree with him that
an infant with a breathing rate
of four gasps a mlnulc and a re·
ported heart l'ate of 80 beats per
minute couldn't be considered to
be altve.
Watson referred to the vicUm
throughout h is cross·
examination as '"\hls product of
conception " "this tblrul." and
·'this creature7
But Mrs. Grtifith refused to
alter the testimony she earlier
gave for Chatterton.
Asked by Watson, wbile the
doctor-lawyer was disc\IHlng
her efforts to ~vive the cbUd. If
she felt that she had a ri"ht to
rule on the issue or Its life or
deatb, sheahakUyresponded:
"I den't think any of \II has a
ri&bt ~say who should Uve or
• wbo ahoUld dle. ·•
And she agaln a11ured the
persistent Watton that ahe
believed there Wal Ille ln the In·
fant U\at the coroner hA• ruled
was •tranfled to ituth last
Marchi. ·
"I'm torr)' •• abt told Wation.
''ln m)' .. ,.dc•l ml1'dlttt w11 a
llve babj. 1'hei'il wu 1 e In that
boCly or l woold not havt trled to
••velt."
D•lly 1'1111151.tt ,..,.. ..
.Cops S~ize
'~~gel .Dl1st~
Santa Ana pollce said today a
multi-million dollar 1Uegal drug
operation was raided this week
and a chemlst and his ~on "t:rt'
.... rreslt•d on multiple drui:
t.•harj!e:-.
Workrng 1n COOJUl·tion With
Lo:. Angeles police. the raid at
l\\O warehouses near the heart
of downtown Santa An;, yielded
\\hat Santa Ana Off1cu:-.
dei.cr1bcd as the mo!>l
soph1st1caled 1lle&al drug fa{
LOry ever uncovt-red in their
City
Ar r ested were chemist
Frank Cranz. 59, of Tustin. and
hi!> 19· year-old i.on, Mark Cranz.
also_;>f Tustin.
Police said Cranz 11> a licensed
chemist and that records seite<l
at the factor) show purchases
u~ed 111 thl' drug manufacturing
opt.•r .111on datt.' back to 197fi
llt'cord!> l>ho" that I ht· alleged
ill<'~al druit operation "a:. car·
nt.·d on undt>r a hu!.tncs:. license
1i.1>Ul'd to An.t.i lndui.tr~s. a
l1<·enM· n.coque:.tcd for c:hemical
manufactunnA purpoM•S,
Viejo Gets
OK to Fill
Its Lake
OR. WADDILL ANO WIFE LEAVE COURT IN SANTA ANA
Murder Trial of Huntington Harbour Ptiysiclan In Recess
rather and son were booked
into Orange Couty Jail on mult1
pie charges rl'laled to manufuc
lurtnA a c:ontrolll'd substance for
:.alt'
Pol1ct.' allege they "ert.• pro
du1.:111g PCP. or · Angel Oust. ..
at w arehous(•i, in lhc 805 hlocl.. or
t:ast C1v1t• Cenler Dnve
By JERR\' CL,\l:SEN
Of 1M O••I• "•lot Shit
Promises Statement T-tw l\11!'>s1on \"1e10 Company
Wiii:> j!l\t.'O pcrmll>l>IOn by the
Stal<' Wat(•r Resourt·('& Contrql
Bo11rd Thursdav to rc!>ume fill-
ing ll)> mun madl· n·creational
lak(' Polanski Silent
The l:irul( 1s used a!'! a tran
qu1hzcr tor horse:.. but reported
ly prod~ces -hallucinatory h1ghl>
when ingested hy human~ usual
I~ when rolled into cigarettes. Santa Mari.:urita WaL<•r D1l'i-
tr1cl i.poke!'>mt•n l>a1d tht:y were
hcheduled to he#!1n pumping
water into tht• lukt• at the rate of
I .i m1lhon ~allon:-di1ily today al
I p m . with lht• rlow SN IO tn·
creaM• to H I m1lh11n J.!:tllons da1
ly tomorr<iw
On Escape Reason Woman Sues
After"Rape PARIS t/\P> i'"u g111v(' him
director Roman Polunsk1. who
rlPcl to EuroJ><• only hours before
hP was to .ippeor for 1>cn1encmg
on 11 l>C:X "t·hargl• in Santa
Montl'a. !'illld toduv hp has not
dcc1ded on "hen o~ how he will
c·xplain h1~ action
,\ New York Po:-.l reporter who
rontal'lt•cl Polanski <11 hii. Purl!.
apartment Thursday night quot
c•d him as saying ··Please havti
i.y mpathy with my probleml> I
don't wunl to talk too mul·h
<1houl 11 today I will make a
)\t utt>mt•nt wh('n the ll ml' is n~ht
hut 1 dnn·l kn1rn \\ht.·n th<1t will
ht>
· I um on m,· own ht•r<• worl..~
ing 1t out ;>.;o one 1~ helping ml·
I will do (Jverylh1ft& on my own
When I wilt mnei • slatemenl I
will give 1l mysel(." the 44-year-
old Polanski "'as (luote<i <il> say
mg.
··Everyone wants to know 1r I
will go back Lo Los Angeles but I
can't answer th.al Too much 1s.
involved." the Post quoted him
as saying.
Post reporter Doug Thompson
in Los An~eles said Polanski
ubruptly hUJ:i~ up when asked if
he ever plannc•d lo return lo
California.
Polanski said that he might is-
s ue a statement or perhaps hold
a newi. conference hut that •·
nothinl! would be done hefore
Monda>
Ex-L~a
Coach Starts
Term in Jail
Former Laguna Beach
volleyball coach Ian Campbell
Gregory has begun serving a
one-year Orange County Jail
term imposed following h1!> con·
v1ctlon on charges or unlawful
!>ex ual intercourse with mino,.s
Gregory. 53. was sentenced by
Superior Court Judge William L
Murray after he pleaded guilty
rather than face trial on multi-
ple fe lony counL'>.
~e was accused on arrest of
sexually molesting several
members of girls' teams he
coached while living in Laguna
Beach.
lie was arrested in San Diego
aCler Art Colony police in-
vestigated reports that he had
sexual relationships with girls
between 13 and 16 years of age.
Thl• director of J.uch movies <1s
··Rot.emarv 's Oaby '' ~nd
.. Chinotown· arn\'ed tn Parih on
Thur ... d11y He d nown to I.on
don on Woo !>d&ay
I k fal' a :.cntt'Ol'l' ranginl!
from a Pl'l"ICK! on probation to a
ma\lmum 50 ycarl> in pni.on on
h1!' pll'U f,r l(u1lly 111 havinl! sex
uul rntcrcourse with a l:i-yeur
old girl Other charges of rap<·.
st'x perversion 11nd dru~ abuse
W('rt' dropped in a plt.•a harga111
arrangement
Pnlunsk1 ti. ;~ 1-'rent.'h c1l1Zt.'ll
and C<innut he l'X trad1tcd from
1-'runn• It would he possible for
l'ahlorn111 uuthorit1c!> to -.end all
t'vidence in lh(' ca!lt: to France.
and Fn·nch offlco1IS <:ou ld de·
l'ldl' tn prnset.·ule the c·a"e hert•
This v. Cb com~1dt'rt'd unlikely.
ho" e\'t.•r
'·
UERKEL~Y IA P > /\
woman raped by a man who
forced his way into her apart
ment last April hai. filed -su11
agam!>t the owner or the butldini-:
and Lhe re<ilty l'Ompany that
mana~ed it
The i.u1l I 1lcd Thursday 1n
/\la m edu Superior Court. on
hchalf of the woman. 21. allei:cl>
lhl' defendanb led hc·r to ~hcvl·
the apartment wui. :.ale 11011
!'>Cl'UrE'
Thl• l>U1l abo !'!a)., O\\ nl•r
Franct's B Willard and realt.orl>
Langer <ind W<ilson lnc failed to
i.N·un· tht· building properl)
l'' en after poltcc had told them ''
rap1i.l wu~ operat1nJ( In tht•
nl'igh borhood
M 1i.:-.11m V1t•10 (.'omp:.iny presi:
dent Ph1hp ll~illy l>Uid the lab
ll> e>. peeled to tw full sometime
het we1.-n Apnl 10 11nd June 10.
1'h1• Stull· W ;iter Resources
Con I rol Hoard \'nted unanimOUl'i·
ly Thursday 10 lift restrainti.
ni.:atnst filling th1• lake levied
las t March bet'OUS(' or lht>
)>(ill l•w1d1• dr<>ughl
The I :!5 h1ll1on ·~allon
C'ap;it•1\y lakt• basin subsequent
I~ hill> rt·m111nt•cl mw·lhtrd rull
"h1h· :!50 ramilll'~ moved into
homt.•s ~urroundm.: 1t. a Mission
\'tl'lll C11m1>uny -.pokesman said
Tht• lhrt.·t• ml'mlH'r stall' hoard
orclt•n•cl Th11rscla\' thllt the laki> m.1~ lw ftllt•cl ~ 1Lh drinkablt•
Culorndo R1\'l•r w11kr hut not
ol'thtlfn C II rm t 1'"Ht r
r""'~mum.~ri ·· . ·~ ·~,;. . "
Bare-Root Roses (~·r, I . & Fruit Trees ·: ~ ~~ · ,
You' 11 find over 60 varieties of .. -~J"\L_·
Hybrid"' Tea. Grandiflora. 1.
Floribunda and Climbing Roses on
display now. All No. 1 premium
quality. ·
Non-Patent Roses ...... Just '2.59
Patented Roses .....• _ .•. Just '4. 79
1978 Award Winners .... Just 55. 99
1 f I ~
If',
Choose r~ver 40 varielie'> or fruit trees ~pecially
seJected r~ own Soutbem California climate. Every
tree · hormone dipped and custom pruned for proper
develop~l.
Featuring ...... Apples, Apricots, Cheeries,
F igs. Nectarines,Peaches and Plums.
Standard Fruit Trees ............ Fro~ '4. 991
Dwarf Fruit 'rtees .............. From s7. 99
PRESERVATION DEPT. -
Orange County has been grow-
ing so fast over the past few dec-
ades that now we have cone on
a new kick. We are all out to
save things from the past.
This is good, I think, if we can
really figure out what or our his-
torical heritage is worth s aving
Most recently, for example.
the Huntington Beach Company
was swayed away from the no-
tion or knocking down a couple
of ol~ slloa which, back in the
1930s, had been used for corn
storage.
It d evelops that some hooty·
owls live In the silos, not to men·
tion skunks, squirrels and
weasels. So it was determined
that ttle silos were useful for
housiog as well as historical
flavor.
ALSO RECENTLY, an old
wooden water tower In Seal
Beach was saved . Re posing
alon g Pacific Coast Highway,
the tower has been dry for years
but debate raged long and hot
over whether or not it ought to
be preserved for posterity.
Certain wags s uggested the
main purpose in saving the old
tower was because it served as a
landmark for numerous bleary.
eyed citizens who wanted to
locate the saloon which does
business just beneath it.
Downcoast, the citizens or
Laguna Beach got into a con-
s iderable flap when the Main
Beach was scheduled to be
transformed into a beautiful
public park. They wanted to
save the beat-up old lifeguard
tower in the middle of the place.
Years ago, this tower was part
of a Union 76 ~as station across
Coast Boulevard. Back several
decades when Union decided to
rip it down aod build a new sta-
tion, former fire chief Bob
Thompson and several others
hauled it across the highway for
use by the lifeguards.
THEY NEVER REALlrED
they were hauling a historical
monument.
Anyway, when t h e Art
Colony's main strand got turned
mto a park, the old tower was
saved. First they tore out the in-
terior and rebuilt that. Then
they tore off the skin and rc-
poduced the exterior.
By the time that ex-gas station
was redone, you probably could
have buill the lifeguards a Ta.i
Mahal for the same dollars.
But you have to have a sense
or history for these things.
We're building new stuff in
this county so fast thal the peo-
ple with a sense of history have
trouble staying ahead of the
bulldozers. Today's historic
monument may be tomorrow's
pile of rubble. And the next day,
it's a taco stand. · -·•
The preservers of our historic
structures need to get a couple
of sets of signs made up so they
can c ruise our county and label
everything -either "Take" or
"Do Not Take." Just like the
signs you put out in the alley for
the trashman.
SOME SAVANTS of urban
pl anning have gazed upon
Southern Ca l ifornia and
marveled at it by noting that you
could bulldoze everything we've
built recently and start over
without losing anything of
. significance.
If t hat's true, no wonder we
try to preserve a couple of old
sDos, a barn or two and an ex-aas station.
Jobless
Tallies
Hit LOw
WASHINGTON (AP> -The
natlon--s unemployment rate
dropped another notc h in
January to 6.3 percent, its
lowest point in more than three
years, the government said to-
day.
Even more important than the
slight Improvement in the job·
less picture last month was the
report's confirmation that the
big and surprising drop in un-
employment in December, to 6.4
percent from 6.9 percent the
month before, was not the fluke
·that some economists had
reared.
THE LABOR Department said
an additional 270,000 people
found jobs in January, raising
total employment to 92.9 million.
The number of unemployed peo-
ple remained at 6.2 million,
about the same as in December.
The 0.1 percent drop in un -
employment last month meant
the Carter administration
already is near •the upper end of
its goal to redllce the nation's
jobless rate to between 6 percent
and 6.25 percent in '1978.
However, the job picture for
blacks and other minorities re·
mained bleak in January, as the
overall jobless l'ate for this
group of workers remained at
12. 7 percent. For black males
and black youths, jobs became
even more scarce.
THE DEPARTMENT said the
jobless rate for black adult men
rose to 9.8 percent in January,
up from 9.1 p e rce nt in
December . while the rate for
black youths rose to 38.7 per-
cent, up from 38 percent in
December. There was an Im-
provement for black adul t
women. whose jobless rate
declined to 10.8 percent from
December's 11.5 percent.
The Labor Department said
most of the employment gains
during J a nua r y were in
manufacturing, up 105,000, a nd
in wholesale and retail trade, up
95,000.
It said overall employment
tota)s were affected by the
strike in the coal mining In-
dus try, which has removed
160,000 workers from payrolls.
although they are not counted as
unem ployed.
""----· ... r
I •
)
Bridging t~ Gap
It takes some effort to get 6-year·old Michelle Steele to
her school in Harlan County, Ky. Yocum Creek runs
between the. Steele home and the school bus stop and the
local bridge has been washed out since October. So
Michelle inches her way over the creek on an 18-inch·
wide steel beam .twice a day. Mother Louise accom-
panies her to help make s e the little girl doesn't fall
into the storm-swollen creek.
Ti111e to urchase
~
Washington Star
WASHINGTON CAP) -Time Inc., the magazine publishing com·
pany. has agreed to buy the Washington Star newspaper from Joe L.
Allbritton for $20 mUlion, Time and Allbritton announced today.
Allbritton, sole owner and president or the Evening Star
Newspaper Co. ror the l ast four years, has a1reed to stay on as
publisher of the Star, the an-
nouncement said.
Purchase of t he afternoon
newspaper, with a daily circula·
tion of 350,000, is subject to ap·
proval by the directors of both
companies.
THE STAR HAS encountered
financial difficulties in recent
years. Allbritton said that since
he took control, the newspaper's
losses "have been reduced from
$1 million a month to something
near the break-even point."
Time's purchase of the Star
would mean both or the capital'~
newspapers would be affiliated
with weekl~ news magazines
T h e Washington Pos t an d
Newsweek and other media pro-
perties are owned by the same
company, the Wasnington Post
Company.
Time Inc . 's o nl y oth er
newspaper property is Pioneer
Press, a group of 17 suburban
Chicago newspapers that the
company purchased in 1969.
Rapist Des~rihes
His Urge to ·Kill
ALLBRITTON PAID $61
m illion to acquire Washington
Star Communications Inc ..
which included the newspaper
and its broadcast properties.
from the Noyes, Adams and
Kauffmann families, which had
controlled the newapaper for
more than a century.
WEATHER I NATION
W ASHlNGTON CAP) -Tbe Cartu adralnlatraUon ,atel»Ped Into
the 60-day-old nationwide coal strike tod._,, asklne United lllH
Workers President Arnold Miller to p6etpone a schedulld mMtlal of
his union's bare$tna council as contud talks reached a crttfeal
potni. MWer eomplled.
A White House spokeswoman aettling on terms that Coulcl IDd said Labor Secretary Ray tbestrike.
Marshall t.elephoned Miller on
behalf of President Carter . She CARTER HAS COMB 11Dder
d"escrlbed the request for a one· ncli•asing pressure to lntenme
day delay in the meetlng as an in the strike as the effeets of
effort to give union and industry dwlndling coal s upplies have
bargainers more time to reach a been felt by utilities and other
contract agreemi?nt. ~~stomers. especially in the
Miller had called the council middle W~t and Appalachia,
into session today to brief it on But the president told a news
the status of the negotiations conference earlier this week he. ~med at ending the walkout. had no lntenUon of invoklnf the , · strike-baiting provisions o the
IN ANNOUN~G po~tpone-Taft-Hartley Act, which pro-
ment of the council meeting un-vldes for an 80-day cooling-off
til Tuesday, Miller told re---period.
porters: "President Carter Marshall also has stressed a
asked me to postpone for one "non-interventionist" policy
day the meeting or the council." tow a rd labor disputes in
Associate White House Press general.
Secr etary ·c 1audia Townsend
s aid it was Marshall who made
the call.
Mediators, meanwhile, met
with union negotiators as they
sought to nail down a deal that
could end the longest UMW
s trike in history. The union had
struck for 59 days in 1946.
"The mediators are m eeting
with the parties separately and
will be doing that this morning,"
said a' mediation spokesman,
Norman Walker.
..THEllE PROBABLY will be
...-a joint bargaining ~ession later,
depending oo how things go."
Negotiators for the union and
the coal industry, reported at
one point "very close" to agree-
ment, bCd recessed their talks
shortly alter midnight without
settling on terms that could end
the strike. . .
Federal m ediators
meanwhile. met with unlo~
negotiators as they sought to
nail down a deal that could end
the longest UMW strike in his-
tory. The union had struck for 59
days ig 1946. .
· "THE MEDIATORS are meet-
ing with the parties separately
and will be doing that this morn-
ing ," said a m e diation
spokesman, Norman Walker.
. "There probably will be a
joint bargaining session later,
depending on how things ,:o."
Negotiators for the uruon and
the coal industry, report~ at
one point ''.very closl!" to 'agree-
ment, bad recessed their talks
s hortly alter m!dnigbt without
Presley's
Ex Files
For Money
M EMPHJS, Tenn. (AP) -·
Priscilla Presley, former wife of
Elvis Presley, has filed a clahn
for about $357,000 from his
estate as the balance of the set-
llem ent she was awarded in
their 1973 divorce.
Mrs. Presley also asked that
tbe est ate provide the other
money and benefits for her and
their daughter, Lisa Marie, as
provided in the divorce decree.
INCLUDED IN Probate Court
records checked Thursday was a
claim for more than $356,900 as
the balance or $725,000 awarded
to Mrs. Presley in the divorce.
T he amount was to have been
paid in monthly installment& of
$6,000 or more and was to have
been paid in full by Aug.1, 1982.
Vernon Presley, acUng for his
son, mortgaged Graceland
M anslon in April for more than
$494,000, reportedly to secure the
remaining amount due Mrs.
Presley . The mortgaie is in·
eluded in the leeal papers filed •
with.her claim and the claim
notes that the money is secured
by the mortgage.
PITTSBURGH <AP) ''I said I fell like kiJling somebody and h~
said, 'Why don't we r ape and kill somebody?' " David Rall told Al-
legheny County Judge Donald Ziegler. _
Rall, 26, gave the explanation Thunsday in describing an evening
of sex and violence last August that left a 14-year-old girl raped and
permanenUy scarred.
Another Pittsburgh man,
David Schmidt, 28, prevlously
pleaded guilty to being Rall 'a
partner in the crim e and was
sentenced to from 25 to 70 years
in prison. '
••1 JUST BROKE up wllh my
girl," Rall said when questioned
by the judge. "I just went wild. I
couldn 'l stop myself.''
over her with their car. Rall and
Schmidt also pleaded guilty to
laying a bar across her neck and
standing on either end in an at-
tempt to stran~le ber.
''I"m sorry about it," Rall
said.
Ziegler s et sentencing for
March, but told Rall: "The facts
of this case are so grievous that
I'm telling YQU right now there
will be a substantial prison sen -
tence." He faces a maximum of
52 to 104 yea.rs in prison and
fines or $180,000.
.Wead~
of
G£ove ~~-·It :r .,r-·. . vd "Do you have any defense to
the case that fOU know or?"
Ziegler asked.
''No, sir," Rall responded.
Present in the Pittsburgh
courtroom was their victim , who
had accepted a ride while walk-
ing home.
AFTEIJ RAPING the girl,
police said. the two m en ran
ln_ a tape recording of a coo-
f essaon that was played in the
courtroom, Rall repeatedly
mentioned that shortly before
the attack he had been ejected
from the house he shared with
bJs atrlfriend.
·southern States Chilled
This Valentine's Day send your
love a greeting all the world can
share with a Daily Pilot Heart of
Love. It's easy, compose your
personalized greeting and we'll
set your message in. type to fit the
border of your choice or your
hand written thoughts may
appear in the bor,der you select.
Borders come· in the 3 sizes as
shown Below: $15, $10 and a
special child's size for' $2. (You
must be under 12 to qualify for
the littlest greeting.) ~ Snow Flurries Cover Great Lakes, Ohio Valley
'te•peratare.
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If you wish to create·
your own decorated
greeting, use· a black
pen and draw your
design to fit one of the
dotted line "hearts ..
shown below.
For help with your ad,
just call 642-5678 and
a frl•ndly Valentine
ad-viser wm be happy
to assist you. And, lf
you like, you can
charge your Heart of
Love or use yQur
Master Charge or
BankAmertcard.
DAILY PILOT
f
Brown to
SACRAMENTO <AP> -Gov. Edm~d Brown
Jr . stung by the Senate's second rejection of hls
P eripheral Canal bill. says as "a last resort" he
may build the canal without le1isla\ive approval.
Brown bluntly cntlclied Senate foes of his $3.4
billion water projects bUJ after Thursday's 20-14
, otc. saying opponents were .. foolish, very short·
sighted" and actin& with political motives.
The bill needed 27 votes, and Brown said he
would ask the Senate to vole again lat.er this
month.
BROWN DID NOT SPECIFY how he might
build t he cana l without legislatlve approval, but
said "it's possible" with federal help.
Ron Robie Brown's director of water re-
sources. said the 1959 act creating the California
Water Project gave his department authority t.o
add elements to the pro1ect. He said he will meet with
Fnday. February 3, 1978 DAILY PILOT
Build rJanal Anyway?
Int.eriorDepartmentofflclaJanext week. Southern California unlC6S you destroy the Delta to
Supporters of the plan. SB 346 by $en. Ruben do It," sold Campb II, who is s ponaorin1 o
Ayala, D-Chino, include the powerhal Los Angeles· alternative bill to build six new ~·~s. includins
based Metropolitan Water District. som e environ-three on the rree·flowinj Etil Raver on th•
1 mental groups and the Association or California Northern California coa»t.
W .ter Agencies.
THEY SAID THE PROJECTS in the bill -
three major new Northern California dams, plus the
43·mlle Peripheral Canal through tbe Sacramento-
San Joaquin Della -are essential to protect the
Delta from salt water iotr~lon and to deliver more
water to the San Joaquin Valley and Southern
Califomla.
But roes, led in the Senate by Sen. WtUlam
Campbell, R·Haclenda Heighta, sa.Jd the proposal
is "fraudulent'' and that the canal, if built, would
be "a monument of our errors.
·'Thia bill provides no additional water for
BROWN SAID THE BILL "WILL be broua_ht
up for reconslderolion, and I'm going to try ag&\A.
But I expect dlrflcully," Brown said.
"There's a glimmer of hope. There are f4
votes there now and three RepubUCJlns who either
voted no or did not vote Thursday may switch, B~own
sald. He said the three Republicans he hopes io
switch are Dennis Carpenter of Newport Beach. Lou
Cusanovtch of Van Nuys and John Briggs o!
Fullerton.
··1 talked to Carpenter, and he did not close the
door. Sen. Carpenter Is a very important person in Cops Seek ' B'ank Ban dit -the-Peripn-eralC-an1&l-debl!te_.·· Bro_wn sit-id. -
..............
1915 PORTRAIT POSE RECREATED
Lorraine Collett Petersen, 70
'Sun-Maid'
Historic Day Recalled
FRESNO CAP) It w~Fresno sun
shining down on her aubur~,,h~·i·~hnd red sun
bonnet that caught the eye of Leroy Payne
one Apnl day in 1915.
Payne. a Sun-Maid Ra1s10 Co. executive.
:.aw pretty Lorraine Collett and knew that
was the image he wanted for his product.
What resulted was an emblem of a smil·
ing bonnet-clad girl holding a basket of
ra1s1ns with the sun al her back. It became
familiar lo millions of Americans and gave
Miss Coll<'ll a double identitv as the ··sun
Maid Girl " ·
NOW IN HER 70s, LORRAINE Collett
Petersen's auburn hair has grayed, her face
has aged and she walks with J cane But she
still rcmt•mh<>rs back more than 60 years to
\YhCn ll all began
She recalls s1tt10g for thn::e hours a day
for almo!>l a month while her portr ait was
painted. The fi rst effort was r cJected because
Payne wanted the sun 10 the background.
Miss Colletl's hair hanging over her shoulder
and her head lilting to one side
M 1ss Colletl's association with the raisin
industry began with u summer job at a
Frc::.no packing company while s he was in
hii::h school in 1914
TllE NEXT YEAR, SHE AND TWO
oth<'r girl!. wen• asked to work in -Ole raisin
booth at the-Panuma-Pacific International
Expos1t1on in San Francisco
In ~pril she returned home to participate
in the first Raisin Day Parade. It was while
tirvinl? her hair 1n the s un on the day of the
parade lhal Pc.iyne conceived lhe idea fo r the
Sun-:\1 aid symbol
Shl' "a:. pauJ Siil J \\eek for working al
the fair but say" "hl• received nothing lo pose
for I he porlrmt
MOST Pl::OPLI:: VISITING the exposi-
t10n f.iilcd to reah1.c "he was lhe girl on the
ra1:-1n boM·~ t\ fl·~ Fresnans did re~Qgnize
her hN·auM' '"my dad had told them." she..I su~'l.
Worker~ at the fair were aware or the
tonncction. however, and .. the guys from the
orchestra said they wunted to dance with the
Sun· Maid girl." .
When the exposition closed, she studied
nursing ond continued to work for Sun-Maid,
appearing in Raisin Day Parades for a cou-
ple of years. Latet:Shc did some modeling,
nppcnred In a few movies and operated a
convalescent home for many years.
1T WASN'T UNTIL 1964 that Mrs .
Petersen heard from Sun-Maid again. The
cooperative invited her to take part in the ded-
ication of a new processing plant at nearby
Kingsburg
Ten years later. Sun-Maid President
Fr ank Light presented Mrs. Petersen with a
brome rcphl'a of the Sun-Maid emblem.
In return, the "Sun-Maid Girl" turned
O\ er to lhl' company the onginal portrait
she had kept since 1915.
That lime. the company paid her Sl,700.
Knievel
Treated
LOS ANGELES <AP)
-An old motorcycle ln·
'jury may land daredevil
Evet Kni1vel Into the
County-USC Medical
Center for further tests
if the cause or the pain
he Is reportedly having
cannot be found.
K n i e v c I --w a s
transferred fr o m
Wa)'side Honor Farm ~hursday, where he ls
"'lervlng a six-month aeD·
tence for beating his
CARLSBAD <AP> A man wearing a fake
beard and apparently well versed in bank pro-
cedures is being !>ought after escaping with '42.600
from a Bank or Amenca branch .
Although police patrol units and detectives ar·
r ived within minutes of the holdup Thursday, of-
ficers said the robber vanished with t.he loot in a
plastic bag.
· FBI agents @ave this--------
account of the heist: ( J The bandit strolled STATE
into the bank about 12:30 ._ _______ _...
p. m ., asked to see the
manager. produced an
automatic pistol and de manded that the bank's
own safe deposit box be opened.
Tax BUI Drafted
SACRAMENTO <A P ) The chairman of the
state Senate Finance Committee says he's drafting
a bill lo raise $5 25 billion in new taxes - just in
case the Jarvis property tax initiative passes.
The Jarvis initiative, to be on the June ballot
as Prop 13. would -according to critics -cripple
local governments by taking away $7 to $8
hit hon in re.,,enue and providing no replacement
WILLIAMS (i\P> Some Northern California
farmers have halted a l 13·car freight train to show
their support or lhC' American Agricultural ~ove·
mcnt stnkf'
Diainond Firlll
Sued by Liz
former press aaent with
a baseball bat. He was
taken to the County Jail
medical faclllty for a
phystcal examlnaUon
after complaining of
paln, 1 aald Sheriff ls
Deputy Jlm Borland.
kit 3 WeellendS of Fet>fUOty 1978
T <*s. Movies &. btbta on
Mollr-. ~· CCXJSI04
Wde 6. Oc:eon E~cnnent
HOURlV WHALEWATCH CRUSES
Speclol E venti Land l s.a PofadeS. Novy St"C»
A spokesman said Thursday the farmers from
Colusa, Tehama, Glenn aod Sutter counties parked
their tractors across the main Southern Pacific
crossing in Williams early Wednesday.
liART Ride• Free
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -"It's just like steal-
ing," chortled one passenger as the troubled Bay
Area Rapid Transit district gave free rides to all •
comers Thursday to atone for weeks of jammed
cars and breakdowns.
The day of free travel, estimated to be costing
the system $100,000, was authorized last week by
BART directors to follow the end of a 69-day bus
strike. The Alamcdu·Contra Costa Transit District
strike ended J an. 29.
Marine Plea"• GuHt11
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A teenage Cam p
Pendleton marine has 'pleaded guilty to first
degr ee murder In the bludgeon slaying or a •
Rancho Penasquitos woman last summer.
Lance Cpl. William F. Martin, 19, entered the
plea Thursday before Superior Court Judge Raul
Rosado, who scheduled sentencing for March 2
Citizens Fear
Pet Poisoner
LEUCADIA (A P ) "Warning. Animal
poisoner at work in your neighborhood.'' say the
grim signs in this c·oastal community 20 miles
north of Sun Diego.
Officials of the Rancho Coastal Humane Socie-
ty started Issuing the posters after about 20 pets
were poisoned in the pai,,t two months, Mary Port,
director of the animal i;helter, said Thursday.
• o;tfXE.L • HERITAGE • BAKER • HEKMAN • MASTERCAAFT • WIEMAN • HIBRITEN •
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Newport Store Only
We are m the final
phase of our moving
sale. After fifteen years
in the same location, we
are about to move .
Prices are rock bottom,
many reductions
slashed from existing
winter sale prices.
Save up to 50°/o on
famous brand names we
are known for. We
cannot take everything
with us , so take
advantage of this
once-in-a-lifetime sale.
All sales final and cash or credit card only.
Our new location is at the corner of
Newport Blvd. and 16th Street, Costa Mesa
fret D11itttJ llill. ltslp Senlce Allilllllt
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NIW..O"T llACH l.AQUNA HACH
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I. at•U OH• llCINOo\Y TIWJ IANflO.'I' -t .... TO I ~PM
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Orange Coast Daily Pilot
New Airp{}rt Site
Study Redundant
H l'amt>' almost YS c. bad joke recently when the
Orange County Trans portation Commission was asked to
endorse a prnposed study of possible airport sites within
the county.
What made the proposal seem like a bad joke was
that in the past 14 years there have been four such studies
that collectively have cost more than $1.5 million.
Nothing has come from those voluminous and costly
;iirport studies except the realization that Orange Coun-
1y's airport site options were fading with each new
~plurge of.urbanization.
Consequently, it is unlikely that the research pro
p o::,cd by Inter County Airport Authority will be any more
n~warding than lhat.~already done.
The authonty. in truth. i~ little more than a born
c.igdin \'er~ton of the defunct Chino Hills Airport
.\uthonl\.
That airµort authority fell apart when Anaheim
'' 1thdrew. Now the Inter County Airport Authority. madt.'
up of three Orange County cities as well as Chino in San
Bernardino County, hat> taken up the quest for an airport
!->Ile .•
That quest t•xLends r,to farther th~n the Chmo lhlls in
northeastern Orange County. the one possible site that
hasn 't already undergone exhaustive study.
Leaders in the study move should recognize that fact
<Jnd not try to pass a single-minded study off as an ex
aminntion of altc-rnatives that wcot down th<' tuhes long
ago.
Unions Los·
The image of labor unions 1::.n 't so hot the::.c day::.
It wasn'l improved this week when 17 leaders of the
powerful Teams ters Gnion were charged with playing
fast and loo::,e with million!'> of dollars in pension funds un-
der their control
Yet the l '.S. Senate 1s right now preparing to debate·
~ bill that \\Ould stre ngthen labor's role with or without
the support of the public. Similar legislation already has
pa::,¥'d the J louse of Representatives . •
CongreJ-,s must not be listening to what most folks feel
.1bout the pow<!r of labor unions. A poll ('OnducteS. by the
res pected Opmion Research Corp. of Princeton, fl'. J ..
..;a) s flatly thl' public feels unions already have too much
power '
Proposed ch;mgcs in the National Labor Relation::.
\cl, heavily backed by organized labor to bolster dwindl-
ing union ranks, would make it much easier for unions to
recruit and organize non-union employees.
With government backin~. prOfessional union or·
~anizers would be authorized to campaign on an
l'mployer's property during working hours . And firms not
cooperalm~ would he subjl'Cl to severe penalties.
But the opinion poll revealed only 22 perc·ent of tht.•
.!Cllc ral publiC' favor::,.lt.·~i!->lalion to make union organiz3
lion easter. while 25 pcrtent would support laws making
1t morE:' d1fftcult und 40 pcrC'cnt ~aid they think current
laws should not ht• ('h;1nged lnten•::,t m~I~ cnoui:h. 1;3 percent of all per::,ons
rl'::.ponding and :;1 percent of union m embers said they
think loo much power is c:oncentrated in the hands of
tabor union leaders and 73 percent -including many un-
ion memix'rs -favored a law that would allow a person
lo get and keep a job without joining a union.
Forty percent of the union members said they feel
muon leaders represent their interests "poorly.··
'.\lore than half those polled expressed the view that
org::in1zcd labor has too much influence on Congress
That influence was successful in the House. It remains to
be seen whether the Senate will respond to the labor lob·
hy or the electorate as a whole.
:\Jeanwhile. the Labor Department is trying to figurr
out JUst how much.money Teamsters President Frank E.
ritzsimmons and 16 other former trustees of the scandal-
riddC'n union pension fund channeled into questionablr
loan transactions deals involving gambling casinos.
race tracks. uncl<'rground fif!ures and risky real estate
ventures.
Best guess. say insider::,. 1::, tens of millions of dollars
That arrogant caper -along with public opinion
ought lo give the Senate pause before it gives unions still
more power over the way our country is run.
• Op1ntons expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot.
Other views el(preased on this pao• afe those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment Is Invited. Address The Daily Piiot. P.O.
Bpi( 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92828. Phone (714) 642-"321.
Boyd/Shoplifters
B1LM. BOYD
Police statisUcians think
lbey know that the typical
grocery atore gets hit by an
average ot six ahopllften a
day.
To that lencthY liatol phony
expressions our Laniuage
alan is proud n•ver w bave
med. please add "mind bog-
gling ....
Q. "How can the capital ci-
ty of Albany, N.Y .• have high
and low tides when It's 150
mUesinland?"
A. Because so much or the
Dear
Hudson River lies below sea
level Albaf\y's tides on that
river run•~ feet.
..
r __ ,.., ____ ---
...,_. __
Friday, Februaty 3, 1978
...
Jack Anderson
• • I
\'
Robert N W-.d!Publl1her ~s Ke-vii/Editor
&.rblr• Krelbfch/Edltot>I-' P-ee Editor
We Don't Say 'No' to ~the Shah
WASHINGTON -No foreign
potent.ate is pampered by
Washington quite like the shah
of Iran. His latest request for
American arms, for example,
hiv> the blessing of President
Carter. So once again, it looks as
if the shah will get just about
what be wants.
Yet the president has pledged
to hold down arms exports
abroad .
particular!)
to d1etaton.
who use the
arms to sub
Jugate their
people It
should be no
secret in thl'
While flouSl'
that the shah
r u n !. a
repressive regime.
Nevertheless, Defense
Secretary Harold Browo sat
down personally with the shah
last November to go over Iran's
military shopping list. Brown re-
ported back lo the president at
the next Cabinet meeting.
According to the confidential
minutes. ··or. Brown said that
he spent over etn hour meeting
with the Shah of Iran They di!>·
<'ussed the longer-term perspec·
t1ve on defense issues, as well as
arms purchases from the United
Stales
• I PUB~I~\~
CONFIDENCE
Earl Waters
. 4 "The president said Iran
has purchased an average of
$2.7 billion per year in military
items from the United States
since 1973. -Or. Brown said that
Iranian purchases last year
were $5 billion.'·
In mllltary terms. this would
make the shah's remote desert
domain our foremost ally. For
Iran has received more US
military equipment tharn any
other foreien nlltioo.
Brown told the Cabinet that
·'the figures are being worked
o u t n o w f·o r t h 1 s y e a r · s
purchases " liut \\ e couldn 'l '1nd
anyone in government who
would discuss the figures
\ PENTAGON spokesman
said the estimates have been
subm1ttod to the White House.
Rut a White House spokesman
said no estimates have been re·
ceived or are expected. The
s hah 's request will be con-
sidered individually and no
totals will be available until the
l!nd of the year. he said
Our own sources estimated
that the shah would spend
.iround S3 billion with the Pen-
tagon during this fi scal year.
More than $1 billion has alrealiy
been spent l>inct• the fiscal year
began on October I, they said
Thl' s hah· I!. determined lo
equip his air force, for example,
with the best fighter planes
I
America can produ~~ -the
F-16. He has already ordered 160
F-16s, but now he wants 140
more. These additional fi&hters
should cost around $4 billion,
although the full payment
wouldn't likelr be made this
year.
The shah's most controversial
purchase will be seven huge fly-
ing command posts at a cost of
$1.2 billion. These plane5, part or
the Airborne Warning and Con-
trol Systems <AWAC l. will be
loa~ed down with super-secret
equipment. Congressmen weN!
touchy about entrusting these
sensitive planes to the shah
What the congressmen haven't
been told is that one or the
shah's top intelhgence officers,
Lt. Gen. Ahmed Mogharabi, has
already slipped AWAC secrets to
the Soviets. He was caught and
executed. But it was too late to
save the secrets.
Both the U.S. Embassy in
Tehran and the National Secur1
ty Council in Washington knew
about the Iranian general who
sold out to the Soviets. But the
scandal was hushed up. Ap·
parently, US. officials don't
want to offend the shah by tn·
terfering with his pur:chase of
AW AC aircraft.
MARSTON STORY There's
more than meets the eye to the
sto ry or the sac king or
Philadelphia's brash, young.
crusading U.S. Attorney David
Marston.
Jimmy Carter started out, as
he put it himself on June 16, ·
1976, to take federal proseeutors
out or politics and appoint them
"strictly on the basis of merit."
He also wanted judges to be
qualified.
But he collided with political
realily ln the person of Sen.
James Eastland, D·Miss., the
owlish. old Senate dean. As
Jud1c1ary chairman, lhe
powerful Eastland bas jurisdic-
l ton over the Justice Depart-
ment He has used his power not
infrequently to stall appoint-
ments and kill legislation he
dt>esn 't like
Hts blessing was needed. for
example, to get Griffin Bell con-
r1 rm ed as Carter's attorney
general Back m De<:ember 1976,
Bell and Eastland got to1eth~r
m Atlanta for a heart-to-heah
talk
Easlland promised his com-
mittee would approve appeals
<'Ourr Judges, even though they
were appointed because of their
1udlcial ability rather than their
polili<'ol connections But the
:.enator 1ns1sted that U.S. al·
torncys shouJd remain partisan
polill(•al appointees
I\ SECRET deal was reached,
and Bell was quickly confirmed.
rhereafter, he kept his bargain
and began replacing Republican
US attorneys
In Philadelphia, meanwhile,
Ma rs ton was wmnmg corruption
convictions against some of the
most powerful politicians in the
state. Most of them happened to
be Democrats. who began
mnaeuvering behind the scenes
to get Marston off their backs .
Among other alleged scandals,
Marston began investigating \he
funding and constNclion of 1o1
new wing to the Hahnemann
Hospital in Philadelphia. The
hospital a llegedly paid $500,000
in fees to the law firm of Rep.
Joshua Eilberg, O·Pa., for help
in securin~ federally subsidized
loans amounting lo $35.5 million.
It may have been merely a
c:o tncidence thut Eilberg was
pushing legislation that would
se\•erely .limit the power of a
prosectitor to conduct grand jury
investagallons It may have been
a coincidence again that Eilberg .
telephoned President Carter and
demanded th.it Ma rs ton be
fired
E1lberg, meanwhile, became
a targ<'l of Marston·s mvesttga-
lton
\ . .
How ~rown Has Honored His Tax Pledge
When running for governor in
1974 Jerry Brown repeatedly
pledged in various ways that
there would be no new taxes and
no Increased taxes.
It was not too di!Cicult a pro·
mise to make for his pre·
decessor ,
Ronald
Reagan, had
sfg ned in -
creases in in-
come and
other taxes
during his
eight years in
office suffi.
cleat to
finance a
budget boost Crom $4 billion to
$10 billion and still leave a sur-
plus in the treasury when he
turned the state over to Brown.
As time has proved those in-
creases were far too much and
the surplus has been growing in
leaps and bounds now exceeding
$3 billion despite the fact that
Brown himselt bas increased the
budget to $16.5 billion in just
three abort years.
Art Hoppe
The major factor in this
enrichment or the state treasury
has been inflation which has
been so rapid as to outdistance
the prolllic spending or the state
offlclals.
There are tax experts who
contend the very fact that in-
come tax rates have not been
adjusted for jnflation, by the
mechanism terrqed "indexing,''
1s in itaetl a tax illcrease. That ls
based upon the fact that cost of
living wage increases llave re·
suited in the payment &r higher
income taxes by individuals
while experie nc ing a
diminishing of lake-home pay.
REGARDLESS of one's view
creased taxes during his first
three years in office.
Without going into great detail
it will be remembered that
Brown's first effort was to
eliminate the "loopltoles" in tax·
ation. This resulted in an in·
crease of some $43 million m
laxes by altering tile oil deple-
lion allowances, $23 million in·
crease on the insurance industry
by eliminating the home office
exemptions, and $2S mlJlion in·
crease in income laxes by im·
posing a minimum personal in·
come tax. Wh.en questioned
about these Brown said he
meant there would be no new
"generar· taxes.
on that l,sue lt re}'Dalns that the SINCE THAT time there have
state is taxing lb cltiiens rar too been other little bites here and
much or otherwise it wouldn't there such as the tax on all utili·
have 41Jl)' surpluses. The reasons ty bills to finance the Energy
government should not tu Commission to the tune or $17
beyond what it needs to operate m p lion , a no lb e r ta x on
are many and have been well telephone bills to finance the
argued elsewhere. new 911 emerg-ency system, both
Wbat is or apeclal interut ot which would seem to be about
here is how Bro~ has honored •• "general" as •tu can be.
hiJ pled&e for no new or ln· • 'l'ben there was a $3.6 miWon
increase in fees charged in-
surance companies. a I percent
increase in the takeout on
horseracing at the fairs along
with a J percent increase in
takeout on harness racing.
Also there was the elimination
of interest to corporations on tax
overpayments which saves the
states $5 to $6 million a year in
rerunds. And an additional $15
miJllon revenues gained by
atterlng income and other tax
payments "to conform•· with
federal practices.
BUT THE biagest blte of all
was the increase by more than
$600 million In the taxes paid ror
unemployment insurance.
Br9wn, by some legerdemain
says those aren't taxes but pre-
miums. thus defying the defini-
tions or the tax ln the revenue
~odes .
And nothing could be more or
a general tax than that levied on
every employee to finance • $64
million increase in disability
fund cost& to extend payment& to
pregnancies.
Watch Out for. Our 'Vast and Restless Energies' . . .
I was so inspired by the Presi·
dent'a State or the Union speech
that I called up my con-
gressman, Bagley Boodle, to of·
fer him my help in what Mr.
Carter so aptly described as
"the task that lies ahead."
"Mr. Cooaresscnan," t began
.. 81 one or your constituents .•. "
.. Call m e
eagley, dear
rlend." h e
llld.
· ·•aaalty.
old buddy," t
aald. "1 hove
Juat li•tencd
to our Pml·
dent say you
leadert must
'call fotth th• vut and reslles.~ oerlla°"' « u peoplo to. aa be PUt it 110 ... 11. 'bulld for the'
future.' And I w1nted you to
lcnow yoa can bavo all Utt vast
and resUess eneraies I've aot "
"Tbat'1 wonderful news!" ht
cried. •·would. you like to sturr
fnvelope !"
"8ag.ley, I don't think that's
what the Pr iclent had in mind.
lo fact he spedncally said that
wbal thb l'oUntry needs ls 'a
ne,v aplrll ... ll partnuahlp bel..,een U.O.e who ltad and ta.ose wlloeled'. ·•
..
beacon' for all of you who are
'elected to serve'."
"A beacon, eh·! How do you
feel about going around rlnglng
doorbells af\er dark..,"
••Bagley, as the Pre11ident
said , 'The foundation of this
partnership ts truth, the 09urage
to face hard dedslons and a
haslc faith and tru1t in the
wisdom and strength or the
American people, wblcb Is enc.
Don 'L you have faith and trust In
my wtsdom end atrenath?"
"I do! 1 do' Believe mt, you
co around rln.11nc doorbell~
alter dark in my district an~
you'll nttd all the atr nith you
Cit\ 1et."
says we \\on't get anywhere
without that "
"You can count on Hone.st
Baeley Boodle. You scratch my
back and I'll scratch yours."
"Frankly. Boodle. I'll bel you ...
haven't even sought 'fresh f
answers unhindered by the st.ale
prescriptions of lhe past• or,
most Important of aJJ, ·r~
dedlcotcd' hourself. ••
"I will ! I wlll ! Meanwhile, you
1urc you don't want to stuff en·
v lopf'11?"
TBA.TR WHEN 1 told Boodl
where. ~e could stuff hi~ el\·
vetopes
The President 1ure •• an ~·
splrina pealcer. bit he lhould
M more careful. tr our ltader5
o•tr do ~all forth OUT vut am
houndl ncr1l , we'll lbn>w
the bum oul or olflte.
-
.,
•
BOATING I ORANGE COUNTY I OBITUARIES Fnday, Febf'Uary 3, 1978 * DAil Y PILOT A 7
QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi to Race?
ne Quit,s Man:zanillo Event
By ON iOCKABE\°' pearance in lonr.dlstance ra498.
o.My ., ... a..u.,. wrttw
"No, I didn't hurt 1t skiina. I hurl it paying for the
skiing."
Deatlu Elsewhere
T entry list in the San Diego to
Manzanillo, Mexico, race dropped to
41 Thursday with the withdrawal of
Sunshine, a 43·foot entry from
Acapulco.
And race officia)s at the San Diego
Yacht Club had their collective
fingers crossed today on the fate or
Merlin, the 67·foot ultra-light dis·
placement yacht out of Santa Cru
which is one of the ravorltes for fint
to finish in an anticipated boat-for-
boat battle with Drifter, Ragtime and
Christine.
Merlin, owned and skippered by
Bill Lee, was apparently landlocked
because of heavy s ilting in Santa
Cruz harbor after the recent storms.
Attempts to dredge a channel to get
the deep-draft Merlin to sea were un·
!>uccessful.
LATEST REPORTS were that
Merlin escaped her s andy prison by
being tilted almost to her beam-ends
with SO.gallon drums secured to her
t.::..=:::z::::i:=:::::==:==r":=::~mli:::AIC::miD::Dm-=a masthead, allowing her to be towed to SC$. She was freed about 4:30 p.m.
Wednesday and set sail on the 40():
mile voyage to the San Diego st.arti.ng
line. As of noon Thursday, Merlin
had not been heard from.
NEW YORK (AP)
Don Freeman, 69,
children's book author.
artist and illustrator Cor
Death Notices
AUSTIN
such authors as James
Thurber, died Wednes-
day after a heart attack.
GRAND RAPIDS,
Mich. CAP} -Gezina
1'1eljer, 91, a Dutch im·
migrant who helped her
late husband Hendrik
build the 28·store Meijer
Thrifty Acres retail
grocery chain on bor·
rowed money. died Wed·
nesday in Miami Beach.
Fla.
RICHMOND, Va.
IC Merlin fails to make the Satur·
day noon starting signal it would
leave the battle for line honors
between Drifter, a 69·foot ULDB
sailed by Harry Molos hco, and
Ragtime, the elapsed time reeO'"rd
holder for the race, both from Long
Beach Yacht Club.
A dark horse in the first-to-finish
skirmish is Christine, an 8'·foot
backyard·buill sloop skippered by
Fred Preiss .. Pa.cific Mariners Yacht
Club. This is Christine's first ap-
FIVE LOCAL yachts which will be
contending for corrected time honors
in the race are Mike Kennedy's
Yankee·38 Audacious, Dana Polnt
Yacht Club: Cottontail, a 37-foot
sloop skippered by John Arens.
Balboa Yacht Club; Free Spirit, a
Mull-40 sloop sailed by Richard Et·
Unger, Newport Harbor Yacht Club;
Hawkeye, a 48-foot sloop skippered
by David Cuckler, NHYC, and
Huckleberry Frog, a S&·foot sloop
sailed by Joseph Hoffman, Bahia
Corinthian Yacht Club.
Barring any last minute dropouts,
here is the starting lineup:
ARCADIA ($&5.41) Gl-Jollel., UVC. AUDACIOUS CY.,.,U.JI) Miu IC--,, OPVC.
8ANOIOO CT..-1 Terry LI-~~. SOVC.
80HES V CC.WSl Wl"foln ~. Sl'VC. CHALLENGE ~I JoClf< Qltey, CYC.
CHANPAGNE Usl-r-361 Helt Pel-., St. l'YC CHRISTINE l..__llOGp) l'l"ecl PnlM.1.PMVC. COTTONTAIN CCF-111 Jolln A,_, 8Vo;;..
DESPERADO CCOlumOl•S2) C-od .... I. LIYC. OIUFTfR C..fl. UL081 KOtrf ~o. LIVC. l'ANTASIA CEtehellMS) J_, Oi-, SOYC.
l'LEXlll.E Fl VER (3'-11. 2 lonl Don lludl, PMVC. FREE SPIRIT <Mull-«>I RICMrel llll"Off, NHVC. FR&&WHEELEA IP.Square Sii Rk"-N wi.oter, sovc. HAWICEVE 10r1~~l Dawe ~kter, NHYC.
Cotmtg Bar Offif!ers
New officers of the Orange County Bar Association include <from left)
John C. Garrett, secretary-treasurer; H.oward F. Harrison, pre·
sident-elect; John K. Trotter Jr .• president, and John H. Pittd, vice
president.
5 Indicted in Bomb
HUCKLEIEARV f'ROO IG•M VechtW6l ...._. . Pl Hoffm1111, llCYC.
HAHHUNAHPU CHerlUO-MM) Juen 1'1'911VW'tl, "':r:s're:'r.<ioN STUMSHIP (C"..J7) Olcll A<Ur, ot
P'YYC.
Against Briggs
ICARI II (O\Mce 47> Rkhtnl Kelton, L..AVC.
LOLA (INwport-41) Wlllt Oewl1 CW YC.
MAMIE !Corter Non) Miit Sl!lltll. CYC.
MAS ALEGRE CSYndl•MOI ROClert W11111\ SOYC. M•RLIN (4Mt. ULOll Wiii Leo, Soni• OW YC. Ml RAGE CC&C 2 ton) I.es Herlencler, Rktlmond VC. MONDO ISento O'llL~) Oeeff .,~ IMI• ovi YC. PHASI! ONE I Pon Man) Gonion Hell, Venture VC.
RAGTIME (~ti Jim PMI ... , L8VC. REGAAOLl!SS (TertofMI) R-rl Cole, SI. l'YC. AEISENOE (Er~I Michael s.tttrl•. SOVC. RENEGADE INel-1 lonl Sanely '°"l'ODfl. SOVC. SAE TA lKIWl-«>I R-'IO Pertl40, ~enlll YC SALSIPUEOES (5WM~1) Fred l'rve. SOYC.
SECRET LOVE IS.MH41 8rodl91. H9mWI. ORYC. SORCERY IC&C .. l)J9CoOW-. eve.
TENACITY CCal-39) MlchMI AIM'-, Welklkl YC. TERRAL Ill C~I) ,,.._ 5-% Jr., "'-'<O YC. TAIBUTElc.t~S2JJMwal'_....,ORYC. VECTOR ICF-VJ Htrt>_,.._, SOYC. VENDETTA CPetenon·'40) Jewler VtlHctllH,
AcojMl!co YC.
WHIMSEYTRES IVentt...a) HeQft Ao09n. LAVC.
WHIPPET CCF-41) Dk.II l'enfll"llOft, LIYC.
LOS ANGELES (AP) sassinatlons and bomb·
-The County Grand ings when they arrested
Jury indicted three men 'the defendants last Nov·
and two women Thurs-ember. The plot was to
dayoncharge3ofplotting' have begun with a
tobombtheFullertonof-bombing Nov. 19 at fice of Republican state Briggs' office.
. Sen. John Briggs.
THE INDICTMENT
charges that Perey con·
ponents and posaeaion
of a destructive device
wlth intenl to injure, in·
timlda.te and cause
damage.
The defendants are
serving as their own at-
torneys and were jailed
on ball ranging from
$500,000 to $750,000 each. The indictment. re·
turned after two days of
hearings, names Marc
Curtis Perry, 29; Judith
Emily Bissell, 33;
Thomas Michael
Justesen, 27; Clayton
Van Lydergrat, 62; and
Leslie Ann Mullin, 33.
structed a bomb on Nov. i;;:;;::==:;;f.:~~_,·17. It al.so accuses the ATTOltMIY AT LAW
defendants of con-Dl .. DllPJCY $95 spiracy, two counts of UNWUIU
possessing a destructive ftlVftlC device in a public place UllU E $95
and one count each of Uncontested
HARRY WINl'IELO "USTIN, rHI·
clenl of Hllnlll!Q!on 8Hcll, Ce. Peued
-•Y on J-ry :IO, 1t7' at Ille 4199 of 6S, lei-,.....,.,,., of AltNe Alntll\
of Hu"tl"9ton 8eacll, C. , t>etoved
fetller of Susan 1<"'9Ms of H\Mltl"91on
e..c11, CA. ond K•lhryn Perrone of WHI Hewn. "°""9c1Jcut, brOlller of
Mn. Olive DocMlnt• of Mitt-. e.on-
Metkut, etto IOU!' orend<tlltdren. Mr. Allllln Wet e :i. ~ .......... of V..
s•l•1 d•P•rlmenl of Anecond•
A-ICM lr9H °"'-Y· He relJl"ecl
In 1'12. PHI -mber of Ille Oey
Spfl!IO Loelle •JO A..1'.&.A.M. ~r
of U.. PvlMl!I ~.,. •26 R.A.M.
--of IN C:tewford Council •It R. & l.M. --ol Ille L.eleyette
Conalstory S.P .R S.·22 dtoru.
MemlMr et IN All<4 CN!lter •16.
O.E.S. ~Of Ille AllSIJn Femlly
A11oclellon ot Amtrlce. Fu"•r•I
servtcH ..-Mid TlwrsdAV Feo.uery
2, tt7t et r:oo P.M. et Smith Tuu.111
WHl<llff 0..C-1, "17 E. 171h SI., Coste
Mew, Co. wtltl Rev. Donald Slur;.on
of lrvlne olfkletl"O. tnt ... -..1 et Oek O•ov• Cemetery )., WHI Hewn, C.on-
r>e<tlcut. Tiie femlly will •l!oO lleve •
funerel Mrtia on l'rlcley F-ry l,
tt11 el 71JO P.M. ti Tiie ht Untied
MetllOdJ1t °""" ol w.tt Hewn, eon. nectlcut, " Ol<lt.,. SI., W.sl H•wn,
C-Cllcut. Smlltl Tllllllll I.Amil C.te
MAM Mor1..-y CllrectorL .........
CAP} -Charles Twigg,
46, a former truck
driver from Baltimore
who underwent "pig·
g yback" heart
transplant surgery at
the Medical College of
Virginia here Dec. 21,
died Thursday.
Weekend Calendar esaion of bomb com· '4o. 1
C 0 U Jl T d o c u ·• ~iii!~iiJ!~iiiiiiii~i&.:iiiiiiii~~firiiijiiiiij-
men ts identify the • AUTO. HOMEOWNERS two men as
former members of the •YACHT INSURANCE
radical Weather Under··
ground group and the RABB ITT men as members of the
S~ist Series Ending
uau•
STEVEN A. LACKIE, r~t Of
210H VI• Son Ole9o, Mhilan, V .. Jo,
Ce. Born ~ry 2', ''" -PAH.cl owey on Jenuery It, 1trl •I "'°'"'-'" v.. c:-y ,.,_ .. 5wvlYH 11y Ills,,,..... Mn. ~
C...C•te, slst"" A1r1 _,,, LI,,.,., -
brOtller MM-L.edtle. 91'•--•llla Mr. & Mrs. ,.,, ltrktl•nd Of
TiottftPMft, "-th OOllo4• •nd Mn. DeoftY L«kle of --eln. IN-L Also $WVl.....S llY J --.ts enc1 a vnclft. Memoriel MfVke\ wlll be et Owlst
Luthenn Cllur(tl, JU22 C•mlno
CAPhtreno, S." ci ....... te, c.. on
S.turuy Febr\wy •• ""It I :00 P.M.
"' ""' of ,._"ti. femlly ~t• memorl•I CDnltiDUlloM lie -to TIM Four>d•tlon Offltt Orttoot>edlc
HeiJpllel. t«JO So. Fl-. I.AK.,,.. .. ,, C•. tOOOJ, All..,llon; Mr. Jamu
Heldenrekll.
AIPIM
JAMES R. ASPIH, -Md -•'f In Lot An;el-, C.. J_,., JI, 1'1f, 899
71. Survl"9d llV ton J4Kk Asllln of
Tr•n•cOllo, Manti-. ConM•. •Ml d•wohl•• Mory Ltl• ol Melvlllt,
S osk •l<h•w•n, C•n•de, u or•ndchlldr91, 2 grM19-llll*tn, two slatora l!lale Kerr of Vl<torl•, Brlll5" C:oh1mDlo, c.n.dll end Dora,,.,
V-r of WllWll .... M11111100., c.n.cio.
P"-Cfftllll lrf -dAu911ler lllfM Derls, wife ....-.. Asc>ln end mother
5or•11Altllnolc.tllornle.
COAICLeV I ERHARD A. OOAKl.EV, rHlcMfll
of Tustin, PhMd -•Y l'ebruefy I, 1m. He 11 ~'" llY • aon, e.merd A. Cookley Jr., of t..o"o 8uch, c1eue11ter Jotn WUlllml of NorthrtCIOe,
2 llrotlltrs, "°""*' J. Ooeklev of Mis·
-·· 11*'1 T. Cookley Ill Ml_,1, -1lster, Oer1Nde M. w~ of MIS·
-·· Crypttlde ..vtc:a wlU lie Mid 5oturdoy Feflr\IWy 4 et II A.M. et
HWbOr ~Mittnori.I Nr11. l!lll--t et ...-.._ Memortel Pert!
"'"'' A•v . .IOtlll A.. Llndllell olfktotlno. e.ll ll'MdWil\'~Ofrt<10t'L CM•tmMUN
"<>SE M. OtlUITIAHSliN, ..........
t1' UOutlo """*· c.. p.,_, -•Y on FMruory I. "''· 5'W'«IWCI lly two -. Jofln I.. T_, ol loOUN Nfowt _. Rkllird T-fl/I Son JoM, C..,
-''''"'.,,, -llto4tler. o ..... s1c1e Hrwlcn wll./ be held Se111rdey
LOS ANGEL~ {AP}
-BUI Kennedy, 64, the
colu mnist known as
"Mr. L.A." for 25 years
in the Los Angeles
Herald Examiner and
the Herald Express,
d0led Thursday of
cancer.
SAN FRANCISCO {AP) -Marland H.
Chandler~ 60, president
of the Pacific Gas
Transmission Co., died
Thurs day at a Santa
Barbara hospital.
FRESNO (AP> -A
former stale A s·
se mblyman from
Freooo, Lucius Powers
Jr., 76, died of a heart
attack.
STANFORD CAP> -
Alexander A. Roblcbek;
52, professor of finance
at Stanford ·university's
business schoool, died of
cancer Thursday.
Mesan Cited
Edward Ott, a junior
art major at Arizona
State University. has
been named to (be de·
an's list for academic
excellence. Ott is from
Costa Mesa.
PUBUC N011CE
P'IC1'1T10US 8USINUS NAMll STATaMIMT n. fOllOWlng per'IOn Is dlllflO llUll--•: W.A.S.P. MOTION ~ICTURI! u• .. ,,.. w. ~St., s...... Mo,
CM lfOrTll• t210f
l'WV.ry •· 1m et 10:00 A.M. al Atce"Slel\ Cometary, II Toro, C..
O'ConllOr Lo911ne Hiiia MortlHtf.,
direct on. . Wllllom AllNCI 51\ip'f, 2111 lnwr·
----------=Or., Lot Al....,ltos, C.lllornl•
U&.n.ta•ROM
..,....&.HOMI
Corona del Mir 873-IM!IO
Costa M ... 846-2424
This bllsfMta 11 c.onduclecl by.,., ln-dhlldllot.
W1 Mlem A. Stll!"f
Thlt ltelement Wot fll9d With the
C_I., Cl-of a.-.... c;ovnty on Jenuer., 24, lf7t
Nt1U
PutllltNcl Oranoe Coost Delly Pllclt,
Most competitive yachting activity
in Southern Caijfomia this weekend
will be pointed toward the Southern
California Yachting Association's an-
nual Midwinter Regatta starting
Feb. 18. / On the local ftont, the Balboa
Yacht Club will wind up Its Sunkl.st
Series with small boats racing inside
the harbor on Saturday with the
larger keel boats ~ompeting over
ocean courses on Sunday.
The Udo I.sle Yacht Club will wind
up its Adult Sabot Serie11 on Sunday
and the Capistrano Bay Yacht Club
has scheduled a Midwinter Tuneup
for Performance Handicap Racing
Fleet yachts on Saturday and Sun· day.
PRIMARY YACHTING interest
this weekend will shift to San Diego
where 44 ocean racing yachts will get
the starting signal at noon Saturday
for the 1,140-mile race to Mamanillo,
Mexico. Five local yachts are en·
tered in the race sponsored by San
Diego Yacht Club.
Southern California Yachting As-
sociation calendar:
Los Angeles-Long Beach
ALAMITOS BAY YACHT CLUB-
·coa.tal Weather
~
Some "'"" throvoh mlck'nornl119 foO s.turdey, ot,,.,., .. ····--.n. Utllt vwlollle ...,.. llloht end M«lllno ._.... HltM Sotvrdeyfll .. mldtol.. Conl.91 ..,.., __ Wiii renoe ....... JO .........
lnloM ..,.,......_ wtn r.,.. ~ 46 Olld 10. Tho ••• ..,........Wit, .. "·
s.concs """ SKondtow
'1"1 "'°" Flrstl-
Second """
"''"'-='t!. Secondlll9"
l'ltlDAV
SATURDAY
SUM DAV
S4lft rlMt •1410.m., Mtt S1U p.m. "'-rl• ltlll •m .. eeta I :rt p.m.
7:112p.m. J.7 ll:JOp.m. 1A
•:lla.m. u t:JOp.1'11. .1.0
~47p,m. 4.1
1?:4'•.m. r:Ol •.m. 2:1D p.m.
1:26 p "'·
1.S ' .. , ., ... ...
-.&.•OADWAY
WQITUAIY
l'WNll,.,S, 10, 17,24, 1'11 ·--------------*'11
Honest Abe Regatta, outside classes
Saturday; inside classes Sunday.
Prairie Fire group, IMSUltAMCE A~CY
which allegedly pro-SHVIMfi THI
vides above·_ground sup. HAUOll AllA SIMCI 1957 SEAL BEACH YACHT CLUB -
Midwinter Tuneup (IOR. PHRF:'
MORF and one-design) Saturd.&y;
Sunday.
port for the Weather Un· derground. ' Ow ZOtlt y..,
FBI agents said they -•548-5554• fount! plans for a 8-nta Monica Bay purported series of aa-19.1,.KAllOR ILVO. COSTA MESA
SOUTH BAY YACHT RACING-;~~~;;~~~~~~======================~~~ CLUB -Champagne Serles No. 4 NOiW. . {keelboats) Sunday.
SOUTH COAST CORINTHIAN PIANOS
YACHT CLUB -Les Storrs Series
No. 3 (Keelboau> Saturday. lor Sale &Bent
Newpori-Balboa
BALBOA YACHT CLUB-Sunklst
Series, bay classes Saturday; outside
classes Sunday.
LIDO ISLE YACHT CLUB -AdU.lt
Sabot Series, Sunday.
CAPtsrRANO BAY YACHT CLUB
-Midwinter· Tubeup (PHRF) Satur-
day, Sunday. .......
. CAILl·UWU·--
Saa Diego uaB &CA9EI.
SAN DIEGO YACHT CLUB . AlllONDOllll
Start Manzanillo race, Saturday; AND PIAllO CEITER
Boffinger Series <IOR > Sunday. · ""8Alla DEL IU
OCEANSIDE YACHT CLUB -""""""
ARNOLD L. COHEN
D~P .M.F.A.C.F .s.
Diplomate American Board of
Podiatric Surgery
is pleased to Announce the Opening
of his Office for the practice of
PODIATRIC MEDICINE AND FOOT SURGERY
219 AVENIDA DEL MAR
SAN CLEMENTE, CAUFORNIA
(714) 498·5520
' Predicted log race, Saturday; Shan-2814:..=~·
nqn Series (all classes) Sunday; ~~~~~~~=~~-_!~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!~_.:. Winter Series (Sabot) Sunday.
SILVER GATE YACHT CLUB -
Privateer Series, Sunday.
SOuntWESl'ERN YACHT CLUB
-Disraeli Sert.es (MORA) Sunday;
Fiore Series (PHRF> Sunday;
Winter Trophy Regatta, Sunday.
YACHT RACING UNION -
USYRU eliminations for Smythe,
Bemis and Seara CUp, Saturday, Sun·
day.
.NOl'tb and lnlaad
PIERPOINT BAY YACHT CLUB
-· Saltwater Series No. 3 <PHRF>
Saturday, Sunday.
POMQNA VALLEY SAILING AS-
SOCIA TION -Class raclog, Sunday.
SANTA BARBARA YACHT CLUB
-Handicap Midwinter Tuneup,
Saturday; one-deaign tuneup. Sun-
day.
SAN LUIS YAC'lrr CLUB -Winter Series No. 2, Sunday. ·
AT APPRAISING
DIAMONDS ·
BY COMPUTER
I 110 Etroactway
Colt•Mesa
842-8150 -...,...~
~OWll.
421 E. 17th St
CQll• Meet. 94&-"'888 S81'1t-.Me Ch8e>el
511 N. Broadway
Santa AN• 547 ... 131
SKY ART CO.
MT SALE PUBLIC AUCTION
FOR HAVING ntEBOOO
FORTUNE OF HAVING
ACOUIRED THE SERVICES OF GEMOLOGIST •••
AU. PAIM'f9 IY PROFISSIOMAL
AITISTS
ELLIOT PUGH
~~) Graduatest {Gemollglcal
Institute of Atnenca) f
I
•
,,
M DAIL y PILOT Frld.y, FebfU81Y 3. 1978 NAT10NAt-
Civil Service Reform THE FAMILY CIRCUS .. By Bil Keane Doggone It
We~thy Mutt 'Broke' Carter Out to Make Government More Efficient
~EDITOR'S NOTE -Pmid.,.I ( • ) worker fired for shooting a co-
Cfrter 00. ~a civil •tTW:e worker in the stomach. The
•fprganizallon ploft lhal "tom· : NEWS A.NA.L'fS/S commission said the l••man'•
f't'1ore th• merit principle to a . boas had r o ule d up the
qlfem w~Lch ~. grown Into a paperwork by JoinUy signlng the
bllreaucnwc maze. TM ~ ,.. tt collar derlcal and 6ecretarlal dismissal letter. while the rules
co11.1idning are namined m Uti.t workers who now receive hli}ler required that one boss propose
la.t of a /Ive-part "1iea on the pay than counterparts in the the firlng and another approve
/a1eral bureauCTacy. private sector. ii.
1 • B_y BROOKS JACKSON
WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi-
dent Carter is considering a
package of proposals that would
make it easier lo replace ineffi-
cient bureaucrats, top aides say.
)11 his recent State or the
Upton address, the president ··
said he will make civil service
"re(orm" a top priority with
Congress this year. He said he
needs a more efficient ~lvll
set'ViCe system to make the gov-
ernment work better.
AMONG THE OPTIONS re-
poftedly under review is a
streamlining or the process by
which federal workers can ap-
peal firings or demotions for
months and years, through one
bureaucractic layer after
another. ·
This time-consuming appeals
process is blamed by federal
managers for the fact that only
#
Carter f IJ(!n a dif-
-Limit the preference which One proposal would prohibit
military pensioners and able· managers Crom being reversed
bodied veterans eet in hiring for for minor p~ocedural errors.
federal jobs, while keepine pre-Sugarman saJd. Another would
ference for Vietnam veterans e~courage ~e ~e or voluntery,
and disabled vets. bmding at;btlration in place of
-Give conaideraUon to the
relatively generous pensions re-
ceived by federal employees
when adjusting their pay to
levels comparable with private.
sector employees.
THESE PROPOSALS ARE in
addition to a tentatively ap-
proved plan to split the Civil
Service Commission into two
parts, putting personnel
management functions inside
the president's omce and creat~
ing an Independent panel de-
signed lo hear grievances and to
root out such forbidden prac-
tices as political patronage hir-
ing. ·
S plitting the Civil Service
Commission can be don~ under
Carter's authority to reorganize
the executive branch, subject to
congressional veto. Most of the
other proposals would have to be
approved by Con~ress.
the lengthler, more formal ap-
peals process. Creation of a
Merit Review Board would cut
the levels o! administrative ap-
peal from three to one.
PRESIDENTIAL AIDES say
the proposal they are most confi-
dent of getting appro'/ed is one
to provide more flexibility in top
leadership jobs. •
For the top 9,000 "super-
grade" civil service executives,
who earn up to $47,500 a year, a
new Senior Executive Service is
suggested. These highly paid ex-
ecutives enjo_i all the same job
security as the lowliest me clerk
-a fact which admlnistGtion
omcials say maku it dlffi'Ctlk.
for them to remove incompetent
or insubordinate execuUv~s.
Under the proposal, t})ese top
managers could be removed
from their job at the pleasure of
the head of their agency, if their
performance is judged to be ih-
adequate. They would not be .
fired. but would be demoted to middle-management levels
where the present job protec-
tions would still apply.
· PINEHURST, N.C. (AP) -King, the shaegy
dog provided wltb the good life h\ his ddd mis-
tre ' $150,000 house, )\as lost it all with the deatb .
of the chauffeur who was to take ca.re of hlm.
King, part cbow and part colUe, ahared the
lwo-story white brick home with clta\llfeur.
caretaker Georee Bisset, '#ho wiped the dog•a
paws with a towel after walka around town and fed
him a dozen sirloin steaks each week.
ALL THAT WAS PRESCRIBED in the will of #
Mrs. Florence Green of Pinehurst and Buck Hlll
Falls, Pa., who dJed last September. /
She willed the bulk of her huee estate to four
friends. Bisset got tbe Pinehurst house and
grounds "with the understanding that he will take
care of my dog Kini ~urin& his lifetime."
But Bisset died Jan. 19 at age 7L And now
KinJ lives at the Sandhills Animal Hospitat:' where
"How will that stuff get from down there up to nobOdy wipes his paws and they feed him dog food .
my sore throat?" .. KING DOESN'T STAND TO inherit
anything," said Warwick Neville, M~. Green's
Pinehurst attorney. "Now he belongs to the re-
siduary part of Mrs. Green's will. He has not been
specifically given to anyone. and therefore falls in-
to what is known as the Tesidue."
Name Published
No 'Swinger';
Woman Suing
But NevWe said he believes one or the other
three friends named in the will, Mrs. Helen
Baumann of P.ennsylv~nia, wants to take King.
THE MATTER HAS BEEN complicated, by ' will Bisset has left. It had only one wltneas,
although two are required. Details or the wiJl have
been withheld by Blsset's lawyer. Until the will is
"SHJCAGO (AP) -A suburban mother or sever al cleared up. King will probably remain al the ken-small ~hll.d{.en has sued two "swinger" magazines nel.
(or $I3.4 million. charging that the publications "He's a gentle dog, very friendly," said k,.ennel
libeled· her by advertising without her consent that attendant Luther Headen. "But he's still a b1t up-
she was avallable for deviate sexual practices. set about being taken away from bis masle ''
Her iawyer, Alan-;:1f~~lijiij~;:;;:;:;;:,-~!!!!i!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!i!!!!i!j= Miller, said Thursday ·.~ that the suits.were filed
in Circuit Court against EARL'S
L.S . W. Enterprises Inc. . PLUMllHG
of Missour,· publisher of :,~Aci:g.
"Ac-e" magazine, and 54,,.1Q.r~~:\.our0oor
llettlt polltieal pro-
'•le•. The lederal i teork loree u lllflldtf
l ualonzled, a11d U• ! lofJ"tf 111 C011greu laa$
: fJeen freqllftltlfl •11e-
, ce••ltd.
The president is tentatively
scheduled to unveil his package
of proposals in mid-February.
lie told staff members at a pre-
Ii minary briefing.,late last year
that they were "moving in the
right direction" with the pro-•"
posals mentioned.
s.c. Enterprises of New IC•llStcw•Nffr"IYCKlrArul THEY~ WOULD be al-York, publisher of cosrAMuA642-17S3 lowed to earn one-time bonus "Swinging Woman" u».._..t~. f payments of up to 20 percent of magazine. Mtn10Nv1&.>0495-0401
;226 federal employees of a work CARTER FACES A 'dif-
force of 2.8 million were fired for Cicult political problem. The
their annual pay, plus some THE OAK Forest cs..=:.~~.;,~wy.>
adde'd pension benefits, if they worn an -whose name are judged to have turned in
. inemciency in the most recent federal work force is highly un-
12 months. ionized and its lobby in Congress
· . Any final package may make has been frequently successful
conce ssions to politically in the past. Veterans groups,
powerful federal labor unions, also a strong force in Congress,
who want concessions including oppose any dilution of the World
. power to bargain ov er pay. But War II~era ~iring ben~f1ts whlch
there is room for compromise-the~ ~till en~oy. . . .
·because the unions also are dis-· C1v1i Service Comm1ss1on Vice
·enchanted with the cumbersome Chairman Jule Sugarman said
: appeals process, which they see in an lntervi~w that the key. to
as too time-consuming and the package 1s the streamlinmg
loaded in management's favor. of the appeals process, which
•superior performances. At pre-is being withheld at her
sent, top-salaried executives attorney's request -contends that the two have virtually no financial in-magazines lis ted her
cetltive to put out more than a name and add~s and
m1nimum effort because their described her as availa-
pay is frozen and their job ble for various sexual tenure is virtually iron-clad. acts.
A potentially controversial set The suits contend that
of proposals would bring major she did not submit her changes in the federal pay struc--tu re under which blue-collar name to the magazines
workers and many clerical and and never spoke with
technical workers earn more any of their r epresen-
th an their counterparts in tatives.
private businesses. MILLER SAID that
INTRODUCING "APRIGOLD"
TRUE GENETIC DWARF·
APRICOT TREE I THE RECOMMENDATIONS
: said to be under r eview, if 1 Carter proposes them and
: Congress approves, would:
can typically take 18 months to
resolve a disputed firing, demo-
tioi;t or pay freeze.
' ' W e wall t to g i v e the
employee a fair shake, but at the
same time managers shouldn't
be overturned arbitrarily," he
said.
The administration already since the ads appeared
has tried without success to flnd in February 1~77 the Gr9wa 6 -6 ft. tall. 9.95 a member of Congress to woman bas received Fnalt lat. Juu.
sponsor a tUll to end a legal more than 250 letters, ......... --------------quirk that gives federal blue-about 20 calls on her un-Other fruit tteei to plant now: • -Convert the highest-ranking
19 ,000 bureaucrats to a new
I "Senior Executive Service,"
with corporate-style salary
:bonuses for outstanding
collar workers an average of 8 listed phone, and visits
percent higher pay than private by several persons to APPLE •APRICOT• PLUM
El'IPLOYEES CAN P URSUE employees. het home. . NECTARINE •FIG•PEACH
performers a!'ld instant demo-
tions or transfers for poor ones.
-Force middle -l evel
managers to earn their pay
raises rather then getting them
almost automatically as they do.
appeals through three levels in The suits charge the
the commission and then into FOR WHITE -COLL AR ads were "fraudulent, @:J:l?J;W
federal court. Two-thirds of all workers, it is being proposed demeaning. and hlghly .. ---------------------------...
3 FOR 14.98
-EFFECTIVELY SCALE
down future pay ra\sea for blu~·
collar workers and tbose white.-
reversals are for technical er-that clerks, secretaries, steno-often s i v e a nd de -
rors rather than on the merits of graphers, keypunch operators !amatory," and caused
the cases, commission figures and other clerical and 'th~ woman "mental
s how. Often the errors are technical employees be pai'1 on-anguish and severe emo-
minor. / der a pay scale separate from llonal distress," and
In one case We commission or-that of professionals and damaged her reputation
BULBS• PIPS •TUBERS
GLADIOLU.S BULBS ov~ 30 varieties
2.39 J>OZ . ~ered reinstatem_e_n_t_o!_a_pos_t_a1 __ m_an_a_e_e_"_· __________ in_b_e_r_co_mm __ uni_t_Y_· ___ •
-----iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ___ iiiiii ~ERl~lKI ~~,..,, LILY-OF·THE·VALLEY frairant Oowera ~~~«, f J~~N . IJ>~-\f~ "I. : . . . . ._Abo_:...,,G..,.LO_X_IN_IA_S_,-CA_L_L-AS-, T-I-GR-1-Dl-AS
HANDMADE PERSIAN &·
CUP OF 3 PIPS 1.98
co~~~~~dR~G~q~l~a~~~~~~~ly S· 1~A' ·1. _ _ . -$300.000 worth of Inventory U.S. Entry ID _
1-4188626 & f-4188918 & Biii of Lading
tPX50-4 totaling 62 bales of fine hand
knotted wools and silks. The above bales_ 2 65 arrived Nov. 1977 from various London A delicious Teriyakl Steak. prepared the $' bonded warehouses and cleared ...... Frank 'P. way yotrllke.lt, and served with crisp green
""7 salad or home made soup, rice pilaf or Dow Co. Inc. Auctioneers Note: We have choice or potato. roll and butter. • examined the rugs and tound them to be of
fine quality. This auction should not be
missed. AUCTioM m • M&D OM. .
SUNDAY FEBRUARY 5 A'f 2:0C) p.m.
THE REGISTRY HOTEL
GRAND BALLROOM
1800 MAC ARTHUR tAVINEt CALIF.
Corttflc:ete of Authenticity With EV9fv Rug Purchase.
Inspect 1 t-tr. Bef°'9
· Terms: cah or Check. ·
Emf)assy Auctloneera • licensed & bof'lded
INFO t213) 981-8542
Lii.BOYD ]
INFOR~S In the
Served Friday and Saturday from 3 p.m. to 10 p.m.
·sPIRES
.. JRVlflE ............. ,.,.
PIGGY-BACK PL-ANT
Each leaf producea new plantleta
••pi111Y back'' fuhion. Indoor or
ahade plant.
6 .. Pot Tbru
Rea. $6.~6P.§JFeb. 7
All Specials Limited To Supply On Hand.
PHONE
546-5525
•
0
IN SI DE : •Sports •Stocks
•Business •Ann Landers
Fridey, feOfuary 3, 1978
'I tried it .once and it gave me
diarrhea.' -Lillian Carter on
Billy Beer:
Pt•re Billy
One brewery is banking on the
downhome image of Billy Carter to sell
booze to beer-swilling America.
By DENNIS McLELLAN pearances.
Of1 .. o_.,, ... ,.u1111 "Billy Carter was the muin al·
Sometime this spring Califor. traction,'' says Wahl. "We had
nians can expect to see the follow-heard that he was married •to
ing commercial sandwiched some other brewery."
between their favorite TV shows: But one of the Falls City Brew-
A beer truck driven by a red· ing ~y·s distrttnrtors-mel.
haired man with horn-~im gta~eS'-Carter at the race and had him
and a toothy grin pulls into a small pose for pictures wearing one of
town. His afrlval is greeted by a the brewing company's caps and a
crowd of obviously thirsty locals can of its beer.
who engulf the truck. His willingness to pose made
" Billy Carter steps out and greets company directors back in
the throng Louis ville realize, says Wahl, that
"l've hadthisbeermadeup jusl "golly, he 's no t m arried lo
for me," he informs them. And, he anybody Let's go after him·"
adds. with good ol' boy sincerity:
'Tm serious about my beer." THE CELEBRITY PEANUT
The above is one of four 30-farmer/filling station owner soon
second commercials IJle Presi· will begin making personul ap-
dent 's beer-swilling brother bas pearances in behalf of Billy Beer.
made for Billy Beer, which not on-for which he receives a con!iden-
ly bears his endorsement but his tial share of llle profits.
s ignature. While Billy Carter rode into the
The brew, which is m arketed by spotlight on the coattails of his ·Fall ~ City Brewing Co. of brother, Wahl believes the
Louisville. Ky., is sold in 13 states. popularity of BillS'-and Billy
Sometime this month It is expect-Beer-will not live or die alone
ed to be available in 48 states. with Jimmy Carter's political
It presently is banned in fortunes or misfortunes.
Virginia. which prohibits the sale "I think Billy can very well or any beer bt'aring an endorse· stand on his own," says Wahl. ''As
ment from ''any prominent living you look across America, you s~
person." • that everyone has a little Billy in
them. He tells things as they are. l "BUT WE ARE selline it at the think he's loved for that."
military installations over which Wahl says "the whole gamut of
the state has no control," says beer drinkers" are reaching for
Jerome Wahl , executive vice-the orange-and-white can bearing
president or Falls City Brewing the inscription: "Brewed express.
Co ly for and with the personal ap·
Sales. according to Wahl, are proval of one of America's all·
doing "very well,•• especially In time great beer drinkers-Billy
Georgia. Billy Beer, fittingly had Carter ."
a s plas hy d e but in Plains. But does Billy Carter. who has
Georgia, last Oct. 31, complete been photographed with a can of
with peanut-shelling races, a T-Pabst in his hand about as orten as
shirt beauty contest and media Paul Newman has with a can of
coverage. Coors, really drink Billy Beer ?
But the Billy Beer tale actually "Well now, I haven't seen him
began last May at a car race in since the news conference," ad·
Terre Haute, Ind., where Billy mits Wahl. "I know he likes
Carter was making one of his beer ... but for me to put a quantity
typical $5,000 personal ap-to it, I couldn't do that."
DAILY PILOT
With a skeptical eye cast on a product
whose sole reason for existence may be to cash
in on lhe notoriety of a celebrity, the Daily PUot
features start recently coaducted a BOly Beer
taste test.
Skepticism about the quality or the brew en·
dorsed by President Carter's celebrity brother
grew when Falls City Brewlltg Co. ot J.Oallvllle,
Ky., refused to send the Dally Pilot a Hmple
slx-pack.
(It is expected lo be on lbe California
market in several weeks).
'•Arter some consideration, a deds ton was
made not to forward any BUly Beer to you/'
wrote Jerome G. Wahl, executive vice·
president. "Should you desire some empty 1'Uly
Beer cans (for pictures) please let me koow."
Weeks or effort ln trying to have frtead1 or
relatives locate the beer in those states current-
ly selling it finally resulted in success. Many II·
Unols liquor stores were sold out. "It's' a coUec·
tor's item," one store clerk explallted.
So, to get the real Billy Bea-s&ery the ))ally .
Pilot this week held the beer·taltlng test.
Grading four unmarked cups or beer on a
scale of one to four, <on.e belng tbe bed> t3
Orange Coast beer drinkers umpled four
brews: Budweiser, Coors ... Backbom aad BUly
Beer.
The result$?
Coors came In first, followed by Buckhorn,
Billy Beer and Budweiser.
Somewhat surprisingly, as many people
(six) listed Billy as the best-tastlnl of Ute fotar
as did those whose pal•te deemed tt tile wont.
Re1ardless of how Bllly Beer fares In Uie
months to come, Ute public bas spoken.
It's .a i ,·
. '
. -.
JI
• ' f : ..
Dog's Life
Walrus is a cat. who
fetches, rolls. over, a_nd
thinks he's a dog. .
,
Billy Carter with his beet.
..
a ·.112 DAILY PILOT 'Frid~. Febru#y 3, 1971
PoH:otants Gil.ide
A research organization has found that the typical American household
is polluted by dangerous chemicals and poisons.
By LOUISE COOK moderately toxic and should be used only products are used in enclosed spaces.
•-"''"..,.. when substitutes are not readily available; Vapcrs from one· material may linger and Warning : Your home ma Y be and those which are only slightly toxic and interact with another to produce a toxic ef ·
hazardous to your.health. can be used safely as long as you do not feet. Lack of ventilation compounds the
That's the word from The Center for overdo it. trouble.
Sclence in the Public Interest, a nonprofit, Fritsch said Slmplifying your lifestyle The first step in making your home a
Washington-based research organization, to take advantage of the Information iii the safer place is learning where the d'anger
which says that the typical American book does not necessarily mean lowering lies. Make a rough floor plan of the house
bousebold is polluted by dangerous your standard of llvlog. "I use well over 90 and go through your home caretu;y to see
chemicals and poisons. percent of the SUfgeatlons." be said, "and how many pollutants you have.
Scientists and other staff members at I live a good Ute.* . There ve {wo types of pollutants -
·the center have prepared a guide on some The· center also has campaigned potential and actual. ''An unopened can of
of the more common dangers posed by against chemicals in the environment and toxic material is a potential pollutant,
chemicals found around the home. They of- in the American diet. For the past three whereas an open one is an actual hazard,"
fer advice on possible alternatives and years, the group has sponsored a na· the guide says.
ways to cut the risks. tionwide .. Food Day" program to alert The center guide lists potential pollu-
"We tried to be positive," said Albert people to what center scientists say ls the tants from A -aerosol sprays -to Z -
J . Fritsch, co-director of the center a nd danger of junk food. zoological waste and disease. It includes
general editor of "The HousehoJd Pollu-· Now they h ave turned a similar building materials , clothing and fabric
tants Guide." which will be published next critical eye on the home. The introduction care products. furniture and floor polishes,
month. He said the book explains that you to the book notes that there has been a insecticides and pesticides, kitchen and
don't have to eliminate all chemicals or growing awareness in recent years of laundry products. oven cleaners. plastics,
~r potentially dangerous items. ecology, pollution and occupatiobal plants~lvents and metals. ·~ · o! ~ence," he hazards. At the same time. the authors W ever you find a pollutant, mark it
said. "We try to ge P c 1Co-<•1ua~. ,. •&av, ~pie have tended to ignore the down on your floor plan. You may be sur-
not 'Yes' or 'No.• but 'I wi e this only to a dangers ln"'~Nme-rll'IJ.icb ~B)J!9 , J>.rJ.A.m!_ at the total. Fritsch said that over
certain extent'." ' average American spends 5.5 percent 01 'fiis tne coiiff~ho..v~ .... .Mle average home
Knowledge and care e the keys---to 'or her time. will contain 45 aerosol spf'a~"'Wtttctrcaatd,
safety. Parts of some ants .may be "The,home still remains beyond the under some conditions, be dangerous.
poisonous if eaten, but that d n't mean eonsideration of many·environmentalists,"
yo u have to give up geenery. st take the the introduction says, despite the fact that
time to learn which plants pose a threat "more chemicals are found in the average
and choose other varieties, particularly if home today than ill chemical laboratories
you have young children around the house. · of a century ago."
Fritsch said the book stresses that According to the book's authors,
there are different degrees of toxicity and "Danger lies in not only the variety, but
distinguishes among four types of the sheer quantity of chemicals used in the
materials: those which are extremely home. A few drops of a solvent m.ay do a
poisonous arid should never be used; little harm, but •an open can evaporating
those which are highly poisonous and ' over a period of time may 'be fatal to in·
should be used, with precautions, only habitants."
when necessary ; those which are The problems are made worse when
.
Animal· Lover
_,_ -· . Ne;ds .AdViCe
• D E A R A N N . l)uaband's grave which·
LANDERS: 1 am af-means her name and
fillated with the kennel· blrtbdate wlll be en-
tn1 of animal.I wbUe graved oo lt NOW. The
tbttlr ownera are OD poor lady la grieving
• vacatlOll. For the put and you treat her like
year 1 have been aomekidfromYale.
r eaponaible off 'and on H 0 De. tl y. ADD.
for tbe care of a sometimel I Wonder if
paralyzed doc. Altbough you 'v• sot all your
my livellbood ii made marbles. For~this boner
by caring for animals, it. someone aboWd drop a
breaks 1111 bean to have wet bead.atone on . your
to care for this orte. All blg toe. -SLIGH'l1..Y
ebe can do la lie on a ANNOYED
'blanket, urinate and de-DEA& ANNOYBD:
fecate Oil herself, cry l'U. set a.. bll tee tea41.
and 1leep. • Tell •• ._ • I eaa
Sbe cannot po1slb1Y ... , oa.,...., '**-
enjoy Ille. n .. total and
unrectlftable J*'alyals,
and bl JJ/11 81•, cruet • and idbumaae treat•
Once you knpw what you have on hand,
you can go through the list. Some items
may be unnecessa{y. Others may be old and..
need replacement. Still others may need to
be stored differently. No matter what you
keep, you should make sure you read th&
instructions carefully before using. If
rubber gloves are recommended, use
them. Uthe label says one.quarter of a cup
of detergent is needed, don't add half a c up. And keep all chemicals otit of the
reach~ youpg children.
"It's a long time to U8>, and I think we
should let the candidates prove themaelves."
He mentloned·Gov. Jerry Brown, Sen. George
·McGovern and Sen. HbWard Baker as possible
candidates.
"Tbe liberal wing of the' Democratic Party
19 cllaeacbaQted, .. be aald ... But whether anyone
can 1IDMa& a •ltttDf President k Ullclear to me." He deecribed Bn>wn 81 a .. charismatic
eampallPJG"' who readl political poUa "better
tban any man I've ever seen in m)f Ute." But
Mun>by crttlclzed tho 1overnor'1 "tendency to
• be flippant" and said "he som«imea fortet.s to aet lnlo t.M u.ouaht procea ...
Murphy. who occupi• a aecond·Ooor 9mce
as publilber of tbe Ell~ad a lh1nl·f1oor office u editor. ata future for the newspaper lnduatr7, spec= aftel'llooD
newspapers, Uee in comblnlq wrltlna with lfteltina jrapblca • .. MOit people eoaYineed themMlftl tMy
clldJl't have time &o read In tbe aftemooG -and aow they are besmnta1 undentu4 that•• when
theJ do have Ume,11 be aald.
lie stm.cl be hit lt was IDnltable that
MWIPJJ)ll'I 1'ilJ becoiJle 0 mqulldab'' and .. let tt la lmper8dve th.at the indu.trJ must know the
trend.I or it wW fall. "I.ain't Vfll:1 tren47,'" be admitted.lnalow-bT~emmanner. • • What doee he see In the Mure for the pro-
blem-plagued Hearst Corporation, wblcb owns
the J:'Hrnlner and Hveral other newapapen?
••nnt we bue to reacqalre our own
newspapers." be replied. ..a.ton we b.ne a riCht &o f,fOfl otberwlH. We~...,, manas~ mmt CID Bol&on, Albc7, SID PrlDdaco and
Loi AnpJel) •• •• These ~ ba•• nputa. Uona la .. ~ .. ftnf quilltJ. .
0 1 tblnk that llld.lcatel bow aerloul \be:J' (the
co:;:ate oftlcen) are about tltlblisblnl quali-
ty tbe cqanlaab. I feel yeq a->Od about •
Thm tbe llllbtlJ built ICID of a t'OUilb') ttore
owner and a tcbocllteacber. wbl> eoalda"t afford
to 10 to GMdlcal 1ebool, and M became a
joUl'llalilt IDltel4 -1.tl to take a lbower.
(
. ., --.....
ANN LANDERS/HOROSCOPE
Horoscope
SATURDAY, FEB. 4
By SYDNEY OMABR
J
ARJF.S (March 2l·April 19): Emphasis· on
achle.vement, ealning recognition, malclnl room
at top __.for you. Open lines of communicaUon.
Deal with Gemini, Vlrgo. In matten of apecuJa-
tlon, stick to number s. A written messaae could
cootaln key to resolving a dilemma.
TAURUS (April 20·May 20): Good moon
aspect coincides now with communication,
foreign travel, study of language, receipt of call
or message from another nation. Cycle 1ucb
that past efforts bear fruit, past contacta pay
off, potential is withio view. Yes, you have rltbt
to be confident. opUmiltic.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Accent on the
occult, mystery. bidden values, physical
responses, psychic reactions. Avoid brOodlng.
See situations, persons as they exist .
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Obtain 1'lnt
from Gemini message; dig deep for informa·
tion. Protect ideas, ·eet legal aid where patents.
copyrights are concerned. Your posatlon is
atrona -at.and your eround. Ride with tide -
circumstances take strange twist.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Finish what you
start, reestablish contacts. Aries, Libra figure
prominently. Stick to basic issues -maintain
moderate, steady pace. ·
VIRGO (Aug: 23-Sept. 22): Element of tim·
ing ts on your side. Personal magnetism much
in evidence. Change, travel, variety figure prom·
inenUy. Member of opposite sex is drawn to
you and apparently doesn't care who knows.
Express in your own manner. style.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0cl. 22): Accent on home
base, stepping stones, building on solid struc-·
lure, being able to discern what ls real, what is
product of wishful UUnklng, Rise above office
politics. Teach and learn. Give full play to in·
tuillve intellect. Means follow through on
.
hunches. .
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Movement.
travel. relatives, messages and vi.sits are part
of cycle. Leave details for another Ume. Grasp
overall view. You have ability now to eain in·
sight into your own f\1ture. It b briaht and today
you can "help it along."
SAGrr?AllltJS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): SpoWaht
oD money, personal possessions, makln.8 the
most of material at band. You're able to break
through, to remove restrjctioos.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Npularity
Increases; you come back from adverse period.
Gemlnl, Vlt'go, Libra figure prominently. Stick iR number 5. ;('Qt~L4Jao. 20-Feb. 18): Pace slows
-avoid panic. Deli~in your favor.
Be aware or ele ment of dece~fflftt. .. ~~
sources. Take nothing for granted. Utilize "oose· ---~
for news."
PISCES (Feb. 19·Mar. 20): Aura of
romance present -evaluate needs, deficits, as-
sets, aspirations. Another Pisces and a Virgo
could flJOU'e prominently.
••• Cat
<Frum Pate BU from people sayjng, 'WouJd you train my cat?~
But m06t cats won't do what you tell them."
And Wally, who is now nearly eight years
old and a bit overweight, disproves the old
adage that you can't teach an otd·dog (or cat)
new tricks. .. He just learned the other day to Jump
through my arms," says Mrs. Simpson, trying
to coax Wally to shake bands for the camera.
"Come on Wally," she aaid, "abalte. shake ...
But the cat, in a most-un-dog·like way. •as
being stubborn.. .
"It takes more ~ee to train a cat than a
dog," noted Slmpeon as Wally finally raised his
paw. ••That's a good boy:• said Mrs. Simpson.
RUFFEll'S
· UPHOLSTERY
W..Y•W .. ......
am ..........
c-. .... -IO-Oll, .
TEN~NIS
LESSONS . Art Show
8 Lessons Today thru Sun ~ 5
more than fifty tlfented s12so artlsta res>N•ntlng the
AttiR• d• la Rue wm u.inv.TIOM preeent their outltlndlng
MOM.. ... 6tla worb. Whether~ btOW98
COSTAMISA CK buy you wl I enjoy tNs
collection of original Olla, TBM$CUll 9CfVllcs, ICUlptU,_ Ind
-517.0211-cnfta. Beect\ Blvd. & Edinger It the San Diego Pwy.
ONE DAY ONLY .
Antique Dealers
& Decorators ,
PARKING LOT SALE
Featuring
Furniture, China, Silver
Paintinss, Baskets, Folk Art
Pottery, Jew~, Bugs
Collectibles
L
ANALYSIS I CAREERS I NATION
By THOMAS D. EUAS
· Northern Callforida eonservationists paid Uttle
attention 85 the leder.i Bureau ol Land Manace-
ment 'moved slowly JJUt aurely toward sale ol Q.ew
oil ctrilling leases off the Southern Callfornla cout
in 1975 and 1976. '
..
LAS Vl!GAS -M-.flege lic.Mff
llwedllereWll.tdl: • ... ,
Now the same proces' has beiun again, but
this-time its focus could be s6me ol the most scenic
coaatllne in CalllorDla -the Point Reyes National
Seashore north of San Francisco and the Redwood
Natio.nal Park.
&A••ETT·SULLIVAN -~tlllp o.r-. ,.. .. .......,. ...... -
SMll• ....... °' ~,.... ••AL•V.cuc:r -JoNI W .• fl. « 0-. ~ • cattww II .• ef U flf C..t.eL...-N'9WI.
WAl.tcl•·1'0St! -JG4WI "°'*"· '1, JA -..~ .... CMelYI\ s-. N. ·"-~ ...... .
CALIFO{lNIA POLITICIANS FROM THE
state's U.S. senators on .down did everything they
could to prevent the Soutli.ern Callfornla lease sal~.
whose full impact has yet to be felt •.
Many of the same figures are lining up against
the newly-proposed leases and its difficult to say
whether theiduck will be any better this time.
Sen. Alan Cranston, for one, bas advlsed the
Department of Interior;
SOUTHERN parent of the BLM, to
CALIFORNIA keep bands off several FOCUS scenic areas ranging
--------"" from San Luis Obispo north.
BUT THERE DAS NOT BEEN any response
from the BLM, indicating that the Department of
Interior may not heed his pleas -now any more
than it did those ol both Cranston and then·Sen.
John Tunney before the last sale.
That leaves Northern California's sale right
about where the Southland one was in 1974.
At this staae. oil companies have until April 14
to nominate specific tracts for leasing. The leases
won't be auctioned until 1981. Jn the interim. the
W•lnterior Department can decide which areas to ex-.
elude from the sale.
The department used the same time period in
the Southland sale to eliminate many tracts in the
scenic Santa Monica Bay and around the Channel
Islands off Santa Barbara.
' IN ALL. ABOUT 18,000 SQUARE miles of
coastal waters are involve,d in the latest ca1l for
nominations.
Just as the Santa Barbara Channel and Santa
Monica Say nominations drew fire from conserva-
tionists before the last sale, now
the possibility or oil drilling off
both Point Reyes and the
jledwood park angers many.
· "It -c.~---~ improvident
a.nd patenUy stu~la Trot.. !h.0
federal government's point or
view to sell offshore leases ...
along the Pomt Reyes seashore, ..
says Republican State Sen. Peter
Pierre Salinger.
press secretary to
the l ate President
Kennedy, has been
decorated with the
insignia of th e
French Legion of
Honor. Salinger has
Jived in Paris for
several years.
Seniors
Needed
On Jobs ·
The Retired Senior
Voluntee r Program
(RSVP> is s eekin&
!>eniors 60 years old or
more to fiU positions in a
variety of volunteer
service jobs in south
Orange County.
Positions are availa·
ble as classroom aides
m local schools, English
teachers for adults from
other countri.es and
clerical positions for
many service organiza·
Uons.
Interested seniors can
contact program mem-
bers at 675-9210 or
498·3322 ror more in·
~ .... ;.!.!:. .. _ t
>.l{}ek'f d.~arin County, one of the Legislatur«fs~g ..c.QQS~a·
cu NU-OH tionists. -
Students
GrJJduate-..
BUT THERE ARE SOME REPORTS that the
Shell Oil Co. found oil in test wells drilled in the
same areas during the early 1960s. Reportedly too
expensive to exploit at the time, they might be
more profitable with today's higher oil prices.
If natural gas prices are deregulated soon, as
many congressmen now would like, the areas
might become even more attractive to oil com-
panies.
A discouraging fa.ctor, on the other hand.
might be the apparent lack oC success in drilling
tbe Southern California offshore tracts. No major-
finds have been announced there in the year since
the leases were sold.
GEOLOGIC CONDITIONS ARE SIMILAR off
the Northern California coast, so there may ac-
tually not be enough oil in either place to make the
leases worthwhile.
Similar doubts, however, didn't prevent the
government from taking in almost half a billion
dollars from the earlier lease auction.
Thal means protection of tl\e northern coast is
actually up to the Interior Deptl'rtment. which con-
trols the waters more than three miles from shore.
lf it doesn't eliminate the most scenic areas from
the oil company nominations, many of the most
spectacular parts or lhe cauromla coast could
soon sprout oil rigs.
Medical Assistant
Three local students
have been graduated
from the psychiatric
Technician program at
Cypress College.
Cindy FPench and
Steve Leff, both of Costa
Mesa. and Toni Fusco of
Newport Beach were
graduated from the
three-semester program
and are s cheduled to
take stale board ex-
aminations March 10 in
Los Angeles
Senion Get
LB Legal Aid
Luuna Beach senior citizens can receive free
legal assistance two
days this month from
9:30 a.m. to noon.
The legal aid Is
available Feb. 10 and 24
by appointment only.
Phone 497·2442 for in-
formation.
Broad Scope Required
By JOYCE L. KENNEDY
Dear Joyce: I will gndaate from
hlgb scbool this year and JPa)
become a medical assistant lft a doc·
tor's office. Are there many jobs 111
this field?
-B.D.D., Chlca10, 'fU.
In most places, yes. A review or
newspaper want ads and a call to the
county medical society will il-
luminate job market specific.a.
On the money side, a study by the
Amencan Association of Medical As·
alstants shows an improvement In
pay. In 1914, eight out of 10 medical
anlstants received an. averaae
salary or $120 weekly. Today, M per-
cent average $184. Nearly 8 percent
earn between $12,500 and $2SJ)OO an-
nually.
( CAREERS )
HIM"41u,<:IOHTIU~""5 -...._. O•tt. u,w ~,,. ~..._.._
.i Hom~ INCi\. CAV&•9'09tNSON -J.IMI 11'~ st. of .... e..o. .... t!ll&Melll •••
$G, .. c.r-clltl IMf. kSNNl!OV·W'AIT1t -JeM .,...._
2S. •ftd ~ A., u. '*" .. Coton•d91~. . L.AMB·STANOFILL -M. C.,
Jr., ... of ........... IMcll, --.. "" ti Jo, .... "'°"' llMC:t\. SEE·LA ROCCA -ROfleld f'r-ls, i.. end SMrry Ann, 31, Ntll el
Wfft"""'1 ....
HANLEY·LOWltV -J-Pet~.
2S, •nit 1C•t11 LY"ft, 22. llOtl\ el Munt•
Int• llMCI\. ' .,_,
CALDWELL.·STOHl!R -Wiiiiam Roland, :M, arid Inoa, J.4, Doth Of
UQUMNl!ll* ,_.
HERMAN·l.OEB -Herold H., 71, and Pa11llne H., "i.o-1 ~." Doth 01 1..e9una Hllll
ORLAHDC>PU>UFFE -S.Olvator~
.Manual, $4, of Conine def ~ •• and Merglt R-.~.Of RocMster, H.Y. , ... " MATTHEWS-PHILLIPS -Brue ..
Gene, 24, ol "-italn Valley, encl
Julle Elluti.th. 27. ol Gerdlft Gro•"
SHORT·OCHOA -Oerley llk l\ard,
?6, of f"-.!n Valle't', and •111.111eth
AM, 11, Of Ula Anoillet .... u BACHMA~INKER-N -«ollert
T •• SJ. of IMne, end a.v s.. ». of
Sante AM
Jaft. 11
McPHERSON-NEUMANN -Cul
Geotge, 25, -Petrkl• lo<relnot, JJ, ·both ot Hlll'lllnoton lie.ch
BOWLING-BOWLIHO -Fran-. Jr ,
S7, '*"'trrleel ~r11le P..,llne, S.
both of W"tmlMle< , ... ,.
HYOE·WOMACIC -Dall• Gene, 40, ol San Cl-le, arWI Lela M., 42, of
Seke"lleld GILLILANO.Mc:MAHUS -ltObert
L., ~. encl E°'""" tt, llOlll Of Hunt·
lngton e..cti
VAANER·8ERGEVIN -Charle$ 11 ... 1, 27, of "-!Mn Valley, and Ci.eryl LYM, '6. Of Saftte Me
BOYLES.WILFONG -Sleplwft M.,
?l, end Jullarw L.,..,., 23, both of
WeUmlnsi.
SAHCHEl·TIRADO-Raul Antonio,
40, Of Costa Mew. end ~rla Irene. J.4, ol Ne-' llHCh
STEVEHs.NESS -~ IC .• .O.
a nd Beverly J ., ••. both ol
Wfftmlnsl., • Tl'••:::.---...c-~v. 4S. eno
!Sorothy J , so. both Of Huntington
e .. ch
WINFREE·KtM -c1.-Kanaha,
31, of Hl.W>ll'IQI°" 8"ch. end Younq
H .. , >0, ol Gar-Grow
Al ORI OGE ~~HSON -Jaole
Ray, 1J, -~rlela Lynn, 11, both otW~°'' --•l'l\Jwt•l40.to&8 -c;,.._., 1...11.
ol Ntwl>Ort lleectl, -0.-<ltl El· ltfl,27,of~teMesa
ROOHEY·C>RAIS -Patrlell M.trlr, n . -~ o.-. 11. botll of Cost•MeU ANTON·8 EWLEY -Anthon1
Oomlt. SS. of lrvlne, -Betty Ford,
SO,of Se!QMI
Mf>.11
TRAP.USO-ZAYAS -JOMl)ll An·
'"""'. Sr~ Sl. ol ~ llffell, •nd loMl'V Palrkl'I. 44, ol El Toro
PALOIHO·OUNLAP -Wllll•m
MkllMI Jr., ?4. Of Wo<eHlef, Ma ....
encl oa-Gamllle, 1', of Hl.W>llngton
Bea<h , .... 11
BENAVIOEZ·SEHTNER -Alu_ 37,
Of Wffttnlnsl«, end Londa JeenotUe.
:ll, of Sent• ...... ,_,,
CA8RER-"Wlsc.HMEYER -Fer
'"' T en11t•. a1. o1 o.n. ,...nt, •"d Fe Pede ... ta, oUMI [)le9o
OEMAREE·AOAMS -8ruct
Eugene. 11, of Cost• MeH. and
JoEllel\, 21, ol Genleft ~ ,,_" ..
THQMAS·CRAHFORO ~ Gle..n
St11trt, St, Of Altevlste, Va., end
GIO<le CMrlolt., U. ol Cost. Mew
BOOMS-RUSSELL -S-David,
22, ol Orenge, -CY"lhla J-. ?J. ot weumlMttr
BB Coed
Horwredat
l.m,v School
TR£ M~DlCAL ASSISTANT (MA)
works io a pbyaiclall'• oftlce.
medical clinic or hospital. Typlna
and som~ klnd of ahortband or 1J*edwritlnl ere usually req,uired.
YOU CAN STIU learn mecllctlru..
slJUna on the Job. but doctorf'" are
bualer tbele clays and may not want ClaaHe rancinl from
A multl·talent~ 1enerallat •ltb to teach beftnnen. The belt ap-aeron1utica to w•ldlna
bolb admlnlatraUn and teebnlcal J)l'oach-pait.lcularly for• new hieh-tecbno&oo .,. belnt 4f.
re1poulbtlltl ... the MA '1 d•ll•• Kbool ,..ac1 -Js to1:ake • one-°' tered durinf weekencb
ranee from CTeftlDI patlmtta and two·ytar accredited proir•• In ·bY Or••I• Oout handllnt 1ppo1D.tmenta to ~ pa-medlcll -..uni, available at'iDIDJ G olden· We 1 t and
tlent'• blood ~ •"4 ct.oflt1 aim-priv•'-.ocadodal acaoola end com· CoaatilnO eoueaea. ' munl&J tone1 .
-------•
Frtday. February 3. 1971 DAIL V PILOT
Construelion Continues
Despite the recent heavy rains construe ..
lion of Laguna Hills High Schooi is expect-
ed to be completed in time for its
scheduled September opening. A year
from now, the construction site will be a
campus with about 760 students and 30
teacbe~r in its administration building,
library, gymnasium and classrooms. This
first phase of the school ls costing about
$8 million. It will be the third com-
prehensive high school in the Saddleback .,
Valley Unified School District.
Israel . Offers Egypt Aid
Atomic, Desalinization Know-how to Be Shared?
BOSTON (AP> -Israel is prepared to offer to
Egypt nuclear know-how in buUdlng atomic power
and desalinitation plants as part of the Mideast
peace talks, the Boston Herald American reported
authorizing live radio broadcasts or its upcoming
debate. In a related matter, a Howse rules subcom·
mittee recommended that the lower chamber
operate its own system for broadcasting proceed-
ings, using the Canadian Parliament as a model. today.
The newspaper said ) ~~s:rt.~~~e1~flh~~( IN SHORT Mllltaf"11Pa11Pla•N~d
Egyptians as well as . WASIUNGTON <AP> -A presidential commi·
American officials. sion h as rejected a proposal t.o change tbe tradi· ·'The construction of major installations like tional military pay system to put some 2.1 million
nuclear power plants to provide electricity and ·servicemen and women on salaries like ether w ate~ desali~ization ·would have to include wage earners. ~merican pm.tcip~.tion in running and sa£eguard·. 1 By turning down the proposal, 7-0 on Thllrs-
ing the projects, the ne\IAipaper. quot.ed Dr. day, the commission would retain the present Yosse~ Rom, a '?ember of~~ l~~aeJ!.Parliame~ ,~~ ~-wl:Uch rnili~~rsonnel.rec~!ve
as s~vJ.nsr _ · -· basic pay PJllS tiGb·TBXiimtttd!OWil'ices tOr-Aousmg
and food.
Torrijos lnloraaatlo•Sol'fl•t
WASIIlNGTON (AP) -A leading Senate op· ~BoWTeen-ageB .. tage1
ponent of the Panama Ca11.a1 ,t{~at1)~~~J!lg lh~-~GTON <AP) _The Vietnamese gov-?DmCe pepanmentror-~~~ntTs"'ho1arrr1ras ..... i · MsUte 'tfle 't!en-aie
, mfor~ation after h_e rece1v~ stepson of an American information officer
seem mgly authentic govern-charged with spying for Vietnam, according to the
ment ~tles im.plicatlng man'slawyer. Pan~m~ s leader m narcotics A. Andrew Giangreco, court-appointed at ..
traff1ckang. torney for Ronald Louis Humphrey, 42, said Thora'· Sen. Bob Dole, 'R-Kan., said day night that deman have resulted from the Thurs~.ay that an. "un~nown boy's detention, but lawyer declined to specify
source furnished him "'.ll~ the what the demands w or to link them directly to ~rug Enforcement Adm1mstra· lhe a lleged espionag .
'TOHr.ios hon documents involving G!.?n. Omar Torrijos. Dole said the, _______ __... _ _,., ________ _
material was delivered to his office Wednesday in PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
a plain white envelope.
'
·Iii DAILY PILOT
<
Fri~, FfOnaty 3, 1971
Mortgage Costs Mulled . .
Bill Would Requli-e Disclosure of Interest ,.
WASHINGTON (AP> -A bill
•ratting a vote by the Senate
w,o uld a llow prospectiv e
hOmeowners to learn, many for
tpe first time, that they pay more
io interest c harges for their
·ri>o1tgage than they do .for the tlsSuse itself.
The provision is part of a bill
chan ging th610.year-old Truth in
Lending Act. The Senl te Banking
Coe/We Plea
For Air Routes
Wins Backing
Committee has unanimoustt re ·
com mended the bill forpu afe.
WHE NnfELAWwaswrittena
decade ago, home m ortgages
were excluded because of t~e
belief that consumers would be
less likely to buy a home it te>ld all
or the financing charg~ over the
25-or 30-year course of a
m,ortgage -charges that usually
add up to more than the cost of the
house.
However. Maryland and
Massachusetts have enacted qis·
closure laws for mortgages, and
several senators said the ex-
perience of the two states shows
they do not discourage home
ownership.
"'It is a question of whether you
can trust people to have the
truth." said Sen. Donald Riegle.
D·Mich.
SEN. WILLIAM Proxmire, D·
Wis .. agreed and said disclosure
of the dollar figur e would allow
the con•umertosee, tor example, exacU~ wbal the dltte«liee l"
~tween a mortc•s~ at 9 percent
and onut9\4percent. / • Unde~ the blll, consumers also
would tet a almplet statement Of
the terms of ~lr loans than tm•
der the preJenf law. Proxnilre,
who ,pansored lbe 11188 Truth ln
Lendlnt Act, 41.so la sponaoriq
thebUJ.
The committee, c haired by
Proxml~. acted after bQth credit
instltuUons and consumer groups
tesUfled at hearings that the law
has loo many complex regula·
tions.
T H E ST.ATE MENT now gtven
to customers lists about 20 items
of infor mation, including the ad·
dition and subtraction steps in
computing various totals.
Under t he bill, the consumer
would be given only fi gures rorthe
total price. finance charge, the
amount of monthly payment and
the annual payment rate.
...
'I HAVE NO REASON TO FEEL SORRY FOR MYSELF,' BLIND ARTIST SAYS
Crla Delmonico Approaches Life Boldly, Vtgoroualy, Full of Ambition
WASHINGTON <AP) -An
administrative law judge has re·
com mended th al the Civil
Aeronautics Board give Cochise
t}.irlines a certificate to serve 14
cbmmunities in Arizona, Nevada
and California.
' Judge Frank M . Whiting also
r ecommended Thursday that
Cochise setve Page, Ari~ but
not as a ct'rtificated carrier
Blind Artist O.pens :Many ·Eyes
..#
"'
HE RECOMMENDED THAT
S)cy-West, another commuter
line, not be certificated but
round the carrier "fit, willing
and able" to fly passengers
Qetween Page, Las Vegas,
Nev., arfd PhO<.'ni'lc.
If the CAB goes c.1ong, the
j udge said 1t should limit federal
subsidies to Cochise on its routes
to $1.2 million
By JULES LOH
AP' 5-i.I C«r~t
!'f\ENDHAM, N.J. -"Here 1s
some of my work." the young
man said, extending a thick
loose·lear book with color photo·
graphs of paintings. "Do you
have enough light?
.. , don't do this work out or
some pursuit of equality, or to
show off. I do 1t because il feels
great to do it, and l do it as art,
and people buy it as art, not as a
t:uriosily.
··Right now I'm applying to a
number of colleges, for my final
two years. I want a bachelor's
degree that will leave me open
for a master's in several areas
-design, visual arts. Then I
want a doctorate. \
"Somewhere between now and
the master's degree I have to
find the courses that will allow
me to perfect and simplify this
art of mine.
Coch1:,('·s cerl1hcate would
•?IC\'ale 11 from commuter ~talus
1 •• lh"t ,.u.,,. uy:..1 '"rvicP earner
and wouJd suoft!°Cl it to economic
re~ulation hy thl• CAR
CO )1 M lJ NITI ES IT would
:-erve unckr this dcsij!nation a re
Crand Canyon. Wins low,
1-'l a(.!staff. Douglas. Tucson.
Phoenix. Fort lluachuca·S1erra
Vis ta. Yuma. Prescott ,
Kingman and Lake Havasu in
Arizo na; Las Vegas: and Los
;\ngeles, Blythe and E l Centro in
:~ .. ~:--:e'!.'" ~_.; ~~.!"::.•'
year at the Somer!>et Art As ·
sociation show I won first prize.
The judges were not aware I am
blind."
"I WANT TO MAKE it a com·
mercial venture, sell it in kit
form. 1l will be not just for the
1'1mti, v1:n: .; ... _;;;!:t.~ ~Nut.c;e j!
1s ¥lfl art form anyone canteacn
himself, on his own.
"Then I want to teach. I want
to teach communicatjon. I want
to teach younger people to ex·
press themselvcs,_t.o_~ their
, Californw.
During hearings before Whit·
1ng, Hughes AirWest a nd Fron-
tier Airlines stated their opposi·
t1on lo Cochise's certification.
These carriers already ser ve
many of the cities involved.
Whiting also recommended
that Hu g h es AirWest be
permitted to suspend its service
to Blylhl' and continue sus-
pension of service to Kingman.
Prescott and Page and that
Frontier continue s uspension of
:.er\'lcelo Winslow.
At the rcstll'SS age of 21 ,
Charles Crist Delmonico 4th -
Cr is, he calls himself ap·
proaches life as he approaches
art, boldly, vigorously, fuU of
ambition. His view is ahead, not
behind; with self-confidence, not
self.pity.
"See you later." he says to
every visitor.
CRIS DELMONICO knows.
though, that he will never again
see, that Qls bli~dness is total. as
it has been fo r a third of his life.
He regards it as an inconvenient
fact, nothing to mope over. If
it is true that they al~o serve
who only stand and wait, count
him out of that category. His
plans allow no lime for standing
and waiting.
~yes. ,, -----...
Cris has a nam e for the art
techn iqu e that he wants t o
spread to the sighted and the
blind alike -inner,creative vis-
ionary craft. "It's a variation of
what is known as str iog art,
without the strings. Here, I'U
show you"
HE TOOK DOWN his drawing
board. put it across his lap. and
with pins and a T·square deftly
went about making a pattern of
lilies .
"They're all s traight lines. but
soon you will see them form a
curve. Do you see it? Do you see
Uk curve? Start with that, and
the possibilities for expression
ar e endless."
PUN SVITI
CHARGE IT
CINCINNATI (AP)
Gredil cards are being
accepted by Cincinnati
Oor Cl problrm~ Tltt'll IDrll~ IO POI °"""· P!lt lDiU
n.tl n-d topr. g~111ng 1ltt o"'~'' ond aclloll JIOU 11t~
to aolw 111~1t1t1111 oov~n1mt111 arid bu.ftntu. Mau
your q~sllotU ro Pal DU1rn. Al Your S4!nnct, Oro119e
Coa1I DoJl11 Pllnl. P 0 8or 1560. Co"o Mno. CA
n&26 Al man11 /fllrrs 01 pau1blr will be' a111we1td,
but phoned mq111rlu or ltllrr• Ml lncludhlg tlMr
rt1adfr"1/ulJ1M1m1.addr1u and bwm1u ltollr1' Jllton•
numlw'rcanl'l<)t~conrid<lrN Tlt"col"''"lapptOrldal·
ly ucqii SaJ14rdoy1 ·• •
lawyers for some legal
~ervices. Ant• Rua Fro• Cleanser
-"It's an accepted part M our monetary system DEAR PAT: I imagine a lot of
now. and we felt we your readers are having problems
should allow people the with ants due to all the rain we've
option of charging legal had. I want lo pass along a non·
services as they would chemical ant control method I've
charge other services," used s uccessfully for a long time. I
said Albert Fingerman, just sprinkle Ajax cleansing powder
president or the Cincin· on a paper to~l where the ants ap·
nali Bar Association. pear inside the house and also out· __________ side where t hey enter the house.
CAPITOLIZE
WITH
CAPITOL
CAPIT(X.IZATION MEANS TO'
-ttfMRT CAPITOL TO CASH"
(.You,...., Sl.00010 Uo 000 c.ttll. ana '°" ....,, e ,_ °' 01'-' IW-•1·. ..., IClr O< .... l.i ~OI. llO\ll
LO . .\H 1t•etl99 to ~!Olllt ~r ""' ""° • c.111 --.... lfld ~ ......... .
They steer clear or the Ajax for some
strange reason and I have no pro-
blems at all. M.A., Costa Mesa
Your scouring powder ant re·
pellant ls almost as strange 11 the
m ethod that recommends leHlng
cucuJnber peellngs out to deter anti
from lnvadlQg a boasehold. Bat, 11 It
woTks, that's what counts. SUsafraa
tea also bas beeJl p.rllsed by A YS re·
aders H an ant repeUant. U Is made
by bolling two tablespoons of
sasaafras leaves and two cups ot
water fer ftve mlbutes. Cool. atraln
and 1talnton a.ninll••>'•·
C.,.Perad•• Proieeu
DEAR PAT: My husband and I are
planning to buy a business. What are
the advantllges of forming a corpora·
lion?
well as a general dl1cusslo11 of prac·
tlcal aapectaofsettlngone ap.
DEAR PAT: I applied for credit
recently and.was turned down. I ex·
.amined my credit. bureau file. and
found that It contained some inac·
curate information. What should 1 do
now? ·
R.O., Costa Mesa
You have a right to dbptd.e In·
accurate or mlaleadba' lalorma n
ln you credlt bureau ftle. At yoar re·
quest. the bareau must relov.Ugate
disputed matten. Jf you are rlpt or
lf the ln.lormallon can no lonaer be
verified, ll must be removed. If &he
bureau verlftes UM> ln(ormadela and
you 1UU disagree wlUa It. fOll are P ·
titled· to write a statement •P to lM
word• on tbe dtsacreemtat. ?be
credit bueau mut lndllde It la :yoar
file. The law farilMr nqulrel tile
barea• to belp you write Ute state·
meet, If 1" aak.
If the cndlt banaa revl.et 10·
form atlon or 1r ye• wrtte a statemeat
for lnclmloa ln you me. Ute bvea11
muat read your atatemea& ,.. 11•
Hmmary of It to aa,.. •,....
tbey give the report.: 1t _. noury HJ'll'e"IOll wlllli w nw.1"'9 • report OD )'OQ wttllJa Ifs llllllClll. (OC'
two years If l& Involves ellillloY._O
of &Ile atatetneat 104f ••e.:..._.. )'011 ailt. TbeN • .., .. .,._ .. IGCllU..al
char1e for tltll. ~Qetlt w~ ,..,
~to Me II Ute .......... cem· ,., .. , ... &lal& .... ..... .,.a~.,.,,..,.
It would seem. so, glancing
through his own collection. His
pictures· ue far from mere
geom etrical abstractions. Most
contain freeform voids In the de·
signs .and all ar e vivid with
blues and greens and yellows
suggestive of seas and sunbursts
and all manner of moods.
"I WANT THEM to reflect
how I feel at the time. l know
they give a sense of rhythm and
power. I feel it myself."
Cris was bor n with poor
eyes ight. When he was 14 he lost
his vision entirely, but not until
after-a patnrin ~ear '' w!".&l. he-called living in a shadow world.
"That wa::; the worst l ime of
all. I could see enough that I
held out a glimmer of hope. 1
seemed to be always angry,
tense, making excuses. When I
finally became totally· blind I
could accept my condition and
go about living with it. It
became much easier.
"I REALLY HAVE only two
regrets about my handicap.
"One is that when I want
desperately to be with someone
and have no way to get there I
feel caged. The other is that if I
ever have children I will not be
~~ l'l ~~ tl\~ir faces.
..Apart from those res·erva·
( A.MERICA J
tions, blindness is not disabling.
I have no reason to feel sorry for
my~lf. When I could see, I saw
gratefully well. 1 have seen the
view from the top or the Empire
State Building I have seen lh£
Maine woods I have seen pie·
lures of the Eiffel Tower and the
pyramids. 1 have seen these hills
wherf I live
·'The Amcnc:an dream is to be
able to do what you want with
your lift! J expect lo do \hat.•·
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STOCKS I BUSIN~S
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NYSE COMPOSfl1K -TRANSACTIONS
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l/N OAtl Y PILOT 8:i
'l'«a Ttnte
Meals,, Joh Hunt
Rules Detailed
By SYLVIA PORTE& , ..... ~
A I1m u .s. Supreme CoUrt declslon ls bad newa tot
employees ~i.mbursed by employers ror meals boulhl
while performing jobs. ,
A 1roup of police omcers and highway patrolmen
argued thtll reimbursement for meal$ while working
wasn't Income because of a special exception ln the
federal tax law, stating that the value or mea!J lumished
to an employee by his employer on the employer's pre·
mises and for the employer's oonvenience is not income to
the employee.
THE COURT SAID the exception applies only to meals
furnished by the employer, not to reimbursement pald b"
the emplo9er. • ,~
The court lert open a point concerning "supper money, •
an irregular reimbursement for a meal thiat ao employ~
may be paid when be or she voh.iotarily stays beyond Ne·
ular workina hourt. The Supreme Court declalon ml~t
be Interpreted as en<!;
ing a le>na·stancltng ex·
•m pUon of supper
money from tJt,x.
But tbe Court em-
phasized that, without
makin1 a dedsion now, ' tl)ere might be other '-..illMjll._ ____ _
good reuons for continuinl to enmpt supper money. Leoq
Gold, chief tax consultant to t,be Research Institute of
America, says to continue to treat supper moneyrecelved In 'l977 as exempt under tbe old IRS J'Ullng. Do not report it
as income.
IF YOU SPENT MONEY LOOKING FOR a job in 1977.
here's how to handle expenses:
-The IRS will allow a deduction lf you sought a job, re·
gardless of whether you got lt. only in your present trade
or business. You can't deduct the costs if you looked in a
new field.
-Travel expenses, both local and away from home, are
deductible as adjustments on line 23 of 1977 Form l
even if you don't otherwise ltemlze for
taxes, lnteres~ ---EXPENSES FOR TYPING 'AND printlna of resumes
and for postage are deductible only as itemized personal
deductions on line 31 of Schedule A of Form 1040. U you
don't itemize, you can't deduct these expenses.
lf you're an employee required to contribute to state dis·
ability funds in California, New Jersey, New York and
Rhode Island. you were told by the IRS that you could not
deduct these contributions as taxes.
But in 1977, the IRS agreed with the Tax Court, which
had held that Rhode Island employee contributions to the
state's fund were deductible as taxes. It disagreed with a
similar Tax Court ruling about California and has ap•
pealed.
Nut: Medkal erpenua \ .. ·~ ....
Stocks Slww, Worry
Over Interest Rates
NEW YORK <AP> -The stock market was mixed to-
day in a drifting session marked by uneasy specualtion
over the interest-rate outlook.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials was down 4.50
p0ints to 770.88.
But gainers ran sli&hUy ahead or losers in the broad
tally of New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.
More than a point or the Dow's loss was accounted for
by ex -dividends, or dividend-payment-adjustments, in tne
prices of three stocks in the average.
'Analysts noted some concern over the continued ex-
pansion of the money supply that showed up In week!~
statistics issued by tbe .Federal Reserve at Thursday·~
close.
The data prompted some renewed fears of credit·
-tightening by the Fed.
Sto~la In The
Spotlfglat
NEW YORK IAPI· 5-1•, • '-"'· prlu .,,ci Mt ~ of tlle fll-MUI Kil ...
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WflAT AMU 010
l'IEW VOAIC (A .. l
-
• LOS ANGELES-Wltb the
' ·.;withdrawal of Olympic cham·
:jlon John Walker from the mile,
:"°'e spotlight wlll be concentrat-
: ~d on a couple ol field events in
. oonight's -Times Indoor Games
· .1t the Forum.
. The high jump brings together
ne gold, silver and bronze
11edal winners from the 1976
•)lympics while the pole vault
• eatures half a dozen members
of the exclusive 18-foot club.
Walker, who holds the world
oile record (3:49.4) announced
Yednesday that he wut undergo
i1rgery to correct a circulation
problem in his right leg.
In his place will be Tanzania's
Filbert Bayi, the world record
holder in the 1,500 meters. His
late addition insures the mile or
a stellar field despite the fact
that Walker's absense will prob-
ably befeltatthega~.
Another late withdrawal is
Franklin Jacobs or Fairleigh
Dickinson. who set an indoo
world high jump record (7·7 11.i)
a week ago, because of meet
commitments in the east. But
bis absense will hardly be
noticed.
.,.,_.
RAYMOND TOWNSEND REACHES FOR A LOOSE BALL.
•ae-8 ~oundap
Bruins Bury Cards;
USC Trips Bears \___
.OS ANGELES CAP)-David
!enwood scored 21 ~lnta and
led down 13 rebounds to lead
b-rpnked UCLA to an easy
-64 PacHlc-8 Conference
;ketball v.ictory over St.anlord
Pauley Pavilion Thursday
ht. rhe 21 points moved
denwood, a junior forward,
m 23rd to 19lh place on the
time UCLA scoring list.
rhe Bruins are now 6·0 in
c-8 play and 15-2 overall. The
rdinals dropped to 1-5 and
8.
JCLA started fast, moving to
3·2 lead after five minutes of ·
,, 1Y. and Stanford never re-
1ered. The Bruins made 13 of ;: !lr tint 19 field goal attempts t ct 22 of 34 in ttie flnt, half.
::· e Cardinals converted only
• · >1en of 25 Ooor shots in the
~ning 2t minutes.
• \JCLA led at halftime 50-24 • .cl continued the onslaucht at :4: ) start of the seooad half, out-
•.:• ring Stanford 15-6 In the fl.rat
~;.-e minutes to extend-its advan-
4 '
.: 1eto~.
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'"·
con{erence action and 9·10 for
the season.
Southern Cal led at halfllme
41·38 and took an eight-point
lead early in the se<:ond half.
But cal came back to take a
74-73 advantage with just under
fiv~ minutes to play. But USC
went ahead seconds later and
held on the rest of the way.
It was 82-81 with on~ minute to
play, but the Trojans scored the
final five points, all by
Robinson.
CALIFORNIA (11) -Sl~Ofl t , True 14,
ScllM'-rlGM 14, Ransom 21, c-111 2, Devis 2, 811ottU~MltcNll 7. Tai11ld6 "1U1.
SOYTHellN CAL (17) -Helldtr9M U, Miiier
H, llellfMM 39, CMflllo I,~ l. Rllkcwkll S,
Hohlngllln 2. O. 5"'11116, T •. 1$-» 17. Htlnlme -Sou1Mrt1 41, Cllllomlt at. Fo4.11te eut-Sdlneldef!Olwl, Mltclltll. Totll IOUtt
-Cllllomll 27, SoutllWll Ott 1'1 l'Kl!l1kMI -Soul~ CM '*'Ch. A-4.2"·
Bwlda,U.52
SEATl'LE -Dan W'alker
scored l'1 points and Sten
Matzen added 14 Thursday ni&ht
as the UniversltY of Wasbll\itoa
Huskies held oU the Oregon
Ducks 58-52 in a Paclftc·8 COn·
Cerence basketball prne.
W ashiDeton switched from a
man-to-man defense to a zone
mid way in the second half and
held the I>Qclcs to one fteld goal
for the last 1() mtnuta.
· Ot'egoo'a Du Hartahorne led
aU acoren wlth lt polntl. Ho did
nbt ICCn In tbe On.al llx min\rtff
•• Waablo•ton'a 'l-foot·2
freshman ceuter P•tur Gud· m•d._ _..,•t-4 the lna(de ,,,.. ..
,.
DAILY PILOT
That's because effervescent
Dwight Stones. who has lost both
his outdoor and indoor records
in the last year, is once again on
hand. So is his new nemesis,
Cunadu's Greg Joy, who held the
a~r mark at 7·7 before Jacobs
(' d it.
Jn addition, there's Jacek
Wszola of Poland, who won the
Olympics gold medal in 1976
ahead of Joy and Stones.
The pole vault also features a
sterling field. UCLA's Mike Tul-
ly , the indoor record bolder at
18·4, goes up against the man
whose mark he erased, Dan
Ripley, and the man who beat
him out for vaulter or the year
honors in 1977, Poland's
Wladyslaw Kozaklewlea.
Other 18-foot vaulters entered
include Earl Bell, the former
NCAA champion from
Arkansas, and West Germany's
Gunther Lohre.
T~e mile field includes current
indoor sensation Dr. Thomas
·wesslnhage of West Germany
who has won twice in two weeks,
UC Irvine's Steve Scott, who bad
times of·3:56.S indoors and 3:5.U
outdoors a year ago, and
Ireland's Eamonn Coghlan.
In a Los Angeles indoor meet
two weeks ago, Wesslnghage
posted .a 3:49.7 winning time
ahead of Bayi (4:00.S) and Scott
(4:00.9). Wessinhage is current·
ly ranked second in the world.
Olympic champion Arnie
Robinson, the soie member of
the newly.formed San Diego
Ghetto Strlders, heads a long
jump field that includes UC
lrvlne's LaMonl King, a 25-foot
jumper last year as a prepster.
· The ro.yard dash splits world
record holder Houston McTear
and Steve Williams into
separate beats.
G8uChos Outshoot UCI
Anteaters Dealt 78-76 C~e Setback
SANTA BARBARA-UC
Irvine's Anteaters shot the lights
out and played tough defense.
but came up a bucket short
Thursday night as red-hot UC
Santa Barbara outlasted the vis·
iting Anteaters, 78-76, in a PCAA
basketball game.
UCI zone to go up 74.12, but
Wayne Smith, with an assist
from Kirk Christ, scored on a
a 2Hoot jumper outside the UCI
zone. however, a nd the Ant·
· eaters then lost some of their
momen\um when Stephens mis-
PCAA ITMOING~ " '"" .. A sed the front end of a one·and·
Fm"° stM9 • ' 01 "1 one situation at the free throw P•clllc S 2 •ti •'7 l" C.I St•I• (FUllwtoft) s 2 JCIJ 410 me. ~
s.n D'-9«>5'et. s 2 ~_. U ~ain. Rick Jurk
c.1 si.t• <&..ang llMcbl ! !-529 _ got a bucket with 22 seconds left San Jote State c ~ • ~-The Anteaters of coach Tim
Tift never led, but tied the &@JJle.
at 10 72 jUlci 1-4 trero-re the
Gaocifos got a break when UCI
missed at the free throw line to·
get the upper hand.
UC~ 2 s 01 '°' to pare it to 78·76, but UCSB
·i:te 1rv1ne 1 ' .so st1 wasted the next 18 ticks before T!MwMrf'• IC-•
In those fmal three minutes of
action the Anteaters tied it at 70 .
on Louis Stephens' layup and at
12 with 2:02 left on a 12·foot
jumper by Brad Carson.
UCSB clicked from outside a
Sports in ·Brief
'
ucs.m.~•11. uc 1rv1ne7' the Anteaters co u Id get
S•n OleOo ScM••· c:.1 S1M• c1..ong BMdl> 11 possession. S.nJo1eState~;!~C::-. Smith's $foot desperat\on ef·
UC Sall~ llartllra M UC lrvlM f rt t th ... ·---• 1•• d d th FrftftO SUC• .. cat ttM• <Futt.nonl o a e uiu.~ m'""'e an e
s.n D'-9c>ScM .. t'C111~CL.onv11M<1t1 Anteaters had the1r sixth loss In
s.n .,_ s.... .. PKHk seven circuit tries.
layup with 1:30 to go to ue il
again at 74.
Matt Mederos countered with
'
Tlft's forces played well
enough to win most encounters,
hitting 34 of 58 from the field for
59 percent. UCSB, however, was
even hotter, clicking on 29 of 42
for 69 percent ..
Laver Ousts Cox;
Smith was brilliant again for
UC Irvine, scoring 30 points,
)Vith 24 of those counters coming
in the second half surge. 4 Smith made 13 of 20 from the
field (65 percent), had four as-
sists. a blocked shot and two
steals to his credit. Padres Sign Lolich
RICHMOND, Va. -Bjorn
Borg defeated Harold Solomon.
6·3, 6·2 and Rod Laver of Corona
del Mar ousted Mark Cox, 6-4,
S· 7, 6-4 Thursday on the
Richmond stop of the World rennis Championship tour.
In other second round
matches, John Newcombe beat
Jose Higueras, 6-2, 6·2 and Eddie
D1bbs defeated Zeljko
Franulovic, 6·1, 6·2.
In the quarterfinals tonight,
Borg goes against Newcombe;
Dabbs plays Laver, Vitas
Gerulallis faces Ken Rosewall
a nd Corrado Barazzutti is
matched against Peter Flem-
ming.
LoU~h Sign•
SAN ·DIEGO -Left·handed
pltcher Mickey Lolich came to
an agreement Thursday with the
San Diego Padres.
Lolich, 37, sat out last season
after two years with the New
York Mets. He ranks sixth in
strikeouts among active pitchers
with 2,799 and third in victories
with 215.
Stoelctoa RoU.
NORTI{ IJTI'LE ROCK, Ark.
-Dick Stockton defeated Jiri
Granat, 6-4, 5-7, 7-6 Thursday
night in a $50,000 tennis tourna-
ment.
In another match, Jiri Hrebec
upset Terry Moor, 2-6, 6-4, 6-4.
Nick Saviano defeated John
Yuill 6-2 when Yuill retired after
pulling a hamstrine muscle, and
Byron Bertram defeated Bernie
Mitton, 6-2, 6-4.
Goo ............
CHICAGO .-Evonne
Ooolagong. and Betty Stove ad~
vanced to the semifinals or a
women's tennis tournament
Thursday.
Goolagong beat Rosie Casals,
3·6, 6-4, 6-2 and Stove outsted Sue
Barker, 7·6, 2-6, 7-5.
•• ,,.... llepe•t•
STRASBOURG, France
Defending EUl"Opeari cbampton
Jan Hoffman of East Germany
overcame a faulty landing on a
triple loop to retain his slnal.es
Laken Face Neu .
In TeleViaed 'rut
crown at the European figure
skating championships Thurs·
dty night.
Hoffman, 22, executed the only
triple lutz of the evening in
four-part exhlbltlon in the con-
cluding five·mlrwte free skating.
Second place went to last
year's European runner-up
Vladimir Kovalev of the Sovie(
Union and Britain's Robin
Cousins placed third.
Ra.lrez In Se.ls
1\1 EXICO CITY -Raul
Ramirez advanced into the
semifinals of the $50,000 Mex-
ican Open Thursday with a 6-4,
6·1 victory over Rich Fisher.
In other matches, Peter
Pearson downe,d Paul
McNamee, 7·5, 1-6, 6·3: Anand
Amrit.Faj,.be~t Colin Dowdeswell
6-0, S-7, 7-6; Pat DuPree defeat·
ed Erik van Dlllen, 4·6, 7·6, M
and Gene Mayer upset Marooo
Lara, 4-6, 6-1, 6-1.
SEATrLE-Dan Malaae, a
graduate of Fountain Valley
High School, ~ nine points
for the Unlvenlty of Santa Clara
in ah 88-69 victory over host
Seattle University here Thun·
day night.
UC IMl!e o.i """· C11rl't J 0 3 " McGulr• s O 1 10
SMltll 13 4 4 30
C:.rson I> O 4 12 Jvt1< 2 0 2 •
~ 0 0 1 0
$!aphefll 3 0 2 I>
llol41en 1 0 2 2 "~ 0. 1' 8iiwn 1 0 I 2 Tot.It M I 21 7'
Halttl-: uaa. lf.D.
0 11 ucsa
Flavln
Momlllck
M_.ros
Perry
Rl09eway H-••d T•te
T91-ll
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2'1301'71
~Swimmers
In Netherlands
AMERSFOORT, Netherlands
(A P) -A ~oung and talented
crop or Amencan swimmers will
compete this weekend against
some of the wo rld's top
performers in a 23-natlon meet.
The U.S. men are paced by
Jack Babashoff, 22, of Fountain
Valley, in the 100-meter
freestyle, and Joe Bottom, 22,
who holds the world record in
the lOO·meter butterfly.
!fhe American women are led
by Cynthia Woodhelld, 13, of
Riverside, ranked third in the
world in the 200-meter freestyle
and the youngest swimmer in
the competition. 1.(argaret
Brown~ 17, of Corona del Mar.
200-meter backstroke; Kathy
Tl'eible, 16, 100-meter
backstroke; and Diane Johnson,
18, of Walnut, 200-meter in-
dividual medley.
r
Old erip
Helping
Littler
HONOLULU <AP) -Gelle
Littler recently began using en
old putting gt"lp that he laat Uled
three or four years a10. ·
And the "double overlappin1"
&J:'lp helped un the 47 .. year-old
tour veteran to the first-round
lead ln the $250,000 Hawallan
Open aoll tourn11ment Thursday.
"This grip elves me a new /eel
and it's worked very well," said
Littler, who beean using it acain
last week and prompUy Ued for
second in the San Diego Open.
"I've been pulting badly tor
some time and when you are
putting badly, you're always
tinkering around and cbangtng
something -either your grips
or your stance or somethine."
he said.
Littler had a 7-under-par 65,
one stroke ahead of ,John
Schroeder, with whom he tJed at
San Diego. Mark Hayes, Eddie Pearce, Dave Stockton and Bob __
·Wynn .,.-ereU~·~ ~~nampio n ljann>:
Wad kins had a 73 and Arnold
Palmer was 10 strokes off the
pace at 75.
The field will be cut to the top
70 and ties after today's second
round. The 12-hole toumameat
continues through Sunday, with
the winner receiving $S0,000,
The greens on the 7,234.yard
Waialae Country Club course
were described as in perfect
condition and Littler said bis 65
was due to his holing or some
long putts.
''I probably holed more putts
today than I have tor six
months," said Littler, who sank
two 40·footers, two 20-footers
and one from 15 feet.
While the fast greens didn't
hamper Littler, Schroeder said
they could be a problem for
others.
''It may be tough putting from
long distances because the
greens are so fast, so it will be
important to knock it in there
close." he said.
The wind was another factor
in the opening round. Sea
breezes, which increased to 15
miles an hour in the afternoon.
hampered some of the late
starters.
''Don't forget to write that the
wind blew." said Hale Irwin, a
late starter who came In with a
3·under-par 69 despite the wind.
Flnl·rownd tcOr'9S Tllunday In Ille S2'0,GIO
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•l>.1...,1 ~ J.CNMey ~
E.0e9Mrty JW4-10 0.8UfM 3146-n
L.. TrevlN :JW1-70 C.SedNr ~ e.o.w-~ J.Scwldllft ~ A.North ~ F.Florl ~72
BASKETBALL I SWIMMING Fridly, FebNely S, 1171 DAtL Y PILOT 87.
-:Barons Bid for Share of Crown
Fountain Valley H1gh 's
Barons will be out to chnch al
least a tie for the S\ln.Set Leaaue
basketball championship while,
Huntington Beach and Edison
will be batUmg to grab a playorf
be rth, all against second
division teams tonight.
The Barons of coach Dave
Brown tangle with M arlna 's
<Huntington ~ach) Vikings, an
up-and-down squad this season,
at Fount.run Valley.
Huntington Beach plays host
to doormat Westminster and
Edison's Chargel"!l are at home Fountain Valley, the Barons pre-
to Newport Harbor. All games vailed, 65-SS.
are at 8 o'clock. Two games re· Randy Heldenrelcb missed
main a~rtonight's play. four early 1ames with a broken
"Marlna ls~ a young team with jaw, but appears back in top
a lot of potential," Brown says s hape o CC hi s 2 6 ·point
of the Vikings. "They are performance aga i nst
always dangerous and could win Westmlnst.er Wednesday night.
against any team in the league The Fountain VaJJey zone de·
on a given night." fense will force the Vlklngs to
Steve Popovich's Vikings have ·shoot from outside much of the
had their share of troubles this,. night with center Mike Heide
season, losing by two points .t&-,..)1a rd to control around the
Edr&on and three to Huntington boards. .
~each. In the firs t game with Huntington Beach had litUe
trouble with Westminster in first
round action, winning 73.$>. Rico
Thompson, Marco Pagnanelll,
Curt Wooten, Curt Stelnhaus and
Pierre Aylla alt~ored In dou·
ble figures ln that orre.
Edison's Chargers are led by
Mike ldcCourt with a 17.8 scor.
ing avera1e. Coach Don
Leavey's squad has also had lt.s
share of hard luck th1.s season,
losing ln overttme to Fountain
Valley the first time around,
56·54. The Chargers toppled
Newport in their first meeting.
·T S • · .. C South Coast QP wnnmers _ompete Fives Bid
· Annual MV IJWitational Set Saturday For Playoffs Mission Viejo lligh's Diablos
and the San Marino Titans, CIF
4·A and J..A champions for 1977,
lead a parade of 11 of Southern
California's fine&t swim outfits
Saturday in the fifth annual Mis-
sion Viejo High Invitational at
Miss ion Y!ejo's Marguerite
"8'¥ tm+Cenf.er.
Prellms are scheduled for 10
a .m. with finals at 2.
Among the powers are Sunny
Hills (Fulle rton), Newbury
Park, Mira Costa (Manhattan
Beach), Newport Harbor, Costa
Mesa, San Clemente, Estancia
<Costa Mesa). Edison (Hunt-
-Scoring Rerord
mgton Beach) and Westminster.
Although ·Mission Viejo aces
J esse Vassallo and Ed Rydet"
will not be swimming (they are
in Paris competing on the In-
ternational level). standou~Jre
aplenl)' in every dlrecfion.
Among the Mission Viejo
Diablos' roster are Jim New,
Mark Barber, Steve Ba ml coat,
Vic Vassallo, Mike Barnes, Paul
Kontrimas, Charlie Ray, and
Dave Barnes.
San Marino freestylers Glenn
Grant, Mall Wood, Carter Grant
and Amir Janie} are entered,
along with Bruce Elleman.
Sunny Hills brings sprinter
Eagles Run Wil"
In I 04-95 Victory
By ERNlE CASTILLO
Ol IN O•llY ~llet S~ll
Thos<' who like h11<h·scoring
basl-.l·tball J!Snws would have
lon·d Estan<.·111 <Costa M<>sa)
Jl1 gh's run-an d -~un shootout
against visiting Santa Ana
Vnlley High Thursday night.
To $how how wild it was.
Estancia gave up 95 points. in·
eluding an unbelievable 44 in the
fourth period, and stjll won.
That's because the Eagles
shot a blistering 67 .8 percent
from the field (40 of 59) and an
even better 82. 7 percent from
the line (24 of 29) in a f.ast·
moving 104·95 decision tlnlt kept
them in second place in the Cen·
tury League standings.
The 44·point final quarter by
the Falcons was a CIF record.
breaking the old mark of 43.
In cracking the certfury mark
r the first time in the school's
13 years of existence, Estancia
had 'Jn offensive per formance
that would have even awed Sad·
dleback College. Aner missing
their first two shots, the Eagles
sank 12 ·of their next 13 In the
opening frame, including a
perfect seven-for·seven effort by
Jim Pr\ce.
After more human errorts in
the second period (10 for 17) and
thlcd frame (9 for 15). Estancia
capped the fireworks with a 9 for
12 sbowlng in the last quarter.
Actually, the game was never
really close until the final mo-
ments. With a commanding 80·51
lead, Estancia coach Larry Sun·
de rm an opened the fourth
quarter with five rese rves. San·
ta Ana Valley, which has been
frustr:ated by the defense of
Saddleback
Net Outlook
Wllh three lettermen retum-
i n g a.pd some prom ising
newcomers on l'land, Saddleback
College tennis coach Bill Ou.a ls
opthttlsUc as the su~pn ap·
proaehes. The Gauct\Qll[ open
pJay Tuesday, hosting Mt. San
Antonio Collqe.
'
Price, Doug Jardine and Mike
Camp, then began having a field
day against the Eagles subs.
When the Falcons narrowed
the gap to 94·80 with 3:33 left,
Sunderma n inserted Jardine
back into the lineup to give the
Eagles some boa rd strength.
J ohn Carrido, the Eagles' pesky
5.4 guard, replaced him half a
minute later to help out with the
ball handling after Estancia
committed its ninth turnover of
the period.
ll was 98-87 with 1: 51 to so
when Sunderman inserted three
other starters. The last re main·
ing reserve. Kevin Karamanos,
had the honor of scoring the
lOOth point on-a lay-up.
Jardine and Maddock each
scored 20 points while Price
wound up with 19 after a 12-point
first quarter. Carrido was con·
tent to hand out assists. 11 In all.
Eleven of the 14 Eagles entered
the scoring column.
Only the fourth quarter out·
burst kept the Falcons from be·
ing embarrassed. They cul their
turnover average from five per
period to two, canned 12 or 18
shots from the field and 14 of 15
from the line.
SA Ven.., (tSI 11041 1114-1•
''",."' """'"' Edwerds 10 S ' U Prl<e -«. S 3 1'
satterfltld l o ' • c.....r, ' o 1 • O. CermON1 O O 2 Jerd ,. I ' 2 20
Slokes s 1 s 11 MHdo<ll • I I 20
TllomH I s 3 21 C.rrldO 1 ' 1 I
Oevl1 ' 2 1 10 Coollef I I S l
J-t l 7 2 tJ KrOIMlltcdl l 2 1 I
R•VH 0 1 0 I er-ldWf ' 0 1 • E~I ' 0 O 6 U rl,...1 1 0 J 2
Tot.is # 21 10 tS M-y J 0 0 6
K•r--1 0 0 1 TymlM 0 0 I 0
Tolelt 40 14 20 ICW
" 1t ,. -u 21 u tt 24-!0t
* * * UNTUlY LIAOU•
El'M-.,.
E1lencl•
5all4eAN
Tutlln
VIiie Per•
Foathlll
W L "'° ,.,.,
10 I "' 10i ' 2 e:z. 1't llWJM
• l 7\J '°' ,,,21,u
7 t 615 7U
sant• Ane ve11.., Ot•no• .,.......,...,.,~
E11MCl1 '°4, SMli. AM Yelle~ tJ
111 ModeN t2. Vltlt Perk S1
Tustin '1, f'ooOllll ff
S.11t1AlllW,Ortnge~
s.l_.y'sO-•
ett1111<I• It Vllla p_,-
111 ModtM lltQrMOI
Tu•tln at s.nt• AIM s.tnll Ma Vall.., M Footlllll
2 ' '°' '" 110 .. , m
Mark Bucko, indo ace Dave ,
Kanahele (2:05.0) and distance A~ thats left ror Corona del
swimmer Phil Atkinson; Mira Mar s basketball team to ~ li
Costa's g uns i n clude Dan bang ~e ~~-Oouraasue
Diener· and l'ie.w.blU"..y-~ diimp 0nahip banner and stay
features Ureg Graahmehr, Jack in tune for the upcomln& CIF
Mantor and Matt Hayes. playoffs. · ,
Other Orange coast area But for four other teams, its a
gems include !;stancia sprinter dogfight to the end for .the re-
PhiJ Ohle (22.5), Newport malning one or two allotment.a
Harbor sprinter Jeff Fults (23.1) lnto the playoffs.
and Costa Mesa distance star WhUe the CdM Sea Kings
Bob Dolan. 00-1) should clinch at least a lie
Top seeds include New In the for the tlUe at last place Costa
200 and 500 (4:38.0) freestyles; Me~a (1-10) tonight. f~st-ris":ig
San Ma rino's m edley relay University High (lrvme) ~Ill
quartet (1 :45.5); Grashmehr in have its hands full against m·
the fly (55.0) and Individual vadlng El Toro in a fight
medley (2:~.2 ); Vic Vassallo in between two playoff conten-
the backstroke: Barber in the ders. . breastslrok~ (1 :01 .0), Wood in Two others, Miss10~ Vlejo and
the so free (21.7) and Bucko in S~ Clemente; face s1m.llar pre-
the 100 free (48.2). dicament.a. Mission Viejo, 6-S
The backstroke's top three are after two straight losses, tries to
Mission Viejo's New, Barnicoat ~jf~oup when it visits Dana. ;bd Mike Barnes with Mantor (3-8). San Clemente (8-3)
considered their nearest rival at hosts bot·and·cold Laguna ss.s. Beach (4-7).
An interesting rematch is , All games are scheduled for 8
possible in the ~ freestyle .re· 0 cio~k .;tarts. ( 7. 4 ) d efeated lay where San Marino, which .oro .
features the Grants, Wood and l:Jnivers1ty .11-65 at home in their
Janiel tangles with Mission Vie· first meeting but the Trojans
jo's N~w. Ray, Kontrlmas and (5·6> have just now put things
Barnes. In the recent CIF together. ai:id are on a three-
1 b t d th game WJMmg !>lreak. Included ~f~~f;; ~a~h~a~:;nt. e!l~houg~ cin1 that tis1a t67"'48 kwin over San
"·1· · v· j • ed the emen e as wee . n 1ss1on. ie o ca,p ... ur Rick Reid and Ron Holmes of
crown with ease. El Toro will be matched against
Aztecs Win;
Pacific F allS
SAN DIEGO (AP> -Kim
Goetz scored 24 points to lead
San Diego State to an 88·82
Pacific Coast Athletic Associa·
lion basketball victory over vis·
iting Cal State <Long Beach) at
the San Diego Sports Arena
Thursday night.
All five starters scored in dou-
ble figures for the Aztecs, who
raised their r ecord to S·2 in
PCAA play and 12·7 overall.
Steve Malovic had 18 points and
nine rebounds; Joel Kramer had
17 points; Mike Dodd had 16
points and Dean Decker had 11
points.
Rickey Williams paced Long
Beach· with 23 points. Francois
Wise added lT points and 15 re·
bounds for the 49ers. Michael
Wiley contributed 18 points for
Long Beach.
Saa lo•e St., 78-89
Roger Poirier and Don Bagley of
University in what should be a
high.scoring game. Poirier and
Bagley carry a combined 35-
point average while Holmes and
Reid have combined for 33
points a game.
San Clemente. which survived'
a 58-57 scare by Costa Mesa
Tuesday, Is pitted against a
Laguna Beach team which h~
lost twice ln overtime and
dropped a pair of two-point de·
cisions. John Carson leads the
SC TritoM with an 18.1 scoring
average while Randy Smith tops
Laguna with a 15.7 average.
Mission Viejo, which has lost
back-to-back games to San
Clemente and Corona, faces a
Dana Hills crew which dropped
out of the plaYoff picture by los·
ing seven straight.
Center Jetf Burden (6-7)
should be the deciding factor in
Corona's game against Costa
Mesa, a team which has little
height.,
Burden scored 22 points Tues-
day night to lead the Sea Kings
to victory over Mission Viejo.
That was a seasonal high for
him ln the absence ol leading
sCOTeT Dave Koehler, out wtth
an arm ir\jury.
°"" ........... GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE STANDOUT TODD ZIRBEL.
Par Shooter
Zirbel: From Links to Court
By CRAIG SHEFF
CM tM Oelly """ 5i.tf As a high school athlete, Todd
Zirbel was rated a little better
than average' as a basketball
playe-r and very good as a
golfer. ~
At Huntington Beach's Edison
lll~h. Zirbel averaged a lillle
over 13 points a bas ketball
game. but he had a fine 77
average on the golf links.
Thus. when recruiting lime
came, Zirbel was passed over by
basketball coaches, but Golden
West College golf coach was
eager to have him.
"I probably would have
played .golf at Golden Wes(,
but my knees bothered me and I
decided to sit out a year," says ·
Zirbel.
When he came back a year
later it was as a basketball
player-much to Golden West
cage coach Dick Stricklin 's de·
light.
Zirbel not only was a starter,
but the 6-5, 215·pounder also was
Cfolden ·West's second leading
scorer.
And this year he's pie.iced up
where 1976-77 ended.
Going into tonight's game with
Rio Hondo. Zirbel has scored 410
points (18.6 average), leads the
Rustlers in rebounds (8.8 per
game). is shooting at a nifty 56.9
percent from the field and is
headed for an All -Southern
California Conference first team
berth.
season when be moves on to a
tour.year school.
"Todd's strength is his Inside
game. but he's a better outside
shooter than he gets credit for."
s ays GWC assistant coach Jim
Greenfield. "Ile doesn't shoot
outside much because we need
him under the basket.''
Zirbel hl,mself doesn't really
like the post s pot, but he knows
he has litUe choice. _.,I'm not really a post guy, but
1 can't play any where else
because of the way we are. I
would prefer to play outside
because 1 think I shoot well and
I don't turn the ball over very
much. I'll probably be recruited
as a swing forward next year ...
says Zirbel.
Zirbel s~s his play has im
proved tremendously over a
year ago. "Mostly, I've im·
proved mentally. I'm now think·
ing positive. That has a lot to do
with any game ... knowing what
you have to do."
Al this polnl, Zirbel says he's
undesJded about a four.year
choice for next season, but he
and former Edison teammate
Tom Lloy (now playing at Sad-
dleback) may go to the same
school.
"I'm just going to have to wait
until the season ls over before
deciding about a four-year
school,'' says Zirbel.
And before the season ends he
figures to move up quite a bit on
the Golden West all-time scoring
list. He's currently· in ninth And he's playing out of posi-
tion.
Zirbel, because he's Golden
West's tallest starter, bas to
play the post position-a spot he
undoubtedly will vacate next
. place with 702 points, but will
probably move up another three
or four notches before the ,
season concludes.
SAN JOSE CAP) -San Jose
State broke open a tie basketball
game with just over eight
minutes ten to go on the way to
a 78-69 victory over University
o( Pacific Thursday night in· Ar G H
PCAA play. ea 0 GWC Faces Rw Hondo CASH REBATES
San Jose jumped to an early
lead and bad a 15-polnt margin
with just under nve minutes len. For Women in the hall. But Paciflc rallied t.Q
within four points by the end or
the half.
Golden 'west College bids to square its
Southern California Conference basketball mark
at 4-4 tonight (7:30) when the RwiUers host Rio
Hondo College.
Wally Rank led San Jose scor·
Ing with 21 point8. Phil Davis
added 11 points, including eight
free throws in eight trips to the
line.
Pacific was led by Russ
Coleman with 21 point$ and Ron
Cornelius with 18, also bitting a
perfect eight for eight from the
free ttyow Une.
G WC coach Dick Stricklin figures to start ltANCMOSA91'°'60UIN9C Id Ch bll o..., TO\lrftff'Nllt1 " "'""t-1. Todd Zirbel. Brian Rodgers. Haro am ss.
1t111 Jeckt• Krot1, O•""• s11no, Gary Sanders and either Larry PetUs or Ron Gar· :~i. ~,.f.11~~:."c~~~1~: ret.son. Zirbel is averaging 18.6 points per game.
Lu w 1111 •. u 111; 2 . u 1 • Regular starter Dave Stricklin injured a knee
e1rt11oiomew. Ul'I. 0 l'llDht-t. In a 96·82 loss to LA Harbor Tuesday night and is Mlffle01~40.
Limited weod• Touma_..: A out for the rest of the regular season.
F119111-1: ~ .....,..,, 611 2• J1<k1t Rio Hondo. 0·7 in SoCal play, is led by Kirk K...et, 16; a. 1!1 ..... Y~ 12. 8
F11e11t--1. nte> u111t MoM. 111111t ~rkeland, who is averaging 18.7 polnts per game.
M<K1111-v, 111 a.,_.. G•11111. a. c Golden West carries a 10·13 record into :!::;!Mir~,~~"~U.:.;-!: ~= tonight's game while Rio Hondo is 3·15. The "'*-· "· Roadrunners have dro~ped 13 games In a row Acettlflt.Melllll Utt ...... I. De ber MUMTINOTOM MACU,, cc since defeating Orange ast In cem .
direct from
Nikon on
NIKKOR LENSES
The ~Ins sophomores In·
elude Kirk Ftnley (No. a lqt
aeaaon), nm Fuller (No. 4) and
GU LuJMO (No. 7).
Tbe l>est of Uae newcomers AN Brad Fallermeler •ad Jory
Area Cagers Play 14*'"" .,...._..... <• Ntter In other conference games, LA Southwest ~",."~~~'::'ii.:~ hosts Los Angeles CC and Cypress visits Santa wt. i. .....,.. ll..,,....., SN,,., Monl"a Gelltr, Oefly s.c.N. MS. a. C'ltel"""' ___ ... _. ________________ .!
Lewl,Mer•Ollw'll""*"·'""4«4 ----------------------------------~-,· ·Olsen. Fallermelei: ... a former
University <~e) Hlah at.Ir, ls
a transfe~m the Un[•enlty of Ian· Oleco. Olsen pl~ed at San
lement• Ulsh • couple of
Je~aao.
OtJMirl on t.he roster Include Gary llaanro <Saa Cl•~>.
8coU. IGDM ctlDlvenlb'>. Daw ..
Hom and Bob Clark (lllalion
Viejc)), .. ..,.~ !'!1d be the bal tenn1a ~alD ft W ll9d at Saddkhdc ll>eca .. if our depth," ••Y• oua. ·
J1ll11111a, Stv Oudll'I': as1111r
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RENTAL EQUIP~
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; • Dallr Plltll.....,... llY Garr~ ?"/IS BRAD BROWN (LEFT), GEQFF WYCHGEL CLOSE IN ON EDISON'S BRAD WEBSTER (7).
I: dis on
Kickers
Rolling
Edison (Huntington
Beach l High's visiting
Chargers took their
time, but finally with a
three-l!oal effort m the
second ha lf, s ubdued
~unse t League soccer
riyal Fountain Valley,
4-0. Thur~day arternoon.
In roltin~ to their sixth straight league triumph,
the Chargers got a pair or goals from Chris
C rate r. plus single
tall ies from Brad
Webs te r and Slaffa n
Bulow .
Defensive standouts
for Edison included
sweeper Mike Digiovan·
ni, fullback Bob Long
and center back Herb
Boehm.
N e wport .H arbor ,
m e anwhile. Edison's
closest pursuer in the ti·
Ue chase, was stymied
by host HunUn1rton
Beach in a l ·l tic, drop..
ping the Sail()('S to 3·2·2,
while Huntington Beach
is now 3·3-1.
Scott Brummett
~cored with 15 minutes
left on an assist from
Joe Campbell to give HB
Ch e tie.
EDISON'S CHRIS CRATER (8) KICKS AWAY FROM BRYAN DONNELLY. •
·11•-122
117
122
llt
117 Ill
N a..itr Mar• ltll 1411 .. _ _,
....:-~v•e <Ill_., 11y forlel1. ~t~l IMI _, l>'I' forfeit.
115-NusWlN) plfW*I Tl'Vllllo S • .U.
1U-RawHM !Ml dK llr9Wll .. l.
UO-PI~ IHI de< Hlllen..i. 13'-e.-n (NI plM9Cf Sii,,.., 1:1'.
10-McO...ld IMI dK lleauchamp 1-2. •
1--.iapN:s IHI dK S.0-llc*1f.S,
m -Tl'9fDe <Ml "'GP.IWfort.11.
16'-Deltt INIDllVlfl(Lac-,. J:JI. 111-v~u OdW!wlt>ytottelt. 194-841(1lH 00 _,by lorlell.
Hwt-~1*e !NI -by forfell.
·~ J1111tw Varsltr
Mar IN IC1 I • ., Newpe!'t H•r .. r tt-ouble forlell.
\0.-8rown (Ml won by lortell
IU-<:etall (N ) pinned l(nobbe I SI
113-Ngu.,.., !Ml flnnecl l(ovalenllo
3:26. IJO-Soll~ IMI won Cly lorle1t
1~ee1a,,_ IMI IMnn<ICI Dur~•• .,,. ..
14\-Dutfy <Ml lllllned e..;ooc 1 40.
1,.._8aller IMI pl....., Ehlw S Sf
U7-HlllC!tlwn IMI de< D'D•IY 1.0
'"-•forlell. \,._-.rile feriell. ,,._•forfeit
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MariM (1t) '461 ......... H--.r
'11-illaln (Nl _,bYforlelt.
1116-Alv-<Ml dK l!M1.,,..1,. 104.
115-Jaclnlo IM) pl-SlrHMI l:U. •
UJ-C.rr <N> plM9Cf 5-Man s:n.
130-DrHler IHI pl""" FHI• 1:34. l~Ull'9 (Ml dK Iv-H . 141-Jano (HI dK H.,ri...., 4-1.
14'-Ffftlslra (NI c1K ~aft M .
157-Pomo IN) plmed Coy 1:40.
14>1-l..Oft9ebardl IN I -by tortell 111-Ruuell (Nl won 11y Portell.
194-Mol..., IN I dK llrownlno 6.0.
Hwt-8rauri <Ml pinned 8ockmll1.,-
S SJ.
Varslly
WetlmfMtw IUI 1111 ...... Valley
'8-Mand nl !WI dee Vom09IC1a,
1)-1.
10.-1..ara IWI pinned Olsen, 2: J4
\15-Clot1se !WI dee S.Ward, 1·4,
12l-8olla'I' (f')O.C B•ock. .. S.
130-erlnll"*I IWl dK Chaw, 11·7.
1lS-8areUo (Fl OK Clark, 4.0.
141-l..unalWlptnnedAon.l :41.
14'-<:Mnire IWI pinned Hall, 2: SO. u1-oraM ll'l lledMcGM'ry, 12·12.
l..._NIC~Mlft IF) de< S<.INIU, 7·2.
111-8\ldoln IF) dK J.clnto, 11-S. 1'4-Po<llelt CWI d9C HelOncJI, 1).1.
Alamitos Results
l'Wn.wtday
Clffr, Tracll ,..,
FlltST RACE -JSO yard~ l year
olch & up. oa1rn1nv. PvrM u.soo
Mr Zing SIXTH RAct -3511 Yards. J year IAlllSOO\) •oo t J .0 UO olC!S. AllOW-., PuneM,lGO Dupes Bid (Off<Jtrl 1 20 S.00 Wlllema wi.tltsowr
Trv Cuc>ld (IC ...... I IUO (Treasure) IUO 5.60
Tl,,,. -11.22 Nolly Tu 1ere.,...1 4.«I
Scralc'*' -N!w -Bee. Coml"' DH·8•Madoo (Ptmlrl Tll"'9. Curt's Caper, TOjll DH· WINK N Wlldl~e IKlllllM> u bocta t-Mr Zl11t a~.... DH·O.aclllNt tor si-..... t.nt... TlrM-11.17
S.«I
3.00 J.«I
J.00
-,---Sullcllad -ic.tena Fen., Fut
SIECOHD llACI! -400 yards. 3 Jal Wins, Sll11Wlndtr, Ima FtstJet
war olds. Clah ... 1111. FOf' maidens.
• Pli"6U,IOO HYINT'lf ltAClf -.00 yarft. S
Aeposs•n•ct • vetr olds a. up. Clalmln;. For flllles
(Harl> l.60 J.:10 3.00 •Itel mares. PurM $4,600
Madt In P•rls l~acel UO UO Queen Tu l~r) 1.20 4.10 S . .0 ~r MOU/If IAlll10nl e.oo PlllHlon !Hartl t.40 uo
' Time -20.'5 Ell• 8tobbv <Ward> '·'° ~·so r/HI -1119 M Gola Tru. VIit· Tlf'ne-2CUt
l11ts Get. ~ C>ella Dawn, Go Get Also ran -Aun Kitty, Olaroln tlte Money, Hl9/ler Tyme. LC.cky Frt"'• Juniper Oeclt, Royal Bar Su,
Daryl, Gall.,t lo Man Jet CU•r•, Dupe·s Pallwn, Wiid
Scr•lchff -C.mPV• Jel$91Cer, c.sfl • S..nday Feather, Mall Polsa Aooet. Scr.,cMct -Lomlla Min, Cl"tffte Roclty Polky ltocl!el
--U aae«a ~ T• & •Plllll .... , Tt(lllO ua -1111 Y•rds. J yew P .. Otu.•
oldl & up. Cll1imlt19. ,..,.... sa, 100
Wat's lteQUMll •tONTit RACE -«IO yants. 3
<8•"'1 • ,uo • oo LIO year olds & up. AllcM-. Purse
l..lllla11's ~ IG«ul • 10 •.IO 57,SOO
Mr 81rdt«!t IHaf'tl S ... Mr l!ttalle
Ttrne -'7.» (ltO\flll) '·'° •.«I l.AO lAO ,...,
1AO
Also ran -Hawallen hie, u~ Alleeop IAClalrl
clrcui.1ee1, NaUw Time, Wlllcl J-. Ball9" 9ar IV......,,
....,., Knlfl'it Fll1>e, CUllOm Tatloncl, Tlme-20.IJ
Tiny Chltlleft Alt0 ran -Jee °" Sam, JM R-No Krakhft o.dl, KIMI! Girt, Paswm Je1 Mow.,
u Euda t-w .. -. ........ & 1· Go WlsdOm, Doc's £•~·"· Al'• Ll&llM'a ......,, Pai. WS.M Allbl
ScrlllCMd -Viva VIiia. OM F1ne
•OURTH ltACa -.00 yards. J D•r. Dvtty Spte"' crnut'• w...r year olds & up. Clalmlng. Pura.
S3,200 NINTH •AC.If -400 yards. J l'Nr R0<1<t11 Sea Olds. Clatmlne. PwM 52,toO
!Grace) SI ID 11 70 •·• Watcll ao Soeedy S•"'annet> <TrHwre> uo :uo s.20 (1'retSurol 7.AO Powerb18"91Ada!r) t.40 7AO
Nevtcla RoVll <Wmll • 00 ..... Out 114..t) ''· UO Tlme-20.n TlrM -20.S1
No S(ra«MS Al~ ran -N!w Jtu, .. lllld to ""™ "AC• -110 .,.nc .. I ....... Oldl A Up. Clllh'l'll"lt-Purlll P, 100 Fll"St Ntllft
(Pe11t111tJ 1..0 .uo a.a
A•9Hll'S Image CVauQMl MAO lUO
Gold Polley 1Har11 6 • .0
"Time-•7.14
PloHt, S""'fsq111c11, Clewr C.,to lier, H119Wn, Sletnt F.irr
SCr•k* -BIO M Olla fCftttf!, 9'evtltl0f, .Nie Tttt, Lw I Jet. Mkl-nlQllt 8..-r u luc:ta •wltdl .. a ,.,__. ., ........ " ....
WRESTLING I SOCCER I GIR[S SPORTS
Girls'
Athletic
ResultS
UCITennis
College ·cage Scqres
ADAM W. METHUEN eypr..,
-. .
ntermission •R•view of 'Beatlemania'
•Movie Reviews •Out 'n About
Stories by
JERRY HERTENSTEIN
Of .. C>Mty l'tNC Sc.ff
Frid9y, Febn.lary 3, 1978
...
A small ratsed platt'l>t1n ~iii
a decorative roof ln the park at
Balboa Pier is reminiscent of a
bygone era when folk gathered
for afternoon concerts under a Sunday sun.
The Orange Coast has
produced some highly-rated
high and junior high §Chool jazz
rnusiclw: A 'reshlgence ·ot Jf:IYz
ls just beginning to take hold,
music teachers at several area
schools agree. •
Today, strollers OJ> the pier
sometimes hear soUhds of Jan
!rom nearby Studio Cafe.
But in another age, jazz of the
big name bands used to resound
nightly from a spacious
blo c k -long building, the
Rendezvous Ballroom.
The Corona del Mar High
School Jazz Ensemble, directed
by Vernon Schroeder,
represented 10 western states
and placed second in the lln4
All·American Jazz Festival in
Mobile, Ala.
close to
Y pros
y ask
s','
love,
ger
Schroeder inherited an "all
new group" in lln6. But things
are beginning to sound good
THE HALL was filled to' again, according to the direc,r.n.r:.-~
capacity as the locals mingled tr 'l.!.!J.iilll• .. ~
with touri* to do an early '40s J~!ZIS a1tlp big-u~ti dance, the Balboa Hop. Beach· ~gfi Sebo~ e
Stan Kent.on, a gangly piano W•ckerman. -of Seal each's
playing youth, got his start at·· McGau.C, M1cf0le School has
ttie Rendezvo~ days ot • ti..\t~n "s~sible for ~~ing Worhi~ goQd ll(USlcia~ Hunt n's
Kenton s j;JJwYriih jazz way. -
presentaUo~nuenced those Estiii lpgh ch"".J..M!rr w h o fl e a r d h i m a t t h &• Mtt;\ ~ &e~ o c~~ enl
Rend.ezvous. And his impaot yeau ~6 riod!aooutjaiz. , rem ams 40 years later. ....-1 . • . Kenton and his orchestra have Hjlt ~ ,,au MIA~ conrm.ed to
ast nm · ie
e
h Woods Quintet April and
t Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Band
pril 8.
In addition, Joe Pass, Ray
Brown and Shelly Manne will
perform. ~
BCG TASK -Students in the Ensign Middle
School Jazz Ensem~le are small but play
dynamite music. From left are Gavin Keith,
.,..., ...... ""-.., ...... ..,..
trumpet, Valerie Cooke, flute, John Barto~
drums and Tom Cuino, saxaphone. Ensign is
in N ewport._,Beach: .
-become a summer regule,t Ql1.. htgb ~."Ensign Middle
the Orange Coast College School ~ Newport Beach has
campus in Costa Mesa where accomplished much.
their fourth clinic will be held Orange Coast College has built
Aug. 13-18. a top-notch reputation. Golden
West College, Huntington Beach.
bas made notable· achievements
and Saddleback College, Mission
Viejo, has scheduled its first
festival this spring.
Fifty-two schools -from
elementary to college -'Will
represent four states.
Of OCC's four jazz ensembles,
the top group is usually made up
of members, some 40 years or
older. of the Saturday workshop.
J:a -zz H ·as Creative Edge
· "THE STUDENTS have
access to a performing group,"
said OCC's jazz department
bead, Dr. Charles Rutherford, of
the Kent.on clinics. "The student
can get down to the nilly gritty
with a professional."
"There's a great deal of
emphasis on student
composing," the man whom his
peers greet as "Doc," says.
Youth Favor Medium for Expression
Here, in story form, is a
rundown on the jazz programs
and achievements in the field al
~~lllJ9"ClllNKel!Nw
THE WAY IT LOOKS -Jazz may allow for freedom, but it
also requires reading charts. Estancia High School ensem·
ble direct.or Pete Foumier studies a chart with clockwise
from left, Shawn Layden, Doug Barra~lough, Dave Surber and Steve Doan.
HunerY Joe's, a on""tlme funky nightspot lo Bunt·
lntton Beach. ainled nllhtlY with some bot Jus P'Qups
tbat left tbe usually 1tan.dlnc room only crowds yelllna for snore.
Then late laat year the place_ burned, llterall7, to the around.
"IF A YOUNG student bas the
skill and interest, he is more
likely to turn out ~ composition
that the other students will like
better than anything we could
buy," Rutherford added.
"It's very Important to not
only r ehearse that student
Jazz ha~ been around, more or Jess, for a long
time. But at no time since maybe the late 1940s bas
it experienced the "rebirth" currently prevalent
not only along the Orange Coast but nationwide.
And the youth to whom names like Freddie
Keppard, Joe "King" Oliver and Lucky MUlinder
are just that -names, are high on jazz too.
composition but to perform it. If Tff&Y ARE PLAYING the blues in emulation
the student knows his worJt is of coun~as}.e.or beatiJ)g the drums and dreaming gofng to be performed .he will of Bu.tld RiCh.
perfect it." . ~· xleland group froei 10regon, the Jan
Rutherford said there was a Mino:, ·maCle its Orange County debut last week.
time four years ago when the The ungest member is 16, the oldest 20.
school was blessed wjlh so many h)' Jave Youth suddenl)' "d.Lscovued" Jazz!
good student • com~seta .. we • •'fJ'be schools have done a lot to educate stu•
didn't buy any pmsic;," dents.so they have an appreciation of J~,'' said
Students'.. Ruth e-r ford Dr. Charles Rutherford of Orange Coast COllege. { m e n t i o · n e d ,a ,,. e
arranger-composer Tom i,Kubis "AT TUE CLINICS we talk ~ what ba1>4
or Santa Ana; Charles I»Uens, pened a '°P.g time ago. The stu<l!ms learn about
who now teaches at Saddleback Basie,'Woogy Herman, Stan Kenton.
College; David Diggs, currently • "Todai's s~udent la ...tDuch more serious,"
a composer for Pat Boone; Dave jRuthe~~aid. ")$ore are concentrating on Jazz Siebe ls, who also wo~ks for as a H\I · . ,,
Boone; Mike Paulson, now a ~ Rub ord~an~d ·most of the other area
trumpet.er with the Ice Follies ~ueatcts a~~i.that ck may· be "going do:Wn
,orchestra. •"bill" -ori(theytnC:te 't more jazz rock is being * * * ~ '!t pla,yed :t; ·r "' "THE nR$T yeanwe3bas;ll,af.1 .. ..., .. • ·s:~11Wre.1oand .,ore eo..,nerclal Jan,"
'jau b~d it ~was,ha~d ito f~ . · G 'en'W9't c:t.HegEfs·David\.Anthony. "Thi:
somepne whoijlayed the.electi;i"' 0 • l larefinfl~oced by~uch things a#f
bass .• Now w bave as,mui ~the· e .f · m u,e,,_. efllod<)'I( Today's bla-'.
12 peof!le s ow ·u~f~r e'~'tan k musicUs· allitUe-Jauter tban 10 . chair," said Davld etho v.war ,.,
assistant artsrdivislon cltairm • " -~ 1 • •
and mmic lnstructor~atfGol ' , i· · NYrlKENTli"l'llE popular Tower West College. ; ;·· o(P · e ·a~uz-l'Ock upwtth a.wide impact.
Tbe music di~ision ,.has· .ar Ther~· · lnluen~ n es audl as Seawlnd, recording studio stoclce'd with· ·May apdG e~ .
sop,blsticated equipment. ~. AJoig IQusJAntbtny liews, ls that youth fn·
A lot of our students here are ~erested hiljazz are 'encouraged by their parents really talented,'' Anthoay ••
himself an accomptla~d
trumpeter, said. "They .try ~to
take two years out of their life to
hone up what they do.
"THEY ARE looking for a
multicareer in music. They want
to learn perhaps to play the
piano, to write music. We would
rather see them do well in the
(See JAU., Page C5)
It left Orange County Jau freab with little aelectJon
for Uatenlna to Jan "live." ~
rather than discouraged if their interest is in rock.
"Many teachers have played jazz," said
Chuck Wackerman of McGaugh School ln Seal
Beach. "'They enjoy developing jazz groups and
have a wealth or material available."
I
ORANGE COVNTY has long had a repuataion. t as·a conservative area.
That may be a help-to the reboost of Jazz, John
Lindfors at Newport ~acb's Ensign Middle School l
believes. "Parents may: be saying when they hear
jazz now that's what I lieard when I was younger, / what I danted to," Lindfon said.
Galen·'Voget of Huntington Beach High.
School says credit for the student's interest in jazz •
"bas ~ JC? to Uie co\)efes and universities. • • 'G91den West ud Orange Coast as well as Cal
State Long Beacth 'have excellent programs, ..
Vogel said. "Tbe lD•nY tesUvals are atrong
metivators." ....
Bt11' WHAT MA,T. be influeadng the Jan stu-
dent most is wltat dused auch1 greats a.s Dwy
Gillespie to disrupt years ago tbe familiar ~ds.. ·
of swing with his bebop-the freedom of creativt\ expression. ..,,. ·•.
"Living and feeHng jau, then,relaylnf that ex-
perience is what it's all about," Llndfon said.
··J~ is one of Uie best expressions ot person~·
emotioo. lt'a you coming ~of·tbe GUlet' "d of~-1 instrummt." VerDOQ Scb er of Corona 4'el Kan
Hlgh School notes. ~ . t• I .. You've got to be a e to feel to be a 1QOC1. •
musician," Schroeder sai "Blues ls a speeifie' ~
style. It depicts •. ce~ feelJng and to~ !
it you must unde_ta\,alld opp~lon and depressl&l. rl • , .I
I "IT'S -'111AT feelinf of understanding that al· J
lows a musician to just take off. It can lead to
some fertile ideas that can't be taught."
Bob CUsen1, Who:l_, Orance CountJ ltbythm •;
(See 'YOVTR. Paie Q)
I
I I
' ..
• • ~ '
\
Western
Th.emes,
Black ·
Atliletes
Showing
I
HAND-Sl':ITCHED IMAGE OF LONE RANGER, TONTO
From Betty Hahn Serie• at Splrttu• Gallery
"TWO FROM ALBUQUERQUE" -
University of New Mexico art professors are-
showing selected works at the Susan Spiritus
Gallery, 3336 Via Lido, Newport Beach,
through Feb. 25. Thomas F. Barrow's Can-
cellation series and band-stitched Lone
Ranger motif by Belty Hahn may be· seen
from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through
Saturdays.
TEXTURES OF TIJUANA -Photo-
g raphic canvases by Mark-Elliot Lugo
featured through February at Status
Galleries I Exhibits
Galleries, 3337 Newport Blvd., Newport
Beach, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through
Saturday.
UNIVERSAL STUDIO -Is remlllllbered
111 a portfolio of photographs by Robert Cum-
ming, on view at UC Irvine Fine Arts
Gallery, noon to 5 p.m. Tuesday. Feb. 7
through Saturday, Feb. 11.
COLOR PHOTOGRAPHS -February's
showing in the Hippolyte Bayard Memorial ·
Gallery at Orange Coast College is by Jo Ann
Callis. Hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m • .Monday
through Friday.
GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE -Render·
ings by students of Jack Heard in the
Ji brary's main reading room through Friday,
Feb. 10. Hours are 7:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. Mon-
day-Thursday, 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday and
noon to 4 p.m. weekends. Also a cross section
of California crafts will open with a reception
from 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 7 In the Com-
munity Gallery.
TACM..E PRINTS -Peter Keefer and
L.C. Blair display their collagraphs at Sird's
• Eye View GaJlery, through March 9. May be
seen from 11 a .m . to 5 p.m. Tuesday through
Sunday at 3420 Vla Oporto, Newport Beach.
CALIFORNIA ARTIST -Armond Fie.Ids
will be honored with a reception from 1 to 6
p.m . Sunday, Feb. 5 at the Village Gallery,
22651 Lambert St., Suite 103, Lake Forest. His
recent oil paintings and handscreened seri·
graphs will be shown through February.~
ORANGE CRATE -Labels dating from
the 1880s from the Gordon McClelland collec-
tion capture the beauty and history ot this
California. Hours for exhibit at California
State University, Fullerton library are 8 a.m.
to 10 p.m. Mondays through Thundays, 8
a.m. to 5 p.m. Fridays, 9 a.m. ~ 5 p.m.
Saturday and 2 to 10 p.m. Sundays.
PEN, INK, PASTEL -Drawings by
Billie Nugent featured at California Federal,
2700 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa, through
February.
MASTERS PROJECT -Graduate stu-
dents at California State University,
Fullerton are showing cyanotypes, silver
prints, light drawings and gum prints at
Muckenthaler Cultural Center< through
March 12. The photography techniques may
be aeen from noon to 5 p.m. Tuesday through
Sunday. 'I
.. BLACK ATHLETE" -Exhibit opens
Sunday, Feb. 6 with introduction by Brad
Pye Jr., sports editor of the Los Angeles Sen-
tinel, at Bowers Museum, 2002 N. Main St.,
Santa Ana. Other current showings: Russian
icons, petroleum and the American Indian,
southeast Asian stone sculpture. Viewing
times are 9 a.m. to S 11.m. Tuesday through
Saturday, 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday and 7 to 10 p.m .
Wednesday. Adn\ission is free .
Delly,. .. ,.,.....,°'"._....
THE OCC SATURDAY WORKSHOP TROMBONE SECTION BELLOWS
Youth Favorµig Jaz~~
GALLERIES I TIMES -& PlAGES-
Fun Starts
·At 'Picnic'
.. RIDAY, "laRUARY J
SMALL TOWN OllAMA-''"lcllk" -nl 10fl'9ftt al GolOlll West (01 ....
Community Tl\eeter at l ::IO p.m.
Tl.Cllau $1 Ol"Mel. P •tudent& and Gold !Cey cerd llotders. flqr
lnlorm•llOll. <.all "2·7711 HI. !JO.
DRAMA, 'THI IM .. llllOa' -Directed Dy Shiert OuclllRoOrlll, IPDMOrecl by UCI ScllMI of ,.,__
Ari$. Ille play run• toftfOlll and
SalunSey et I p.m. In the VIiiega
Tl\eettr. Tlcuta P 0tntrel, &i.50
llUCMnl-.
61 VOICU OllllT U•IUNO -Unl,,.rslty Slngen In COftCM al C•I
Stele P'ullar10ft t•nlolll throuol'I S<HMSay In IN Uttle TIIMltf' Clif'leln
et I p.m. Tl(Qts $2. 1n1onnatlon
avelleoltlll~t.
MUllC AaOUT LOVI -
Newlyweds Jofwl and JMMle Mtver perform ti 7:)0 p,m. ti Ce lvary
Cl\apel ol Dena ...i111, J3n2 •19 Stw, lnalrMc;oi.cart.
SATUAOAY, ... &aUAlllY4
UCI CONalllT ttAU.-Vnl,,."lly
Sym~y Ordle$tr• ctl!OIKted by Al¥ero S Ctt111to, UCI mutlc Pf'Of•-· ......... p.m.. Tkll.U u
ll'tlll(l I, $I 1.-..U..
MULTI .. DIA-'MAD MIO' -
....... Mctl, ""'llUlll llMOft tf ........
INl'I ttlf lldtr, e( llw ISOOI wttlt
llvt dra-. mu1tc. pltotoo••Y.
dMce ~Mime. ll,.. IM_y -S11tHtey, tune111 et • p.m., flMI
pertormflMI fl•b 11 111 P'lllllfltf!
Coll ... c..... Tlletlff. TlcQU u lltl*'al, 11 •IUdtftU.
A119elK Tlcllets 16 ... ..,..,._ by celll~ 12m •11·1211. P,..,I_ run
l"'Outh fl.0. 1$, re,ul.,. fVft FM, 16
tl'lrouoll AOrll I (llcllell 11«MWhe1 111oiwr1.
'WllK WAR WAS OVl!R' -<ompeny ThMler of I.OS An9elH
preMnll ctr-.-i -ll In lour tpeclel perlorrnlMft ~ .... 'eb.
12, 11'41 It Md l'ff ff. Tlcllll, time
IMM!ftlllloft •I the t ..... tw, 1W La Cit~ Blvd.,,...,., .. ._ •I 121Jl J14·SU~.
TUllOA'f, ... IRUAllY 1
DUMMY AND fllllllNO -Vtlllrlloqullt Wltllt Tyler eftd Luter, plus Carl We•men, Bllt
Mtfterd open at Hewpert a.ect1•1
L,aff "°"' ~y l'llOM <lub el 2122 S. l!Ht 8rl1tol. Call Ul·7120 for
dttalfl.
"IANO LICTU!ll, OISC:UiSION
-Pianist AllOey SllNft -rs et CNpmen ~·1 Sal"*' HIMI In Oranoe ea _, of con_.1 Music
'orum S.rlH. T,... IO<'mer clllld
pr0d19Y'1 dllCUISioll la Ir ..
TMUlltSOAY, ... lllUAllY t
CMILDlllH'S STOllY STAOl!O -
Cal Stet• F1111arton pruenu
''fl..-nl t~ .f91,•• br, Arthur
F•UllUH In'"'.,... 11'aaref' ... _ tllf'cMl9ll l'MI.. 12. 11cMt lnformMloft -~'-
•UINA PAlllC INOWTIM• -
Cll'('I f9urttl _..... dlwal f•tlvel et • "'"· "'ICMtt'• llwry ,.,.,., •• Oood flitte 'tlleelet'. ,.,... CJIOrel trOW9
perl•rl'I tllMI frtm 11\UllUll.
Tlc•ttl f,2, ev.llMIM It 11111 tfflM.
Dane olnt Ctltbrttta enn11e1 PlllOAY. fll81lUAllY tt SIXT~ PllTIVM. Of' WHALH -
mlor•I IHI Wllh mtrlne wlldllle
prestnlallofl•, open houaaa. Cell AMllll~N flO\.K IAU.IT -
"""" -detail•. Denet t~ peffOf"'t t• "•Mic efttl INflOllMAt.. 8UT SlllllOUS -m•der11 •oru ebeut Amtrlce. CallMI.., Brau .,r1,,..1or S.turclty curtelfl at I p.m. II\ Cl'l~pman
concert el Clertmont Colleoe•s • C•llt1e•a Memorial AUdllorlum.
GtrrllOf'I Thffler S.tut'doly •I I p.m. TICktU '2 .......... 111 A&ldent$. 'I'"' grOUp pl.-,s e vtrlety of cleHICI. 'OHOSTllT WlTM MOITllT" -
TIC:llels et Mut~ tQeMIH or et Marni +II_, 11"91 In tile campus
8rldvft Auditor!...,, 4111 end College Tlle•ttt tf FUllarton allege t p.m. Ill Way, Clenimont. Ticket lftform.iloft -r•m of Mrly Eur..-.n -1l1.
et 6U-.Ut. T1<11et1 as.JOoener-1,suostvdenll. .
SUNDAY, flelllUAlllY J
THE LAGUMA HACH WIHTIR FISTIYAL
IM , ....... ~teo ........ 0..0,.. IW. 9w •••OM 11~.,...OIMI0..... .....-.. JAZZ Fol-•71• SUM.fa. ... ....._ ...... _. .. ~fl ....
SUK.f&I ..
~·i a :JO.,.,,,
~---... JOE TUaMm wlffll
n.~--MTI" .....
-a...a.-.. CMeC....-
TOMY RlDJ
SGUITARS + 4 ._. ,_ MD__,.r
,....,. ....... OOdie t(..rJ
. .... _ ..... ._..,
-eo.. ....... Qllle-. ,_.,.. 1111111¥81ora TI!e---iMO S Coa>I H-...y i.....,. a.-The U1gun1 a.di °'9INlet of C:0.--4M-1011
- -Jau "°""" ·71 8o1 274 t..aouN ...,. .,.., ....... tit ,_...,.,,, .., Feb. 10!11 --~ ,.,.......,.,._ ..,..._ 01MM eerty-...-11 _. lilr frff ,.__IO Feellvlll Grounclll
,,_~ ... 22•-0M.Yll
,._ 2,. COMIMG .,._....HI
SIAWIMD WIWI IOIO
This magnificent
performer of stage.
screen and teleuision
is ~n~d to you
by Ille Artist Series, in concert, Saturday.
February 4th at 8:00 pm. Garden Groue
Community Church. Comer of Ctiapman
ond Lewis Street. Gorden Groue. Coll
(714) 750· 7000 ext: 297 for reseruatlons.
ReHruatlons also ouatloble at the door.
Y1~~ '-.;,, ~ t.111 .
tr•STIVAL 01' \.IAllNINO -C.0.-rt ..-Ml by ltudeftb tf ftWllC at Softta Nia Celt ... ·1 !'NII.,. Hell
et I p.m •• AdmllMoft U ~-. SI for~
SUllVIVINO 'OllTTING OUT' -H-play llbout IUA••<Gr1 i..wr.,.
prl-.... -end,_ Pio,_ opens et IMr!I T-Forum, t..os
.ll:rfq ..
For the art lover ~ 'King Tut'
On Screen
A free film describing
the artifacts of King
Tutankhamun'l;'~b is
offered this month bl the
Huntington Beach
. Library, 7111 Talbert
Ave. ·
The rum will be shown
in the Pacific Room
Wednesdays at 7:30 p.m.
Feb. 8 and 22 and at 2
p .m . Saturday, Feb. 11.
Items to be included In
the exhibit of King Tut
Treasures at Los
with discerning tas1e ~
Via Lido Plaza
3439 Via lido, N.8. 673-5430
To oil at lovers: We ore expecting o conskrnent of 18th and
19th Cem.y o1 paintings and wots colors of investment quality. All
art lovers md investcn ore invited. For flliher detcil, watch the lex.al
newspaper~ or coll in penon ot the gallery.
.lvQher first! wt.1e owating yow ~ repast ot Allyson·s. 0
Hemmgw<J'f restcuont, enjoy ttowsing in 04.I' gallery. When yoi.-
toble is ready, you will hea yow noma called on CMX intercom
system.
All nedudse caries C11 ~ 7~ money·bod:
quorontee.
.OPEN 7 DAYS PER WEEK FROM 1().6
Angeles County Museum --------------~.....;;:;--------------....---
of Art will be featured.
C.11142-5678.
Put a f•!IW words
to work tor ou.
Congratulations to the Magnificent New Terrace Theatre
and~ easy to reach by .m many freeways
.I
.. '
. . . ... .. . ~
OUT .NABOUT .,_ -
Ytroay, FtbNary S, 11'11
DiDen,' Tip .Sheet·for Yea~ of Horse·
Next Tuesday, Feb. '1, the Chlnese Year of
the Serpent pvea way to the Yetr of the Horu
and 4676 will gallop onto the scene for the
second New Year's observance in little more
than five weeks.
Dlrung out is the most appropriate means of com memoraUng the occa'Sion.
IN UNE WITH the Chtnete tradition, New
Year's Day occurs on the fU"St new moon after
the sun enters the sign of Aquarius, which
means the holiday never falls.earl(ef than Jfln. 21 or later than Feb. 19.
Out 'N About
--Norman Stanley ..
Chinet.e restaurants sometimes offer
special menus for the holiday but if they don't
the regular bill of fare serves Just as well. And
that leads me to the most common question
asked about ordering Chinese food.
.. ..
"Should we order from the family style din·
nera or a la carte?"
When ulced 1f there is an approved method
f ordering any type of food, the policy bu been
recommend the selection of those dishes in·
di 1 taste deems most suitable.
ere are. however, a few tips that
t prove helpful, picked up during converse·
tlo with the owners and managers of those
0 ental restaurants frequented with some egularity.
The restaurateurs providini the so~d ad·
vice include good friends Yuan-Der 'and Chi
ang of Costa Mesa's Golden Dr~n. Ditto
D is and Kathy Young. Bamboo Terrace,
Costa Mesa.
Still others are Mike and Ann C6iang, Man·
darln Gourmet restaurant, Costa Mesa: John
Kam Yee, Kam's restauran~ CorOlla del Mar
and Santa Ana; Harry Yee. Stag Chinese
Casino, NewPort Beach.
EVEN IF YOU'VE always ordered famjly
style in a Chinese restaurant -which poses no
problem because everything comes in a kind of
pre-packaged spread -next time let the spirit of adventure prevail.
Cello Solo Off erect-
Harrell Plays WitJ:i Philharmonic
lnternalionally famous cellist Lynn liar·
rell wlll perform with the Los Angeles
Philharmonic Orchestra during its 8:30
p.m. concert performance Saturday at the
Santa Ana High School auditorium.
Zubin Mehta, now in his 16th and final
year as music dtrector of the orchestra,
wall conduct the appearance which is
sponsored by the Orange County
Philharmonic Society a s part of its sub·
scriplion series.
THE PROGRAM WILL start with
Mozart's Six German Dances and Sym·
pbo_.ny No. 40 in G Minor.
the South" (Aluss1ol
In has early 30s, Harrell already has ap·
peared as guest soloist with symphony or-
chestras in New York, Chicago, Cleveland,
Londonr Atlanta, St Louis, Minnesota and
lhe National Symphony of Washington.
llE RAS BEEN A rcg_ular part.Jc1pant in
the festivals of Marlboro, Stratford, Aspen
and Ravinia as well at. the Casals Festival
in Puerto Rico.
His honors include the Avery Fisher,
Merriweather Post and Piatigors ky
awards.
In that event, you will still find an element
of the family style approach. There ls no slngte
main course but a combination of main courses
to be shared by everyone. It's simply a matter
of choosing the dishes rather than having them
pre·selected for you.
Select as many dishes as there are people in
your party, and aim fqr variety -in food, ways
of cooking and ways ol cutting.
ONE REPRESENTATIVE selection might
include meats in chunks, prepared in what is
called the red-stewed way; d.iced seafood dish
cooked in its natural Juices; vegetables pre-
pared by atir frying ; and some type of cold dlsh.
Regardless of the dishes chosen, the com-
bination should always be tasty, pleasing to the
eye and balanced In terms ol nutriUonal values.
A dinner for· four persons from a typical
Cantonese menu might include the following;
egg drop soup, barbecued spareribs, moo goo
&al pien <sliced chicken with mushrooms>.
lobster Cantonese. rice, Cea and dessert.
[( there are Sllt persons in the party, you
should add two more dishes. Ideal prospects are
sweet-sour Pork and flank steak with oyster
~auce.
Note that these choices include bee(.
Pork, chi~ken, lobstel' and other assorted foods.
This menu provides variety and sufficient quan·
tlty for al'.
Sboulo your party prefer chop suey and
chow meln, you can stlll apply the same
formula. And.Cora party of four1 a likely selec·
tion would be beef chop suey, chicken chow
metn, shrimp egg fu young and pork fried rlce.
It is also quite helpful to remember a few
key Chinese words that appear repeatedly on
menus. There are probably less than two dozen
such terms.
TO QTE A FEW: "dine" means diced;
"gee yook .. , pork; "how yow .. , oyster sauce;
"see". shredded; .. soong", minced. Knowing
them will greatly facllitate comprehension of
the entire bill of fare.
Should attempts to order a la carte lead lo
the shoals of indecision, however. you can
escape via the all-purpose acceptable roule:
consult wtth the waiter or waitress and follow their suggestions.\
We've noted some excellent Chinese
restauronts in this areu where any way pf oi;
derlng will lead to palate·plea.sing results. And
they will undoubtedly forgive you if it requires
several visits before you select "ngar choy."
with the absolute knowledge that bean sprouts
will be brought to lhe table.
POil THE FIN.AL touch in giving yourself
an authentic Cblnese dining experience, you
could do no better than to master the use of
chopsticks. The accompanying lllustration will
show you bow to hold the chopsticks.
---------
,. 1rst. hold one chopstick like a J>encil.
Place the other on the fourth finger and inside
base of thumb, parallel to the first chopstick. To
use, move the uppe.-chopstick only, holding the
lower chopstick st.ationary.
For a hapruc a la carte Chinese New Year -·
or any other day in the following 12 months -
here's the location of our recommended
restaurants. Bamboo terrace, 1~ E. 17th St ..
Costa M~sa. 645·5550; Golden Dragon. 2023
Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. 631-9911.
A Her intermission, Harrell will be
featured Jn Elgar's Concerto in E Minor
for Cello and Orchestra and Overture "Jn
lndi\'iduaJ concert ti ckets, at $8.SO. stu·
dents $3. are available at the Orange Coun·
ty Philharmonic Office, 1801 Newport
Blvd., Costa Mesa; phone 646·64ll. CELLIST LYNN HARRELL DUE IN SANTA ANA
Mandarin Gourmet, 1500 Adams A,e. (at
Harbor Blvd.). Costa Mesa, 54().1937 ; Kam·s
Corona del Mar, 2121 E. Coa~t Highway,
673·9919; Karo's Santa Ana, 1421 E. 17th Street,
558·2626; Stag Chinese Casino, 111 21st Place \at
the Newport Pier). NewPorl Beach, 673·9560.
\. , Rear
Cantonese Food
ut here or
take home
STAG
CHINESE CASINO
111 21st Pl., Newport BHch ORiole 3-95'0
H-to MHWc)ht Ooily-WHllndt Ufttil 1:00 0.8L o•• u _, .. Mil-..,,,.
SU~DAY BRUNCH
AT THE
ARCHES
· ·Newport's Finest''
10:30 A.M. to 3:00 P.M.
P aclflc Coast Hwy. At Newport Blvd.
PLUS
MONDAY
THRU
THURSDAY
SPECIALS
(Fri., Sat., Sun.,
'til 6 p.m.)
645-7077
RED SNAPPER •••••• 3.45
MAHI MAttl •••••••• 3.95
GRILLED SEA BASS • 3.95
TOP SIRLOIN STEAK 4.25
NEW YORK STEAK •. 4.95
LOBSTER TAIL .•... 5.95
STEAK ANO LOBSTE~ 6.95
and dozens of others
1'278 hdfloCollt Hwy• Hun""tton llcll..• 12131692·1321
aG1 E. Coast Hwy.• c-o.t Met • 01CI •7&-0900
• • SPECIAL! DURING FEBRUARY YOU
DON1 HAVE JO BE AH EARLY BIRD TO
SAYE WHEN ORDERING OUR FOUR
SPECIAL LOWER·PRICED DUHIERS!
We have cbani.CS tfle blius of our £1rly Bird Menu
just for febru.,y: ~ 4:30-9:30 p.m..; Monday
ttlfoulh TtKndlY, $'.10 p.m,: Friday'~ still• Ut'ty
I •
Bird dly, 5-7 ~m.; Mt ltrWd Of1 S.turdays. ft!'.;lliltto!',I
OASSIC ITALIAN CUISINE ·
***
A'WAAD 'WlNNING•
<!Iaptain • s 1\nc!Jorage
~'ij 't~~~ ~~ GA:1e_B0
·So Cohf. l\eslouroni 'o/r•lef~
Dinners
from
""''" So11p & Solod
served wltft ChOiee
of Baked Potato of
fnes ...
King Crab Legs, Fine Beef and Seafood
..
· FOREIGN AFFAIR
(formerly Sugar Bear)
Wednesday-Saturday 9:00-1 :30 AM
Sunday 8:00-12:30 AM
Exciting Rock 'n·Roll Music and
Dancing
16060 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach, (714) 842-2541
<fleGJliariib
• • IS Hometown Ftince
Not Fancy Prench-iust Superi>I
YVft and Yvan haw planned the
setting f:rotn~ Intimate and
(rWldly. The ma'IU fa ra.tONlbie and
t~ Hoine<OOlc.ed meals are cat9ully
prepared. From rack-of.tamb to
50Je bonne fe:imne. you will savor
Mlightful tastes.
:iJ!11 ii ygvr ln•itation llO tab• trip \0 ff•ll<lf •••
101\labl al Le Blmltr. ft~b<f, you'fj be llavtn1dl11~
"1111~cM
WE PLAY'MUSI~
Having 11 party or getting
married ? Call The
Wynnloow·s All kinds of
m us1c, ver~allle 5 pc band. l ,·oeul1 st.
1/526-~
MOW!!
BOB WHITE
PLUS
LISTZ &
COMPANY
HcrryUnt, 0,...
P_,Cose,DNM
DAMCIMGAHD
INTBJ A»IMINT
1V1. THaU SAT.
t P.M. TO 2 A.M.
,
:: It
I
DAILY Pl.LOT
You've beard or all those theater pieces
about gro~inl up black ln tbe shetto! Well. now
a local husband and wlle writing team has
come up with the book for a new musical about
growing up white in the SUbUfbs.
Saundra Mathews.Deacon and Warren
Deacon, both former members or South Coast
Repertory, are collaboraUn1 with composer
Robin Frederick on the sbow. entitled "You
Remind Me or a Friend." It'll open Feb. 24 at
the Circle Theater ln Los· Angeles where it's
ticketed for a 10-week engagement.
The project ls gear~d. through music,
comedy and drama in a revue format, "lo give
something or the feeling or what it's like to grow
up white and female in the suburbs," says Miss
Intermission
Tom Titus
Mathews-Deacon, who starred in SCR's highly
successful original musical "Mother Earth"
a nd also launctted the company's Magic
Theater program for chlldr.en. .
DEACON WHO HAS directed several _ t shewrat SCR, is the author of "The New Bijou
, Soft Shoe," which premiered in Los Angeles in
: 1974. He's also a winner of the Los Angeles
: Dramatist Award from the National Repertory
· Theater for his play "The Chair at the End of
! the Room."
Creators Frederick and Mathews-Deacon
will appear in the i;how, along with Jayne
Hamil, Barbara Lynn Block, Pat Angeli and
Chris Bennett.
Performances will be given Thursdays
through Sundays at 8 p m., at the Circle
Theater, 800 N. El Centro, with reservations
being taken at 1213 ) 466-8803 • H ELPING ASPIRING actors pver come
inhibition and use their imaginations wiµ be
: among the goals of "theater games," in a new
trSaturday morning course to be offered this
·spring at Golden West College.
, Instructor Ralph Eastman says the course
-will center on rehearsal and performance
· of individual and group s cenes of improvisation.
The improvs are designed to "stimulate
C'reativ1ty and both verbal and non-verbal
· communication "
No previous actini: experience is necessary.
;ind it's suggested that students wear
comfortable clothing that doesn't restrict
movement. Registration on a walk-in basis will
be held at the college through Feb. 16.
R estaurant & Lounge
Prime Rib
Entmalnment and
Dancinq Nightly
FRED CLARIZO
•"""-~
Tueeday·Sat.urd.ay
BlalM Huelle ... '"'°" Sunday & Monday
Oyster Bar Menu
'" Our LoW!K•
• St¥med Clama •Cran
•Shrimp • Oyeteu
~Sp.cUt. Daily
t '"°"' '2.25
BANQUET FACILITIES-20 TO 70
16431 BOLSA CHICA (AT HEIL)
HUNTINGTON BEACH 846-1347
Tbe Minion Vlejo Repertory Theater
will present the world premiere of an original
musical, Jack Sbarkey's .. Turkey in tbe
St.raw," at tbe group's summer musical
workshop.
The company is curre ntly taking
applications from directors and musical
dtrectora interested ln worklnc on &he project.
Auditions will be announced «ometime ln April.
Anyone interested in working on the show
sf\ould contact Jay Rayl at 768-6574 or Cliff
Bristol at 837-8113. •
BACKSTAGE -Davld Emmes, executive
director of South Coast Repertory in Costa
Mesa, has been elected to the board or directors
of the CaliCornia Theater Council.
Ethnic
Dancer&
Wming
~a/Jen . I'{-~~~
Tickets for the Feb.
10·11 concerts by the
Stanze Peterson Dance
Theater, Inc. are on sale
at the Performing Arts
Center box office of
Ca liforn ia State
University, Fullerton.
The contemporary
ethnic dance company
from San Francisco will
mark its first Southern
California appearance
when it performs two
entirely different con·
certs at 8 p.m . in the un-
iversity's Little Theater.
Peterson accompanies
his works with a wide
variety or music, both
popular and classical,
pl us poetry.
Phone the cultural
events office at 870-3347
or the box office at
870·3371 'to reserve the $4
tickets.
-:---Call 642-5678.
,
Put • few words
to work for ou.
Sl;;;Jragon
GENUINE CfffNES£MAHDARIN-OISH£$
Specializing In Chinese A la c.orte Dishes
LUNCH•DJKNER DAILY
F,oodtOTekeOUt
11 :30 A.M. to 10 P.1111.
lhghesl Quality
1' al1 ve Mexican Foods
·zw ..........
COSTAMISA
64Z.7162 • 646-Hll
Upen i Days
All SPORTS EVENTS
GIAITT 7 FOOT TV SCREEN
Mon.-Th11. 11:30 o.m. to 10 p.m.
Fri. & Sot. 11:30 o.m. to 11 p.m.' (QCKT AILS
~undoy 4 p.m. 10 10 p.m.
9093 E. ADAMS, HUNTINGTON BEACH
962-7911
, ___ ._ ____ a.JPHER.E
I •
INTERMISSION.
At £red Dennis and
Virginia Jeager ap-
pear in the dream
sequf!noe of •Fiddler
on the Roof• now
playing at Sebas-
t i a n ··s d i n n e r
playhouse at the
Grand Hotel in
Anaheim. Phone
772·7710 for reserva·
lions.
EXTRA EXTRA EmA
THE :
~!~~.~~!~E!!~ :
bn1 aourme1 dinner "alue. Ski> I
aboard lht 20th CtnlUI) um11.ed for 4 URklUl' d1ni111t ~\~r I
1enct For tv.o Stroll 1hruu&)I ~~1111"\<'dr, mtm.mib1ll4 •nd din•· I
on Pnme Rib in an cJ..'114nt. prl\'dk' dining ur Your """ dinner~ I
v.111also11\clude. >UUIJ ..r m1~l·dgrtt11 ..ii.id. b.iked ll'l"h and I
hot t'rt!nch bread w11ll •iiipped 'huller The $10.95 I
SPtridl rs a\·a1lable-wven ~~a •Ht!. (.,,duding hnl1da"l I
On-the-Mall at South Coast P laza Near the Carousel I
on the F'lrst Level. For reservations call: 540-8822 OP2·3 • L------------Oli.<&oitetF• 13 1171 -----------·
Come journey with us back th rough time. To a place
where the .atmosphere and· decor is Victorian.
Where antique chandeliers softly· highlight treasured
turn-of-the-centucy: mementos. ~·'Phis is~~
The Big Yellpw House. A restai.trant
where you can enjoy a very special
dining experience. ~·Food is fixed
with old-fashioned goodnes~, with all .
the trimmings . Everything is serve~ in~~---:.......a~
...... , I• •.J , ,--. _,, •'")I --. "' ----
i bowls and on platte_!]-famil y style. The
: T main course features our famous golden-
brown fried clii~n and a second entree,
which vhanges ~ly. Adults pay ·onlx
$5 ~95, with -beverage and dessert extra.
Kids pay according to how much the~
weigh. iJt,·We also serve teirific cocktails
·and lunches. ff So next ti~e you'd like a
'relaxed;·ftili-fjlled tlining e~perience, come to '.Gae Big )
Yello~ House. We *now ):auUl enjoy it.
' • I ' " I
-
·----
Friday. Febt.u&lY 3. 1974 DAILY PILOT
A inovblC....,. A l'O'Mnde ~
'A story of envy. hat..td. f'r~ triumph, and krve.
4'4·10fJ/9
, .. ~CO•ll-Y u-. ... e ..
0,..24H...,
rw.aw_. ---
.. ---------------. I If~ Chinese Cuisine· 1 /l/f' ORIENTALCOCKTAILLOUNCE . I l BAMBOOe~tunng Trop1ca1 Dnnk!I I
I ~I TEUVW!\ FEIR.UARY · I 1 · ~ SPECIAL · I :I ( Ji?f. ,.it D ..... ,_, _ _..._ I
'I ~I $4.JS ,.,.,.,.... I 1 _,,..~
• ....Price SS.SO I I ~ oo· "DPe"• ... -,._ ... .......i -... ,,..., ••Alt I
I pult·S-·IEM-·---~ 41 111 b<oceoh _ _,,, ___ nc•·••f 1 I nd COOll ..
F0r 3 or ,,..,,.. act·o oe.., :I ~ ·~ C"'0""'4-wllllbelt11Ptovto I : I •" I Otror .. "', .. F-u•ry 21 ''" 1 ! 1~3 EAST l7Tll .• l"US'I A MESA &1:;.5550 .... ______________ ..
A NEW"DINING ADVENTURE
IN THE MOOD ~lembers of the Goldl'n
West College Jazz Ensem~e. from left. Lory
Co le. trombone. Ron Slout. ~pet. M ark
bbell, al!O :.ax~phOlll', anaEddie ~arsha ll,
tenor sax. present a mellow mood as thl1 Y
ple.y in the sophisticated reeo.rding ~tudio on
the Huntington Beach campus. Oa\"ld An·
thony isdirector oftheensembll'.
• .J
.. mAnDAn1n CHINESE Geurmet c u1s 1NE
,,/JllA .. lll·~"' PEKING • SHANGHAI
JAZZ STUDENTS,EXCEL AT ALL AGES. • •
~ ~~~ IKB
SZEC~N •HUNAN
Daily Lunch
And Dinner
Yow Host ..ct Hostfts-
Mlb cmc1 """cw..g
(Former Chet of the
Twin Dragons-Anaheim)
<From Page l:l)
jobs field and s ay good.
bye with our blessing.
That's where our em-
phas is is ... Anthony
said.
Kirk, who plays the
bass m "casuals,.. has
performed with big
names such as Ray Con-
niff, Buddy Morrow,
Anita O'Oay and Buddy
Collette • • •
1500 ADAMS A VE. l•t H..W 11...0.1
Two who have gone
from Golden West to
multicareers are Kevin
Nude au. lead mus1c1an at
Knoll 's Berry Parm
where he also' performs.
and Don Harper, a com
poi.er living in 1'·ountain
V11 lley.
THOSE WHO do out·
standing work at the col·
lege level and ~o onto
the pros. no doubt st:irt
ed when as elementary
i.tudenh their parenb
bought them their first
instrument.
COST A MISA S40-I n7
Anthony. al> do most Some of those pare nts
music teachers, believes may ha\•e danced to ~"~· ''lhuslc~eativeand K e nton at the Ren-
com municative art, not dezvous.
a competitive one." One of the major m id
Much of the participa· d~e schools, seventh ';ind
lion in festivals is on ~ighlh grad~s •. tutoring
that theory. Groups are Jaz.z mus1c1an s I !> ~-----• d k Ensign. rate ·not ran ed. John Lindfors directs
1 the unique group thut GOLDEN WEST'S pr11cticed during the
GRAND HOTEL ensemble: directed by lunch hour when it first
Anthony , was rate.ii formed. Now I.here i:-. a No.On•Ho~W•Y superior in the OCltJ.azz band class.
ANAHEIM Festival in 1977 and the CACROSS l"ROM
o1sN[VLAN01 '76 Pacific Coast Juzz ENSIGN llAS played F estiva l al UC ..Berkeley Al last -;Yea r's in l he St ate J a z z .. -17141 B k .... • . i..:~i.. FeSU,l;al l,n Sa~an1ento °""'oN'll......,._., ...,.112 7710 . er e • .,~ even, tll w......... ar1ti ln Snit l"r-ancisco. ATION • unkings were given. At j azz. festi vals. ._ ___________________ __. GWC was second among
the 4o coUegiate groups where the ratings are determined by pro-participating. fessionals the group re·
OCC Festival and The J azz Ensemble,
participating in the high· whic h draws members
school division, was first from Harbor High as
of 26 high schools at last well as other schools in
y e a r · s 8 u r b a n k the district, was rated
Festival. No. 1 at the Mt. San An
One problem, Lindfors tonio College Festival m . -
notes, is that his stu-Walnut last year and m
dents gradual<• but con 1976 toured Hawa u. It
tinue wanting to play as ll I s o p c r forms a t
agroup'. Fa s hion l s land 10
At Newport Harbor Newport Beach and itl
Hi gh, the problem has yarhl club openings.
been s olved by the
Newport Jazi Associa-
tion's sponsorship of two
groups -the Newport
J azz Ensemble a nd
Newport Big Bund
The Newp ort B q(
Band is a feeder for the
ensemble.
The Newport Jazz As·
sociation IS city-funded.
CROWN HOUSE
RESTAURANT
• • • •
t\ '1 SAD OLE BACK _c~erv~e~d;:;:N~o~. :e;l;;;:a;;t;:;t;;;;h~e;:;;J~97;;;:74!F==--===---------;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;;;;;:-. College, Bill Kirk. the ~
32802 COAST HWY.
499-2626 496-Sn3
IVY HOUSE
RESTAURANT'
314 FOR£ST AVI!.
LAGUNA B!.ACH
(lft ""'~-111
Ample Free Park1r1g
494.9491 752-8551
CALIFORNIA'S MOST
ELEGANT DINNER THEATRE
MOW PU Y1M6 THtU .... I 2
Nell Simon's '
"LAST OF THE
:RED HOT LOVERS~
Starring
ALCHECCO
With
n ew jazz ensemble
director, and Monte
LaBonte, are busy plan·
ning the school's first
Jazz Fe:;tival March 3
and 4.
They will host 12 col·.
lege and 18 high school
bands, according to
Kirk, who has moved 'to
the college from La
Mirad a's Neff High
School. Kirk guided Neff
ensembles to numerous
s uperior r atings-and
competitively that group
twice won the
Southwestern Jazz
Festival in San Diego.
The Toshiko Akiyoshi
and Lew Tabackin Big
ORANGE
(714) 639·7264
''ALLYSONS''
/I Hmtmf(WdJS Rntmmint
INVITES YOU TO OUR
R A.M. GOOD MORNIN(,
\1"1.i/1;1"X I• /~•11111•"1 8,.,,J.,ll
11 O'dork LUNCH TIME.'
i W AFTERNOON 'ft:A
'i: W 111 11 :O{) EVENING CUISINE
'-l.! I I /A I.JOO. NEWPORT 81:.AC.ll
I i RI·• I I""' I t/11,,,,/, l.u!. lktttrr
NI \f:RVA'/ JON.5 675.f>:!.!fl
Cl"i•rl M1111d")t
Band will perform on ..::.::::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~,~~ campus as part of the
Jazz festival. .
Saddleback ensembles , ~~~~?1~~tfJ~~;; have boon compeUng ln 'i
festivals the 11 years the
school has existed.
FOR A REAL
TASTETREAT · ~ ~•I
GJfltl-c,10cei
THE ENSEMBLE that competes in jazz
festivals and bas set a
May tour of central and
northern California has
lb ree playeu who
perform professioq•llY at area dubs. They are
Craig Chastain, bass,
Dan Hefferman, ox,
and Kevin Walk e r ,
drums.
~i~rter
• GOURME"f DINING -MEDITERRANEAN RM.
• CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH SUNOAVS 10.J PM
• DANCING NIGHTL V -CABAR!T LOUNGE
• CAPTAIN'S TABLE COFFEE SHOP -24 HRS.
18700 MAC ARTHUR BLV.D.
IRVINE, CALIFORNIA
l()pposltt Ol"lllge County Air~)
11141 833-2no
WINNER-4
GOLDEN GLOBE AWARD$
INCLUDING B!ST PICTURE
1' Ulnt:'rlHi\ (( •• Nr -A HPNJrT /tOSS llUI
A!o\t IAW.MUH 'HllllAY,...,VJM TIUln.'ft!ol.\'01(NNrf0'45K,lflt11T'
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CiiG±--ei ~ l.;Q~-~-~~-~..,..ep+1.....,~ ... ,, ... ou.•~..,. t.mlJ.
MATINEES DAILY LAKEWOOO C!NTER I LA MIRADA
\ c ........ ........ .,
49 .. 1514
,_.,
.. l ....... 9711-9150
"WI A• MOr_AIO'M.~CLOll INCOUNTUS 01 1Hf fHUtD KIND (llO) "" • a.ioe ..... a.ao n , NO PAUii
OCOltl Ml~ I """4 .NV.I
OH GODl<'°J '"'' SUNSHIHf IO'rS Cl'GI
fllt~I ACTIOH MIU
l, DIAf" MACHl,.I !It
1. HUSTUI SQUAD 181
I . KUNCMU MAMA 111
G · DAil Y P\LOl
.. ... _ ~
\MARMADUKE by .Brad Anderson BOOMER
. . • "Yeah. he's got au the can openers in there
too!" • ..
r ~UNKY WINKERBEAN
~ I CAME Bt..> MA~ 50£'5
L..OCKE.R "K> A5K HER
OJf BUT I Ml.15T'VE
M166EO ~ER!
CASEY
,--~~~~~~......,
<XAY. WHA"f wetJf Wllc>k7
1'tltt 1iM~ , Ai.Sot.Cl ?'
MISS PEACH
;CD I .
I
..
by Tom Batiuk
By Charles RodrtguH
MOON MULLINS by Ferd and Tom Johnson
' ·l
GERIATRIX
HO~ ~e. AZEE \.ANCE
WIZITIN6 eu-;;1Ne~,
SCOOP 1
•
0
DENNIS THE MENACE
.... ,..~--
.. __
GORDO
JUDGE PARKER
by Wm. F. Brow and Mtl tasson
1 o~w 14,~ ~Ci? ~Ai~ 11c.ct.€c;i
Cj..05~ 1' .t1e ~ lit( N05f. A~P I ~iAIZ~O INTO 60f A ~~~ilNG H~'2 ~y~6 JUST F"lf .' L.U(~ 'ftlu loiD
Meii ro ,aooM~~
DOOLEY'S WORLD
I ntrNK LAUNDRY DA'I
15 VE.RY HARD ON MOM
DR.SMOCK
PEANUTS
-------
COMICS I CROSSWORD
by Charles M. Schulz
I ~ALLSET10
BULD A SNOWAAN,ANO
NOU.t lT'S AAlNlN6 !
AA\1€ 't'OO EVER
TRIEO TO OOILD
A RAJNMAN!!
by Roger Bradfield
by George Lemant
1' •• A , '
I ' : COMMUNl6T! :
' J ,,_
by Gus Arriola
by Harold Le Doux
by Tom K. Ryan
TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PVZZLI
ACROSS 59 Stont1:
Suffh1
I' ~k>O 81 Stieme ...,._ M-of 10 EnQlltll title credit ''Shi~ 87 Mo¥ta
ChlflCi.f pOOCh
15 GeoflltlrlC ta Aec:ldenf.
eolld •''"°' t: 2 18 Pl1yl11Q field . wordt
l 7 llllPl'I'_,.,,._ 70 8r1111'1
1 t NllTUW _, nelgtlbof
20 Tr111•ty 71 S.llOf'I
21 CotontrJnt llin1
23 Kind of mitt 72 S1111ll
25 Ant!Que clllldren: 1ulo y1,
21 Sec:ul•f 13 An1in1r1 27 C1nontted gilt
one. Abbr. H C1n1dl1n
29 Acaulre by wtllllllH
labOf 75 P•rtume 31 Spoil
UNITED FMtlft 8yM&cate TNrldl,t l'llZ:Zle loMd; .
J3 0.1truc1t11•
one DOWN 22 Spr.. 48 Hates
H ··e111o1-···"
39 Feline
40 Moweby
1111111
OtgfMI
42 Avid ''Of,,,. GMla 45 Settle1n
•ccount·2 worctt
41 DecelVed •iChlefOurey
tollOwer
500b;ectof
faith
52 K•Dtof
lulure use
5! Wlcited .,, Palm
cock1too
c,7 Sttao;le
24 Grouo of 51 NOflhern or
1 Dioee11t llWM N11tllle··--
2 lt1Ua'1 27 Statua of: 54 Adjuat Ill·
cal)ftal Suffb UllQIY
3 S.loUa 28 T11nny 55 011e getting
altuetlon 30 Ethiopian II· up
• Spentall !Ille tie 56 Ster: Comb.
5 Hot dflnka 32 Draw, lr1 lorrn
8 .tiloh card tPo't• 58 Inter~ of
7 Be'Olln city 35 FloWlf IHf 1uror111e
8 M11tU1lly: 37 ProtDtttofa IJO Pr1nc101e ol
Prefht uncltrwril· good con-
9 PMttonor fl!G duel
Patrick 38 Tiiis· 12 Prethc for
t O PllY1hing Soenlall bOY or bols
1 t Be ol UN 39111tlr11menl 63 "Aft r~d•
1 2FoocHroni 41 HefCI closetr le.Oto·····
""~" 43 ... a 1;11nsl es Smooth 13 Dir~ 48 01m1 ol 66 R11111fncH1r
18 ··0o 11 IOI" •• • Oriental 69 Call tor 11e10
or1g1n
-•
WHALE FESTIVAL F'r1ct.y. February 3, 1978 DAILY PILOT (;f
-Dana "Whak Fest a Leviathan Event ~ sTe~L •AND Music G '-Al Occ•l••I
HOW A.VA•AM.m Dana Point Harbor's Festival of Whales starts A continuous Marine .Movie Festival from In contrast to the varied prolfamS on massive Cal:....._ W._
ocr Saturday with a spect.rum of free weekend 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday will offer marine mammaJs, visitors can also aee Uny l714J IJWtN CJUJ 611 l4JI events, including a children's art workshop, fossil leading Cousteau, Disney and other sea-oriented harbor inhabitants during a tidepool tour al 1:30 •
talk. and displays, underwater movies and a search Cilms at Harpoon Henry's restaurant. p.m . beginning at the West Basin pier.
for whales' land "roots." On Saturday, cinematographer Lew Trusty,
The sixth annual festival celebrates the migra· whose "The Silent Forest" earned first prize in the
1 tion or the California gray whales past Dana Point International Underwater Photographic Society
,Harbor. competition, will show his film and talk about its
product.loo at 11 a.m.
UCl marine biology instructor Hayden
Williams will offer "Roots: Searching for the Land
Ance~tor~ .of Wt)aJes" -a slide·talk at 2 p.m.
THEATRES-ORANGE COUNTY
MAMM'S .. SEMI TOUGH" 1•1 SO. COAST PWl easu •rll ,--=--.1 DAIL\' 6:0o.&:OO. I 0:00
J411 ltbltl '°°' ,...fm MO# US SA1/$UM-1~~1'.-W .. llUNM
MAN 'S "SA TUIDA Y HIGHT SO. COAST PWA FIVEll" IRI
~:':: I IOlllY 'I DAILY S:Jo.1:10.t:10
Sil-1"1 . MP P.USH 1Al/a-...114'-1:4.___I_
MANN'S
CINEMIUNO
1416 St. llMMr .., .. ,.
W.IMI
fMl-•
•aosl IHCOUMTUS Of THI
THlltD KIND" U'G I
1111-1:41-11111
Jll( ......
"OH, GOD" lf'OI ...... ,..,..1 ...
,., I MIM·»t·6'>1· llllt
"LOVlH & OTHO STV.t4GUS"
•A&YlllllAY/-· IM·_,1.1111
MUM'S "TB.lfOM"' IPGI
CINEMAUNO ,..,~":,~":::. ...
••sMOKEY AHO THE IAHDIT"
et.IU UI IAl~ ·wt• 6<M • •-
IAU,MClllC
•HEW YOU, MIW YOU'' INI
At Specially Selected Tltcatre• And Driwi.fnsf
ONLY SUNN COMPLIMENTAAV PASSES ACCEPTED
SEE DIRECTORIES FDR SHOWTIMES ANO 2NO FEATURES
MESA, Costa Mesa • MJ-5125
El CllillltO, T1stln • 544-1191
CEUURY 21, lna~ehll • 112-1912
MIRAMAR. San Clemente • 497-0051
CIMEllA WEST. Wlstmh1ster • 892-4493
FOUltllllt VALLEY. Fountain Valley • 131-1580
SADDUIACl El TOia • S&l-51U
ORAM&£ IW.l. Oraqe • 137-0341
CYPRESS. Cnl'tss • 121-lHI
FOUW'lllll *1fY Dl • ..JW, Fa1ntJla falltJ • l&Z-241l
BUENA Plll DR.-111. llhtla Park • 121-4870
llQU£l., uana • 491-1253
''Sounds that Whales Make" will be explored
by Larry Leyman, Fullerton College life science&
instructor, Sunday at 11 a .m . Both presentation!
will take place in the Wmd & Sea restaurant's up·
stairs banquet room "Orange County's Fabulous Fossils" will also
be shown there by Bob and Peg Montgom~ry at
2:30 p.m
FOSSIL FANS can enJOY two other displays i11
Dana Point Harbor this weekend at the OrangE
County Department of Education's Marine Science
Lab at 24705 Dana Drive on Dana Island -10 a.m.
to 3 p.m. both days. The American Cetacean Socie·
ty will also display whale and dolphin bones and
related materials al Dana Wharf Sportfisblng,
where whalewatch cruises will depart hourly. Ad·
vance reservations are reeommended through
714/ 831-1850.
( I ~,' !'\•·~·f ; '\.z" '"' ... ... ... 1' • ,.,., ... v• .... .
. --------·
HBJlOVU
"DL;RSU
UZALA"
1 ..... WitittNI
Co-hit at
Bristol
"DISCO 9000"
CO-hit at
Plitt
"EverythlnQ
About Sex"
WINNER 2
GOLDEN GlOBE AWARDS
BEST MOTION PICTURE--ORAMA
BEST DIRECTOR-HERBERT ROSS
THE FF.STIV AL or Whales will eonUnut for
three weekends in February, with dlCCerent talks
1Uld events scheduled tor each.
Dana Point Harbor is located at the lntersec·
tion of San Diego Freeway and Paci.ftc Coast
Hi1hway. All festival events except wbaJewatcb
c;rulses are Cree.
Duringt.be feativaJ, youngsters can participate
at home. Tbe Orange County Publle Library bu a
telephone story, "Noggin and the Whale,'~ the tale
or a whale who joined a harbor festival, on its dlal-
a-story line.
Two other stories are scheduled durln& the
festival period. Dial-a-story's nwn~ la ~n.
832-3622 or 871-9793.
HUMTMTOM llACH-UONS CW. lnVll• )'(XI to the
llG BAND DANCE .
at the
IALIOAPAVIUOH MARCH 10 . ... _.,,.. Mtnlc by Kefflt w. ..
..... , i .... , ...,_. Orcltntnt
D ... .,_llOIPM D-.:19tt:OO ...... l:OOAM
SINO fOR TICKETS NOW-AT S7.SO eACH
UOMScP.O. IOX llll~Alt4 VAWY
ftw ll#1Mr ~_,.KS JoN\ flood. c:ii--1\, ...,_ -· Mt-OIM ~ --"'O) or-.1"'4
"The talk around Hollywood Is that our .
.movie m~y be a heavy favorite~ for an ,
Academy Award -No kidding, an Oscar! I
may even have to rent a. tuxedo!" ·
DAILY PILOT
642·4321.
George Burns
/ ~ CARL "()\\~r
. . '
~----
John Denver
· She had to marry him. .
She was too embarrassed to have him as a date •
A Carl Reiner Film
HENRY .. . .. • IS
.. .,
...
..
(ll DAIL f'PILOT * Friday. FebrUMY 3, 1'78 re1e.,uwn TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS
I J<ll).'\ \
EVENING
eooe CUNEWS
•• N8'S 0 EMEROEHCY 9NEI
A IOU!* loot&>U hero 'ltld• the ,..,.,.,. emerven·
~of. pw~,.,
mote lnghtemng th•n •
~ol lootball. a MOV16
• • "Winier Kiil' (197•1
Andy Orllflth, SharH
North. A mount•h't com-
munity hi terrorind by •
myaterlou1 murderer. (2
IVI.) CD ntl BRADY BUNCH
P•ttwbt•eks•vuo.
Cl) THE ROOklU ·&:l ZOOM
'1!) Sf'ECtAL ·rne Harps>c;l\Ofd Maker"
A portr1ll of Peter
Redllone. builder ol llarp.
•1C11<>td1 end otner 8Utnen·
lie t 8th C«'ll\Jry keyboa!d
1n1trument1. ®l A8CNEWS
Horsing Around
9:30 8 THE PRICE IS0RIGHT
tD MY THREE flOff8
The usulllly alt-male Doug.
tu household booomee •
refuge '°' 1n acrr8Ct1ve girl
d8t!C« wllO h.. bee<\
evicted from her epart·
rnent.
Edward Albert and Glynnis O'Con
nor dismount· for a romantic· in-
te rlude in the' fourth of five parts
of the TV movie "Black Beauty"
tonight al 8 on NBC. Channel 4.
fD OVEAEASY
6-t: Mite-Odey
C!) CONSUMER
SURVIVAL KIT
~ CALIFORNIA
TONIGHT
men Chet Wray and Ak:t\-
ard Robonaon. dltcuh aovernor Brown's 1pec:1a1
IMlllOn on prOf)«ty tax
reform •nd ,..,_ the
JllMS property lb llmlta-
llOtl lnttlatMI.
Cl) TO T!Ll TH! TRUTH
"Mat, 0--· The-Counter
Drugs. SecQnd Hornet"
(()CBS NEWS
7:30 tJ ALl·ST AR ANYTHING
00£8
®J MERV GRIFFIN
Guotta: Pleyer. Marilyn
Sokol. Harry Ch8')1n.
"HM H•w·· vs "Don
Klr"1M<'1 Rock Concen" Cl FAMILYFEUO (I) THE MUPPETS
·......._ Guell: Don Knoti.
7.00 I) THE MVPPETS
Guest· Judy Collins. Cl NBCNEWS 0 UAR8CLU8 IJ A8CNEW8 m ILOVELUCY
0 NEWLYWEDOAME 0 OJ11 HOU.YWOOO SQUARES
a. tJ (() WOHOEA
WOMAH
Wonder Woman MVet the
world ftorn M o1 en.la
Wiien lht expoHI a
tnaglclel)'e (Piclt OIUtltw)
tMtlw)d of Chllnglng lead
m THE BRADY BUNCH
Clnely IOMI lier motllet'I
oerrloga. tD AOAM-12
fl) LA. INTERCHANGE
"lnlormed Sources" Into gold. · Lucy and Ethel (lilt tob• In
e canOy factory m ADAM-12 £Il) MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
C!) VOTER'S PIPELINE
"Sacremen to 011ellne"
Host Jim Cooper and his
ouests St111e Assembly·
U 8lAa< BEAUTY
Beauty .. l>OUghl •t publlc
nuetlon by • gentle ceb
owner (Werr•n Oatn)
CPllrl 4 of 5)
• •
Cha""~ Ll•t Ing•
1J KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles
Cl KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles 8 KTLA (Ind ) Los Angules
G KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angcl1Js
(J.) KFMB (CBS) San Diego
Q KHJ·TV (Ind.) Los Angeles
OJ) l<CST (ABC) San Diogo a» KTlV (Ind.) Los Angeles
Cl) KCOP·TV (Ind.) Los Angelos m KCET· TV (PBS) Loa Angeles e KOCE·TV(PBS) Hun11ngto
U MOVIE • • * "Tr1poze·' ( 1~)
Burt Lancester. Tony
Cul'tll. A F!enctl drCutl llCt
becornel • lhattenng In·
•ngki •tier .,, Ameriean Jolnl the act. (2 llrw.)
0 lfl DONNY & MAlllE
G.-ta: Cheryl Llldd, Paul
lnde, Jey Oetnond.
JC>Klft'8Wll0
CAAOl llUANETT
ANO FRIENDS GJ ..,.ACU8WE1.8V,
M.O.
9 • WA8ttlNOTON
Jan and Dean Story
,
· 'Curve' Crashes
By JAY SllARBU'IT
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Sad
news: Producer Roger Gimbel. who
made such fine TV films as "Birds
of Prey,·• "Miss Jane Pittman" and
"Queen of the Stardust Ballroom."
l\as a not-so.fine film on CBS tonight
at 9 on Channel 2.
ll's "De ad Man 's Curve.'' a
dra matized story of Jan and Dean.
two CaJifomia kids who hit it bi g in
the late ·50s and early 'OOs warbling
catchy surfer songs amid the new
wave that brought the Beach Boys.
l'heir ride to fame came to a sad,
abrupt hall when Jan, dFiving force
of their success, plowed his speeding
Corvette into the rear or a truck. He
was left partly crippled, unable to
sing.
THE RISE AND demise of pop
music stardom for Jan Berry and
Dean Torrance is re-enacted tonight
by Richard Hatch, cast as Jan, and
Bruce Davidson, who plays Dean.
The re-enactment is sprinkled
with such J&D oldies as "Jenny
Lee," ''Surr City" and ''LitUe Old
Lady from Pasadena." and has
cameo appearances by Dick Clarkh
Wolfman J ack and Mike Love.
Although Hatch and Davidson
seem too old to play the lads as high
school kids in the show's early
scenes, they do creditable work. The
major problem wilh the show is
Dalene Young's script.
IT TRI ES FOR h o n esty,
particularly· in its uncompromising
portrait of Jan, healthy or crippled,
( TV REVIEW )
as a man of consuming ego. But it
com es across as ·flat and predJcta·
ble.
Dean emerges as a passive, level·
headed. unaccountably loyal good
gu)'. Jan proves only a part·time
good guy, afflicted by guilt now and
then, but always looking out for
Number One.
The show starts with the usual
California '50s touch, with the boys
and their date~ in a '53 Chevy con·
vertible, top down, at the drive·i.J),
joshing the somewhat dense
waitress.
THEN tT TELLS how they re-corded their f'U'St hit, "Jenny Lee,••
in a makeshlft basement studio, and
how th~ briefly and angrily parted
ways wben Dean, not convlnced
they h4d a future, left for a sbc-
month ArQly Reserve b.llch before
their sonj became a hit.
There are moving moments -
Jan's painful at.tempts to recover
after the car crash, his callous treat-
~ent by 8 group or beach hippies,
bis pathetic attempts at just one mor~ hit. ooe more con~rt with
Dean.
But thel'e's llttle spark in th.ii
show. And the better scenes on.en
are sabotaged by such lines as this,
from a crippled Jan to bis J~ as
they walk along a beach ~ 'AP· 'plause. I need applause ...
merry him.
She waatoq
embarrassed
to have him
WUK "4 AlV1EW ·~1~T10H
• WALL l'l'AUT
WUK
"i'erotpace Stoell1· A·
OI<?" ~ Wolfgllllg H
Oemleetl. Ylee prMIOMt.
Smith 8emey, Harri•
Uptiwn 4 CO~ Inc.
t:o0 8 on.MOVIE
"Oeadman'1 Cun•• •
lPrtmlere) Alc:l\wd Heidi,
8ruoe Oevl1on. The
IMteo<lc mueic:.i CWNr of
CllllfonQ I~ Jen
8'tTy eild ~ Ton.tlCe,
• lirfOlf\O duo of the late
1950'• and ·eo· .. O~FUS "Soutl\ ey aouni_, ..
R«kfora-I• mlltekenly
ebducted ey the otA end
~ In • ptot to help
.,. heir-~from her
lwlbend. 8 9 MOMOVIE
"CrulH Into Terror"
(Pl'Wl\6ere) R.y Miiand. Hl'llft o·enen. l:t19 d._,..,..
""" of .,, llnClenl --pfl1Q119 turne a Cetlbbeen
,,..._e crulM into • a"~
lronlkle It framed IOf'
being a tipoff main wltlllf\
Ille Ponce 'Oec>ert~ tD MUV ONFFlM
GUMta; Player, • 'Metolyn
Spl!ol. HMty Cll~. Oevfd
Soul, Burr Smidt.
• MAACUe wrurv. M.O. e THE 80( WIVES OI
HENAYVlll
"Cetlle<'llW Of ~ ..
Sl)llnlatl ~ Cau-
rlne m81rriee Henfy, Marl
~ • dllllghter ~ uw.
Npplly wl\h him fof elgttt•
eM ,...,., iinlll lie ..._ ._ '°' "'-Boleyn. ~=UHE ~· ·~ '"The Oul·OI· Towner•" (1870) Jaolt
Lemmon, &Indy Oennl1. A
couple Ylllltno New York
~_,,known
urben d!Ma1er.
10:00 G QUINCY
"Aoconlplic9 To Murele<''
Oulnc;y ts aided by •
l>•llered wife (Betlnae J
Montgomery) In h111
attempt to prove o
wom•n's •hr-month-old
beetlog by hit!' wealthy
huaband c au1,d lier
dMlti.
I D NEWS
HOHEYMOON!M
WOAL.D
"The CIOUded Window"
0u.t host OIUllel ~r
ptenn1ng to ldlt him 12 hra) mil\.)
TUBE TOPPERS 1:00 0 MIDNIGHT SPECIAL
Host: Slt•un CH•ICI)
G11M11 Paul McC8rtn.y
Md Wingt. ABBA. Bob
Q MOVIE
••"KIM Of TM Taran1u-
I• ( 19721 Eric "'9oll .
Suunne Uno· A young
glfl, 1 .. c1n•1•'1 with
~""' ttie cree1wee
10 •Y8ft09 N WtOflOI Oot'9
lier by '*' modllnO ~
mtlM (211A.I
KTLA 0 8:00 "Trapeze.'' Burt
, Welch, G•orge Oulte
P-Allel> Lancaster and Tony Curtis are aerialist
partn e r ~ and riv a l s fo r Gin a
Lollobrigic..la in thb 1956 mo\lie drama
CBS 8 9 :00 ·'Dead Man's Curve."
Q ISPY
'OraQOn 'TMlh G» MOYIE
The s tory of ~gers Jun and Dean and
their rise and fall in the late Fifties and
early Sixties is made into a TV movie.
• *' "Or Ol'lotf'• Mon11er
11965) JON Ruflo Agnec
Spuk A-6 r-..ge 1w hll wne·• lnfldetlry • ..i tc1entla1 CtM... " rObol .,,4 pro-
gr-fl to klll beMllJIUi
WOIMll.(21'1r&.)
"'u t tw n
MORNING
7'009~,..... <See review below.) ~
KCET ta 9:00 -"The Six Wives of
Henry VHI." A popular historical
series is repeated with this first of six
e pisodes.
1: 10 II TAU<ABOUT uoCB MOYie
••• "o.tnon And '"Y'"'-
.... (1~2} Guy Wllllllme.
Don Bur"'1t. ~ frlenef·
lhlp bet-IWO )'OU\"9 II
put to tfle uffime\e t• ( 1
l'lr,.30mln.)
.,.,. worm: "°',... ..
One of Am0f1ce .. INding a.oe llCCf--.. Men la
con..,.,...tlon _. euu. I
tlle81., c1111o M•roetet
CloYdOI\ In ~· btW petfo<olftetlCIM and ,.... dl1cuue1 lnternaUon•I
-_iiatllerlng
10:*> I CD HeWI
LATINO
CON80RTIUM
11:00 I II D Cl) II§) NEWS
LOVE.AME~
STYLE
"love And The Big Night"
M.,k 1u .. his MCTetary to
her 8Plflmeot ~ ol Mr,.., Of burgl.,., G MOVll! ** "Wlnltr Kiii'. (1974)
And)' Grlltith. Sheree
North. A moootlln com-
munity 11 terrortzed by a
mytterk>U5 murderet (2
~ .. ,
8» THE OOOOOUPlE
''.\ TuteOf Money" GJ L£T'B MAK! A DfAl fD OO<CAVETT
Gueeta: l.11\e Wtrtmu!W,
Glencarlo Gl•nnlnl.
~ MACHEL I LEHRER
REPORT
tt:iG a Cl> M·A·e·i.
"Tiie Longjohn Fl-.P" Dur·
ong a cold llMp. a pair of
longjohns -..it to Hhtleye
beCOme l!\Ot'8 vetuable and
nogoti.ble Ulen coin of Ille
reatm.(R)
D TONIGHT
Hoit: Johnny Ceraon
Gueau: Joen Rlvert. \Ito
Damone. O.\lld Sut11t•d.
Mette Eat1e
... OW, AMI.RICAN
STYLE
"Love And The Legal
Agreement" A couple
agrM lhAI ,...., C11tf l 11anc1
Mell ottitr. bfJI neither
-i.toltlwt D 9 BARE'l'TA
"He'll ~ See Oayllght
~ .. A crime l>ou caus-
ee a contr11Ct to be put °"' on 88ftlte when h•
~ ~ for eteglog •
• raid on • numbet• No·
M•dlyn Allue. Andr-
Prlne ou-t atar. (RI •
• NIWS I Gnat.WIT
CAl'TIONED A8C
NEWS
MORNING
1~ 0 1W1UGHT ZONE
A newly ~mlAIOMCI
officer 1rrlll'08 In the PlllllP·
pll'\M In Ille w1nlftg yea,.
otW.W.11.
G) FOAEVEA
FEANWOOO
tD MOVIE * 11t'h "Desert Hell'' (111581
8rt811 K .. th, Batblf• Hale
Olqj(ltnt CSU.I trll>eltn..,
•ttempt to.,.,, • holy wer
(I llr .. 30 m•n.f
12:068 (11. CBS LAT£ MOVIE . '~··''Sob & C.,ot & T-1
& '.uc.•· (t~I N_.
Wood, Rotl«t ~. A
marri.cl couplilr, experi-
mont)no wltll 8'I ~ ,... ••
1~1p. tty t11 bring
8110ther ooupte In on tl'M
llOnMt)', truth and truat.
IR)
12:30 8 MOVIE • * • ''Thal Men From Rio" (1H4) JHn-Peul
8tlmondo. Ft•ncol••
DorlMO. A Qlrf la kid·
~ b:t a oeno a1>C1
t>rougllt to Rio, with her
soldler•bOylrlend hOI on
the v811. ( t 11r •• 55 "'"'·> G» WORU>OF
SURVIVAL
12:37 8 Sl'AlmMf
"A Smell R•bethol\"
Simone Signoret. George
M.,,.111. A young pll)'-
wrlghl delend1 his l>l8Y
llqalnlt die ....,.,.. crill·
c:iSm of a lamo\IS 8CttM8
rtlll,lng nil lulur• H 111
trlet to ,tum lier l'tostmty
Into Mll'f1Mlllltlon. 1~40 III MOVIE * * ui..t•s 1(111 Uncta"
(1986) Nigel Green, Mary
Bad1111m. A young men
decildel to atrtl!e flrll wt'81\
lie dlllCOlltwa hit uncle i.
1:i5G NEWS
2:008 MOVIE • *'~ "St•t• Secrel
( 1950) Oouglu F81fban1t1
Jr., GlynleJohna. Attere11-.
covenng top_.. tnfar·
meuon et>out a Eur~
()(M.lntry s lea<llw. en Arner.
!C41n doelor tries 10 teeve
IM country (2 h•• 1 2:~0 NEWS
Z-30 0 HEWS D MOVIE
•' • "The Night Cl! Tt.e
Bk>OO 8ffs1-( '9581 Eo
Nelson. M~UI E.mmai.
An utronaut. having CO!'ll·
mun1e11ted Wllh 8 81ien.
reWe9 Ille Cf .. lure 15
p totling to deetroy
mankind. ( 1 l'tr , 26 '"'" I
2:45 8 NEWS •
3:00 CD MOVIES * * • "P.,.10 l1t Yeet Z.0" ( 1962) Rey MIU8nd.
Jean H8gen. One lemlly
svuggtee 10 .urvtve ln •
wot1d gone mad •her •
nuc:IUI' •lllldc. (2 llrw.1 * * "Vvnpire'1 GllOet"
( 1945) Jolln Abt>ott, Peggy
St-..-t. !1i llumfln v.-mplre
1talk1 811 Afrlcen village
terrorwng the netlves (55
n\ln.)
m~s
3:20 IJ °yOVIE * **'1t "Carrie" 11952)
L-.nc. OIMer • .i.nntter •
Jonea 'w11en a )'Ollng g111
runs ew•y with a marrlea rNWI, ~ two _, YfWY
O.ltetem r.t• (2 hra.. 25
mtn.)
3:H0 NEWS
4:008 MOVIE • * "S-1i Ot St;0llancl
Y8rd,. (1~) 8teph811te
8achelot, C. Aubtey Smllh
WM • C'YP'~ II murdered ... ......,~
Mekt r~ (1 tw., 30
8ftllk•PH'Mm ~ D ttOHOkOHO
PHOOEY
I a 8UHN'NINOI
PT\.CUJa
EUMENTAAY NEWI
YOGA FOR HEALTH
Cl) THl\IJ A LOOKING
OLASS
7•30 B 3TEl"S TO lEA"NH«l ®GO
Gl08El'MTT£RS
·~EM •••;"Tilt .. F.:a1 Weal''
t 19-40) Jottn Wayrwe. 8iot1d
Gune. Thr .. people '°'" • grc>up Of ,.,,,,.... In their
joumey to OtoO<>" ( t hf ••
30rntttl
• BOWERY 90Y8
Q;) SESA ... I!! STRUT cv~-
4:00 a Cll AOeONIC
STOOGES 8 MOVIE *' * "lnvlalble Agent"
( 19$7) Peler Lorre, Jon
Hall. TI)e OOWlll1ort Of a
seor•t dNQ whlell reno.re
him ln\lltlble n\llltn • U.S.
-egetll a "'get tor <INVI. 11
lw.,30mln)
l @~YMPICI
MOVlll
• ·~ "Eeglee Anacl( At
OllWn" ( 1972) Rick Jaeon,
Piiier Brown. Atler OIC8P-
lng from ttwP Arabi. 811
IVMll toldler pleOgea to
r91Ufn wllh • ..,... com-
"'9nd '-10 ~ OUI
11\G dulfoy the aadiatlc
~ of Iba or'-'
(2 iw.t
1;30 I (I) SPEED BUGGY
MOVI!
*'*'~ "Mullny" 111152)
Merit Stevena, Angela
L•n•~ury. Amerlo.na
~ to run ttl9 Brllllh ~ '° bMO In lllUd\ tlMded fold from frtnce.
• 1111f~30mll\ .•
'WYatt' Still On
Hugh O'Brian in Thrill~r Tonight
By TOM JOltV ·•
NEW YORK (AP) -Hugh O'Brian
burst into television in 1955, six-guns
blazing. And while 18 seasons have
gone by since O'Brian's hit Western.
"Wyatt Earp," left the air. TV work
'still kee~ the actor busy.
"l don't have the heal I once had.''
O'Brian says, understating the case a
little, "but I'm not without work."
Actually, O'Brian does a feature
film now and then, spends several
weeks on the stage each year, and
maintains a schedule or two to four
TV shows a season. His latest. a sus·
pense thriller, "Cruise into Terror:·
is on ABC, Channel 7, at 9 p.m.
tonight.
_AN "CRUISE INTO Terror." 0~1'iab is .Andy, captaln of a cruise
sblp in the Caribbean. An ancient
sarcophagus is recovered by divers
and brought on board. and death and
destruction follow.
largely restricled bis television work
to specials and blade-for-TV movie&.
"l don't do guest spots on senes, •·
he says: "If you do a lot of episodic
sturr like that, you're dead in the
marketplace for t1'e long-form work.
lt 's hke the motion picture people
used to look at those who did
television. You have to be extremely
selective ...
O'BRIAN, WHO'S 47, doesn't deny
the importance or• "Wyatt Earp" -
be calls it TV's first adult Western -
to his success in television today.
"lt put me on a first ~ame basis
with my banker," he quips, "and it
had a tremendous effect on my
career, taking me fr9m a feature
player to a household name.
"A lot of guys don't want to admit
they had a series," he says . .ii think
it's wrong to look a gift horse in the
mouth, and that was a gift horse. 1 'm
recognized because of the series, and
it provided a financial basis so I
didn't have lo do what I didn't want
to do.··
'DEAD MAN'S CURVE' ON TV TONIOHT
Star• Bruce Davidson, Richard Hatch
The movie features Ray Milland,
John Forsythe. Stella Stevens and
Unda Day George.
Since "Wyatt Eatp." O'Brian has
O'Brian says be stm enjoys the fux·
ury of choosing his work.
c1nename Ei scR Een
53U 2553 COlllt~LEX
MATINEES SATUUAY & SUNDAY
''Close ENCOUNTERS
OF THE 1HIRD KIND" (PG)
"WORLD'S GAEA TEST LOVER" (PG)
''MONTY PYTHON"
.. JULIA" (PG)
Jn a woJd gone mad .. who nttth a
ftmny, fabulo~ loVft slory7 YOU DOI ,
SAUY FIELD
T
' REVIEW I MOVIES Friday. FebruAI)' 3, 1978 DAIL V PIL.OT C9
i
i .
•
'Beatles' Back But
,,
Mania's Missing ~
t By DENNIS McLEUAN
Otn.o.tty .......
I For anyone who fought the puberty wars tn
. the mid '60s, there was one thing that was cov-
eted above all else-more than the back Hal on
• a double date, even more than a lifetime supply
or Clearas ll. It was a ticket to a Beatles concert.
Slnce the Beatles burst forth on the Ed
Sullivan Show on that memorable Sunday even-
mg in February 1964, there wasn't anythln1 any
self-respecting lffn-aser-barring Stones fans,
of course-wouldn't giv9 to see the four mop· topped Liverpudlians ln person.
SO IT W AB WITH a great sense or anticipa-
tion that one who bad to settle for repeated
viewing§ of "A Hard Days Night" waited for the
start of "Beatlemania."
' The popular' multi-media show· is playing at
the Shubert Theatre in Los Angeles. Due to an
' overwhelming demand for tickets-between
3,000 and 4,000 calls a day-there will be addi·
tional ma\inee performances during Easter
vacation.
As the houselights dim and the sl&hts and
sounds oT the Camelot era begin flashing on the
on-stage screen, lhe sound o( Chubby Checker
invites us to "twist again like we did last sum-
mer."
WE SEE A GRl~NING .rack Kennedy touching outstretched h nds, a youthful Elvis,
astronaut John Glenn j t back from space and
carefree high school ch erleaders yelling lheir
team to victory.
Then there is one r;oat , lingering inlrodUC·
tory image: the all-too familiar grief-stricken
fa ce of the First Lady.
This image of despair is broken by a black
and white Ed Sullivan. The shrieking studio au·
djence melts his stone-fa_ccd countenance into a
smile as he introduces The Beatles.
The decade of the '60s has begun. Suddenly
1 it's February 1964 again.
Tttrbugh the back-lit white screen on
"DIVIJE' IS THE BEST. •• "-•. '· ··-. c:. ........
From,,,. producer who brouflht )'OU
"THE ADVENTVRES OF THE WILDERNESS ~10"'
In 1176 lhey crossed
rhe Rockie& ..• wm1 hope
and coiJrege Iller clung
10 their dream •..
lcrass Tha Graat
Now
Showing DI 'd Limited IVI B Engageme~t
""'\ . Or•nge Mall .•........••..................•• m .oMO
F11hlon Squ•re .............................. •1-0US
Cinema Center •••.....•........•....•••••••• 171-4141
Fountain Valtey Twin ........................... 1500
UA South C:O.lt ......•..................••.•. 140oOCSt4
UA WH tmtMtef Mall ........................ ~
UA City C.mer .............................. ts44111
lrootthurtt ••.•...........................•.• 172-4441
Anehelm D/I ........................•..•..•• Su-3529
Mlttlon D/I . . . . . • • . . ...........•....•••••••• .a 4145
stace we see four familiar figures dressed in
Edwardlan suits. They launch into "I Want to
Hold Your Hand." For a brief second a chill involuntarily runs
down the spine: So this is what It must have
been Uke.
But the feellng quickly vanishes as the
screett rises and the four boys come in focus.
They sound like the Beatles and they've got the
mo\'es down pat:
Ringo (Justin McNeill), bunched over his
drums, moves his head side to sldo with the
beat. John (Joe Pecorino), kneu fiex.~ ..&J!\IS
pensively into one mike. And Paul <Mitch
Weissman) and George (Leslie Fradkin), face
to face, share the other mike.
THIS PAUL LOOKS surpri6ingly like the
real Paul McCartney. But Jobo, George and
Ringo are unreasonable facsimiles.
The two-act show talces us chronologically
through the Beatles career with 29 Lennon and
••• • !{;~. , .. &-n . . ... ,.
McCartney songs. It e11ds with the l!e.lles
break-up. The final song siinific"PUY is "Let It Be.''
What comes across in t.h1s musical tr\p
down memory lane is how the BeaUe songs and
the four musicians themselves rdlecltd the
times.
.BY THE TIME WE'a.£ in their
"psychedelic" period ("Lucy in the Sky With
Diamonds," "A Day in the Life") the Edwar·
dian and collarless suits are long JOM. Jolfn
and George have let their hair O'aJll and sport
beards. Joe Pecorino, by the way, now loob
strikingly like the bearded Lennon.
For lovers of Bealle m\Wc "lfeUleinAnia' •
is a success, especially in the second act when
tb4) stage ls transformed from a concen aettinc
t.o a recording studio.
Much of the success of "BeaUemania'' ts
due to the constanUy-changing images that
bombard the audience throughout the show.
Tim~ Square-siyle headlines &Ive us one
look aUhe decade: "LBJ Will Nol Run A.fain,"
"Cassius Cl4y Changes Name," "Hair Opens-
Broadway Is Liberated."
THE MJJLTf·MEDIA 'visuals give us a
sometimes bitter, sometime$ sweet view of a
decade ol change a.nd turmojl: There's Viel·
rlarn, race ri~ abd assassinaUons to be sure.
But there s also Peter Lawford with love
be{lds, $eM Connery with hair and Lll Taylor
without double cbln. It seems like a tong Ume
a,o iftdted.
WhJJe the four bPgus Beatles lack the
humor and in'everence that were hallmarks of
the real Beatles -they rarely address the au-
dience -q,ey do provide lwo eatjoyable bouts of
entertainment.
On the way out of the theater one 17-year-
old sagely said to her younger slater: "Now you
kl'\OW wbl!lt the Beatles were like."
But she was wrong. You really had to be
there.
Wlnner'-of 4 Golden Globe Awards!
. · Best Picture
Best Actor, Comedy or Mualcal-Rlchard Dreyfuss
Beat Actress, Comedy or Musical-Marsha Mason
Best Screenplay-Nell Simon
'"The Goodbye Girl'
is a joyous comedy-
justwhat the
doctor ordered.
Nell Simon makes
feeling good legal ... "
GENESHALJT, NBC-TV
A RAV S1AAK PROOUCllON OF A HERBERT ROSS ALM
NEILSIMON'S
.. lHE GOODBYE GlRC
RICHARD DREYRJSS ·MARSHA MASON ~
and tntrodudng QUINN OJMMING.5 as Lucy ~
WriHen by NEJLSIMON • Produced by RR/ STARK ~ Olreded by HERBERT ROS.S
M.tSic Scmd and Mapted by Q6.VE GRUSlN • ~·GocxtJyeQrr
Writlmand R!i b:11ad by MIID GA.TES • a RASTAR f.eature •Prins by M3M Labs
~-1191( wNopm.,.f.WilJIRoaiO I lr-.~~"""'*"rmw....llOOiliLl • ...;-. _..,, .... .,"'~ .. ----.___.._
Edw.,da Sehedut.
Delly 7:15, 9:11
Fri 8:00, 1:00, 10:15
S•t/Sun 2, 4, 6, a, 10:11
2ID lUnltfOl '1.-
A RIDWID ROTH PresentalKin (i ifREO ZINNEMANN Film
•I
Jt\NE FONDA VAN~ REDGRAVE "------JU~------·:#
·~
l
=:-JASON ROIWIDS H.Al. HOLBROOK
ROSEMARY MURmY 1111 M.6.XIMlJAN SCHEU:~.r.
fREDHN RKiWIDRbrn Al\1NSAR600
-r::::aG~;E~.
r
~
Friday, F •bruary :J. 1978 MOVIES I AEVl~S
'
Suspeme Played ·1 or Laughs
THE BRITISH
ARE COMING!
MEMBERS THE
Tbe UDlvenlty ol CalU~, tmDe. praent.s
BY., 1110"MA8
""" .. All«i.ttd "'-• ., GB ANXIETY,. ls
oated by Mel Brooks
Allred Httdlcock, and
• an affectionate,
metlmea hilarious
'-te to the maafer of 1pense. Brooks tau
y be lesa satisfied
• adherence to the pense genre seems to mper hUI antic art.
Jll t he outra1eous
Chs .are there, and ks gets fine support
m Madeline Kahn,
arvey Korman. Cloris
acbman and assorted
anies. Rated PG, but
ere•s little to offend
yone, except possibly
yebiatrists.
tre"' a "'tlll•I llotJ.ltel, 8110
c.llftrlll .. "' --Glf'ej ..... ,...,... Jiiii .... ...-.. .. .,.,Sally ....... Slis'a NWlle _., frMI e Mwe, ._._ ...,_ 1-• .._. ...,. Vtt """ ....... •Iii•.'*-.... .,.. w erclll,,., llelh<' 1vrt of whet
llMlr'll flM. """'-" ta -'°" • c.....-.................. 11 .. ..
........ 9'WY J!I """ ..... -... tract ... Ill..,,_ llM fw fltNN!e "'"'.........,-· .-..flG. Mf1A•DOM .. .,,..,._ ... -
Olf'9dOr "--.....--.-... . ....... ~tdlllt ~ tllllt will flc91t• 111 wt111 "ltll9fl etter ~ ........... ltollitt1
Otf llltrs. lllOugll, Is R~ ""*°'t Md
Otr ls Oey wltll 111lltltlu, •
.............. ..., ..i·""""'9 of""
tort NtNl'rWMd tl~td wltll IM
--.... ,_.. ""'. ~ lgO. Aftff' "'~ '*· -lltto (lllctiy ....,. by JIM ROCIWfot1), ,,..,.., --.. "'' ,......, -"'*. reellty Md IMc_l.....,..Wlll>t...,...c•
--. .......... llW'r .... The
-··· ~ ,_ lloftte end ltoc"9fort nfNltS to U.. bid\'~
wllllllow "-· It meu• rov 1111u
HMWd Lio,o. ~ '°"'" 1111rslng •11 acute <•M of Fr111Cop11111, Rollert's fee.M ••m -._ nlttr
''MaaOES" -F1Mlly 9lef't It • &ubtltlft -ll*lnOlng -Is lft al· >ftlo¥1• 11111 crtdlbly sums llP tlle fair roo e111 ltfor'd to "'las. Rlllfle
lellt tf tlla Vlttftllm wtffen. • PO.
''Htt'ots," ~1"9 H-.. Wl'*ler "TMI! OAUNTLaT"' tttltlnuH
i.::. Siiiy Ael4I.. II• -.Ylftelfle S'-Y Clint E..._,1 rio1tnt lt1111tls. Tlllt
-• me11 -'"" to -· tllt wer u,,,. he Is • ~ "'-1• cop ew•r tll' IM'1Ulno • ~....., on • minion to l'9turll • t.ac Vee-a em. As Jtck ~. Wl'*I« does '#Mrt fOf' teUllTIOllY age""* t11e ,_
Uet11911 Job ol -tne f.-.. His ,.,.,.....,. Is f,..,.nt wltll ~
II, I~ "l'oftz" Ctww«1• 1"91, ~ -cell-<Iii~-. pleys ., ~ to • Clllf\IMll ec well•• '"'Y_...,.. lleC-Cllftt
dettrmlMCI .....,.,. wflO Wtfttl to Md tlK cllergt, Mii Plrttd b'( ~ .,.. • wwm term 111 Cellfomla wltlt *• t.octe. OltwCtot Easlwood ~
ftw Of his w buddies. S..-t• ttie _. golno • .. .._llllng c"p ~,._..,..._ V.,._ ~llt~ uncll '°Ille uwNlles et IN ell-. In
I 096 S. Coat Hwy. i.,......._..,.._tu1
21154 vi. hlillc ....
Utiltcrt. ........ Ylefo l lMSU
USE THE
DAIUPILOJ.,,
""IAST
RESULT••
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
For Result
Service Call
642-5678
lxt. JU
WINNER2
GOLDEN GLOBE AWARDS
Be8t ActreH -J•ne fOJtd•
Beet Actress In Supporting Rot.-
Van•••• Redgrave
Two women, Ufe Iona friaads, are reunited
bt an ace of l.erobJrl. It ii the leamcnsU1 ot their risk
and uafllce, and tile monaity of tbdr counce and
eommltnwnl to d eb other ... that wUI OJI the screen
as no story or war n er lab bdOtt!
PASSKJlf. MYSTERY. LOVE. .
EQ_UUS
alCHAaOBU«lON
\. I
ROYALSHAXESPE COMPANY
Moeday. P'eltntarJ U
THE DREAM OP PETO BAOOX Cone-man program) with John Kane
,..._..,.FebTael'T l4
11DS GREAT STAGE OI' EOOIS
(An Elizabethan Entertainment by Shakespeare IUld
Others ~llh TSl"eOCO Hardiman, Barbara Left}a-Hunt. .. • Bill HotDtwooct. Jobo Kane
\Vedlletcll)t,Febl"D&J'715
PLFAStJa E AND &EPENTANCE
with Ternnce Hatdlman, Barbara Lelih-HUllt.
Bill Homewood, TOl\Y Ou.rcb
All perfarmances In va Vlllqe Tbeatre •• p.l'Q.
GOLDEN GLOBE NOMINATION
BEST ACTOR -~ENRY Wl~KLER
WINNER GOLDEN
' GLOBE AWARD
lncludlng.Best Original Score
WW. HAMU ~ foP.O CAMIE: F1SHEJ\
PE'le\~llld~~
Mon • Fri 7:30, 10:00
Sat I Sun 12:00, 2:30,
5:00, 7:30, 10:00
,MEWJIOllT Oomm:a.
Newport f HhJon lafand
Newport Center
Between MecArttlUf end .
Jamboree at PKmc
CoHt Hfgflwey l44-o7IO
I
4-speed manual transmission, contoured bucl<et seats.·
carpeting, sound insulation package. tachometer, amp
& temp. gauges, wheel covers, 2.3 litre I"" engine. bsw
bias tires. power rack and pinion steering, oonsole.
power front disc brakes, front and rear bumper guards.
Ser. J8R02V125223 Stk f0531
OUR PRICE 53799
NEW '78 FORD FAIRMONT
2 DOOR FUTUR.A COUPE ••
4-speed manual transmission front disc bfakes. rack
and pinion steering, coolant recoV8fY system, carpet-
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mounted mirror. accent paint stripes. lnSide hoOd re-
lease, wsw tires. front and rear bumper guards Ser
J8K93V155224 Stk. #8543
53999
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197 4 HONDA CIVIC H. IACK .••••••• $25'9
• eyt •• ._i.----•"'W' tool o.-(lo&)NZfl
MO DOWN PAYMENT PROBLEM
AT DUNTON FORD
1977 PIMTO WAGON •.•••••••••••••• Slt99
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I 972 COURJER PICKUP' •••••••••••••• $2299
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1977 P'OMTIAC VENTUR.A coon ...... $4299 V..e IUIO I<-. loclory ,,,,_..,,,.,,, _...,,,., -0.C...-.fldiO,
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t 4 CHEVY MOY A • IACIC • • • SU
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1977 V'W IAlllT •••••••••••••••••••• S44H
4cyl,4....-w i\IM'lll,_ low.......,M no ourlelllioe (111TGOI
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SHOU-WNEll. IASI FUJUSIDE
6 ft. P1ci<uP Bed. 6 speed transmission with overdrive, V-8 engine. gauges. tinted glass, power steering, extra
WS"! tires. Stk. #5612 Ser. t SGTATR32523 · · cooling, rear bumper. Stk. 1420 Ser. fF10GRBA1M1
OUR PRICE 53599.
HEW 178 FORD F-250
STYLESIDE PICKUP'
H l·torQue 300 6 cyll nde r engine. automatic.
transmission. 6800 GWJ Package, gauges. power ateer·
Ing, power bfakes. extra cooling & more. Stk. 1812 Ser.
JF25BRBC7000
'
OUR PRICE 55299
OUR PRICE .54499
HEW '71 FORD RANCHERO
Automatic transmission. power steering. PoW9f' brakes..
35J V-8 engine, tinted glass. instrumentation sport•
group. Stk. 1807 Ser. f8H47H1"6111
ouR PRICE s5299
s~'-"""'"· -~ _,...,. .......... ---"""" ~~!..v~=
-dllgllM --'"'·-"ii --~'~ toeed conocM, •--way ~ __ ,,__ ... _
NM'M ••.o '""'° wtltt 1-. l ... ll<'f McOf opl•Oll. tlftlld ..... -complete. dual spotl
~-= :;c;:;i.~.
t4.l2I °""".
Cotor•klyld w~1el coven '
_. W-.. -ICC>elll
_ ..... ____ ...
_...,,.rool,302ClOV .. '"0'"'· ••••c.• t f\lft ~-nidlll llf ...
COftwen••"~ 91owp. powet
11-lnt . -•• tornl di" ...-. -"'-.-..
77 FORD. GRANADA
4 DOoa GHIA 5eAM
FACTORY .\ta COMDmOMtMG
=i=-.• #A19'1o.-or-co,......
-_CIC::.-NW!l'.-,Jlfl!C ffoup. lier. ., ............ Demo
4-speed manual transmission, r.ek and pinion steering.
bucket seats. ~rpetlng. mlnl-<lOnsole, power front dlac
brakes, wheel covers. AM radio. etectnc rear window •
defroster, vinyl lneert bOdyslde moldings. Unttd glus. •
2.3 lflre 'ZI.' engine. bsw bias tires. front and rear
bumper auarcb. Serl f8R10V129534 Stk. t738
OUR PRICE 53299
NEW '78 FORD LTD II
4 DOOR PILL.Alto HARDTOP'
Selectshilt crulse-o-malic, pawer front disc brakes.
power steering. bright wheelllp mfdings. brfght roc:ker
panel moldings. deluxe sound paciclge. dlrectalre ven-
tilallon system. 5.8L 351 CID 2V engine. all vtnvt seat
trim, bsw redial tires, deluxe bumper g~. tinted
gtass·complete. left·hand remote mirror. Ser. '
f8A31 H1e9148Stk.10711
1
ouR PRICE .5.4999
HEW '78 FORD LTD .
Z PILLADO HAIDTOP'
FACTOllY A• COMNTIOI••
6.8 litre 400 ao V-8 engine, aJl-vlnvt seat trim. WSW
radial tires. convenJenqe gruop, deluxe bumper group,
AM/FM st9'80 radio. tinted glasa-complete. deluxe
wheel covers. tieavy·dwty suspension. Ser. •
18J62S100821 S11(. t078
OUR PRICE $5899
lt75 IOID FIOO P~U. • ••••••••••••••• Slltt
v .... ---· "'· .... rldlo. Oooll ........ C*TMJ
60 MO,..,TH BA .... I( Fl ... AMCING
AVAILABLE ON APPROVED CREDIT
lt77 L1D H WAGON ••••••• •••••• ••••• SIJtt
v..a. No. ffW.. l«:lotY * conclll10!'"'9. pc.-Merillo, -dllo......, tldlo. Mldlln~ ...... (nMU)) . • •
1973 L 1D 2 DOOtt H. T •••••••••..•••••• $2599 v.-.-. Ir-. t.crcwy elr~flt. _ _,.,,,_..._AM/FM I
.,_ radia, ............. Ylllyl tool,---. FotO,.,_, (IOU"tl)
lt76 DATSUN 7 FT. r.u ............... $3799
4 ~ • ' -..S: ~ ,-. AWL I -. IPOle fNlll. olW mlrt'Oft. _,. 11 .... -......,.v.---...y.11c.~ ;.
lt77 FOID F 150 r .U. •••••••••••••••• $4699 v.a_ Mo..._._.._..._ .......... r-, Mlltl.UMI.,.,, ~
-(1Hlltll
l YEAR OR 2 4.0<10 MIU-
Yw ARRAtHY AVAILABLt
ON ·73 THRU '77 USED CA~'>
•
~l• From AP DlspakbOI
..... ~ Newspaper heiress Patty Hea.nt asked the U.S. Supreme Court to revit!w her conviction for ng part in a 1974 bank robbery with members
lhe radical Symbionese Liberation Army.
~ Miss 1Iearst, now 23, was sentenced to seven
n in prison in 1978 and ls free on a St million
d under the condltlon that she live with her
nts, Mr. and Mrs. &andolpb A. Hearst.
• In her brief flied with the bJtb court. Miu
earsl's lawyer, F . Lee Balley, said ber convlc-
ti<>n was based In part on evidence of partJclpat.ion
in an earlier holdup al a Los Angeles sporting
goods store. ..
Nearly 100 girls fainted during a conc~rt at
Munich by the Bay City Rollers, a pop group from
Scotland, the West German Red Cross reported.
''They howled, sighed, beat about them and.
trembled like aspen
lt·aves." the Red Cross ..... ---------. s~td The girls were re· ( PEOPLE )
loa~ed after treatment al
~ospital. • Steve Bond's truck skidded and headed ror a
tn?e. He jumped out sprawling on the Ice. The
"Queen of Great Britain and· Northern Ireland
a~lloped to his rescue.
"Al firsrl couldn't believe lt," &>nd told a re-
porter who couldn't either.
Queen EIJzabetb II was out
riding near the royal mansion
al Sandringham ln Norfolk
whrn Bond's vegetable truck
went out of control near the
estate's main gate. • Tippy Huntley, widow of
t elevision newsman Chet
Huntley, announrcd that she is
a candidate for the Republican ouieN ~LiuairH nomination ro the U.S. House
from Montana's western district.
Mrs. Huntley, 47, said she is not a professional
politician, but is knowledgeable about the political
system and is acquainted with political groups in
Washington.D C.
She said that she is not running as Mrs. Chet
Huntley.
"I am my own person. I always have been. I
always will be," she said. • Gov. Hugh Carey of New York says he'll do his
bes t to sc•e that New York state grape juice ls
il'·a1lable for sale in the cafeterias or the state of·
lice complex.
The ~overnor is acting after Assemblyman
Rolland Klddf'r, who represents a grape-growing
distric t. complained that he has
even "had to settle for Florida
oran ge juice" in state
cafeterias.
··since New York Stale
'doesn't raise oranges or pineap-
ples. but does raise grapes I
thought it would be appropriate
(or the state of New York to of·
ter g rape juice in the
cafeterias,'' wrote Kidder.
PVBUC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE i· SUf'«•IOlt CICM.l•T 01' TMe lt•fMM
STATE otr CAU-NIA l'Otl SUl"l!ltlOll COUlfTM nlE
T"E COUNTY4>1' O•ANOe STATE Of' CALll'OfllOA l'O• !M.-liM T"I. COUNTY 01' OllAHOE
NOTICE 01' NEA•INO 01' .... ~
"ETtTIOff 1'04! PltOaATE O" WILL MOT 1(1. 0 I' He Altl H 0 0 I'
AHO LETIEltS TRSTAMaNTAlt"I' PITIT10ff ro1t Ne>eATE Ol'WILL
l'O• AUTHOltllATION TO 40· AMO l'Olt LnT••s TeSTAMll ...
M I N I ST I. It U M 0 a It TH I. TAllY AMO l'Otl AV~..OltlZATIOff
INOE,RN09.lfT ADMINIST•ATIOtf TO AOMUUSTa• UNOE• TMa 0' HTATHACT INDllHNO«NT M>MINllTUTIOtt
Estala ol KATHLEEN HELM ~ llSTATeSACT.
sou••ES •• I(, $0\JlltES .. K.H. ESl•I• ol STeALIHG ~ 8ALAMCI,
SOUlltES,~ OKaffed.
NOTICE IS HEltE8V OIVl.N _. NOTICI IS HUIE8Y GIVEN -
9LANCHE M. EKDAHi. lies flled ODlt DOltOTHY I . MOSKAU, llff
t..rel" a petll..,. !Of or-•• Of Wiii fllM ~n a 11111t1o11 for Pro!Nto Of
-IU ... flCO ol lAllWS THl-ary Wiii and '"' h1ua11<e of Ltlltrs
to lllo ~1111_, end lor ~1tallofl Ttslam.ni.try and tor AuO-lratlon to to admlnuler unde< llw l~I Ad.,,lnl\18< .....,., lllo ,.,.,__ ,...
admlnhtrallon ~ E•l•te> A<I, ¥· mlttll!ral>cn ot C,lotH Act, "''••tne•
utn<• to Wf\k!I h m-'"' lurthef to wllld• 11 made tor lurlller . parlltul..-s, and IMt ,,,. time alld ll•f"llCUlffl. ond tllot the ti""' and
pt.cool ~Ing IN,_ --Ml ptece ~ -ino i... -llaS -Ml for F-ry 21. 111', at 10.00 om., ltt !Of I'~ ?I, 1'7t. at 10100 oftl., M
1M c°"f'I,_,, al ~-Ho J ~ t1M coun.-.. ol 0.--Ho. ) ef ~Id court. •I 1'IO Ovit Ceftl8< Drive "''" cowt, at 1'00 Cl¥1c Ot11tw O.lve ;t!!!HI, '" , ... City of s.111• An.a. West. '" tM City ol &•Ill• ,. .... c:.i1,.m1a. Colllomf-.
• Doled JINJMY JI, 1'71 Do!H F.-V I, lt1'1
WlWAM II. SCJOtlN WluJ-11.StJO+fN,
c.unl'I' a.rtt C-1'1' o..t ft TTY J. McMUU.EN Oltl041tY N. HOUIM • , .. , oew scrwc. s.i.... 2m c..o.,. onw, Mt*
N .. ,.,. '-'II. CA""' '"''"'· all"""• nus Toh UM• Tel: 7JS."21
Aft-y hr!,.._ Aft-y W, .........
l'ubU\Md ~Moo C.00$1 OaOy l'llot. PulllllMd Or-. ClN!lt Deity Pllet,
.ho. 2. >. '· "1'1 -.,. """'°"' i. 4. io. "" ~11
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
World headquarters of 'the
Welch grape Julee company ls in bJs district • White House preas secretary Jody Powell of·
rers a story about the perils of having husbands
and wives judce beauty contests. To wit:
After meeting and tnterviewina the conte:s·
tanta, but before marking their ballots, the
Powell• and presidential aide
Fran Moen and bis wlf e went
to dinner. during whlcb the two
aides announced agreement
that one of the five finalists
clearly wu the most alluring.
When ballota were marked •
ranking the competitors on a
scale of zero to ftve, the men
gave their choice the maximum
f'ive points. The women eav-
the young lady zeroes -ki\ock·
Ing her out of the race. • King Sobbma JI, wearing a traditional apron
of animal skins and bel)ds and feathers ln his halr,
inaugurated S)Naziland's new television .service
with a nationwide speech. .
The service ls not costing the tiny southern
African nation a J:ent. A South African firm, ln
conjunction with lt.s British parent company, ln·
vested more than Sl mllllon tD set up the privately
owned commercial channel, which will alr British·
made shows. ..
Prime Minister MorarJl Decal welcomed the
Shah of Iran to the Indian capital of New Delhi for
o four-day visit while police
used bamboo clubs to break up
leftist demonstrations protest·
Ing the visit of the Iranian em-
peror.
The leftist all-India student
federation said more than 250
persons were arrested during
demonstrations along the route
of Shah Mohammed Reza
Pahlavi's motorcade into
downtown New Delhl. •
Anthoay D. Tbomopoulos has been name<J pre·
sldent of entertainment at the ABC television
network.
Thomopoulos, 39, former vice president of
ABC Television, wlll be responsible for developing
programs and talent and with providing entertain·
ment programming for ABC, which is now at the
top of the r atings charts.
lie succeeds Fred Silverman, re<:enlly named
president of NBC, who generally was given credit
for programming moves that helped skyrocket
ABC lo the top of the ratings.
• Frank Sibley Jr. said he skyjacked a jetliner
from Reno to Seattle in 1972 ''-as a citizen's police
officer" and that he wanted $2 million for children
crippled in the Vietnam War.
"There are circumstances when you can
violate the law," Sibley, 48, told jurors in his de·
f~nse at his Seattle trial for hijacking the United
jet.
lie satd he never wanted to hurt the three-man
crew. which he held al gunpoint for over 13 hours.
PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
• PEOPLE
PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
PtCTIT10UI IU$1NIH
MAMaSTAT•MINf
f'ICTITlOUS aus1 ... ss •-Dtl
•.u.&STATUUENT $Ull'IUOllCOU•TOf'TIUf
T ... tol~ --Ii d0o"9 IM.l\I
MUH
Tl•• IOllOWlftQ per"Ofts ., • .-01n9 STATIMCAUf'O•NIAf'O• .... .,,... • ._. THI COUNTY Of' OllANO•
TltUCKElt SUllFWEAR, lll lOll\
St., ... .,..., INC'\, CA '1"1
M E $ A P • 0 II' E • T y .... A_,IMll MANAG!MENT (0 JOU-8 HMI>« NOTIC• Of' HEAltlHO Of'
1tedm•11 M<iller, tl1 >otll '1 , ~._,.,CA'*1
....... C.O•i.-. CA mi. ll'ETITION ll'Olt OltOllt OlltlC• •-n T S•O• >OIS.8 H•rt>« TINO CONVIYANCI Of' ••Al
81W., t.osi. ~CA th1' ll'ltOPEltTY TO CX>MPlltTI SALE ""''~·It~-by .., In ........ !>w Wll-. 0731 Olympic ,. ... , ON CONTltACT INTEltlO INTO IY
to.teMH•.CAn.16 DICIASIO Cll'•OIAT• coo• 11.-.-MY11 ...
TMs sla1-t •• fllad wllll IN
c:.unty Clef1I ol Or-t.ount\' on JIUI
AllOrey H.,,.•Moll, l..00 El00n A .. , •te-"'11 IY PlltllOttAl ltlPltlSIH•
U7,Co&t•-.CA'hl1 TATIYI.
J4, 1'1'. Tllll tuulneu •• ""'""<!"" Oy • EU•I• ol ~LIE P. RAINS, •k• ,,_ oenerellNlrl""''"'P. DOLLY PHOLOTA RAINS, •k•
l"Wll,_ 0.eftll Olett o.lly Pl.... S... WllMWI DOLLY P. RAINS, OMMMll. J.,., 21, P'al, I0, 17, "" Tiii• st•t-nt .... filed •Ill\ tN NOTICE IS HERE.BY GIVEN , ... , 274-11 CoufllyClenOIO.-enveC.OUntyollJ ... ICE.HOALL RAINS •nd RON c.
------------U, 1'11. SHOW.Al TER, Petition«\. dlllV ·~
PUBIJC NOTICE f'NllJ 1>olnltd, q11•llll•d ... d •CllllO ••
Publl•l\ed 0.-Coast Delly Piiot, 1>9r\on•I --•tlws ol u.. t •i.••
J •11 21, l'tb S.10, 11, "" ol DOLLI[ P. RAINS,"-• llled ~ttln PICTIT10US IUSINHS , ___________ 2_12_·-111 • 1>91111on tor GfcMr dlrttt\n9 con-
NANll 11'ATIMINT • · ,,.yantt of rtel pr-ny to c0M9lele
TM tollowlftf "''°"' •r• ctolnv P UBLIC NOTICE ••I• on conlra<t emtr9d ll\IO by IM· ..,..,,." •: U•••d lo euoov CA Rt.SON ......
CITV EMOIH• RE8UILOERS, BETTV JO CARLSON, •s pu<CNl .. tl, -Pt~t.,c.&a Me~ CA'2tl1 NOTICE TOCREOITOllS """ lollowlno Dt-'V l.ol II of Tr.ct a.ti. CeNy, tt'ltt eerune Lii., SUPE.RIOft .OURT OP' THI ,11, more commonly ""°""" .. 442
HIM'tlft1Jt..,IM<Jl,CA"'42 ITATEWCALIFORNIA ,Oa Ralnoow L•ne, Vorba Ll11da, C..or~ T. C-.y, IMtt 8.,une THE COUNTY OF Olt,.NOE C.lllornl•, r•f..-.nce to Wlll<ll I• m-
l.n H11ml"91on llff<ll CA t?Ml .... "'"'95 lor lurl_. Nrtlculat\, •nd that t,. Thi• OUM-• It <onducl*<l Dy ... ,... estate of IDA MAY SCHOM"ICER. u .......... pl-of ....... no '"" ......
dlvldual Oe<HMd II•• llffn s.1 tor Maren •. 1t1t, el •·OO ..... J. C-Wy NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to tile • m , In l1W '°"'"_.,of Ot~rtment
Tlllt stat_,. wH lllld "''"' '"" treGllOrs of ,.,. ..,.,,,. n•.-d o.c-..i No. l ol wo court, At 100 Civic ten!« c-•Y C"'11 °'Or-touftly on J.,. .... , •1.' --MV•"9 ,,.,,.., ~·Inst Ori•• WK\, '" .,,. Oty of Sant• ...... 11 1'11 Ille Wtd -M• teQUlfN to Illa C.lifOtllla. • ,_, 11\em, •llll "'9 nee~>¥\' ..,...,,.,. In O•ltd J..,...ry 24, 1'19
Puf>llsl\ecl Or-. C:.0.\1 D•llY Pilol ""' ollld OI llW '1f<lt OI ltw •Do,,. .,._ 11WIU.l.AM It. M JOtlN, J.•n. 20 21 FtO. ~ IO 1911 llllecl court. ot to P<twnt Nm ... ,,,, County C,.,11 ' • ' the nue•s.ary YOUC.IW!:r.s., to lhf un-___________ ,_:M_1'_1dersloneo •• 12'11 s w Urd PIK•. t.10...ARO O.aASINOER
Portland, o.-_., """l<I\ 1s Ille piece ol MJ "· T°""" ,._ P VBIJC NOTICE bll•tneu Ol 11• under\~ 1n •U m•1· hit• JJI
-
------------1 ••n pert•t"'no 101,.,. ••I.tie ot .. 10 oe ~"'•A••· CAii-a U7H "ttwMy lw ""'111 .. tn f'ICTt nous auSINESS <•<Mnl, wltllln four montn• .iter tr.. p11011"*' Or-eo.ll D•lly Piiot,
NAMI STATIMltNT 11"1puDlk.Clonol1"'• noll<e J•n 2l •nll f'el). l, IO. ltlt 327 1' :.~~f:ol-...... -II CIOl"O bu•I· 0 Alt<I ~=i;~;.!!7,!Mllltr
GlORGE'S SIGNS, •20 E. 6111 SI.. E..wtor ol IM Wiii o1
s.nteAna,CA 1r.-.. ... meo0ecell•nl
J.,.,. •• I.. EllMd, 2'1S S.K.01\ St., J"MES llAYMANNMILLflt
H-por18NUI,CA9tl4l 12'11 s.w. ~Place
Tiits _,,,..,Is conoucttd Dy •n In· ,.,,l•n•, ~ tn1t
•1v1c111e1. hi: (Mll u..i.n
J-LEllMd P11blls""° Orenot Coast D•llY Pllo1,
This sl•l-1 w-s llled wltl\ 11\e J1n. 13, 20. 71 M>O Feb 1, lt11 120·71
C0urtW Clerk Of 0.--t.oullly on J•n.
24, lt71. ,,_14 PUBLIC NOTICE
P11bll111ed Or~ c:.oast Dally Pllol 1------------
Je1111. P'eb.J, I0, 17, ltll
PUBLIC NOTICE
l<ICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
'"" 1011ow1no person is OO•no busl "t\$ .,
CREDIT ANALV!.IS SY!.TEMS,
,ICTIT10US IUSINEU INC. . 10121 Sl•ttr, Suite '.l<M, Founla11\
NAMI: STl•TEMENT ll•lley, CA '1'1108
Tll• t ollowlno pu\Onl •rt dolnQ Allon Cr•t0 T•rran1. 114$0 "tl•nl•.
ltu•IMU ... Apt. " '· Hun11noton 11 .... (h, CA .,M
NEWPORT FIRST INllESTMCNT Tnl\ buslneu" ton<11.c1ed Oy •n In
SERVICES. lolOO lrvtne Awnue, Sutt• dl•ldu•I
ti), N•--19Hfll. CA t?'60 Allon Cr•10 Tr arr M l
PUBLIC NOTICE
f'ICTITIOUS IUSINHS
II.AMI! STAT•M•NT
Tht lollowlnv 1>9rson1 ue doing
l>llllntu .. :
MORAN POWER, M71 Sc>l<Urd Orlvt, Hun11"91on e...:11. CA m47
C••OIVft W11dltr M«..,., ~ Em•rson Oanitl Mor¥!, 4111 SPkk<lrd Ori,,.,.
1111nlln91on Bffcl\, CA .,..1
P•lrl<I• Moren Kendall, 1300
1Clnq,1on Ridge Ad., C•ry, No.
Carolin• U711 • •
Emtt'IOn Oenlel Maren, Jr., m
Sl•I• SI .• AIO.ny, N-York 12210
MlcnHI Wllckr Mor•n, lstl>·U
MeMOclno Or. Chui• Vista. CA '2011
C.•rOlyn Wiider Monn
Tl\I\ ,,.,..,....,,. WH lllecl wl11\ Ille
Co11n1y Clenc ot Orange C°"nly on
J anu•ry 10, 1911 ,11127
P11bllshed 0t""91 Coast D•llV PllOI
JAn 13, 20, l1, Foo l. lt1' Wllll.,,. JoMt111 F•rtv. 1n• Port Tl\ls st•l~nt wa• fllf'O wlln 11\•
...uroet• Pia<•, NewPo<I e..cn, CA Counly Clotk OI Or•nve Counly on J~ 103.71 92..o "· 1911 1----------....:..::=:1
TNodot't "-.. 11 GlUtnw•l•rl F .... PUBLIC NOTICE
1010 GrMtvllt•, ,.._port Be.cl\, CA Publlsl\ecl Or•noe Coa\I Dally Piiot nwo J•n ?O, 21, Fe!). l, 10, "" ------------1 Tiiis t>vtlneH Is ond•.Cled by • , ... 18 l<ICTlnous •USINISS
.. Mr•lpen,,.nlllp. 1------------N-ltSTATEMf NT
Wl"l.,,.J.F.,.ry PUBLIC NOTICE ...!:!,'°'loMftlJ penon I dolno bull·
lllls 11-..nt "'" llltd wllll Ille GEORGE'S STE,.ICS ANO :"':'~c1et11•0r-t.oun1ronJ .... l---,,-ICT_IT_l_OU_S_ll_U_Sl_H_E._S_S __ HOAGIES, ~I w. lttn s1.-, C:O.ta
• f'"'41 NAME STATEMENT Mt .. , CA '26l7
Pllbllll\ecl Or-0»11 0.11y Pilot, Tl\• 10110 .. lftO l)et\()j\\ •r• dOll\0 Rol>ert i.-"""""'· 2406 H••bor. Jen.11. l'el). J, 10, II, 1'11 busln•\l .. : C~I• Mew, CA.,.,. Hl·11 ' TE"M HARRIS 98 (lH.911 Aulo-Thi) DUllne .. 11 <OftduCled Oy al\ 11\•
------------ILor•. t•l Promont~Y Or,v• we-111, c:Uvtch••1
NewPOrt tkacl\. CA 'l'lMO Roi..n l PnllhP\
Wlll••m Edward~ H•'"' H J Tiit\ •1•1-1 '"'°' filed will\ It.
Promonlory Ori•• Wn1, Newport Counlv Cler-ol Ol'•l\09 Counly on J•n
P UBLIC NOTICE
.. ICTITIOUS •USINliH Buen. CA. 9"'61) 23, 1911
MAME ST,.TliMENT Shirley Paul In• Hdrrl' 44) FH 110
Tiit t oll-"9 --Is doinQ Ou"· Promo~IO•V Onve W•"· Newporl Publ1>""" Or-cm1 Daily P1lol neu ••: e .. cl\, CA. 91f,60 Jan 27, l<eb 3. 10, 11, 1971
fHE SICILIAN, 71!1'11 ~utll Co4il Hunlef MOntqom.,y Harri• •ll 7•1·71
Hlgl\w•v. t.-llH<h, CA. ™SI Promontory Ort•e Wr\t, No,..gort
Tllom .. J. Ma<lnool•. 1 l'IO T~mple Be•<h. CA.~
Terr•<•. i...oo-Beech, C"-tUSI Tnls D11slneu I• conducl•d ov •
Tiiis busl-• Is c-.ct*<l Dy an In· IJ*Mral pertnenfllP
dlvldual. Wiiiiam E. H4rrl\
TllOm.ft J. Mar1nqola This statemtnl wM t1l@d wl1n lht
Tiiis st•l-1 '"'"' lllllCI wllll lht Counly Clrrlt ot 0<•"91' Count• on
County Clerk of Orenoe Co11n1y on JaMHry 1•, 1978. FtlJl7
JAnvary 16, "79. Pullllsl'ted Or-Coa•I D•1ly Piiot,
Pvll>lhfled O.enoe t.oast oa11v"=. JM>. 20. 21. Feei.1.10, 1t11 20i-11
Jen. 20, f1, f'et>. 3. 10, ,.,,
201,.
P UBUC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
f'ICTITIOUS a USINEU
NIUo\E ST"TEMENT
•ICTlnous I USINliSS T~ followlno '*''°" Is 00i"9 busl ~AMI STATIMENT neu u
,,.. lollowlno ,...._. I• OOlno 1>1111· C"RMEL CONSTRUCTION CD
""' u . m11 s.o ... ro, Aol • .A. El Toro C.A CZ ST"INEO GLASS AN O t?•lO
FRAME, ISlG Slar>lord u ..... Hunt· P•t L•Vill•, 13211 5-9 ... n>. Apt
l"IJlon hKll. CA., ... , "·El Toro, CA. 926.lO G•ry Gtrilld CUtN<kl, IS2'2 s.... Tiii• bllilne<.• I• conductlt<I l>Y •n In
f0<cl l-. H.-i1~on IMKll, CA 9tW dl•l«Nal
Tl\h bu<IMH Is condueled by ... In-P•t UtVlll•
ctlvldu•I. Tiils •l•1emenl was lllecl wltn th•
Gery Gtrelcl CtArneckl Coul\IV Cler-II of OtMQe County °" Tiiis II-WM Ille<! wlln 1111 JAnuary 6, lt1'
Couftty Cltr11., Or-t.oumy on Jan.
u. ""-
,.tt)I
Pubtl•l\ecl Oranoe tout D•llV Piiot,
Publl•lled Or-Coa>I DeHvF=. J•nuur 11, lO, 21, .,d FeD. l , 1~~04-71
J•I\, 21, Ftb. 3, 10. It, lt1t
311-71
PUBLIC NOTICE
•ICTln out IUSINHS
NAMt! STATEMINT ,.,,. •••-no ,...._ •• c1otno 1>11•1-....... :
0 I' L l.AOO RE Al. TY, 22112 864~•. Mlalon v1e1o. CA. mu
J•r•ld Ou•"• Hardin, 22112 .. 11.ef\a, Mlalotl Vlelo, CA. '261S Tiiis IMi~..u Is,_,_,, by .,. 1,.. di._._ ..
Jerald 0.-Hel"clln
T11l1 •t.c_...i wn flied wllll tM
C-ly Cltnt of O«t"Ot Ce11nly on
J•llNf'Y 10, '""
P'ICTlltCIUS IUSIMl!U
M6*n ATl!MINT
,. ........... --b CIOlllO 111111·
__ ,
WOO OLAHI! VILLAGE
,...,. ... , •• HTS, S27 W•ll Wiison.
~....._C.A...a -..r T. Miii'"' Jam P-Oel
111we1. ~ Hlfllll, CA mn fMs ....... 11 CMtlllcMd b'f e1t In· .. ,,..... ,_...,,,.,,..
.,,.,. ~ •• fW wflfl !lie
ClloMtr Cleftl tf Of .... c...tv en JM. -.me.
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS aUSINflSS N.-Nlfl STATEMENT
The 1011owlno l*'OOll It OOlno busl·
neun.
OONOllAN'S OF CAt.IFOANIA
REAL EST,.TE, S•nla Ana
Pn>leul.....i 81d0 .. 1410 S.....I• M•,
~llP L. Co.ta MtMI. C"-
DonO••ll Cr•Wlord, 110lS RIM
...-1110.. l'ounl•I" ll•llev, CA t?7llll.
Tiii\ -neu Is ~t9d by.., I,..
dlvld11•I
OOtlO\'.,. Crawiord
Tl\I\ \l•I-WM Ill«! will\ UWI
Countt Clen OI Or-Countv on Jen.
•• 1'1t "'7Qt
P11blilf\t<I Or-Co.t\I 0•11Y Piiot
J •n 13. 20.17. Fdl. l. 1'71
1os.11
P UBLIC NOTICE
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Friday. February 3. 1978 DAILY PtLOT
The 8la-t ~on the Or..-Coelt ~· DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS ....-..... . ....-. ..... .
::;.:...~ .... ....
.......... .. .... -··· ,_...,. ........ _.
-··········--__ ,.._
i..u....i ..... .-.,...., '""" ......... --You Con Sell lt4 Find It, [ 642 587B 1 One Call Servkt
Trade It With a Want Ad • Fast tredit Approval ...---~ ............
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
ruMlthet-'1 Motice:
All real estate advertised
in tis.ls newspaper is sllb·
ject to the Federal Fair
Houdng Act of 1968
which makes lt illegal to
advertise "any pre·
rerence. llmltaUoo, or discrimination based on
race, color, religion. sex,
or national ongm. or an
intention to make any
sucb. preference, bmlla·
lion, or discnmlnahon."
Thi.I newspaper will not
k.oowingly accept any
advertising for r eal estate which is in viola·
tiooofthe law.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Ga•ral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
DUPLEX
3 bedroom unit s
$105,000. Pride or
ownership. Excellent
~!~!!.O:.'!.~ .... · .... l~.'i..~ ........ ~.~.~ ....... 1l~~.5.~ ........ :
G.....,.ol I 002 G......... I 002 ChMr.. I 002 Ga•rel I 002 ....................... ····•··········•······· ............................................. .
NEWPORT IEACH WATERFRONT
Ju.st llhd. l IR, 3 loth • ..2 frpk1 Mal KCll
condo. Lr'} ~k at watert edge. watc1' tt.e
boah at play ••• SlS0,000 lncWes le.cl
BLUFFS
S.aut. "X" rs-in Horth llllHs wttt. wrap
aroUMI patio, cloM to pool. a•lfiooldftcJ
cyeffbtth. 3 BR, family rooM. 21/J la. Prof.
decorated w ultOftl woHpeper. fonst
9rHtt carpet & wood ,._ ftOCMI M1cJ. Showa
lib Cl modef at .•.. $10,500.
EMERALD BA Y·IEACHSIDE
L1u11rlout 5 Ir, wood Ir 91011
buJlden ~ hotM • ...,. frOlll p'lf.
!Mach, ...... crt & port&. ~ .,allty In
secl11dad settln9. Rad11ced to •••
$595,000.
644-7020
2123 SAM JOAQUIN HILLS ROAD
NEWPORT BEACH
ALL WIHHBS P lay TENNIS on your
pr ivate court. Enjoy PARK -like
grounds on TREE SHADED LANE. 4
Bdrm, CUSTOM for only $255,000. Call
64CMl61
IEAUTIFUL MESA VERDE
"Exce ptiona l" descr ibes t h is
beautiful ad ult occupied condo!
Immaculate condition. new carpeting,
outstanding location across from 1)001
& school. Priced at $62,900. 54Ml41
Serving Costa M esa-Irvine
Hunt1nqton Bl'Jch -N e wport B e ach
I Ga•rll I 002 Ga•rll tttz .......................... , .................. .
RIGHT ON THE WATER
&:i~!:~~.Jocation . GaMral 10021GeMf'GI 1002
64J-.506J ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
A very low down paymL will give you .
possession of an almost new 3 bdrm., 2.
bath hom~n the shore at Lake
Forest . Enjoy sailing or canoeing
from your own front yard. Offered al
$125,000, including t he waterfront
land. on the basis of renting now &
purchasing later.
c...tury 21 Crocker
WESTSIDE
FIXER
$63.000.
REDUCED -THE ILUFfS
What was once a good buy, is now a
i!reat buy! The movers are coming, so
the owners have reduced their pr:ice to
$159,500 & you own the land! 4 B<inns.,
3 baths, umple storage. Don't delay -
call today.
759-0811
Potential plus! Nice 3
Bedroom, l ~ Bath
home. Needs a lot or TLC. Carpets, dra'pes,
paint. If you're handy
and have a lot of im-
agination call now.
673-4400
645-0301
FOREST E
OLSON
I 002 GIMf'OI ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
lf•ro1L ... Al. TUH4 DM$ion of ~ lnn1hMnt Co. HARBOR VIEW
WITHA
CAPE COD
$53,000 /fl.,' so .
TOTALbOWN
Winding roadway to
soaring 2 story retreat!
Private groundt protect
sechldcd entry lo lavish
living room. Gourmfll
kitchen overlooks s,_o-
shlne courtyard! WinC,-
lng stairway leads (o
sweeping master bdnb
plus ch lid 'a retreat!
Hurry! Seller la anx.iou.a.
CLOSE Gatterol 1002 Geweral 1002 HARIORVIEW ~()l~C:l-I •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• First Time Offered. in
the original section of
Harbor View llills. On
lhe view side or While
Salls Way, an excep·
Uonally sharp 4 Br. 2"'2
baths, Cam rm home with
formal dining, lovely
pool & jacw.ul. Low care
yard
·Like new 3 bdr 2 ba Foun· DB.UXE TRIPLEX
lalD Plaza special. Love· Spacious 2 BR. 2 ba .,
ly yard pool & clubbou.se each with laundry area,
facilities. Give your patio. frplc. & encl.
tamily a Happy '78 ~arage. Convenient loc .. w/thi.S delightful offer· m East Costn Mesa.
~.Only t66,000! Owner SlBS.000 soUci~ back·UP orrers. BROKER
646-77ll.
552--0434
OWNER MUST SELL
Lovely 2 bdrm., 2 bath
condo; FP. A /C, lge .
patio, g round Cloor
Si(l,900
HI 833-9781
Hester-Brown U .A t TO•S
ILUFFS
AND 847-6010 A Spe<'tacular Ocean. 011N•9 0·11sl\.Wro&rN1C1• IAYAlOMT
Balboa·s ~t location! 2 Bdrms .• 2 bath condo in E}id unit, X·Plan. Tennis
adult, all security bldg. Villa former model. NE'WPORT Walk lo ocean. pier, Spacious 3 BR, 2~2 ba., ~~~~~;~··hl [~e!BI
HEIGHTS Vlllage. shopping: boat Cam. rm .. Corm d10 shp ava.il. All this ror WidegreeobeJt. S13l,OOO. COUMTIY "1n NICEL
8 UNITS :soo HEl.£N I . DOWD
15°/oDOWH $l49'c~MACOVE REALTOR 644-0134 c~~~~~~ 01\lLEY &
ASSU[IATES
Eight uni .... bem' g totally <.:orona del Mor; newly. 3br I f d •l..O 950 .,, profess1onally decorated · g~ nc xd. close toi·---------i -, refurbished, to be de· 2 bdrm. +den . 3 baths . shoppuig. etc. $S9,500. AU RV PARKING Lush approach. Tiled ert-livered in like-new condl· JV 63 -0900 try H f -1 i · 1 900 3 • s t o r y b o m e terms. 1 2 Story, 3 bed rm. rumpus · uge amt Y s te<I ~.ooo· FuDol pwnricepaS239ym'ent.· w/elevator· gour t &d.lningroom. fir<'placc, living room . Country _. • me llAMD HEW kitchen. Secluded ter-Owner w\11 trade. BEST kitch .. all teak cahmets 3 IR·•1..s,9001 built-ins, tastefully de· 1 lied rd
UNIT Buy IN ARE •· floor t b f I -corated. Much.. muc .. race nwa courtya · A. "' • we ar. rp c. Its true! A brand new '' Sweeping stairs to Pleasecall962·7788. Some bay view. too! more. Asking $93,600. 1 hid · Steps lo beach & bay. custombulllhomeaton· CallS40-11Sl m ass ve eawaiy Q.. K€Y · $299 500, ly J!S,900 ruu price. Ex-master suite & separate V P.€ALTOP.sA · · cellent location oo tree children's quarter. Flrat DUPLEX lined street. Established lo call get this unJq(ae
Investment Property OPEH SAT. I .5 neighborhood. 3Spacious baruin! 963-1881
Sales I 09 45th Strfft bedrooms + 2 ba tbs .1~~~~~~~~~~I ONN 111 v • "s •uN •o &1 Ni<f~
Specialized small firm Corner duplex across Fam!Jy room. Trailer ac·• ["t&Ali1Ji Ii u1 ~:!5~~~~s:dsa~:ss~~: ~~a~·~~·e~erm~~~n! ~~c;.:i!·.~~~~L!,~~~~1· FIXER UPPER • 1;µ;01~
~~:!~:~~c. :e~SlRof k;.:;" [ ~lt1!11\ll ~:!~.·~·~,:_~ '~1:--------...
rorWlilTEelepbants ~ . -bath. needs paint and S BR & 2 BA~
withaClassifiedAd •67ir7060 * 1·--------1 TI..c.lt'samoneymaker Wood floors . wood ;:=~Ca~U~642-~S67~8~=~~~~~-~~~~~11' MESA WOODS att60.900.callS40·1151 shingle roor, fireplace, -; HcMM Of Pri• dble garage. $64,SOO. ~~lrl( & ~JNlf COMBATANT GI/FHA financing avail . .-;s r 1 A beautifully decorated Santa Ana near Warner.
coovertible 4 bedroom or R
ttnNCt : i -btlow ...,.., • ...S. up, down or dllf'Wltlly. Find eodl end bo.11 It • ~
Or'agoon Doughboy Corites tint ..;
Brave Pug111 st Musketeer "
Boxer Scrapp•r Shlt'1>$tM>ot1r ~
Sold1er Wrestler Guer illa
TOlllOrrow~ Charlu A. Lindbergh
3 bdrm PLUS den . ~~~~~~~~I oyMcC..,a. Formal diniog, attrac· :: 1110 Hewp«t llYd.
ti v e LR. Sp a c:l o u s lllGHT & CHEEIY Colto Mesa 541-7729
kitchea/{am·rm,loadsof 4 Year old. 4 br, 2 ba.~~~~~~~~~
s torage. Atrium & with brick fa.replace andr. waterfall of M.B. Prof. expensive upgrades.i---------•
landacaped. Eaay up-Owner b as bo ught IE UNlq\IE IN ?I
k e e P . A q u l e-t another and must sell DoM the thought appeal
neigbborbo,od. Move quickly. $85,500. Call to you? If so, consider
rlgbtin. 151-3191 Joining the prestigious ~SantaClara.C.M. .SELECT oCfic:es of Unique Hemes ~ Open Sat/SUn 1-5 for a fantastic 1978. Ac· •Mr...,.8"RtR"" PROPERTIES celeraled commission wv I.JI ~ schedule, ln·hoUAe swiog
CJl 4i<z:e. .as GOUCOUISI HOME ~·eo~';!,~~vt'!,~i!!i -= 2-Story, S BR. 3 BA. 3 car & aclive training le ad·
CORONA
DB.MAR
S Hue• Bil. 3 Ule' BA,
den, d1niDI rm. 2 sty,
w /Zf>' open beam cell·
lnp. tile entry, frplc.,
wet bar. laundry rm.
overtized dbl. gar. 3000
Sq. ft. of ve17 unJque UV·
log~
$149,500
JACOISUALn
675-6670
aar. 3000 aqrt.. JumtJo ministration. Be unique
fa m ·rm • g o u r m et tn "1S with Unique Homb
lcltcbeo. Spectacular Real ~tale. Contact Jlm
v\ewl Wood at 6'15-6000, Jaclcie PABEL HandJeman al 546-5990
WALKER
175-4144 CB .. AUO.
3 Bclrm T own house •
Garden Gro"e· P.000
Herbert Hawkia s
f19..8100
IOU
~IAUT'fllW
From this Bayside Cove penthouse.
A pr ivate communih•. secluded
be.ach & sp8~iou.q living Hi Included
with this rar$ ot'Cerlng -The bc!st
for only $280.000. .
A COUMa&.IAMnt CO.
644-1766
• • ~ -. . ...,,,. ·-·-3. .... ·, . I ~!.~.~ ....... 11~:.~.~'!:. ....... ~~.":'.~~ ....... 1~:!!.~~ ....... ~.~~ ..... .. ...... ~~ ....... 1~.~~-.. ~··· ........ ~~ ....... ' ~.~~~ ....... ' ?.~::!! .......... !~! ~~ .......... !!!! ~.~~~ ... !!~~ ~.~~ ... !!.~~ ~~ ...... !!!~
... ,.. 1002 a.. .. ,.. 1002 GtMNI 1002 G••"' 1002 ---------------• w Ccodoa. a Br. 2\.'t B•.
2 &plc'a. ceramic tll& kltcbens 6 batb. Pool 6
spa. 67M8U Brobr
~ .. ~·················· .................•..••••.•.•...................••••••.....•..........
JHE STARNES COMPANY
_REAL TORS 640-5711
180 Newport Center Dr., N.B. ,. PRES!MTS ... ... Big Canyon Golf Course Estate
"'The ultimate in living luxury on
-nearly ~ ac. lot. Enter parking court
thru remote control gates for privacy
""' security. Marvel at nearly 7000 sq.
ft. home ideally designed and
decorated for formal entertaining, yet
has a cozy den for relaxin2. a separate game room /wet baf !<Jr
casual parties, spectacular free form
pool/jacuzzi and separate pool house
Jor wet fun. 5 huge bedrooms, 51.CZ
baths, breakfast nook, and o( course
an exercise room.
• CRIMI 'DI LA Cl841
Incredibly beautiful 2 bedroom and
den Irvine townhouse on the Rancho
San Joaquin Golf Course. End unit
affords privacy and a view of the golf
course and lake. This is a San Joaquin
model that has been upgraded and air
\~ .. o!1_ditioned. The price is a reasonable
.i1z~i;SOO and this is the creme 'de la
creme.
U~ICJUI: li()Ml:i
REAL TORS~: 675·6000
2443 East Coast Highway, CQrona del Mar
A DIAMOND FIELD
"l CARAT" $59,000 FHA. 1640 8 Lowa St., C.M.
Woodsy 2 stry, 2br offered w/FHA terms. $3,300
c11sh moves you in. Hurry, It won't last al lhls
price/tercns.
Call Roy, 631-2246 ·-Friendly Bkr. • •• "2 CARATS" $65,000 VA or FHA. Spacious 3br.
l 'h ba, frplc + enclOKed patio. Huge k.ll. Offered w /VA or f1iA terma. Hurry!
Call Diane, SCl-7879 -Friendly Bkr. • •• "3 CARATS'' m.m -10% dwn. Lowest priced
Mesa Verde 3br + l'ti ba home. Owner must
aell ASAP!
Call Roy, 631·2248 -Friendly Bkr •••
931 .. 2248
11tE KEMDALL
COMP.AMY
REALESTA!E
'onH HOUSI SAT SUH. U-4
438 & 4311/J llGOMIA
3 Bdrm. house & 2 bdrm. income unlt.
Lovely quiet street, ocean side or hwy .
Owner can live in one & enjoy tux
write-off. Please come! $215,000
HANDYMAN'S
DREAM HOME
Fantutlc opportunlt1 IOI' the haod.Y1aH leek·
in, a laJ'le ~tsbop at
GOOD REAL ESTATI bome. Bl& upant• 494-7511 bulldinl lo baek .Utable
for mecbanic, wood
worbr, electrielao. or
!!? Detllr bu.nyt Call
I 006 C..... .. M.-I 022 ~a103. •
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Lot nr No Bayfront. 2nd
St.y bay vie w .
30'x85 ' -$1:19,SOO.
HARDESTY RE ·
ALTORS (cor Park &
Agate, Bal lslnd)
675-2866
Fo1:u::c, 1 c
OLS ON
G1Mrel I 002 • Geweral I 002 ..... PeailllMlo I 007
• • ••••••••••••••••••••••
CUSTOM
IASTSIOI
3 br 2 ba, Ne'lr kitchen. IAYFltOMT HOME St.in&lass. oat nra. F .P. ......•.••••.•.•....... ...••.•••.•.......•.••. , ________ _
3 Bdrms., 3 baths + Super tot. Trea. Deck & OPEN 12·5 maid's or tt\l'lll qlrs. bot t.ub. Qulet. <;01y.
G also in M~a Verde. at 546-5990 •• !'!!!:'! ................ , •••••••••••••••••• !~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ LtDd ISLI
Newly remodeled 4 bdrm., den. 4
baths, living rm. w 1calhedra! ceiling.
Lge. master bdrm. s uite. S224,950
·C.foM 5 lediM Laree workshop, com· 119.500.0wner64a·F30 pletely secured. Space 1.,oa p..._ Pt. tor boat. approx. 45 rt. On Private Lake. Mu.t
THI 1Wff5-IHD UMrT LEASE
, Spacious customized condominium tn
. newest section of the Bluffs. 2 Lge
bdrms:-den with firepl., formal dining
rm + 211~ baths. Dec papers, cptng &
drapes. Air-cond. $800 Mo.
WESUY H. TAYLOR CO., REALTORS
2 f 11 S-Jo1 .. la Hlls Rood
HEWPO«T CEMTElt, H.I . 64 ... 49 I 0
Balboa Island Realty
.\.\U t,\W" "'-:. '\ f W'<W1'.'"l Ustof Homes
Credit Info
Move in Fiee
All Prices
AH Areas
673•8700 -. MAIN
A TI'RACTfOH
Four year new twnhme
Just minutes from S
Coast Plaza. Ground
floor, sngl story unit,
with no neighbors above.
Priced for quick sale al
~.900. THE
HOME STORE
754-7100
~all 24 hours)
ANAHEIM. 3 Bdrms, P•
.,Jaatbs. $77,900 Herbert
Hawkins Rltr. 979-8100
964-2455
19401 Brookhurst
~tington Beach
1002 ,.... ...... ~·············· ...................... .
~ll macnab I l~ne ?--realty
FINER HOMES
JICU $lt,500 TO Sl,500,000
AllSTIUY AT $77,9.00
westcliff condominium
convenient to shops. Attractive 2
BR, 2 bath. beautifully decorated
w /separate dining rm, brk£st bar &
fireplace, ror comfortable living. 2
private pati~. & pool. Appt. only.
Mary Lou Marion 642-8235. <H·ll)
OUTSTAMDfNG SPYGLASS VllWI
Reflects true quality & comfort
tbruout! 4 BRs, famiJy rm, 2
fireplaces + a VIEW to behold! A
must to see! Laszlo Sharkany
752·1414. (H-12)
VIEW! V11W! VIEW!
Within walking distance of 3 private
• beaches is a beautiful 4 BR, formal
dining & family rm home ... Earth
Tone" decor is carried thruout this
ocean view residence w /pool in
secluded patio. Appt. only. Donna
Godball 644-6200. <H-13)
YAWi PllSOMIFfED!
I
t002G:e•r .. 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
HARIOR VIEW LUSK
PRIVACY-#llYACY-nJYACY
This 4 bedroom haven is an executive
reward -green hills, blue Pacific, a
home to make it all worthwhile.
Corona del Mar at it's best! 1436
Keyview. Open daily till sold. $259,000.
·3411
IOOZ GtMo .. 1002
llG CANYON
4 BR, fam. rm., 3 baths. Beautifully
decorated Broad moor Plan 3 w jpatio
views from each room. $325,000
IAYFIOMTS
Several fine bayfront homes
with pier & slips
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
3 4 1Boy\ocl•·Or •v• N R b]~·blb l
~~ ..•....... !?!~,~~!'! .......... !?!~
MANAGER-REAL ESTATE
NEWPORT BEACH
421 S.•Ha.. Newly decorated, new see. or So. Coast Plua. 2
Completely remodeled carpet. r o 11 e wood story lake front, pro-
execuUve home! Better cablnetl, cedar outside; reaalonally decorated.
tba fee land. a95.000 • central air, ZBr, 2Ba, n new with custom MAURY STAUFFER den, game rm. aouod
amenities too numerous SEAIJON REALTY system. Pool, Jacunl &
tomention.Hugefamily 3&01E.Cat.CdM673·5354 clbhae. By owner.
rm, den, formal dining & '"''"N. Cst, La ... -a $125.000. 551·41.CT or more. """ Baths, 2,,., car ~ .~~ ~
earare + workshop. Call 1~~~~4~97~-33118~~~~fj~NSj~i;J[N(;oj;fi-964·168J for det~il& I~ MANSION A: INCOME
Colonial Real Estate Harbor View Home, air Eastalde huge old redone !~~~~~~~~~ cond, 2 Br 3 Ba, xtra lge 3 br, den, 2 ba. Bach. apt den, easilv convert t.o 4 over big garaxe. Lugs of 7 Unit s, 6 · 28r 4t 1 ~ A .. ~ •-• k Bachel I Br. all lhil + panoramic avoc ...... rea Y .., pie . or, poo . steps lo view shown by appt Luad1 or character. ~~~2:0% down. Unil~d Brokers. BHi ~00 . Ow or /Alt
Fernaodei,fWS.7414
Peninsula Point
Ocean View
PRESTIGIOUS
LUXURY HOME Tiled entry, living room
with fireplace &. view.
~~ ....... !!.~~ .,500
Had a Facelift!
A · t It · t Formal dining room with l!ACHYILLA prime oppor un y w1 h an rireplace. Custom
SI OJ,OOO outstanding real estate organization kitchen with Island serv·
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
MESA DELMAR
Lowest priced 4 BR + den & check thi.s, new
pa.int. new carpet, traUer access w /llab. A must
see thi.s one. Offered at •uoo. Seller motivated.
Open Sat le Sun.
Newly paluted
"Balcony" model~.
TI.led entry, 2 bedrooms,
eathfl area. large
master suite. Excellent area, BKR, 540-11llG
Unbelievab' .. low pricel! + high earnings! Experience is a ing bar. SpaciOUl! family "' must. Prestigious location. All room with beautirul out. Just blocks from the aide tiled pallo, excep. water. Xlnt Newport applications held in s trictest tional landscaping .
Beach JocaUoo. Sprawl· confidence. Please reply to Ad #68. Master bedroom with R2, like nu 2 BR, 2 ba
ing contemporaty home. Daily Pilot, P. 0 . Bo:it 1560, Costa bath upstairs. Two addi· --------•home. Owner bas var.
540.3666 -
l'fltela11
AlAl l~IAH
Wood deck entry . Mesa, CA 92626 tional bedrooms upstairs s•VE SSS for2moreunits. $110,000. Spacious laving area, · h .d d k & ""' 138 Albert Pl. Onr/alt, Beautiful s year old with muslve fireplace. wit outsa e ec Paint & carpet to your 642·303'7 duplex. Each unit has ruslicfaDUlyroom.Open oceanview. D c;>1;1 blc taste.Owner's allowance•---------
EASTSIDE
COSTA MESA
king •I~ bedrooms, 3 beam ceilings & wet bar. Gt'Mt'al I 002 GeMrol I OOZ garage with addill~nal \>ffers rare bargain for 4 $3Z,t7S
upstairs + 2 downstairs. Circular stair leads to ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~parking. Price. BR..3 BA, formal dining. Pa HOUSE
Each has wood bumlng fantast.ic sun deck. •OPEN HOUSE family, near Mesa Verde For these 3 2 BR homes
fireplace, built-in elec· Hurry 00 tbia one!! Call Horttt LOCJllftG Condo SATURDAY 1 :00-4 :oo. Country Club. 675-4392. that. need a little TLC &
trlcal appltances. Just kldaJMS-7171 Large 1 bedroom, while 21730cean Blvd. HALPIHCHIM lotw1Utakeanaddltiooal like a home. $148,:IOO. ~ 1119 •11 5 "JNTQS,Ntrl' $l2 "OO .a.--n..._. _ _. '0 EALTOR ·-·• W\U ban I water -v1ew. ,., "'.,.....--"-'n ....... cofi~ri.~~':!'°RT :·•~11111 down. ~=~~~ CH~~OUT
675-5511 _,,..,,,,., '''----····==,_ IALIOADUPLEX ~;=way $74,900.
.
Al ,~~
l!ACH Rm EAT lASTSIDE BY OWNER. Completely
Just steps from the COHDO remodeled. 28r+1Br UP· sura STARTlR
17630..,.,CcMta .....
645-9181
beach. Surrounded by 2 A.DULTSOHLY OpeeDally 1·5 per. 4 doors to Bay. HOME
garden patios. Your own Sharp upfraded units in OCEANFRONT 673-9431 4 Bdrm. larce warm den
private Newpon retreat. a prime location. On 1526 Hic)hlcMd, HI Peninsula Poml fixer. By with beam celli.ngs. 2
Huge open living area, st.reetparkingnearyour 4+Fcm. $l8 4,500 REDUCED owner. 3 bf')1l, l"'4 ba. Enclosed patios. 5
TRIPUX
Three 2 Bdrm Ullits.
Desirable Eutaide. Of-
fered at $152.500. w twall or natural wood" front door. Lge patio. s I s 000 673-8698 Minutes to the beach.
glass. Vaulted celling & partly cov'd VJ /aslro turf 107 ,, .a.., St,._.•-• . $75.000. Call 546-2313 cozy llreplace. Rustle flooring. 1 bd +den in "' -..-.... Owner anxious, low ~atr..oleach 1011 OPfN,,t9•11'HUNIOfllN•W = =:r::r:te~ ;::~:i ~ ~e~.~d~~':n~i 3Stry $265,ooo :i~~~~9c:;:~~s!~~c ···oc···.·:::·.::;1·E··w····· [•.·1m*. ;ti:·.ul DOLP .. Ml.E.
Ctl4t4-lllt
Ownerl.lleavingarea& your otter today ! 4604~.HI tr;;A" ~~ Hf:'iH:'J: I~~~~~~~~~
wantaaquicksale.Doo't 545-949l. n..lw $175,000 VA quality constructed S~f:.::~~.:~~~~~ OPIMSAT l:S miss tbia opportunity! 1 ....-_ duplex w /large 3 BR, 2 I I l"' MISSI~ I.
Calltoday646-7171 -BA units. Nice ocean llEAUTIAIL .. ~D
oPfNlll9•ttSIUNIOlllNlct• WATERFRONT view. UpJ:r unit bas MESA VBlDE Mesa del Mar .. prlde or
l.·1Jil11.f!·U1 --------AE~~;'~TE TERMS ~~rC:~e ~5et~t~ 2STOttYHOME ~:!e:.•bsl:~k3e brd::;: ~ .. '· -· .. · i\J:l1,i1•"J: IMYISTOR'S 631-1400 Cap Is tr an o Be a ch. Cba~g fmly home in custom abuttft'!I, frplc .• . • fll!-1•L 38drms!Comert..ot! S158500 move·tn condition. • bit.ins; mov•·in condi· ....-5'¥ ~ ' • bdnnS, fmly rm w /frml t.ioD~l83 $47,500 MEWPOITDUPLIX GreatArea! Call Now! \t AMCHOIA&I din rm. Highly upgraded 1T1••CH FOUR,IB»ROOMS arded REDCARPET7S4·1202 -Ou gateway pro· New on the market! --=~-----------IMYESTMIHTS lnsldeout w /Blt·l n RIAi.TY. '7S.l'4Z $74,900 t.ectalavllharound,switb Large• bdrm. up & 3 bookcase & pecky cedar
Great Costa Mesa loca· pool Secluded entry t.o bdrm. down; just steps 15&.AHD COTT AGE 1714) 496-771 I panelling. Out of town IMVIST IM
tlon, a short walk lo esecutlve living room. lo ocean. B~•utiful Sl6t SOO seller is motivated. SUb-achools •ubopping. Well Sunabine gourmet furniture" wall ~er-• CoroM .. Mar 1022 mitanyreaaonableofler. HAPPIMISSI maintained, well priced. ldtcben overl ooka t.toa included In 118~ Sunny~ Bright. 3 ~drm ....................... Callnow.545-Nil. for towocaow by buying
Spacious ramUy home. prl vate courtyard. ·~ of $195 000 home with formal dining this home today! U you
For detalla CALL SWeeping master bdrm ~:93663 675-4TnEves room and private patio. South of Hwy eqjoycuualalhomellv· ~ &child's retreat. Owner Justenoug.hyardt.oplant $1~f 500 fnl tbia wlll tul& )'OU! 2 • is anxloua. Submit any 1 Mil" your pansies behind the <11 • Real F.atale Ora.ngetreea adofa 134Ct. CSELECT olfetl 8'7-6010 MCO •• picket fence! Thia bome ltrJ abeolutely charming 1---------1 lot completelY fenced. T'PROPERTIES OffNIU9•rrsrt.wto8fN<f' Balboa Penin. Just re· olfen the opportunity to 2 bedroom on PoinseWa Safe for cblldrea & ,.. ducedl 6 Unita, Dve 2 paint, carpet aod with beautiful budwood MANAGER . oodles of room for
..... OOO 1. ' ' bdrms • .konel·bdrm.,on wallpaper-then you'll floors. Owner occupied M t b b r camper parklnfB 3 ~· ~ · 2 Iota. Just stepa to haveyourowndollbouse. forever and in xlnt cood. us e mem er 0 Oenerout aise bdrmtt Thisisnotamlssprlnt! Itl_~>~-,~-,,~,.-.~y~~~~~~~ be• ch • 0 w n er thru-out. 2 Full double Newport Harbor/Costa _ ..... ____ .. __ , _ _._ ...
ls a super 2 Br twnhme, moti ted! -~RY d Mesa Board wlt.h a h1a· w1ui ~ ~ -w /pool, clubhouse " va garages<Not tan em>. A tor)' ol aucceu in real mlrrorell doon. Oalt
sauna. Prime end unit ~9 950 673-3663 6'2·22S3 Eves R ESTATE real doll bou.se offered estate sales-for det.alla beam• la kitcbea ft
location w /pvt patio, Beauufiilly1 maintained · .--.-: 88~'f~nd for the first Ume in over call Cbuclt Naab at du.sic liviDI ROm with
closet.o sboppi.ng. townhome in ideal loca· l2yean. 768-7700 craclll.log toe fireplace!
75"'7800 I~~~~~~~~ Cal 644-721 I a,cenUy reduced to ... Uoo near 1bopp1ng & tbe f ...a....a n-IY OWHlll ..,,. a• Get atot ,....,_ beach. C&n't 10 wron1 ~cho C&llf. Temecula, Of'_....,. ~·v. · ,.,.. YoUr ....... ....,, · of 3 Br, house, JI.tat. re-3BR,28A,FR,DR,rncd money I Call the W/....., ..... , piece pro-d 1 d 51 900 pool, lee entry kitcb, Penonal Serrice People
perty&sucbalowptice! mo e e · $ • · Italian tile entry, elec today! ROYAL
646-m.1. IACK IA y VU 6'76-50&4 car opnr, much mo PRDPERTIES"2·1130
2.000 Sq. fL 3 BR, bonus lcAoo 1"-d t 006 t19,SOO. Open SatfSun. EAST SIDE DUPLIX ~ Walkt!r & Ler.
1002 Real Fatale ....................... -----....----
QlfT ISL~ COM We're certain a visit to this-home
Sunday will restore your faith. It's
still possible to purchase a well
located decorator home for a !air
price. 3915 Inlet Isle is such. a home
with a fantastic ocean view &1
beautifully landscaped on a comer
site. $129,500. Open Sunday 1-SPM.
nn., fam. rm. w / wet ••••H••••••••••••••••• ..;;NEWL==Y=R=E=M;;;:;O;;;;;D;;;;;E;;;;;L;;;;;E;;;;;D~1 ~olumbia Dr. By owner, 2Br ea .•
bat.SwimJKIOl.:..Jac., RV DUAMCOTTA•I 3BR.S.OFHWY 1--------1 encloaecl1ara,...fenced
area.$130,000-ne. IYTHESEA 615-7931 MESA Y&DI rardens, 00,000 •
..... I .DOWD 1 block to the beach. SBr,2ba,falllrm,extra ~;'258Coaatallesa
lllALTOR 644.0134 Charmine cotta1e oo BY OWNER bltincabl•bookcaaes.2 _St. ______ _ HIWPOIT ll4CH Balboa Island. Summer 2br lba me. New paint In UMd brick hplcs. Many • Br• 2 ~ Lars• lot.
Cenallront•Br,famrm, ~aJ:1u~rna,:-a~~!·n!!~t ltout.NewauperdJx!br, ~~· $10S,ooo Pb ... ioo. HerbertHaftins
rumpus rm .. Redwd. Call546-2313 2ba apt over 1ar. All m.8100
deck; walk to beach, Ol'fNltt9·11H1JNTONNK1• ~l~~t'a:t:i ~!~ Open1 House SU.ob da2~._1CMb • -4-0-7-1-,-.. -.----.• -.-
pOe>la & teonla. Only 710 Fetllleaf Ave. ()po mmac. 5 rm n a. nw5
"65,900! Sat{Sun l ·S. 873·6992. ~!!~~~· ,.1!.~-'M'!..a.rl· O,.s.t~ 12-4 CAYWOOD REALTY $189.SOO. .....una-. ..,.,._ ~ PN1ti.1e ..-le COata
INC. 548-1290 =~=--=---..... ~-------! Mesa. fir. Harbor JOgb. -========-100'ZY 3br, 2ba + pat WLOT Count1'7 Eogliab alyle
C../i'Q-0 ,I\ 11.. l f) ~ ~C. • house. Frpl, 2 patios, R·2 Phla 3 bdrm older home, home. a Bdrm, cllninc
2'200 sq. ft. of Country Charm on
qu{et cuf.de-sac w /beautltul
sreenbelt location ... A., Plan w~
BRs & lg. famll~ rm. $157,500 -
compare & you ll agree o.n the
value! Owner ready to move!
Burry! Jean Dales 6'2-8235. CH·14)
COM DllPl.EX W/lOFT
Charming detached 2 Br front unit
with huce shade tree aloag with 2·
Br. batb anct 't. + spacious loft· owner'• WJit. l .mmaculato pride of .
ownership cond. Open SatJSwa
l.SPM. 505 Paam.ttia.
O~ J.'Q\I ~).-ce J:J(/"' ;J lot. Prin. only. $157,000. South of Uth Street, rm. ll lmmeme.lam rm.
Tira# lnlfig11Ing Word Gome wllll o Chd/e ,_O._Wfter _ _,,._lf0.:_T_030_~_.,..--~bide.Call toaeel =r Jon ea. Agt. •
..... "'ra.&Y L fQWI IBIUCEIJ\ .,.._, ·=·~~ _.c:. ~ XJntcond. Each u.nit2Br, 'W•!!I R~~ ~y ~ ""'• ,_ .,... _.. UIL "51,000 by owner DOOi. ~ .. .-.
'91.SS.LI , Ownr. 55'7·"'4 ...
lllACIJTE CDI IM W'VU
"1n '•' I'
, · ~ '
l1(l'1! Jl ,.\1 f (j
.. ..
•
"-w.F.wW. .... , •••••.•.•........ c-.w.. ......................
VAC.AMT .. OW!
Well p lanned. 3 II(
bdrms • 2 ruH b111.M v. It 2 t u bs. Compluel>
renced uort yd lo
18.tdenin& or play ! Sllln)
lln&ht newly decorate
with br•nd new aha
cvpettni. Vacant & re
ady to live 10 1 Excep
t1ooa1 value for S79.900' Gr~t Easts1de Lree line
• tlrfft! Treat yourself t
h11ppy laving Call the
Penooal Service Peopl
now! ROYAL PRO·
PERTIES642·1830 ------
' ~~!~.~-~ ....... J~c:4!!!!.~.~ ........ ~!!!.~~-~ ........ ~!'!!:!.~.~ ........ ~~::.~~.~....... Fnday, Febni.ry 3, 1918 e f'tLOT Pl
.....,.,. • .._.. 1040......,'910tthach 1040....... 1044 lnlM 1044 9"1M .,. 1044 ~~!!!.~~~ .. ~ .... ~:::.~~.~ ............... ~~ .. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• WOODlllDGl IMlll_. .._. I 04I •ecll I 041 Mlwport IMdl I ·
ANOTHER CHANCE
For Beach Lovers!
Miss last weekend's auctJon in Seal
Beach or prime single-family lots near
the beach?
PATIO HOMIE $74,00011! OP844 LIMSAOT JS!1!41tEl.·5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• .. ••••"•• '
NEAT 4 BR. Plan ~. M'nu; GatATIST IUY
rucely lndsepd; on cul de Un.iv. Park Tbe Ter ~ Larae • BR &: family
room, sunken llv101
room & d1mng area. Mir·
rottd wardrobe & many
extras. MotJv•ted seller.
$109.900
VALLEY 640-HOO
'l!ft.10''"iii
sac, or. Irvine High & race Cardltf model In N ewport Ctef t ;
Herita1e Puk. Super townhouse wlth 2 Spacious S Bdrm •• Mt
locatJon' bdtms. 2 baths, rrplc . L·ngo bath. Kitche n with EVB. YH COPIELAHD blt·ln.s. upgraded ·cat'IHlt I ~l• di.nlftl area, up-
RULTOR 552-0434 &rW1tomdr•PH· 184.600 f~c~u::~:.4r:r:b HIWPORT HACH Rul&nn • AlllOR LAKE RE.ALTY 675•1642 automa e opener .... ic.
P r 1 me w ate r rro n t ~Uent locatioo "coodl~ t.ion. Tennis court.I, pool.
town house, below1---------•I Jacuul, etc. PJent)' of
m arket. By owner GREAT LOCATION OPEN HOUSE SUM 1-4:30 gue1t pastint . $113.100.
4M-0536 AdJacent to 1wlm· ~I I 089 MADISON rt.ACE By own.r. Leavlnl for
O,....ER • ••v1o...1G and recreation area. Jt s L "'·-. caUM2·1818.
""" .._ " --------•1 the Sycamore Plan In lhc CICJWICI leach ...,....,..., ~~~~~~1!11~~.P~a~t~: =~~~~s2a~~Su: ~~~: creekside development CUSTOM WOOD & GLASS HOUSE 1-------.. •
I am .rm w /I r PI c. 2 b a & a t r t u m . oI ~oodbrldge. It's ne,w -&ajoy the quiet s.clwlon & greceM OfFEDm BY
CAT ALINA breakfast r m, lrml din· Landscaped & uperaded. Bt .:!i:~ :e~~ ':;:~lr~e~ ele-ca.-c• In thl1 hCNM •slptd f« tM I'
ing, bltn microwave Reduced to $103,000 2S fiiuteof $105,900 ex•cwtlv• fontlly that h "oft th• NEWPORT CREST
O...Poiftt 1026
Don't miss this exciting opportunity!!
3 outstanding single family lots with
homes included. Just blocks from the
ocean in Huntington Beach, a nd
Priced from only $116,950! Call (7 14)
960-5244 or visit sales office at 509 17th
St., Hwttington Beach . •••••••••••••••••••••••
MOUNTAIN VllEWS oven, trash compactor. Bluejay, 551.()685 .. $ 1 Ideal location, high ato HuntiMJfon •ach I 040 HwlflMjtCMI a.och I 040 JG Deerwood East, call fJO • • • • • 178• SO. SPECIALISTS:
·bill. ne ar ha r bor,•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• forappt. 497-3331 • •
beaches,sch1Js,3 Br,den, ---------I PATTI WALKER Greentr ee 38r . 2ba, SOUTll I AGUNA DANA 9Swift Court 2"'2 Ba, frplc... wet bar, SUPElt CLEAN JUST LISTED REALTY 84.2-1418 study, country kitchen LAGUNA NIGUEL POINT 32 Encore Court
much more! Priced rrom 3 0 A"•m, i:i. bath, fan-.. P-_.-ft---C-d 1 w/ceramic tile floors. ~~~~~~~~~I 499.4551 49.S·l720 4.93·88l2 lQAriesCourt · t SSS 000 All t ~ • Temflc woodsy setung """'" on o, prime oca· S119,950. Aft. 6J>'M Owner ::: '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ -U Anes CourtA speaal lf ' id 3~m~ ta.sllc family room. cov· Young fa mllies de tJon. One i.lory, pool & 5S?·S286 condo to rit your 1..-.1.1 ~~:::~ ere · .e ered p:~o .cfrea t ltght!!'3BR.2BA.large tennis nearby. Asking l.agllnaleech 1041 LalJlllNllleacll ICl48LAll)mMI~ 1052 needs • .,_.
KA TB.LA RI.ALTY neighbor use lo rarruly room w /Swedi.!>h $116.900 Owner wants of· SAVE ••••••••••••••••••••• •• ••••••••••• ... •••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• beach fll,500 fireplace & spiral fer Call631·2740. Greentree. Hampton
Ul.·902 493-9672 ., . : .•. ' . St.all'WllY to loft On qwel t'.....~.J1 I/< r ,,...,.. model, 5 bd 3 ba, many OC~ VIEW DUPLEX '62·447'1 r.:: 546·8103 i.lreet Only $89.500 i.11 l C,11 ~~I~' u Pg rad es. LI.!> t e d
Live m 1 let your tenanl"l•--------•I __ _ __ $109,900, buy from ownt:r
pay the taxes Fireplaces ----LUSK LUXURY Sl05,000. 559-6640
SUPER ST AllS OHN SUMDA Y' 1-5
2920 Alexander Rd.
Charmin& new 3 Bedrm +
den, 2 bath, fa'r):l -rm,
A/C, French drs. pvt
front courtyard, $l23,900.
Owner. 831·7098 ~2t
& balcomes. 33866 Diana BY OWNER Here's the best of the
SJ.35,000. Pride of ownership best' In 'rurlle Rock
$12,000 UNDER
M.ARKET-WDIRDGE
.. is what we call these 6
commereial & reslden·
t.ial uruts 10 the heart of
Laguna. overlooking
Main Bearh. Asking
$fl95,000
Spectacular ocean view
home OD 3 lols. A t.ouc h of
old Laguna in this 2 Br 2
Ba, den & country kilch
home In desirable area.
Five sundecks, beaut.
stone pool, w /terraced
back yard. Walk to beach
or stay home & watch the
whales. Lots of room to
expand. Priced to sell.
$189,900.
Mcwtee .... Es~ GREAT 640-5357 •
4Br, 2Ba custom homel~~~~~~~~~ home. i:ood location. Highlands, on a cul de
3Br. l'.Ba. dbl garage. sac street. View or night
pnce-<t below market. at 640-6600 ugh~ & mts from this
$tl5.000 5021 Pheasant beautiful Lusk home.
Circle. 546 5745 ~~~~~~~~~-1 'rot.ally enjoy life in this new, spacious 4 BR.
home. Br eakfast at a
c6arming bay window,
o r dine in elegant
formality. You slill have
ume to pick your carpet
S.Q-U.f.6-Z,E SI 1,400 DOWN My seller & you may get
IY OWNER AS SU MES VA s.ss since he will own 2
Beautiful, new 2 slory Ocean close beauty. shortly. Super 3 br pre·
Dana Pt. home. 4br. 2"3 Shake roof, near new st i g e beach w a I k
l)a, Hv. rm., ram rm., t•rpl'g. bll·ns. frplc. and w/private jacuizi plus
form. run. rm .. upgr kll • morl' Run ror lh1s one I S('parale apt for Mom &
3 cur gar., Lgc cul·de loll<' 531·5800 open l'Venings Dad or. Only $567 /mo
view lot $120,000 lnt1REHetwork PJ.T.l.968-3371.,
496-6573, 493-2878 1---------1
Fo.wtoift Valley I 034 OP9UY OWNER (~1wm:rn1itrn;.t
• •••••••••••••••• ••• • • • Seabreeze condo $75,000 Real &<!tale
TliDE-+tAVE
4Br, 2't bath, frml din,
fam rm+bonus rm. 3 car
gar +all amen1l1es of
Green brook.
WANT
38r, 2 ba to 190,000 Any
good location. Open
Frt/Sat/Sun 12·4 pm
J81S7 Sanla Laurella Cr
Forest E . Olsen Inc
962·5585 or Agt 968·5880
THOUSANDS
D~LOW MKT
Gorgeous G reenbro"k
Granada, 5 brm :1 b.i,
highly upgrded . prof de
cor .. no-wax k 1tcht•n.
Italian llle entry, foun·
tam etc. Walk to comm pool, schools, park, ten
nis. shops. $123,900. lly
owner. Open Sun 1 4
10499Salinas River.
3 Bdrm (Master Down I
Camel color cpl thruout
Gas log f1repla<'e 2 Very
pnvale encl. puuos & at·
tchd 2 car ~ar. Sauna,
pool&sp~962-0224~--
SALE BY OWNER
SUPER SAVE
S&S
Buy this new 5 br S & S
for less than builders
pnce. f765/Mo pays P &
I. Quiclr sale needed.
968-3371.
Sharp 3 Br, upgraded
Condo 21, yr!> new. 2 ba,
2 s try Pvt laundry, pauo. gar+ carPort. No Real Estate
<'Ommon wall Comm -----pool ~·m.Roo NO ,\GNTS S&S Resale Spec1ahst-.
962-3527 3,4 or 5 bdrm model' avail. some w pool:.
SR 9684602 4 • $69, 9 50 Pennington Properties T~o full bath~. lge lh·ang ,
rm. w bn<'K fplc, <'Oun :t. • lry kilth for family dan· By owner. 4 Br. I • U.1,
10g" Li:e rear yard. One view lot. $74;900. 19422
y11ar warranty. Brkr. Harding Ln I h. 9634977
964 2425 aft 5pm.
Sell idle items 642-5678 4 brm 2 ba, sngl story. ---------•pool, orig. owned by
•............................. i..1 .. 11111 Supenntendent of track. S h arp ! Purc ha sed
another house Must sell
968·8100 10181 Edye.
(near Brookhurst & In
dlanaPohS)
color. Call
NORTH HILLS
RE.Al.TY 731·5900
In Larwan Square
SPARKLING
BEAUTY
A rabulous Piao 106 in
the Califor nia Homes
features i nclude 3
bedrooms, added family
room and central a ir.
Unbelievable pnced at
only $83.500.
RANCH RI.ALTY
551-2000
AREAL HOUSE
. with u yard, at this
price! Plush carpel &
proress. landscaping add
to this super value. A
California Home 10
mo' t' 111 condition.
$79,900
HORTH HILLS
RE.ALTY 711-5900
Toe.ally upgraded Broad· m ..-A-...,....,. moor 4Br, 2ba, fully ~~~r~
lndscped, great redwood ~~'W
deck & atrium cover. 499·2800
Beaut. view of parks & ------
• m t n s . 0 w n e r I 80d.cJrM VIEW
deb per ate!! $101,950. Catalina sunsets, & city
Must sell by Feb 5! ! Ughts by night. 3 brm 2"'2 Open House at 20 Whisll· b a . B y o w n r .
ing Swan, Wed -F r i $134.500 /ofr. 499-4685
2-4PM Sat/Sun 11·4, Tom evens.
W1lson1Agt 752·6688 & ---
552·0216
Dramatic Exec hme, 3 BR
2 Ba, Dining Rm &
Library. prof lndst•pd
w lights. Close to-30 acre
lake, fish . swim, boaung
& pvt beach. Call
Patnck, Agt. 552-4414
COTI'AGE W /VIEW
Well built olcler re ·
furbished 2 Br home 10
hear t or village .
Hardwood floors, re·
painted inside & out.
New kitchen & bath. new
lndscpog. $149,500, sub·
rrut orrer. Open Sal/Sun
10-4PM, call for dtrec·
lions 49Hl130.
WOODIRIDGE
Broadmoor home, 4 BR ..
fam. rm .• atrium, pool,
spa, decking, lndscpd.,
fenced. ''The wor ks". __ __!~.~~c:J!!!...__ Reduced t.o $1.25.000
AG ENT 640·5560
DEERFI ELD PK HOME
Spacious 4Br, 2Ba, pre·
mium corner lot.
wallpaper & upgraded
cpls lhruout. $136,000"
Owner 559-5598
1990So.Cst. Hwy. 494·8519
GU.AT EST A TE
OFHRING!
497-1711
EXCEPTIOM.AL ..
.. home in North Laguna ,
very clean. new carpets.
custom tile; move right
in! 3 Bdtrns .. 2 baths,
with coastline view 1
$215,000
ruJed with every conve·
nie n ce & Ju xu r y,
secluded &rounds with
R&F pool, jacuui, cov·
e r e d p a ti o , a ll
sprinklered. Mint cond !
Try $151.000.
STANALAND&
MEGARGEE RLT Y
(714) 497-1744
Superb Buy!
Lag un a Beach 2
bedroom with outstand
u<g view or ocean & city
lights. Totally r e ·
furb1Shed & immatulate
in every det•il. Only
$164,500 (51)
f;, I I ., ' '
; r. ~ , . · t ; , , ' '.· ·
bl>l 11b1 ti.II ld!IH
TEMPLE HILLS
This bright & cheery 2
bdrm. h ome has
panor amic views of
ocean & canyon & an ex·
tra large deck for enter-
taining. Room for ex·
pa.JWOTl. Sl52.ooo ~ forfft I 055
OCE.A .. VIEW •••••••••••••••••••••••
Family home in good re· SEU.ING al COST! New
sidential area, close to Warmington 10 Woods.
downtown. 3 Bdrms .. 3 2500 s.r, under warr.
baths. big kitchen. de· $145.000 Covington RE
li1ihtful patio. Priced 768-8106
nght at $189.500 --
TURTLEROCK
By Owner 3br, 2ba, film
rm, prof lndsrpd, elect
sprinklers. lrg cvrd patio
w/vu or UC I & valley. Nr
pool, tennis & prks, xlnt
schools. $122.500. 833-1948
Best buy in urea, 4Br,
2Ba. 2 frplcs. amenities
galore, nicely decorated.
~~;~.beac h . N ° w YOUNG AND
SCHULZ&LEER.F.. ~
VIEW!!
.rrom Mt. Baldy to
Calalina. 4 Bdrm .• ram.
rm . P l an 2 in
TURTLE ROCK
31616CoastHwy BEAUTIFUL $.Laguna 499·2281 ,,,...,,,,_
LAGUNA CH.ARMER 1105N.Cocufttwy.,loguna Former mode l, pr o·
Close in & s blks from the 494-1177 fessionally decorated in
beach, 48r, 2Ba. den , 31601CoastHwy.,S.lagvno warm tones. Breathtak·
pool, Jacuni, same rm, 499-4591 ing view of Saddlebad: basement, sun deck bas __ __; __ _:____ Mountains. P rivate dock
panoramic ocn & city ~ 4 Bd overlooks s himmerin g
vtew. frplc, tncd yd. By rm lake, at an affordable
owner , appt only Brea aking vu fr lg. pnce.
In La in Squ~c _ Beautirully landscaped $2 3 s . o 0 0 . 4 9 7. l 3 8 7 sunken master BR & con· Koala Properties Inc.
evestwknds venation pit in war m, 7S2·2UO c LEGE PARK
SPECIAL
lawn and atrium with
mature trees. woodsy ram. rm. Skyllt •
wk. studio J acuzzi in Mi11M Vl•fo I 067
master ba. $175K (644 I •••• •••••• •••• •• •• •• • • •
VJIEW.LOCA TION
. ~ By owner Madnd 871. 4 5
Price Slashed •
t.o $l52,900. Trina S Wrm
end unit In The Bl\lf fs.
Great view. pvt Jacuni.
wrap around patio w /ex-
citing firepit. Perfect for
entertaining, a fantastic:
execuUve home.
Open Sat & ~n l ·5
406 Plata. Npt Bch ·
AESOP REALTY
7314911
WANTED:
Pnme bayfront for ex-
tremely quallried cliM .
MID. 60' rrontqe, Joca-
t 1 on & deep w atf-t"
dockaee. is essen tlaf,
able to remodel or build.
Prine. Only. VALLEY
REALTY, 640-9900. Mt for Phyllis or Linda. (
SPECTACULAR
IACIC IA Y VIEW
BF.Sr JN BLUFFS 3 BR.
21h BA end unit w /glass
lanai Prof. decrt'd, ext
use or mirrors, all new
ktl w 1micro, new t'pt'g &
d1J8. $167.500. Open Sun
1·5. 651 Vista Bonita. call
D.J. Helyer (l) 998-7660
Trans· West Real Estate
BIG CANYON
GOLF COURSE
VIEW
At Harbor View prices. S bedroom , formal dining _
room. Only $1.87,500.
Focus on You!
NEW & DAZZLING
Beautiful 2 story home 4
Bdrm. 2 bath, newly
landscaped yard with
gazebo effect patio.
Country kitchen wllh
crackling fireplace &
ranuly area 'adjoin mg.
Lovely sunken living
room &. form11l dining.
2900Sq.ft. of 1mmacuJate
living. Open Saturday
12·4, 21152 Shaw Ln.,
H.B. Call today I 963·6767
Fantasucally beautiful
PURDUE. Adult lived in
only. Entirely upgraded
and ideally localed on
large comer lot with a
beautiful entry. Cenlral
air and professionally
landscaped.
..,J(J br Casa Sarga. Beaut.
decor & landscaping.~~~~~~~~~
Avail. 1mmed. Minutes
7389
9237 SIZES 8-18
'"' 1ff "";_ 1ff t.\-r'-
()PfN "' q." s IUll ro 81-N(I •
[Vl-
BEAcH COTT AGE RANCH REAL TY Warm & cozy 2 Br 2 Ba. 551 2000
home w /fresh ocean -----· ---
breeze. for only $2,000 GREENTREE
down. 6.11-4560 Agent By owner /agent. 2 Br +
. 4 Br, 1:1v, baths. Corner rarruly, quiet street close
lot. $77 ,950 Her bert t.opark.New drps,gar dr
Hawkins 979·8100 opnr, brick work & more. ----.-£.----•~Dys 833·6405; eves,
....,,liwgton 551-5238
HarbOur 1042 •••••••••••••••••••••••
BOAT DOCK
AT YOUR DOOR
3BR, 2BA, frpl, 1800 sq.
ft. 2 Sundecks $167,500.
Agt, 213 /439·2115:
438-3678.
CHAMPAGNE
TASTE
BEER
POCKETBOOK!
SEASCAPE CONDO 1 BR, 880 sq. I\. Looks We have 2 Plan 3's in
like a model, tennis. Orangetree. LOCATED
pool, FP, =ar. . Just ON THE WATER. Total·
reduced. Call . .lY upgraded with many
COUHS RLTY 4i,(idiUonal features. Ten· · hls, gy91, pool, spa and 960-4311 aaunas. Both locations
JUSTLlmD
Harbour Lane 3 Br, 2~
ba end unit w /1.4' boat
s lip. Supe r a b a rp !
$1.SS.OOO Call now.
PURC&L IE.ALTY
('114) fMG..,2828 1
am. 104 .. •••••••••••••••••••••••
are priced under SSS,000.
l.AMCH UALTY
Hl-2000
walk lo all recreation.
After 6p m wkdays
837-8260
>OJ:lt r-,T r
OLSON
,,
./
..
t>All.V °"91' 9tMI ..... · t • · P\LOT Fttd8y. FebN.,y,, 1m ....... -.............. Othtf-1..a tstete Otftet-le.a !ltet. HousH ~
t°.ill.f .___<IL.a.... ._. __ el IL.. .... c........... 1...1~~ R--...... ..... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....... u......... ........ u~ ._... ~ -.,_,. rv.-~ ~ ,,.._.-S4llie ,_ --'" •••• ••• • ••• ••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••
....... .... .... .. .. .... ...... ................. ... .. .. . . ... ... .. ...... s. 1100 ~rty 2000 Lott for Sale 1200 ,._....... ,._.._ ~-J•A .~ ____ ... Jl Jitftpa...... I OH Si..-. L I 01 ~ I -I 01• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••• •••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• -_.. M• ) 122 ---l ....™49'----40 ~, ..... ~ ......--l.K.ING 2'•80 2 Bdrm + u•WPOIT ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
• I -·····-·········· •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• , • "'" •SUPB IUYI• LOVELY BR •m·rm. top cond & loc. HEIAHTS S A N Cbarmina 2 BR, 2 b•. Nice % BR. 1 be. fncd • 3 , 2 B .. PIUCI RB>UCEDI nr beacb. $37.500 Agl. .., J U A N tucln'1 i.ncl Feb 18/Jun ya.rd, encl gar. $280 mo w/trpl. OW, crpt, kld~t SSOOOto SI 1 4.500 W-4380 DUPLEX CAPISTRANO 1.8, S700 mo for 4 mo'I, or 2:5440ra.t1104112778 OK. tUO. 963...s67 Aacni.. Ready to bwld. orily 6 $850 mnth. Debbie,,... •·Id No(ee
A charmUJg ll1&rbor V1~v. IGNATU RI!: '73 20.60 Extra sharp 2 BR units, now av1Ulablc. Agt. 675-0000 .,...s.... e, new l'rµti. & Home.3Br,2ba w1man) plus enclostct porc h. both w /prvt patios. '114-752-1070 53'1-7722 -drps, remodeled 2 br2br.:?ba.car ,h milobcb
appt.s. Plans 10 1&dd $31,000. Es late Sale:!> 1 Owner will help finance. -2Br. 2b<l, lgc patio & yard w JWtov~. refne. patio & SS95
more bdrm&. Mosl de Alt 646..al!O For s a I e or trad e Sptttacular ocean front 3 ~~ blk to bcb. 3 Mo r~ntlll. fntd yd No peb. 5325 alrable area $1.39.SOO. ajacent lots. 3 Arch Bay, $425. l ·U2-600 Don mo 646-8300 3hr, ram rm. trg muter
' CALL FOR DETAILS ~~ ~= :~~9S CA.LL 955-0350 So. L..t&(o $26.S.OOO between 9-Sor673-6817 Lovely large 3 br horn~. bdrm, pool, t'75 " <@Q) 12 > $285.000 Hewpori hoclt 3169 dlnin& rm, ''f· tam rm. 4br. pool, " t11I lo ocean, · · 00UQ CHARMER WITH V E fMIJ Pn (3> P>S.ooo ••••••••••••••••••••••• rrp1c. 2 ba, db gar • elec. '325 ~h---'-I W SpeclaH1t Will sell singly or as 1 3S3VlAl.tDOSOUD door Oi)C\J', crpta "drp11. TH~. Bob Graf
-nwnv South L~ t.o. wHh oce• we have 2. 3, & 4Br, parcel. Pvt community DRIVE BY. 2 bdrm. blt.N + dshwbr In choice ---------
Rultors, Est. 1907 •lew1. CloH to beech ond shopplnCJ. mobile bomes listed in 58 UNITS-Top Oranae w/large beach & tennl11 eleaantly furnished, col· Mesa del Mar area. st50 NEAR PARK. 3 Br 2 Ba. (71•1•1~ Rec...tty""'ad1ledwittta.llal•hclwood all areas. Tell ws your Co.loc:5Yrsold,$U,275 covrls. B .M. Craig or TV, deck, view or mo+ 1&N1ener. Refll. dbl gar. fplc. many
> NEWPORT HTS. wollt, wNte brick flreploce, new e:..,.tlftt need. Let us help . per urut. W /$i00,000 dn. ~=·~4-499·3070 or water. fri/mo. Avail. now. 549-2644 xtras. "5().847-4.52S NearCUrrDr.•B~r,ms,S and llnole u• ond lor ve cou•try PAC I FIC COAST Owner/bkr. Prine. only. . WATER RONTHOMES IA.Cl(IA.Y
b l 11
Lf&....h-S 1-50 REASALES, INC. 6.11-1234. R l Comer lot Wal,_ to 631-1400 for appt. ..... ... a., am y rm, frpl "'" .... • •... &11'1 0. An--· 99 -8660 • • • Spacloua 3 br %\.\ ba t'nt_,. 32•2 Roomf RV ~04 soo ""''1m 1 1...v15y Westcllll & 17th St. abop t b 'v 1 ~a• .. STUA.RTftHE 499.4551 Huntinaton8eh963-0991 n• ORS centen,CM.1805Tu1Un, ...... Uwfwonbhecl own ome. rp o, •••••••••••••••••••••••
LAGt:1'•\ DANA LAGUNA DREAM 5'8-3751 •••••••••••••-•••••••• modembltns, W/Dhook· Waterfront Townbou1e
IEA.LTOR Ul.5454 NIG UEL POINT BEACH A.Cf"HCJ9forW. 1200 G .. 0 up, F,beaUng, dbl 1ar, 36'boatallp 3Bd 2'; >-....................... SIXTEENUNITs ••r 32 2 fncd 1d, comm. pool, ba, pau·o L-k. ~..'R·is ... , ~yfront, tuxuriou!I con 495·1720 493·8812 497·3331 av1 •CRIS Eight 2 BR" eight 1 BR. ••••••••••••••••••••••• jacuai. t.enn.La " clbbse """"' ~.., • .u do; open daily 12.30 to 3; rn A Prime Orange Co, loca· ........._ DeHrt, Brand new 3 brm 2~ ba, "25, m0. Act. 631-1266 o; tB2S/lDO. m
4
>846-llS2
633 Lido Park Dr .. A 1. SoutbolCoronaonpaved tion. Pnde of ownership RftOri 2400 ram rm, fncd yrd, ~H38wknd ~ JZ44 ~1:1.500Agt 675.5200 Hewporihoch
1069
S-Jumt =Good for lot split. units. Seller will trade·••••••••••••••••••••••• microwave kit, frpt, Eutside.-, JYab•,fn cd •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• Copistrc.o 1078 e~775691 (7l4) up. call for more info. At Snow Summit. Bia lndacpd.631·173S.$S2S. yd. 228 Sierks St ....... c. IEMTA.LS
WESTCLIFF IEA. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Olfered Jll $420.000 Bear, furn. townhouse .-... Spacious
3
BR, den CH LIVING or522-0S30 540-3666 faclng ski :.lopes. Great HOMEFlNDERS mo.548-6680 2BR.2ba.... .. $.525
family rm. home with
312
In Newport Shore:. for rental record. Partners 'nlousand.s of Rentals 3BR. 2 Ba ..... 5175;~5
baths. l~e. laundry rm SllO,Ot>O 3 Bdrms. OWNER ANXIOUS gplittlng. must sell Allareasallprices 2 BR, l ~ ba, patio, 38R.2a,,ba .... $tSOJ•9S
with walk· in pantr); comm. pools & tennis. $)9,SOO. or trade for local Sample: adult.&/nO pets, S'l75. Nr 4 BR. 2' 2 ba . . Ji.25/850
bri c k frpl c •-"'w OPEHSA.TJSUM 1.4 J>reRntallorrersonUus property.642.9666 SSOBacbcottaae!reeut lnhSlahops.S.S0-7317 4BR.38a .... 1625/7
45
"' "
323
wu ... UT 1.9"1 acre CantasLic view $1502brwon'tlasl! carpets over hdwd. tin, ""'"" property. Xlnt mini TRIPLEX. C.M. WHKEHD C .a....... $2703brkldswelcome 3br. wall lo wall Crpts.
,Ta:.telully decorated 'LEAS ...., rancbs1te.Broker, Great Eastslde loc, ,_." UFETIMESERVICE drps. •ml fncd yrd, gar.
with shutters. paneling & Lawson DR"'·MA""s•' 676-5117 (714) newer3br , 2ba. frplc, yd. Tw /view .~n 21foJ abecres. 557.0122 avail. 962·~
'l"allpaper. Lge. patio & liA • OR 522·2060 C2) 2b lb Uos I ongue .,. groove am 2-sty. playhouse for the ln dreamy Mira Cost r. a, pa 'enc · celling uUlilies avella • --....__-_-,--.... -~---l-2_0_7 _ ,_L..& "'226
IA.le Realty Comp""" T u COi •rclal gar. $l6S,OOO. bl c1' i . -••m•---~ ....... $170,000 .. , ownbome ! Fabulous .a Tom Lee, Ritr, 642•1603 e. ean a r environ· •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• .. •••••••••••••••••••••
. Hl'WPORT llA.CH balconied master BR. Properly 1600 ment. Call Geo. Frey Br 2 Ba p 'li p 1 b b & REALTY retreat w/Cireplace (& ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wlderclo....out 54.2-3M6lorinlo , or av1 on, anoram c ar or · 675•1642 waJk·in closet) +2 oth"r NEWPORT.· Gr·eat loca· BENHINKLE.R E Inc t'60 rno yrly. Will be while waler view!
3
"' 2 DUPLEXES LEFT · · shown Sat/Sun Noon li1 bdrm, den, 2~ ba, frpl,
NEW TOWN nous 1-;
3Br212Ba, FR.endunll,
Nwpt Terr . $82,900
644 1179
pPEHSUH.1-5 •sunny B.Rs, living rm. uon for small bus\ness Near S.C. Plaaa Bkr OutofCCMlftty 1PM,675-8618or6i5-3964 bll-lns.33602·BDanaVls· 't513CAMPUSDl:IRVtNE
18571raftnllrWay l2nd _f1replahc e ) & with good visabllity. 557.9710 P--rt1y 2550 ,.~ .... ..1-•M 3222 ta.$&8Smo.213/372·86S9
Li , f . bl . . s p a c 1 o u s . c e e r y Agent. ~6·4380 • -r-· ---uw. or vc cum orta Y 10 this kitche n /brkfsl rm -OCEANVIEW Duplex,•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• TeMis condo 3 Br 2 Ba lerock 4 br. ram rm spuc1~us lli>me .with 4 <H·20 . Newport Beuch. Owners steps from beach. Upper By Owner, 1600 s q ft 2 BR 1 ba fr t beam f le utilrm' I ar ' dinrm.2ba,viewofUC1° bdrm~.dl•n.fam1lyrm .. DonnaCuster642.8235 w11lflnunt•e,2 t•ommen'. 3 bedroom. lower 2 townhome . on golf ceit'pvtp~liop$.75 Agt p • 498:1~,g .. Lsc. Grdnr, waler. as se~. rumpu,, ~"'-& a se~ prop. nexl tu oceanfront. bedroom. 6 Car garage, course at La Costa. 2 497-lJss 673·5354 son .• dues pd by owner
ing rm ot offil'C for mom - -S95(>.000 & ~.000 Full huge fenced yard. Ask· brm, 2 full ha, :.! frpl, liv ---2 brm I ba, Crpl, fenced S)75. ill9'71 Antioch. Agl
or dad. Otht•r rcalutes tn· Santa Ana I 080 pr Both have ofr·street ing $1.80.000. Make an of rm, sep. dtn rm, wet bar. South side of Hwy. 2 sty yrd, gar., monthly $ISO. 5"1·5032
rl 2 'l•mt'.' frpks . open!••••••••••••••••••••••• pkg. & net lcaseo; (er ! W or J d W i d e central air, 2 car gar. Cape Cod hse. 3 BR. 2~2 Open Feb. 5th. 1·3 -------bcu m t•ell . gourml'lMINl HORSE RANCH, 2 A.JohnsonHkr.979-4964 Brokers,673-4!'>45 k1ld1en has microwave ba, frplc, patio & gar. SJ0.5225 Woodbridge, New 4 br.
k1tc:pen w walk·m pJn-Br 1 Ba, lighted arena, -------+ self cleaning oven Avail Mar 1st. 640-2095 3ba, fam rm .. A IC. nr
HA.RIORVU HOMES try Sep. brkfst. rm & tack rm, pony run. o.kxes/ •2Triplexes• w /ceramic cooktop. . &Toro 3232 park & pool $.550 /mo.
2 br, +den or 3 brm, 2 ba, dnve·thru ~arage with $72,000. 642·4758 ONts Sal• 1800 Near Lake Park. Min. to Completely upgraded. Gingerbread House for ••••••••••••••••••••••• 610-1044 parquetentrance,allup· RV or boat storage ••••••••••••••••••••••• bcb.l-4BR,3ba;l·3BR. Prof. decorated. $SOOO lease. 2 BR, frplc, lrg Wehaveallslzeshomes& ________ _
P"ades. By owner. Prin. $195.000 Be CAPTIVATED by this Lovely duplex for sale by 2VJ ba; 1·3 BR, 2 ba. 5 under appraised value. P3.Uo, so. of Coast Hwy. c.ondos Crom $350. Calt rrace Twnbm 3 BR, 2
• Hl!:AUTffU L rcmu<l'ld
Westcl1 rr St 67 ,ouu
CaU\l'<iral t'lg!>. wh11c lat
tice shutters & big yard.
:I Br 2 Ba . oen. By owner
1121 Oxford Ln 548 0391
'
4
nly. $139,750.
644 7463
, NEWPORT IEA.CH Cs&tOO price red
1
u
1
clldon . ~2er1 .
1
3 !,~~~~a. frpk. garages, frplcs. $1.85,000 On I y $8 3. 90 o. ca I l ~~72llpets. $400. Dave, today. casa Pacifica RI· :!ii!:~c75~~~·:adapy~~
or640-1440 REALTY 675-1642 oi:ntemporar y e·....,. 1 ,.,............, each.1709-17l3Alabama, 436-0509 .,... ty.'m).0882 675-6452eves.
By owner. 20 steps to EASTBLUFF. 3 Bdrm, 2 ~fa! ~~~~ak:~~;r~~ec!~ btcotmP ~l. Bch. 536"1718 Rmtehn.Fcrms, CodaMfto 3224 Condo. nearly new, 3brs.t---------beach 2·apthouse; I RR bath $142.000 Herbert $19.500.Hurry&call · roperty l OOO er. Gro•es 2700 ....................... upgraded, offered for Orange'I'ree,ZBR,new. ~dwnbtrs, 2 BR u~trs OR lla~kms RJtr 979·8100 VERN JOHNSON RLTR ••••••••••••••••••••••• DUPLEX OR ••••••••••••••••••••••• MESA WOODS rent with ""possible" lse A~l~:~33
all l house. $190.000. 20'; .---s.io 46-16 HORSE RA.MCHES 3 BR. 2 BA, big fenced apt. Call 640-Q28 an 71----""-------
down. 91 •', Pnnt·ipub V.estchff exdu::.1vc "arm . . , , TRl·PLEX Two t o choose from yard. 4 yrs. old. $525/mo. tw0-9900Agt. Rancho San Joaquin. de·
only Opt"n llou~e Sul &. ~oody. J br. di·n HXER:l·I P~R. 2 llr 1 Mesa Verde Duplc.x CALL7 · luxe 3 BR
2~; b l ,Jo'eb ·I . to I 6KUl w w 1:ountry k:tchl·n ~~.1<.:lol,S o£Wurncr. w '3BRo~nersun1t ~1cR~.BO~;;c:~.'\~;~~~ ME5S1·!19Vl.ERDE Superbeautifu13bdrm.2 drps ,pan~ramlc~'iec.;Pof
Scu:-hurl'. ('01 n1·r or l'nml' Im 1:112 0 0\Cf ~·~ ,!t-rm11. S24 ,90U Hm, loti.oftree::.. barn & "" ba. W/(am·rm, frplr , lake.park&countr}'sld<'. Oran"c SJt>,1},500 Opl·n Sat & Sun •~ll·.t1SI! 3 Scparatl' unit:. un H I 4 BR. 2 ,B.\. fenced yard, OW, /\.tC. !IUper llrea B•• uolf cou-e. 1 ··u ..,t\11 ...
1 1
'"' :1 c:ar .:arn~c. & $\50 91>3-4567 /\ t N J " '" ...... ~ ......... >>Ant•r \J:l·nt &I:! 0758. Souttt LOCJuna ol. v11ly S1311.000. Orll' 3 fir 2 Ra nc". new paint carpc~ing. fee · .:en ° mo or lse option avail.
Sf::,\VIEW IH:ST Vlt-:w St l ••••••••••••••••••••••• l·'ruit tret"S, i~n1:cd, :.! car $>25 imo. CALLSS6·2660. · - -Cull H3J-9Hl8 eves or
New, up~radl•d JUr + . 'J\'ll'W, >Y owner. EX· ril REC CARPET .:.irui:l' Rrokl-r MESA DEL MAR Fcuwtoin Vattey 3234 !>$()..2'JJ3days.
1''R :it builders prit't' olrc ,.u. u1:eun. Fa!.hion • 645 676·5717 (7\4\ 4 BR. 2 Bi\, big kitchen ••••••••••••••••••••••• -------
$250.000. 644-4597 Isl. mnt. Nu 3br Broad· ·3474 OR 522·2080 w tbuilt·ins. Gardener 1·n· .... .,"' L I B ON GOLF COURSE moor, llamplon mod _..,/mo. rg, c n. 4 r. 2
4 Pl f
Upgraded. lmmed. po".'· N Q R l N S R-....a tr:....t--.... eluded. $475/mo. CALL ba, across from Mile Sq Rancho San Joaquin 2 br
· tx, JOO t. from ocean; ''"""
000
<>A• ~.. --wn• 556-2'60 Park ,.._ll 751 2060 & den, 2~ ba. Great ,~.OOOW/land ! _..,., ,.,.....3549
0
8UNlTSinTUSTIN &chorMJe 2800 HO FEE • ·""" · · view! $600 mo. Ready -~larsball Rllr. 675-4600 San Clemente
1076
R E A L T Y wner will carry with ....................... H.a1tMgtonhoch 3240 now! Owoer /Agent low down. ~305,000 . Will trade 2 brm 2 ba .SELEC T •••••••••~• ••••••••••• 640-1212
.B t G C A N Y 0 N •••••••••••• ••••• •••• • • Herbert Hawk ms Rllrs ho L' d B ---------TOWN 1-10 ME 2 Br • IEA.CHDOLL HOUSE Pride of Owners hip 979-8100 me on I o +.cash for PROPERTlES 3 r: xtnt n . Beaut lrg br 2ba f 1 2
Greenbriar, upgraded. Walk to Riviera Beach. OCEA.HftlOHT make'th1s unique tr1 ·plex 3 brm home on Lido. . yd ln great nebbrhd, els BBQ. ~1c!~ ctO ;:;~a~ Securitya.14-4298 On natural canyon with one or the best values m 673·1202 br, 2 ba, DtW. F /P, to schls & shop'g. Avail schls. $t50. Call aft6PM.
ocean view. 3 Br. 2 ba. MOllLE HOME Dana Point. Excellent SUPER 4.PLEX Real Estate fenced yd. Near OCC. 2/lS. ft25. Call Birgitta, ssg.7478
with extra 1 a lot. Never l·Bdrm .. carpets. bit-tax shelter with Capital Side by side, buy one or Wanhd 2900 Child & pet ok. $435 . ...:846-:.=..::.137:.:.:1.:..; 846--4296:::.::~:::.:.·---1·---------
.NEWPORT
·· CONDO
agum al only $1
25
,000. ins: oceanfront pa uo. Gatn potential. $215,000. both. All di~ 2 bdrm units ••••••••••••••••••••••. sw-0608 N E'W DEL u x E 2 B r lege Park 3 BR. den, 2 Only :.teps lo private ·w frplc W II 11 Ba ,.,_I DI N beach. Xlnl condition.' S ' . ,.1 se ~n con· 0 W N proper l Y i n ... R S.C. p• ... .. ... duplex, frplc, gar. t child ... ., c, n rm. r PRICED RIGHT
000
peakmi: of Tax Shelter· tract at 9 ',mt. Pnced t~ Inglewood, Hawtborne "" --ok, faces park, frwy & pool & parks. $450.
San Clemente's foremost sw .• t.AURY STAUL'f'ER LiBd"e In this charming 2 sell fast. Call now or So. Bay area? 2 Story Executive pool shops close by. '17Stmo 848-8540 . "' .-rm hou:.e in Corona 5S8 3327 borne. 2600 sq. fl. 4 Ph 962 TT87 5"" 090
\lalue. "Cantamar"4 Br. SEALIONREALTY del Mar & have 2 umls . W1LLPAY CA.SH!! Bed.rm. 3 bath. includes : · or .,...
7
·
brm 2 ba. Iv rm, din rm.
fam rm . S400 mo.
&14 1480, 830·5050 II 22 family home on cul de· 3601 E. Cst. CdM 673 5354 help make the payments. Ph Tom D'Allessandro pool service. $6SO. mo. • E...iJOY
sac corner. high above 12l3N est.Laguna $175,000 Duplex. 11'.wpl. Bch 3 & 2 T.D.PROPERTIES (Oave)545-7506eves. "
the city. Call £or long h:.t 497.3388 Bdrms side by side, 800 (213 )674·6907 or (714 ) T .. IEA.CH LIFE oC outstanding features. * 494-80S7 * blk of W. Balboa Blvd l ~46·6201 anytime or ERV PVT 1 BR HOMES New 2 story 3 Br. fam.ii---------"!;:,n~rred, ask mg only IR"' •THT ... .,
1
... G ___ ____ bPril~ lo oc1 n & hay on Penn. ~5221 aft. 6p~ ~ ut53il pd.;.;.,,..$240. $250. rm. 3 Ba, frplc .. laundry
_,.. EA Aft....
7
U t . 6 . B & non y.645-209-1 .,,....,, 10, ..,..v. Adlts. no hook·up , dbl. gara1te.
HERTHA HENRY Ocean view; deligblful 2 °1 s, · :.! r 1
2200 2br, lba pref owner. No pets, dys 548·4135 eves, ...,.,.. Ch'ld
Omtu
REALTORS ' BR. 1 ,~ ba. apt. (you'll Bachelor. pool. ~-.teps to LotsforSole fixerupper. 646-6423 .,._,Jmo. 1 tpeL~ OK. , _ lfV: 215_De1Mar 492·4121 love the storage space). heh. $450,000. 20, down.••••••••••••••••••••••• &16-830l Agent, 846·1311 o r -.z•21 Lge. pool. Near beach. Owner64S-0721 R{lady to build on lot, fan· New 3 Br 2\<'J Ba. 2 car _960..o __ l_6_l . ______ 1 NOT JUsT ~ . $11950 OWN OnJWNyS89.500 7 U ... ITSC.M. tasllcoceanvlew&walk 1.-.1.c.i gar: fpk. cpts, drps. SUPER 4 Bdrm. 2 ba •R~•L•. ·,-' · { 0 ER 499 2094 "" tobeach Laguna """ 1 E/Side, $550. 631·0303 & w<lrplc DW crpl fed A ~·-----.. l
11
t' · Beautiful brand new 4· l ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 64&-708S '' · • • Beautiful 2 -BR. Warm·
Classy 2 story home 1n
-.ecluded private area.
Large bedrooms. 1m·
pre,s1\'e flrpl. X'lnt in·
\estment S8J.500.
t;.15·7221
WntcUff Realty Ho Cr.dlt Nffded br, loft, f/p. 3·2 br. 11.<a bu Owner /agent 673'72~ HousH FurftlsMd yrd. $125.
9634567
Agent. ington Townbom e In
LIDO ISLE. lmmo" 8 R, Bi< '"" 2 B• home with Tmlln J 090 lown hou". •II blln•. ,.llWp Jot, fl•l. bwld• ble. ••••••••• ••••• ••• • • •• •• ~'\'L\ FF ·~··. 28,' ""fee. Woodbridge. ovedooklng
3 B La I
0 C E A N V 1 E w , ••••••••••••••••••••••• crpls, drps. Hurry. buy ocean view at 2?\d story lc6oa Island 3106 a, rp c. pal10, poo · 2 Story Condo. New pool & a few sLeps to
• A. rge ot. Terms to Completely remodeled, now . Isl user deprec. level. New area. r.reat ••••••••••••••••••••••• $425. 752-7799, 494·0029 beigetone cpls, drps. lake. Bullt·lns lovely
suit. $249,500 ! A~ent owner w /carry contract, FOOTHILL HI Tom Lee. Rltr,642·1603. oppty. $<&8,SOO. 639-7239 Luxurlous 38r. 4Ba, N . ev. New paint. S Br. l \.\ba, pati06. $>25 /Mo. (H-22)
• $48-6333 $11.950 total dwn includ· DISTRICT 4 PLEX-IEA.CH NORTH TUSTIN B ~ Y f r. o n t h o m e Clean 2 Br w /gar. adlts, pool, tennis, rec hall. Lois Miller642.823S
•, \ng closing cost.s. See to $l8S,OOO PARK SKYLINE W1Jacun1, yrly or sho~t nopeta. TT3W. Wilaon. j'1'~5~.!Ph~SS1~-8623~[_~=~~~~~~~~~~
... THEVIEW apprec. & move in to· Greal3bdrm&famrm x h Lastestatelot locatedln term, $1.SOO mo. Avail 642-8205 3Br2Ba D/W BBQ fncd hoch 3248
or Catalina Sunsets must day. Total price only home on about '73 ac. 4.pl)!/ P~~e 'ii.~."rotcoa~ the Beverly' Hills of 67no.,w.:062Lora Vance Rltr l Br. """'"· drps 2 enc. r:i· Nr ;bops,' schls pref ,.••A••N•T••A•S••T•l•C•••V•••:••••
be "•en from th1's nAw. Stl9.500or make ofter. Hug H •· F I 1 f Or C '" -........ ' 751 ........ 12 /3 IE W 3 ~ .. e .,. poo . ot.s o lion. Jmmac! Need fast ange o .... nown as porches fncd yd $300 am. ._....av . · ~~~: ~":rr .~"!:~~'h THE HOME STORE ~·::~~ r. ·~~~d lif :~: ..... ., ....... •52·1100 ., .... ';!.:':iu.... -. r....,... 3101 ""' ... .,...,.,., "'..,,,; ,.,.,...,,..,,.. '"''" db1 ~;:·; ,' ~~·~ .".°~~·:
.private courtyarq. vault· 91? j2455 ~.000. 7~~7~11 .,. s •ur• 10.., N<Cr, Bell lnvestments •••••••••••••••••••••• MESA VERDE 3 Br Fam gar. patio, fncd yd. JiOO. $i95/monlb.
ed entry. beamed ceil· ~ AESOP REALTY [ I 364 E. l.BtSt. Tustin BEACHFRONT 4 Br, 2 b Rm. 2 fplc's, nu' cusl
67
5-
58
lO; 642-0393
lngs, 3 BR, game room. FIXEIMJP-SA.VE 731-4911 ~~,.lil~i!~·ll 832-2440&830-0343 comcl. furn home. Frplc, drps. $475 grdnr inc. Sharp 3 Bdrm 2 ba DW OCEANFRONT APT. ~~~~.r/ya~~::r:;!e: Located ol) the Bluffs, ,...,.,._R ~:JitjiJJ:A C·2 ZONE, Downtown ;::. ~~~Z~2F~b &1M945 ~led yNrd .,
0
$395 '. ~'m~\~~-Bd~~~1!~
Sunday
1
.
6
. fantastic ocean view 2 ~ ealEstate -· CM,lOOxl80.S90.000. thru July. 545.5354 o Ideal 3 br, 2 ba new 2 gent·
0
ee '500/monlb.
206 LA JOLLA LANE Br. fplc, wetbar. Estate •••0 •••••••••••••••••• Sacrifice, ownr retiring. 3 &4S-4203 &645-1103 644·9582 atcry. Si&SJmo. Will lse 23>0 sq fl, 4 brm. 3 ba. tn· sale. Needs work, you MoblleHotM1 yroldduplex2Br lBa . opt. 835-3437, eves plex lyrold 2cargar FUNKY LAGUNA
canaave $$$. For Sale 1100 dbl 1ar ea. fncd yd, xlnl lncOIM Properly 2000 htcofM h'operty ZOOO 673-MM fenc~d yrd, 'rrpl. fiSO: charm·3 Bdrm .. 2 bath
VfewReotty ••••••••••••••••••••••• area. CM. $96,000. •••••••••··~··••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Eves536-3964.or960-4648 house in Woods Co"·e T70-055S 496·"1722 ANXIOUS OWMER 545-3448 ' Best MESA VERDE area. area with bwlt·ins & a fll 646-6197 --• ... Sesame Sll"efl·Sharp & ' b1Deluxe4Br.2ba.famrm, 4Br2Ba.nrGoktenWesl SUPER VIEW. Lease. 11'1 J. Tr H t Har1ton btI1
38
r
288 24
x
52
Sun nt.ness forces sale; duplex . tns, frplc, [lew paint & & SUlter. Lse al $525. 1st s,575 /month . . --------1 OPEN HOUSE SUN n y b r 'o 0 k, 19 7 z next to counlry club in macneb /lrvlne carpet, gardener $545. & last. call 536-3145 or
IY OWMIR 1·5PM w/enctoeed porch. Many Ccsta Mesa.~ BR, 1 ba. ~ · 847·CY.!93Avl 3/1. 2 BDRM. OCEAN.
Charming Npt Hla. 3 Br, S08 E. San Juan xtras. Vacant. Priced ,ea., frplc., patios. ~.soo realty 2 Bdrm $325 FRONT APT. with built· f'R. 2 ba, 2 blka to Npl Colonial beauty4 Br2\.1 right! (JM7001 ·2) A.JohnsonBkr.979-4964 3Bdrm$395 3:s~~p~k~O:ed:jy~~'. lns.$700tmonlb.
'Bay. Trop cardens, Ba, master suite has PACIFIC COAST .,. .. .....,,. •. ,,.a23 fplc dr es•1'ng r RES REDUCED ' _._...,.....,... 16
eor. $115.536-2990 C Ir tazebo.Ask forDanor • " oom. ALES,lNC.991-~ CORONA DEL.MAR ~ ... ___...DU .. .v-...Y c-.-y F rank, agt, 540·3666 ocean view. Beaut "~' """..-"~' ..--.-Nwpt Hats. 2 Br, den, Move in now! 3 Br, close 497 145
dtY•, e vo G<S.2549 . lnd10pn1. pmtlglou• >I' KENSKILL. Tmma DUPLEX . Xlnt oond. $115,009 huge yud & gar. pso w -& beocl>. .... "A 7 ~a.ooo. area.$139.900. Island. south Laguna . Each unit 2Br, lbal. 2 BR, 2 bath upper & lower dUplex mo.'75.2305 mo.Brltr.963-8377 DOWH'TOWM
A.A llA.CH RLTilS SJSOO. Ta,ylor Made Rlty. !56•000· Owner. 497·3516 only steps to beach & yublic tenn1·s . . l(GC)I .. OVBSIA.S s.a.. 492-1-toO 499-291811495-4486 3 bdrm 1 ba. SlOO d!~.:i 4 BR, pool, Spa. frpk, LA.GUHA.
11ontegoR.V.H .. •brm.2 v--_ ---_ ---14~-W~:WE EE x ce l1te n t
1
ren t a history . Ready to move in. ~ Kids, pet OK. Nr shops. Deluxe 2 bdrm .. 2 bath ~ fam rm, nu crpts, ti ~.....:--__,._ LADOl.CI VITA. Eves: 831•1810 xcept ona ly well maintained. mo.548·2049 schools. "5()mo. 548·5669 duplex reot.al. Out.stand·
.y(l;WOoddeclt. Find whal you want in Uve ln a Beach Club, Owner will exchange or sell. Drive New condo w /tranquil amarak vtllageTwnhse. lng ocean & village view,
''S'YOWNER. 7S9-06S4 DailyPUotClasnfleda. golf, pool, clbbse, near by 5406 /08 NEPTUNE. <Please do panorama vi e w . 3Br l' ... Ba 1 I yetonlyafewsbortblks. be ac b . B ll I 2 Ox$ 8 T•" BIT.,•. lnv""'t now ' ..,, ' enc . pat o, to town & beach. Huge -•--a. p d ~ "-" ""' not d' t b t t ) p ul F\replace, 3 master size pool fac., attchd gar. ,._...pcgrt ~ t 06' Htwport hodt I 069 arklan w /enclosed In one of our 2 best buys. IS ur enan s a a Bailey bdnns. 3 baths. ceramic _,5/mo. 557 .... "l liv. rm & dining alcove. ~•••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..,,..,.b, new aiding totally Ou 1 ln ,,.,.,. H 1 G42·8235. (H-17) .,. ....., '•e klt"hAn -/bill ins :;p,taded. CFPT4&&6·T> P ex g...,.. .B. oc. tile entry, beautifully COZY bd ~ · ~ "' .. · ..
1967 . Call Tod.y
Bltns,crpes,aarages.on· cft__.__.&d.ra-A,trash 3 rm. 2 ba, Incl. wash /dr ye r . t o ln Tltl,.. • .. II""""' .,..... /""" fed rd kldt Separate 2 car 1arage.
CE
IDlll ILlllS CD.
OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE
·· Spectacular TownhoU1e. Spacious
'Bedrooms. 3 Bath• Plus Pamlly
ttoorn. Many Custom Peature,..
Large Co vered Balcony. Patio
Ove.rlooU Pool And Ramada. The
• Home Is Vacant And Read)'._ To tMove Into. Let's Go Inspect. Prlce
At$157,500.
PAC IF IC C 0 AST · Y tDt.SOO. r, 4 Pin ..-...,)( compactor. Balcony & w .. _ Y • & An outstandinl oflerioit
RESALES. INC. 2~038 C.M. All spacious I Br. 2 Lovely 3 BR home attached to 2 SR 2~ car 1arage w /elect pets ok. pas. 963'4587 at $500 M'o. Ref. re·
Brookbursl, H .B . ba apta. Good locaUon. & 1 BR. Pride or ownership! End ~·~2..~·nopel&. A§ent.Nofee. qulred.CaU :
963-0891 Alwayarented. sieo,ooo. garages -laundry rm -extra -mo............... Vacant• BR. newly pa.Int· M.lSSlON REALTY
2Br. 2Ba, tae patio, ocean Red ea:~•ltora -special cond. ONL y $169,000. Lois ._!~~ ~2 Brns,ot< .-c: ~!1°~u~~t.~r1 ,.._. 494-0131
vlew. So. Laauna Miller 642·8235. <H-18) r.ou......,. • ar, -· .... ---· •tmo· On tbe ocean at 49M710.171HfiOI 64M148ot87M2SI Walk 2 bdl. Lovl)' I bet. Blue Lagoon Villa. 28r,
UDO PIMIMSULA WISTIAY TalftlXIS PBQMSUl.A 11UPUX 2 bnn. No dop. J265. M5 Den, fpl, beam celn1 L fR 2ba, pvt bch. PoOls, teo·
Brand oew 2Br, 2Ba, LMt mtnutecancellatloo Prime Jocatian (or I Ummert..ri .. ter Victoria CM. Lnd l\rn $415 P /mo nls. (213)70~·0230 or -·~.f'Hdvo. ... -ove Jeav•ltripleJt•lotHI• l 1 ...... '546-.... "'~ -..S10 ('114)327·8771; 499-I084
.. .,_ 1 ..,,.. lD ''IOldou\"tr1ct. rent.a ! 1, 2 ,. 3 BR units: partially . .,....,. all In. ' oal)'. fd,OOO. COS'l'A MESA furn . $159.500. L ynn& VJtlentlne ~Br 1'11 a., bl• tbrm condo. l~ ba, ll'p1 • ....;..........;..
3
------
875-.U SO. CoAST PLAZA 644.·6200. Cff·19) rm, w /fplc. t74 ii-Uo, pool, $MO. 532-4015, BR. CK'ean view duplex; sieUOOEA.CH 1'25mo.6'73-613t tv•. 7111.mlor m..-rs lrpl.1... bdwd . n". ne'ltr
3 bdrm, a b•tb "owner'•" beacn: North La1una. apt+ two 2 bc'!rm rental 4.ftlX HUNT1N6TOM MACH 3 br. 2 ba, 2 car garace, Rully neat 2 Br. 2 ba JUS. Agent4!M·750
..... ...... 1 t Four 2 BR 1•-....... ln ft-pie. Kids ok. No doa11. w fdlhwebr. c:pts, rncd ..-· -we. C'Omp. e • un YI W IWJ 2 ml. or ••r.. mo. 8'5·2274 yd. $385. 90-4587 Ag\•NO New I BR . 3 ba .. frptc.,
carpH•. dr•pu, beach. Super areal $160,000. Vic Pe. ocean vie w ; bi le . to
l•rvbcor\"' f\l't'1!•ce <3 J bln ic· 642 at> H 1.-... _.. 3B l mJ b N h L bedroom) "MLlo• •. as S l '1X-36. ( -20) _.. """"'o. r. a r, r ..,._, beac • ort a1una. .. "' appl., tennis. J)OC>la, tt75 . .-.11.Xe/Pi'ot. Decor 4 br 2 $1SO Mo. -~EN WKND 10.5 644-6200 e.i-Z1U,$4M$9T ::i::,/~ F./,!~· %°bl Acenl494-'7$Sl
820 Baller ~ BJ owner. a Bfl. z a.. E· pr. IAue 91so . ...,. .. 132 Top ot Workl, a aa, 2 u,
Cl bill W ~) llde Ltl Jot. Q\111'-pVl, Nee OCIUO YleWl Jra llled.. U.11. Lallol't., ~·hor t91.100.MJ.23.aa .... 'bo, 1u· btb, scblt .. O('CUpaoey. ttH Mo.
(!J')I!:!!!! 5 WdAdt call =.--atncd)'d. ~ :.;."" d->'a: 4M..f:wt
-,.
..._., UafurwiJ.hed Howu t U ....... llMd ''fa ....... ,_..,IMd ..,..... ... ts ~ ............. U8fww,. ApartMHlt u.t... Friday. February 3. 1978 DAIL V Pl.LOT 0.1
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • r LeliM ~ 1241 Mtwpert IHct. 31'9 Mtwport leoc• l7'9 CoraMdll M• 3122 Colt.Meo 3124 .............. ._ 3140 Office Rtntot 4400 Offlc.e lt..m.1 4400 Mbc1l••CM1 \.
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• R ...... t 4,Su
Ck~~ronl, WCX>CU Covt1.
3 BR, 3 ba . comp re
done, lu11e Turner A11
1")C.
CaU Donnie 499 4591
~Mlpel 3252 •••••••••••••••••••••••
NIMEI
W. MIME CONDO
Delightful 2 brm 12 ba,
lower tind unit, nght on
the golr course. More
light than most com para
ble unals. Washer, dryer.
refrig lncld. Al110 golf.
ten nis, health clu
racihlaes avail. Beautiful
beach ls only 2 ml away.
SPECIAL PRJCE
$400.
Oense optJon possible)
ON WAT!!lt. 2 Bdrm
C<lndo w 1view. Side Ue
IY&.ll. '650/mo.
DOVER SllORES 11.J'eu
Larae S Bdrm, den, dan
Ing rm 4r pool. Sl200 /rtao
lse .
CORONA DEL ~AR
Cba.rmrn& 28r, fam'rm. 2
ba house. Walle to be arh
$\25/mo.
UDO NORD. Best lora·
uon. Exec 2 Bdrm, dan
Ing r m . New In/out,
$700/mo.
ON LIDO. Special 2
Bdrm+den. Glumorou:.
hlde·away $850/mo.
Wot., ft •t Hotftet
CCllUl-1100
_Ca_l_l_496_-444_0_._493_·G0_33_iv .. te A·Frame 3 Br, Fam
SEA TERRACE Garden
Home. 2 br & den, 2 ba.
beach, tennis & ix>ol.
$52S . 493-6490 ,
<213 )696·5077
AT LAST
Alt ..... Senlu
Y•C•htl
At HoMt Witlt
WE CiUARANTEE
. •Widest selection poss.
•In bowse computer sys.
•Daily telephone service
•Vacancies verified daily
• FUii staff of counselors
•Free to aged 65 & over
•Free rental counseling
•Open 7 days 8 00-8 00
RENTIMES
Rm, beach, iennu., Pool,
$t80.5'5-41S7
10 Prospect. Newport
Shores. 4 br ~lS mo.
67:l-26S4
$375 MO.
3br, Iba. Dshwshr. 2 car
gar. lsl + last + sroo. re·
fundable. Kids /pets OK
Lse OK. 631 2246
live
BIG!
EXECUTIVE ROW, Inc.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Wantod . :w 30' lrot'I
trailer older ok Che1i1p
tielf contained pref
046-8680
'it':t.""" f-•••••••••••••••••• ••• • •
IOOi
MUST !\ELLI Oeeanfront
Market. Net ps,000 yr
A&ent. 64.2-4758
I
...
N DAl\.YPILOT ' Friday, Fef)ruaty 3, 1978 .
Add i t ... Build it. .. Diaper at...Hammer it... Carpet
tt...Cem ent it... Wire i t ... Hoe it ... Clean it...Move
it •.. Press it ... Paint it ... Nail it ... Plaster it ... Fix It. .. SERVICE DIRECTORY Plumb 1t .•• Pat ct1 1t ... P1pe 1t. •• Remodel 1t .•• ,
Roof lt ... Landscape it ... Tilo It... Trim it ... Sewlt... ·
Haul it ... Add it... Plant it ... Alter it. .. Learn It ...
•pplmc• Repair c:.,.ts.mu C..octor c.•-. G1M1al5cnlcH LancMaping PailtHncJJP...-i Patios loott.J •.•....•.••............ ····••·········•···•··· .............................................. ·•···•········•········ .........•...•.......•................•••••...............•••....•••.....•..................
B" J Appliunce Serv. Shampoo & t leam dt1an. Gen. contractor, new. 11d· WEEDING·CLF.ANUPS HOMES ~APTS. LANDSCAPING PETERS PAlNTl NG Custom Redwood Patio ROOFS in11t.ulltld factory TRIP CHARO.I!: $10 Cc>lor briahtenen; wbt dlUoos, remod., res.. Weekly Maintenance HANDYMAN Reasonable prices. Expr'd. Rea• Ratoa . Covers & Deck~. 11idina direct estab 3S yrs. Call
2025 S. Main, S.A cptli 10 min bleach. comm. FrH est. Call Free est 642·9907 C 0 n !I c i e n t 1 0 u Ii 968-$783 or 547·5846 Free Est . Call Gene "pa.nelina. 645·2333 Harold Gunn 549·2961
,$49-2422 957-0169 Clean llv, din rm, hall SpiroS47-0204 er-... ~ • $1.5. Avg rm ff.50, couch, Dig lt Land.scape Main· .. ~man. 645-0302 COMMERCIAL 1---------iPlmhr jtepair Roofs For Less. All~. labyallllng $1.0, chr 15, Guar eum Cam11lng tenance : Mow & Edge. GtadMg LANDSCAPE All_ PROFESSIONAL ................... , .... Lic/bood'd. lna\11'. Pree
••••••••••••••••••••••• pet odor. Cpt repair. 1~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Full maint, ba~l~ng, ••••••••••••••••••••••• MAINTENANCE. Painting. lnler/Exter. VERY NEAT PATCH et1timate. 89•·0421 or Babysitti!'g• my bome. yu e x pr. Do work PSYCHIC MEDIUM clean.ups, rotot1lhng. SKIPLOADER. Dump Over 12 yeans of quality Reas, work cuarM2.o.186 JOBS &TEXTURE S.17.4133
Want ch!I.~ ~~.."· myeeU. IU!fs 531-0101 . Readino• c ....... 06 Free est 675-5518 •-~k. HAULING, •r..... service at reaao~able p . ,;_ E-'-1 t E Free est. 893-1091----------....,........ .... -.. .... ...... • "'"' rates for your busl· ~ .... g. ,., .. I n r. X· Root Lea.kina! Tot.al di.·
---------rw e Care C arpet Draperin .Ralph Caballero & Son's work, grading, demo etc ness/•PIU'tment com· pr~· honest. neat, reas. PATCH PLASTERING count on all repairs.
Mother to watch your Cleaners. Steam cleM ••••••••••••••••••••••• Free est. Clean up's , 831·1257 plex. Ed Barrett. Uc d~-l<MS Dave All type s , Free Exp.&guam. Reeklen·
child in C.M-l'enced or shampao. Also up Drapery 1''abrlc Sale tree trim. 646-4654 aft HaidlRn 548-3371 YOUNG MAN. 5 yrs expr estimates. Call 540-6825 tlal & comm. 6'6-03SO
yrd bot lunches. -........__,'All work "'"'r ds k 4PM 11 i ll 1 F Call Karen 645-6748 :r;::;;;r;T~ount unn"'p. 47,000 Y m st.ex: must • ............... •••••••• M•a• 'I . n wa cover n~.. r ee PLASTERING Tie
---.....--' ----• est. reas rates 645.3716'' be tlOl41 703 savangs in· Ex per gardener, full OOC Student.~ T. truck. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ests. 645-8576 Andy Homes, additions. r e· ••••••••••••• .. ••••••••
1.-. sWYke · ventoryualireaK~ct.loaB ffU~· mainl, lndscpng, & Trash, tree trim, Randy Brickwork. Small jobs. Paint Your CosA.t-stucco, free ests, low Ceramic TUe-Spec. in ....................... C11111•t JCwnt. 1st Cl ty. en ukucr cleanup. Call for $10 off &&2-5703, 549-3666 NeWport Costa Mesa ·& ,... rates. 58&-4892 entries le noon, 2.5yra
SMALL BUSINESSES & ....... 1.;.~.-~~.~~~ ..... Drapery 1510 E. EdiJlger 1sl mo. service. 83\.7494 . Irvine. 67~3175 eves. Average Extr 1 Stry $395 PILab'--exper. 982·1883 ST A RT Up S ,CustomConcrete&Bloc:k Santa Ana 541·0203 Student,b1gtruck:Haul· 2$t.ory~,Jntr~rm ......,
Management/Business Work, Patio covers & SU-2080 ~Japanese Landscap. lng;~ean·up, trees cut. IRICK & IL9CK Prices incl matrl/labor •••••••••••••••••••••••CERAMIC t.lle. New or
c011Sultant available oo brick. Lie &. Bonded Custo d d mg & g~enlng, Malnl. Any szfob. 494-1669 Gd but cheap. 6'5·7307 Ouar/lnsr·Free est. HOMESAV~RS. Plumb· 1remodel. Free est. Sml . m rapes, 1prea s. incl. mowmg, trimming, Lic320881 Ted 636-7085 ing & Heating. Free est, jbs welcome 636-2'26 aA uruque fee arrangement. 642-6894 shutters & all window spraying weeding Free CHEAPEST hauling in MoYlncJ • ' $1..0 hr. Honest&: rellable 5 •
Benefit Crom expertise Concrete Mas onry co.verings at discount estimat~. 545-7072, town. Fr ests. CHEAP! •••• .... •••••••••••••••• CUSI'OM PAJNTrNG. service. BofA, M/C OK. ---------~ra!l~ o~% !~~~l=~ sl.abs, f~undatl~n s: ~=·s~~~ ;>:9-~.a Japanese gardener 15 642-299Sor64S-l.390 ''Two Men Will Move ~~~:1 ~:;;.~ifj~~bo~~ 751·3LSOor847·0383 C:: ~t! :.,-:08!:~::
751-4760 h.•ghwal_is, p~tio s, ' · yrs exp. Malntenan~e & ,....,._.., You" We handle_lrg & ded/lnsrd, guar work. Any plumbing. water Reasooable.832·2488
Licensed Eves 556-8241 Bedrical some clean·®· 646-487! ••••-•••••••••••••••••• s ml moves-~fflce & Free e.st.s. Won't be un· ser v. lealta, bathrm ---------Calculator Service Sale. CEMENT WORK All ••••••••••••••••••••••• Want a REALLY CLEAN household. D1stanc,e & derbid 842~ encl, ceramic tile. Reas. Tutoring
ICBM. New & used. 216 k' · ELECI'RICAL SERVICE GeMral Senlces HOUSE" C 1l G i h local. also packing. 832•2468 ••••••••••••••••••••••• llAMarlne.BI.673-6007 mds. Reasoi:iable. Free CALLS$1.S hr,&SMALL ••••••••••••••••••••••• · a ng am Lowes t l egal rate. Painting. Homes lntr & _ PIAMO _ ests. Call750-6625 JOBS842-8233 HANDYMAN: .Curpen-Girl. FreeestMS.5123 Llc,linsrd. Cal T 11\.!M4. Exterior. Specialty: Poof Seritc., ~-
c.p.nhr Paci·fi'c Co cret.e Lo ,,_ try electrical plumbing BALBOAISLAND Ph847·7278 Apts Lorates 631·2508 •••••••••••••••••••••••f-IMS'RlUC'ftOM ••••••••••••••••••••••• n • w n LL.L.L~ a-.........:c .f . . . 1 . Xlnt Credentials I , , day & full day rates ~ -•n & loors. 847·2787, & vicinity. Empty's , . . Paragon Poo Service. • n Lou s Home RepaU"S, 30 661·2423, or 64S-3257 . Uc3271.36 64S-6974 557-4504 welcome. Reliable, reas. Will do lite mov!ng Fine .Exler. Pamµng by Compl-ete swimming your home. Call Terry rrs ex~. Doors, panel· 673-0968 w /van. Reas. Ra c k R. Sinor. St. lie., U18. Tcy pool maint enance·. 535-7005 1ng, windows, patios, COllh odor ELECTRJCIAN·Prlced NEWPORT 1132-5568, art 3:30 wkdys. me. 836-55SS 24 hrs. 6'7:>-9'796 'w·-,.-..,-111-0-Clt--11--.--
etc. 551·2054 · -..................... rigbt·free estimate on ~ HOME SITI'ING Housecleaning with a ..a.-a.... ~--.1-w ... , largeorsmalljobs. ·When travel calls don't rsonal touch Refs ·--...,......-""'" Prof paint'g & paper tlftlDClel&Repalr •••••••••••••••••••••••
Build it, install it, repair 'tJ.Huf!man & Son,1Gen Ucensed 673--0359 leave your home un· ~2'20or~ · ••••••••••••••••••••••• hanging. \¥Ork guar. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SPARKLING CLEAN
it. Rough & finish ootr. Custom ~ t & protected. Call Newport Nurse consultant 30 >:rs Free est. 536·"383, ca ntry, cabinet. elec. Windows & hobseelean·
carpentry. 551-4820 Add, patios, cabinets. Roon Home Sitting pet care Exper., good references exp. Priv. dut.y w /family sss:4780 & rpelumbing repairs ing. 960-5844, 536-7711 formica.~ewconst.lf.es ••••••••••••••••••••••• plant maint.'Bondable: & affordable prices. oriented care. Cal l . . . Al!minated ceilings ln: · Ccrpet Service & comm!· 645-4644 or F1oor & window cover· Member or Nwpt Bch Free est. 646-7939 2131867·6776 for informa-Painting lnteraor tailed also Exp in all ••••••••••••••••••••••• 548-4541 Lie & bonded · 11 ·1 •:-•· For Free Est Call s · · · · · ings, cork wa t1 es, Chamber of Commerce. uuu "'appt. · J Wallard 631·2251 ' Carpet Man w ill lay t arkett, etc. 27 yr s Refs. avail. 2~ Hr !=~IHG. • . GREG'-day or eve . -·---·-----1 yours or mine. Repairs MARK SILER CONT. lie. /Sales/contr. Cameo 640-7066 Painting & repairs. CluslCled ads sell big 494-0589 . · & cleaning too! Guar New const. Res/comm 'l. lnterlors. 531-3440 -645-7918 items! small Items or . --.-Have somethlng you want work at bigger savings. Rm add, remodel, patio any item. Just call Find what you want 1n to sell? Classified ads do
, Free est, 64~3646 Lie contr. Call 979-4411 Want Ad Results 642-50i8 Want Ads Call 642-5678 Classified Ads 642-5678 642-5678. Daily Pilot ClassiCieds. it well. 642·5678.
MEB>HB.P?
Help yourself to a
Heapin& selection of
Qualified Hopefuls
in the DAILY PILOT
HELP WANTED ADS
Lott&Found 5lOOPWIOftal Senicn 5360 HefpWmhd 7100 Help Wanted 7100 HelpWmdd 7100 Help Wmhd 7100 Help Wanted 7100 HelpW•ted 7100 Help W_.... 7100 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
f'OUND: Walch, on Santa Royalty Li .i:nous in e Banking IOOKKEEPER Clerk; Mature persoo for Cosmetic clerk with Dry cleaning presser, ex· GIMI ~ Fectory
Ana River bike trail, Service. Dally, Hrly, ASSEMBLERS M,LER Assistant. Must be good full lime employment drugstore exp. HB area. per pref'd, but we can Wori&er
1/29. 549-3676aft4. Wee.kly rates. AIS'O', -Trainee "··emblers Ptr e es & S t r with. nu!D~ers, strong nit.es. Apply Ml Food Mr/Mrs Hatch. 847·2563 train. C.M., 751-4357 Sport1'no Goods com• ---------•specials to Las Vegas or ..., """' • v a or our detail, willing to handle Store 1673 Irvine Ave • Found Altered male long San Fran. "Be A King Needed Immediately South Co~t Plaza ofc. some clerical functions. CM Phone 64&-6383 8-4, Counter help, Cull time. Electronics pany. '1:30-4PM, Mon•
haired cat, black & ForADay."Luxury+.in Long&SbortTerm ~~l Kathy Xlntworkingconds. Eit· wkdys. ' ' Kuster's Cleaners. 186 DRAFTSMAN Fri. ., .. ,,. ...... white. Large. 644-8161, our new custom bwlt Assignments ~ per. w/gen'l ledger re· E.16thSt. S48-4243 .,...,....~-. Michelle. Lin co 1 n tow n c a r 3 ShifU Availa~e. California Federal q • d . Irv I n e a re a . Clertc • Real F.Btate, OC .
---------• limousine. 714 /523·8331. Must have own tr p. · Savinp &: Loan 833-9384. airport area. Birch Sl. Counter help, part tame Electro mechanical & Gift Store fG-IMtp
F 0 UN D : B t fl ma I e Ceil Today 556-a 0 3333 Bnstol St, CM Knowledge. basic bit· needed for equip. rental PCB exper. P art ti me. Apply in
Shepherd m!:<. br"'.~ &i!loylntnf & Free. Top Pay. Vac Pay Equal Opport Employer Bookkeeper Full charge kpg 10 Jc'ey. adder IBM store. 10·3PM. 5 days. person at 230 Newport
W1Wht markings, Vl C Preparation I T for Public Accountants. s 1' . w t' . h •United Rent All. CM. Proto Ty~e Assy Cen•~-Dr. (lo-er level) !..: t JI & DI f Id ••••••••••••••••••••••• V c:tor .,..orory BARMAID-C.M. Area, t; ectnc. or wit S4S.0760 • ...,.. -a e a . oom ie • 1....L.. w·--1.......1 7075 SenicH top pay, nights & wltnds. ot:fice. Must have quall· friendly people. com· Must be al) e to read NB. l.o~ Ala m itos, (213 ) -umYV, 754.9497 bfrSPM fymg exp. 646-4330 Cortableofflce. Will train • schematics. ---------~31:483! ••••••••••••••••••••••• Div Walter Kidde & Co 9794533 ~ter help. D~Laney s Gingham Girl houseclng
-·-. Experienced. depend a· 2082 S. E. Bristol . Barmaid -Exp. not nee. BOokkHper /AcCCHlll is. no~ accepting up· [lpaC service nds women P tr. LO ST : White W ~~t ble, m;,iture couple de· StelO NewportBeach Beer .Wine. For bu sy 3 m a n phcallons. 18 or over. lopS.carnec.6'5-5123 !.l1 g h.1 ~.nd T erri.e r sire adult apt. manager (Corner of Bristol& 631.9947 The Keg pediatric ore. w 1somc Cocktai1Walfres$ 280 s. Coas t Hwy , Power S~stemS
Westre . nr CdM HIJ!h position in CM or HB. Campus behind front ore skills. Exper'd. School Laguna GIRL FRIDAY Sehl, Mrs. Lehr, 759·9467 548 3358 Carl'sJ'r) BARMAJOS.Port 17, 13() F /time. 495·1380. Learn an e xciting, -~--------979· 440 Fast growtng maiauC. co.
reward offered. . E. 17th St, CM Ask for glamorous highly paid COUNTER HELP 3131 S. Standcrd SA req's well organized.
AUSTRALIAN manager.646-3666. IOOKICEEPER.F.JC profess. Day /eve Thll & p /tlme. days & ---------• moliva(ed, self st.arter
LOST : Surfboard, Jo~. CM. PROFESSIONAL ASSEMILERS Fast growing national classes. Placement As· eve shifts open al to aHist in cv.stomel'
Wave Tool, blue. Hbr Hi HOUSEKEEPER We will train. Apply 7am BEAUTICIAN r~idential land develop· sist. 714 /751·9194 . or several Orange Co. Taco ESCROW OFRCER service. Typi.ng Is ah or ~:~J.eam. 646.4924 Would like private MacGregor Yacht Corp. CM shop. Fri·Sat. Call ment company head· 213 /428·4653. So. Calif. Bell locations. Call for Progressive independent dictapbone e&per.
---------• housecleaning on re-1631 Placentia, CM aft&, 5464310 quartered in Orange Cocktail Waitresses, an intervw a ppt. bank bas opening for an necess. Call Mary Ann.
LOST: Siamese c at . gular basis. Xlnt local County seeks full chrg Inc., Irvine & Long Bch T A C 0 I E L L exper'd Escrow Officer Modular Fixtures,
female, Beach & Talbert, refs. 497·34~ ASSIST MANAGER Beautician with s trong bkkpr w /construction in· tos,aUons. 542·5786 w /PR ability. 631·22'12.
HB w.a.. w--1........1 ?IOO Resident P /t.J m e •. 2 following, xlnt proposi-dustry exp, capable of . Contact Personnel-Dept ---------. 847-4150 ·-.,. ......... . Days/wk at at'tract1ve tion. HB. 963-3433 completing multiple sets College 01"-~.s . g irl. COUMTER PERSON SANTIAGO IAMK GIRLS NBED
---------•••••••••••••••••••••••• H.B. apt property. Of-of books to T. Bal &: lite Reliable. Late b-se.bld F F h I Sandwich dellvel')', $ -..
Lost: Blk & wht cat, lice & 'mioor maint. BEAUTY OPERATORS. typing. Please send re· dutie~. Mon &. Tues !~~~~ ~Ap~l~ 535 E. lstSt, Tustin days wk, 4 hn day. Own
shorthair fem., wht frnt Accnt/Constr $15K Anza Mgmt, 752·1583. for b u sy shopping sume w /salary history 2·6pm, Wed 2·8 .SOpm. in person at Delaoe.Y 's Equal7~~-=ployer transp. Earn ovr $3.SO
legs. Vic: Avocado / Chief Engr/Maint $'.4K . center, rent space, need to P.O. Box 2237 C.M. $40 wk . No ~moking. Salty Sam's, 630 Lido hr. Call 8a..m,·lpm. Fairview 1/28. Reward, Secy /Construe S12K Asst. Apt Mgr. New adult own following 536·1738 92626 ' ' OWn lransp. Bag Canyon $4B.833a .
631-1330 Ret.ail Mir/Jewel $18K + comJ?lex C.M. Couple. aft SPM or 536-6244 days. area. 64().5335. Park Dr, N.B. ESCROW SECY G'--"-·--Cull time no w /wife to work part BOOKKEEPER, exper-. .,._.1 r IS &--,.,.,,.u........, FOUND· Blk Lab a pprox Irvine Personnel Agency time IEAUTY w do checks, invoices & Con.c rel e' Wo rk e r s . .,..,.. •ery!C. lfoc.,..• Mariners Savings has exper nee.' Male pr~f'd
...i mos, ~~Je._Nr. W. 18th &U~~7thCosta :2~:70 11.S Mgmt 642·1603 Assistant, Will train. handle front desk for Finishers & Form Set-Must be 1 · P' /time. See immed opening for an J ackson & Perkins 6757
& Placentia CM. 6454950 --_ _ _ -A to ot. Manicurist w /following local Manufacturing Co. ters. CosHarotal~ies4~ E. t7lh St, Escrow Secretary in lts lrvine nr Sand Canyon. --u m ive pref'd. FaciaUs t Assist. Send resume to: Ad. No. Call 548-7001 ,.. new Irvine ofc. Min 6 ~
Lo5t: Fem. Persian cat, New Detail Shop needs Richard Ouellette Salon. 27, Daily Pilot, PO Box CONSTRUCTION DELIVERY mo's escrow exper. re·---------
\\'ht w /grey streaks, help. 200 Newport Ctr Dr. 1560. Cos ta Mes a Ca. q'd. Xlnt sal, working GUARDS Reward.497-2393.1/28. Acctng Bkltpng Top wages paid. Engine N.B. 92626 COORDINATOR Messenger/Courier conds & benefits lncld . Ptnoftals SlSO TEMPORARY Steamers, eng painters, Need a auper person, .5 Day wk. P /time am or dental. Apply at,
Register Today to work buffers & polishers, Up· Boat us't 1ervice mgr. BOOTH RENTAL. ireat typing required, pm. Know Org Co. Mariners savings l'\ill Is part-ilme post. 'u•••••••••n•••••••••• on various accounting & holstery shampooers, tor Van Nuys & Santa Beauty a bop, Costa good on busy phone. SJ.S.3149 betwn 8 & lOAM . 1S15 Westdiff Dr, NB lions. Uniforms aup·
Drinking problem! bookkeeping assign· cbeck·out.pick·up&de· Ana area. Call '114/ MesaCallaft6642-8316 Handle cballenge .ofDelivery, Afternoons, OrCalJPersonnelFor =Many employee
Call Alcohol Helpline ments. Work. close to livery. Apply at 540-6555. Speak to Mike diverse responsibllb~y Nwpt Area. Over 18. 7 Appt. '114/642-4000 1t.s. Must bave auto
• 24 hrsaday835·3830 your home. Figure 2009JlarborB1,CM orEddie. IOYS-~IRLS for several.peop.le 1n Days.TheRegister.J\p· EquaJOpporEmployer & phone. Apply In
: PREGNANT? Clerks to Sr. Accoun· 645-1030 Boat builder with broad 12·16yearsofage.Even· construct.ion held. prox P>Ofmo.540-3006 ESCROWOFFICER f:J1:M° Mon· Fri
• Ca ring confidential lants nee<led tbruout AUTO SALESMAN expel" & well-developed ing work. Obtain new Several years ofc e,xp. a • BURNSINT'L
•• rnunsellng & referral. OrangReoberlCo. Hlf' "'-pen'enced.Onenew•-wood-working skills. subscriptions for t he must. Npt. Cntr .Delivery Driver & $15(Nfmo+bonus.Musl SECURJ""" a s LA "' Daily Pilot working with 640-4630, Donna · Production Worker. p to have 5 yrs exper. & be £ • • Abortion, adoption & A te one used. Immediate Sam L. Morse Co. an adult supervh1or. start.Call642·2256. capable or managing 1775E.Cen..-si
t keeping. 500 sec~ ~f8 S<ll opening. Contact Tom· 645-1843 Earn $20 to $30 per week COOKS escrow co. Send resume Anaheim ?· APCARE 547·2563 · am, e my Thompson at Roger c II (2l3) Breakfast, Lunch, din· Dental Ass'• ortho, chr, to Village Real Estate,---------No. Tower. Union Bank Miller Chevrote• 900 So Boat Co. needs exper. or more. a .. HAIRSTYLISTS ~ MICHa 1 E •S In Tb Cl f o .. · bi ti · I t 597 0396 noon to Spm ner. Exper'd. Apply in NB. 4\.ia dys. Ortbo exp. 1~ Garfield Ave, Hun-' * ....._.. * e tyo ranae Coast Hwy .• Laguna com na on Je ·coaer, <2U)498-2473.5pm·9pm: person, Ma Barker's &R.D.A.req.6t2-2626 tingtooBeacb,Ca92646, F/limew/clienteleonly 1: Outcalt Massage 714~103 Beach mold e r . 1 7 4 6 E . Resta 212 1" lh ____ __.__.... ___ , 65% & beoellta. 5'8-3446 ~·10A.M·2AM 731~ 494-.1131546-9967 ~~ar.d AVJ!, SA. CallCollect. St c:811t. ~· 17 Dentai Asst. X·ray, in· Attn: Mrs.Turner. ~.· C.J.& .... I-~ ACCOUMTAMT ..........,.,., •CANVASSER• · · · surance, to be trained EXEC. SECRETARY Hairstyliat with atroni
J ...-• _-Boat Manufacturer $5Hr+Bonus 5:30·8:30 COOK, •Experienced . for office management. Part or C/tlme. Busy followiJag. xlnt Pl'OPCl91·
I 1815So.E1Cam1DoR.eal SICICOUMTRY AVON p.m. Call 5·8 p .m. Fulltlme, days. 673--0l2Cl Keclic-1~;>~· ofcs near oc Airport. tion.HB9D-303 . "'--Cl t.e fl'ull•U Staff accountant. fRICSON YACHTS -2881 ' ,,.... ......,. : ._..Fore::. 0:z.'129s c. degreed 2 yrs ex per., 'I\me on b~, tlrecl of .....,.. •OI' a_.. 752Q.377 HAND WOHKEB, for aa.O ---~-----1 major corporation No. staying at home? Meet Has the following full· car Wasb Ca1bler, Nwptt---------c DISHWASHER, mature EXECUTIVE SEC,. klft. G~ or pl. EQer, RELA.XINGM~GE Calif. Anoe Stromberg people, make money & time openinp for ex· & Laguna Area.. Please COOKS AND penoo, f/time &s p/tlme t. of the ard pref.Call OU>-...CU ~ BobJames-LlcKasseur Executive Search, 56'1 bave fun. Become an per'd help. Wages based call6'4-4460 n eeded, also other or aim. Bo 'ti---------OuteallM, ... filll San Nicholas Dr, NB. AVON representative. onexper. • COUM'l'a cafeteria help needed. ~g,.~;· f:=n~~ct BOI'EL 1 640-2600 For more information AMISH LIHI cashier lmmed. employ. PERSONNEL San Clem.'~ dependable, efficient; Tltt leahfrY Hohl
t•. MASSAGE ¥tties lredOf' call ~700. or Zenith CAIU'IMTllS ~a!~!r:.0&tf~~~ DOG GROOMER Pleasant ofc & phone Jsnow-k>oldni for FIGUll MODELS Ce~ed. r !me. Mesa 7·1.359. • CA.llMET SHOP 833-3105 Mate or female. full Ex Pe r , d • 1 2 5 ,,, personality, 1ood typing qu;illfled peop1e tn ESCORTS Verde Conv. Hosp, 661 ASSIMILIRS Ume nights. 18 or over. Broadw•Y Costa Mesa. & S/H skills. Lrg co., the following areaa:
.. OVTCALL OMLY Center St. CM 548-SSSS. ~t~~ ~.a T~:~1 HARDWARE ?r:~~s~~b~l:~~~~ ~~~ ~~{~;;~: DOMESl'IC gt:tn ~; e~:~ e~~ eo~!~e ~J~lnl
631·3' I I AmblUoua CoUl>le Wanted Fri, 8-5, your home or IMSTALLRS area. Transp provided, day. Live-in, Ute coot •g re· classified ad #MIO. Dally shifts. Good entJy level
DANCEOFFUN toman~eaamaUbwst-mine.546-8594 IMGtMIMIM frombuainess.~ q'd.Calllfel4l'1548-5533 Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, posltlon into hotel in·
Btflnudegirlsdance& Del9P me.Wlllnotln·Bab.,1ltter, Mature nr.~SIMTOUCCUH<s, Child Slttu needed CARL'SJR. DRAPERYWORKER CostaMesa,Callf.92:626 d"5~Hr•·UDITOI
p session. lOAJrl to t.erfere wtyour .P!'Nent ~wanted wbo can " .. L ..... -U llflsp.plenontost~w/2 19512BeacbBlfd Exp. women to pleat, ~Pactagen,Yertt ......, A
I M Moo&t 12PM to job. llust be willing to love my 22 mo old boy 2 · DIT-s boys aget 8 " 11 trom Hunt.lngtoo Beach. CA mart, tact or hem. raises. Call 548-5125.1$37 NCR 42llO or 250 exper. i, 8PM sun. 625 k Euclid, learn. Mr. Hall, 6'2·l634. morna /Wk My home. F'!ll baeflt.s, m~lcat, 3:»6pm Mon·!'ri. Also, 8G-1M3 Monrovia Ave, NB :A: for complete room t.v.ri~!"Ms~O·'"'W/" ... ~ntbony •a Pier 2 . Quaint CdK setUDg " dental, optical Phase lite hstpn!.;.!!,deftr Coob Portera le Dis· f ~-.-..-•--&
., ·~"" ....._. " AU N~· t lt.1.li clean WTOWldiii~ Out. apply in person at School area. --a: h -1 -• D """ it DRIVERS-MOVING or .--_...... .... -· DISK Cl.Ill -... rr-~ ml exc I 1 • "-·-'tv Offt--. • _,!!~· aiJn :!.!...8 bouseb.old doodl. E"· S1• 11 ... 1 . U•A&VIQU nureat.&diac:otbequtls door type pre 'd . No ._.u.n.., ... --........ Apply ,,.,.~ d 1 • 1 1 .. llotel exper. pref'd, -..a..-..-M· lnlervle wloc for tbe smoken pla si.as br. lllCSOM,ACHTS CIVIL EA lneen.n, de· 'Iba Ba,-\'enow House: Ptr' «?0 y. C aaa c»call Bula. a.2'41 hn Must be av.U. to wort ~ ••• followln1 poalttons: 6'13-2521 193l~Ave S.A. alperµk~man El 3Q10 Barber Blvd. CK driven lie. 768-Cl843 per day. $1.10 ~ hr. Yal'Ylnaahift.s. , For.._,_ of ltl coob, diabwu!Mn, s>U· -Ea• lei ' per. bl street Is iiad.loi E.O.E. M(I'. . Dnig Is eo.metic Cler.Ir, AppScblooy ltoDJrrinet•trt. et,n2lfl~1 We olf• fllll beaefttl· s.ntqallOnnteOo. tiymanor-terbuman, BAB&.;Nu. -mo. 0 .., ..... Call~ P\111 ,lt1me. Expe d " .,. pactue&competltive "'.· 135-m,a t•nltora, bu• boys, bof,boM-Oo .... ~ !"-~.;!!' Boat Manufacturers · .,........ or P r · Alton Ave. lntne (714) salary ranges. f •. old v •-+It Tb.... 1...o1.a.~y $.......,.. M. 0 U 1 t OD P l 8 S a rr.o • .-• • -i •• 9_ p
!-. artenden, boatess, ol • -nvr CIVIL ra..v c I Pbarmac7, LaJUfta ............,.,, ~,,..,ill enoo ~~ •SANDY·s* caabler, 4'_oorme,D, WmJbome.~ SUPllVISOR .......... G ~l'J ontro Hills, Mr. Dre1ru1 , F.4\lal()ppol'Em11toyer ToPCll'llGIUMIOIOce
., Ouu.llMaaaaie cocktail waitress s, Babyt itter oeedeel rny Quallb' Plant. benefits, DISl•M• "lark JyplS· t 71'/168-378'. Ji\all tlme atoclt/cuhier. 9~~u:;a~~~ . : m.ecm walten;waitresa•.Full bome 1-tPM Mon·Frt, 3 working conda. Eaper'd ln ~ divjalon ll Mutt be able to work lllOO Mac:Arttlw-
l •part Umo avail. Apply chikt 'eau~ Bob Walahaw work A~.,.Y 1A ~· nites " wkods. J\pply .. +"'tn11JU,. EB• In penon Feb. 8, 9, 10, 10 . Erlcton Yachts M ......_ D·" Pi'.... b Shoe M It • ~ Ed Im. 71U177 »nc. .. ·~ • a lm at 102 N. Babysitter fo.r scll1 age '114/540oo8001 to r. eat.es, • .,.. ..u1 .._ •• an $162 DAY ar e., ...,"" · Certi&ed ......... B ay 1 , e Dr. N B boy i :ao-7PM. 3 dys wk, Bein, William Ftoet fl. opening fo:r a copy con· • per 1~8'1=er~A~ve~·::-• :a:e:·:::::-::-leF.q~wal~~Oppor~~E~m!!!!!~!!!ye~r HoaMC.U.·B>'"PPL <tormerly Duttys) We Garfield• Beach ara, AlllOC •• 1401 Quall S&,· trol oleri-~h\. Must 'Furniture retinl1ber, ~ . ..... :: loc8!tc:!o of a ml 90GJLt lotlU4 rfwd•... N.& -:,:.:::-:c:.::ib 1'hat'•1!:';oupay aome u p. requlred. IBouaeteeper /SIU•t: ~FOXYLADY a.,c:'ide Dr'.~·p~~.nlll~Y= v:;=~~:llu .. ~ t ·~ =·.t':*=c:! 3>~acl ~.S.S.'1895 ~~~:o~ ,, a.tell..... Rubtol. Look fw AD• c.M. hm. i IDOi . I ~·..... ,.__,'.rs_, Of --• uoaUOD relief on GEN£RAL OFFICE .. ~· n1-aM1 ~ ._, .. fie ....,. RMI "z' • m ~m:,-~ ~ ta1epbone w• -c1ea1r1. n••LJ Pl' 10T =·· f!~; =:·lb..;;~.--~-.-,.-~-!3---.~,.,c.1 iluHI• .,, A p A Jt., II s HT ~tteJr/UYe-Ja: OoT· Good IWttnl ... ..,,. • . --OppabmltJ rar ad•an-UN I.I --. .. me ........ Call 2. .. •••• ii-'111'1111~ ........... v .. •t14 .. 11ANAon.BMtrec1c.oq. ,,. ... tJP•. 1111ata11e esnp1oyee llmeflts. An-••.•t · ---. Ex_,.i C!Om· ~f'IMlllCE -.,,. llrlvi.ot uceue
1 ~~~--....-a• to m1Dat• Coeta womaatocareforln iyatlt:DB&nucaltd.. ~IT ,_,......._ <KAii P!!,aftJftt7Wall Beach Ai.a. ..-.
... oolt ,._, at.¥• •• 10 uDit bG.lldln1 old llqf. Some~~· JntDe. Ace"WiAJ ••oet. ,o. r i.-............... '"-'-111£CTORY GBmAL OMCI ,...;•~tt.53 _____ _ • --""..!.".7 , ~. ,r 1DMI' a.U eoe•talto(! ... ctutMI. Oft room,........ " tr.a ,.. .,. __ ......... J u ......... rt · "'1f2~!!!!~~~,,....,::!;:.-·.:.:--'~ .. ~c..::JNo chUdra, 110 pet.a. ~Ee11tah.~ Boat meebaalc ateclod 41doc.Uoo. ~d. L,...., ~call ,_._.,,. ~· N.B.•area.
J ~.1apootioi1or •O • ~'~~77· ~ ~.v:~.:~c!it~~ ~::Ton ct~i~~ ~e:~: 06n110W1 1n1t~~~!f.!a ~.:!.,:.U:0~0
~!~cw~m to nf.~.J2 Apt_ Kaucer, co&&t>le ft1 1 ~ 5'CM5li5. ~ to Mlb Con2eelat at.m.cspllert I 1
• 64.2-1'71 needs • r••P· penon to ~ ~ ,.,.. • l~ t•fJiMd..r.tJNd>for ts utt lu.LU.J or Eddie. ... •lnfbntf\ta. ~COAST Wlll'k In tho ore. V~uiel)' Housekeeper wiLb ,e.Jo fof
.ateil. " ---,,'6ak ooinplo Iii Oo.ta 1 fW1 Umt 1 put-time -, < r Cnuner El9d..r'Onlc::s D••i y P&Ot ot duties. txper. belpM. dotall wanted 1 "4l a ..... , ....... ~li6o 1111Ha. s~ .. , tno. cont.act 'Mr. cadi IFYOU ; 112GlDa1.mlerAv~ mw Ba SL but wm train. Call weektoct .. nflla..clry. ~ .. ~:;;;; ....... ~ ...... ~ ..,..., No lll~J ' -..U. b&v• 1 HritCAt to Offer Cit = ODDar &m~er eo.aa .!.. Vqu dcm"t Deed a IUD ~ Bmy,.su-1319• ~. rtll· IMM>MI
n; E:]:C:.'*'f~M.!~~~~ .. ~~-= =,=r..-=-~lt«:~J;r,;~f.'1:': ct.war.::'i.fi itar~!,L'~ ~~l1 1 =:..!~•£f:.T; ~~.fl~;: c\1:1rfr~: =~~!'!,-= ·' .-ll.ubl~ fU, tt w.11 -Call JfOW, Aa Alf\tlUUM adloo ~ 5lidkia • • ,• ~ O"l"14o ~ 1 , • en,~ 1 ~ ·~.P io to at.or. n1ultal • IOD, P'ft ,.~. '9eUt..
• ---I l>'i'lfr 11..-: l' .. ". ;. L flloDllQ.llTt,; ~· W.a.lbN.H.B • .,,.,Q' 'I \'J __ , .. ---\ ~ ..,.~ ... 1. ---· ---. ~ t. ..
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• ~~!='!! ..... ?!.~! ~~~:! ..... ?!.~0 ~~-~-~.~ ..... ?!~ ~~~ ..... ?!!~ ~!.~'.~ .. -~!~ ~~~~:! ..... ?!!~ Friday, FebtuaryS, tt78 DAILV'tlOT ••
PIXAHSWB SHY .w .. , 1005 fwwHwt 1050 ,_wltwe IOM ~r MAT\; R £ W 0 at A 'd FuU p /t Product.Joo SIC.llTilY SOLDE.RER'S ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••-••• LOOklMG FOii v 1ume tQ welcom Ex~aU5..:JoU WB.D/MITAL To work w{lo m mt. Requires min. 2 yra ... .....__ ~"TOREWIDESALl: Divorce. Must Hll. New
MS. GOOOIAl7 newcomeri & contac WOiJUHG/ Xlnt aecretarl~ 11t1f1s a ~rina & wl~I exp. ""'19UI SAU New" I.lied rum. appl't, llvlnl room 1rouplo1.
men:baot.1. P'leioblo hn must. Previoua ex on .-. .. ut lo point soiderina Feb 4th ti 5th Uam~pm. misc. Wilson'• Baraaln Call only If you ap· ~~orm ! ndutt,_!! !11 a c,!,!: Need car, lite lyplni PBX OPERATORS MAIM1'1M4MCI a corporate level S:iu-ol rotary awilc~e1. Not We QUIT. Pantutlc Nook 54.$ & 814 W. 19th, precla~ expe.aslve hlCh
_., -541-3095. SUPBYISOll bl s n l 1 PCB. Some cabling exp prices. Reduced ~ • CM. 64.M930 ~ 54 S2iS3 uallty bi sh i tyle homemaker, mU!t also All Boardl Martaeexper. a plus. ~e:P%e, beJ°p1~c a • helpful. Cole lruitrument MORE! ~umit~'. WW sell f0t ~
be able to care & help 11 Mechanic needed w/ow Lone & abort term U · Qual1typla.nt, benefits, STACOSWITCH iHC Corp.642-8080. E.O.E. C•t•• a., ......... S~ ft. lon1 cuatom COit 8T5-0l98
year old bo Y w ll h tools & exp. on Datsun alenments. Holiday & . wortt1.n1condit1om. ..-.. ·"er"~ta M~a 2131 Newport It, ~~tbddemdulUppolret_.ab,!.~ .. rba,r . t...a... IOSS studies. Must drive. Toyota.~ labor. Exp. vac pay lf0$pltalizaUon BobWalabaw ~ ...... 5 9 .......,30 "'0 st,,..,.u ....... ~•-I( C.M. .. , ...... ,., • -
Some travel 4t eventual· only need apply. avail Ericsoo Yachts 4 • 41 -...,.. -~ track fs turntable-all are ..... ••••••••••••••••••
ly may work into IJve in 642-2436 ·!~ 7141540-8001 Equal Oppor Employer For a mall electronic but ll· ln1 . pl u 1 ·two Na v aj 0 r u a 1 •1 e.
poailloo. Ref!>. please. ~ • manul .• co. Exper. tn custom wr()Ulbt ltoo bar ~-··• .. we.tern AuUques For appt. plellSfl phone MECHANICAL shipping & receiving de· I Day Onlvll stools Sharp• 581 7443 ..u\IWI 675-37119 or 675-9170 Lv ASSEMBLER rro.c .... Wcwtl.... slrable. Req'a good jg•• . . . ' OallCl')'. 31808 Camloo
Msgtrneedbe. RCYI'ARYSWITCHES · Male/Fem. Aluminum SECRETARIES handwriting & aptitude Antique Deal r & **I BUY** ~popls.~an1~San Juan Have immed. openings 3141 C..... Drive FUmiture manul. Jobs for working w /figures. Decorator's Parkina Lot .... .,.,_. __,, ---------1 In our final assembly 54M741 avail lo metal shop, lac-& TYPISTS STACOSWITCH IMC Sale. All at trices you'll Good used Furniture & HOUSEWIVES!! dept. Requires goo (Acroes From Ing, & final assembly. 1139BalterCosta Mesa like. Sun Fe 5th, 10 AM AppUanc~~R I wlll l"l.lrn., Clotbes.,Chhl b7 hand dexterity. Min Seek temporary employ· 549•3041 to' PM. 171 Riverside aellorSELLforYou. Hems, Toya, na, T1nd of Yrs e x P . in s ma l Orange Co. Airport) Slar\ina rat.e $3.37, pro-ment where we make it Ave, NB. (Behind the MASTIAS AUCTION Books, Record~, Nu
mechanical assembly. EqualOppor Employer greu to $UO hr ln 8 wonhyourwhlle. EqualOpp0r Employer Newport &h P01St ore.) 6 4 6 I 6 I 6 & Chromecraft din' eet. tbushold Drwl91ry? ~~~~~~~~~I Ibo's. Higher starting • sat 9.s. 1131 ·Port Work temporary & Cole Instrument Corp.= tale if exper'd. Immed TOP JOI, IJJ-9625 Wheeler, NB., Harbor
make xlra money. 642-8080. E.O.E. PER~MB. openings. Tbio·Llne TOP,AY TECHNICIAN For Sale: Ir& table, 6 View.
Tralftff Asselllblen MEDICAL RECEPT. Our growing agency Manufacturing, Santa You'reYourOwDBoss Audio Exper, apply chain, b~fet & china mrortable hl1hback ....;.....;,._ ______ _
Pedlen Exper'd front & back ~e~~~Y~•e'!1;1o;'::~i Ana. 9'19.0l3t. . ~Q~ o t f ice • ~~~~ ~:_1~~ & =· ~~ac sheU. f:,~~.oc';~t:~ ~~~· 1i:!b«.S::u~~ !i:~
Long & short term as-ofc. Secy & typing skills. counselor in private P,llime Eves &Sa~. Earn 0 overload npp Bike• Misc ~uip.
s lgnments. Holiday & CaU 64G-4650. employment agency. ~S7 per hr. talung or-TB.EPHOHE SALES RolJ.top desk, 5ft. wide, S CASH PAID 9.5 Sat Ir Sun. 5a1 vac pay. .. ... _..it _ _. R---61-'st PoslCion In friendly ofc de rs /delivery. Must 557.006 I Tired of the routine? Roll, Oak, refin. Fine For gd used ,rum, anti· Hamilton St. CM Bet llos 1 ta Ii za lion ~~ ~· .... " w trelued atmosphere. have dependable car & . This job is ror you! cond. $1100 /beat ofr. ques & clr TV s, i57-8133 Hatbor & Pomona PoSillon avail, Laguna Call Carry• 540·6055. phone. Fuller BrWib Co. 3723 Btreh St, NB. Call Us Now At I .:::::64S-0460::.:::::= ______ ._ _______ -I
area. will train. l\Jui.t Coastal Personnel Aaen· 7S4-&47l. 833.,095 r Dlabwaaber, $75. Old
type SSWPM. send re· CY """"Harbo CM A"'mc" 1010 5PCPLAYPEN Secretary deak, s um e to Class ified ,c.•-r, Reat EAltat.eSales People Secretary TIME-UFE ......... •••••••••••••• (2 )8'SOFAS, inahosanl., $1$.
ll41C..,...oriu
54'94741
(Across From
Orange Co. Airport>
F,qual Oppor Employer
Ad1134. Daily Pilot, POPel"IOl'ltowork tnanllque wanted. Up to 90 /lO"'o EXEC.SECRETARY LIBRARIES FRGHT DAMAGED (l>LOVESEAT . Walerbed rame &
BOX 1560. Costa Mesa, shop on commis sion comm. split. Nwpt Bch The Jolly Roger, Inc. has Equal Opp Emplyr m/( H<Yl'POlNT SALE. 3308 2 OTl'OMANS m•tL, $25. More. 2S26
Ca 92626. basis. 646-3020 or 548·H18 631-0000 an opening for an ex-•TELEPHONE• W. Warner nr Harbor, SACRIFICE Cameste. C.M. S56-08N
MEDICAL RECE:PT evenings. Receptionist Secretary, per'd secretary lo report Sal.+ Extu Gd Bonus Santa Ana. 979-292l ONLY "488 Furnilure, ca bin eta,
lmmed. opening. Start Peraoonel·Productlon Ya c b t Brokerage • to the Vice Pres-Finance Call5pm.Spm 839·2861 CASH PAID 3PC ROOM GRoUP• lockers. dog house,
ti5(). Benefits. Npt Sch trainee, Westaail Corp. weekends, typing, front & Adm in i s tr at ion· For Wahr /Dryn /Ref rig 5PC BEDROOM pmes, lamps, clothes &
"'-11"'41035 '---1m-.... ope-'-gfora ofcappear.Pboneforin· Out.standingsb&typing fELLER, Savings & worldn·gornot957-81.33 UVl"'GRM more. 11298 Santa area . .,... '". ~r :i~at~d, hard ter vlew 673·8511. 2122 skills are req'd for this Loan. full time, exper.1----=='-------1 7PC n Joana na Clr. p , y .
HSKPaJCHAUF. Microblologiat, r ecent working lndivldual with Newport Blvd, N.B. pos. Xlnt working conds pref'd, caU Mrs. May Kenmore beayy duty SPC DJNET1'£ (Mag 0 oli a. s.
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Live In, Ea11y work. 21·50 grad pref'd. good typlol & oraanbed & benefit package wblcb 549-9141 for appointment. washer & dryer white, ~88 . Talbert) ·Saturday Fe).
yrs. Pvt rm/ba, board, •645·2111* skills. Background In RECEPTIOMIST lnchxles various group Ibeater, ushers & snack works great. 493-8163 4 DRAWER CHEST $18. _4_tb _______ _ spending money, cred. pe rsonnel extremely C&.ERJCTYPIST lnsur. benefits & profit Walnutnoiah
cards.646-8301,Mr.Bell MOTHER'SHELPER helpful good startin g Good co. benefits. Sal s haring. Sal com· bar.Needemployment.Waaher/dryer, xlat Cwflaf'wwlt••· GIANTGARAGESALE• ---------1 Collc~c girl or woman to position ror person will· start.I at $$50 per mo. mensurate w /exper. Ap· Apply In person. 7·9PM concl. CM Edison H.S. park:hla Jot. Jlskpr ror Rel. lady. be With 3 sml children. . llh d Call644-4242. ply In persop, 8-5pm, Warner Drive Inn, 7361 645-2111 646-6303 1165 ......... IL eorn,r or Magnoli~ & Perm P tr. have car. non· l>lly time as needed, my mg to grow w expan · Mon -Fri. 17042 Gillette Warner Ave., HB Must or 645-61 II AUanta, H.B. Sat 9AM· smkr.642·84~645·068!._ home.Aft4,645·2293 ~~co. Call 7l4/549-97H Rcceptlonls.t , busy Ave, Irvine. bel8.E.O.B. JU(rigerator, Sl<IO. . I~~~~~~~~~ 4PM Sponsored by the
----· G.P./0 .8. office. Must row Truck Driveri; ex· Stainless steel ledger: Edison HS Boost.er Club. IC you're not lnkan~ home NC' Lathe Operator <2 l, PhcMM Schedulers have some exp. meeting per'd Top pay Apply type 4 bole sink w /brand Antq. Din. rm set w /6
S200 l)(:r week Call Mc. TPp !>alary, good pos1· public & bookkeeping. _.,, G&W.Towi·ng 1·000· lrvi·ne' new faucets, 33x22 chrs. 1 lear Walnut. Gd Upnght Freeter, dinette
We ha ve ei. tab . lion 754·1234 1~' Olpehninpgs. Unique Age 2S·~. Call 644·5S6C S.Cs,G.O.,L~s Ave NB"'"·':,c., $50. Sofa, 74", $60. cond. ~.846-0291 set. oxygen .. ~ acethtylenefil customers wa1tan~ to be ~e a t r 0 gr a m · days. Eves. 673·7646 Accnt, Afa CCMKtr • uu. ~ 67J.29J8 • taoka. Le \QA wl e ., ..... ved. Routes avail in H•w~ Delivery P /time. Day or Even-Employers ay All F,._ n.: M"•' ••U New d 5c:• "'371 6 '5 ""' -r-r-· · Need t' 1 ...... ., l'rainee/()per Vitamin en· &nvon:e. .... • .,.. · . raw.era. .-·v "4 ll. B. Fuller Brush Co. Mature resp. adult for mgs. me icu ous, Restaurant. piua in Cdft1 . Liz Reinders Agency capsulallon machine. Washer & dryer stack, chrome & &lass dln1ng Pre11do Dr. CM Bel
754-6471. early AM deliv. Must motivated lndiv1duals. needs help for gen'I 4020Blrcb.St.e104 Days. F{lime. English $150. Washer & roomsetwtvelvetcov· Newport&Faitvlew
have tran.840·2756. Gd ben~ita. Health Ex· work, pl lime eves. NewportBeach 833-8190 8,..altl.,., apply 8-lOAM matchJna dryer $80 ea eredchain.675-0898 . _.._ Jn.surance·Group ltealth . amlnet1cs, N.B. (714) 6'T.H121,673-4647 CallforAppt/&.tab '6S M,...F Li.,.wil.. L ._ ,. .~ Dsbwsbr $80 . Trash Boat stuff, line, H'laAn••
Oaims Examaner. Exp Nurse Aide. must bave 540-744.2. · · n co a .... , .. 1-compactor $80. 646-5848 Walnut Medlt lbl w /6Chn abackles, winclJ. in· at least l yr. F /\lme/P /· car. 8:30a-2:30p, $3 hr. Newport Blvd. CM . ln walnut & bile naugb, 1 vert.or, hshJd m,.. furn.
t ime/Homewor'k Sal N.8.area.645-3953 Plants. Exp person for ~R;:tryHohl SICRETARYft.e9al GE Refrigerator, white, leaf, very gd cond. bed. wshr, pog, disbe5,
open. 549-1767. . HURSESAIDES r1
1
:: ~ho.:~g~a~r:ln~~~ ls now ookfngfor Newport.._. used 9 rnq. $175. 500 St. $250/ofr. 645·7857 aft hardware, tools, 3 fami-
ffi r TRAVEL Andrews Rd. N.B. Spm. ly sale. Sat/Sun 219 JNSURANC E. N ewprt 11·7 F /time. 3-lJ P {time. 67>5657 qualified people in The corporate o ce o a Palmer CM COO Santa
Bch agency has open1og Will tram. Lido Conv. tbefollowlng areas: leading NYSE corpora· • AilteffoR 1015 c-cJt I foot to.g Ana St.)
for ambitious pe rson Center, 1555 Supel'tor COOIC tion has an opportunity AGENT ••••••••••••••••••••••• $75673-7971 ...;..;;;;~....;,..,;,. _____ _ w1comm'I rating backr· Ave,NB.646-7764. Plastics Graveyard. Able to han foralegalsecretarywith Sat & Sun lM. Bat;y
ground t.o learn agenry -MOLDIMG MACHINE die complet.e coffee sboi: 1 to 3 yrs of corporate PUBUC FURNITURE Factory Dirttt Pine Liv· clothes, cloth 'g, bkti,
business. Training 11u~•· NURSES AIDES OPERATORS menu. legal exper. to work in *AUCTION* ing Rm FUrniture. See it maaHinea, paperbclts, t1on w1oppor. to grow. 7·3&3-11.Exper.pref'd Further expans ion CASHtERC,:OSTESS it's Newport Beach law Experietteed made.Cal1979·3128 bric a brae, Scouting
Call Sue Townsend, Will train. Mesa Verde creates perm. openings Afternoon 5 'ft avai·I. for dept. Xlnt ty..ping & Employee Benefits f......1.L.. 7 30 PM c amping & sports 9900 Co u 661 c t shortfiand skills essen Beautiful Location _.., : French Provincial Head· · t 1 r b15 nv. n.oi;p, en er for exper'd & trainee person with cashier· I CDrfnrt Wl'leoftlel board for double bed + equ1pmn ' g asswa e, St. CM molding machine oprs on l h t tial. For appt. please cal Start Now -rec'ds & cassettes, furn, JANJTORJAL. re<;p man rt>g ster & os ess exper Ca'rolyn Eadie REPOS frame $35. 53@161\JO ot.h' r e11uired for Janitor HURSESAIDES swing shift (3PM-11PM>. in our Ga ze b c AMCORDIHC. 675-7944 ESTATE file cabnt, N mg over
.1 . Our training & merit re· Restaurant. 0 S GNlti ENT POOL Table, l " Slate $100. 2869 Ballow Lo, duties, eves. 5PM t• Xlnt benefits Including vue procedures assure PURcu.1.s111..1G ... GT l714J640.lt00 C NI top 3'5-X6'2" solid bit MesadelMar.C.M. lAM. Laguna Hills are11 . · k 1 B y · nA " ~ Lovely sora, lovcseat, • ~ 3321 sic eave . a v iew rapid advancement for hide-a -beds, occasio~al W/cues, rack, balls & Dan. snodern walnut Conv., 2055 Tbunn Ave, a.II employees who have Food & beverage exper. Secretaryto$10,000. ·1s wall hanaer ~395
JANITOR CM 642-~ the basic abllJty & de· req'd with background 111 ADMIM. ASSIST. JYPI TS chrs, rockers, coffee & 673-0538 • • . rum: llv rm, din rm,
sire. Good pay + night inventory control. Da) Animal hospital. Person· end tbls, stereo, TV's, stereo, bedding, mlac. PartUme,2 hrevenan~.Officegirl shift bonus, paid med, boors. nel&Management.N.B. lamps, 'pictures, Game or dinette tbl Mcw'i.u· ao Junk. lOlll
S3 J>et' hr. No exper nee. Permanent P(r • Npt life & dental insur. + Weofferfullbene~~s ReplytoClassifledadno. Dkf ... jStat bookl?~ses, -.dreuers, w/leaves. 4 Uphol chnt, Edye, lm.968-1100
Nr Harbor & Warner. Bch Investment firm profitsharing. packaee&compelillve 142 C/O Daily PiloL., PO flMExK. chests, a'rmoire;s, bdrm lite Mahog. Streffed HUNT 1 NG T 0 N
CallcoUect,213/282·2022 needs alert, bright & CIMCO salaryranges BoxlS60C<»taMeu ea Rtpro&TedlM al sets, desk, dinettes, finish. Rosewood HARBOUR SWIM
Landscai>e Ir Main· ~~~;:~~ ::J~0: 265 Briggs, Costa Mesa T:_r=.foo~ce 926218 ' c r f f.ri eerator •l k:g Etagere & coffee tbl. TEAM·Glaut Garase
t.enance Aaslst. ,Mature, some nexibWty in hrs. 1 BlkS. of Baker&. 9am-"ttpm or lpm~ SECRETARY iob open· Work temporary & make ~ "r~~~~~· :mcse ~b~: 675-5415 , Sale, Harboc" View Sehl -
' resp .• exper d who Ca11Llndaat645·5141 Off Redhill Mooday&hnaPriday ing,callforappoinlmenl "tnt" monay. Loo~~ .PLUS..LO'l'S OF NICE Solabed, SJmmoos queen parlrln1 lot. 4343 ~=~i:;:.e~5~~taa~~ 546-4460 18100 MacArttlur 644-9810 short term assignments. MISC. Beauty Rest.Jbttress. Pickwick Circle H.B.
5pm or au day Sund~ OPTICAL lm.t 752-8777 Secretary for Methodist ~~~1:1~!'1i~at~~~ :~:~ SAVE SA VE SA VE Shiney wlute vinyl ~-S.L eAK.JPM.
Techn•1c·ians Pre-School Teachers EQual()pporEmployer Church pre.fichool. 9AM· avail. We honor BofA, MC. 63l--0688 YARD SALE. Sat/Son.
Landscape conatruct.Jon, needed Banbury Cross 3PM Mon-Fri. 644-0740 Cashier's Checks & Jb""lal bed excel cond. Feb 4/5, 10 lo"-Furn & custm residential. plant Exper'd conscientious Pre-School, 16761 View CASH. No personal S1.25. Stereo cabinet 545. misc. 477 E. Broadway,
& sprinkler ex per pref'd. person needed lo set up & Point.IA Hntg Bch. Ex· Reat.auranl Seael• r fTYDbt checks PLEASE! F~ Reel in er c b r 12 o. CM. 540-5538 operate production-type per. necessary. 847-5284 POT WASHEil Strong typing & sb. App· ·1 bl Items sul>Ject _,;,_ _______ _
Landscape maintenance, optical fabricaUon equip. & IUSIOY ly in penoo to Mr. 3841 C 11 f us Drhe ::,";1r!a~. S3l·2l26 MA.UU SINKS
exp. preferred, 40 hr ~::.~~~;:,~~~n':!~on°~~ 18&0ver Fuentes, Robert Bein, 546-4741 MASTERSAUCTIOM Couch $'.15, loveseat $50, Yard Sale. 26S RoeaLb. ~eek, co. benefits. So. send resume lo ; Pat PRESSER IA.RM.AID William Frost & Assoc., (Across From 207~Newport BJvdCM orbothfor $100. _CM~-------
Coast Plaza. C a ll Wagner Teledyne PAIT·TIMIE 21or0ver 1401Quai1St.N.B. OrangeCo.Alrport) 833-9625 646-11686 493-7123 Sat/SUD all day.~ ••
54&-6682 Camera Systems <Op· For Men's Clothing Stuft N~e Restaurant Secretary /bookkeeper, 1 Equal Oppor Employer llJtple tbl It 4 chrs $150. ~~ frames, many
LAUNDROMAT, part tical Products Di~.) 131 Storeln 548-7418· girl ofc. Boating Sm. Walnut deslt $50. Id item1. sports
time, counter & N.StbAve.,Arcadia.Ca. Faablonlalood knowledge h elpful. Wailer e ---'e ed Fri lk:yde5 102 Cbst of drwrs $7S equip.&mucbmore.113
wash/fold help, 675·0334 , 91006. E.O.E. Prefer Man. Salary commensurate Su • x.,.., f nc ~ t • ••••••••••••••••••••••• S-.13J4 Dahlia, CDM 675-8838
673·1000 AT EASE ~EJAIL w/ablllty. Westport n. eves. or pnvae USEDBIKES
CLERKS Marine, 124 Tustin, N.B. club. 673-3Sl5 Recood. Buy, sell, trade. YCJCll Ste~ ORDERUES CallTallorShopMgr. 714/664520 Waitress, P/I', over 18, Cycle & Co, 2488 Perm. p/tlme. probate Xlnt benefits including 644-5070 Angie's Piua, 25260 La Newport Blvd. C.M. exper. U nder 40 . sick leave. Bayview SECRETARY Paz Rd. Laguna Hills. 642-7910
673-7120. Conv., 2055 Tburln Ave, UTOTIM . 1 Week each mo. & 352S ------------------1 CM642·3S05. Pressman, AB Dick. Ex· C.."'"'9ceMar .. ts sometimes more . 581' NEWOLDSTOCK
LEGAL SECRETAR~· PACKAGING CLERK per'd only. Good io· Help Wanted Transcribe machinedic· WARD Cl.ERK Complete sprin_g forks Briabl, d.lll1enl, exper d F 11 1 . . dependent shop w /pay ,· l.6t,2nd&3rdShifta talion. typing etc. Exper'd. Mesa Verde rorScbwtnncndsen $75. Pe rs on a s I e a d hi~ • t dmeet 0 PW4:JnJantgalin lncenll ves. 644·8233, Noexper. req'd. We train Orange Airport Area. Conv. Hosp, 66! Center Some parts also avail. secretary taut /bkkpr 6 Pg P · 1 r n. 493-2010 those hired Applicant! 1 b Jpful 64.5-5759 for actJve Newport Ctr Appl>: .in 1>4:rson, 18480 eves. apply at Ufotem Sloref c°~iM::~~· B:•dley: St.CMS48·558S. _;_;_;_ _______ 1 Lawoffice.Goodaalary, Bandiher 9rcle, F.V., Prtnt.lngCollaler,p/thne. locatedat: ~.EOE. WOMAN over 40 , Custom Stroker mono
boom avail. Testlng comerofEllas.S63·98Sl Now accepting appllca· lllDelMarAve,C.M. challengin g work shock, very good cood.
ttfsreq'd.644·6400. Part time, working with tions ro.r Moo & Tua 1390N.PaclficCstHwy ~·1·Recept., lmmed. wjfutureoobusypbooea Sl.10.-.USZ
, , the mailroom inserting Di&bt ah.ifta. Appl.¥ 9am· Laguna Beach opealng for experienced no sales. N.B. area. Flex Scbwiun 10 speed Legal sec r trainee. Sec Y machine for the Dally 4pm. Penayeaver, 1860 We are an equal sec'y of apanclins COD· hrs & wknd.s. Reta nee. .....-coodltion' BkllLI req d, oo legal ex Pilot ftacem:La, eo.ta M... opportuntty employer mucum co. Front office Start p hr. Free heal Ol"811P. ......... •
req'd. ecmtac:t: G. E. Arana Prtnt Shop needs ardatlc Ir good ~ atUla a Ins. C.116-9PIU4M071 fl!. M2-Tlt7.
.&a0-820l 642-4321, ext~ pereon to do bhaeprint· llM F L1:fME = ~=~'::tu~~ y ARDMAN C n w &
LEGAL TRAINEE-For EqualOpporturuty Ing, typing & paste-up. Or Reller. Mesa Verde handle a urlety of Rental center' bas opeo FpJI 1"t 1030 ~~~~\:'7~~~irm, Employer 333 3rd St, Laguna Oonv. Hosp,661Center dutles. Casual at· 1ngs for 2 men .••••••••••••••••••••••• ~..-RJ TIME Beach. Sl.CMS48-558S mospbere. Salary com· Mecbanlcal knowledg Movie NlllOO Super zoom LOAN PROCESSOR PA .,,..; _. memurat.e w/ex.p. Send belpfW, neat Unctwrit· 8 $1.TS. B&H 819uper 8
with secy aktlls Cor Proct.ctto.C.trol ~ --res\ID'le to Box 151, % lng nee. WMkday off. autoload Project.or $1.25. mort~ge broker firm. EVENINGS ...................... ,..__ ~......,. Daily Pilot, P .O. Box Will traJn. Appl.7, 1930 Llke n ew 494·9912
k d f'd ,_....... & AR.cltll·Miltdecl l.560, Costa Mesa, Ca. Newport Bl, CM 673-326t LoNeaanr aFca~rounhion plresle·. Adults with oulsl.9nding, Aaatyat Opportunities avall. 921626 ..;_. _ __.;.. _____ _ " attractive personalities i I 114/644-8824 . who enjoy working with Electro·mecban ca w/lnl1 co. ,Sala back· ser•ice Sta. Attend ........
_....;,._.......;__; ___ ~-1 kida. Start at ~so per switch manuf. aeeu In-ground pref d. Top mgmt F /time. Lite mecb 'l -• .. •••••••••••••••• ~. "!ii:tp~':'8e.;. ~r'!!~ hr. Phone 6424331, #250, ~ •Jiback1r:unt,~ posillont~I a~al.' ~rrtn1 Jtnowtedle nee. Neat ap. PUIUC AUCTION DOGTRAINING
n--t·A·Car, Lobby of between 3:()0-5:00 PM. lucl onWollrl pve~nrorm ~ .,_.. n e~~ pear, & lianchniUtig. AP. MANY ITEMS OP FIN Your Place or Mine .._., AtllforJ... COD ro . .. )JC) Box ~=med: ply. a:seo Newport BL. ESTATE JEWELRY JobnMartio 548-oo58
SbentmHotel Equal Opportunity ~~U: lr:tv:lf!,;; 92805 o! cAtrnwo:; foe di ~~B=~:: DDBONDP\JJ)e.Swb,
LYM 11-7 Employer sys~ms. lenow=c of lnt4s-. Service Sta. Atteadut, E'l'C. PHONE FoR tN AKC, M/F', &bob. cbooee
Coantry Club Coov.PART·'l'DIEGlrlP'riday, EDP•clat_cal de· St!ISIAAY eaper'cLFullorp/tlme. PO •• BROCHURE one no• $100.
Home. MNOSl. IOCid pbolM penooallt.y atrallle. --AllPl1 Art.o 8'atioD. lnb 845-QIO ...:(71,=4)551Ml12T=..;.;.;.-----· eood •1elllng. d etail STACOSWITCH IMC for matenllt.y boutique. •ll:vtae.C.M. --.. v IMI Ull'flNIST 1 d .. ··-n-lc•"-•· Meaa llUJt be exper'd. Sa ~ •• ...,.., m nde • 2 ays wa, ..--'YV9.. +comm. lllla-a8lutS1S Sen'lce Station Att1n--··-···-...... 4 0.,.*>Hour'Week "2·2935 day1 or eves 14t·l041 4.&nt. exper'd. Day ft MUSIC IOXES COllle mil: pups, 2 mos
General macbille ~ork m.s427 F.quaJ OPI* Eloplo)'er SAL~ itv.. Full• p/dJM. Ap-Cl.OCICS old. 5 b1.k Ir 1 Brown.
on quallty•uospacepBx ANS WE&ING Pennanentpart.tlmeror Pb',SbellStation,lTthlc Slot llachines, Nikelo 751-1797 components ll at · SERV. OPERATOR chiJdrena toy 4& clotliu IrVtoe,NB. deona, phono1rapb1 . ..;..:.::....:;.;...;...;.. _____ _
bUa Must be able f stor)lt Expcr lo retail World'• larseat selec Need bome, lg adult um • Openln1 or m•ture --•.:...•.,---.p, .... •-, Service Sta. Nlcbt Attend t •on. Alto 1 lf t I , blr .. cat wlth 1olden to work rrom detailed anawerlng 1ervice .., ..... ~ 1..1 .,.. 20r5n1tas k. A ... .. ._ plannln1 abeeta & trained opr. Must be tuvlewilla Sat 'eb. 4 • w pp.,, rurnltue, anllquea. eyes. 557-4435 . bJ~.nt.. alert, sh .... fl reliable. &om 10AM-4Pll. A119ly Sbell. l1lh•ln1De,NB Aroer1can lnternallon1l;
Apply ID Penon .... ,. G EPP ET T 0 'S A <!oo.-.•-110:1 Kettcrinl ·, lr\'lne. free to good home, tri
. icnday-'l'bund Muat be available for CllILDS FANTASY, So. ~ ;;t"'~--~~"· 'IM-17". Open Wed..S.t. color Male Bassett ~ 1111 llte ~ va.riouublfta. m.srm Coaat Vllla1t Saota •_ .,., -t• • • Round, 1ood w /kida.
_. I -"' N Pb ' C ••-6--' Pawuc ff7, IC"MUJ 1101Dove&.. NB ("BX ANSWERING Au. o one au H.B. (21.l)urz.J.SU S'l'KW•-ROTH 1..;;... _______ 1 ' • SERVJCB OPSllATOR PIMMI • A.NTJ"Qua Black 4 yr old Cocker
Maid, p/tJID-. Start w,ltl'abL N.S mat~ IALDPtnMS Senic• Sta. ~ant ~-.o.kl>eil.ltn Spulel, a .. 41 *""°'*~un =:,~::;::: •. v= h11rtuw.1ac.11. =•~.ad~=· •&.DrwB.4.8.A. =:.™&. mwtadl. m.tn1 Oall Ueda MMOtO .\111111 W Newport ~· (atMtwpott FwJ)
PBX An1wer. Stn. 8ALBl·TSXAI OIL CM • ' 'II.ml lllaclrLU.a!Mnd.-= J.!?.f.~~~~~-1 0 0 II PAN Y ate d I Sery. 8ta Help ••l••tltn· = w Jtlda, To a ..-. l*'IOO t« llaort meet. FlalJ or IL A l1 '.._ :=_ =:!1!'tom~ • &. Cat if..,, '-iit ler~aetor truck
We train. Write ~.s. Deb. U... ror 1cbool °'
Dick. Pru., Soulia·~ oS*'lt.or for C'ao pl Ml-llll
,.,,..,, ~ID. n. WI ....,. up; W/PGwer Worth.~ Jli!.*1Mi• .......
Cf/ea~ of CLo~
This Valentine's Day send your love
a greeting all the world can share
with a Dally Pilot Heart of Love.
It's easy, compose your
personallied greeting & we'll set
your message in type to fit the
border of your choice or your own
handWritten thoug hbl m~ appear
In the border you select.
Borders come in 3 sizes: $15, $1 o.
& a special child's atze for $2. (You
must be under 12 to qualify for this
one). If you wish to create your
own greeting, use a black pen &
wrtte your message In the heart
below or draw your own Valentine
of this size.
For help wlth your ad, tust can
642-~ & a f rlendly Valentine
~ w111 be heppy to atelat you.
And, If you like., you can charge
your Val1rrtfne ad or uao your
MMterChatge or San~.Amerlcard •
DAILY PILOT
~--.-.;.;:=.:...~=.:..----:-----...!.Fl'l!.!.!da'f=z;.~F:,:ebt~uary!!!L3~ . .!tt!!7:!_1 MIK••• .. • IOIO "-oa & 0...-. IOtO ...... Pewtr 9040 C&+n Sale/ ltill/io S.-.lce, P.tt T,_b 95'0 ,....,.. ~ 1055 Geroge Sale 1055 ~ Stile 1051 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••-••••• ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• leilt ' t I 2 & Accnaorin t400 °•••••••••••••••••••••
• -~··l·d··.·n-.:·e··s·t···,.·, .. ··r·k· s··u·t··S·Cl·n·· .. ··,·b··:.·:.··:n·t·.·. ··:.::IU···c···:·uc···T·,:::·· WANTED ANTIQUE ORGAN MUST Sii ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• UV ~ k -.... n ru .,. """ Goodcond.tUon TOAPPllCIATI Hollday Ovorh•11 dus.\ Tfo' ¥G lnlake
7
:h;;.p AA~~ .. ~~0~tt~l:oa
Sat 1-rb I q~. off -wp, ..... rm MANY FINE ITEMS OF i~pl DCAFSOHRDOYLOLUARR $300/0fr. 846-0291 2 8 r l Un Ir 11 le cMamperC thdl8t600. Cash, manifold &t cub1 186.\ air. GT S""aler ~hell I:°°' IAM-4PM Cboo:.e uit1. c1 t~ ... poo1"':b1 ESTATE JEWELRY. JEWELRY WATCHES Thomas Calif. Tbeatre Sportafilher wllh ,Visa.or AS469&9 MWftan& ltrt front door wide trk r.;hlil tire~ om ta ulect 100 of bu.al.!$, misc boat eqwp: ART OBJECTS, AN ART OBJECTS GOLD. Mod.el •287. perfec cond, padOed cockpit. cuatom camper Shell wilb Boot $?S Complete 2000 Pinto 7 1 <t 1 s 2 9 s s l or
ome furn1 i.h1ng'>, A C, 10 :s pd bakes TJQUES. FINE FURN . SILVER SERVICE• less than l yr over t97 interior, AC/DC natural For Maida or Ford c:n1,.tra~.18.000m1lei. 114~ 1':!:•~ar:s·
1
ctlothang&'. motorcyclea, lamps: ETC. PHONE FOR IN FINE FURN. & AN• mo payments. C06t new i:as for c ook Ina & Cowier"8-2231 $'l00. $225. Call aClt:r S pm,~ .
,.-....'.......'. a YE em:.h, prof hiur dryer & m1.1eh FO. & BROCHURE. TIQUES 645-2200 ~. Alter683H21S reCnaeratlon. ADF/VllF S48-8083 61 rlOO Cam~r Specaal
..-;n more. veryl ana mart. 2l3/S92·2S33
16481
~2300 · wbltt-lln.s recorder & '7S Chevy Cu.tom ten Excell. cond an11d1: &
IOfll, .Be early ror best Peale Ln Hunt;n t LUGGAGE TAGS NICE UPRIGIIT PIANO enclosed Oybradae. "One w ~ pack, sips 4 adults A.-. for S. out. Toolbox. maa whilo. ~Oft Glen View Pk Harbor ' gonlS families goln& rrom your bualnu1i1 ~ed. Made by Cable of;ilund!"CallDaleat 28,~ mi, mud tlru ••••••••••••••••••••••• &hvydutytite11.Phone ,~·~~d at Sweetbriar toaether·Sat. Feb 4 , card. Send one card for $32.s. 973.1(162 1714) 496-2709. US nms. Loaded. XlA G1Mrtl 9510 ...;.5'8-_;....;..1190~------
Glenn Dr., I.!_!_ Nu SBR Ures Lady Ken· 8am-4pm. 1605 Catalina each t.ag pl~ one spare. '74 21· Cab Crsr. F /G, shape. '84·to59 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '64 Chevy PU. reblt mtr ~ rrm Bluffl• Furn more dyr LIM nu BSR 8 Ave. Seal Bch. P~oceedi; We return ~rmanenlly Playw Plaao F /8, T /S, well 4:1qu1p'd, Dallun Camper Shell. & trans. New Inter &
.a,ntlques, riling cab w/ tr~recrd c~r497·H20 forHBHSAqu:aUc$Club. t1eaJed attractive tag & '2Z. Leonard Ju 11 t seealllt&. Ha.r.846·3033 $100 or bett offer. Trlr WANTED Herd top for camper shell SUOO.
combo sofe SewingT
1
b HUGE SALE Lots of strap, meeting airline rettored A·l cond. P /P axlecomplete.548-6490. lllfi6MB230SL. Wall pay M25157
mach Refr1g appli TVs. k~~h~· Pl ot,o ~t P& goodies. 300 Kings PL. 1.0. requirements. Pre· S49-o906 top dollar for a.ny color ---------All aood cond. Ru.ona· mag~.1 t~is m~r NB.SaL&SunlO to_s_._ venlloss&theft! Fora GRIATFOR Motortudlllret 9140 in good condltlon.77ToyotaSRSPkup.~ust 'Me 640·0104 7'.fl Amigos
631 2126 1
_..._
1070
pcrsonaJiied lag enclose S;larvinl I~. student nds FISHING!! ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1146-71>98 before u ooon. P•O 5lrippln1. CB, at~reo
•Way NB --.............. r wallpaper, fabric or 1nexpens1ve piano. Un· 21Ft. CHAMPION Puch Maxi Moped, Fan· 8 trk. S yr warr .. .-200.
GARAGESALE-HouseCul ••••••••••••••••••••••• "Day Glo" paper & we derS2()0.875-8296 CF.\41788. Flybrldae. tastlc shape. Yell. Must ~/ ~!o:JPM. Jeremy
"3(16 ~~~~J~~.AB'!lboa of furn. everything goes, WAMTED will back & trim your Sewing MacW.... 1093 slnale screw, galley, aell. PlO firm. 837·SS70 Cla.~ 9520 _ __;_;..;;l _____ _
Sa\/Sun 104 carpeting. lovelleals, ba.r TOP CASH DOLLAR ~~kl~~atcr:. two cards S••.••••••••••••••••••••• ~en8!'i~~~~mnkpl··Stl~eely~!: MOP.ED·Blue/allver. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .67 Chevy 3• l~, P /S,
stools, wshr, refng. anll· PA ID FOR YOUR 1 0 o er De I • " "'ox GT g Tl , P 18 A/C 77K m1 $2200 Reing $15. Apt sz runge ques, much much more. PRICES • 0 • u x e built. Electronic aear In· r
1 · mos new. r umph, 62 TR3A. 544-°"4& • ' ·
Sl,5. Tables. sal bed. Alley an back oC S20 JEWELRY, WATCHES. S2 ea or 3/Si Toucbomatlc iagug, cl. depth finder & brand Seals 2. Xlnt cond. $100. Featured June '77 lssue ---------~1621, 227 Cblcquata. Center SL C.M Sat1Sun ART OBJECTS. GOLJ?, 4/Stags Sl.60ea. automa.tically button new, unused 2·way FM 7•1799 R 6: T. Mint cond. '77 Ford PU 150 V·S.
Lq. Bch. from 12 noon ~~ ~ ~E :u ~~R ~ 1 ~~ • 6/9 lap $1.SO e11. holes. blin~~m~, mono· rad.lo & RDF. $7500 or Motorcydft/ 714,198.5-,3'77 PS/PB, Jumbo tires.
Wos,UMd ........ -1,U1 .. d TJQUES.645·2200 10ormore$1.40ea. grams, Ca~titches. best offer. Call eves & Scoobn 9150 '6S Mustang Convertible, 15M ml. 642·'017.
-.u ... Sales Tax Included Used. No <!r needed. wlmds. 645-9378 _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• -'-'t cond, mak• offer. &&2-4738
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• --NO CARD? Bal. $54 .or $10 mo ...u.• ., ----'-------Man's custom made lS Draw your own or send Colle'ct1on Depl. 9 8 MUST SELLI 64S-211lor648..030J '76 Tovota SR·5, white,
MliRQDIS
MOTORS
VOLVO & TOYOTA
SPECIALTY CARS
1974 DATSUN
710 2 H. COUf'I
1973 TOYOTA
COIOUA coun
Hardtop 4 speed, air A u 1 o m a t 1 c
cond., radio & vinyl transmission & radio.
top (879LJCl (061AYZ)
51995
1973 TOYOTA
COIOMA WA~otf
51995
1975 HONDA
CtvlC
Automatic trans . radio Automatic trans. with
& air cond. (007673). radio (676NLL)
1976 CAPRI 1976 TOYOTA
S,OITCOUn COIOUA WAGOH
4 speed tlans air 5 speed trans & stereo
cond . radio & low c assette. player
miles (475PF0) (988PIT}
53495 53295
1975 VOLVO
245DL WAGOH
.
1976TOYOTA
COIOLU 15 COUPI
4 speed trans .. air s speed trans .. air
oond • stereo radio & c o n d & r a d i o .
root rack. (302NAMJ. (093514)
1975 VOLVO
1641 4 DL SID.AM 1977 TOYOTA
Automatic trans , air
cond & 8 traci\ tac>e. (119MNA)
CILICA ST
Aulomat1c trans.. air
cond , AM/FM radio &
5 .082 mat es•
(206RSM)
54995 HARD TO
FIND!!!
"'" Pnc••""'" TOA • ...._
MRRQDIS
·MOTORS I VOLVO & TOYOTA
21102 ........... flltwy.
• Mission Vieio
831-2880
495-1210
karat nugget gold rang. ardu 832 2101 1 J Slel'W\' Cosl $1100. sell $500~t n11me, address. phone & w e. . 1974 250 Yamaha MX '6S Muatans Converubte. ~~~ xtras. Sl500. can
ofr. 675-0898 we'll make one card pe ~Gooch 1094 SEA RAY with extras. Good condi· good cond. $1500
tag. Add 2S< each. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •tion. 5'SC) or best offer. 752--0736 __ Vmas '570
Unstock 1075 Send ~heck or money or-Girl ·s ice skates, site 30' Dul..I..&-Call 962·9898 after 7 p.m. 1-sst'o,..al •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• derlo. 5N·$1S .OO; Fisher ...-.,d ... d0
_,,.. .,.__.._ Reg. Morgan mare. PILOTPRIMTIMG Superglass snowskb. Loa e SUZUKI RM 370MX . VtMdff 9530 Completely custm 1977 broke to ·ride & drive. P.O. Box 1560 195cm with Salomon Owner's Demo Less lban s hrs running ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dodge Van, loaded, lo
blk parade Morgan geld . Costa Mesa. Ca. 92626 5 a f e-t y bindings SAVI! SSS tJme. Including 1 set ot Convt 4 seal It.reel legal mi 'a, AM ·FM stereo. · E w t (71A tJ d •· dune buagy aAi\I\ Call A/C. Icebox, the works. ~101~'· es ern .. > PUIUC AUCTION :i':o~· now $125. Call HARRISON'S ~e =ci. ~~iari S2M486.... . ....,.,. Gorgeous paint scheme.
MANY ITEMS OF FINE SEA RAY 4PM 751·3474. 4 Wlle4ll Drhes 9550 Must see to appreciate. MochilJry 8078 ESTATE JEWELRY, Stor-9,Rest.....t, 3101CoastHwyN.B. SllOOO.Calldays;SS2-5Sll
••••••••••••••••••••••• ART OBJECTS, AN. ... 1096 611·2547 73 DKWIJS. 6 SP, •••C••0•••5•T••:•M•••E•S••:••• '72 Dod"e Van, wide
Salt bend 13"x40" TIQUES, FINE FURN .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• VEAYFAST _ --A · " wttap'r Sl900. Wilson ETC. PHONE FOR IN· Near new wall racks, 24' '74 MARAUDER. Sl9S. Ph U0-6ru AMC. JEEP ~~~:1!d, cc~:t~ l~a,}~
17x.24" $1500. Cincinnati FO. & BROCHURE. card racks. old cash re· command brdg, twn 165, . #I bt Callfontla t A/T PS P B
Prod ml.Jllng .,800 (213) "" 2200 d I t Lo ded I h 77 Hond Ex
8
er., ' I ' I • .. · ......,. mster. 96().6111 ua s a. a . o rs. a press Mod. h "'c 000 l' ..,., 961-3434 ---o• $1.2 500 r PP 340-•a•i.• N,....,. 297 . li FREE s arp. ""• m s. ~·•S.
N
, _. . /Or. . -"""• rru, ke new. 49'l 0146 ewport Beach Tennis Lge quantity of Streater $280 S5S·41U Shirley 100 11 C ·th _,;_._..;_..;..._. ______ .
DeWalt _!40 radh1l 11rm club membership, best Shelvin&. slanchlons, 23' Jlass in/out, slPfJ 3. 1168-Usa aft 6PM eachg~e:'sc:r =~1~.::th '77 Chevy Van Custom.
saw. 10. new Or trade. ofr 64(H793 peg board, gondolas & trailerable. $4250. this ad only. s;600 includes licenlie. ~7674 after 6 PM __ S b d
4
n11sc garment fixtures 835-3437 day, 673·8484 eve 1'78 Kawasaki KZ6SO, 300 Cull 645·6310
MhcetlCMHU1 8010 ~':!"'or3.'I> xi'n~c~~nd.e Best Purch~se by .Pc or lol: "Patio Boal" 1974 Gre or mi. $1700. ' 549-8023 ---------••••••••••••••••••••••• offer 5521790 Shelving, stanchions. Pontoon 22.xS' W/l977i 15 S40--0904eves. 2524 HARBOR BLVD '76 Chevy van, custom
DOLL HOUSE pegboard $2 ea. G~n· hp Johnson elect lllarl '77 lCawasaki KV650 COSI'A MESA mt .. lo mileage,~ or
One room doll house Newport Beach Tennis dolas & garment f~X · Xlras. Only 1 on bay CUstom $1700 • • USEI) bst offer. 644·2621
with light and furniture. Club r 11m1 I Y me m · tures $10 ea. Lot pri.ce $2800 873-2242 · • 552-8347 4•4 '77 Ford Bubble Top.
$l() 00 Call 642·01.38. bersh1p $1000. Call art 5. $2000. 645-8550 Mon· Fri 8 . Loaded, 8K miles. was 5S9·7478; Dys, 640.SOOO. to 5 pm. 1977 SldDiedl 24 '75 Indian 125 dirt, eit· VALUE 80 N
Exercycle delux, almost Ed TV 1 ...... _ Open cru)se r with cellenl condition $400. '7SCHEROKEE (PS18l. ~O . ow $HOO.
nu & 7' dinghy. Must sell __ • -"" tandem trailer, OMC Ca1J M(M853 after 5pm. VB. power steering, auto before Sunday. 548-8879 BEAUTlrVL Handpaint· HIA, Shno •091 wi b onJ b trans., mags. '70 Ford Clb w111, auto,
eves fd gray ceramic poodle. ••••••••••••••••••••••• td Y SS ours. VH 'TT Yamaha Cbappy fun $5195 seats 8, 2 trlr hitches, $45. Manual portable Stereo console in antique ra lo, compau, leak bike, reasonable. 'call ood d mu. 97 og.
Washer. desk. cha1r, mal· typewriter $50 /orfer. reproduction cabinet, swim platform. ~all S311-489lor848-02lS 'H CHEV Blaier I con ........
4
·l
lre5s &box sprang. Xlnt cond. S46·8579 xlnt system as well as system, dual battenes, Cheyenne (P8121. VS, AutosW.tecl 9590 5Sl·OS96 eves twknds beaut. furn. piece. 3yrs Bunlni top with Cull cur· Yamaha 250, 1965, runs auto trans. •••••••••••••••••••••••
----old. S350 or bs t ofr. tains and moonng cov· IOOd $115 $SAVE $ WE WILL IVY
Sale. Co mm '! meat Kang & Twn beds $HIO & 5..'i2·1790 er. And more. Mint con· •S46-:qgs•· 'H RAMCHARGER sheer, clec meul tt>n· $30. Sora & loveseat $35. dillon. $13,300 or be11t of· . (P82l) vs lO YOUI DATSUN dcriler. Treudll' sew Washer /Dryer $25 ea. 25" RCA ColorTV, 1 yr fer838..Cl39 75750HONDA · 'au trans. PAIDFORORNOT machine. Oak rocker. 2 Roll·a·way"°.8-\7·0557 warranty $178. For Xlnlcond.Chrome pow.,-i.teering. air TOPDOLLAR
BARWICK DATSUN
llooscr cupbourds. a -t---s ervice al~o 642·5340 loah. Rent/ $1500 SS7·2677 cond.ta$'S~~~ • FOR TOP CAIS
oak Antique Brai.s bed. Used Drapt's. 1.1kc new.. C.M. Chcwtwr 9050 ~ Old pictures & ma::.c gold .. Th~ee 10. one 13 . •••••••• .. •••••••••••••• Motor ........ Sale I '1 1 CHEV
1
.2 T o n Tahiti Inn off•n~ 450 onc 6 x 7 long.~ for all JBL 77 i;: enclosures for CHARTER Plush so· latjStCNage f°l60 (SKPS31). VS. power
V1ctoriu at Ha~bor or$1.25rt.644·9828 A!t.ec 604's .. CstfTI mad· Yacbt,reasonable,hour.••••••••••••••••••••~·· steenng, 4 speed, rally
548
..
2129
----tweeter unat.s. lSansua. ly or daily. 675·2172 or Rent. a 1977 Excutave wheels. Table & 4 chairs $.'50. 581·5956 875-SSSS Motorhome or Mini· $SAVE $
Sofa bed blue vynl ~ew Xpe~log~dt vacuum $lO. FISHER 2 OT 'M F motorhome from Herb '75 DODGE :i.. Ton cood ~ Coffee tbl mod player $25 . 2 . ~ · M loah. Saff 9060 Friedlander. Call any of <P834). VS, 4 speed,
gold $40: Storage locker 847·3454 {;~r~.=iver • Sl75. ••••••••••••••••••••••• these numbers power steering, rally
S'x6' $SO. Elec. s lmp Colo de Caza Mem· FUJI• YAMAHA 191-6777 whee!a.
vending mach. S45·4S26 bership, Hunting, tennis, 2 Tower Speakers, Paid DIALEIS 537.7777 $4995
Hide·a·bed $40 vw swimming. $800 /offer. $l7S ea. new. Any reas. Yacht Brokerage 12Mlll '75DODGERamcharaer
trailer hitch $10 & rims 114·645·191Saft sPM or 897offe~rent 644·9174 or LlsUngs Wanted! U.33NGB). VB. auto. air, $2. each.
646
.
5386
wk.nds __, S....weshnt RENT Fireball 23' Sell steering, rooC rack. Yodlt ~~ cooL Auto/air. CC, CB, crw.se, stereo
1 yr old glass Hot House Wilson Ladies. gol( clubs. 170 watt Sansui lnteJTat· _. stereo, sips 6 845-2283 $5999 w-udm., door & roof 3 woods. 8 iron11. good ed amp. Bought (or $175, 2616 Newport Blvd. ·10 INTERNATIONAL '~ ., cond tlon S2S 873-0254 sell $250 or best ofr Newport Beach 29 fl. Appollo mot.orhome. vent. 2 potting benchs a. . . 494-8131 (7141673-9211 Must see to appreciat~! Scout (407995). VS. sUck,
7'x9' $350/()fr 834-070.l SPECIAL OFFER. 30 . • . Call John Felter al 4 wheel drive, drive,
Older GE Refri". $20. DaysonJyofamodernBeaut. stereo cabinet New 24 American &a2-00lOorS40·S21l hanitop,clean. " burgla & I t lMahog > w /shelves. 4 Sailboat Take over pay· · SZ 199 misc furniture. All good r a arm sys em. drs in front. lift up ctr menLS. Has trlr. 493·2612 '74 DODGE Club Cab cond. 96().38Z7 Installed in your home _ onlY fj75. 751-1646 top for components, tv, 36• SEA GOER YAWL .._ (SK#P829l. VS. power
$500 Dana Po1nl Yacht . . records, spkrs, bar. etc. steenng, auto trans.
Club Membership (or Goll eqwty membership, Sl2S/oCr. Aft s. 845·7857. . Honolulu Veteran. $4695 M v rd c Cl b Deasel. radio, VHF. pilot $W0.496-2769 7~.:i.,6e nlry u ·Gerrard Turntable $14,500 AY646·9000 '75 JEEP CJ ·S
150' heavy duty concrete ~ /jac.ks Perfect Condi· 12' Kite w /trailer, hull 1, ~~ V,:i1!.speed,
edging, 2' sections. 7Sc camper shell, shrt bed, tion. $25. 545-4662 t950 or offer. S52·0899 •~ts
ea 675-3175 tM. Cbaln saw $SO. ~ · 646-4996 Midland 19" color, 9 mos eves & wknds * HOT * COPB.AND JEEP
Npt Bcb Tennis Ctn old, auto fine tuning. ' -»OOl 11 S membership,. Super de· Misc .. aneous $175. 631·3298 Excellent 1977 Lancer 25 • xtra SHl'UIER 6
at A al. Call 644-6800 wkdys W..ted toll condition sharp, pvt party. UH 558-1000
or644·7326evs. ••••••••••••••••••••••• K d. KR•o7 _'1_1-'41498-__ 1 .. m _____ _. ----------tp . . d . enwoo • 0 re-, •·a-Ma.aw Orangewood, delivered o r1vate pty es1res ceiver, Kl>20SS semi· 31 Ericson , pedestal AU. HEW
you pick up. Eves. arte match.log sofa & lov· auto. turntbl, Altec· steering & compass, xlnt FOR 1971
6 PM.4S5-8717 eseat m earthtone ~ol· Lansing design 20 aalls, stereo, VHF ----------t ors/gold, green, beige, speakers Brand new RDP'. Cash to loan. gd GYPSY
Roll away bed xlnt cond. etc. Must be xlnt cond & ~ 873-.iB29 · pymnts. 586-9893 alt Spm
$25. 7 blade pusb mowe qualfty · WJll pay fair · W t d T d Wb I
9560 •••••••••••••••••••••••
HEW J971
MUSK HT
MINI-HOME
Sell contained on Toyota
chasls. U21643).
..... lfl J 11.lfl { I pl ~ 11 ,I II' 1
8 3I·1375 493.3375
WE BUY
CLIANCARS
&TaUCIS
CONNRL~
CHEVROLET
2828 ff.arbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
546-IJOO
WEPAYTOPDOLLAR
FOR TOP USED CARS
FOREIGN, DOMESTIC
or CLASSICS
IC your car is extra clean
see us first.
IAUER IUICK
2925Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa 979.2500
TOP
DOLLAR
PAID
FOR CLEAN
IMPORT CARS
ALLMODB.S
~.1
$10. 493-7425 price. 544-897'2 loatl • ~ an e , an am -'---------t •••Pl •lit keel type trlr. G.W.
9100 Aalto1, Mew tlOO Alltoa, Aew 9100 BUY DIAMONDS, cars, ••••••••••••••••••••••• for Columbia 24 848-9554
• • •••••. ••••••••••••• ••••••••••• •••••-••••• ••••••••••• •••••••!!'•••• auna, Jewelry.. Highest G ~ tO IO · cuh price paid, Pvt Pty.a•r• Islander 30 MK ll. Shari>.
Ml•I Meter H•••
l•••lllet• O•ll•ery. ". ... Ort .. o..T..,. $15'9
1971CHEVY
1/2TOH 4X4
Automatic, V8, radio,
pwr. steering " brakes,
(.13S203 ). (Uaed ) •
lllll t~ Bt Alt< IH Vil
t-<lJNf1~4(,f(JPll Bf ACH
6·\.' ~IH1 ~Jr 1lJ4/
DAISUll .810
THE FUEL-INJEcfED
FAMILY CAR WITH ·THE
PERFORMANCE OF
A 240-Z ENGINE
THE 810 FEATURES:
• 6 WAY ADJUSTAILI DllVll"S SUT
'• AM-FM STalO MULTIPUXlADIO
• TIHT9 al.ASS t
• rowa 5181NG •
• THI 6 CYL FUil IMJIC,.._ 84GIMI
• PLUS MICH. MUCH ~l
SIDAM
Trade? 332.2101 •••••••••••••••••••• .. • fl,S.SOO. Call Pvt pty.
u....i....a Boat Ult trailer 2750 lbl. (714) 844-1836. ~ 11' cap. o'500. Boat • IMl1 am 1013 trailer tram• ror U•b1 Must. aell 18 Venture Ca ••••••••••••••••••••••• bost $1~. 873.'llTl Ready to 10. ~/ ha
Be1lnners &uitar, w.m otr.49:MllOev1
BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA
•• , ,, .... ..! •4' I\'',
.. J .. ' .,.~• ._-.,..II.., "
~b:r~isllo~~lt:. NCE~i '°l;fp .. t030 Ca2.~;U27, S mo. new
te-4131 ••••••••••••••••••••••• a......... et too nume · to ment.loo. Dana Pt G6 MOl'OR HOMES-
Dynaco stereo pwr Amp. •ZODIAC Bob 963-8078 or 8U.s590 FOR RENT 400 atta S300 M tt Port·A·Marine From $1.50 wk '1'7o.os22 air~ si~. m.J: o Inflalable Bo•ta 1178 Manta sall boa · · · 2925 College, C.M. wtmtr & trlr, 13'4". Ful '73 ~bago B.rave, lo
Classical 1u1tar, very (n4)540-2070 ly equip. Gd fish'g boat . miles, air, aenerator
$7666
lt71fOID
C.toMSt•,.W.
Automatic, VI, pwr.
1teering & brakes, air
cond., custom paint.
mags + tires. (4164).
(Used) •
$69'9
WllUY
USID C.US!
We're the new Cheft'olet
dealersb.lp in lbe Irvine
Auto Center. We need
)'OW' used car!
JOE
MACPt&SON
C .. VIOLET
21 Auto Center Drive
IRVINE
768-7222
Mtol. 1..,ortec1
1971 JEIP CJS •••••••••••••••••••••••
• a.cood qual., xlnt case, ex· • Call John 213-862·3246 a sssoo. ~;493-1652 tru 581·5958 Graf marine eng. V8, set SPM an day ~---....;......,;......;.,;......;.....;.;_;__1
· ·fot speedboat w /1 :1 '73 Mint cond. 20', lo
MlllidaQ'I Qara1e Sale! !if.lg Warner vet. dr. ltO::ei:.,.I 907 mJlea. fully contained,
Deluxe, reverb feoder .-.. 6'2-m.4 bast offer. 848-8123 aultar amp Peavey •••••••••••••••••••••• Musician Q~~ a~S>. <lu'ysler 225 HP w /Item WA,NTED.REWARD alt FOR RENT 20' Motor
400 aeries. Quilter 8 drive&fresbwater~l· ID NB for <12 ' Gran Home .comp letely
V81 manu~ trans., pwr. Alfe 1-.o '705
st.tiering. wheels & tires. •••••••••••••••••••••••
COU082). COaect>. *ALFA IOMIO *
channel PA 490 couole, lot· controll excel Bankatrawler840-8208 equtp•d, very cl n
$6H9 '78 Splden are here!
A rew "111 left at factoey
reduced prices. 2 Mltchell cab!&etl, 1.2 6'$.2014 •• , 673-5133 afl 8pm
strlnr acoustic i\litai" & It' boet lnall/tnDelr $500 Need lllpa for Z'1 & 34 T........_ ,,.... 9170
much. much more. All bardw•r•: comp au; tall boata. M[.Whfte •••••••••••••••••••••••
at lncredibl1 low prlceJ. bio,nin, teleltex ateer· l• Holiday Vacationer,
O>eclt it out tbl1 Sat • t.na ~2014 For Rent f1oat oo New. 22' 1lnt eood W.ide 1204 Sun only • .SS Yaa:nolla. Port bl•od. apnN'\X. W '"--·t B N..; i St, Coata Meaa. olf IMh. P...r 9040 feeU'f5-0874 .... -·"""""" "7. -.. n
Irvine. •••• .. ••-•••••••-•••• =~ Seen daily
1971 DODGI 'la
4X4 POWllWAM>N
VI. 4 speed, wheels &
tire1, pwr. 1teerlng.
<5031.&2). CUHd>.
S6Ht
IEACH IMPORTS
148 DOVE STREET (Near MacArthur 81 vd.·
fl Jambo~ Road>.
NEWPORT BEACH
712-0900
Ro
a.e rt , Tbunderblrd IMh. $tMH Ir · 1911 •MC 5-pc. aers drum aet. Formula (oflabon). 361 5ed tOI tt~" self-contained, 1/J TOH rtellUr "14 Spider.1 Owner, mint
Brand new. SiOO flrro. Va.. all oavi1attonaJ •••••••••••••••••••••• awnl.n&, crpt. bat jacks. ) cond.. J\emovable cuat. •. can Keltb $48-1.0>U iur • Srowtd tackle. 17' Fantuy t.r1-bull, aid HAies• bitch, au tlru. tnOU9 • (Used). bdlap fr never used sof\·
Office hiwltn' !lMpe fC>UT. Under so or nib. Xlnt cond. 540-2888afUpm $46'6 top. 20.000 Miles ~t of· ••••••9' IOll houri UMd 1Jnce new. e 18SHP, IO. c•tm trlr. Milo s.r.la P..tt f er over $ 5 9 9 5.
....................... •heel trailer tnctuc1ec1. bait tnk. m.1010 A~ & Accs11.ri.• 9400 ~~t!.~e~ Pb:mJM.9 .
Anawerlol device, Voxi <O full c nYH. C.11 ~ ••o•••• .. •••••• ... ••••• • eaa Ad 9707
rel1'.!0te. Paid •·· ael Jolin Felter ,•t ~o 18' Fbnll SJl1 boaL '84·'17 Used Muatenc 646-0226 ••••••••••••• .. ••••••-
$lll0otbeltal.r. 4NA131 "~ Ult»Mft'C. aaoo. Parta. 980 No. Parker, •es lntern'l PU. Sbort 1971 AUDI FOX •
8lbt12 euc. wa!Dut dale • Be a 1t t I f u l a p 1 e d • CllU 4tf ·119' alt 5pm. Onnce. Cell 19'1'-2000 ~ •JIOU •hlt Jri Automatic, alr condl· .. ,
Jl an about. ru l h vw .1arlta, all kinda, knobal6e9. •~Jl enc, 'otr. \1011101, sunroof, low CeQtU1'7. T1 i ........ CHEAP '1Mllhr75Hl.. IDllts Is ln tmrn.CW..t* SJOOO. N-IQ:M ................. •••••• tN.tMl>f condliloQt azlNPZ) •
......,-.-...;.;..;...;;....mo_-. ........ .-;.i IS'OHIUI CRAFT CU11En, .. /. V.J T .;!! ~I!'
Mcallln}datltaUola lllilt 912 ..., ...
..... .1-,...._ ,,.,1 ,. .. _........._ ....... -. ...... ••••••• WANT£D: Hard top for .,1 ........... . ....... _.., .. •• ,. ,..._ ,.. SOW .... -..-JJle MB.230$L. WUJ pay runi ~ ton Cam~r lbulecl. aurvey Al, pntd •• ....,. ...... .,., to tal. ..... dollar (OJ' any color Special. AC, radio, duel $15,000 A.Y WlllOO ..._ CQMh.J, bUtaH ._ 11 t ... \ • d --~~--~;.;.;...;.;;;..;;.;;;;;;;:.1tto •e a rtfrla,'. h1 1ood c:ondttlon. an .. 1, •n~ con . lf71 UAIA! ~a~:.J:clr. '900· •199berore 12"°°"· · tm-~wkdys M~~:O!~ic\~ereo
:MO ~ ........ !NU · '71 CbeV1 P.U, Headen• uaeet .. : JnOO. M>4al&
_. ~ •• • ·n c •• ,., •••dal SAM a VOi.YO * lhodtl, at8tto. snoo. ev'8 -Vi 11 11t0. ...,,1:T»1orr 1.~-:---:~.;;..;..,,_.::;..,....:.:.... -·-· • lbt1 ,... • fn..,..., Ltt ~=· ~fyic• oe all .,, Audi 1001.S 4·•P4 :; ~~'fa •;. ~ ~· Xia ~~~_!'!'1 ~ ()llC p.u,, ~ loll, e Xlftl CODCl, 10 ml'•• 4.1pct:
t :.-W. 'J14 .. "'I H.& -!'!!!. -· --•• -_, .., ... 911111: JldiilC; JIU tJhi; !51.~ _.-. -__ .. ....II ' en.-..,_
•
Ml' \tllfJ ,, l), 11,•• tJJ \
·•I I j. J 1J
Aalo&. IMpertM Awtot, lfftpot'tM Autos, l1nporled AAltos, IMporhd Ailtos. lntporled A.dos, lmport.d Friday, February 3. 1978 DAILY PILOT 0 l J ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ,.~.~ •••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• rw ~...... • 9101 ~~...... t712 o.. tno ...... t727 Mere.-a.a 9740 ,.-sche 9710 ~~·.~":r.>.~...... ~ .. !·.'.":~~ ••••••• ~.~!·.~~.~ .... -.... ....... ...•...•.... •.........•.....•...... •........••......•....• .....•.....••.......... ...••.....••...•......• .,.
'70 Audi, sunroof, stertoo, -~ N 77 1975 MIX 250 LAl•E .... Royce orot• '7'5 ,........,. n•i
looks ~ run:. ltkt nu. ...--.u ew COUPE. Suoroor. pwr, . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·-•••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••...,.
ll600orbt-lltorr .a948i3l HONDA Cars W\ndows,crv.la control. SIUC110MOf "lDEALERIHU.S.A. 1975 Trlumph Sp\,.
'i& AUDI IOOLS 4 d &'" •HOADWAY 77C~ MA.NT s tereo tape & 1n IUMON1Wlt71 ~ROY rlre 20,000 m1lee, ~ r showroom cood1t1on PORSC...-. 92... AMtFM stereo tape &.ID ~S Auto traiu. rreo, SANfA ANA Demo Ii execuUve ule To C .. aM "'°"91 ((g5MJF>. ns ._ CARVER excellent condlll~ s~, A 1C. xlnt <'Ond, 835·3171 oow goin1 on-hurry! u11i...11VERSITY MAJCE OffH See us for your besl buy ROllS~ROYCE a mechankally, Ul&lde " lonu.642-944..!__ 1Htuu1MAuo11tv1No ... c...... 188DOVESTREET n today-Hurry! out ~300• cau sca.sw
btkrHealey 9709 •USED IMW's• lNearMacArthurBlvd. ~ble We have a good seltc· llLL YATIS =='=.9:11 alter8pm. .:
•••••••••••• • •• •• • •• • • • '74 2002 Auto. 598L PO : i,;~bo;;eB ~~ti Haftdla c... • GMC lion of other fine M BZs VW.POR SC HE ~ 7' CXJRouA T ft 1 19 7 6, A M . P' ~
1974 AUSTIN '74 2002 Til Alt 023LJ R l ll-1300 Trwcb 10 our Inventory. Call to-San Juan Capistrano C\OSED SUNDAYS WA4M*. casaette. ~. 3000 mrt. ~IMA GoT CPI. '7S20CrlA Ser 2236 ---------28.W Harbor Blvd. dav! 837-4800 493-451 1 XLNT BUY • 111 :r..=-,....,,.. $&800. 631-29.1:5
4 speed, air cond. & only . 7 6 2 O 0 2 4 s Pd S I R 1977 DATSUN C>ista Mesa ~0·9640 Shal'J> '66 Sliver Shadow, 0: ~ ... 19 a."":9=
46.000 miles (7611.GYJ ~NLF ICIHGCAI PICKUr '75 Hatchback. 5·spd , 19'5 POaSCHE white RR -Ri&hl hand v~ t7
One or a kind!!! Now , '77 ll!OIA StR 177RSK with camper s hell. 5 A..\f FM 8-trlt, xlnt cond. 35' COUrl dr. )Ont cond , $1~.900. OHL Y SI 575 Closed 0.. s..dcry~ speed trims., factory air $2650. 642 S231 Jn excellent condition Call Patnck, SS2·4414
t ... ,_._ llMtn
i. Harbor. <bsta Mes
,42 .. 7'1
IMW
ORAHGoE COUMTY'S conditioning & AM iFM -'74 4SOSLC, s pus. sports with factory chrome Saab 9760
OLDEST i.t.ereo tape. 11E47577 ). '77 Accord, S·spd, 3,000 coupe. rm mac. fully wheels. (0624 ). MUST ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• MAKI~ mi. $5295 equipped incl. ractory SE.El!!
&, ~9-5915 elec. s unroof. &tereo SAODLllACK ._:._ ~UAI '*•1 , cassette, leather in· VAU.IY IMPOlTS '0 .... a.... re ere. JCllJllW 9730 p R ,,.,. A few '77 Saabs left. ••••••••••••••••••••••• tenor. · · .,....,.9323 131-2040 495-4949 (3122 >. From $5925.
BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA , .............. , .. ,.,.,
... "' ... , ,..,.,., ..... It• H
·····················~ ~
1'75 VW SIDAM n
4 speed. air cond., rua
whee!&, radio &c heaW .
In excellent coodlUOb
with low miles .
(9S6NJE>. Tbla yellow
beau.ty is just ror you!
Sales-Serv1ce-Leasmg '70 JAGU'AA DE 1911 Ml% 210$1 1977 9115. 1000 ml. sun· We are now taking re----------1 R~ CarYer,lnc. Automatic, air cond & l .5 COUPE rool, leather, loaded. lst serval:ions for the "turbo '77 Cellca coupe, stereo,
HUUYHOW·.
i2 240Z. clean. AM WM. AM t FM . Only 58,000 • -f lb h d d k car"! air. blue. Many xlras Rolls oyce BMW air cond. mags. Kon1 mil Sb ( W .... st o e an ma e $18.000 ta es. 64-0-8208 lllt-"CH IMPORTS 6 000 ..:. 000 '-t rr • 1S40 J;imboree es! arp! 3724B I c I as Iii cs ! Luxur y ------'""" · mi. ~· ,.,,. 0 · '
COSTA MESA
DATSUN Newport Beai.:h 640 1)444 i.hks $lOOO. S3l·07«. ALLEN eqwpped low miles & '77 9116 Targa. 6.000 ml, 848 DOVE STf\EET MS-7465 aft ~M--2MS HARBOR BLVO.,A
'78 2801 2 + 2. Olds/Cadillac 1C MC i.howi. SUPerb care. 1 of £n?etald ,peen meLaJlic (Near MacArthur Blvd. '75 TOYOTA COROLLA 540-64 I 0 540-0Z fl._
1978 BMW's
HERE MOW!
'72 B~W2illrlhpd. MI NT ' Mu ~t i.~11 , SO.Frwy.-AveryExit only 600 m11de for lht• paint. 7 Alloy whls. &JamboreeRoad> ~.OOOmi $!'
d eun. artt>r Gpm. metallic blue GA i:ar. LAGUNA NIGUEL U.S Musl see to a p-stereo, leather int, 5 spd. NEWPORT BEACH CALL 040·0998 70 VW Bug, very
cull 552 5100 no cmm1on l'Ontrols. (7141495 6430 prec1ate-owned by a lowered. Ml~t cood. 1 752°0900 must see! $1'700.
73 Uava.ria. 48.000 mi. Save hundreds on price • Ho 11 y wood s la r . ~,C~691lf 7:S,!~9~ T ot 9765 '76 Cellca ST. Lo._ded. --.i----833-__ 01_45 ___ 91
COMrLETE
IODY SHO,
HOWOrE.H
Ac. auto .. radio. xlnt &v fue~ ;all 499·2495 '64 XKE Convertible. 1593EMO>. _ms_g o .:>!.:•~•••••••••••••••• ~~t:~\f~oinl. WOO/bat QI VW Bug, good co ~nd. SJjlOO. 759~~-_ e esrw n s needs t ender loving IEFORI YOU SS.000 mi, $1.0SO.
9715 mechanic to make me Porsche 356C '71 Corolla, gold, i.tkk, 968·5844 Capri s parkle agaio. $2500 Xlnt shape, Call Paul saL YOUR t 11 ..,,.. Ka"·v ·················•••••• Bil nrm. or trade older S24-s140wk996·4926bm TOYOTA. ~~1~e · •·""· ... ,. '71 Convertible. nawl
IXCEU.EHT 74 Capn V-6 4-spd. Blue , Ti a ~2~ truc k & cash. SEE us.• .... cond. t.hrou&bout, S&.ECTIOH OF nu tire~. AM -FM stereo , ..._....._ 771/J Ponche 91 IS ._ 67~ ca~s. 2ll.O-OO me. Xlnt 1975 MIZ 2400 Absolutely immaculate. MARQUIS TOYOTA IMW RESALES rood. f,!950. 673-2062 IC--GWa 9735 4 apeed, pwr. Sl~ring. Sunroof. AC, stereo wlfoM• '6S vw bus, new pai
We may have your next .------••••••••••••••••••••••• AM 1FM &c s unroo(. I tr MISSION VIEJO 01;,,. motor, transaxle ve
car in our inventory 76 Capri, mint cond. all 7 3 DATSUN ·m Karmann Ghia in 1001 ). ~~~~~ 8!.s~~~e ~:e ~~ 831-2110 495-1210 v.~i .. e" eood, carpeted, 2 radi
Callust.oday! power . auto : air . llOCOUPI excellentcond1Uon. MUST SEE! Sl28permoorpurchase. MINT COND '74 Celica Ures.$&SO.
lll-2040495-4949 AM FM cai.i..SSti·S328 ~.~~-...:~~·~!1 673-6230.Pvtpty. SADDUIACIC C hrli . 631 ·2152 or 32,000mi's.lOwnr.P.P: ____ m_·9S84 __ . __ ~
'73 to '76 CAPRIS GO'.>d thru ,.,..,.. &" .. o6e 19S8 Ghia coupe. Xtra VALLEY IMrORTS 631·3390 _____ ~oo 640-3.118. l973 TOYOTA um VW. 4 dr, xlnt con
4 to Choo•• From S 1 5 9 c In . 11 o r u i. t , n u 131-2040 495-4949 um 911T. Xlnt cond. Nu --1-977 TOYOT .--..caur ~-:,.~~~nt, S2000 SS2
Drive One Today! 9 dti.:h ,pnt. $1200 firm. - - --Mich XWX lire:. Mui.t Cellca Llftback :;::,e!•:-:'*OC:.."= -------.
540 • 5630 494
.
2130
9739 Au~~a~i~~ :1~0!!,nd see. 16450· 673 itiw__ In excellfnl condition ~t'~ .. 1~~"" 91104' ... , ;;~~:r~~wm~~
WAHTB> TO IUY
Quality ui.ed RM W:.
ROY CARVER BMW
l~ Jamhort•l' Ho:.id
NEWPOHT lU-:ACll
640-6444 IWi!~l~ ~ ................. ~~~.~iieje~u~:h1J!~~~i· I~·1c~·~:~tl~~~:IT'. E&Y~~~1:X:~i~'.:. S 1968 tenance.M2·2Sl
7
2626 HAUOR BLVD. stereo, recar06. spoiler. HURRY HOW!
COSTA MESA We have other tine etc. Best over $10,000.
--------499-1237 ' -t • ... • • ' COSTA MESA
DATSUN
IMWRESALES
1973 l .OCS
4 i.peed with ~unroor
<~1 \ICG I.
1974 2002
*DRIVE A* * LlnLE ••• *
SAVE A LOT
SHOP & COMPARE
BARWICK DATSUN
s· ... , lu.1ut .1p;....!,,111u
831-137S 493-3375
4 ~pcerl. air t•onrl & Call
s t t.• r l' o c :.i s ~ct t e NEWPORT DATSUN
<763MCC I for the best buy In a new 1974 3.0Sa or used Dal!un! ,\utomatic, a ir cond &
sunroo(. C388KLF>
1974 3.0Csa
Automatic, sunroof &
leather Interior
('488LNT).
1976 5301a
4 speed with sunroof
833-1300
The 71• An Htrt
All models & colors.
1 ...... cMatt
DtffYtry Todcry!
<ERIN Dl. 3 to choose Lasl chance for fan-
from. 1977 3201 tasllc savings on all re-
maining '77 models in s 4 s peed, air cond.
A:\f /FM stereo, meta llic
paint & only 7800 miles.
(!l.SJS ;\I v )
COSTA MES~.
DATSUN
'16 DATSUN
4DOOI
Aufo l •ll 0f'1ve •"4 8 Vf' s-l-..._ °""" llwu t-~ re S"'-1$(»6 s2sso
Bill MAXEY
TOYOTA
........ •l l•d ••' ...... \
... Ufii'flM~1t,1Nlf •l M
MI S~ION VllJO IMPOIHS
'•• I ' • . ._ ..
,.,, 1148 49~ 1104
'74 Mazda RX4 st.a wag. '66 2SOSE coupe, 4-spd,
Good cond. Lo ml 's. mint cond $9500.
$2200 or make ofr. 646-2231
IUY OR LEASE
'77-911-S·Targa, fully
loaded, under 7000 mi's,
rull warranty. Copper
brown w /fawn Inter.
Asking $20.000 or lse at
$338 mo. 675·91 I l or
675-1337 S40-60l8 ----------·
INVENTORY
RB>UCTIOH
SALE!!!
1969 280 SEL
lf you want ah xlnl 1!169 '65 3S6C Super rond
MD from onginal o~nt•r Man y xtr11s. $6500.
which shows xlnt earl' 8.J0..5216 C\'e. or 830·6030
for $5900 firm call tle~ve message>
~64!._0or fl:'·l .. 1684 __ 1974 Sil\.' c r Tur g a
Over 50 brand new Porsche. 64,0-00 miles.
M al d a G LC ' i. 1 n MGI 9744 Orig. owner. Maint. re-
st0<·k ... Mazda's "G real ••••••••••••••••••••••• cords. Showroom cond.
Little Car"! ........,. '71 MGB. Xlnt cond. Low Carrera a cces. AC, FREE mi. orrer. Call ~-216.9. AM/FM t.ape stereo. ce .
968-68&7 Radar sentry, fog radio <o r cash ~ oo '74 Datsun Pickup. AM · equivalent) with Stork forces sale! Late lamps. 714 ·17 ex
FM stereo, mag wbls. purchase of any GLC In '77 MGB. SIC miles. _1_rn _______ _
Michelin radials, Lon· stock. Offer good thru Green /tan• x In~· '63 Porsche S·OO. rebuilt
neau cover, Mint cond, February 6, 1918. garaged. ~125. AM s engine. trans .. new
$)000. 640-0337 aft 6Pm HURRY HOW!!! 838-4644 PM 5 9.i0-2774 clutch, clean thruout.
284S HARBOR BLVD.
54()..6410 540-021 l
Bill MAXEY
TOYOTA
••••• '"'"''"'1•1. ,., '"''"
HUN flN'-'" lOH If AC tf
'75 210 Hlchbck. Lo mi. We wlll meet or beat the 1967 MGB-new englne . $000. 644·6768 ---------
AM FM. orig ownr. 42 prlces of •,~r other paint . top, inte rior & 061 Super l600. By owner.
mpg. lsl ofr over S2 Ma1.da dealer... stereo. In cherry ~ndi· Completely restored. nu
lakes. 1 /63!>-2744 dyi.. Ml• "CLE lloo. <983KDE L Pn pty. tirefl. Classic. $5000. 675-44 24. 675 -8127 11\A Call631·5767after6pm. ~7613 cv:. IWknds MAIDA .. IHAULT _.... ____ _ 284SHARBOR BLVD. 1 ~ '65 MGB. Convertible. All '76 912£. Bra nd new 131-2040 495-4949 540.6410 540.021 l 74 260Z, rruiny xtras. 2150 Harbor Blvd. new everything. Great e v e r y
'76 2002. ex cell cond .. '75 B210 hatc hbac k . Need ~~4~~i $4850 c~Wts~i~A bargai'n! $1000. 83!·9644 thing. $15.195. Inell.Id 'g
2lK mi. fully equipped AM/FM. Air, good cond. '~ 9748 new car warr. 831·9644
P .P. Mu~l sacrifice. Make offer. 213/694·1061. Newly r eblt Dats un Mercedes leftl 9740 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '72 914. air nu riogs.
&\0-7014 or714/871-88SO engine for '66 Datsun.••••••••••••••••••••••• •PEUGEOT• valves, cl0tch , brka.
Auto., Hew tlOO Autoa, Htw 9100 $2()0. Will sell rest of ca 1975 Ml% 210 We have a good se~c-Weber carb. 49M mi.
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• for $50. 8J9..0078 SEDAN. Tobacco brown Uon o{ 8046 & '78 Diesels ~ 494·2130 52180
HELPf
Wt Heed 9-yen f« al th9M
•71 VWa sowe' MClke ltworth
yo.-wt.hto-,at
HARIOUR VOLKSWAGEN
Al Modlfs & Colan A•aHallle
'69 VYI Illa •••••••••••• s 1495
SPi. of the Wee\ Maga, stereo. 732CRO
'61VW1132 ltlCI •••••••• Sl2tS
Pretty blue. 1.1c. vz.vfe1. .,, vw 1132 ............ $1495
Sff.,.r blue. Uc. 028As"
'70 YW Coftvewt .......... $1195 Blue, lh#p. 1.0. 103304
~4 YW IM •••••••••.•• $3495
lo ml.. -· &f9r90. 33'oLWB
74 VW GWa •••••••••••• $3495
Air. at9feo. r1lci<. 293896
?6 VW ................. SAVI
Stereo. altw ~ ~ rnl. 017NXO
?I VWI_.... •••••••••• $32'1 ~ Or. Auto.. etereo. A beaut. 93-'NVB
74 vw.... . .......•... $299& t» m1i.a: 121~a
?I kfrOcce •••••••••••• SJHI
/IJt, 4 ap;. ...,..,, 888NYI
'61 Y.tt •••••••••••••••••• SA ft
NJce & .. Iver. 0aa1¢. ROJ4811
70 Ca41r •••....•.••• $Jttl
TltM Of yallf' to bW. 77180H
'78 2+2 290Z. only 23 exter io r & in im· now ln atoclt. R.....tt 9755
orig mi's. 3 yr warranty. macula-te condition. IEACH IMPORTS new car. Lower than de-(229MFW)'f Muat see to •••••••••••••••••••••••
aler's price. 963-7171, appreciate. 848 DOVE STREET TEST DRIVE OUR ,,.,..2333 eves. (Near MacArthur Blvd. ''LE C _iR "°"' & Jamborff Road). ,.. •
NEWPORT BEACH OF THE YEAR"
752-0900 Good inventory 1n stock .
MIH I ON VIEJO IMPORH .. ' .. . .... .. ..
63 I 114 8 4V5 1104
BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA . ,, •• ·····•··ti ......... ,
thJNt '""'<-ro ... 11 .. r ~ '76 280Z. 2+2. auto, air,
AMtFM. mag whls. less
than 11; yrs old 14.
m1, ltke new. 50,000 mi
warranty $1975. 644-4589
'°"che 9750 Hum' w~reey last!
'11 MIZ 450SL ••••••••••••••••••••••• MIAt~i GARAGE SALE ads In·
Silver, blue lthr int. 1960 Porsche 3568. beau~. MAZO /lll!MAULT the Daily Pilot brine bap-1972 -240Z. yellow. xln stereo cau. alum wbls. example. Must sell this 2150 Harbor Blvd. py results. To place your
cond, loaded, 673·S427aft All xtr as, li ke nu . week . Make otter. COSTA MESA drawing card, phone
_s_P_M ______ -1 $22.SOO. PP. 499-3613 SSS-7238 alwr6 pro . 645-5700 642·5678today.
\970 Sta. Wagon. needs ,74 MIZ 45051 AMtM. Htw 9100 Aaltos, Htw tlO Autos. Mew 9100
work. $800/besl offer. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••~• •••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Must sell. 631·0913 Complete with stereo, _
----i pwr. windows, cruise IN 5"TI OF W •5
'69 Dataun PU w 1camper control & less than 34.000 OltST LOCATION .•
shell, runs good. SOOO or miles. A rare rin d!
n1alce ofr. 646-5401.
'75 280Z. wht, xlnt cond.
Best offer. 673·5785 nlle
or day
Rat ••••••••••••••••••••••
1976 RAT XI /9
With stereo cassette
only 19,000 miles .
<887PFI).
SAODLUACK
V ALLIY IMPORTS
131-2040 495-4949
FIAT 124
SPIDR
COHVBnlLES
(2 >To Choose From
Ur75 1J 19'76
Both with low mlleaae
bl excellent sboWl'OOan
condit\()Cl, (11W11).
f'rtcedteW
Mf~'tc1r. I/If 11) tM~•(l.,1\
l) J 1 f "·1 1 ..J.... I .,, ..
----~
MISSION VIUO IMPOIHS ... . .. '• .. , . ._ ...
BJ I 1148 4 95. I /04
70 2IO sa
All pwr. Xlnt cond.
$5995 675-9534, 7SJ.0484
'7' Mil 450$&
Fully luxury equipped
includlni cruise control,
!lunroor, air condltlon-
1 ng. ster eo tape &
leather Interior.
(<M6653l.
Ml\\ION V•/J!JIMl'OR1\
BJ' 174/J .io,>', '104
'74 450SEL. ucell cond .. loaded, eun-tf stereo,
cruise cont.rot lthr Int.
Sac. $12,500, 497-1718,
49'1-:MM
'66 M BZ 230SL
Xlnt oood. nops.
SZ2· 7299 & S.23-0334
HEW'71 ~IOWlGOM
s3777
" speed. big cargo aree.
rear window
de f og g er,
cao>ettno.
tOICJCllola
GUSTAFSON
LINCOLN MERCURY
1 &too leo<h t0ulevO<CI
"""''"II .............
142-1144
---~~----~----------
'SJ VW, aunrool, AM-F
rebll eng. l900.
+67S-1447•
'68 Westphalia cmp
Cherry, no rusL 66M
$1895. 494-2130
73 2 dr Corolla,
48.000 m1. >.Int
$1.600. ~ ·51162
s tick. Divorce, must sell. Sha
l'Q.nd. VW Bus, 1972. $2500 1
ofr. S40·0383 after S PM
Alltos, Hew 9100 AMtos, Hew ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
FANTASTIC
1101411
SELL·A·BRATION .
96HOUR
FEB. 2, 3, 4, 5 ONLY
AUTHORIZED
DISCOUNTS
On Every New Car
In Our Hug• Inventory
SAVINGS LIKE
YOU'VE NEVER SEEN BUORE
Has AM/FM 8 track.
iuaaae r~k. Beauty wheel rinp, etc. (Ser.124 187)
Only 5,416 Miles
• So6d new for $7222.96 s5595 *THIS WIEICIND
Low rniltaae DEMO. Auto. trans .. air condl·
tlontna . Loaded with
llltrt$. (lief .93937)
14799
1971124 SpNw
Only 1-',530 rnlles.
Loaded & like new .
(307NRN)
'5295
1174124 Spl••
l ~~M .• ~
tlldlo.t11C1aetim.eto.
(OelNQI)
'3495
BRAND NEW
FIAT
1314-DR.
f Ktory Afr Cond.
Automatic Trans.
Auto. trans.. fact. air,
cond.. AM/f M ~IO, •
macs. etc. (Ser.~),
s4999
117512CS,l•er
lvcwy finish. futly equip-
ped . Mint condition.
(Set.92206) .
•4495
1974125 .....
5 JC*d tn~. nidld. heatW, ... *-
(49'1.JU) ·3-l l
. .
. '
...... UM4 Allto1, UHd (I Aldo1, U1•d Autot, U1~ AMto1. Us.cl Atlto1, U1.d •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• l~orhd A.Mtol,._,...W .._,l•••rhd C ... HIS C ·u 9tl5 ~eolet tUO Carntte 9U2 Pord . 9940 ........... 9960 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
~rtday. F!b!u!y 3. 1'71
••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• * ~ * Automatic. pwr steer AM·FM stereo, llh.r lnt. cond. $22SO or orter llJtllACUDA
9770 V•• 9772 ..... 9772 v· . .... I I ~ lfn2 Monte Carlo '15 Corvette Auto. AC. '7$ Torino. A /C, Xlnl • 974 PLYMOUTH
1977 'IW IWORI YOU IUY 1974 VOLVO CADILLAC lnl. 1alr cond. vinyl top. pwr wind. Green. Xln Muataell. MZ·OtSZS In excellent condltlon
UllfTDll5a A.USll>VOLVO, 2444M.SIDAM USAUS MustaeU (714)493·1089 co nd. 40 ,000 ml .~_._.. 9947 with automatic pwr A t ti $1300/bll ofr. SSl-1183 __._ I ~-"-' ln a· to find model with See u 1 at Southern . u oma c, pwr. 11teer· 73 Monte Carlo. pretty ••••••••••••••••••••••• Slettlnc. 1 r '-VI"'•• v Y
low mUes. Call tor Oranae County's Volvo IJ\I, •u.nrool. lnth r In· • 1971 &Do.ADO dark blue, auto, AM /f'M C..,.. 9933 75 MaYenc• C top. (116645). A nice car
a.it.. ClS4TBH> Jt..dqurteta. ~'!"~"' Machelins. C>r-.C..tyC ...... ·1 llAIRIT'l'a stereo. air, 11wlvel ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8cyl .. sticlt shU\, f:wer tor WON'T LAST LOMG MAl'i>UIS VOLVO ~P•· S.•0.. (3)ToCboose From bucket seats. lilt whl. Take over lease '7'1 steerlna. radio Slit OMLY SZ795 llLL YATIS Ml~ION VIEJO • All are fully "loaded". PS, PB Good cond Cougar XR7 Beaut tux· 7029A. ~N'lr.mlllils:;~---•..,,__~
Mf~)ION lllf JO IMl'Olll S YW' -RSCHE 13 l·JHO 495-121 O OVER I 00 Miies as low as 1400. S2100 bi3·6071 ury car w 1every option $2095 ...-v U78298>. Only $184 per mo. 28 mos
C •DILLACS t«IGI •.&VIHGS '64 Corvair Spyder ron ~!'1 .. ali46ning on 3 yr lse. 540-5630 . . . . .. . . "" .. .
San Juan Capistrano
137-4100 491.4511 Ol.A.HGI COUNTY BJI 1148 '9l I 70•
VOLVO Auto• Used
EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO •••••.'••••••••••••••••• L~r&e~t Volvo Dealer AMC 9906
A ~ vert .. 4-spd. good cond . .....,..,
TO CHOOSI FROM Sl~-64~2333 --------'
"'T "'LL TIMES 1977 FLllTWOOD . 191 2 Co u g a r X R 7 • "' "' IROUG .... "'MS 74 Chevy Nova ~ustom AM /FM, AC. PS. PB. lo na ht hbk AC PS PB 2626HARIOlt ILVD.
1011\SO\ & SO\
• LINCOLN ME 11CURY Bug '7 1 rebwlt eng.
u paint ·ss body S8!;0
11544-5214 m Orange County! ••••••••••••••••••••••• BUYorLEASE. • 1'i...T .... 1bers VW Bus. 1000 ma on nu 011\Ect 73 Gremlin. PS,AT. air l ~
eblt eng. Great cond. cond. AM·/P'M stereo.
(3) To Choose From c · · · • rru. new paint. whl, new All fully equipped with bucket seats, auto. tires. brks, s hocks & COSTA MESA un.a Ply. Satellite Sta.
miles as low as 10,000. be~I~~ :w ~b~~ .'~~· 7 ~ll~r !!~~'fr, du64a51 !!~3aust. Men:wy 9950 Wag. 9 pass .. p /S, p /8. (S6TJ'LPr. 963.7820 _..,.,. rm. ...., ••••••••••••••••••••••• Air, Gd. t ires, tr ans.
torr 494.2793 _ _ ~·,~c~,~·1·J!~·~ ~:i ~~~~!:ind. $lll00. Cadillac Priced to s.11! ORANGE COUNTY'S Cooler. air s hocks,
"11 Impala excel cond. 4 Dodp 9935 MIWIST trailer hitch, CB Radio
dr. Factory air. nu eng. •••••••••••••.•••••••••• LlNCOLN-MERCURY lnct. Good Cood. $1 ,900.
Sac too<>. 751-1706 _ '71 Charger Super Edi· Deelershlp ls now OPEN _834 __ 0899_. _____ _ ~no Bubble Top Bus, • T • --,,, 11 h 111 1 :::IS:ooo ml on new ena 1977 Hornet sta. wgn. -1100 " or H 1977 UMOUSIME
4ew paint, bed, FM 8 2025 S 'Manchester Takeover payments '"'"'·' Mn.1 .;,~0·'1100 Full power, air cond,
:Yk. radials. $2000. Andy Anaheim ?50-2011 E _:_ ~1·8744 ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!..I stereo tape. senlinal. ~-6656 _ _ --Wd& 991 o Autos. UMCI rummer. cruise control.
'6.1 Chevy II Novu sla lion, auto. PS. PB, RAY R.ADEIOE '74 Duster. Im mac. 31,000
wgn. 1 owner. nu tires: bucket seals $109S t0fr. LINCOLN-MERCURY ml. 18·20 mp1. 1 owner.
r b It en g. I m m a c 752·5620 aft 6PM 16-18 Auto Center Dr ~ S2790. MW!l sell. 754-6961 S ed h V h bghted entry system & BaJa. 1700cc enl(. xlnl. w as olvo Mee a_ni ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• vanity mirror. power trl5 ofr 54&-0945 '70 Dodge wgn, 9 pass. SDFwy·Lake Forest c:<tl e\•s "W_k_n_ds __
" 70 Bug 4.spd. 49 000 ma n_ow al Ivan!> Forl!1gn '72 LeSabre Convt. Rare GeMI al 990 I trunk 1 k 1
•• lust sdl ~2.os.28 Car repairs. 199!i lfarbo car in mint cond Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• & oni:C 1'1 ~ro~u m~re~~ '89 blue mist Chev wgn !I loaded '72 Chevy Vega 813~V71NOOEO ·75 Cslm Fury cpe. 39.000
p&Sli Xlnt cond. SMlQ bi.I wgn, 4·i.pd. air S999 v-actual m1 ·i.. A C. Nu
orr today. Will trade ~h. 645·1448 evstwkdys -. . ' rad I a I s. $3250 t orr. ..... 94n xt "" pp . ~ a.. iO Marqws. very clean ssz.~ ~ e ..., ~ ~ Cruise cntrl. P JW. P dr ---
·~ · &vd.OM &i!i 1982 RaJphor'SallyM0-7744 Showroom new-al
VW BaJa Sedan. new L'~--=: - -----PROPERTY black. (164840). · res, :.hocks, p:unl, oil,, v:: -'67 Sta wgo. Gd work car HUGE •.&VJ)IGS ·~1er. roll bar. lamps, $250. -
"!lutch & spe<"1al susp Ho""• 646·4996 RmUCTION ~fui.l see. 960 6187 morn ol •loo ngs. v.~'"ll 1968 Electra. ong o,.ncr SAL( -18,000 m1 . ~ dr hdtp.
VW Camper, lo mt, \"inyl roof. all pwr. AC. F1ect replacements re-
41ew eng .. xlnt mech S82!i. ti-10 ·3334 day . qwre lhe Daily Pilot lo
d. $1990.1·768-17114 1969VOlVO !Hti-9'.!l!ieve hqu1dale 12 Plymouth
J1 V Dug. rbll eng , gd
ond. $1000 or bci.l J..7~ or 540·4l!l0 Ext
COYPI '68 Skylark, good condt· Station Wagons fro m ex· :oz' .:~""=.~':".;; lion. ru11y equipped. isling inventory CM & I,.,_ -11&61100) $1000, 5Jl·!i668
5998
GUSJAFSON·
"62 Buick Sperial Con
vert. Need:. work. $300
Ph: 646·181ti eves
9915 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LIN.COLN MERCURY VW pop top cam1>er ~/'72 rblt eng. n<·w tires 6~009,0,"a<>ule•o•d
1
. 076 Senile, 1mmac.,
, shoc·ks, run:. good. """''"9'•" a.och custom gnll. w1r1.' whls.
king $1800 St•l' ut Ill! 842.8844 4!19 -3732 blwn l S
7lh St. NB Lv msg al • $10,250.
3-4695 ~=""==~==-=1fl ---'7!i Eldo. Lo mt. sorr.
4 VW Dasher 4 dr wi;:n. ·71 \'olvo 144. dt'an. oldr loaded. Gd cond. Stlvt'r
lnl cond. Auto. mu:.t auto, AM l'':\t radio 1 blue. Bst orr. 499.1477
ell 64fl·0791 Ow SltiOO ~I 5685 nr · t9664dr.A/C.fullpower.
E AM i''M :.tereo Nl.'w .75 lti4E. Lots or xtras. 4 new tires. as as ~75.
ake:. & Dalt Perrecl Very clean, Xlnt cond. 8-17-6825 nd Best ofr 640·!i262 o<JV\ be r u --------·-__ ~..,.,.,or st ol er must .72 CAD CDV. white. foll ~ Bug. runs good, look~ ·ell 548·0.W_ _ pwr. A C. xlnt cond. Call
9"',.iul $i50 ·74 14~ AM , FM Slick 770-0654. ~ 6461677 . ---------1 :-_ l lean $3250. or best offer •;4 Cad Eldorado Conv.
; 67 YW lus, $995. ~ 3911 All xtras. Reg. gai. ·~>S 64611!130 SELL idle items w1lh a Good cond $5700
;-Dally Pilot Cla:.!-.1r1ed Ad 759-1676. ' -----------jillltos, Hew 9800 Autos, Hew 9800 Autos, Mew 9800 r······················ ....................... ·············~········ . \
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . . • .. . . . . • . . . . . . . .· .. . ... .. · ... ::
VI e H~ aows of '&ft
To C~ "'°"' ...
MEW CAPRI II
1976
VOLARES
3 to choose from. All
with factory air condl·
tionmi<, 318 engine. lug
gage racks, trailer tow·
ing package. AM JFM
~h'reo 2 equipped with
power windows. Pnced
from . $2175
CL1c.n858PCW >
1976 ..
GRAM FURY
Station W11gon . 2 lo
choose rrom. 440 4 bbl.
engine. AM ;FM stereo.
power windows, roof
rnrks and factory u1r
<·ond1llo n1ng Priced
from.
$2150
<Lac 11600PCY l
1975 FURY
Cui.tom Suburban
Wagon!> 5 to choose
rrom. All with foctory
air. roor racks. 360 4 bbl.
engine. 01rrerent choice
or extras on each car .
PriN.>d from·
$1975
1L1r i1223MCG >
1976
GRAM FURY
Custom Suburban. Fac-
tory ai r , 360 4 bbl.
engine. luggage rark.
heavy duty i.hocks. lint
ed glasi.. gold metallic
rin1:.h
$1950
ILIC' 11799NCF)
1975
SPORTS FURY
1977 SEVILLE Chrp.... 9925 111..-~
Full power. air cond .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• s te~eo tape_, cruise, '76 Chrysler Cordova,
Ho"'•
ol rloe
locks. P /trnk rbe. lit 1900 Plymouth 5.-ltelltle
whl. P seat. 7 ·ply Sll Runs &ood. $'ISO or bet>l
blld rad. AM FM 8-lrk offer. 646-4987
twU1&ht se.ntanal, auto. Loaded. ~
dimmer. hg~ted ~ntry •833·1990• system & varuty mirror.---------
Low miles. Flrem1sl CoeullsMntal 9930
plum w /matching top & •••••••••••••••••••••••
leathe r interior. m ~ "'
<683RDT).
I 977 SEVILLE
"MOOMROOF"
Full power. air cond .•
stereo cassette, cruise.
pwr. recjiner, lighted en·
lrY system, wire wheel
coverll & only 10.000
miles . Powder blue
w /matching top & in·
tenor. <Z70TL P >.
1977 D'ELEGAMCE
COUPE DE .VILLE
Full ,power , air cond.,
stereo/C.B .. cruise con·
trot. sentinal, dimmer,
hghled entry system.
secunty system. Dark
brown w /bei&e lop & in·
tenor. (157462-l.
1976 B.DORADO
"SUM ROOF"
· '.""Home
011~.
v1•1n9"
..
1'117
MARKV
~·'599 .... .... --~
This beautrlul car 1s
loaded with oPtlons.
Cruise control. tall
wheel . 8 track
AM/FM stereo. all .
power windows &•
seats. Car has less
than 13.000 miles
One only (lac
139TCRJ
SJQ,900
PtylllOflla ot 1298 « b eo '"ont1's 1 otlll eat" pttc• •11.86• 1nct la. & 11c
Oet•H•d • 1e 10~ 40 incl
,,.. lice" .. '""•"'
Full power, air cond .• rull injection. spill pwr.
seats. stereo. cruise con·
trot, senlinal. pwr. truck
lock & only 20,000 miles .
Dark brown w /buckskin
top & leather interior .
<246280>. GUSTAFSON
Full '!7.!e~E!:~L~ond .. L:~.~~<h::~;~:y I
s tereo tape, cruise. rtun••"9'"" a.oth
lighted entry system & 142-1844
1975 DOOOE
OARf
2 -· • cyl -.,.,,. • ..O•o. lleeter. -ol_."9. 11r cono • vlnyt tool
(4&1MOOI
5 1998
* GUSTAFSON
llNCOLN MERCURY
I &800 hoch lovt•"o'd• '°""'•ft91CM\ koc-h,
842-8844
'1iG""
'74 Dodge rear end. Will
fit Darts & Dusters $125.
842·6169
Dodae Charger, 2 dr.
1973, looks & runs very
well I owner. $1'100.
673-002
1976 Swinger Special! On-
quad w 14.20 oi Jensen
spkrs. ''inyl top. Must
set I. $1500. 536-8785
'71 Marqws 4·dr sedan.
all pwr'd . AM -FM
stereo. $1400. 963·7398 pp
'75 Monarc h. PS/PB.
AM /FM . air. new
radials. Xlnt cond $3600.
Ph 495·5l60
75ptymovth
DuaterCo.pe
6cyl., auto trani; .. air
conditioning. power
steenng, 558NDP
$2425 .
S40·S630
1011\SO\ & SO\
• LINCOLN·MERCURY
2626 HARIOR ILVD.
COSTA MESA COUGAR ·77 xn 1
LOADED' Show room
cond. '3800. Call 536-0907 -Pontiac 9965 •7 3 Mercwy • ••••••• • • • ., • • • • • •• • • •
Colony Park 19'1!i Pontiac Aslre. 2 dr
9 Passenger Wagon Air hatchbk. 4 spd. 32.000
conditioning. power mi. $!\00. 975-6200 dys.
steering. power win· Sl&-41'11 evs
dows, AM /FM stereo.
191JEY
$2195
540-5630
1011 \SO\ & SO\
• LINCOLN·M ERCURY
'6'1 Firebird. A{f. A/C,
p /B, p /S. JISO. 548-6'128
'73 Grand Prix. SJ. 35.SOO
onii mi. Loa,4ed. $2500
Pb49H093
ly 19.000 males. 2 dr H.T. 2626 HARIOR ILVD. 1972 f'lrebard. xlnt cond
Full pwr. extras. T.O.P . COSTA MESA S'l400
540-38ll 846·7882
Ford -9940 '72 Mere. C.P. Wgn, A·l
cond, full pwr. $1650 / ·7~ Pontiac F'1reb1r'd
••••••••••••••••••••••• Best orfer. 644·23ll. Formula. fully louded.
•
-P'HIL Mustang 9952 xlnt cond. $)900. 646·2360
LONG ••••••••••••• •• ••• ••••• '70 GTO. Xlnt.
FORD 1974 Mustang II C hm. New Paml(I'ires
sunroof. PS. PB. air: lo $?000 962-6719
mi, AM /FM 8 ltk, auto. '76 Trans AM, 31,000
968'3089 aft 6PM miles, auto, cruise,
'6S Fslbk 2S9. mech. AM/FM, 8 track. $t995 .
sound. needs minor bdy _67_6-_5064 ______ _
wrk. 9600. Dan. 642..SSSO .
vanity mirror. Low ~ 'fl
miles . Red w i r ed .......... ~ •• ~ •• o. ........ ., leather interior & while -.... -..... c..... , .. _
'75 Mustang II Ghia .
Auto, air. PS/PB. V-8,
AM-FM tape, xlnt end .
Must see. Call Allison
752.2995 or 6'15.()(29
'74 Grand Safari 9 pass
w11n. till whl, cruise .
stereo radio & tape, roof
rack, split frn l seat _
wtpwr, 4.\,000 mi. very
clean. $3195. oC92· 7296 ·
top. Sold new by us. ~ -===============-(SSSPKDI Ford '72 LTD Wgn. out
HUGE SAVINGS
ALLEN
Olds tCadillac JG MC
S.D Frwy.-Avery Exit
LAGUNA NIGUEL
(714)495-6430
Home standing cond. New
ol ,~. tares. cpts & reblt eng. ·ss Mustang, xlnt condl·
V1•1n9 644·~ __ _ tion, $2,000 llutdertHrd 9970 545-0789 •••••••••••••••••••••••
1976
LINCOlN
CONTINENT Al
TOWHCOUPI
19'13 Gran Torino wgn. ------
Xlnl cond. Metallic blue
$1495. 759·1260 SUPER BUY!! I
·;5 Mus. II. Good cond .
''14 LTD 9-passenger 4·spd. econo. eng, stick
wagon, aar, $!600. shft. 26.000 mi. Stereo,
•!163-0216• mag wh.ls. nu tires.
---------1 S2500Jreas. ofr. 559-6870
'HoJlft•
of llt• v ..... , ..
,-
f
Wagon. AM JFM stereo.
air conditioning. 360 4 75 Fleetwood Brougham,
bbl. engine. tinted glass, D'EI, velour int . 42K.
power windows. Sliver t6300. 963-83'17 ; 963·7653
-"'499 .... O<l -cndl 1~&/t~ G~=~~~~'. CM•biM 9955
Uon. 968·3461 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ $3998 T~11 "ew 71-• -''lf'\111'\iH.an oowet fr'Of"'lt
dilC b'ekea r•Cllnlftl
bucket •••11. t•oe bOdy mld9• (Sor IOAECTll2~13)
Cloud metallic finish. PM $2225 --------1
(Lie. #B46MPQ> 19'16 Cpe DeVille, xlnt.
Loaded with
options. V·8.
automatic, AM/FM
stereo. cr u ise
control. tilt wheel,
po wer windows,
vi nyl roof. apllt
comfort aeata. "Real
p retty car . One
only. (Lie. 238SPV)
•is FORD LTD PRIVATE PARTY
4 dr Sedan. vs. auto 74 OLDS CUnASS
1W7
T-BIRD
Ot&,'399. ~ t,: .. -.. .. :-.-.....
·~
.
Vel\~....,...ltclpnor ... -Pnc. pU 1 .. a k-2..,,1 '·'~!~TJl,PJI ·
16100 llACM ILYD. ••2 8844 HUNTINGTON HACH • 9W •
VIO~~~~H s 1395
(578KLI)
lt7l
MBCWY
CAN.I
(004HSO
1974 .... .-..r·
1008LJO
1916
FORD s3595 UHCHBOGT
(1C17702
"" us:i'4D1. s3995 (483POL)
Sunroof & xtras, new
All cars may be Inspect· tires & brks. Av l 2/S.
ed in ·garage area. Ask SllK>O or best ofr. 642·9686
for Rick or Oscar. _w_k_d_a.:.y_s _____ _
1977
POU MUST...-
(739RXS)
ORAMGI COAST BeauUtul '74 wht & blk
DAILY PILOT epe de Ville. loaded. Lo
330 West Bay St.reel m I 's • $4 9 9 S . P . P . ,
Coeta Me11a 5116-SMQ
For Information:
642·4321
$6200
'71 MARK V
trans., air conditioning, 2.0R. Hr
vinyl roof. 862LXZ Less than 47,000 miles,
$3575 one owner, very clean,
never damaged. Factory 540· 5630 air conditioning. Power steer ing and brakes,
vinyl roof. good tires,
AM /FM radio. Sacrifice. 1011\SO\ &SO\
• LINCOLN· MERCURY
2626HARIOR ILVD. _64.c_-0468 _______ ,
COSTA MESA 1972 Sta w gn c ust.
75 FORD LTD cruiser, 9 pass, full pwr. AM-FM stereo. Priced t.o
4 dr Sedan .. AlrJ<Cond.. sell. $1.050. 642·3203 power sleenng, power
brakes, power ~dows. ''1'1 Cutlass. Brougham,
power seata, All /FM loaded.
stereo tap e, beater , 552-T749 an. &pm
cruise control. Split --..._ 9957 seats. 967 MXH ,.._
$1575
540-5630
1011\SO\ & SO\
• LINCOLN ·MERCURY
•••••••••••••••••••••••
'72 Squire Wagon .
Yellow, new tires. recent
mjr overhaul. Gd cond .
Best ofr. 759-9335 an 6
Oft _..,.... CNdll
Loaded with all the
goodies Incl. cruise
cont rol. wh ite
interior & exterior.
with white vinyl
roof. Beautiful ~
must see to
app rfclate . One
only. (Ll~952NLL)
55750
GUSTAFSON
LINCOLN MEICU•Y
CARTIER Full power, s unroof, 2626HARIOR ILVD.
8,165 miles. Beautirul COSTA MESA
'74 Pinto Wagon. Lug-
gage rack, mag wheels
<wide>. S-track tape
161()1) leoch toule•ord
"""""9'"" a.odl.
142-8144
(~~clal interior. 1970 Torino. 33,000 m l.
SH TOD "'Y' xtnt cond. seso.
deck/ radio, auto., whl lj/
exterior. blue interior,---------
SOK miles. $1795. 642·3379 Vega 9974 "' • 1l<H175-2605 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 540-5630 '75 2·dr Granada, VS, -. ....... 9· 9u "14 Hatchback, A/C, AM I
P /S, P /8 , air . FM rifl911ni -FM. Frnt disc bk, 53M,
stereo, vinyl top, Clean. ••••••••••••••••••••••• xlnl cond. $1400. B.O. 1011 \SO\ & SO\
• llNCOlN·Mlll1'URY '93-9648 · "13 Plymouth, P ;S. Air , P.P. 546-2022
2626HA1tl0l ILVD. Nu ti 6 I $1900 COSTA MESA Alltol, Mtw 9100 Must s~~s·&U-~f32 • ~· Mtw 9100 --------------1 •••• ... . .. . . . .......... . ...................... .
'HLIMCOLM
COHTIMIHT AL
SEDAN. lull power ,
very good condition.
VIM'128
$1295
540·5630
1011 \SO\ & SO\
• l INC <ll N ~f H1 URY '78 cadilkat Brougham
, d ElepK• $29208 . TAX
Equipped With automatic ·cumate control, luxury lnterk>r ,.tilt
& telescope steef1ng wheel, pawer door locke, l)OWer'
windows. power brakes. split power seat, full padded vtnjl
top, wtre wheel oovera. AM/FM stereo radio w/8 tmak
stereo tape S>tus much, much more.
Serial 1t8B89S89147662 Cap $13078.00
· Residual $6800.32
36 Month 0 .E.L. Based On Initial Cash
Outlay of SS.2.20 Including License
' /
I
BRAID IEW 1978
KDS CUTLASS cALAIS
With power brakes -windows -door locks -trunk. vinyl top,'
tilt wheel. Cfulse controt. AMIFM tape, clock. SPorts . '
wheels, mirrors & air cond. (3K47F8M48r6f7l(863S)
73FIAT 124
Radio. heeler. 4 IPMd. (878KXZ)
73SUIARU
Air coftdltlonlng, radio, heater, 4
speed. (353SFLT $5896 · MO.
'73 OLDS OMEGA HATCHIACK $62!5 Automatic. power steering, PoWer
brakes, air cond., radio & heater. MO (631NBV}. •
a1m _,......,...,.,1111.a-1~.,,.__.,_._~~,,_l:t"32A
Nll«JAJ.. f'£AC!fHTNlE Mn: 1..-
BRAID NEW 1978
..
BRAID IEW 1978
OLDS 98 llGENCY ,,_.. ------------___ , ____ -----. Full Power and Loadadl!I
(~69R8M152194) (6474)
'76 AMC GREMLIN
Air condttlonlng, IWflo. heater. 4
speed. (OEE42Q).
'73 MERCURY CAPRI
Equipment Includes radio, heater,
¥! vinyl top, radial tlree and mags.
(274GOV)
'7 4 OLDS TORONADO
Loaded. Air conditioning, AM/FM
stereo, 6 WW1 powtK seat. power
windows & vinyl top. (361LCC)
BRAID IEW 1978 . ---"
GMC
. .
Fr1day, FebfUary 3, 1978
BRAID IEW · 19J1
OLDS-DBI
,•
V8, air conditioning. power steering, power brakes. tilt ·
wheel, pin striping & deluxe wheel coven
(3L69R8C122313)(8379) •
•75 OLDS OMEGA 6 CYLINDER s91w · Automatic, air conditioning.
power steettng. radio, heater, . power~ (837MEP). MO.
lttCIO.OOClllflptoe•i.c•-.-..:11_..,.....,.. ... ....,. .... o...... ............ ·~U. NH.W.flQlc:EHrAGI RATE 14,.... '
'77 CUTLASS SUPREME
Air cond., Y, vinyl top, AM/FM
stereo & tip&, tilt wheel, power
brakes & steering, Loaded.
(182895)
·s129• MO.
BRAID IEW 1978 ... .--~_.. ' GMC ·YJION
LONGBED PICK -CABALLEROS JIMMYS
With 3.73 axle.1ock. diff., 400 V8, automatic. pwr. steering, chrome bumpers. gauges. removable hardtop, folding rear
& auxlllary seats & much morel CTKR188Z512214)
(TCD148Z510345)
(TCD148Z51 1656l
IMMEDIATi DELIVERY
$
BR
. ..
vlrand New 1978
CIVIC
CVCC 4. SPEED
HATCHBACK
Brand
New
1978
. With power steering, Power brakes, turbo hydromatic.
gauges. radials & much morel (5W80A8Z500622)
(5W80A8Z500628l .~ CTKR188Z512222l . .
IMMEDIATE •UVERY IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
$
cmc cv~cc
s
4
SPEED
nAMSMISSIOM
Brand New 1978
CIVIC
CVCC SSPEED
HATCHBACK
Stock No. 9880 (SGS4001~1) 1580 down ~ •'402.
cash pt1oe lr1CI. tax & Ncenae. .a months financing on
approved c:ncM. Oefem.d peYINN'I( prtce •5315.00. ANNUAL PERCENTAGERATE1~97'rt.
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
---
(
GIANT SELECTION
IMMB>IATE DELIVERY
OUTSTANDING VALUES!
BRAND NEW I 978
PLYMOUTH ARROW !5
'. $ 379 -·~·-k t seats. • speed Recl1nll'lQ buc e side mouldings. AM
transm1ss1on. v1dn,Yll tires. tinted g\ass.
radio wsw ra ia •' adiusiable steerillO wneel.
OUTSTANDING
SA VIHGS. ON FINE . '
USED CARS
1973 YWWAGOH
4 cylinder. automatic, air conditioning, AM/FM
stereo radio, heater, rQOf rack. (358JEPJ
,. $ ' .1195
1973 CHllSLER llOUGHAM V-8, automatic trans., a1r conditior11ng, power
steering, power brakes. power windows. power
aeats, rlldio. heat«. w/~w tiret, tilt wheel. cruise
control, vinyl top. Lie. t744HOJ.
.s1l95
1975 PEUGEOT 504 SEDAM
4 cylinder. automatic, air conditioning, rlldlo,
heater. whitewall tires. sunroof. Lie. te77PHYl.
s399J ·
1970 C .. YSLB M'IW YOltKR
v-e. automeHc. elr oondftlonlno. power etwtn;.
pewer brakes. power windows, C>OWef' tffts,
AM-FM radio, whltewell tll' ... tllt Wheel.
(72CSBLQ).
r .,.
. BRAND TISTDlllYE
1HIS-
GUAT CAR
MOW
ANDS&
WHY!
MEW 1978
PLYMOUTH
HORIZON SEDAN
BRAND NEW i'978 CORDOBA
FACTORY
AIR
COHDrrlOHIMG s5995
landau vinyl roof, automatic /
transmission, 360 V-8 engine
AM radio, tinted glass, paw~
~teertng & disc brakes. radl9' tires.
FOR FLEET
SALE OR
LEASE
IHFORMATI()H
CALL IOI UDY
546-1934
V-8, automatic trans.. air conditioning, p0wer
steering, PoWer brakes. AM-FM stereo radio w/tape, hellter, lugg,oe rack. LIQ. t968PPO.
1975 CHEYROLET MOMll CAILO
V-8, automaitlc. air oondttlonfng. ~ ttwtng,
power brllkef. teak>, heat«. whltew.11 U,... vtnyt
roof, ral!Y9wheets. (7161.WE).
s3195
AllAS
OlmlER PlYMOuTH
SERVlaHOURS:
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
7:00 AJA. TO 6:00 P.M.
SATURDAY
8:00 A.M. TO 5:00 P .M •
1977 PL YMOUIH ARROW ZOOO
4 cyt. 5 apeed, power bf'ak ... radio. ·hteter. Uo.
4573TW~ s3395
1969 PLYMOUTH CUSTOM
V-8. automatic. air conditioning, pt;N19r steering,
radio, heater, whitewall tires. (701AGTJ
V-8, autometlc. air conditioning. PoWlf steering.
power brekeS. pewer wt.noows. AM-fM radio,
heater, YINtewell tires. vinyt roof, lecther, CNiM
control (166RYL).
. .
B11ntington Beaeh J
Fo11ntain Valley
I EDITION
Afternoon
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 71 , NO. 34, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORA'NGE--GOU_NTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1978 TEN CENTS 1
City Attorney Race Heats Up in--HB
...
The battle has been joined in
the race for I luntington Beach
city attorney with three can-
didates who appear to be an
.. mid·scason" form committed
to the campaign.
lnc umbenl Don Bonfa and
challenger J erry Bame filed
-their nomination papers Thurs·
d ay on the last day of the hhng
period.
Gail Hulton, the third hopeful,
filed her papers Wednesday.
She and Bonfa traded potshots
in news releases this week.
Bame criticized both releases.
"The current city attorney has
r ea ll y disgr aced a ll of us
through his dismal performance
and lack of dignity," Mrs. Hut-
ton said.
Bonra said, "Mrs. Hutton has
hired a very high-powered, ex·
Weeps, Collapses
pensive press agent and has ap-
parently decided to run a mud-
slinging campaign."
· Bame claims that the news re-
leases arc evidence that his two
opponents are feellng the impacl
of his entry into the campaign
last week.
"They appear to be trying to
generate some activity to let the
people know they are still in the
race," he said today.
'There Was Life1'
Says Key Wit~ess
o.llyl'l ... llaff ......
DR. WADDILL AND WIFE LEAVE COURT IN SANTA ANA
Murder Trial of Huntington Harbour Physician In Recess
Gumnan Wires
Manto Bomb,
Get,s $82,000
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -A
lone gunman escaped with
$82,000 from a San Francisco
bank today after strappmg the
manager into what ·he claimed
was an e l abor ate radio-
activated bombing device, or-
Jicials said.
Police said it was unknown
1mm ediat~ly if the device was a
hoax or how the robber escaped
<>nee he left the bank.
Crocker Banlc public affairs
officer Terry Mcinnes said the
unidentified manager had ar-
rived for work and was parking
., his car behind the Park Merced
1 branch early today when a man
walked up and pointed a gun at
hlm.
M clnnes des cribed what
followed:
The gunman forced l,he
manager Inside the empty bank
~nd ordered him to open up the
vault.
The robber then tied a bell
'around his captive .and dis-
played a walkie-talkie device
Jle said there were two sticks of
dynamite planted in the belt that
~ould be activated by the porta·
ble radio.
Meanwhile, arrjvlng bank
employees were warned by the
robber or the manager's sltue-
tlon.
The robber then walked out.
with $82,000 and police were
sum mooed.
Mty ~ IUff,......
SOBS ON WITNESS STAND
Waddill Wltnest Griffith
Radioactive
Debris Moved
By Workers?
YELLOWKNIFE, NQrt.hwest
Territories (AP) -An attempt
will be made today to move a
· hl&hlY radt<>active fragment of
the fallen Soviet satellite from
the ice-covered ea.stern end or
Great Slave Lake.
Capt. G~e Hoean. a Canadian
mllltary spokesman. said the
fragment. would be put in a lead
container wel,hinl about 300
pounds, then placed aboard a
C·l30 Hett\&lel and nown to Ed·
monton for an&l,alS.
Four Other' o~eci. from the
aucltar·Powered Cosmo• e~
which ft.._ bfto tM ni'th'1 at·
moapbere J.n. 24 ~ere di•·
Dl•;ed 1liundu It I ~ COO• lerence •Fa ·mrtltary bu• near
EdmomM;
By TOM BARLEY
Ol IM O•llr Pil•t St.II
A prosecution witness in the
murder trial of Dr William Bax-
t c> r Wadd111 -01.. Huntington
Harbour collapsed and wept on
the witness stand Thursday al
the height or a day-long, in-
tensive cross-examination.
Reg1stl'red nurse JoAnn Grif·
fith or Westminster Community
llospitnl laid her hl•ad on the
rail of the witness box and
sobbed. Orange County Superior
Court Judge J ames K. Turner
immediately called a recess in
the trial.
Mrs. Griffth lost her composure
arter repeatedly answering for
defense attorney Malbor Watson
what amounted to the same ques-
tion: '•How can you be so sure that
the infant you tried lo revive was
ever reaJly alive?" .
"There was life in that body," Mr~. Orfrtilh protested, close to
tears. "Again, I tell you there
was life in that body."
And then she slumped forward
on the witness stand and wept
while prosecutor Robert Chat-
terton got to his feet to protest.
Another protest, this time
from an audience that created a
standing-room-only situation in
th e courtroom Thurs day,
brought an angry Judge Turner
back to the bench after the re-
cess.
· · 1 have been told of a com-
ment made by a spectator and I
am going lo warn the spectators
once again that I will not allow
jurors to hear comments from
the audience," he snapped.
"l will clear this oourlroom
and charge anyone who makes
audible comments with con-
tempt and that means live days
in jail," he said.
"And if anyone doesn't believe
that I mean what I say, just try.
me." he added.
The apparenUy offending com-
ment, audible lo many spec-
tators, was: ''Doesn't he think
she's had enough? What's he
trying to do, give her a
breakd.own?"
Watson rel)eatedly told Mrs.
Griffith before and after she col·
lapsed that he· could not un-
derstand her belief that there
was life in the baby that Dr.
Waddill tried to abort last
March 2 ..
She has testified that she tried
to revive the child after she was
told or the presence o~a
heflrtbeat and watched the in·
fanl, weakened by the effects ol
lbe saline abortion it. apparenUy
survived, struggling to breathe.
It is alleged that Dr. Waddill.
44, strangled the infant to death
after ordering the nursery staff,
including Mrs. GriCfitb, to leave
the ~rea. .
It is further alleged that Dr.
Waddill r esorted to murder
because or his failure to abort
the 28-week fetus delivered that
light by an unwed, 18-year-old
mother.
Chatterton said he will obtain
testimony from a witness who
will tell the jury that Dr. Wacf..
dlll told nursery staff membert
that the baby bad suffered
tremendous brain damage and
should not be allowed to live.
Watson arRued whlle question·
ing Mn. Griffith that nurse Pal
Olvera had only reported a
heartbeat and the fad that the bab1 cried because ahe wented
to treate • aenae or uraenc1
amon1 an apparenUy lolharate
nursery jgff,
Alid hl;npealedJi atked Mn
OrUfttb to qree ~ him that
an liar. With.-brffthln1 rate
OC four ldli8 a minute and a reo ~tl..-...:t rate of 80 beal.I M minute eiouldn't be con1ldered tO
<a.DOCIO-. Pa .. Ai>
Bame also contends that the
news releases demean the in·
d1vidual and the position. "This
1s not a city council race," he said.
··w e are lawyers and are sup·
posed to actlike il."
Bonfa claimed that Mrs. Hut·
ton has built up a substantial
political war chest "with most of
the financial support coming
Crom persons outside Huntington
Beach."
Getting back to Mrs. Hutton,
s he said if there has been any
mud·slinging, ··1t hasn't been on
my part."
"Have you seen any of it?"
she asked. "I'm going to run a
dignified, proressiona l cam·
paign. There's no mud, just the
truth.''
Making it unanimous, BoAfa
also said Ulat he intends to run a
clean, honest campaign.
"Frankly, I think today's
voters are too sophisticated to
be vi c timized by s m e ar-
campaign rhetoric," he said.
Mrs. Hutton has hired, for
$2,000, the services of Robert
Nelson, who also is handling the
campaigns this year of Orange
County S uperv is~T Thomas
Riley as well a s oth~r can-
didates.
(See RACE, P•ge A2)
• Dally ...... SUff Pllete
HUNTINGTON'S NEWLAND HOUSE: WHO PROMISED WHOM A ROSE GARDEN?
Proposed Flower Beds at Historical Site Have Become Thorny Issue
No Bed of Roses in' DB?
Newland House Ffura/, Plan Hits Thonu . -
By ROBERT BARKER
Of a. O_,ly Pl ... Si.itt
A battle has broken out in
Huntington Beach over plans to
plant a rose garden at the his-
toric Newland House.
· Members of the city's His-
torical Society are lined up in
the controversy against two
archeologists who claim that the
roses could destroy 5,000 years
or Indian history.
Elaine Craft. outaoing presi-
dent of the historical group, ad-
mits that the controversy has
reached an impasse. "We have a litUe problem/'
s he said Thursday.
One of the archeologists bas
s uggested a 10-year delay on
plans in order to.thoroughly ex-
plore the midden, or Indian dis-
po s a 1 grounds which have
Master Plan Bearing
' yielded ancient .mortars and ·1•
pestles.
"We certainly have no inten· I
tion of destroying any l
archeologlcal sites, but I am not
sure it is feasible to wait that
long.•• Mrs. Craft said. .
The archeologists say they are 1
determined to slop the project ' for the present.
"I am appalled that the His·
·v.Teacher Dress
torical Society would destroy
s uch a valuable treasure on a
whimsical business venture,"
Bee Maguire or the Pacific
Coast Archeological Society •
s aid. H •t . Mrs. Maguire said she was re· } ferrlng to reported plans of the
Historical Society to rent the
By Valley Parents
By RAYMOND ESTRADA
OI t1W o.ity l'llel Slaff
Poorly attired teachers, and al-
leged drug influences in junior
high schools were among topics
aired by parents before Foun-
tain Valley (elementary) School
District trustees Thursday.
The session was the first of
three public hearings on the dis·
trlct's proposed master plan.
• The proposal recommends
clos ure of three schools, the
establishment of a junior high
BB Man Hurt
In Smashup
Fleeing Cops
school and sweeping attendance
area boundary changes during
the next three years.
But one parent, Tom Beaman,
of 9170 Blackbird Ave., told the
school board that Harper
Elementary School teachers
wear "lumberjack outfits,
muumuus, sandals, tennis shoes,
sweat suits and sport coats with
jeans" to their classes.
"My kids laugh at them when
they go home," he said.
''Maybe we don't pay them
enough," Beaman added.
District Superintendent Bill
Plaster interrupted Beaman and
said teachers' attire should be
discussed with the school board
in a secret meeting.
"An executive (secret) session
is the appropriate plate for
this," Plaster said.
But Beaman also crttislied the
school for being a "filthy mess"
with the "worst janitorial
service in the district."
Harper School Principal
Wilma Bohannan was not
available to comment on the
charges today.
Other puents crlUcued the
district's plan to establish the
first Junior high school for
seventh and eighth grade stu·
dents, in the district.
Parent Leonard Pattert told
the school board junior hillh
sch()Ol students will h moro
likely to experiment with drup
because ''they wlll need a
crutch•• In that envtronmtnt.
•'They will have more
teachek'S, less one-to-one Cot\l~t
and Jess irldlviduality io a J&&nlor
hillh school," Patzer aaaerted.
Dlatrict aicle•~ htve recom·
mended the c"lolure of Lamb
School, lOSll Yorktown Ave ••
end transfer ot !ta twd.nts to
Areve&O ~h:Ml, 1H28 Lex·
inRton Lane, neJCt y6ar. Both
c hoots are in uottnaton
8¥dL:
· house outfor weddings.
Marie Cottrell. who heads
Arcbeological Res earch
Management in Garden Grove,
is more militant.
She said that tff plans are •
pushed for the garden without
adequate precautions of Indian
sitq's, she would revive warm-in-
frdn t-of·tbe·bulldozers syn·
drome."
Miss Cottrell said that s he has
contacted an Orange County In·
dian group and indicates that a
physical protest movement
could be launched.
Historical Society members
say they have contacted
ar~heologlcat experts during
various planning stages for their
project.
(See ROSES, P•ge A2)
Coast
Weather
Some nlght through mld·
morning fog, otherwise
fair but hazy through
Saturday. Lows tonight 45
to SO. J;lighs Saturday in
mid·60s.
INSIDE TODAY
Jazz i• Hjo11bag a rt•
aurgenc• along U.. Orange
Ccxut. Man11 OrfO achootl are
turning out top-notch jazz
mudcioM. Storiet and photos
on Page Cl.
Ct a
. #
"
'• ..• ,.._. DAILYPILOT 'to4iF
By GARY GRANVILLE
Of t• Dally l'tltC ll•H
Campaign disclosure state-
ment~ on me today in Santa Ana
s how that incumbent As-
semblymari ·Dennls Maneers lD·
Huntington Beach> has $19,521 m
his campaign coffers.
That is what Mangers wiU
begin his campaign with u he
~eeks for the first time to defend
the slate Assembly seat he
wrested fro m R e publi can
• Robert Burke in 1976.
Mangers' statement showi;
that since being elected to office,
he has collected $52,329 in cam-
Gibbs,
Wieder
Decline
The Huntington Beach Cit y
Council will be missing at least
two veteran members when the
city elections roll around April
11.
As promised, both Norma
Gibbs and Harriett Wieder
failed to take out nomination
papers and their deadline for do·
ing so expir~ al noon Thursday.
Mrs. Wieder will concentrate
on her candidacy for Orange
County supervisor. Mrs. Gibbs is
completing her second con-
~ecutive term and says in the in-
terest or good government that
1s enough.
Because an incumbent failed to
file, the filing date for other can· ·
didates has been extended until
f'~eb. 7 under state law, according
to City Clerk Alicia Wentworth.
Thirteen candidates have en·
tered the city council race thus
far , including incumbents Ted
.Bartlett with 20 years of servlce
and Al Coen who has served
three consecutive terms.
Other candidates are Andrew
Chandler. Don Brown, Ed
Zsochc. Don McAllister, John
Thom as. Charles Osterlund,
Shirley Halkyard, Ruth Bailey,
Steve "Citizen" Kane, William
Tizzard. and Frank Hoffman.
FV' s Council
Candidates
Set for Forum
Fountain Valley voters will
have a chance to meet the 11
ctuUlidates running for the city co~cil Wednesday at 7:30 p.m .
in the Community Center, 10200
Slater Ave.
The list of candidates in·
eludes: Manny Alarcon, Bart
Shigemura, Phil Johnson, Carl0&
Galindo, Ben Nielsen, Raymond
Irvin , Felix Rocha, Chuck
Thomas, Walt Hammond and ln·
cumbents Al Hollinden and Roger Stanton.
Three seats are up for grabs in
the March 7 election. Coun-
cilman George Scott will not
seek re-election. Instead, ht! will
try for the Republican Party nod
for the 36th State Senatorial
District
The League or Women Voters
is sponsoring the Wedneaday
night candidates' meeting.
I
Gay Slaying
~Suspect Free
• SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A
: 21-year-old part lime laborer
• has been acquitted in the stab·
. bing death of a homosexual
whose slaying ignited protests
: from the gay community.
· Thomas Spooner was con-
victed of felony assault in the
case, but was acquitted in the
s laying ot Robert Hillsborough
: on J\ll\e 22.
: Spooner was one or four people
: arrest~ if1 tlM caae.
~ .... COAIT HIP ·.
•. DAILY PILOT
p~l&ndQit~.»t Off,.tUl\f UIC*O receipts have
been e3rpen1H tft1t Include
$7 ,813 paid to South Coast Plaza
Hotel last year in connection
with a Cundraiser.
T h o. i)..&.m.o.o r ~l (.. As ·
semblyman's disclosur.: i.tate·
ments are the most met1culow; and detailed ~led by any county
candidate.
For example, included among
the breakdown Of expenses I!> 36 cents paid to Dams Stationery 1n
Huntington Beach.
And listed among the detailed
accounting of contributors 1~
· $2.50 rettJved from Zlta WesH
· • HuoUngton Beach 1cbooi
board member.
Am ong more major con-
tributors are a number of sav,
mgs and loan groups that donat-
<'d $1.250 each. Included amon£
those savings Md loan donor11
ure M-en·ur~ Savings and Loan,
Great Weslef'n "l!tcn•ines, First
Char ter Financial and the Sav-
ings and Loan Committee for
Rl'sponi.1lJle Government.
A Republican who has an·
nounced he intends to oust
Man ~ers from his seat. Charles
1'. Gibson, filed a disclosure
.
·~··...,.,... DYNAMITE FAILS TO CUT THROUGH KENTUCKY ICE
Blast Caused Youngster in Foreground to Turn Away
Blasts Fail
Dynamite Can't Cut Ice
WARSAW, Ky. CAP) -Controlled De!'Ool.ltlon Inc. never
tackled anything like ripping up f three-male ice gorge on lhe
Ohio River. After two days, the Army Corps of Engineers said Thursday
it would shelve the use of explosives to carve a channel through
an ice gorge behind the Markland Dam.
INSTEAD, THE CORPS DECIDED to revert to the more
traditional method of usang tow~ to punch a channel for barge
traffic. . . "We never promised anything." said Mark Lo1zeaux . vice
president of the Towson Md., demolition company. "They called
us and we agreed to try it ..
Loizeaux later said that if his company was asked to move
on the project he believed he co~ get a channel through the ice
in eight or nine days. . ..
"We just don't want to sit around and collect our money,,
Loizeaux said.
THE EXPLOSIVES EXPERTS NEVER really got going in
their effort to break up the ice jam. They spent Thursday test-
ing various amounts of dynamite and sati.sfying Kenh~cky state
officials lhat they would not shatter the windows of buildings on
the nearby shore.
"The corps called us because or our experience on
Chesapeake Bay. But this is different. This Is much bigger
s tuff,•· Loizeaux said.
From Page Al
ROSES HIT THORNS. • •
They claim that their requests
were lgn0red until just recently
when the time to plant the roses
approached.
Causin~ all the fuss is the plan
to plant 238 rare roses in a 40x36
feet plot on the south side of the
old home and in a 24x66 feet
area in the front yard.
The roses were donated Crom
t he private collection of a
botanist at the Huntington
Botanical Gardens in San
Marino.
They are reportedly varieties
that flourished kl the En1Ush
gardens at the turn of the cen-
tury and are no longer available
com merclally.
The ro6eJ began arri\llng in
Huntington Beach several
months aao. They are being
tended by members of the ffis.
torical Society in their
backyards \ll\til a decision is
made to plant or not to pJant.
Shirley Kerins, In charae of
landscaping, said there ls some
eonc~rn that the roses are
WBObbySox
~Sliiied
becoming too large for their one-
callon pots.
"They are riiceiving excellent
care but the lime to plant is
now." she said .
The roses would be planted in
holes two-feet deep. Their roots
would extend another root.
A proposed underground ir·
rigation sprinkling system also
is causing problems.
An herb garden and a scented·
leaf geranium garden also 8" in
the landscaping plans.
'!'he archeologlsts aren't say.
ing how much orriclal clout they
pack, but they say they won't
hesitate to go to higher
authority.
They say that the stale Ills·
torlc4l P.reservaUon Office has
been contacted. II the planUng
proceeds. they promise that the
state Attorney General will hear
llbout it too. -
Ir is their contention that It ls
unlawful to destroy
archeolo1ical sltes without over.
riding reasons.
Meanwhile, cooler heads are
trying to work out a com·
promise.
There are c:onslder~Uon.s to
plant the "*' In ral5M beds or
to plant them In th• moat fqal·
ble areu while research J1 8'>ftll
on. No declJJona ha\lo been tnade.
The lUstorlcal Soclet7 bas
been encaaed ln teatorinc t•
house -.vhlch ls located on a bluff near Adama A\renuo arid Beach
Boulevard.
1t wai bunt ln 18811 by Hunt·
h\aton Beach pioneer wunam
Ta7Jor Newland. 1t ~••;.de·
111nated an OMC,11 lllakl'lffi
alte n 1911 by tbe Or'UC• CM-
ty Boarc.t o~ tJup1rvl1on,
Calllpaign Funds
statement that showed he re-
ceived $6,500 in contributions to
get hts campaign under way
So far, Gibson has puid $1.000
to political cons ulting firm
George Young and Associates
and his di~closurc statements
sh owed he incurre d another
Sl,000 liability to the consuJtlng
firm.
In the 74th Assembly-District.
incumbent Democrat Ron
Cordova, a rumored candidate
for Slate Senate, dad not yet
have a closing 1977 disclosure
state ment on fil e In the
Registrar of Voters office.
.SA Drug
Factory
Raided
,santa Ana Police said today a
multi-million dollar illegal drug
operation was raided this week
and a chemist and his son were
a rrested on multiple drug
charges.
Working in conjuclion with
Los Angeles police, the raid at
two warehouses near the heart
o.f downtown Santa Ana yielded
wh at Santa Ana Offi cer s
d escribed as the m ost
sophisticated illegal drug fac-
tory ever uncovered in their
city. . Arrested were chemist
Frank Cranl, 59, of Tustin, and
his 19·year·old son. Mark Cranz,
Bui two Republicans seeking
to oust Cordova did.
Marian Bergeson. who ran a
~trong write-In candidacy in
1976, showed she received dona.
lions and loans of $31,223 to
begin her second quest or the
74th District seat.
Top donors to Mrs. Bergesoo's
campai~n included the Fluor ~~~ation with ~ donallon or
Another donor to the Bergeson
campaign was Newport Beach
Unified School Dis trict Superin-
tend ent John Nicoll. Mrs .
Bergeson's statements showed
that Nicoll and his wife con-
tributed S2SO to her campaign in
early December.
Another Republican contender
in the 74th District. Lee Watkins
of Newport Beach. filed a dis-
closure statement that indicated
Friends of Lee Wntki~ took in
$26.470 l ast year and spent
$22.692.
Heaviest expenditures on
WaUuns' i &at•menl ~ $10,000-
to the Political consullin&: leam
of William Butcher and Arnold
Forde and $10,832 paid to Opi·
nion Research, a public opinio
survey firm frequently used b
Butcher and Forde.
Singer Freed
Tiny T~m EvithJU:e Lacking
DOUGLASVILLE. Ga. <A P> -Fans of Herbert
Buckingham Khaur·y note: He made a command ap-
peanmce at the Douglas County J ail.
Herbert Buckingham Khaury, to non-fans, is
f al!>ctlo singer Tiny Tim.
Tim was at the jail Thursday to post bond on a
theft of services c harge. But the charges were
dropped (or lack of evidence, a district attorney's
spokesman said .
Willia m Sorrows, former road manager for the
singer, riled the ch a r ge, which apparently grew from
a dispute between Tim and Sorrows over a
performance, the spokesman said.
After the hearing. Tim sang a couple or numbers
tor the deputies and left.
Fro• Page A J
ulsoofTustin. DOCTOR TRIAL Father und son were booked • • •
into Orange Couty Jail on multi· ..
ple charges related to manufac-
turjng a controlled substance for
sare.
Police allege they were pro-
ducing PCP, or ''Angel Dust,"
at warehouses in the 805 block of
East Civic Center Drive.
The Clrug-is used as a lran-
q uil i ter for horses. but reported-
ly produces hallucinatory highs
when Ingested by humans usual-
ly when rolled into ci~arettes.
Police said Cranz is a licensed
chemist and that records seized
at the factory show purchases
used in the drug m anufacturing
operation dale back to 1976.
Iiecords show that the alleged illegal drug operation was car-
ried on under a business license
issued to Anza Jndostrles. a
licen11a.. requested for chemical
m anufacturing purposes.
be alive. Watson refened to the victim
t hroughout his cross -
exarnination as "this product of
conception," ·~this thin~." and "lhls creature.,. .
But Mrs. Griffith refused to
alter the testimony she earlier
gave for Chatterton.
Asked by Watson, while the
doctor-lawyer was discussing
her efforts to revive the chil<t. it
she felt that she had a right to
rule on the issue or its life or
death, she shakily responded:
··1 don't think any or us has a
right to say who should live or
who should die."
.And s~ again assured the
perslsten\. Watson t hat she
believed there was life ln the in·
flUlt that the coroner has ruled
wits strangled to deeth last
M.arch 2.
"I'm sorry," she told Watson.
• "Jn my medical mlnd, it was a
live baby. Tbere was life in that
body or I would not have tried to
save it."
Judge Turner called a three·
day, weekend recess in the trial
late Thursday. 1l will resume at
9:45 a.m. Monday in a new
courtroom, Department 26.
Judge Turner ordered the
transfer to the larger courtroom
so that lhe trial can accom-
modate s pectators who have
been rilling his Department 24 to
capacity.
Woman Killed
As Car Flips
On Freeway
Fro• Page AJ
A 21-year-old Anaheim woman
was fatally Injured early t-Oday
when the car she was driving
overturned on the San Diego
Freeway near Oftega Highway,
the coroner reported. RACE FOR ATTORNEY. • •
Bonfa has hit at the Nelson's
previous as&ociation with the
controversial political campaign
team of William Butcher and
Arnold Forde.
Bonfa said that the tone and
direction of Mrs. Hutton's cam·
paign indicates a smear cam-
paign.
Mrs. Hutton said that Bonfa's
statements are totally unsup-
portable.
She said that she has been oc-
cupied as a municipal attorney
in the city of Santa Ana and
doesn't possess wide knowledge
in running a political campaign.
She said that Nelson is helpful
in organizing campaign volun·
leers and answers polilical ques-
tions as they come up.
Mrs. Hutton claims that most
of her contributions have come
from Huntington Beach resi-
dents.
She said that her mother and
her aunt, who both Jive outside
the city, have contributed $200
each.
She, i.n turn. questioned the
sources of. Bonra•s money. She
said that he has received $200
each from a building develop-
ment company in Beverly Hills
and from an Insurance agency
tha~ does business with the city.
Bonra said that both his oppo.
nents "are sincere, honest peo..
pie who may some d ay be
qualified to fill the Job of city at-
torney."
Bame contends that there are
too many words in the state·
ment. He said the phrase "may
some day" is supe'rfluous."
Identified as the victim was
E velyn Hartkamp, o.2341 W.
Crescent St., Anaheim.
According to the coroner's rr·
port, lhe woman was driving
southbound on the freeway at
12:45 a.m. when s he app arently
lost control of her light weight
car and it rolled over.
T he victim di ed in San
Clemente General Hospital two
hours after the accident, the re·
port saad.
Immigrant Held
SAN FRANCISC<1 (AP> -A
17-year-oid Hong Kong unnamed
immigrant has ~n arrested in
connection with the rapes of two
girls in the North Beach district
her:e. police said.
The Junk Business
f Some years ago while addressing the Central
Indiana Floor Covering Association, an industry
spokesman, Walter Guinan said: "Too many
people in the floor covering industry are
convinced the public only Wl\OtS to buy "junk"
carpet."
We're afraid that you might also get this
impression from the ads which specify unb~lievable low prices. Investigating these ads
will determine one of two things -either the
carpet JS JUNK. or they will try to sell you
something more expensive!
We don't sell junk at Alden's, but we· do have
quality at competitive prices. and the best
installation In the county.
I
•
-··· --. ,,.. . . . ----. .. .. .......... -.... .. ...... .. ...... --.... . .
..
I
Q DAILY PILOT Frloay. Fet>ru.ry 3. 1978 . Tele1'ision \ • TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS
t IHI>:\ Y
EVENING 8:00 . C88 N€W8
8 8 NEWS D EM€AGENCY ONE!
A bmet football "810
hndl the ·~hi• -gan-
c:lel ol • ,,.Wemadlc: 111
•
- -..moca tngl\JQlll~ than • Q!'"8 °' lootb•ll t-·--
,
I .
U MOVIE
• • "Wln1er Kiii'' (1974)
Andy Grlllith, Sharee
North A mO<Jnlaln com-
munity It terrorized by a
my11eooua murdefar. (2
"") tD THE BAADY BUNCH
Polar break• 11 vue
Cf) THE AOOKIE8 m ZOOM
Cl) SPECIAL
'The HorpSIGl'IOtd Makar'
A portrelt of Peter
Rodst~. builder Qf harp·
llChords ltlld olh« at11hen-
uc 18th cenlury keyboard
1n1trumen11.
®) ABCNEWS
8:30 f) THE PNCE IS RIGHT GI MY THREE SONS Horsing A round
Tiie uswlly all·male Doug•
lllS hOUseh04d becomet I
refuge lor an et1r1ct1vo girt
dancer wflo 1111 been
evlc:ltd from lier apart·
ment. fD OVEREA8Y
Gueet: Anita Oday
'11) COHSl.IMEA
SURVIVAL KIT
Ed ward Albert and Glynnis O'Con·
nor dismount for a rnmantic in
ler lude in the fourth of five parts
of the TV movie ''Black Beautv•·
tonight at 8 on NBC. Channel 4. ·
'11) CALIFORNIA
TONIGHT
Host Jim Cooper travela 10
Sacramento to dl&eUH
Calllorn1a end Orenge
County c;oncern1 with
elec:red olllclara.
"Meel. 0119f· Tfle-Coun1er
Drugs, Second Homei"
(J) C88NEWS
(J) TO TELL THE TRUTH
7:30 f) ALL-STAR ANYTHING
GOES
ll]) MERV GRIFFIN
Guest•: Player, Morltyn
Solcol, Harry Chapin
"Hee Haw" va. "Don
Kirshner'• ROClc Conoert" 0 FAMILY FEUD D NEWL vweo GAME U ®J HOLL YWOOO
SQUARES
({)~HE MUPPETS
Guest: Oon Kno111
1:00 0 ()) WONDER
WOMAN 7:00 tJ THE MUPPETS
Gueat: Judy Collins 0 N8CNEW8 Q UARSCW8 0 A8CNEWS GI I LOVE LUCY
ID THE BRAD'\' BUNCH
Cindy IOses her mother's
eerrlngs
wono. Woman .. ,,.. the
world trom an CHI crl51•
when •h• ••POUi a
maOlclan'a IDlck Gautier}
f'Mthod of cilanglng IHd
Into gold. Lucy .ind Ethel got 1obs •n
II candy laGtory
«!) AOAM·12
(!) AOAM·12
fD L.A. INTERCHANGE
lnlorrned Sources" 0 BLACK BEAUTY
Beauty IS !>Ought II public:
8UGlton b)' e ~lie ceb
owner (Warran Oataa)
fPart 4 ot 5)
Eli> MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
Cl) VOTER'S PIPELINE
Sacramento Oatehne"
Cha1111~l Ll•t i n g•
tJ KNXT (CBS) Los Angule~ D KNBC (NBC) LO!. Angelu!.
0 KTLA (Ind) Lo!. Angl.'1<!5
U KABC·TV (ABC) Lo'> Ang()lt'
Cl) KFM B (CBS) S.m Diego 0 KHJ TV (Ind) Lo~ Angulci. llJl KCST (ABC> San 01~0 ID KTTV (Ind.) Los Ang~
Cl) KCOP· TV (Ind ) Los Ange~
fD KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles '11> KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beacll
0 MO\llE
• • • "Trapeze" I t951)
Burt L1nce11er, Tony
Cur111 A Franch Circus eel
becomal • lhanettng tr ..
angle altar an American
joins the llC1 12 hre.) 0 ®J O()fojNY & MARIE
Gu .. ta: Cher)i Udd, Paul
~Oemond. 0 JOl<ER'S WILD tD CAAOl BUAHEn
AHD F~IEND8
Cf) MARCUS WELBY.
M.D.
Jan and Dean Story
'Curve' Crashes •·
By JAY SHARBUTT
LOS ANGELES <A P ) -Sad
news: Producer Roger Gimbel, who
made such fine TV films as "Birds
of Prey," "Miss Jane Pittman" and
"Queen of the Stardust ·eallroom,"
h as a not·so fi ne film on CDS tonight
at ~ on Channel 2
l t:s "D ead Man's C ur ve." a
dram atized story of Jan and De an,
two California kids who hit it big in
the late '50s and early '60s warbling
catchy surfer songs am id the new
wave that brought the Beach Boys.
Their ride to fa m e came to a s ad,
abrupt halt when J an, driving force
of their success, plowed his speeding
Corve tte into the rear of a truck. He
was left partly crippled, unable to
sing.
THE RJSE AND demise of pop
music stardom for Jan Berry a nd
Dean Torrance is re-enacted tonight
by R ichard Hatch, cast as Jan, and
Bruce Davidson, who plays Dean.
. The re-e n::iclme nl is s prinkled
with suc h J&D oldies as "Jen!!.>'
Lee.·: "Surf City" and "Little <JTd
Lady )rom Pasadena," and has
came'o appear ances by Dick Clark.
Wolfm an Jack and Mike Love.
Although Hat ch a nd Davidson
seem too old to play the lads as high
s chool kids in the s hbw's early
scenes. they do creditable work. T he
major proble m with the show is
Dalene Young's script.
I T TRIES FOR h ones ty ,
particula rly in its uncompromising
portrait of J an, healthy or crippled,
( 1VREJ/IEW J
as a m an of consuming ego. But it
com es across as fl at and predicta-
ble. ,
. Dean emerges as a passive, level· hea~ed. unaccountably loyal good
guy. J an proves only a part-time
good guy, afflicted by .guilt now and
t hen, but always looking out for
Number One.
The show starts with the usual
California '50s touch, with the boys
and their d ates in a 'S3 Chevy con·
vertible. top down, at the drive·ln,
josh in g the s om ewh a t d e ns'e
waitress.
THEN IT TELLS how they re-~orded their. first hit, "J enny J-ee,"
tn a makeshift base ment studio, and
how they briefly and a ngrily parted
ways when Dean, not convinced
they had a future, left for a six·
month Anny Reserve bile.fl before
their song became a hit.
There are moving moments -
Jan's painful attempts to recover
after the car crash, his callous tfeat-
m ent by a group or beach hippies, •
hJs pathetic attempts a t just one
more hit, one more concert with
Dean.
But there's little s p ark in t his
show. And the better scenes often
are s abotsg ed by such Hnes as this
from a crippled J ao to bis lady a~
they walk a long a beach: "Ap·
·plause. I need applause."
She tiad to
marry him.
She waa too
emba;raaaed
to have him
a• a date.
• G!) WAIHtNOTON
•=•:u~TlON TUBE TOPPERS ·~~ET KTLA 0 8:00 -"Trapeze." Burt
wm< Lancaster and Tony Curtis are aerialist
"A Hope F« LO'#er •ntta-p a r t n e r s a n d r i v a l s f o r G i n a non" G~t: Dr. A. Gery SNUtno. Mnk>f ~ P'-'· Lollobrigida in this 1956 movie drama. *' 91\d chlet ~t. CBS f) 9:00 "Dead Man 's Curve." -..oa;J!!~tft..:~~-..u·-11:.---1-+_Jrpitt,,, ... ic story orsinl!ers J an and Dcancmd -
''Deidman'a curve· their rise and fall in the late Fifties and
1Prernier9) Richard Hatch, early Sixties is m ade into a TV movie.
Brucie Dav11on. Th• (See r eview below.)
f'Mlto<lo ~ catMf oi
catttornl• lffn-1get• Jan KCET 9 9 :00 ''The Six Wives of
Berry ano DNn Torr-. Henry VIII ." A popular his torical
• 111ng1ng duo of the 111a1 series is repented with this first of six 1960'1 and 'ISO'a. D AOCt<FON> Flt.E8 episodes . "South By Sooth-I" '--=--~;,__ ______________ ..,,
Roektord la mla!Akanly Guest t.o.t Danial SChO<r NEWS ~ad by the CIA and dlacunea intarnetlonat
lnYOIYad 1n a ptot to help -_98therlnQ , MORNING an'*'--~ from,_ 10:30 GI g) NEWS 12:00 D TWILIGHT ZONE
hulbll>d. 9 LATlffO A newly commlesioned D O A8C MOVIE ~ offlcar arriv.a In the Phillp-
"Crulae Into Terror" 11:00 ti D .D (J) 9 NEWS piMa In the waning ~
(Premiere) Ray Miiiand. D I.OW. AM!RICAH of WW. II. 8TVL! GI FOREVER Hugh O'l!Nn. TM dbco¥-"L.ove Artd TM """ N.....,I~ FtANWOOO er; of an MICi.nt IMCO--W 'V'' pnagua tuma a CWlbbean Marti Ilk .. hl1 ~laty to G) MOVIE
plauuta CluiN into • '* apartm«1t bacatM ol **"' "DaMtt Helf' (1951)
Ngtl '* tear of burglar• Brian Keith, Ba1bara Hale.
G :=su 0 MOVIE DISlident deMrt trlbeamen
1tonald• 11 tremed for **"Winter KHI" (1974) auempt toatwt•holy-. ~ a tJpott man w!Ulln Andy Grllllth, Sheree (1 hr .. 30 min.)
the Polloa o.partfMl'lt. Nor1h. A moun11ln com-12•05 tJ (J) C88 LAT! MOVIE CD MEJ:IV OAlfflH munlty Is lerrom.d by • * • * "Bob & Cerol & Tad
au.tr. Playet, M1111yn mY91atloua murclaf'et 12 & Ab" (1969) Natahe
Solcol, Harry~. O.vld hrl.) Wood, Rob«t Culp. A
SOUi. Bun Smidt GI THE ODD COUPLE ma~ couple, 8l(p8ri. G) ~WEl.BY. "ATuteOfMoney" mantlngwlthanopenrela·
M.O. • es MAKE A DEAL tlon1hlp, try to brlng ~ THE81XWl\IE80F CAVETT anothW couple in on the
HENRY Vitt ONEIL I LEHRER honM1y, truth end truat.
"Cathef'lne Of Al•""'n" REPORT (RI
Spenlal'I pr\nceM C:lti. 11:30 tJ(J) M·A·a·H 12:30D MOVIE
rin. rrnlrriel Henry, *" "The LongJohn Flap" Our· * ** "That Man From
hlf'l'I a daughter end llYea Ing a cold 1nap, • palr of Ale" (19MI Jean-Paul
hlQplly with ltlm to< eight· tong)Ohna aent to H11wllaye BelmondQ, Francoise
_, yuta, unlll he ieavea beCOm8 m<l(e veluable Ind Oorleac. A girl i. kid· '* '°'Anne Boleyn. neo<>tlable 1han coin ol the napped by a gang end ID ~ UHE realm. (RI brought to Alo. with her ()) _..,,.,.. D TONIGHT soldiar-bOyfrland hot on
**+'A "The Out-Of· Hoi t: Johnny Cereo" Iha trlM. (1 hr .. SS min.)
To-a" (11170) Jack G~·JoenRIY8t8. GI WOAU>Of
L Q ........ Denni D LOVE. AMERICAN SURVIVAL anvnon. _..,., '·A STY\..£ 12:370 STARTIME couple .,,.,ting .,_ Y«lc
aKperlence every known ·Love And The Legal "A Small Rabeltlon"
ur~ter. AgrHment" A couple SllftOna ~. Geofge
agr .. thel they can't ltand Mahana. A YoU"O play.
10:00 D QUINCY ue11 oth«, bUt neither wrtghl defends hit play
"Accomplice To Murd«" weo111oiew.. ~I Iha -• crllf.
Ouinc:y la aided by • U IW BARETTA C1atn of • famous ec:trMa,
blltllfad Wiie (Ballnda J "He'll Newt SM Daytight rlMllng hie future p ha
Montgomery) In '"' Again" A crime bOU caut-trlae to turn her hostility
attempt lo prove a "• conlr..:t to be put out Into Mlf~.llorl.
woman'• •lll1"ontf\.old on B•r•tt• when h• 12:AO 9 MOVIE
·lio•t Shaun Cau ldy
G-1· Paul Mc:Certney
and WlnQa. ABBA, 8o1>
Welch, oeorg• O..k•
Peter Allllfl. 0 tSPY
"Dtagon'eT .. 111
• MOVIE
•• "Or. Orlqlf'• Monltllf"
11NS) -1:Pae Autio, ~
..SS>Mk. Al r~ tor Na
wife'• fl\llda41ty, i '81?11TIT
CINI" • robol and pro-
grlmt n to 11111 belulllul
-.(2 hra.)
1:15 8 fALl<AaOUT
1:30m ~VIE * '* lfr "Otimon And Pytkl-u " (1"2) Guy Wiiiiama,
Don ~nett. The fflllfld.
shit> bet-two YoUlh• Is
put to the ultlmat• _,. f 1
llr., 30 mtn I
t:UU NEWS
i :00 U MOYlE
••~ "State Sac:rar•
1115()) Douglu FlltbenU
Jr., Gtynoa Johna. Aller 041-
COYannO top_. lnlor·
matlOn about a EutPPMf'
cour11ty'1 leader, -~
lean doc1of triu to leave
the country 12 hrs )
2:26 0 NEWS
2-.30 0 NEWS D MOVIE * \.\ "The Night OI Tiie
Blood BaHt" (1958) Ed
totelloo, Mlcl\UI EITll1W!I
An u ttonaut, having com·
munlclled ¥11th a alien,
rellllzea the etHture ts
plotling to dett•ov
mankind 11 hr • 25 min I
2:4St) NEWS
3:00 GI MOVIES * * • "Panic lr1 Year
l«o" (1962) Ray Miiiand
Jean Hagan. One lamlly
atrugglea to aurvlve In •
world gon8 mad alter 11
nUdHr attldl. (2 hr1J.)
• • "Vampire'• Ghoal
111145) bin AbbOtt, Peggy
Stewvt. A human vampire
stalk• an African ll!Hegtt
terrortzlng the natives 155
min I ·
Cl) NEWS
3:20 tJ MOVIE * * • ~ "Came ( 1952)
Leurenc:a OIMar, JenNler
~ When • young glf1
runs away with • married
1111111, the two '-I very
d~t ,.,.. (2 hr• • 25
min.) ~
3:55 0 NEWS 4:00 D MOVIE
D MOVIE * * "KIU 0t The TlllnlU•
11" I 1972) Etlc Maaon.
SutalWt Lil'IO· A young
gtrl, taactnatad with
~. utM Illa ~·UNa to ll'llf'(la the 'fjfOf'IOI dona
her by '* ~Ing cte..
m&1ea. l2 M)
' \ I I ){I},\ y
MOANING
7:00 8 CAM£M fHAU
"Ir-Wcwth: ActraM"
Ona of Ametrlea'• leading
•t.ge ac:tr...., la _, In
eon,,.,aatlon wltll authot I
theater critic Margar91
Ctoyden, In ......... bri.t
!*form-=-and r..cslng
$ha1181pMt'Mn aonneta. 0 ~KONO ~
8 O s~. l£NDtS
PT\.ClU8
• E.EMENTAAY HEWa fll YOOA FOAHEALTH
(J) THAO A LOOKIHO
Gl.MS
7:30 0 STEPS TO~
0 0000
OL~~ 8 PACUnTEM GI MOVIE *•'• 'TIVMFaces W~"
f t 940) Jol\n Wayne, Slgt'ld
Guria ThrM people loin a
gr~p of larnwws In their
IC>Uf'MY to Oregon ( 1 hr.,
30 mln.)
Cf) BOWERY BOYS E0 TO Be ANNOUNCED
(I) BUSINESS
1:00 tJ (J) ROOONIC
STOOGES D MOVIE * • "tnvialbte Agent"
(1957) Peter LOf'r•. Jon
Hall The poeaenlon of a
secret drug wl\lch renden
hom !nvllllbta mallet a U.S.
agent a 1arget for death (1
"'·· ao m1n 1 U <tJ) LAFF-M. YMPICS
U MOVI!
••~ .. ~ Atlade At
Dawn" 11972) Ric:tt J•on.
Peter Brown. Aller ~
ing trom the Araba, an
,.,..,. aoldler pladgea to
""""' with a lf1'lll -mend force to -en OU!
ar<d deslroy the ladlatle
commanClar ol the ptlsoft •.
12 hfl.I
UO 0 Cl) SPEEO BUGGY ., MOVIE
•
t>eatif!i. by '* weatllly ~mmr« ,110~-• • ·~ .. •• Kil ,~ ..
t.uaband caused her rltld on • number• b9Q. lt9eel Nigel Green, Mary
:8~ "'EWS . Madlyn Rhue, Andr-8IOham. A young man
• ~EYMOONERS a,in:,:;:1 llM, jR) :'::*..;;:.~,!~~
'li) W~LO G) Ol!T SMART planning to kill hlm.12 In.)
,_ ~s Of Scotland
Y8'd" f19«) -Stapfl~
Bac:helc!I', C. Aubrey Smith.
WlMI I crypt0gr!IPf* 11
murder9d. hll twin broth9'
!leek• revenge 11 hr , 30
• *'" "Mutiny· 119521 Mar~ -$4-na..-AirigalLJL
Lanabury. Amarica('la
lltanlpl to Nn tl)9 9ritlah
bloclllde to bring in ll'IUC:I\
nHded gold !tom Franca.
"Ttt. Clouded Wlndow ' f1l) CAPTIONED ABC 1:00 0 MIDNIGHT SPECIAL min) ' ( 1 hr., 30 min.)
'DEAD MAN'S CURVE' ON TV TONIGHT
Stars Bruce Davidson, Richard Hatch
MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY
"CLOSE ENCOUNTERS
· · OF THE THIRD ~IND: (PG)
"WORLD'S GREATEST LOVER'~(PG) •
''MONTY PYTHON"
.. "~LIA"(PG)
...
.. OPENING NIGHT~
"LOOKING FOR MR. GOODBAR"
"HUSTLE" CR) .
'Wyatt' Still· ·on
Hugh O'Brian in Tluiller Tonight
By TOM JOK Y
NEW YORK <AP ) -Hugh O'Brian
burst into television in 1955, s\x-guns
blazin g. And while 18 seasons bave
gone by since O'Brian's hit Western.
"Wyatt Earp," left the air. TV wor k
still keeps the actor busy.
"I don't have the heat I once had."
O'Brian says, undersl afillg the case a
little, "but I'm not without work."
Actually, O'Brian does a feature
film now and then , s pends several
weeks on the st age each y~, and
m aintains a schedule of two to four
'l'V shows a season. His latest, a sus-
pense thriller , "Cruise into Terror,"
is on ABC, Channel 7, al 9 p.m.
tonight .
IN "CRUISE INTO Ter r o r ,"
O'Brian ls Andy, captain of a cruise
ship in t.he Caribbean. An ancient
sarcophagus is r ecovered by divers
and brought on board, and death and
destruction follow.
Tbe movie features R ay Milland,
J ohn Forsythe, Stella Stevens and
Linda Day George.
Since "Wyatt Earp,·• O'Brian has •
largely restricted his taevision work
to specials and made·for-TV movies.
"I don't do guest spots on series, ..
he s ays. "If you do a lot of episodic
stuff like that, you 're dead in the
marke tplace tor the tong-form work.
It's like the motion picture people
used to look a t t h os e who d id
televjs ion You have to be eiclre mely
selective."
O'BRIAN, WHO'S 47. doesn't deny
the import.ance or ''Wyatt Earp" ·
he calls it TV's first adult Western ·-
to his s uccess in television today.
"It put me ort a first name basis
with my banker ," he quips, "'and it
had a tremendous e ffect on my
career , l aking me from a feature
player to a hQusehold na me.
"A lot or guys don't want to admit
they had a series," he says. "I think
il's wrong lo look a glfl horse in the
m outh, and t.J\at was a gift horse. I'm
recognized because of the series, and
it provided a financial basis so J
didn't have to do what I didn't wa nt
to do."
O'Brian says he still enjoys the Jux·
ury or choosing his work.
In 11 ;;rid go;;r mad -:V110. ri:ttd;;i
fwmv. fab11/011' love ~t°.::117 YOU DO~ I
SALLY
FIELD
'Finding /lie ont ~' lai1t
i fi111h11g ·'""'r~ //
HEMES (PG)
' It k\l"' 11"-rt II ( Cl\.11'""'\ l'l!PI • • ~ • tll l« 'I
(., ... ,,~ MAllllt<.<>N l t !MI.
,. l\1t1t.,l bylAMC><.:AltAI AT!1V> M•• ~ ~y J/ICK NO .t:SCH( •t>d Rl,HARD H A7ARO
OtrttlH ~ latlMY Pf.Vt. ICAC:AN
l'rocf11ttd by DAVID TOSTER
tnd LAWllENCE TIJRM"'N
"tno.'IVH~AL rinuttr r.o1--. 'tlOINICtlLtlll" tir~ ...... W OI• ~~ ... ~-h.,,!C! .tMZ!r:re."" )3?B ---..
lrville
EDITION
VOL. 71, NO. 34, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES OR~NGE COUNTY, c;ALIFORNIA FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 19t8
1 TEN CENTS
--Srwm-Ban Belat_f1'e AJi"e in Sitieria?
MOSCOW (AP) -Soviet scie.nti.sta say they have 1athered
evidence pointing to the existence in Slberia of a dark, shasgy.
haired, shrill-voict!d wild man resernblinl in some ways the legen·
dary Snow Man or the Himalayas.
The Soviet news agency Tass said specialists at the Institute of
Language, Literature and History in Soviet Yakutl have been
evaluating testimony of Siberians who claim they encountered the
man-hke creature called "Chuchunaa." ·
THE NAME MEANS "FUGITIVE" or "outcast" in one of the
di alects of Yakutla, a vast expanse of forest, mountains and frozen
tundra in northeastern Siberia. '
''The famous Himalayan Snow Man, Yell, whom many ex·
plorer11 believe exists. might prove to have a Yakutlan relative.''
wrote Tass correspondent Sergei Bulantsev in a story on the in·
stitute's findings.
The Himalayan Snow Man is also known as the Abominable
Snow Man. Large tracks in the snow are ascribed lo such a
creature. Some scientists believe that, If he exists, he may be a
form ol unclassified ape.
JN THE AMERICAN NORTHWEST, there also have been re·
ports of a huge creature known as a Sasquatch, or "Big Foot.''
which bas been desc~be<;l by various people who claim to have
seen it as looking like a bear or an ape.
The Tas'i story s1tid "there is a lot of lesUmony of witnesses
who ran into the wild man" in \';akutia's Verkoyansk region-, llbout
400 miles north of the city or Yakutsk.
.. The old-timers of highland villages of the Verkhoyansk re·
gion warn guests ~bo come f1om afar: 'Don't go alone in dark-
ness. Be careful in the mountains. Don 't go to the river -
Chuchunaa might appear'," the account said.
ACCORDING TO THE WITNESSES, Tass said, ''Chuchunaa"
was described as tall and thin, standing about 6 feel 6 inches, with
• <See 'Ft.JGmVE.' Page AU
Irvine Co. Sells -Montana Barich·
Donah IJsed
Bank Robber
Gets $82,000
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A
lone gunman escaped with
$82.000 from a San Francisco
bank today after strap~ng the·
manager into what he claimed
w as an elaborate radio·
a ell v ated bombing device, of·
.Ii.ci.al.s rn d L Police said 1t was unknown
immediately if the device was a
hoax or how the robber escaped
once he left the bank.
Crocker Dank public affairs
officer Terry Mcinnes said the
unidcnHficd manager had ar·
rived for work and was parking
his car behind the Park Merced
branch early today when a man
walked up and pointed a gun at
him.
M clnnes described what
followed:
The gunman forced the
manager inside the empty bank
and ordered him to open up the
vault.
~ The robber t n tied a belt
around his ca live and dis-
-pt-ayed -a-w~talkie deviee:
He said there were two sticks of
dynamite planted in the belt that
could be activated by the porta-
ble radio.
Meanwhile, arriving bank
employees were warned by the
robber of the manager's situa-
tion.
The robber then walked out
with $82,000 and police were
su_mmoned.
Rain's Harm lo B8y
Called Temporary
By JACKIE RYMAN
ot u. oaOy 11'1"" s .. 11
Recent rains brought addi·
tional silt, flotsam and part of a
cliCC into Upper Newport\Bay,
but caused no significant long·
term damage, a State Depart-
ment of Fis h an d Game
ecologist said today.
· Ron Hein, wh() is supervising
the department's restoration of the bay as a wildlife preserve,
said the amount of silt that came·
in through San Diego Creek will
simply add volume to the •.
amount lo be dredged in about a
year.
Dredging is necessary lo undo
years of damage bY. silt and now
obsolete sail works, Hein said.
--~ Much of the present· Sitt "as
brought into the bay during the
1969 nood, which also washed
out some or the old salt work
levees, he-said.
Another effect . of the l.recent
rains waa the collapse 01 some
blurfs in the Dover Shores area.
"In co.ntparison to the ailt
from the rains, it's not a signifi•
cant quantity," Hein said.
Also, fie noted that fiotsam
such as oranges, styroCoam cups
and other debris were washed
into the bay, presenting an
esthetic-problem.
"But biologically the visible
material is not that bad and it's
typical of a watershed where the
debris from upstream comes
downstream," Hein said.
'.NB's Jim McGuy
-Runs.fol-COngress
Newport Beach Democrat Jim
McGuy, who earlier said he
would seek the 36tb State Senate
district &&al, announced today
tie would run for the 40th
Congressional District post held by Robert Badham, R·Newport
&eact\.
McGuy said his move was
prompted by uncertainty as to
whether Assemblyman Ron
Cordova, D-El Toro, would nm
for re-election or seek the state
fenate seat being v,cat.ed by
Newport Beach Republican Den·
n.11 Carpenter.
• Carpenter bu announced be .
•ill not seek re-eleclioo. .. 11 Democrats are 1oln1 to
•in In that area we must be un-
ited,•• McGu1 explained.
McGuy la prealdent of World
A merican Bualne11men•1 Aa·
•IOCiation in Huntln~ Beach. an or1anlaatlon which offer1
small business members dental,
. hospital, mopey1 ma11a1ement a~ct diacoun~cna.se benents.
McGuy said he plans to visit
2,000 to 3,000 amall b~ainess
operators in the conaressional
d{stfiCt ln hopes of Ul)iting them
behind his bjd for offtce.
"There ls a real need ror them
to 1et involved in pollUcs now ~cause they are discoura1ed
wlth the system," he said.
McG\ly described his UJ>COID·
Ing campaign as .. fair, decent .._a low-bud&et. ••
The 10.year Newpoft Beach
reslclent said be bu not AoU&bt
elected offtce belore, but bas
been active lo Democratic
politics. # •
McCq:y, .a. 1ioldl a bullness
decree Ire ;au .Joee lute
Unlvenaty. & u4 181 w~ Arlue;Jla~toarcblldren.
Dag of the Iguana
A rhinoceros·iguana taltes it on the chin
from three youngster.s from UC Irvine's
Children's Center, a day-care facility usecl
by student parents. Reptile was part of a
day-long exhibition at the univers ity
Thursday, by Monty's Traveling Reptile
Show.
), ..
Northwood Center OK'd
Selling
Price
S.ecret
By JOANNE REYNOLDS OI .. o.Hr ,.. ... s .. tt
Irvine Company President
Peter Kremer has announced
the sale of the company's Flying
D Ranch in Montana for an un-
disclosed sum to members or the
family that operates the Kin,Jt
Ranch in Texas.
The Robert R. Shelton family
took deed to the 83,158·acre
ranch near Yellowstone Na-
tionat.:ltark an Wednesday.
The Shelton familv own~ and
operates the Spanish Creek
Ranches, a multl·state ranching
operation which owns a 36,000·
acre ranch next to the Flying D.
·Shelton is a member of the family that owns and operates
the one million-acre King Ranch
in south Texas and is a member
of the Klng Ranch Board or
Directors.
Roeers Rainey,'Shelton's busi-'
ness agent in Corpus Christi
declined to reveal the amount
paid for the Montana cattle
ranch noting that "Mr. Shelton
feet.a lt'1 nobodt's bOllhela." A 1pokeemld fol' tbe Irvine
Company aafd the n,rm would
not disclose the sales price at
Shelton's request.
Kremer said the sale was
made as part or tbe Irvine Com·
pany's plans toconcentrateonde·
veloping its 77,000 acres in Orange
County. ·
"A large cattle ranch in the
stale of Montana was d e·
term ined lo be outside of our
range of interests,,., Kremer
said.
• . • • The Flying D supports 6,000 I J,.-u .... n P 1 ;... __ -..... P•111hib.;t L1nr1nr,.1. Mar"Jwt head of cattle o!1 its own proper· , • u ai. s..::; "-"Ure• o • ., " --~ --'7 ty and an additional 20,soo acres ·
. · . . . · or leased 1"1d on the outskirts of A use permit to build a com· range of income groups. the time, "Everyth1ng·stops un· Bozeman.
mercial and office center in By state Jaw, cities must come til April. We don't waste any The large ranch biggest in the
northern Irvine, in !he. up with such housing plans by more staff lime, (n?r> have Bozeman area, r'uns from the
NQrth)"ood district, was BP· July, 1979. . m~mbers or the Housu~g Com-Madison River on tbe west to tbe
proved T.1ursday by the PlM· The comm1ssloo has struggled m1ttee show up al public hear· Gallatin River on the east
ning CommissiQo. · with a proposed document for ings that never happen." s traddling the Madlson·Gallati~
The commission required as a months, but was blocked late The ~e~iogs before both the county line.
condition of approval that last year by a need for advice comm1ss1on and~councll A spokesman for Spanish
neit.her a liquor store nor conve-from the City Council about have been sparsely tte ed. Creek Ranches said the Shelton
nience market be bl.iilt, citing whether state guidelines for Al Thursday's commission family intends to maintain it as . .,.
t.ramc increases likely. such plans.were to be treated as meeting, however, Joan Irvine a t attle ranch.
The Verde Development Com· advi!lory or mandatory. Smith, a director and part owner
pany plans lO build the center on That would make a difference (See CENTER. Page A%)
1.6 acres between Trabuco Road in its recommendaUons, the
and the 5'lnta Ana Freeway, just commission told the council.
east of Culver Drive. The state legislature now is
The proposed building is a debating the status of the
two-story, 21,000-square·foot guidelines', wfilch were mued by
facility of stucco, metal, wood, state Housing and Community
aluminum and glass. It is to Development.
house a ·combination of retail The council refused to reply to
l\nd service businesses, and pro-the commission's query for ad·
le••lonal, financial and business vice. Instead the council ordered
offices. consideration of the housin~
The commission also brieny plan delayed until the first meet-
considered a city plan to en· ing in April, after City Council
courage home developers to con-elections.
atruct housing affc>rdable by a Mayor Bill Vardo'1liS said at
I
Oranges Poisoned
LEEUWARDEN, Netherlands
(AP> -More poisoned oranges
were round In HolJand today by
a woman who. noticed silvery
droplets in fruit she squeezed for
her family, poUce said. She
looke<t at the juice closely
because she had he4rd ~eports
of chlldren being hosJ)itallzed
after eating mercury.tainted
fruit from Israel
NB Police Seek
Su~rsonic Boom
SACRAMENTO (AP> -The
U.S. Air Force says, the loud.
boom heard over a wide area of
Caljfo'rnia and Neva·da was
caused by a high-flying SR·n.
Co ast
Weattier
Somempt ~ mfd·
tnorning log, otherwise
fair but hazy through
Saturday. Lows tonight 45
lo 50. Highs SalU.rday in
mid·60S •
INSIDE T ODAY
Jozr ii nJ011ing a rt•
turgence along the Oronge
Cocut. Many area ichooU ore
turning o..t top-notch jou
, 1"~· siorlci end ~to·
on PGQe Cl. 1
·2 · Light Planes
Crash ·ove:r LA
Two single·englne lieht
airplanes collided m midair over
tho Lo• An1ete1 area today, Ono
plane cruahaed (Jpsldt down ln
the 1urftlne end the other fell In
flames on top of a car.
Police and the Federal Avia·
tion Administration offictial1
were still pleeine te1ether d•
t alls by midday ot the coll11ion
just north of Marina del Rey.
At teaat one death waa reoort·
ed but the total number of.
casualties was not yet known,
FAA spokesman Bruce Cham·
bers said.
He said a Ce111na 182 lour·
seater flying from Fullerton to
Santa Maria collided wlth a
Cessna Skymaster s i!(·Seater
over McConnell Avenue.
The /lane six·aeater, which
cruhe Into an auto, burst into
flames, Chambera said. He said
reports indicated al least one
person was rushed to Torrance
Hospital. Another report tndlcat·
ed there was a body in the
burned craft.
Reports also Indicated \he
pilot of the Fullerton plane that
flipped over and landed on a
beach In.side the surf line was
rescued. He suffered minor in·
juries.
The accident will be in·
vesligaled by the FAA and the
National Transportation Safety
Board.
'FUGITIVE' IN SIBERIA ••.
' long arma hanging below hi• knee1. "He feeds on raw meat and wears a reindeer skin," the story
said. "He cannot speak, but only utters shrill screams."
The creature WH in the habit of sneaking up to people's dwell·
ings and stealing food, Ta11 said. Upon seeing a hunter or reindeer
breeder, tl_e would r un away in mOflt lnatancea, but sometimes
would stan fighting.
.. REINDEER a aEEDESS, HlJNTIUta, muahroom and berry
collectors ran into Mm most frequenUy at dawn or late in the even·
mg," the account noted. ·
Other <tetails provided by witnesae1 deacrlbed "Chuchunaa"
as barefooted, shaggy.haired, "with a faee aa ble aa that or a
human belng, only very dark. His 1mall forehead protruded above
the eyes, Uke a peaked cap," Tass said.
It added thal "he ran away from people very quickly, leap·
mg."
TASS QUOTE D A SENIOR staff member or the Yakutla In·
slitute, Semyon Nikolayev, aa 1ayin1: "Almost all witne1se1 speak
about Cbuchunaa as a reality, without the fantastic details 10 uaual
for tegenda." •·oescripUons 1iven by many witnesses coincide too much in
details of the appearance, 11\~e.r& and behavior of Chuchunaa,"
Nikolayev said.
Detailed Report.-.
$19,521 to Open
Mangers·' '78 Bid
By GARY GRANVILLE
OI tM Dellr f'lltl Stall
Campai&n di1clo1ure state·
· ments on file today in Santa Ana
show t h at incu mbent All· semblyman~nnis Mangers (D· •
Huntington ach) hu '19,521 in
his campalfh ffttli.
Tha ha .... OJ .. FWill
be1in his campai1n with aa he
seeks for the firat time lo defend
the s tate Asseml>ly seat he
wres ted from Repu blloan
Robert Burke In 1978.
M an1era' 1tatement s hows
that 11lnce being eleeted to office,
he has collected $52,329 in cam·
palgn donallon11.
OrfaetUng those recelpts have
been exeen HS that inc lude
·S7,81S p aia to South Coast Plaza
Hotel lasl year in connection
'wlth a lundrnlaer.
Tho Democ r atic As·
umblyman'1 dl&o101ure state·
menta are the moat meticulous and deta1Jed hte<l by any county
candidate. ·
Por example, included among
th• breakdown of expenaea la 36 .centa paid to Dania Stationery ln
H untlneton Beuh.
An4 listed among the detailed
accounUn1 of contributors ia
$2.50 received from Zita Wessa,
a Huntington Beach uhool
board member.
Among more major con-
tributors are a number or sav·
in1a and loan ll'OUPI' tti.t don•t·
ed $1,250 ea<:h. Included among
those 19avtnss an4\ l~an donol'li
llre MOTC\ley Savtn11 ancl L9aP
Great We11tern Savtn1111 Flrat
Ch1trter Fbianclal .-nd U\e Sav·
ing11 and Loan Com mittee tor
Re&wnaibla Governm ent.
A Republican who h as an· .li<>unced he lntend• to oust
t-fangers from hi• seat, Charles
. T. G ibsoti, tlltd a disclosure
ORA .... COAIT
DAUV Pll.OT
·-...... ,.,......._,~
.. ~.=..= ......
~ ......
~
statement that showed he re-
ceived '6.500 In contrlbutlona to
ael his camP.aign under way.
So far, Gibson has paid •1.000
to political conaulUne firm
George Young and Associ}ltcs
and his disclosure slalenfents
showed he incurred another
$1.000 liability to the consulting
firm.
In the 74th Assembly District,
incumbent Democra..t. Ron
Cordova. a rumored candidate
for State Senate, did not yet
have a closlng 1977 disclosure
statement on fil e in the
Registrar of Voters office.
But two Republicans seeking
to oust Cordov'1 did. Marian Bergeson, who ran a
strong write·in candidacy in
1976, showed she received dona·
lions and Joans of $31,223 to
begin her second quest of the
74lh District seat.
Top donors t.o Mra. Ber1eson's
campai&n included the Fluor
CorporaUon with a donation of
$2,000.
Another donor to the Bergnon
campaign was Newport Beach
Unified School District 8uperln·
tenctent Jotin Nicoll. Mrs.
Bergeson'8 statement.A showed
that Nicoll and his wlfe con·
· trlbuted $250 to her campaign In
early December.
Another Republican contender in the 74th District, Lee Walkins
of Newport Beach, filed a dis.
ciosure statement that lndjoated
Prlends ot L4:e Watkins took 1n
ta&,470 last 1ur 11nd spent
$22,692. fleevtest upendlt\lres on
W•tklns statement wercs $10,000
tQ tile p01iUcal conauttlnc tearq ot WlUlam But~htr and Arnold
Forde a'1d Sl0,833 paid t.o Opl·
11lon fte:iearc:h, a i>ubUc opinion
survey firm treq\l!tn\J)' uaed by
Butcher and Forde.
I
2Bacf'ed
ByBaMl
In Irvine
Pretty Gulls All in a Bow
Standing like winged $entries, the1c
seagulls in San Diego choose up l\J&rd
raUs on -a Jenee overlooking the Pacific
Ocean. They're probably just looking for
their lunch.
T ·wo Face State Probe·
r
Internal FainJiew Chsck May Be ~xtended
By JACKIE HYMAN
Ol IM D<tllr ""-'It.Ill An internal investigation into
actlvltles by three Fairview
State Hospital employees has
turned up unexpected evidence
that may lead to a probe by
state officials, Fairview Ex·
ecullve Director Frank Crinella
aaidtoday.
However, Sandra Udovch,
one or the e mployees
who was a 1ubject of the internal
lnveatlgatlon, Blrongly denied
any wronadolng. Dr. Lincoln
Shumate, alao named by Dr.
Crlnella, could not be reached
for comment.
Both employees were sus·
pended with pay two months
r
&JO, along with former hospital
dlrector Michael Levine, on an
earlier charae that they used
state resources to mail out docu·
ments representing their own
peraonal opinions about prob·
le ms in the hospital.
ResoluUon or that case is 1Ull
pending, allhouab Or. Crlnella
has indicated he expect• lo aak
the three to reimbur1e tho 11tate
for some costs.
During that inquiry, an in·
vestigator came acroaa a file In
the office or Mias Udovch and
her supervisor, Dr. Shumate.
Dr. Crinella aald the Clle In·
dlcated the pair were amone lhe
incorporators of a nonprofit cor·
poration called l''oundatlon tor
Singer Freed
;
Tiny Tim Evidence Lacking
DOUGLASVILLE, Ga. {AP) -Fans of Herbert
Duckin"ham Khaury note: He made u command ap·
pea ranee at the Douglas County Jail.
J lcrbcrl Buckingham Khaury, to non· fan~. 1:.
la lsctlo :,inger .Tiny Tim.
Tim was at the jail Thursday to post bond on "'
theft of services charge. But the charges were
dropped for lack of evidence, a district attorney':,
~pokesman said.
William Sorrows, former road manager for the
s inger, filed the charge, which apparently grew from
a dispute between Tim and Sorrows over o
performance, the spokesman said.
After the hearing, Tim sang a couple of numbers
for the de puties and left. .
Baseball Bat
Slayer Gets
8-month Term
A man who admitted that be
used a b145eball bat to infltci fatal lnjunea on his brother-in-.
:i
Man Held in Drugs
OAKLAND (AP) -Jose
Ramon Perea Peinado, 35, a
man descrlbed 11 one of the ma·
jor suppliers of heroin to San
Francisco has been arrested by
Oakland police. He 11 being
held In Oakland oily jail ror tn·
veaUgaUon of po11esslon of
heroin for sale.
Family Oevelopmen t . Inc ..
which has received federal
funds for an operation called
Orange County Advocacy
Services.
lie said the services provid~
under the grant •·would be
r ather difCicult to distinguish
from those that would be part of
their duties here al Fairview."
That allegation led him to
question whether or f\ot state re·
sources were used for the grant
and if the pair. were paid twice
for the sarrie work.
Dr. Shumute and Miss
U dovch's dutlea include
thching parents to work with
their developmentally disabled
children and stand up for their
rights. he said.
"We don't know if there was
tclually any dual reimbUr!iC·
ment for salaries," Dr. Crinella.
said, adding that ho expects the
s tale Attorney General's office
and possibly the I ntcrnal
Revenue Service to investigate.
Miss Udoveh deni.ed the al·
legations except to note that she
had used hospital facilities with
the knowledge of Dr. Levine, Dr
Crmella'a; predecessor, a nd had
belteved that since she w&& aerv·
ing developmentally <lisabled
persons. the use was justified
Before laking her position at
Fairview, she had alrea<lY llP·
plied for the grant fund&, Mias
Udovch said.
When the money came ~hrough, lihe then hired an filll·
side employee to carry out'the
terms of the erant. and assisted
her outside of Flllrview work
time, Miss Udovch said.
"l probably put in 60 to 80
hours a week for about a year or
a year and a hair," $he uid.
She said that wllile ll~e halil re·
fused to let Fairview Qfficials
audit her book!J because the)' are
noL accountants, she ha& written
to lht> State Department of
Healtll requestjn& a special
audit but received no reply. .
Dr. Levine, who now d(rects a
prlvate hospital in Cerritos,
said, "Sandy put in such In·
ordinate houra that I think she
probably ought to bill the state
for the extra hours."
Irvine City Council cendklatet1
Ellen 1''reund and Larry Agran
were endorsed for clettion
March 7, at a Tburad~ nlpt
meettns of lrvlna Tomorrow, a
local clUiena' lobby af about JOO
members.
The vote followed by a week a
public forum hosted by the
eroup at which moat of th• el.ht
Qompalgnlne calldlda'ea at-
tended.
Mn. Freund Is an Irvine plan·
ning commlsaloner; A'gran ia an
attorney and· s late vlce
chalnuin for Common Cause.
The endorsement drew critical
reaction from a third council
candidate, Weatminsler High
School teacher Vivian Hall, a
member of Irvine Tomorrow ..
She complained that n o
"searching" questions had be'n
asked at the candidates' forum.
an~ that &ome lrvme Tomorrow
members who voled ThurlJday
hadn't attended.
She claimed, "They packed
the place. There was no way you
could win. It wouldn't have mat·
tered if 1 had stood on my
head."
She Hid the group ~eemtd
m ore concerned wlth
personalities than Issues.
·'They've become it single·
issue or~aniaalion totally .ob·
sessed with what they call The
Plan (the cltr general plan).
··sounds lik.e Big Brother to
mr."
Asked why she remained a
member or the eroup, Mrs. Hall
replied, "l didn't realize how
much they'd changed, until I got
there last night."
She added, ··Naturally I would
welcome the support of any in·
dlvidual member or the group."
Woman Killed
As Car Flips
On Freeway
A 2l·year·old Anaheim woman
wus fatally injured early today
when the car she W8'1 driving
overturned on t.he San Die&o
Freeway near Ortega Highway,
the coroner reported.
Identified as the ,"1ctim was
Evelyn llartkamp, ()f 2341 W.
Crescent St., Anaheim.
Accordm~ to the coroner's re·
port1 the woman was drlv!J\e
Joutnbqund on the freewa>' at
U :45 am. w~ 1ha..appa•enlly
lost contro~orher lightweight
car and 1t rolled over.
The vichm died in San
Clemente General Hoaplt.al two
hours after the accident, the re·
port said
Gay Slaying
Suspect F~ee
SA N FRANCISCO CAP) -A
21 .ycar-old pnrt time lctborer
h11s been acquitted in the istab·
bing death of a homosexual
· whose slaying Ignited protests
from the ~oy community.
Thomas Spooner was con·
victed of felony asaault In the
case, but was acquitted in the
slaying of Robert Hillsborough
on June 22
Spooner was one or four people
arrested in the case.
law has been sentenced to ejght
months in t.he Orante <.;;ounly
Jail.
Sueerior Court Judge Robert
E. R1cklea ordered the jail term
and three yearJJ problltion for
Bobbie Jones, 24, of Fontana.
arter he pleaded auilty to re·
duced ctiaraea of involuntary
manirdaushter,
The. Junk .Buslliess
Jcme wu booked on m~mter chnl"' by Fullerton police la1t
April l~ after '4iild•e>' Hutton
Grttart1 a7, a110 of Font.ana, d~
followtng a fracas between ~
&.women,
Jones tofd police that he used
the bat in self defense after his
brother-in·law pur1ue4 h{m
from the Hudtet Aircttt '-1•11t w'-•H Ult)' both work aDd re-peatedly c})allenged m to a
fiaht.
Some years ago white addressing the Central
Indiana Floor Covering Asaociatlon, an Industry
spokesman.·· Walter Guinan said: ··roo many
people In the floor covering fndustry ._re
convinced the publlo only wants to buy ''junk''
car~et,"
We're afraid that you might also get '"'' lmpreaaion f rom the ads whi ch speoify
unbelievable low prloee. lnveetigatlng these ads
will deterniine one Qf two things -either the
carpet IS JUNK. <>r they will try to sell you
aom ethlng more expensi\)ef
We don't sell hmk at Alden's, bul we do have
Quality at competitive prices. and the beat
inatallatlon '" the county.
• •
r
Lag1•na/South Coast ..
VOL. 71, NO. 34, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES
L
ORA NGE CO UNT ¥, CALIFORNIA
Aft eMIOOJI
N.Y. Stoelui
Snom· Jffan Kelati1'e Alive i11 · Siberia?
MOSCOW <AP) -Sov\et scientists say they have gathered
evidence pointing to the existence in Siberia of a dark, shaggy.
haired. shrill·voiced wild man resembling in some ways the legen·
dary Snow Man of the Himalayas.
The Soviet news agency Tass said specialists at the Institute of
Language, Literature and History in Soviet Yakuti haye been
evalu atmg testimony of Siberians who claim t.hey encountered the
man-like creature called ''Chuchunaa "
''The fa~us Himalayan Snow Man, Yeti, whom many ex-
plorers believ exists, might prove to have a Yakutlan relative,"
wrote Tass co respondent Sergei, Bulantsev in a story on the ln-
stitute's findings.
The Himalayan Snow Man is also known as the Abominable
Snow Man. Large tracks in the snow are ascribed to such a
creature. Some scientists believe that, if he exists, he may be a
form of WlClassified ape.
THE NAME 1'1EANS "FUGITIVE" or .. outcast" in one of the IN THE AMERICAN NORTHWEST, there also have been re·
dialects of Yakutia. a vast-expanse of forest, mountains and frozen ports or a huge creature known as a Sasquatch, or "Big Foot,"
_lu_n_d_r_a_i_n_n_;o_rt-'h-'e-'a"-it'"""e_rn--'-S-'1b'-e-n_·a ________________ w_h_i_ch_h_as_bee __ n_d_e_s_c_ri_be_d_b_..y_various people who claim to have
seen it as looking like a bear or an ape.
The Tass story said •'there Is a lot of testimony of witnesses
who ran into the wild man" in Yakulia's Verkoyansk region, about
400 miles north or the city of Yakutsk.
''The old-timers of hlahland villages of the Verkhoyansk re·
gion warn guests who come from afar: 'Don't eo alone in dark·
ness. Be careful in the mountains. Don't go to the river -
Chuchunaa might appear'," the account said.
ACCORDING TO THE WITN~ES. Tass said, ''Chuchunaa"
was described as tall and thin, standing about 8 feet 6 inches, with
CSee 'FUGITIVE,• Page A2)
1
SC Cop Saves
I
3, Hit by Car
A San Clemente police officer
who pushed three men out of the
path of a car late Thursday
night, was struck by the auto
himself but was able to get back
on his feet and arrest the driver.
Ofricer Stephen Bernardi, 24,
was investigating a report or a
broken store window in
downtown San Clemente, when
the accident occurred just
before 10 p.m. in the 100 block of
West Escalones, sajd Lt. Clifford
Gates.
ORIGINAL CAPISTRANO PALISADES GAZEBO WAS BUILT FOR DOHENY FAMILY, 1928
Architect Roy Kelly and Wife ~re Shown at Hla Handiwork In 1931 P hotograph
Bernardi had stopped on West
Escalones to question three
pedestrians about the broken
window al Eddiers Family
Pharmacy, about a block away
at 706 N. El Camino Real. When
he saw the approaching car
, swerve toward them, he pushed
the three men out of the way
before he was struck.
l'iem. Preserved. Bernardi was transported by
firemen in a city ambulance to
San Clemente General Hospital,
By ANNE COOPER
01 tt. o.ilf ...... St.tfl
A prized Capistrano Beach
view spot, won for public use in
a 1975 court battle. will be ded·
icated as a park Feb. 12,
restored to its original 19t9 de-
si~n .
The park is located on a prom-
ontory, high above Pacific
Coast Hi ghway, a t 24601
Palisades Drive. Its com mand·
ing view of Capistrano Bay and
Dana Point mlldc the spot a
favorite retreat of the Doheny
family. developers of Beach
R'oad and Doh eny Drive homes
f in the 1920's. t The Dohenys hired architect
Roy Kelly in 1928 to build a
gazebo on the blufftop promon·
tory. The gazebo was completed
and decoratively landscaped in
1929. During the Depression and in
subsequent years. the property
changed hands and fell into dis·
repair. The spectacular view,
however, continued to attract
visitors, establishing a pattern
of trespassing which won the
property for public use in 1975 on
the legal principle or eminent
domain, said Micky Valentine,
execulivb secretary for the
Capistrano Bay Parks and
Recreation District.
By the time the property came
under the jurisdiction of the
county's special parks district,
tt)e gazebo was in ruin&. the
<See VIEW, Page AZ>
Co ast
We .th e r
Some night through mid·
morning fog, otherwise
·fair"" but hazy ttirouch
Saturday. Lows tonlght_45
to SO. Highs Saturday in
mid·6Q;s.
I NSIDE TODAY
Jan fa enjo11fng a Tl·
.urgenct along thf Orange
Coo.t. Man11 arco .c11ooU an
hinting Ot.tt tOJMIOfCh ~ mu1~1cPta. Storft• ortd photoi °" PogtCJ.
0...,,,... ...........
PRIZED CAPISTRANO BEACH VIEW POINT BEING RESTORED TO ORIGINAL ELEGANCE
OrlgtneJly Private Pro-perty Site Wiii Be Dedicated Feb. 12 •••Park
'
,
~l Oppoae Rent Control in Laguna Beach
If you strongly oppose rent
controls, you can go into the vot·
Ing booth blindfolded March 7
and pick three Laguna Beach
council candidates who share
.)'our views.
Laguna Beach realtors
learned Thursday that all 10
candidates for three seats on the
City Council oppose legislated
celling' rates on rental units by ·
landlords.
And most of the council
hopeluls said they would not
support a real estate property
transfer tax. Wbue \he can•
didates differ ls in their co~
of the right to develop p~perty
and how they rate tJle city's cur-
rent plannlna commwioners
and board Of ~ent mem-
beri.
The property and planning re··
lated questions were posed by
the Laguna Beach Board of
Realtors, and candidates were
given six minutes each to
respond before a aroup of more
than 200 real estate people.
Candidate Wa11te ·Ba&llD said
he supports the right to develop .
one's own 1>fOPCrty, within the
zonJn1 la\vs, but was critical of
current council-appointed plan.
nina boards.
"I am oppcjffd to political and
bureaucratic h a.raasment (of
builders) whether it comes from
the city staff, elected o(foclals or
appointed members," Ba,Ua
Nld.
• .Ja ma w. Blabop, a legal con-
sultant, sald be approves of
tnan aged trowth in Laauna
Beacb, addinf that he does not
advocate 1»growth. B-.t he said
be ls firm in bls belie! of
restricted development of
Sycamort;. Hills, aasalllng
another candidate for seeking to-
de·annex the 522-acre parcel
owned b)' Rancho Palos Verdes
Corp.
"Another c9ndidate said we
can't attord it (Sycamore Hills)
and th at the city should de-
anoex t.be land," Bishop said.
"But we can't aftord to e>pen ll to
2,800 horDel wblch wW mean a
need for more 1cbo0l1, more
road.I and more tues."
where he was treated for bruises
to his right leg and released. He
will be off duty for several days
to recover from the accident,
said Gates.
Driver of the car, Paul An-
thony Coen, 25. of 234 Rosa, #2
was arrested for felony drunk
driving and booked into Orange
Countv J ail after an investiga-
lion by the California Highway
Patrol.
The CHP is routinely called in
to investigate any accident in-
volving a police officer, Gates
:.:ud.
Officer Bernardi was hired by
the San Clemente Police Depart-
ment in August. He was former-
ly with the South Pasadena
police.
Held Since 1944 ' I.rvjpe Company
Sells Big Ranch
Irvine Company President
Peter Kremer announced the
sale of the company's Flying D
Ranch in Montana today for an
undisclosed amouni to an un-
i dent Hied Texas ranching
family.
The 83;158-acre catUe ranch
has been held 6y the Irvine Com-
pany since 19". It was acquired
as part of the deal that ended
with the federal government's
purchase of the sites fpr the El
Toro Marine Corps Air Station
and the Santa Ana Marine Corps
Air Station.
·A company spokesman said
the sale price of the ranch and
the identities of the purchasers
are being withheld at the
purchasers' request.
Located on the outskirts ot
Bozeman, the Flying D supports
6,000 bead of catUe on the Irvine •
Company owned land plus an ad·
ditional 20,551 acres of leased
land.
The ranch. the largest in the
Bozeman area, runs from the
Madison River on the west to the
Gallatin River on the east. straddling the Madison and
Gallatin county line.
Kremer said the sale was
made as part or the company''
plans to concentrate on develop-
ing its 77,000 acres in Orange
County.
"A large cattle ranch in the
state of Montan a was de-
termined 10 be outside of our
range of interests," Kremer
stated.
Council Approves
LB Bingo Night
,
l 1
By STEVE MITCHELL
Gt .. o.11, ""-tSUff
The City Council told them
last year they'd better not show
up again and ask permission to
set up bingo games.
But Laguna Beach High
School Booster Club supporters
were back this week. daring
councilmen to play a game ol
chance with a city ordinance
dealing with bingo.
The gamble paid off.
B.ooster's were asking
permission to hold bing61fames
in conjunction with a planned
Las Vegas Night fund-rai~er
March 11 at Viftage Fair.
And they came to the COUDf!il
armed with financial figures and
emotional pleas.
The club, which raises funds
for the high school prep squad
and other activities, raised
. $4,042 during last year's Las
Vegaa Night. More than $1,000 of
that amount came from the
blnao tables.
Laguna's municipal code
states bingo aames may only be
cooducted on property owned or
teased bY the group sponsoring
the charitable event.
In the case or the Boosters
Club, that would most likely be
the hilh school auditorium.
But Boo&ters supporters want
to bold the Las Veaaa Ni1ht at
VJUace Fair -partly because
the1 c:arn. aerve aJcohol at the
high adaool. ·
Slnce Ylllqe Laauna cannot
re•U1 be Conalrued u a ~ar mffUilt p&.ce for UHi ~ten.
they iOulht cOUad1 pennlsllan
to 1ta1e • Mcond annual hhuM
event.
Latt 7ear tbe council ap-
f"9VM UMir requut Mcaiale
men w lllr'eM1 *" •• oot adv~ the bingo 1am-. Al uaat u .. , aoo.a.n •embfra.
said they were not aware ol the
city ordinance, and the council
made a one-lime-only exc4U>ti0n
to the rule.
Booster president Art Fong
said Wednesday l1_!gbt the Las
Vegas Night and bingo games
"have become so successful that
people sort of expect them -
like Thanksgiving and
Christmas."
But City Attorney George
<See BOOSTERS, Page AU
Cops Seeking
Assailant of
LB t:ouple
Lacuna Beach police are seek~
ing a well-tanned 1oun1 man
who punched out a woman on
the beach near the Surf ..and
Sand Hotel Thursday allernoon
alter telling tho woman and her
companion to "1et off my
beach."
The 22.year·old woman and
her 19·year-old male companion
were playln1 Frisbee on the
beach when the aasailant
bumped into the teen-aier and
began swearl~ at hlm.
1'he woman told the assallan
to leave hJm aJone at whlch time ti~ slugsed her Tive Ume• in lbe
face, telling the pair. "Thls la
my beach. Get otr of It."
He raa 1n the water and •
challensed tbit lQjured woman to
"come 1n-ariC) l'll dr'oWft )'OU."
Police say thlty are 1eetln1 a
blond man s~ndJna fi•• feet J l
iicha uw .... ihlftl 1a .-.... Hia Wdim suffered a brfdlitd
r, eye and forehead bl the 4
p.m.auawt.
J
D•ty l'li.t IUIH .......
DR. WADDILL AND WIFE LEAVE COURT IN SANTA ANA
Murder Trial of Huntington Harbour Physician in Recess
Fro•PageAJ
... • ey.TO" BAaLEY "' • ...... .,. ........
A pros~~OI\ witness ln I.be
murder trial bl Dr. William Bax·
ter Waddill ol Huntington
Harbour collapsed and wept on
the witness sland Thursday at
the height of a day·long, in·
tensive cross-examination.
Registered ourae JoAnn Grif·
fith ol Westminster Community
Hospital laid her head on the
rail of the witness box and
sobbed . Orange County Superior
Court Judge James K . Turner
immediately called a recess in
the trial
Mrs. Griffth lost her composure
after repeatedly answering for
defense attorney Malbor Watson
what amounted lo the same ques· l
ti on : ·'How can you be so s ure that
the infant you tried to revive was
ever really alive?" .
"There was life in that body,"
Mr!>. Grifhlh proLcsted, close to
tears. "Again, I tell you there
was hfe in that body."
And then she slumped forward
on the w1tness stand and wept
while prosecutor Robert Chat·
terlon 1ot to his feet t.o protest.
Another · t>rotest, this time
from an audience that created a
LAGUNA BEACH CANDIDATES. ·-
1tat\dln1-roosn-only situation in
the courtroom Thursday,
• broucht an angry Judge Turner
back to the bench after the re·
cess.
"I have been told of a com·
menl made by a spectator and I
am goln& to warn the spectators
once again that I wiU not allow
ju.rort to hear comments from
the audience," he snapped. "I will clear this courtroom
and charge anyone who makes
audible comments with con·
tempt and that means five days
in jail," he said.
"And if anyone doesn't believe
that l mean what l say, just try
me,•• he added.
The apparently offending com-
ment, audible lo many spec·
tators, was: "Doesn't he think
she's had enough? What's he
trying t o do, give her a
breakdown'>"
Watson repeatedly told Mrs.
Griffith before and after she col·
lapsed that he could not un·
derstand her belief that there
was life in the baby that Dr.
VI ad dill tried to abort last
March2.
She has testified that she tried
to revive the child alter she was
told or the presence of a
heartbeat and watched the in·
rant, weakened by the effects of
. the &;aline abortion it apparently
survitred, struggling to breathe.
because of hls failure to abort
the 28·week fetus delivered that
night by an unwed. 18·year-old
mother.
Chatterton said he will oblain
testimony from a witnesa who
will-tell the jury that t>r. Wad·
dill told nursery stl),ff members
that the beby had surfered
tremendous brain damage an<\
should not be allowed to live. Watson argued while question·
• ing Mrs. Griffith that nurse Pat
Olvera had only reported a
heartbeat and the facl that the
baby cried because she wanted
to create a sense of urgency
.among an apparenUy lethargic
nursery staff. .
And he repeatedly asked Mrs.
Griffith to agree with him that
an infant with a breathing rate
of four gasps a minute and a re-
ported heart rate of 80 beats per
minute couldn't be considered to
be alive.
Watson referred to the victim
throughout his cross·
examination as "this product of
conception," "this tbinl," and
'"this creature."
But Mrs. Griffith refused to
alter the testimony she earlier
...
gin•e fQr Chattettol'\.
Asked by Wat.sQn, while the
doctor·lawyer was discussing
her errort~ to revive the child. if
she felt that she had a right t.o
rule on the 155ue of its Ille 0t
death, she shakily responded:
··1 don't think any or us has a
right to say who should live or
who 11hQUld die."
And she again essured the
persistent Watson that s he
believed there was life in the in·
fanl that the coroner has ruled
was strangled lo death last.
March 2.
.. I'm sorry." she told Watson.
"In my medical mind, It was a
Uve baby. There was life in that
body or 1 would not have tried to
save it."
Judge Turner called a three·
day, weekend recess in the trial
late Thursday. It will resume at
9:45 a.m. Monday in a new
courtroom. Department 26. .
Judge Turner order ed the
transfer to the larger courtroom
so that the trial can accom-
modate spectators who have
been filling his Department 24 to
capacity.
•
overstep their bounds when they
tell the homeowner where to
plant trees and which side of the
house the shingles s hould go.
''Where I live (Victoria
Beach} ever ything is leg<1lly
non-conforming and I find that
charming."
ni:recd with Mrs. Meggs' that
th<'re arc too many city agen·
l'IC!>, saying, "It's my un·
dNstanding the only com·
mission mandated by law is the
planning commission."
ll is alleged that Dr. Waddill,
44, strangled the infant to death
after ordering the nursery staff,
including Mrs. Griffith, to leave
the area.
It is further alleged that Dr.
Waddill resorted lo murder
Capo Beach Youth
Held in Jail Knifing i
A 17-year -old Capistrano youth when he pulled a knife I'
Beach youth was booked into from his belt and stabbed Perez
Orange County Jail on charges just above the belt. He was sub·
of at~empted murder Thursday dued after a brier struggle. Brokerage manager Howard
Dawson criticized the city's
~trict building standards, say-
ing, ··1 feel we have approved an
inor dinate amount of or-
dinances. ·'The net effect of ou.r legislat·
ed conformity," Dawson said,
""ill that most or the houses on
the recent (Village Laguna}
charm tour were legally non·
conforming."
Bandits Hit
Photo Shops,
Collect $250
Armed robberies at two south
Orange County fast photo proc·
essing out~ thieves
about $250 Thursday.
The first occurred when a man
described as 18 tOt 21 years ol<l.~
approached the Fotomat at 30810
Pacific Coast Highway in South
Laguna and demanded cash.
The bandit escaped in an old
white car with about $100,
Orange County Sheriff's dep-
uties said. The South Laguna
robbery occurred about 11: 15
p.m.
About one hour later. a man
described as about 32 years old
robbed a Photo West stor -: at
23721 El Toro Rd., in El Toro or
$152. The bandit escaped on foot.
Sheriffs officers believe the
two robberies were performed
by different individuals since the
later bandit wore a gray ski
mas k .
1Dief Gets Jewels
Jewelry with a total value of
$3,520 was stolen from a Dana
Point home by a burglar who
punched a hole in a window
s creen to gajn entry. Orange
County sheriff's officers said
Frani Metzler was shopping
when the burglary occurred.
The thief entered via the
bathroom window or the home at
24725 Camarillo Drive.
BIUY BEER
CElS PREJllEW
Billy Beer, the brew endorsed
by the president's brother, is
comlng to California, and the
Dally Pilot staff gave It a taste
test. see Featurine, Page Bl.
I.AC •
DAILY PILOT
He said the council s hould
replace the Board of Adjustment
with a "'board of concept rev1c.w,
to start from scratch and merely
approving the concept of project
proposals.''
Plan n ing Comm1ss1on
Chairman Diana Dike said she
was placed in a dilftcult position
in being asked to rate the cur·
rent commission , having served
on that panel and the board of
adjustment.
She said municipal laws are
not absolute. "They are made by
people and can be changed by
people."
Incumbent Councilwoman
Phyllis Sweeney raised the ques·
lion of what is to be done with
1.800 acres of vacant unsub·
divided land remaining in
Laguna Beach, ad.ding that
there are seven subdivisions be·
ing processed by the city, "and
more subdivisions waiting in the
wings."
Legal Bingo
Wins ApprovaJ
In San Juan
after he allegedly stabbed one of Officers said the youth was
two sheriff's qtficers seeking to Orst Uken t.o Juvenile Hall and
question him on an alleged then booked into the County Jail
violation of probation. when a judge ruled that tbe sus-
D e puti es identified the peel should not be incarcerated
wounded officer as Pet~' Perez, with other juvenile offenders.
32. They said Perez was treated
a t San Clemen te General
Hospital for \ a two· Inch knife
wound in the 'bdomeb and w~
l'roaPIJfleAI
But she opposes experts and
professionals alone on the plan-
ning commission, ~aying that
panel should be comprised of ··a
cros s·section of the c om·
munity."
"We have a (city) staff that is
able to handle, to'a degree, the
technical concerns."
She said the Hoard of AdJU~l
ment needs to reV1se its design
and review standards to address
major issues. "I care nothing for
the material in a building or the
architecture," she said. 1 'm con·
cerned about how the project
blends in with the neigh-
borhood.''
She said the task facing the
new council will be to deal with
those subdivision requests.
''Denial of the subdivisions
me<ins someone ha~ het&.e:'· be
,-e.ady to eornl\ up with the
money to purchase 1,800 acres,"
she said.
She does not believe the Plan·
ning Commission should be com·
prised of experts, saying she
feels it should "be made up of
generalists." But the Board of
Adjustment is a different case.
s he said, and should contain
members who have back·
grounds in design or engin~r
ing.
B\ngo games in San Juan
Capistrano likely will becom•
legal soon.
Councilmen voted 4·0 Wednes·
day, with Mayor Yvon
Heckscher absent. to accept an
ordinance allowing bingo games
in the Missiorf City unc,ler certain
conditions.
Primarily, games must be
conducted by nonprofit, charita·
ble organizations.
However. a change in stale
law last June, wlU aJso allow
mobile home parks and seniprt
citizens organizations t.o conduct
bingo games.
The San Juan ordinance was
proposed alter a group from the
Capistrano Valley Mobile
Estates approached the council
see~ing to sponsor bingo games.
The new orcHnance will be up
for final adoption at the Feb. 15
council meeting.
later allowed to go home in what BO 0 STER S was described as "good condl·
lion."
omcers said the attack oc-
curred outside the Sierra Con-
tinuation School, 26126 Victoria
St., Capistrano Beach, where the
17·year-old allegedly involved in
the incident was located .
They said Perez and deputy
Terry Boyd were questioning the
f'ro• Pa,,e A I
VIEW •..
garden overrun by weeds,
Logan reminded council mem·
bers that the intent of the or·
dlnance Is to keep undesirable
outside groups from coming to
town. renting a hall and conduct-
in g bingo games.
High School principal Bob
Hughes said he appreciated the
intent of the ordinance, "but we
would appreciate it if the council
would reconsider our request."
Councilman Jack McDowell
said he would be willing to "take
a chance on one more year for
t~e Booster's Club," and the
couYleU &PPl:<>Ved the request.
Bul they'8¥~ Boosters mem-
bers to figur~.~t a way to comp-
ly with the city Ot\d~nance rr ~
want a thira year l!l( bingo.
'\ "
Businessman John Gabrlels
said rating the Planning Com-
mission and Board of Adjust·
ment is like rating the elec-
torate. "They are the ones who
are tasked with making sure
their elected officials reflect
their beliefs," he said. He said
there is a means of controlling
those two agencies which make
recommendations to the City
Council.
"If the people do not like their
recommendations, they can be
appealed at the City Council
level," Oabriels said.
NB's Jim McGuy
Runs for Co-ngress
)\'.ith a 10-cent t~ \e, the
parks district could not afford to
develop the property, even
though it amounts to less than
an acre of land. Soon after the
district acquired the site,
however, its voters approved a
tax hike to 25 cents, making
possible a $23,900 allocation for
park and gazebo restoration.
Original gazebo architect Kel·
Jy, now 12 years old, was con-
tacted in Hawaii by Mrs. Valen· .une. Kelly verified that gazebo
plans drawn from recollections
or long·lime area residents were
accurate. He also supplied a
photograph or the 1929 fatebo to
aid in its renovation.
Laguna Unit
Plans Picnic
Village Laguna supporters are
t aking a folksy approach to the
City Council electi<?n by holding
a brown bag picnic rally at Main
Beach Park in Laguna Beach on
Sunday. Graphic artist Adena Gay said
a charter city property transfer
tax would be ineffectual in at·
tempts to raise city funds, citing
a higher bed tax or increased
parking revenues as more viable
alternatives.
She said the ideal planning
commission and design review
board would consist of a cross·
section of the city, with
"balance, diversificallor. &nd ex-
perience incorporated in both
groups." -M aggle Meggs, a Laguna
Beach housewife and former
Grass Valley councilwoman,
said there are too many boards,
commissions and a1encles in ci-
ty government, saying Laguna
Beach "is run like a great
metropolis."
"This is a small town of 16,000
people," she said, "which ls prob·
ably more like 32,000 if you
r~alty counted them."
"Every board -.e can dispense
with, we should dispense with,"
she said.
Candidate Barbara Smith
Newport Beach Democrat Jim
McGl.sy, who earlier said he
would seek the 36th State Senate
district seat, announced today
he would run for the 40th
Congressional District post hefd
by Robert Badham, R-Newport
Beach. M cGuy said his move was
prompted by uncertainty as to
whether Assemblyman Ron
Cordova. D·El Toro, would run ·
for re·election or seek the state
senate seat being vacated by
Newport Beach Republican Den·
nis Carpenter.
Carpenter has announced he
will not seek re-election.
"Jr Democrats are going to
win in that area we must be un-
ited," McGuy explained.
McGl.l)' is president of World
American Businessmen's As·
sociatiolf in Huntington Beach,
an organh!alion which offers
small business members dental,
hospital, money management
and discount purchase benefits.
McGuy said he plans to visit
2,000 to 31000 small business
OJM'.ratora an the congressional
district iil hopes of \IDiting them
behind his bid r~ office.
Frea Pflfle Al
'FUGITIVE' IN SIBERIA. • •
Joni anm hangm1 beloY hla knees. "U. feeds on raw meat and wears a relndeer akin," the story
said. "Ho cannot speak, but only utters shrill screams."
The creature wu ln the habit of aneakinl up to people'• dwell·
tnga and stealing food, TUs 1aid. Upon seeing a hunter or reindeer
breedtt, be would run away h\ most instances. but sometime.
would atart filhtin•·
0 RDNDBEA BRBEDERS, HUNTBU. mushroom and berrY eoUectorl ran into hbD moat ~equently at dawn or lat.t tD Ute even·
lng," the account noted. Other details pmtcled1by witMIMI deembed .. Cbucbunaa''
u barelOoted. abalSY·hai.Nd, "with a f'ice as bll u tbat of a
human being. Ollly very dart. ma 1mall foriht1d protruded above
the eyes. like a peaked cap," Tau satd. lt lidded th•t "he tan away from people very quickly. leap..
tna.'·
TAM QUOTED A S&NIO& staff member ot the Yuutia ln·
1Ului.. SimJOft NUtolayov. aa aayinf: 0 Almott atl wttnelMt speak
•bOUl ChudninH .. :. rttlil)', WiUMM Ute fantutlc delaU. IO UIUI tor 1.,..-..'.!J',.:;1 ~. "~ i,inft by many wltnllMI eolndde tOO 1in1ea. in
detall.a ot the appearance. mlnMn And beb•vl~ OC Chucb.unu. ••
Nikolaye• u1d.
"There ls a real need for them
to get involved In politics now
because they are discouraged
with the system," he said.
M.cGuy c!esc.rlbed his upcom·
ing campi.lgn as "fair, decent
and low-budget.••
The 10.year Newport Beach
resident. said he has not sought
elected office before, but has
been active in .-Democratic
politics.
McGuy, 45. holds a business
degree from San Jose State
University. He and his wife,
Arlene. have four children.
Raucfl General Builders of
Garden Grove began restoration
, work in October. In addition to
rebuilding the guebo1 the con·
tracting tirm.has lar>dScaped the
site and put in adobe sidewalks
like the original.
Fifth District Supervisor
Thomas Riley will describe the
park's hlstory at its dedication
Feb. 12 at 2:30 p.m . Additional
information on the ceremony is
available by calling Mrs. Valen·
tin~. at 496-4261.
A soap box and microphone
will be available for short pre·
sentations by the 10 candidates
·seeking three seats on the City
Council, but Village Laguna
sponsors say the intent of the
rally is t.o make informal one-on-
one conversations with the coun-
cil hopefuls.
The picnic rally will be held
from l t.o S p.m. and families are
encouraged to bring their
families for the afternoon.
The Junk Business
• I
Some years ago while addressing the Central
Indiana Floor Covering Association, an industry
spokesman. Walter Guinan said: "Too many
people in the floor covering industry are
convinced the public only wants to buy "junk"
carpet."
We're afraid that you mtght als6 get this
Impression from the ads which specify
unbelievable low prices. Investigating these ads
will determine one of two things -either the
carpet IS JUNK, or they will try to sell you
something more expensive!
We don't sell Junk at Alden's. but we do have
quality at cof9petltive prices. and the best
installation in the county.
\ t
17
..
• Orange Coast
EDITION
Today' Clo lng
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 71, NO. 34, 4 SECTIONS, .CO PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS
....
·Snow Mon Relative ·Alive in Siberia,
MOSCOW CAP) -Soviet scientists say they have gathered
e\•idence pointing to the existence in Siberia of a dark. shaggy.
haired, ~hr1ll·voiced wild man resembling in some ways the legen·
dary Snow Man of the Himalayas.
The Soviet news agency Tass said specialists at the Institute of
Language, Literature.and History in Soviet Yakuli have been
evalu:tting testimony of Siberians who claim they encountered the
man·hke creature called "Cbuchunaa."
.
THE NAME MEANS "FUGITIVE" or "outcast" in one of the
dialects of Yakutia, a vast expanse of forest, mountains and frozen
tundra in northeastern Siberia.
"The famous Himalayan Snow Man. Yeti. whom many ex-
plorers believe exists, might prove to have a Yakutian relative."
wrote Tass correspondent Sergei Bulantsev in a story on the in-stitute's findings.
The Himalayan Snow Man ts also known as the Abominable
Snow Man. Large tracks in the snow· are ascribed to such a
creature. Some scientists believe tbal. 1t he exists, he may be a form of unclassified ape.
IN THE AMERICAN NORTHWEST, there also have been re·
ports of a huge creature known as a Sasquatch, or "Big Foot,"
which has be(:n describe<;l by various people who claim to have
seen it as looking llke a bear or an ape.
The Tass story said "there is a lot or testimony of witnesses
who ran into the wild man" in Yakutia's Verkoyansk reelon, about
400 miles north or the city or Yakutsk.
"The old·timers or highland villages or the Verkhoyansk re·
gion warn guests who come from afar: 'Don't go alone in dark·
ness. Be careful in the mountains. Dsin't go to the river -
Cbuchunaa might appear'," the account said .
ACCORDING TO THE WITNESSES, Tass said, "Chuchunaa"
was described as tall and thin, standing about 6 feet 6 Inches, with
<See 'FUGITIVE,' Page A!)
Irvine Co. ·Sells Montana Ranch
Bomb Thre a tened
Bank Robber
1 G~ts $82,000
I -I SAN FRANCISCO (AP·-A
calm young man robbed a San
Francisco bank of $82,000 today
after strapping the manager into
a bell he claimed was a bomb
that could be triggered by
remote radio command, officials
said
The two long sticks contained
in the belt pouch actually were
road flares. police learned later.
Investigators at the Crocker
National Bank in the quiet Park
Merced neighborhood said the
mornin~ heist appeared to be
well olanned. ·
''It was professional," said
one FBI agent. ·
FBI° spokesm an Jay Colvin
called the robbery •'one of the ·
biggest in recent San Francisco
Jtlstory." Bank officials said
most r6bberies usually net only
"a couple thousand dollars at
most "
Police and FBI investigators
said il happened like this :
Bank manager Joseph N.
Criss, 47, was getting out of his
car at a back parking lot shortly
before the bank opening when a
tall, thin man with a beard
approached and pulled out a
small handgun.
The gunman ordered Criss
back into his car and told him to
put on a wide leather bell,
ofrlcers said. .
The robber said a pouch on the
belt contained two sticks of
dynamite in a pouch which could
be d e tonat e d with a
walkie-talkie r adio he was
hold i ng.
Rain.,_s -aa~m to Bay
Called TemJ.!.orary
By JACKIE HYMAN
OI tllt Dally '91i.t Stalf •
Recent rains brought addi-
tional silt, flotsam and part of a
cliff into Upper Newport Bay,
but caused no significant long-
t erm damage, a State Depart-
m ent of Fish a nd G a me
ecologist said today.
Ron Hein, who is supervising
the department's restoration of
the bay as a wildlife preserve._
said the amount of silt that came
in through San Diego Creek will
simply add volume to the ·
amo_unt to be dredged in about a
year.
Dre<tging is necessary to undo
years or damage by silt and now
obsolete salt works, Hein said.
Much of the present silt was
brought into the bay during the
1969 flood, which also washed
out some of the old salt work
levees, he said.
Another effect of the .recent
raina was the collapse of some
bluffs in the Dover Shores area.
"In comparison to the silt
from the rains, it's not a signifi,
cant quantity," Hein said.
Also, he noted that flotsam
s uch as oranges, styrofoam cup_s
and Other debris were washed
into the bay, presenting an
esthetic problem.
"But biologically the visible
material is not that bad and it's
typical of a watershed where the
debris from upstrea m comes
downstream," Hein said.
~NB's Jim McGuy
llUm .for Congress
A rhinoceros.iguana takes it -on the chin
from three youngsters from UC Irvine's
Children's Center. a day.care fa~ility used
by student parents. Reptile was part of a
day-long exhibition at the university
Thursday, by Monty's Traveling Reptile
Show.
·~No . Bed of Roses in I
DB?
Newlaml House Fl.oral Plan Hit,s Tlwms
By ROBERT BARKER
Ol 1111 Delly '911« Staff
A ballle has broken out in
Huntington Beach over plans to
"plant a rose garden at the his-
toric Newland House.
Members of tlie city's His-
torical Society are lined up in
the controver sy against two
archeologists who claim that the
roses could destroy SJ)OO years
of Indian history.
Elaine Craft, outgoing presi-
. dent of the historical group, ad·
mils that the controversy has·
reached an impasse. "We have a little problem,"
she said Thursday.
is more militant.
She said that if plans are
pushed for the garden without
adequate precautions of Indian
sites, she would revive warm·in·
front-of.the-bulldozers syn-
drome."
M lsS Cottrell said that she has
contacted an Orange County In-
dian ~roup and Indicates that a
physical protest movement
could be launched .
Historical. Society members
say they h ave contacted
archeological experts during
various planning stages for their
project. · ·
They claim that their requests
were ignored until just recently
when the time to plant the roses
approached.
Causing all the fuss is the-plan
to plant 238 rare roses in a 40x36
feet plot on the south s ide of the
old home and in a 24x66 feet
area in the front yard.
The roses were donated from
the private collection of a
(See ROSES, Page A%)
S~lling
Price
Secret
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
OI .. o.i1y f'llet Stalf
Irvine Company President
Peter Kremer bas anno~ced
the sale or the company's Flying
D Ranch in Montana for an un-
disclosed sum to members of the
family that operates the King
Ranch in Texas.
The Robert R. Shelton family
took deed to the 83.158·acre
r-anch near Yellowstone Na·
tional Park on Wednesday.
The Shelton famllv owns and operates the Spanish Creek
Ranches. a multi·state ranching
operation which owns a 36,000-
acre ranch next to lhe Flying D.
Shelton is a member of the
(amily that owns and oi>erates
the one million·acre King Ranch
in south Texas and is a member
of the King Ranch Board or
Directors.
Roaers Rainey, Shelton's busi-'
ness agent in Corpus Christi
lteet~veal the amount.
pa id for the ltJOi\taua e:tiUe.
r anch noting that "Mr. Shelton
feels it'a nobody's business."
A spokesman for the Irvine
Company said the firm would
not disclose the sales price at
Shelton's request.
Kremer said lhc sal e was
made as part of the Irvine Com-
pany's plans to concentrate on de-
veloping its "L7,000 acres in Orange County.
''A large cattle ranch in the
s late of Mo ntana was d e-
termined to be outside of our
range of interests," Kremer
said.
The Flying D supports 6,000
head of cattle. on its own proper·
ty and an additional 20,500 acres
. or leased laQd on the outskirts of
Bozeman.
The large ranch, biggest in the
Bozeman. area, runs from the
Madison River on the west to the
Gallatin River on the east,
straddling the Madison·Gallatin
county line.
A spokesman for Spanis h
Creek Ranches said the Shelton
family intends to maintain it as
a cattle ranch.
Supersonic Boom
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
U.S. Air Force says the loud
boom heard over a wide area of
California a nd Nevada was
caused by a high·Oying SR-71.
J Newport Beach Democrat Jim > McGuy, who earlier said he
whether A·ssen1blyman Ron
Cordova, D·El Toro, would run
for re·election or seek the stale
senate seat belne vacated by
NewPort Beach Republican Den-
nis Carpenter.
One of the archeologiJts has
suggested a 10.year delay on
plans in order to thoroughly ex:·
pfore the midden, or Indian dis·
posal grounds which have
yielded ancient mortars and
Two Light Planes
Colli~e; · l Killed wo~ld seek the 36th State Senate
district seat. announced loday
be would run for the 40tb
Congressional District post held
by Robert Bad.ham, R-Newport
Beach.
McGuy said his move was
t>11>m pted by uncertainty as to
Newport Pair ·
Report T~eft
Of Jewe lry
Carpenter has announced he
will not seek re-election.
''If Democrats are going to
win In that area we must be un-
ited," McGuy explained.
McGuy ls presldent oC World
Amer\can Business men's As·
soclatfon in Huntington Beach,
an orgaanizatlon which otters
small business members dental,
hospital, mortey management
and discount purchase benefiu.
M cGUy said he plans to visit
2,000 to 3,000 small business
operat.on In tbe congnsslonal
district in hoDel of uniUnt lhem
behind his btd tor office.
.. There la a reial need for them
to 1et lnvol~ed ln politics now
because they are dlscouraaed
wllh the system," be said. .
McOuy dac!ribed his upcom·
Int campalp •• "fair, decent
and 1ow·badett."
The 10.,ear ,N.ew~ Beach
reaJdtl'it Nici tii haa not ~ electtd. omce before, but hu
been active ln Democratic ,,.~ ..
McGvY. '5. holds a buslneu ••aree frocn San Joie St•te
Ulhenltt. Re and tils wife,
ArleH. have faur cbUdren. •
pestles. •
.. We certainly have no lnle~
t i o n o C des troy l n I any
archeological sites, but I am not
sure it is feasible to wait that
long," Mrs. Cran said.
' The archeologists say they are
determined to slop the project
for the present.
"I am appalled that the Ills·
torical Society would destroy
such a valuable treasure on a
whimsical business venture,"
Bee Maguire of the Pacific
Coast Archeological Society
said.
Mrs. Magulrc said she was re·
ferrlng to reported plans of the
Historical Society to rent the
house out for weddings.
Marie Cottrell, •ho heada
Archeologlcal Reaearcb
M1na1eanent 1n G•r.ten Grove,
A Gatden Grove pllot was in-
jured and the pUot at another
pleasure ~aft was killed this .
morning ln an.apparent mid·alr
collision near Loa Angeles
J nternational Airport.
The dead pilot's plane spiraled
In na.me. its tall section aevertd. into a parked car near the
Hu&bes Aircraft landinl field.
He was not immediately iden-
tified.
The other plane. a Cessna 182
single.qine fwr·seater l1own
by Larry L. Lamboy, 44. hurtled
upaide down into lhd sand near
Docltweiler Beach. three miles from tbelm~polnt •
La.mboY ete!gfld wJth minor
ln)uries ..S wu treated at TOI"'
ruace~ UO.pltal, ~
be WU~ to be ... &led. Lam-~1 ,. .. abie In hla ;1-. u hl\MOCMrpiJot.
Hil daMIMi' •DI he wu on a crou~.r•fto quallr1 ror a
IOlopllot'tUc!tDieo • n.at ... tonftrmM b)' toWil'
citrtcwa 11 run~ ·-~ ~•=rrom nen l;amboy ~'Eru.v.~
ing •lone. Lamboy reportedly
was bound for Santa l\taria.
Federal Aviation Administra·
tion investigators said cause of
the crash was not known.
Lamboy is o-,ner of Aegis
PrptecUon Systems, a Garden
Grove bura:lar alarm and safety
devices business.
Jlome Burgled
IDNewpon
Newport Beoch police are
aeeking the burglars wtM> broke
into a Balboa Island home and
took Jewelry and 1Uverw.are
valued at $11,110 ThW'lday af.
ternoon.
The theft was reported at
about S p.m. by Charles Rlpley1 1005 N. Bay Front, who tola
police ttie house was unoccupied
tor about two hours.
Police E the thieves first 111101hed a aide entrance
door lo l e home an4 then
mashed e.nothe.-interior door to
• •et le> a c111e conlalnina Hveral
pieces ol jewelry.
Co ast
Weat h e r
Some night through mid·
morning fog, otherwise
fair but haz.y lhrou1 h
Saturday. Lows tonight 4S
to SO. Highs Saturday in
mld·60s.
INSIDE T ODA V
Jou b enJ011ing a r e-
aurgence along the Orange
Co<ut. Man11 area achoola are
turning out top-notch jazz
miufcfan.I. Storie• and pilot~
on Page Cl.
l •dex
IWLYPtl.OT
4fHI of Berela Marigers
Details
Funds
"Fo11r Men Held .
ln Drug Bust
By GAltY GltANVILL£ Of _Delty,....li.tf
Four men who were the sub·
ject of a two-monlh investigation
by Newport Beach and Santa
Ana police. were arrested
Thursday night allegedly in
possession of $5,400 worth of
heroin.
Booked into Newport Beach ci·
ty jail on charges of conspiracy
to sell heroin were Claddis
Tripp, 37, Milton Parharm, 35,
Manuel Cabello, 32, and Donald
While. Tripp, Parharm and
Trash Bag
Kil~!Jr Eyed
On 17 Raps
LOS ANGELES CAP> -The
district attorney will be asked lo
file 17 moro murder charges
against convicted "trash bag
murde rer" Patrick Wayne
Kearney, sheriff's investigators
s ay.
Sheriff's Sgt. AJ Sett said
Thuri.day that Kearney revealed
details of the killings while he
was being questioned Tuesday
. at Chino Stale Prison. where he
1s serving a life sentence for con·
nct1on in three olh~r murders.
Sell and Deputy Roger Wilson
.said the 37-ycar·old Kearney
previously had claimed to have
killed a total of 21 persons, and
Tuesday provided details on the
othe r 18 vict.ims. However,
charges would be sought only In
17 of the cases. Sett said.
"We never had any details on
the slay1ngs of Merle Chance.
Ronald Dean Smith or David
Rogers. a Mar ine at Camp
Pendleton," said Sett. "But he
hai. given us information on
those and the others."
He said he expects the files on
the 17 murders will be presented
tQ the district attorney by next
Monday or Tuesday.
··1f we ever discover the other
18th man's name and find him,
then we would file on that one
rem aining case," Sett said.
The string of killings became
known as the "trash bag •
murders" because bodies of vie·
tims were found stuffed In large
plastic trash bags and left along
deserted highways.
Kearney, who turned himself
in. was indicted July lJ In the
~ea lb!' -4£. Albeft-:7tven, 21. or
Los Angele:.; Arturo Marzuez.
24, of Oxnard, and John 0 .
LaM ay, 17, of El Segundo.
Ex-prisoner
Claims Hurt
1ByNBCops
·• A man wh o claims that
Newport Beach police pushed
and shoved him off the back or a
· moving police van while he was
· handcuffed sued the city and the
police department Wednesday
for not Jess than $25,000 in dam ages.
' James Edward Cobb claims in
his Orange County Superior
Court· lawsuit that he suffered
)erlous injuries in the fall short·
ly after he was arrested on 'char~es of disturbing the peace.
Cobb stales he was placed on
the police vehicle shortly after
being arrested on West Ocean·
front last July 23. He states he
tell after officers attacked him.
Lt. Arb Campbell, adjutant to
Newport's police chief, said
Cobb filed n complaint. with the
department in October.
"We did a personnel lnvestiga.
tlon and ditl not lind anything to
•ustain the complaint," he said.
ORANGll COMJf . N
DAILY PILOT
Cabello all list Santa Ana ad·
dregses. White declined to give
his age or address.
In addition, police said they
arrested two Santa Ana women
on charges of prostitution based
on information developed aner
they booked the four men.
Taken Into custody at a
Newport Beach motel 'Vere
Joyce McAdoo , 20, and
Catherine Williams, 21.
CampaigJ\ dlsclosure atate·
menta on Ille today in Santa Ana
show that rn c u m be n t As-
•em blyman Dennis Maniers <D·
Huntington Beach) has $19,521 in
his campaign cofferu
That is wha\ Mangers will
begin his campaign wlth as he
seeks for the first timb to defend
the slate Assembly seal he
wrested from Repub lican
Robert Burke in 1976.
Mangers• statement shows
that since being elected to offiet!,
he has collected $52,329 in cam·
paign donatlona.
Detective Mike Hietala of
Newport Beach said information
on a heroin selling operation was
first uncovered by Newport
Beach about two months ago.
He s aid the narcotics ring
worked almost cxclusi\'ely lJl
Santa An~ .follc.e-irt-ttrat city
were-·e.tJloo in to aid in the in·
vestigalion.
Bar~ l!laa11 It Looks l
Offsetting those r eceipts have
been expenses that include
S7.813 paid to South Coast Plaza
Hotel last year in connection
with a fundraii.er
The four men were arrest·
ed after allegedly attempting to
sell an ounce of heroin, valued at
SS,400 on the illicit drug market,
to an undercover officer during
a meeting near the intersection
of MacArthur Boulevard and
Bristol Street in Santa Ana.
It sounded easy to Orange County officials
-hook a cable between two tractors and
··s<.iw " off a piece of the bluff overhanging
Pacific Coast Hig hway in Capistrano
Beach before erosion caused a slide. But
it took six hours of sawing and a stream
of water from a fire ho!)e before the bluff
ll•ll. Cyclist Hoh Lindber~ of San Clemente
lhelow> watcht'd the dirt and rock plum·
met to the highway which remained
closed today for cleanup.
The Dem ocratic AS ·
semblyman's disclosure stale·
ments are the most meticulous and deta.iled hied by a ny county
candidate.
Jn addition lo the narcotics, of·
Clcers said they seized a gun
from Parhann, which they at.
leged was reported stolen last
year in a Santa Ana burglary,
Baseball Bat
Slayer Gets
8-month Term
A man who admitted lhat he
used a baseball bat to Inflict
fatal Injuries on his brother·in,
)aw has been sentenced to eight
months in the Orange County
Jail.
Superior Court Judge Robert
E . Rickles ordered the jail term
and three years probatie3n for
Bobble Jones. 24, of Fontana,
arter he pleaded guilty to re·
duced char ges of involuntary
manslaughter.
Jones was booked on murder
charges by Fullerton police last
April 15 after Lindsey Hutton
Green. 27. also of Fontana, died
following a fracas between the
two men.
Jones told police that '1le used
the bat in self defense after his
brother·in·law pursued him
from the Hughes Airi;:rait ptaf\l
where they both worked and re-
peatedly challenged him to a
fi ght.
F,.._PageAJ I
For example, included among
the breakdown or expenses is 36
cents paid to Danis Stationery in
Huntington Beach.
And listed among the detailed
accou nting of contributors is
$2.50 received from Zita Wessa.
n Huntin gton Beach school
board member.
Among more major con·
tributors are n number of sa, ..
ings and loan groups that donat-
ed $1,250 each. Included among
those savings and loan donors
are Mercury Savings and Loan,
Great Western Savings, First
Charter Financial and the Sav·
ings and Loan Committee for
Responsible Government.
A Republican who has an·
nounced he intends to oust
Mangers from his seat, Charles
T . Gibson, filed a d isclosure
statement that showed he re·
ceived $6,500 in contributions to
get his campaill(n under way.
So far. Gibson has paid Sl.000
to political consulting firm
George Young and Associates
and his disclos ure statemenJ.s_-
showed he incurrecl.-amJt'fler
$1,000 llabiJ,11.y-to11\e consulting
fi
In the 74th Assembly District,
incumbent Democrat Ron
Cordova. a rumored candidate
for State Senate, did not yet
have a closing 1Q77 disclosure
s t a tement on file in the
Registrar of Voters office.
But two Republicans seekini
to o.ust Cordova did.
ROSES •..
botanist at the Huntington
Bola.nical Gardens in San
Marino.
Two Face State Probe
Marian Bergeson. who ran a
strong wrile·in candidacy in
1976, showed she received <Jona-
tions and loans of $31 223 to
begin her second quest' of the
i4th Dis trict seat.
Youth Employing
Address Clarified They are reportedly varieties
that flourished in the English
gardens at the turn of the een·
tury and are no longer available
commercially.
Internal Fairview Check May Be Extended
A story that appeared in
Tuesday's Daily Pilot incorrect·
ly listed the address of the
Harbor Area Youth Employ-
ment Service on Newport
Boulevard.
The roses began arriving in
Hun tington Beach several
months ago. They are being
tended by members of the His·
torical Society ln their
backyards until a decision is
made to plant or not to plant.
Shirley Kerins. in charge ot •
landscaping, said there is some
concern that the roses are
becoming too large for their one.
gallon pots.
"They as receiving excellent
care but the time to plant Is
now." she said. ·
The roses would be planted in
holes two-feet deep. T heir roots
would extend another foot.
A proposed underground ir·
rigation sprinkling system also
is causing problems.
An herb garden and a scented·
lea! gerapium garden a lso are in
the l andscaping plans.
T he archeologists aren't say-
ing how much official clout they
pack, but lhey say lhey won't
b est t ate to go to h igh er authority.
By JACKIE HYMAN
Of .. o.1111 Piiot .....
An Internal investigation into
activities by three Fairview
State Hospital employees has
turned up unexpected evidence
that maY-Iead to a probe by
state o(flclals. Fairview Ex·
ecutive Director Frank Crinella sald'today.
However , Sandra Udovch,.
one of the employees
who was a subject or the internal
investigation, strongly denied
any wrongdoing. Dr. Lincoln
Shum ate, also named by Dr.
Crinella. couJd not be reached
for comment.
Both employees were sus·
pended with pay two months
ago, along with former hospital
director Michael Levine, on an
earJler charge that they used
state resources lo mall out docu·
ments representing their own
personal opinions about prob·
lems in the hospital.
Reaolutlon,, ot that case ls sUll
pending, although Dr. Crinella
has Indicated he expects to ask
the three to reimburse the state
for some costs.
During that Inquiry, an ln-
\,
F,.... Pflfl'! AJ
'FUGITIVE' IN SIBERIA. • •
Ion& arms hanging below his knees.
"He feeds on r aw meat and wears a reindeer skin/' the alory
said. ••u e cannot speak, b.at-oniy uuers shrlU screams ."
The creature was in the habit of 11neakln1 up to people's dwell·
ings and s\ealloe food, Tass said. Upc>11 seelnt a bunter or reindeer
breeder, be would run away in mott l.natances, but aometimea
would start fiabt.lnt.
··aaNDna BaEEDEU, ll'VNTEll8, mushroom and berry collectors rMi into hlm most trecauently at dawn or late In the even-
tn1," the ac:ec>unl noted.
Other details provided by wltnene• d..eribed .. Chucbunaa ..
' • banfooted, ahaao·balNd, "wnh a fa~ u bla u that of a
human ~. only very darll. Ula amall forehead protruded above ~· 91111 like a pealCed cap," Tus said. lt added that "he r an away from ~le very qulckl)t, leap. tn1 .• , •
TAM CIUOl'BD A SENIOR 1tarf membft of the Ydutla ln·
atltvte. Seinyon NUlolayn, uuyJN~ "Almoat ill wtlneael apeak
about <:.'bUehUnaa u • rH Jlty, without the fantu tlc dotalli ao \llUill forte,_.:~';,",~,· ,
• .. ~ ~ven by sn.n1 wltneanl coincide toO much ln
-detilla OI tlte appnranH. manneni and bel'lavlOI' of Cbachunaa, ••
NlllolQW IUd.
I
vestigator came across a file in
the office of Miss Udovch and
her supervisor, Dr.Shumate.
Dr. Crinella said the file in· ~icated the pair were among the
incorp<>rators of a nonprofit cor.
poratlon called Foundation for
Family Development,-tnc.,
which has received federal
funds for an operation called
Orange County Advocacy
Services.
He said the services provided
under the ~rant "woulc\ be
rathe r drrficult to distinguish
from those that would be part or
their duties here at Fairview."
That allegation led• him to
question whether or not slate re·
sources were used for the grant
and if the pair were paid twice
for the same work. •
Dr. S h umate and Mi s s
Udovch's duties include
leachin& parents to work with
their developmentally disabled
children and stand up for their
rights, he said.
The service, which finds jobs
for 14·2l ·year·olds tree of
charge, is located at 542 W. 19th
St., Costa Mesa. The telephone
number for the service, which
places workers In temporary
and permanent jobs ranging
from part·lime baby sitting and
housecleaning to Cull·Ume pro-
du c ti on and office work, 1s
642·0474.
T ·he Junk Bus·
Some years ago while addressing the Central
Indiana Floor Covering Association, an industry
spokesman, Walter Guinan said: "Too many
people in the floor covering Industry are
convinced the public only wants to buy "Junk"
carpet."
\
We're afraid that you might also get this
i mpressi on from the ads which specify
unbelievable low prices. Investigating the$e ads
will determine one of two things -either the
carpet IS JUNK, or they will try to se~I you
something more expensive!
We don't sell junk at Alden's, .. but we do have
Quality at competitive prices, and the best
installation in the county.
Saddtebaek
VOL. 71, NO. 34, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, GALIFORNI A FRJOAY, F E BRUARY 3, 1978
Snow Man Relative -·Alive in Siberia? . , '
MOSCOW (AP> -Soviet scientists say they have gathered
evidence pointing to the existence In Siberia of a dark, shaggy.
haired. shrill-voiced wild man resembling in some ways the legen-
dary Snow Man of the Himalayas.
The Soviet news agency Tass said specialists at the Institute or
Language, Literature and History tn Soviet Yakuti have been
evaluating testimony of Siberians who claim they encountered the
man·like creature called ''Chuchunaa."
THE NAME MEANS "FUGITIVE" or .. outcast" in one of the
dialects of.YakutJa, a vast expanse of forest, mountains and frozen
tundra 1n northeastern Siberia
Loeal Snowstonn
"The famous Himalayan Snow Man, Yeti, whom many ex·
plorers believe exists, might prove to have a Yakutian relative,"
wrote Tass correspondent Sergei Bulantsev in a story on the In·
stitute's findings.
The Himalayan Snow Man is also known ~s the Abominable
Snow Man. Large tracks in the snow are ascribed to such a
C'reature. Some sc:ientists believe that, if he exists, he may be a
fGrm of unclassified ape.
IN THE AMERICAN NORTHWEST, there also have been re-
ports of a huge creature known as a Sasquatch, or "Big Foot,"
which has been descnbed by various people who claim to have
seen it as looking like a bear or an ape,
The Tass story said .. there is a lot of testimony or wl1nesses
who ran into the wild man" in Yakutia's Verkoyansk regio~ about
400 miles north of the city of Yakutsk. '
"'The old-time-rs of highland villaees of the Verkhoyansk re-
gion wnrn guests who come from afar: 'Oon 't go aJone In dark·
ness. Be careful in the mountains. Don't go to the river -
Chuchunaa might appear'," the account said.
ACCORDING TO THE WITN~ES. Tass said. "Chuchunaa"
was described as tall and thin. s tanding about 6 feet 6 inches, with
' (See 'FUGITfVE,' Pue AU -
PCP Seized
Santa Ana Cops~aid 'FaCtory'
Santa Ana police said today a
multi million dollar illegal drug
operation was raided this week
and a chemist and his son W\'re
arrested on multiple dnv~
charges. ·
Working IO COnJ UCt1on with
Los Angeles police. the raid al lw.o wMehou~ near th~ heart
of downtown Santa Ana y1eldcd
what Santa Ana Officers
de s cribed as the most
sophisticated illegal drug fac-
tory ever uncovered in their
city.
.Viejo Gets
OK to Fill
I~ Lake
Arrested were c hemi s t
Frank Cranz, 59, of Tustin, and
his 19-year-old son, Mark Cranz.
also of Tustin.
F'ather and son were booked
into Orange Couty J rul on multi·
pie charges related to manufac-
turing a controlled substance for
sale1
Police allege they were pro-
ducing PCP, or ··Angel Dust,"
al warehouses in the 805 block of
East Civic Cenl~r Drive.
The drug is used as a tran-
quilizer for horses, but reported·
Steven Lackie
ly produces hallu_cinatory highs
when in~csted by humans usual-
ly when rolled into cigarettes
Police said Cranz is a licensed
chem 1st and that records seized
al the factory show puc-cbases
used in the drug manuhlcluring
operation date back to 1976.
Records show that the alleged
illegal drug operatio·n was ear-
n ed on under a business license
1si.ued to Anza Industries, a
li cense requested for chemical
manufacturing purposes
J
Cliff Victilll Rites
Slated Saturday -
/\ frC'ak blizzard apparl'nlly was responsi-
ble for dLUnpin~ what looks to1be a foot of
snow on a 15-foot section of the Cordillera
Elementary School playground in Mi ssion
Viejo. l:ndauntcd schoolchildren (abQut 65 or them) turned out like veteran
Eastci:ncrs in :-.i..1 caps and mitten:, for
rnre snowball fi ght. Weather forecasters.
caught by s urprisC'. sought to blame
snowfall on possible urlific:ial importation
by schoolteachers.
j
By JE RRY CLAUSEN
Ol tllt Ollltr l'IMt li.tt
The Mission Viejo Company
was given permission by the
State Water Resources Control
Board Thursday lo r9'ume fill·
ing its man·made recreational
Jake.
Memorial services are
scheduled Saturday tor a 22·
year-old Mission Viejo resident
killed In the Canary Islands J an.
29 when be fell from a cliff.
planned o back-packing trip in
the Islands prior lo returning to .
the U.S. to resume schOoling.
Nurse weeps at Trilli
Insists Baby Lived A/ ter Abortion A.ttempt
'By TOM BARLEY
OI tllt Dally l"li.t Sull
A prosecution witness In the
murder trial of Dr. William Bax·
ter Wad dill or Huntington
Harbour collapsed and wept on
the witness stand Thursday al
the height of a day-long, in-
tensive cross-examination.
· Registered nurse JoAnn Grif-
fith of Westminster Com munity
Hos pital laid her head on the
rail or the witness box and
sobbed. Orange County Superior
Court Judge James K. Turner
immediately called a recess in
the trial.
Mrs. Griffth lost her composure
after repeatedly answering for
defense attorney Malbor Watson
what amounted to the same ques-
tion: ''How can you be so sure that
the infant you tried to revive was
I ever really alive!" •
l "There was lire in that body,"
Mrs. Griffith protested, close to
tears. "Again, I tell you there
was life in that body.''
And then she slumped forward
on the witness stand and wept
while prosecutor Robert Chat..
terton got lo his feet to protest.
Another protest, this time
(See DOCTOR, Page AZ>
Coas t
' .
Weather
Some nlght throueh mid-
m orning fo1. ot~erwi1&
fair but hazy l hrou ah
Saturday. Lo.Ji tonJaht 45
to 50. lUtbs Saturday in
mld-005.
INSIDE TODAY
Jo.u f1 '"Jo11ing Cl re·
turgcnct olono I~ Orcl?tgc
Coo1t. NCJrlfl art0 tchools tars
tuntJng out top-Mtch }Clit
mufcioftl. Stom• altd photoa
onPogtCl.
I Oflty l"llel It,,, ,,....
DA. WADDILL ANO WtF! LEAVE COURT IN SANTA ANA
• ·Murdef Trl•I of Hunttnpton Harbour Phy1lcl•n In RecHt
C9Pvi~ Free Hostage Guard
D o-.a CHESTE R • New knllepolot tor more than five
B1'Unawick (AP> -Two convicts days whlle they demanded to be
Jreed a prison guard unharmed trnnslerred to another penlten·
early today after holding hlm at Uary.
Santa Margarita Water Dis-
trict spokesmen said they were
scheduled to begin pumping
water into the lake at the rate of
4.5 milUon gallons daily today at
1 p.m., with the now set to in·
crease to 8.4 million gallons daJ-
ly tomorrow.
Mission Viejo Company presi-
dent Philip Reilly said the lake
· is expected lo be full sometime
between April 10 and June 10.
Steven Lackie of 27075 Via San
Diego was scallng cLiffs alone
near Maspalomas when he
failed lo return to camp, Jtls
mother, Mrs. Steven R. Lac~e.
said. Friends discovered his
bodv during the se~ch.
The Lackie family traveled to
the accident scene late last
month and burial was in the
Canary Islands.
Mrs. Lackie said Steven had
traveled extensively throughout
Scandanavia, researching his
ancestry. She said he and
friends met · along the route
A grMuale of Arizona Slate
University, St~ven also attended
the University of Conn~cticut
and l\fisslon Viejo Htaih School,
where he particlpaled in
baseball and track.
He ls survived by his mother,
sisters Lindft and Anne, and a
brother. Matthew, of the home
address.
The memorial services 11re
scheduled at l p.m. jn Christ
Lutheran Church, San Clemente.
The family suggests sending
memorial contributions lo
James Heiden Reich, director,
1''oundallon Office, Orthopedic
Hospital, 2400 S. Flower St.,~
Angeles, 90002.
, The State Water !teJouroes
Control Board voted unanimous-
ly Thursday to Jift restr aints
ag.ainst filling the Jake levied
last March becadse or the
statewide drought.
The 1.25 billion-gallon-
capacity lake basin subsequent-
ly has remained one-third full
while 250 families moved into
homes surrounding it, a Mission
Viejo Company spokesman said.
The three-member state board
ordered Thursday that the Jake
may be filled with drinkable
Colorado River water but not
Northern California water.
NB's Jim McGuy
Runs .for-Congress
ReiJly told the board that Mis-
sion Viejo Company Is contlpu-
i ng work on its $5 milhon
pipeline scheduled to pumJf'JOw.
grade water from San Juan
Capistrano's underground basin
uphill 11 miles to the lake.
He said the pipellne, originally
scheduled for completion last
month but delayed by rain, now
is expected to-be fi nished by
April.
A Mission Viejo Company
spokesman said the line still will
be used In filll•g the lake when ·
completed and ls expected to be
used later In replacins lake
water lost t.hrouab seepaae and
evaporation.
Tbe spokesman said that while
the lake is belna tilled, weeds •
growing In the unfilled portion of
the lake's basln will be removed
and erosion c.uaed by recent
(See LAKE, Page AU
Newport Beach Democrat Jim
McGuy, who earlier said he
would seek the 36th State Senate
district seal, announced t-Oday
he would run for the 40th
Congressional District post held
by Robert Badham, R-Newport
Beach.
McGuy said his move was
prompted by uncertainly as to
whether Assemblyman Ron
Cordova, D-El Toro. would run
for re-election or seek the state
senate seat being vacated by
Newport Beach Republican Den-
nis Carpenter.
Carpenter has announced he
wiU not seek re-election.
"If Democrats a,re going to
win in that area we must be un-
ited," McGuy explained.
McGuy ia president of World
AmerJcan Businessmen's As·
sociaUoo in Huntington Beach,
an organlzation which offers
small business members dental,
hospital, money maQagement
a nd discount purchase benefits.
bf cGuy said be plans to visit
2,000 to 3.000 small business
operators in lhe congressional
• district in hopes of unilin& them
behind his bid for office.
•'There is a real need for U\em
to ~et involved in polllics now
because they are discouraged
with tho system," he nid.
McGuy described his upcom·
ing campaign as "fair, decent and low•budgel."
The lO·year Newport Beach
resident said he has not sought
elected omce before •. but has
been active in Democratic
politics.
McGuy, 45, holds a business
degree from San Jose State
University. Ile and his wife.
Arlene, have four children.
Bandits Hit
Armed robberies at two south
Orange County fast photo proc·
esslng outlets netted thieves
aboul S2:i0Tbursday.
The first occurred when a man
described as 18 to 21 years old
approached lhe Fotomat al 30810
Pacific Coast »tghway In South
LaRUM arid demanded cash.
The bandit esopcd itl an old
"hlte car with about $100,
Orange County Sheriff's dep·
utles .aid The South Latufta robbery occurred aboul 11:15
p.m . •
About Oltl hOur later, a man
dt crtbed itil:Mil 31 years old
robbt'd a P hoto West store at
U12l El Toro Rd .. Jn El Toro ()f
$1$2. The baQltll escaped on foot
Sherllt'1 otticers bell ve the
two ~~lei& Wtte perforaM!ld t>,r different lndMdulls llMe &he tat~r bandit .ore a ~·1 lkk .aa.it. ~~---...... ~~~~
l
l
•
u
.· r ..... P ... AJ Singer Freed
f',....Pa~-Al
. DOCTOR TRIAL ••• LAKE •••
from an audience that ereat.ed a
standlnt·room-only situation ln
the courtroom Thursday,
broueht an angry Judge Turner
back to the bench after the re·
ceas. .
''I have been told or a com·
ment made by a spectator and I
am going to warn the spectators
· once · again that I will not allow
: j"rora. to hear cqmment.s from • tbe audience, .. 1'e mapped. ~
"I will dear this courtroom
and charge anyone who makes a .. dible comments with con-
t.empt and that means five days
in jail,•• he Hid. •
•·And if anyone doesn •t beUeve ·
that I mean what I say, just try
me," he added.
The aJJPVenUy offending com-
ment, audible to many spec-
tators, was: "DQesn't he think
she's had enough? What's be
tryinii to do, give her a
breakdown?"
Wat.son repeatedly told Mrs.
Griffith before and arter she col·
lapsed that he could not un·
derstand her belier that there
was life in the baby that Dr
Wad dill tried to abort lal>t
Ma rch2 ..
She has testified that she tried
to revive the child after she was
told or the presence of a
heartbeat and watched the in·
fant, weakened by the effects or
the saline abortion it apparently
survived, struggling to breathe.
lt is alleged that Dr. Waddill,
44, stranglc.od the infant to death
after ordering the nursery staff,
including Mrs. Griffith, to leave
the area.
It is further alleged that Dr.
wad dill resorted to murder
Gunman Wires
Manto Bomb,
l;ets $82,000
SAN FRANl:rsco (AP) -A
Jone gul:Utran escape.d with
$82 ,000 from a San Francisco
bank today aCler strapping the
manager into what he claimed
was an elaborate radio·
activated bombing device, of·
ficials said.
Police said it was unknown
immediately if the device was a
hoax or how the robber es~apcd
once he left the bank.
Crocker Bank public affairs
officer Terry Mclnnes said the
unidentified manager had ar·
rived ror work and was parking
his car behind the Park Merced
branch early today when a man
walked up and pointed a gun at
him.
ltfclnnes do4~r~bed what followed:
The ..a_ypma.n forced the
manag'effnside the empty bank
and ordered him to open up the
vault.
The robber then tied a belt
around his captive and dis·
played a walkie-talkie device.
He said there were two sticks of
dynamite planted in the belt that
could be activated by the porta-
ble radio.
Meanwhi1e. arriving bank
employees were warned by the
robber or the manager's sllua· Uon .
The robber then walked out
with $82,000 and police were
summoned.
Crash Victim
L>ses Life
A man iajured in a mulUple
car cruh on the San Diego
Freeway near Lake Forest
Drive last week died Thursday
afternoon in UCI Medical
Center, according to a coroner's
report.
· Listed as the victim was Jose
Luiz, 21, whose home address
was given as a post ollice box In
T r abuco Canyon.
. The accident report Indicated
that Luis was a passenger in the
rear seat of an auto that eruhed
'.into two cars involved in a
.freeway collision at 7:37 p.m.
"Jan.27. ·
DAILY PILOT
becatl.ff ol his failure to abort
the 28-week letu.s delivered th•t ni,ht by an unwed. 18-")'ear-9ld
mother.
Chatterton said he will obtajn
testimOf\Y from a witness who
will tell the jury that Dr. Wad·
dill told nursery staff members
that the baby had suffered
tremendous brain dama~e and
should OC>t be allowed to Uve.
Watson-argued •htle question-tna Mrs. Griffith that nurse Pat
Olvera had only reported a
heartbeat and the fact that the
baby cried because she wanted
to create a sense of urgency
a mong an apparently lethargic
nursery staff.
And he repeatedly asked Mrs.
Griffith to agree with him that
an infant with a breathing rate
of rour gasps a minute and a re-
ported heart rate of 80 beats per
minute couldn't be considered to
be alive.
OMly ,.Bet Su.ft ,.,_
SOBS ON WITNESS STAND
Waddill Witness Griffith
Tmy Tim EvUkn£e Lacking
DOUGLAS\'lLLE, Ga <AP> -Fans of Herbert
Buckingham Khaury note. ll~ made a command ap-
pearance at the l)ou~las C'lWllY Jail
Herbert Buck1n~ham Khaury, to non.fans. is
falsetto singer Tiny Tim.
Tim was at the jail Thursday to post bond on a
theft of ser vices charge. But th.e ~harges we~e
dropped for lack of evidence. a d1str1ct attorney s
::,pokcsm un said.
William Sonows, former road manager for the
singer filed the charge. which apparently grew from
a dispute betwee n Tim and Sorrows over u
performance, the spokesman said.
After the hearing, Tim sang a couple of numbers
for the deputies and left.
ruins re1> irtd.
The Mtulon Vlejo ComoanY iJ
payina for the Cqlorado Rlver
water at an irriaaUon rate or 40
t'enti. per 100 cubic feet. a water
district s pokesman said.
Domestic water users pay a rate
19 cents hi&her.
The Colorado River water is
purchased from MetropoUtan.
Waler District. Because that dis·
trlct's reservoir at Lake
Mathews is full, water oUlciab
report, the C()lorado R iver
Aqueduct hos been cut to M one-
pump now from the maximum
ntne-pump capability used dur-
ing the drought.
Victim Vnder
Stat,e Care
Watson r eferred lo the victim
throu ghout hi s c ro sl>
examination as "this product of
conception." '"this th1nl!." and
.. this creature "
Students. F o-iego Stand
ATLANTA CAP)-A teenager sufrering from cancer has been
placed in the state's custody for
treatment because her parents
wanted her treated only with
Laetrile, the head of the Georgia
Department of Human
Resources has confirmed . Rut Mrs. Griffith refused to
alter the testimony she earlier
gave for Chatterton.
Asked by Watson, while the
doctor-lawyer was discuss1ng-
her efforts to revive the child, 1f
she fell that she had a ra~ht to
rule on the issue of its lire or
death, she shakily responded:
"I don't think any of us has a
right to say who should live or
who should die.''
El Toro HJa:h School "s Student
Council will neither l>upporl nor
OJlpose the opening of liquor-
!-.ellin~ llusincsses ac~oss fr.om t hl' new Laguna Hills High
School.
I lowcver, the student leaders
said they feel it is "our duty" to
Second Attack
inform· the owners of the
school's open lunch program
and make them aware that they
will have "a great deal of con·
tact" with students during the
lunch hour, before and after
school and during extracur·
ricular activities.
.,
Residents, sch~ officials and
" businessman are protesting a .
pizza parlor, liquor store and
supermarket planned as part of
a shopping center at Alicia
Parkwa.Y and Paseo de Valencia
across Crom the new Laguna·
Hiiis school.
· • 1 consider children with
cancer whose parents have re-
jected conventional treatment in
favor of Laetrile to be deprived.
At least one Georgia juvenile
court has agreed with me,'"
OHR Commander W. Douglas
Skelton said, Thursday,
Dr. Skelton was referring to. a
juvenile court's previously un-
publi<:ized action last December
pulling the girl in the state's care. And she again assured thC'
persistent Watson that she
believed there was life in the in·
fant that the coroner has ruled
was strangled to death last
March 2.
NB Police Seek
During a January meeting of
the Saddleback Valley Unified
School Dislrict trustees, school
officials and st~dents discussed
the businesses as well as the In·
creasing problem of students
drinking akoholic beverages.
Mark Kachelein, El Toro's
student representative at ttw~e
meetings, said Wednesday lh*t
he told Student Council mem-
bers of these concerns.
Skylab Gets
Shuttle Aid? '"I'm sorrv," she told Watson.
"Jn my medical mind. 1l was a
Jive baby. There was life in lhal
body or I would not have tried to save it."
Suspect in Rape ACter discussing it with other
students, he said, the council de·
cijied not to take a stand.-
Wf':SHlNGTON (P) -The U.S. space agency said there's
still a chance a mann~ space
shuttle can ny up to the huge
Skylab space staUon ne~t year
and either boost it Into a higher
orbit or rocket it down over an
ocean area to avojd scattering
pieces over land.
Judge Turner called a three·
day, weekend recess in the trial
late Thursdav. It will res~me al
9:45 a.m. ~Jond ay in a new
courtroom, Department 2G.
Jud~Turner ordered the
transfer to the larger courtroom
so that the trial can accom
modate spect<itor~ who have
been filling his Dcp<irtment 24 lo
capacity.
Woman Killed ..
As Car Flips
On Freeway
A 21-year-old Anaheim woman·
was fatally jnjurcd early today
when the car she was drivin{!
• overturned on the San Diego
r rceway near Ortega Highway,
the coroner reported.
Identified as the victim w;1s
Evelyn Hartkamp. of 2341 W.
Crescent St., Anaheim.
Newport Beach police are
seek mg a l'..ong Beach-area man
known as Dave who allegedly
bl•at and then raped his date in
Newport Beach early this morn-
in~ wh1lr her 6·ycar-old son sle,pt
in the back seut of lhe car.
The 24-year-old Lakewood
,.,.oman who reported the crime
told police she did not know the
last name of her assailant, but
that he h;id beat her in a similar
1nl·idcnl eight months ago in
Lakewood.
i\cc<>rdmg to police reports.
tlu.• couple and the woman's son "'
t·a me to Newport to visit a
mutual friend. lhen left the
friend's house to park on Back
Bay Urive at about midnight.
Sh(' said her date demanded
she disrobe and when she re-
fused he began beating her until
she complied.
She s aid he raped her and
forced her mto an unnatural sex
act.
i\ ftl·r that he drove to a
hearby gas station where she
Former Toro
and her son got out of the car
and called police.
The suspect drove off while of·
ficers were being summoned ,
telling a gas station attendant
the woman was injured when
she ren off a cliff.
Police took the woman to
Hoag Memorial Hospit~I.
Held Since 1944
Hut, reading a letter from the
council, he said, "The best in·
terest of our students, the busi-
ness operators and residents is
of great importance to us for we
must work together to make our
community one in whJch we are
proud to Live."
Irvine Company
Sells Big Ranch
I rvl~ Company President Peter remer announced the
sale o e company's Flying o.
Ranch in Montana today for an
undisclosed amount lo an un-
identified Texas ranching
family.
The 83,158-acre cattle ranch
has been held by the Irvine Com·
pany since 1944. It was acquired
as part of the deal that ended
Gallatin c0unty line.
Kre mer said the sale was
made as part of the company's
plans to concentrate on develop-
ing ils 77.000 acres in Orange
County.
"A large cattle ranch in the
s tate or Montana was de·
term ined to be outside of our
range or interests," Kremer
stated.
An official of tbe National
Aeronautics and Space Ad ·
ministr~tion had said Tuesday
there was a possibility the 85-ton
st a lion could fall back to earth
late this year. The shuttle will
not begin flying untH nexl year.
Home Looted
Drapes and a trash compactor
with a total value of $1,040.96
were stolen from a Mission Viejo
home by a burglar who entered via tbe garage door. Orange
County sherUf'a officers aald the •
tbe(l at 22541 Conil Drive OC·
curred while owner Harold Rup..
pert was }>1'eparing to move into
his recently built home.
According t<> the coroner's re·
port, the woman was driving
southbound on the freeway at
12 :45 a.m. when s he apparently
lost control of her lightweight
car and it rolled over.
with the federal government's Man Charged purchase of the sites for the El
Toro Marine Corps Air Station
· and the Santa Ana Marine Corps Gay Slaying
Suspect Free
Skier J!its
Tree, Dies
RENO CAP) -A
14-year-old Auburn skier
died after crashing into a
tree on a downhill run at
Mt. Rose ski area south or
here.
T h e victim died in San
Clemente General Hospital two
hours after the accident, the TC'·
port said.
Jn Fake Thefts ~s~~~~~Y spokesman said
Police Honor
WpBeater
RIVERSIDE CAP)
Rub your eyes. folks. Jef·
frery L. Nash has won an
award from the police of-
ficer's association for
beating up two police of-
ficers.
Nash thought the of-
ficers, Tom Conner and
Dan Gann, were trying to
kidnap a 16-year ·old girl
Dec.14.
But Conner and Gann,
wearing plain clothes,
were actually trying to ar-
rest the girl for drunken-
ness.
"Here's a guy who
comes to someone's aid,"
Osborne said.
A former El Toro resident wbo
ollcgcdly bilked an insurance
company out of $77,776 by faking
burglaries at homes he occupied
in Orange County has been
jailed by sheriff's orricers.
Deputies said Gerald Gren·
ville liryant, 35, was brought
from his home in Argyle, Texas,
to face charges of insurance
fraud m Orange County.
They said Bryant, who
formerly lived at 21784 Tahoe
Lan e, El Toro, reported
burglaries at his home and then
claimed on his insurance policy.
They said most of the missing
furniture was later recovered
from Bryant.
BIUY BEER
GETS PREVIEW
Billy Beer. the brew endorstd
by the president's brother, is
coming to California, and the
Daily Pilot staff gave lt a taste
test. See Featuring, Page Bl.
Fro•Pa-Al
'FUGITIVE' IN SIBERIA. • •
long arms b~g below his kn~. . ..
"He feeds on raw meat and wears a reindeer skin, the story
said. "He cannot spealc, but only utters sh~U screams." ,
The creature was in the habit of snealuna up to people a dwell·
tngs and stealing food, Tass said. Upon 1eein1 a bunter or reindeer
breeder, he would run away In moat lnltanceat but sonietla>ts
would start. fighUng.
the sale price or the ranch and
the identities or the purchasers
are being withheld at lhe
purchasers' request.
Located on the outskirts of
Bozeman, the Flying D supports
6,000 head or cattle on the Irvine
Company owned land plus an ad-
ditional 20,557 acres of leased land.
The ranch, the largest in the
Bozeman area, runs from. the
Madison River on the west to the
Gallatin R!ver on the east. '
straddllnJ( the Madison and
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) - A
21-year·old part ~ime laborer
has been acquitted in the stab·
bing death of a homosexual
whose slaying ignited protests
from the gay community.
1'homas Spooner was con·
victed or felony assault in the
case, but was acquitted in the
• slaying of Robert Hillsborough
on June~. Spooner \was one of four people
arrested in the case.
Washoo County Sheriff's
deputies said Susie Ann
Ferguson was training
with a racing team Thurs-
day when the accident OC·
curred. Her parents were
at the resort at the time.
Witnesses said Miss
Ferguson was on a
downhill course traveling
about SO miles per hour
when she swerved to avoid
a nother skier. veered out of
co~~r.ol and hit a tree.
The Junk Business
Some years ago while addressing the Central
Indiana Floor Covering Association, an industry
spokesman, Wa~ Guinan said: "Too many
people in the f~'/!or covering industry are
convinced the public only wants to buy ••junk"
carpet."
We're afraid that you might also get this
impression from the ads which specify
unbelievable low prices. Investigating these ads
will determine one of two things -either the
carpet IS JUNK, or they will try to sell you
something more expensive!
We don't sell junk at Alden's; but we do have
quality at competitive prices. and the best.,
Installation in the county.
DEN'S
:iiiSililation:·cu•tom drapsriss
llnokMri • v..ood floor
. Border Than I t ~ooks
It sounded c~} to Orange County oHiciaJi:.
hook a rablt• hel\H•cn two tractors and
··!.aw" off H Pll't <.' of lht· blurt O\"erhangmg
PC1t1f1t Cot.1st lltghv.a' 1n C~1p1~lrano
Beach ht•for(' erosion tau:-.cd <1 i:.hde But •
1t took !-.IX hours of s~m ing and a stream
of waler from <J fire hose before the bluff
foll. Cyclbt Bob Lindberg of San Clemente
<be low> watched the dirt and rock plum·
met to the highway which remarnec1
dosed today lor dC'unup ...
Briggs Wants
His Two Rivals
T o R ej ect Pay
LOS ANGELES 1AP1 /\
Republican candidate for gov·
ernor has challenged two or his
rivals to promise th<'t neither
would Ul"l"'-'Pl a stute salary as govt>rnor
Stale Sen John V Hr1ggs of
Fullerton said Thur!>day he was
referring lo Edwurd M Davi'>.
former 1..,o.., An~eles paltce chief.
and sl<tle \llorney General
Evelle .J 't'nunJter. former Los
Angeles County District At
torney. who hoth draw Jtenerous
oenc;1ons
··If th~ will milke that prom
1se." Briggs said of hit
rha ll enge to lhe two
gubernatorial hopefuls. ··rn
stop t alk 1n~ about double
dippin~ as a campahin issue "
ToSuperBewl
Nixon Already Bets
On Allen-Ram Win
LOS ANGELES <APl -
F'ormer President Nixon says
he'll bet even money 'that
George Allen, returning to begin ·
his second hitch with Lhe Rams
after a seven-year absence, talces
the football team to the Super
Bowl nextseason.
In a copyrighted story by the
L<Js Angeles Herald Examiner,
Nixon. an avid football ran.
described Allen as "more golly
and gee and a milkshake." ad·
ding that "he Is basically a very
decent man.··
Nix on said he knew Allen onJy
by reputation when the coach
began his can!er at Whittier
College. But when Allen took
over the Washington Redskins
he called on Nixon at lhf White
'House in 1971.
of "the things Allen does quietly
behind the scenes." ~lxon said Allen ·'became
very conce rned about the prob-
blems or the American Indian
while he was in Washington."
and headed a committee on the
!.Ubjet•t
Allen 111!>0 reportedly "'al·
tended meellngs and banquets to
rais{• money and support for
schola rships for poor Indian
kids··
Social act1v1sm was the side of
Allen that was not often reported
in the press. Nixon said. recall·
1ng when ··the m ayor of
Waah ington. D.C .. who Is a
block man. told me that George
A.lien was a great help lo him in
many important city pro-
grams .··
Briggs added that his dis·
c u ssion <1f th e Oavi!I and
Younger pensions is t'loroughly
justified and not a violation or
the so-1.:allcd t ll h Comrnand·
ment ··thou shalt speak no
evil of fellow Republican!'" -as
suggested earlier by Republi~an
i. l a l e •Ch a i r m a n M i k e
Montgomery of South Pasadena.
The former president turned
oddsm aker. says or Mien: ··rn
bet even money he takes the
Ra"ms to the Super Bowl next
season with nil that talent. I'm
not saying they will win the
Super Bowl. but I think he'll get
them there at least."
Allen's coaching capacity was
not all Nixon commented on. He
also praised Allen because of hia
"concern for little people" and
Baseball Bat
Slayer Gets
8-month Term
Dick Dale's. Siory
. . t I
Spotl.ighted" Sundar
(suNDAY'S BEST)
ne-.s Just doesn't seem to be
thinking apace. RbckwtU's ad·
\tanced projeeta mana1er hu a
few augae$tion& on the 8iflrinesa page. ~
T V"8 'roP8 ... Aaron SPllUna
Is a 11lant producer fo _ t he
televlaion field. Only Unlvenat
SlQdtOI 1\11 more bo\ir• on the
air weikl1. than SpeWn1 AD A•·
aoclated J>Nta story exp'°"81
wb:atlDM4ibUn ~.
A man who admitted that be
used a baseball bat to infll.ct
fotal Injuries on his brother·tn•
law has been sentenced to el&ht
months In the Orange County
Jail.
Superior Coprt JU(lge Robert
E. RickJes ordered the jail term
and three years probation ror
Bobbie Jones. 24. of Fontana,
arter he pleaded guilty to re-
duced ctJarees of lnvoluntary
manslauahter.
Jones was booked on murder
char1es by Fullerton police last
April 15 after Llnda~y Hutton
Green, 27, alao of Fontana, died
(oltowln1 a rracas between the
two men.
Jone1 told DOllce that he uaed
\ht bat in •elr defense after h1s
brother·ln·law pursued hlm
from the Hugbea Aircraft plant
where thty both worktd and re-
pealtdly c:halleneed him to •
lljht.
•
. ... '
11 More
Murder
Raps .Due
J,OS ANGf:LES CAP) -The
d1stric:t attorney will be asked to
file 17 more murder charees
against convicted "trash bag
murderer"' Patrick Wayne
Kearney. sheriff's Investigators
say.
Sheriff's Sgt. Al Seu s11 1d
Thursday that Kearn~y revealed
details of the killings while he
was being questioned Tuesday
at Chino Stale Prison. where he
is serving a life sentence ror con·
v1ction in three other murders.
Sett ~nd Depu~y Roger Wilson
said lhe 37·year·old Kearney
previously had claimed to have
killed a total or 21 persons. and
Tuesday provided details on tne
other 18 victims . However.
charges would be sought only tn
17 or the cases. Sett said • ··we never had any details on
the slayings of Merle Chance.
Ronald Dean Smith or Oav1d
P.oger:.. a Marine HI Cump
Pendleton.·· su1d Sell. ·But h~
has given us tnform11t1on on
tho!.e and the other!..··
He said he expects the file!. on
the 17 murders wi!I be presented
to lhe district attorney by next
Monday or Tuesday.
··If we ever discover lhc other
18th man·s name and find him.
then we would file on that one
r emaining cas(•," Sell said
The string of kilhngs becam~
k n o w n a s I h t· · · t r a s h b a g
murders" because bodies of v1c
tims were found t>tuffed tn large
plastic trash bag!. and ll'ft alo11g
d eserted h1~hways
Kearney, who turned himself
in. was indicted July 13 m the
d eaths or Albert Rivera, 21. of
Loi. Angeles. Arturo Marzuez.
24. of Oxnard. and John O
LaMay, 17, of El Segundo
Noli~ that Kearney i!> servtng
H life. term for the three murder~
to which h(' pleaded guilty la!.l
Dec 21. Sett said 1t would be up
to the district attorney lo dec1dt.•
whether In :.t.•t.•k lht.• d<'ath
penalty
Although Sl·ll and Wilson
1 a lkcd with Kt>arncy for six
hours Tuesday, they dcs:ltned lo
s peculate on h" m otive tn the•
mass murders. Sett and Wilson
interviewed Kearney once prt-
viously last summer.
··with what he l;?avc us Tuei.-
day. there is no doubt. the di!>·
trict alt-0rney can prosecute m
regard to the.Chance killing, and
also that of Smith and Ro~ers. ··
said Sett.
Chane(' disappeared from his
home in the Venice section or
Los Angeles last April 6. His
partially decomposed body was
finally found May 26 north or
Altade
•
s .
~p ........
MUSIC NO LONGER 'SWEETEST THIS SIDE OF HEAVEN?•
Victor Lombardo (left), Brother Lebert Split Up
'Sour Notes
lomhardo's Brot~ Split Vp
MIAMI CAPI -Victor Lombardo has left Guy i..;mbardo':.
Royal Canadians because or what he says were ··little dlf·
rerences" with his brother. Lebert
But Lebert says the differences weren't little and that Vic·
tor. 66. was ousted for tryinJt to alter the band's traditional
sound
When Guy died tn Houi.ton last October 11l age 751 Victor.
who had left the band in 1971. was brought in.
Victor. who closely resembles Guy. gave television viewer:.
acroi.s tht-nation a tw:nge of 1lOStalg1a last New Year's Eve
when he hosted the Roya( Canadian!>· annual appearance at New York ·s Waldorf Astoria hotel
Victor :.ays he'll soon ht! on the band c1rcurt with his own
group and Lebert vows the Royal Canadiims will be the same as always
Wrong Man Jailed?
f.~RETT. Wash CAPl A
man sentenced to 50 years 1n
prison for rape. attempted rapt-
and attempted robbery may be
relt>ased if the c-onfess1on of
another man to thc.-crime::.
checkb out. authorities say
David Stanley Webb. 29. wa.-.
sentenced in July to the max
1mum term. to be served al the
Washington Stale Penitentiary
tn Walla Walla
Randy Furman. deputy pro~
'-'<'utmg atlornt.'y
··w e a re confirming the In·
form at1on. and it seem s to be
confirming.·· said prosecutor
Robert Schillberg. "It seems to
bt? jellm~ down that the second
man was telling the truth.
Two women grocery clerki.
• lt.'stified al Webb's trial th.at hf.'
was their attacker. but another
man convicted in December of
second-degree assault with in
tent to commit rape has ad-
mitted he was the ir assailant
··As soon as il started to look
like there was substantial
evidence that what the second
man said may have taken place.
W<' tried to run it down. And
there"s a fairly good probability
that that's what happened."
The second man, whose name
wus not released. is "reasonably
close·· 1n appearance to Webb.
said Schillber~
"In a stress situation -and
rape is a !)tress situation -good
faith mi~JakePI can ~ made ...
00 Nobody is e ntitle d to a
perfect trial. just a fair trial and
that"!> what Webb 11\0t.'" ~aid . st.rd~llf~ ,•
I•
Bare-loot Roses
& Fruit Trees
Non·Patent Roses ...... Just s2.59
Paiented Roses .......... Just s4.79
NllGl•G richmOndensls
The se lus h . full y .
blossomed plant s can bright.en al\)' sunny Ol'
shady garden spot. Great
choiee for hang i ng
baskets.
lGAL. SALE st PRICE
BriJhten a s hady
cont ner or garden spot
with this easy to grow
garden ravorlte. Choose
from eleht \tarieties
Golden foliage hlJblights
this carefree landscape
ptani. Eacellent as accent
sbtub
t A4 CWLY'9LOT
PRESERVATION DEn. -Orange Count.y has been crow-
ing so fast ovei: ihe past few dec-
ades that now we have gone on
a new kick. We ~re all out to
save things from the past.
This ts good, I think, if we can
really flgU?e out what or our his-
torical herltaee ls worth saving-.
Most !.ecenUy, for example,
the Huritineton Beach Company
was swayed away from the no-
tion or knocking down a couple
of old silos which, back in the 1930s, had been used for corn
storage.
It develops Ulat some booty.
ow ls live in the silos, not to men-
tion skunks. squirrels and
weasels. So it was determined
lbat the sUos were useful for
houslng as well as historical
flavor.
ALSO RECENTI, Y, an old
wooden water tower in Seal
Beach was saved. Reposing
along Pacific Coast Highway~
lhe tower has been dry for years
but debate raged long and hot
over whether or not i~ ought to
be preserved for posterity.
Certain wa~s suggested the
main purpose in saving the old
tower was because it served as a
landmark for numerous bleary-
eyed cilizens who wanted to
locate the saloon which does
business just beneath it
Downcoast, the citizens of
Laguna Beach got into a con·
siderable flap when the Main
Beach was scheduled to be
transformed into a beautiful
public park. They wanted to
save the beat-up old lifeguard
tower in the middle of the place
Years ago, this tower was part
of a Union 76 gas station across
Coast Boulevard. Back several
decades when Union decided to
rip it down and build a new sta·
tion, former fire chief Bob
Thompson and several others
hauled it across the highway for
use by the lifeguards.
THEY NEVER REALIZED
thE>y were hauling a historical
monument.
Anyway, when the Ari
Colony's main strand got turned
into a park, the old tower was
saved. First they tore out the in·
terior and rebuilt that. Then
they tore of( the skin a nd re·
poduced the exterior.
By the time that ex-gas station
was redone. you probably could
have built the lifeguards a Taj
Mahal for the same dollars.
But you have to have a sense
of history for these thlnga.
We 're building new stucr in
this county so fast that the peo-
ple with a sense of history have
trouble staying ahead of the
bulldt>Zers. Today•a historic
monument may be tomorrow's
pile of rubble. AQd the next day,
it's a taco stand.
The preservers ot our historic
structures need to get a couple
of sets of signs made up so they
can cruise our county and label everything -either •4Take" or
"Do Not Take." Just like the
signs you put o'1t in the alley for
the trashman.
SOME SAVANTS of urban
planning h ave gazed upon
Southern California and
marveled al it by noting that you
could bulldoze everything we've
built recently and !\tart over
without losing anything of
significance.
IC that's true, no wonder we
try to preserve a couple of old
silos, a barn or two and an ex-
' gas station.
fttca.y, F*'*Y 3, 1171
Jobless
Tallies
Hit Low
W ASIUNGTON (AP) -The
nation's unemployment rate
dropped another notch in
January to 6.3 percent, its
lowest point in more than three
years, the government said to·
day. .
Even more important than the
slight improvement in the job·
less picture last month was the
repor~mation that the
big and surprising drop in un·
employment in December, to 6>4
percent from 6.9 percent the
month before, w;is not the nuke
that some economists h ad
feared.
THE LABOR Department said
an additjonaJ 270,000 people
round jobs in January, raising
total employment to 92.9 million
The number of unemployed peo-
ple remained at 6.2 million.
about the same as in December.
The 0.1 percent drop in un-
employment last month meant
the Carter administration
already is near the upper end or
its goal to reduce the nation's
jobless rate-to-between 6 percent
and 6.25 percent in 1978.
However, the job picture for
blacks and other minorities re-
mained bleak in January, as the
overall jobless rate for this
group of workers remained at
12. 7 percent. For black males
and black youths, jobs became
even more scarce.
THE DEPARTMENT said the
Jobless rate for black adult men
rose to 9.8 percent in January.
up from 9 .1 percent in
December, while the rate for
blark youths rose to 38.7 per-
cent, up from 38 percent in
December. There was an im·
proveme nt for black adult
worn en, whose jobless rate
declined to 10.8 percent. from
December's 11.5 percent.
The Labor Department said
most of the employment gains
during Jan\lary were in
manufacturing, up l05.000, and
in wholesale and retail trade, up
95,000.
It said over all employment
tot a Is were affected by the
strike ifl the coal mining in·
dustry, which has removed
~ 160,000 workers from payroU1.
although they are not counted as
unemployed.
Bridging tlae Gap .. ~ ..........
It takes some effort to get 6-year-old Michelle Steele to
her school in Harlan County, Ky. Yocum Creek runs
between the Steele home and the school bus stop and the
local bridge has _!)e~n. _washed out since 'October. So
Mic}lclle inches her way over the creek on an 18-inch·
wide steel beam twi~e a day. Mother Louise accom·
panies her to help make sure the little girl doesn't fall
into the storm-swollen creek.
Time to Purchase
'
W ~hington Star
WASHINGTON (A P> -Time Inc .. the magazine publishing com-
pany, has agreed to buy the Washington Star new1~aper from Joe L.
Allbritton for $20 millioh, Time"and Allbritton announced today.
Allbritton, sole owner and president of the Evenlng Star
Newspaper Co. for the last four years, bu a.aree4 to stay on as
publlsher of the Star, the an-'
nouncement said. would mean both of the capital's
Purchase,,of the afternoon newspapers would be affiliated newspaper,(with~ daily circula· with weekly news magazines.
lion or 350.boo, is subjeet to ap-The Was hington Poat and
proval by the directors of both Newsweek and other media pro-companies. pertles are owned by the same company, the Washington Post
THE STAR llAS encountered
financial difficulties in recent
years. Allbritton said that since
he took control. the newspaper's
losses ''have been reduced from
$1 million a month to something
near the break·even point."
Time's purchase of the Star
Company. ·
Time Jnc . 's only other
newspaper property la PJoneer
Press, a gro._.p of 17 intbUrban
Chicago newspapers that the
company purchased In 1969.
WEATHF;R I NATION
Medfatiott Goe• o.
Carter Enters .
Strike Effort
WASlllNGTON CAP) -The Carter administration stepped into
the 60-day-old nationwide coal strike today, asking United Mine
Workers President Arnold MlUer to postpone a scheduled mffUng of
his , "union's bargaining councll u contract talks reached a critical
point. ¥Iller complied.
A White House apc>keswoman settling on terma that coUlcl end
said Labor Secretary Ray the atrlke.
Marshall telephoned Mlller on behalf of President Carter. She CARTER IJAS COME -.nder
described the request for a one-increasing pressure to intervene
day delay 'n the meettng as an · in the atrik,e as the effects ot effort lQ give union an<J industry dwindling COl\l supplies hllve
bar1ainers more time to reach a been fell by u\llltiea and other contract agreement customers. especially in the
Miller had called the council Middle West and Appalachia.
into session today to brief it on But the president told a news
the status oC the-negotlaUona conf ere~ce earlier ~is week he
aimed at ending the walkout. ha~ no intention of invoking the st.r1ke-t\alling provisions ot the
IN ANNOUNCl~G po~tpone· Tart-Hartley Act, which pro-
ment of the council meetine un-vides for an ~day cooling-off
Iii Tuesday. Miller told re-period.
porters: "President Carter Marshall also has str essed a
asked me to postpone for one "non -interventionist" policy
day th_e meetin,g or the council." tow a rd Ja bor disputes in
Associ,ate White House Press general.
Secrel1lQ' Claudla_Townsend
sald lt was Marshall who made
the call.
Mediators, meanwhile, met
with union negotiators as they
sought to nail down a deal that
could end the longest UMW
strike in history. The union had
struck for 59 days in 1946. ·
"The mediators are meeting
with the parties s.,parately and
will be doing that this morning,"
said a mediation spokesman,
Norman Walker.
"THE&E PltOBABLY will be
a joint bargainine session later,
depending on how things go."
Negotiators for the union and
the coal industry, reported at
one point "very close" to a~
men\, bad recessed their talks
shortly after midnight without
settling on terms that could end
the strike. . .
Federal mediators!.
meanwhile, met . with union
negotiators as they sought to
natl down a deal that could end
the long-est UMW strike in his-tory. The union had struck for 59
days.in 1946.
"THE MEDIATORS are meet·
ing with the parties separately
and will be domg that this morn-
ing," said a medi ation·
spokesman, Norman Walker.
. "There probably will be a
joint bargaliling session later,
depending on bow things go."
Presley's .. •
Ex Files
For Money
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -
Priscilla Presley, former wife of
Elvia Presley, has filed a claim
ror about $357,000 Crom his
estate as the balance of the set-
tlement abe was awarded in
their 1973 divorce.
Mrs. Presley also asked that
the estate provide the other
money and benefits for her and
their daughter, Lisa Marie, as
provided in the divorce decree.
INCLUDED IN Pro~ Court
records checked Thursday was a
claim for more than $356,900 as
the balance or $725,000 awarded
to Mrs. Presley in the divorce.
The amount was to have been
paid in monthly installments or
$6,000 or more and was to have
been eaid In full by Aug.1, 1982.
Rapist Descr.ihes
His Urge tO Kill
ALLBRITTON !'AID $61
million to acquire Washington
Stilt Communications Inc ..
which included the newspaper
and its broadcast 'Properties,
from the Noyes, Adams and
Kaumiiann families, which had
contrlhed the newspaper for
more than a.century.
Negotiators tor th-s uQion and
the coal industry, rep0rted at
one point .. very close" to agtee-
ment, had recessed tbelr talks
s hortly after midnight without
Vernon Presley, acting for his
son, mortgaged Graceland
Mansion in April for more than
$494,000, reportedly to secure the
remaining amount due Mrs. •
Presley. The mortgage ls in-
cluded in the legal papen ftled '
with her claim and tbe claim
notes that the money is secured
by the mortgage.
PITTSBURGH CAP) -"I said I felt ltke killing somebody and he
said, 'Why don't we rape and kill somebOdy?' " David Rall told AJ.
legheny County Judge Donald Ziegler .
Rall, 26, gave the explanation Thursday in describing an evening
or sex and violence last August that left a 14-year-old girl raped and
perm anenUy scarred.
Another Pittsburgh m an,
David Schmidt, 28, previously
pleaded guilty to being Rail's
partner in the crime and was
sentenced to from 25 to 70 years
in prison.
"I JUST BROKE up with my
girl." Rall said when questioned
by the judge. "I just went wild. I
couldn't st.op myself."
"Do you have any defense to
the case ,that you know of?"
Ziegler asked.
''No, sir," Rall responded.
Present. in the Pittsburgh
courtroom was their victim, who
had accepted a ride while walk-
ing home.
AFTER RAPING the girl.
police said, the two men ran
over her with their car. Rall and
Schmidt also pleaded guilty to
laying a bar across her neck and
standing on either end in an at-
tempt to strangle her.
:'I"m sorry about it," Rail
said.
Ziegler set sentencin g for
March, but told Rall: "The facts
of th is case are so grievous that
I'm telling you right now there
wUl be a substantial prison sen-
tence." He faces a maximum of
52 to. 104 years in prison and
fines or $lao,ooo.
In a tape recording of a con-
fession that was played in the
courtroom, Rall repeatedlt
mentioned that shortly before
the attack he had been ejected
from the house he shared with
hll girlfriend.
I
GJlcatt~
of
~ove
This V~len~ine's Day send your
love a greeting all the world can
share with a Daily Pilot Heart of
Love. It's easy, compose your
personalized greeting and we'll
set your message in type to fit the
borC:ier of your choice or your
hand written thoughts may
appear in the border you select.
So,uthern States Chilled Borders come in the 3 sizes as
shown below: $15, $10 and a
speclal child's size for $2. (You
must be under 12 to qualify for
the littlest greeting.)
t I
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If you wish to create
your own decorated
\
'"' greeting, use a black •
pen and draw your
design to fit one of the
dotted line "hearts ..
shown below. t ,
'
For help with your ad,
j"" call 642·5678 and
a ftlendly Valentine
ad*viser will be happy
to assist you. And, if
you Ii ke, you can
charge your Heart of
Love or use your
Master Charge or
Banl<Amertcard .
DAILY PILOT
842-5878
.J
•
'11~. Februaty 3. 19711 s DAILY PILOT
Tiu.Time
Meals, Jo~ Hu~t
Rules Detailed
By SYLVIA PORT£&
"Mii••~·
A 1977 U S. Supreme Court docil>lon is bad news ror
employees reimbursed by employers for meala bought
while performi.ng jobs.
A group of police ofrtcers and highway patrolmen
argued that reimbursement for meals while worlclo&
wasn't income because or a special exception In the
federal tax law, stating that the value of meals fur~Sshecl
to an em~oyee by his employer on.the empJoyer • pre!·
mises and for the employer's convenience is not income to,
the employee.
THE COURT SAID the exception applies only to meal
furnished by the employer, not to reimbu~ement paid bf
the employer.
The court left open a point concerning "supper money,"
an irregular reimbursement for a meal that an employ
may be Raid when he or she voluntarily stays beyond NI·
ular working hours. The Supreme Court decision. mlgh~
be Interpreted as end· '
Ing a long-standinc ex·
e m plion of supper
money fro'rn tax.
Bu\ the Court em·
phasized that, wilbout
Money's'
WortH
making a de<:islon now, .__, ____ .,..,,
there--might.-be.. other __ _ - -~
good reasons for continui.ng to exempt supper money. Leon
Gold, ~ef tax consultant to the Research lnsUtute of
America, says to continue to treat supper money received
In 1977 as exempt under the old IRS ruling. Do not report Jt
as income.
IF YOU SPENT MONEY LOOKING FOR a job in 1977, '
here's how to handle expenses:
-The IRS will allow a deduction if you sought a job, re·
gardless of whether you got it, only in your present trade
or business. You can't deduct the costs if you looked tn a
new field.
-Travel expenses. both JocaJ and away from home. are
deductible as adjustments on line 23 of 1977 For.m 1040,
even If you don't otherwise itemize personal expenses fcrr'
taxes. interest, etc.
EXPENSES FOR TYPING AND printing of resumes
and for postage are deductible only as itemized personal
deductions on line 31 of Sthedule A of Form 1040. It you
don't itemize, you can't deduct these expenses.
It you're an employee required to contribute to stale dis·
ability funds in Calirornia, New Jersey, New York and
Rhode Island, you were told by the IRS that you could nol
deduct these contributions as truces.
But in 1977, the IRS agreed with the Tax court, which
had held that Rhode Island employee contribullons to the
slate's fund were deductible as taxes. It disagreed with a
similar Tax Court ruling about California and has ap·
pealed.
Ne:rt: Medical e.ipenus
General Plwnes
Top '76 Growth
General Telephone Co. of Callfornla gained more
telephones in 1977 than in any previous year in the com·
pany 's history. renecting ·the economic growth ot the
operating terrilory it serves, the company has announced.
A 220,000 telephone gain in 1977 pushed total phones in
service lo more than 3.5 million. The company serves
;il)out 800.000 business phones and 2.700,000 residential
phones. Service area includes Huntington Beach.
Westminster, Laguna Beach, Fountain Valley. Stanton.
Midway City, Sunset Beach and portions of Carden Grove
and Cypress.
THE RECORD GAIN IN Jt77 was almost 47,000 more
telephones than the company adde~ in 1976. The 1977
fourth quarter gain or more than 69,000 was up more than
11,000 over the previous quarter.
It includes telephones gained in areas served by the
former Western California Telephone Co., which was
merged into General last March 31. Thal company had
about 66,000 telephones in i;ervlce.
The record increase was attributed to several·
economic factors by Dr. Joseph E. Haring, General's
economic planning manager.
"Southern Calitomia is experienci.ng record employ.
ment opportunities that are signilicant.ly higher than the
national average. This stimulated migration into the area,
which in turn stimulated a demand lor housing," Haring
satd.
"This, coupled wi.Ua '
n. pensive land ln the des·
(
T1 •KING J the still relaUvely inex,
ert communities, has STOCK resulted in a massive
------------construction boom. And when you butld homes,
you have lo have a telephone," be said. •
These factors. Haring said, uave created great
economic growth. particularly in Southern California. He
said the economic factors present in 1917 are expected to !
continue. j ......_r l•eo111e l•eremes I
Net income of RossmOOT Corp., Laguna Hills, ln·
creased 143 percent in the first quarter, ended Dec. 31,
1917, compared w1th income in the Uke period a ye&C'
earlier, while revenues increased '6 percent.
Net lncoroe was $1.2 mllllon, or 37 cents a share, ror
the quarter, compared with $498,000, or lS centl, a year eorlier. Net income for the 1976 quarter Includes a tou or
$213,000, or 7 cents a share, from operations that have been
spun oCf, since then. :
Revenues were $12. 7 mllllon compned wllh $8.7 •
mllllon. •
OperaUng results ro, tho quarter give cflect to the
1pln.oft of two &ubsidlaries, Rossmoor ConsltucUon Corp.
1nd Laguna Hilts UtUiiy Co., effective Sept. 30, tm.
There w r HS residential W\it.s ~llvered durlnt the
first quarter •t t.a.cuna ffJlb Leisur. World, the com·
panv'J primary operation slnce the spin-offs. compared
wll)\"110 a year earlier. Tho backlog ol advance cMpOlit aw contract.a u or D c. 31, 1J77, /lOlaled $39.8 million,
compared with •12.1 million a year earlier.
Sa&ill!l9 Del eaminas Of Becton DlcklMoft and CO..,
perent ~pllll)' ot :f;ndevco Co., San Juan ~ptltrano, set new hi,hl In lh9 flnt riacal quarttt ended»«. at. Jl was '
lhe 18th C'Cllll«UtJve quarter in wbich saJt1 and earnlnp
topped tbl Jtar· .. rller Ptriod.
!Jalel tot the quartcrr rose 11 peittnt to SIA,JOl.000
from SIJ19'Dl.OOO white net lncome lnCl'Ufed 11 ptttHl to tu.1•.000 fl'Dlll uo,m.ooo. &1mlftp per. &hare were vp 11
perceM Co ll cent. rrom 58 ceatt. J>re.\U lnC!Ome bi·
~re~ 11perffDlto121.W,OOO from .tlt,171.000. Pnflt
maraim r.m.abMld unchan1od at 11 percent .
DAILY PILOT
!~High . . 1
JllDlp Record
LOS ANGELES-With the
• withdrawal of Olympic cham·
pion John Walker from the mile,
• :he spotlight will be concentrat·
ed on a couple ol field events in
tonight's Times Indoor Games
at the Forum.
The high jump brings together
t he gold. s ilver a nd bronze
• medal wtnne_rs from the 1976
·.-Olympics while the pole vault
! .features half a dozen members
of the cxclusl\te 18-foot club.
Walker, who holds the world
mile record (3 :49 4) announced
Wednesday that he will undergo
1Urgery to correct a circulation
proble m ln his rigpt leg.
In his place will be Tanzania's
Filbert Bayi, the world record
holder In the l ,SOO meters. Hls
late addition insures the mile of
a stellar field despite the f3cl that Walker's absense will prob·
ably be felt at the aate.
Another late withdrawal is
Franklin Jacobs of Fa irleigh
Dickinson. who set an indoor world high jump record (7· 7 14 )
a· week ago, because of meet
commitments in the east. But
his absen se will h a rdly be
noticed.
.... ,,..
RA YMONO TOWNSEND REACHES FOR A LOOSE BALL.
Pae·8 Roundup
(
Bruins Bury Cards;
USC Trips Bears
t
LOS ANGELES CAP) -David
• Greenwood scored 21 points and
pulled down 13 r ebounds to lead
fifth-r anked UCLA to an easy
101·64 P acific-8 Conference
b asketball v.ictory over Stanford
at Pauley J>avihon Thursday
n ight.
Th e 2 1 p oint s m ove d
Greenwood. a junior forward,
from 23rd to 19th place on the
all-ti m c UCLA scoring list.
The Bruins are now 6·0 in
• Pac-8 play and 15·2 over alJ. The
Cardinals dropped to 1-5 and
11·8.
UCLA started fast, moving to
a 13·2 lead after five minutek of
play, and Stanford never re-
covered. The Brulns made 13 of
their fi rst 19 field goal attempts
end 22 of 34 in the fii:st, half.
lJ'he Cardinals converted only
"seven or 25 floor shots in the
ltpening 20 minutes.
UCLA led at halfUme 50-24
1 4nd continued the onslaught at
Che start of the second hall, out· oring Stanford 15-6 ln the first
ve minutes to extend its advan·
~ce to 65-:.>.
STAM•o110 c .. 1 -·Sch,..f 2, .... 15,
McHlllll .. ltlbtM 4, PltfT't f, Glove<d>ll\I ~
...... ~ i, (;MW'· SdlftMlirlld '°· •-t. TtCll'lt1!241.._ UCU. CttH -~ t1, Wiikes 9, SklN 6,
.,.....,,lllCI 1', "-11"1111 U, Atluma 4. VlllOIWll!IM tt. Htlllncl Ir, ~ S. &.IPll'rl l, IWIY 2. TM.ti a 41 IS•U 1't, .
HtCtCllM-UCLA .. MM111N tc. ,,__ M -
.._ T ... -. -5UflfieH JI, UCLA 25. A -
11,4".
conference action and 9-10 for
the season.
Southetn Cal led at halftime
41-38 and took an eight-point
lead early in the second half.
But Cal came back to take a
74-73 advantage with just under
five minutes to play. But USC
went ahead seconds later and
held on the rest of the way.
It was 82-81 with one minute to
play, but the Trojans scored the
fin a l five po ints, all by
Robinson.
C.t.1.lf'~NIA (111 -Slnglet111 9, Trut 14,
5<'"'91~ , .. ~ 71, C-111 t. Oevla 2. Bllottl 4, Mlldlel11, T.UIU0·1Stt.
SOUTHl!lllH CM. 111) -He!IOlr-14, #llW 11, Roltlt-Jt, c.r11no .. Ameld t. 11.ttbwleh S, Holsl119to1t 2. 0. SIWlll 6. Tottls 161$-27 W.
H•lfllme -Sovthtf"ll Ce4 41, Cetlf ...... a ll.
l"ouleid Mt -Sdlneldaf.lllflrl, Mltcllfll. Tote! i.u.s
-Call#ot'llla 27, ~ C:.I tJ. TKIH!IUfl -
Solllhenl Cel 1*ICh. A -4,21t.
B•Wn,5a-S2
SEATTLE -DBn Walker
scbted 17 points and Steve
Matzen added 1A Thursday night
as the UniversltJ of Wa.shlniton
Huskies held off the Oregon
Ducks 58-52 in a Pacific-8 Con-
ference basketball game.
W ashingtoo switched from a
man-to-man defense to a r.oae
mid Wlf in lbe aecond half and
held the Ducks to one field aoat
tor the last 10 minutes .
• Oregoo'a Dan Hartshorne led
all scorers with 19 points. He did
not aeon m the flnal alx minutes
as W ubl111ton'1 7-foot-2 f,.sbauua center .Petur Gud·
mundleaQ dominated the lnaide game.
That's because effervescent
Dwight Stcnes. who has lost both
his outdoor and indoor r~rds
· in the last yenr, is once again on
hand. So is his new nem~is.
Canada's Greg J oy, who held the
indoor mark at 7-7 before Jacobs
erased it.
In additi on, the re's Jacek
Wsiola or Poland, who won the
Olympics gold meda l in 1976
a head of Joy and Stones.
T he pole vault also features a
sterling field. UC LA's Mike Tul·
ly, the indoor record holder at
18·4, goes up against the. man
whose mark he er ased, Dan
Ripley, and the m an who beat
him out for vaulter of the year
h o nors in 1977 , P oland's
Wladyslaw Kozakiewicz.
Other 18-(oot vaullers entered
include Earl Bell, the former
N C A A c h a mpion from
Ark ansas, and West GermanY's
Gunther Lohre.
The mile fleld includes current
indoor sensation Dr. Thomas
Wesslnhage of West Germany
who has won twice in two weeks,
UC Irvine's Steve Scott, who had
times of 3:M.5 indoor& and 3:55.1
outdoors a year ago, and
Ireland's Eamonn Coghlan.
In a Los Angeles indoor meet
two weeks ago, Wcssinghage
posted a 3:49.7' winning time
ahead of Bayt (4:00.5) and Scott
(4:00.9). Wessinhage is current-
ly ranked second in the world.
Olympic c hampion Arnie
Robinson, the sole member or
the n ewly-formed San Diego
Ghetto Striders, heads a long
jump field that includes UC
Irvine's LaMont King, a 25-foot
jumper' last year as a prepster.
· The fj(j.yard dash spills world
record bolder Houston ltlcTear
and Steve Willia m s into
separate heats.
Gauchos Outshoot UCI
Anteaters Dealt 78-76 Cage Setback
SANT A BARBARA-UC
Irvine's Anteaters shot the lights
out a nd played tough defense,
but came up a bucket short
Thursday night as red-hot UC
Santa Barbara outlasted the vis-
iting Anteaters, 78-76, in a PCAA
b asketball game.
The Anteaters of coach Tim
Tift never led, but tied the game
at 70, 72 and 74 before the
Gauchos got a break when UCI
missed at the free throw line to
get the upper hand.
In those final three minutes or
action the Anteaters tied it at 70
on Louis Stephens' layup and at
72 with 2:02 left on a 12-foot
j umper by Brad Car son.
UCSB clicked from outside a
Sports in Brief
UCI zone to go up 74·72, but
Wayne Smith, with an assist
from Kirk Christ, scored on a
flCAA STAlllOINGS
W L ~ f'A
Fresno Stet.
P1<1flc
C.I Slate lFU1*1oftl
!Min Dle90 State C.I Steta IL.ong ISH<lll
Sell Jow Stale
UC SAftta a.rt>ar•
UC trvlne
• t 401 m
5, t 493 '11 s l SO) 470
S~S40 ...
1 S S2t5'7
'2 s ... , -
2 ) ~· '°1 I '4JOS21 ~··seer" UC S.m. Bert>ere 11. UC lrvlne 76
S.11 DleQO SI.Ce•• CAI St.te (Lof\9 8 .. <11112
S.11 JOM S!Alte 11, PKlfl< .,
s.iw.-r.~ UC Santa Ber1Mra el UC I Nine
FresM Slate 91 C.I State CFullet10ftl
~ .. DleQoStalU I C.I Stale CLono Bee<h) San Jo .. State 91 P1<1flt
layup with 1: 30 to go to tie it
again at 74.
Matt Maderos countered with
LaVer Ousts Cox;
Padres Sign Lolich
RICHMOND, Va. -Bjorn
Bor~ dereated Harold Solomon.
6·3, 6-2 and Rod Laver of Corona
del Mar ous ted Mark Cox, 6·4,
5 -7 , 6·4 Thurs day on the
Richmond stop or the World
TeMis Championship tour.
/I n othe r s eco nd r o und
matches, John Newcombe beat
Jose Higueras. 6·2, 6·2 and Eddie
D i bbs d ereated Ze ljko
F r anulovic, 6·1, 6-2.
In the quarterfi nals toni ght,
Borg goes against Newcombe;
Dibbs plays L aver , Vitas
Gerulaitis races Ken Rosewall
a nd Corrado Ba razzutti is
m a tched against Peter Flem-
ming.
LoUch Signs
SAN ·DIEGO -Left-handed
pi tcher Mickey Lolich came to
an agreement Thursday with the
San Dlego Padres.
Lolich, 37, sat out last season
afte r two years with the New
York Mets. He r anks sixth in
strikeouts among active pitchers
with 2, 799 and third in vlctcries
with 215.
SUH!lct.,. Roi&
NORTH LlTl'LE ROCK, Ark.'
-Dick Stockton defeated Jlri
Granat, 64. 5-7, 7-6 Thursday
night in a $50,000 tennis tourna-
ment.
In another match, Jiri Hrebec
upset Terry Moor, 2-6, 6-4, 6·4.
Nick Saviano defeated John
Yuill 6·2 when Yuill retired after
pulling a hamstring muscle, and
Byron Bertram defeated Bernie
~{itton, 6-2, 6-4. .
Goolago-. Win•
CHICAGO -Evonne
Goolagong and Betty Stove ad-
vanced to the semi(lnals or a
women's tennis tournament
Thursday.
Goolagong beat Rosie Casals, "-
3~. 6-4, 6-2 and Stove outsted Sn~
Barker, 7·6, 2·6, 7-~.
•• ,, ... llepe•t•
STRASBOURG, France
Defending European' champion
Jan Hollman of East Germany
ov.ercame a faulty lanclinc on a
triple loop to retain his slnales
Llkers Face Nets
In Televised Tilt
PISCATAWAY, N.J. (AP) -
The Los Angeles LaJcera face tho
st.ruiaUng New Jersey Neta here
tonlsbt (Channel. at 8) without
forward Jamaal Wilkes.
Wllltea suffered a broken
ffncer 011 his left hand last
month and reaccravated the ln·
Jury duri.n1 Wednesday nl•ht'a
103· 100 overtlme 1011 to the
Bolton CelUca.
The former 1tartln1 forward,
who hu bMn UHd 1J:i a raane
role recenUy, new to ~· ~tin~ after &be rJUb
la94e4 tn Newark, Nii. HI•
brolten flDl•f ... ION Ulcl ........
crown at the Europe11n fiiure
skating championships Thurs-
day night.
HoCfman, 22. executtid the only
triple lutz of the evening in a
four-part exhibition ln the con-
cluding five-minute free skating.
Second place we nt to last
year's European runner-up
Vladimir Kovalev of the Soviet
Unio n . and Britain 's Ito bi n
Cousins placed third.
Ra.i~lnS~ls
MEXICO CITY -Raul
Ramirez adva nced into the
semifinals of the $50,000 Mex·
ican Open Thursday with a 6-4,
6·1 victory over Rich Fisher.
In othe r m a tches, Peter
P e ar so n d o wn e d Paul
McNa mee, 7·5. 1-6, 6-3; Anand
Amritraj beat Colin Dowdeswell
6·0, 5·7, 7-6; Pat DuPree defeat·
ed Erik van Dillen, 4-6, 7 -6. 6-4
and Gene Mayer upset Marcelo
Lara, 4-6, 6-1, 6-1.
Mala11e Bits 9
SEATTLE-Dan Malane, a
graduate of Fountain Valley
High School, scored nine points
for the University of Santa Clara
in an 88-69 victory over host ·
Seattle University here Thurs-
day nighL
a 2S-root jumper out.side the UCI
zone, however, and th~ Ant·
eaters then lost some of their
momentum when Stephens mis-
sed the front end of a one-and.
one situation at the free throw
line.
UCSB scored again, Rick Jurk
got a bucket with 22 s~onds left
to pare it to 78·76, but UCSB
wasted the next 18 ticks before
the Ante att!r s could get
possession.
Smith's 35-foot desperation er.
fort at the buzzer missed and the
Anteaters had their sixth loss in
seven circuit tries.
Tift 's forc es played well
enough to win most encounters,
hilting 34 of S8 from the field for
59 \)ercent, UCSB, however, was
even hotter, clicking on 29 of 42
for 69 percent.
Smith was b'rilliant again for
UC Irvine, scoring 30 points,
)Yilh 24 or those counters coming
in the second half surge.
Smith made 13 or 20 from the
field (65 percent). had four as.
sists, a blocked shot and , two
s teals to his credit.
UC lrv!M CIU
.. ft .... Cllrht 3 0 l 6
M<.Gulr• S 0 1 10
Sm101 ll 4 • JO
CMson 6 O 4 12
Jur-2 O 2 • SA9ll 00 1 0
Steonens J O 2 •
BOI~" I O 1 2
"OCl9efl 0 4 I 4 ll'OWll t 0 I f
TolelS S. I 21 76
Half.!1,.,..: UCS8, ,._n.
1111 ucsa
Fln ln
ArOMlll<k
M6deroa
Pe<ry
ltl09ewe,
Ho'#•rd
Tate
Totals
.. " ... -• s l 21
6 • l :Ill
' 2 '20 I 2 l 4
3 2 ••
0 I 4 I
I 0 1 4
J9 JO " ,.
Area Swimmers
In Netherlands
AM ERSFOORT, Netherlands
(AP> -A young and talented
crop of American swimmers wilJ
compete this weekend against
s om e of the. wortd•s top
performers In a 23-nation meet.
The U.S. men are paced by
Jack Babas hoff, 22, or Fountain
Valley, in the 100-met er
freestyle, and Joe Bottom, 22,
who holds the world record in the 100-meter bulterny.
The Amerlcrul women are led
by Cynthia Woodhead , 13, of
Riverside, r anked third in the
world in the ~meter freestyle
and the youngest swimmer in
the competition. Margaret
Browne, 17, of Corona del Mar,
200-meter backstroke; Kathy
Treible, 16, 100-meter
backstroke: and Diane Johnson,
18, of Walnut, 200·meter in-
dividual medley.
---,,·
Old Grip .
Helping
Littler
HONOLULU (AP) _, Geoe
Utller rectnUy began U4iftg an
old puttine grip that he last used
three or four years aao:
And the "double overlapping"
grip helped Uft the 47·year-Old
tour veteran to the first-round
lead in the $250,000 HawaUan
Open golf tournament Thursday.
''This grip gives me a new feel
and It's worked very well," aald
Littler, who-began using it aealn
last week and promptly tied for
second in the San Dleeo Open.
"I've been putting badly for
some time and when you are
putting badly, you're always
tinkerlng around and chaftging
something -either your grips
or your stance or somethln&,"
he said.
Lllller had a 7-under-paL-$5.
one s troke ahead of-"'John
Schroeder, with whom he tied at
San Diego. Mark Hayes, Eddie
Pearce, Dave Stockton and Bob
· Wynn were tled for third at67.
PGA champion Lanny
Wadkins had a 73 and Arnold
Palmer was 10 strokes off the
pace al 75.
The field will be cut to the top
70 and tics after toda~s second
round. The 72-hole tournament
continues through Sunday, with
the winner receiving $50,000.
The greens on the 7,234-yard
Waialae Country Club course
were described as in !erfect
conditiQn and Littler sai his 65
was due to his holing of some
long putts.
'·I probably holed more putts
today than I have for six
months," said LltUer, who sank
two .fOifooters, two 20-footers
and one from lS feet.
While the fast greens didn't
hamper LltUerp Schroeder said
they could be a problem for
others. ··u may be tough putting from
lon g distances because tht
greens are so fas t, so it will be
important to knock it in there
clqse," he said.
The wind was another fact.or
in the opening round. Sea
breezes, which increased to IS
miles an hour in the afternoon,
hampered some of the late
starters.
"Don't forget to write that the
wind bl.elf," said Hale Irwin, a
late starte"-.w@ came' in with a
3-under-par ~esplte the wind.
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