HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-02-06 - Orange Coast Pilot7
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l • • •
1Man ueried ~ -
• m
!Second in J 7 Da11s J
BliZzard Hits
By The Associated Press
A wind-driven snowstorm hit
the Middle Atlantic and
Northeast states today. closing
schools, s lowing traffic to a
crawl and disrupting life for
millions. The storm was the
second for the area in 17 days.
The snow began during the
night and as much as half a foot
was piled up in some areas by
the middle of the morning. Ac·
cumulations of up to 20 inches
were predicted for parts of the
region, with winds of 40 mph and
higher gusts creating hazardous
drifts.
Collrt and legislative !)essiom.
were canceled; airport runway!'>
were bl9cked; schools closed; so
.did some public offices and bw.i-
nesses. Roads geherally were
reported passable, but slippery
during the morning. Authorities
lowered speed limits and urged
peopte to avoid driving if at all
possible.
Commuter trains and buses
brin~irlg hundred~ of thousands
of workers to Manhattan from
Long Island and s uburbs in
Westchester County. Conhec·
lieut and New Jersey reported
~erious delays.
In Boston, the peak snowfall
D.-:-was expected to coincide with l.~f, the evening rush hour and Of. Retunisr--fici;ils said thtiy might ask busi-
<Ariaing Six
Crash Deaths
By Tbe Alsoclated Press
~ Pacific storm bas drenched
Southern California, le.avlng •at
least six people dead as the re-
sult of traffic accidents trig·
gered by rain and muds\ides.
Although forecasters 'predict·
ed a chance of showers thro~g1\
the week from a series of Pacific
storms lined up offshore. mQSt of
the upcoming wetne~ Is ex.peel·
ed to hlt Northern Cfllifornla.
''It Jook.s like a lalrlS> rainy
week for most of the West, but
less down here than elsewhere,"
said forecaster Offcar Nichols of
the NaUonal We~ther Service.
Pat ~we. a weather service
spokeawoman, said the chance
nesses to send people home
early.
The National Weather Service
predicted up to 20 inches or snow
in some New York City suburbs
and said the storm would con·
tinue through tonight. The one·
day record for the city-7.S
inches was set Feb. 5. 1961; the
Jan. 20 sn-owstorm brought 13.6
inches.
Two tow pressure systems -
one off the Carolina coast, the oth~r ih the Appalachians -
were blamed for tb~ snow.
Unlike the' January storm, the
current round or snow was pre·
dieted and authorities took ad·
vance precaullons.
The New York City Sanitation
Department put 1.250 men on the
streets· -10 times t~e number
normally on duty each day -
but a spok~man said the new
storm would.:Jbe a rough one to
fight" because equipment Is In
bad shape.
1 Hete is, a rundown of the situ~·
tlon in some a~as : ....
I. Gotha.Q: SDeked AgaiD · 1 Suspect · ~
~-· . ' . H • O ~ Chased, .
A~~
LONE PEDESTRIA N MAKES HIS WAY THROUGH MIDTOWN MANHATTAN TODAY
New Snowstorm Lashes Northea1t, Slowe Traffic end Clo1e1 Schools
Westmiluter Fire Po•ed Chemi,cal -Threat
Freeway when the fire erupted
and as it tumed out, they were
not affected.
Ironically, firemen said. tJie
Silicon General Inc., blaze oc-
curred Just as various firefight·
ing agencies fl'Om all or Oran1e
County were massin& men and
equipment for a disaster drill
scheduled in Fullerton.
Severity Of the blaze virtually
entptied fire slalions·in
Westminster and two Oranee
County Fire Department truck .
companies from Mission Viejo
were dispatched to re9lace
~aptured
By GARY GRANVILLE oe•Oelly,......,...
Anaheim police are quest.ioc-
11)& a Riverside man today m
connection with the bludgeoning
death of an elderly-man in a
second-hand store Sunday after.
noon and the beating and rob·
bery of a liquor store clerk a few
hours later.
Police identified the murder·
robbery-assault s uspect as
Stephen C. Hokey, 24, of
Riverside.
Hokey was arrested after the
b'nttered liquor store clerk
grabbed a convenient stick of
wood and chased his assailant-
into a residential neighborhood.·
I n a s w e e p o r t h e.
neighborhood, police reportedly
flus hed ~okey from a hiding ·
place, arrested him in connec·
. tion with the liquor stol'e rob·
bery and began investigating ·
any pos sible link with the
second-hand s tore murder.
That sJaytJig was discovered
s hortly after 2:30 p.m . when a
customer in the store found a
s till-unidentified eld.erly man ·Jy.
Ing behind a counter. ·
Police believe the man died as
the result or two massive beat-
ing wounds innicted about his
head.
They said both wounds ap-
peare d to have been infli~
"with a heavy blunt instru·
ment."
A)'out two hours after the-
elderly man's body was tound in
the used goods store at 219 S.
Anaheim Blvd. by -W"customer, the clerk at Capp ~iquor. 2161
W. Lincoln Ave., ,,was acc0sted
br a man who df}l:nanded he be
g1ven the mory~Y in a cash
<See SUSPECf, Page AZ>
Al DAil. Y "'LOT s t.4ond11., brv!Y e. 1m
.. • 1
Militau '~~stly~·
Volunt,eer Pay l!.iis $18 Billion
•l\VASJnNGTON (AP> -The
an-volunteer military service
has cost an additional $18 billion
stnce the end of the draft ln um.
far motte than pr•viou1
estimates. the General Account-
·:lng Office said today. ' ' R e leasing th e s tudy,
Comptroller General Elmer B.
Staats said the biggest addi·
tional cost or the volunteer force
is the much higher pay for new
•illtary enlistees.
Staats, who heads the con-
gressional auditing service, said
it. cost the taxpayers $14.2 billion
in higher pay to entice enough
volunteers for the Army, Navy,
Air Force. Marine Corps and
Coast Guard.
Staats testified before a
Senate Armed Services subcom·
mittee.
Subcommittee Chairman Sam
Nunn, D0Ge .• a frequent.critic of
the all-volunteer c:oncept, said
l\e asked the GAO tC> do tbe
atudy,..after several unsbccessful
atlempts to obtain a cost
estimate from the Pentagon.
Nunn said J>l'1!Vious Defense
Department estimates on the
cos~ have varied widely ffOm a
high of Sd> million, with some
Pentagon oftidals maintaining.
that an all-voluntary force was
ar;tually cheaper than the draft.·
Besides higher pay for
younger enlisted men and
women and junior omcers, the
GAO attributed the hl&her cost
to a. number of fact.ors:
' ~Mishandling F .. ds' •
co·lumbia Pictures .
President "!l:esigns
NEW YORK <AP> -David
Begelman, under fire for alleged
JJlishandling of corporate funds,
tias resigned as president or the
motion picture and television
division of Columbia Pictures
lndustries. Inc .. the chairman of
th<' hoard of directors confirmed
tnday.
I n a s t a l t· m c n l . b o a r d
<· h <i ir m a n L l' o J a f f c !> a i d
Bcgelman·, resignation was
•·effectiw 1mmedif1tcly," he
said.
The production chief resigned
••with the view that WC must ft•
sume a more normal '•t·
hlospberc for Columbia." J8'fe .said. ,
Begelmar. 's rcsignationwas
was "effective immediately." he
~:lid
.Jaffe !>u1d the board had been
:-;at1sficd that 1li:. independent in·
vest1gation or the allegations
was •·prompt and thorough."
Bcgclm:.in had been reinstated
to his post tn D('ccmber "with
full confidence of management
~md the board," he said.
On ABC-TV's "Good Morning
America" today, Rona Barrett
r eported that an "emotionally
drained" Begelman had told her
of the resignation Sunday night
it. New York City.
Be gel.man, 56, re moved
hjmself from hls post last Oc·
tober. admitting to financial
misdeeds after a Columbia in·
ves ti gation disclosed that
between January 1975 and May
1977 he obtained $61,008 in cor-
porate funds through improper
means for his personal benefit.
nut Begelmun was restored to
his job two months later, when
Columbia said that he had over·
come the emotional problems
that caused the financial ir·
rej!ularities.
.Miss Barrell said Begelman
would become an independent
producer associated with Colum-
bia.
She quoted him as saying the
deciHion stemmed from "an in·
ability to stand by and watch in·
nocent men and women be torn
apart by headline-grabbing ac·
cusations."
Neetlles Cuts
Stree( Lights
NEEDLES <AP) -Hoping to
s (ave off a deficit caused by ris·
ing electrical power rates. the
City Council has voted to darl<en
the city's 385 street lights in·
definitely.
In addltlon, the council voted
to replace its two-man fir~!lghl·
ing force with volunteers and to
Joy off one pollce officer.
City Mnnager Frank Freeman
~d that the actions were taken
lt'ter the cost of street Ughtinl
'fttcreased 13 percent and other
ubtlc power prices rose 23 per·
ent.
OAANOl!COAIT s
DAILY PILOT
A~WI~•
QUITS UNDER FIRE ·
Columbia's Begelman
Masked Man
Rohs Woman
At Gunpoint
A Laguna Beach woman was
accosted in her garage Friday
afternoon by a.maskM man who
forced her to hand over $37
before fleeing.
The woman, who police
declined to Identify, told officers
a man wearing a black mask
with eye holes entered }\er
ga rage at about 7 p.m.,
threatening the 34-year-old
woman with a partng'knlre.
"Give me all your money and
you won't get hurt,.. the knlre·
wielding suspe-ct told the
woman.
She handed the masked man
$34 and he ran out the garage on·
to Morningside Drive.
Police believe the suspect is
white, has blond hair and stands
about five feet. 10 Inches tall.
'Bigfoot'
A Burglar?
The burglar had bil feet.
That's the best clue Ir vine
police have to a solution to the
break in of the 5592 Southall Ter·
race home of Sidnoy Broward,
65.
The master bedroom was
ransacked Saturday, and an un·
known amount of jewelry was
taken.
''The suspect may have large
feet.'' investl1atlng om~rs re·
ported. They Cowtd tootprinta in
a (lower bed outs~<M the kitchen
wf ndow throuih wblcb t he
burglar cllm bed. From the
prints, police estimated the man
must have worn 1ile u. triple E sbt>es.
-Recruiting an4 advertising,
$1.4 billion.
-Improved military housing,
$1.2 billion.
-Jncentlves for doctors and
dentists to Join the military
services, $932 milllon.
The GAO said $289 million was
saved by phasing out the Selec·
tive Service System.
In his testimony, Staats
acknowledged that if t he
military draft were restored. It
is unlikefy that the blgber cost
would be eliminated. No one can
determine that savMlg, he said.
The Pentagon diaputed .the
GAO's findings, asserting that
the agency used oversimplified
accounting methods and mi.sat·
tributed some costs.
Fre•P.,,e AJ
FIRE .• ·•
firemen were treated for smoke
inhalation or g\ven precau-
tionary examinations at HW\t·
ington Intcrcomm unity
Hospllal.
Tbey included Capt, Ray
Mitchell; Capt. Bill Cooper;
Capt. Tom Huntley; Engineer
Mike Kaneen; i:n1lneer Pat
Neville; Engineer J.arry
'·Richards: Firem11Jl Scott
Freeman; Fir em an Steve
Parjer; Fireman Mfke
Tam1yasu; Paramedic Mike
McKay, and Paramedic Joe
Mohney.
Six Westminster Fire Depart·
ment per:sonnel were treated at
Westmin s ter Community
Hospital.
Among them were Capt.
Rpbert Black; Capt. James
Schlager; Engineer James
Daugherty; Engineer Larry
Bender~. fi crighter Gary Stengland, · d firefighter Ken·
nethKun .
Arms P r otest He ld·
LOS ANGE[;ES (AP) -More
than 250 persons turned out in a
drizzling rain lo he ar
Nicaraguan residents of Los
Angeles demand that tht t:nited
States halt arms shipments and
economic aid to the Latin
American country until the gov-
ernment .' or Gen. Anastasio
Somoza ls toppled.
Mitchell
Leaves Care
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Former Attorney General
John N. Mitchell left
Georgeto~n University
Hospital t4day after a
15-day stay tor arterial
surgery. His destination
was. not disclosed.
The 64-year-old
?t~ltchell, on me.dlcal
furlough Crom the federal
prlson camp at Maxwell
Air Force Base In
Alabama, underwent the
abdominal operation Jan.·
24. The leave was ex·
tended to Feb. Z1 t.o permit
his recuperation.
Mitchell is serving a one·
to four-year sentence for
taking part in the
Watergate coy~r-up.
itptoeing With Ting
Entertainer Tiny Tim and actress-model Victoria
Johnson s hare a dance at Studio SL a ~fanhattan disco
that has becnmc.> CJ watenng hol~ for celebntw::..
Overwater Aircraft .. .
Leave Rafts ~ehind
l\tlAMI CAP) -Al least two
airhf\eS Oying overwater routes
have removed life rafts from
their aircraft with federal
permission. a Federal Aviation
Administration spokesman said
today. •
The airlines include National.
owner of the Boeing 727 that lost
power m all three engines while
flying 155 miles off the Florida
coast Jan. Z1 during a flight
from Miami to Newark. The
pilot restarted the three engines
an,d made an emeq~ency landing
al Jacbonvute, but the 103
passengers would have had to
rely on their life jackets had the
plane been forced to ditch in the
Atlantic.
Jack Barker, FAA spokesman
.at Atlanta, said National and
Braolrr have removed life rafts
from 7Zls flying over the two af·
fected overwater routes -the
Atlantic coastal corridor
between Miami and the
Northeast and on Gulf routes
between south Florida and the
West.
Al least three other airlines -
Eastern, Delta and Western -
Police Case Nixed
LOS ANGELES CAP) -Dis·
trlot AttQrney John Van de
Kamp says the police file shred·
dlng case shows "ample
evidence of bad judgment," but
he concludes that there 1s not
enough evidence to prosecute
anyone.
were given permission lo re·
move the hfe rafts on aircraft
flying those routes, but ap·
parently have not done so.
"The requirements were
drawn during the days of pro·
pell er craft," said Barker.
lie saic! thei reliability ot jet
aircraft is much greater. ii
.''The idea or three engines go.
ing out Is wireal," he said.
The requests apparently were
granted chief for economic rea·
sonJ. Nnlioruil 'Z~7• flying without the raRs -which cost
S19,000 each -•esult in a report·
ed saving of $H9)>00 in fuel costs
annually. -~
Brnniff was l~e first to request
and receive permission to re-
move the life rafts, Barker said.
National followed in June im.
about seven months before the
incident in\tolving one or its Boe-
ing 'i27s.
All aircraft conUnue lo carry
life preservers ror all
passengers pnd crew "and the
emergen cy chutes used to
deplane during emergencies
float and ca n carry
passengers." Barker said.
11 c did not know H the
emergency chutes were capable
of carrying all passengers
aboard a 7Z1.
Barker said all aircraft
normally are required to carry
hfc rafts if the routes take them
more than 50 miles over water.
. .
we1tbound Santa Monica freeways, whlch was blocked by
an o\terturned truck ror two
hours, a spokesman 11tld.
The most ~erloua of the
wealller•rela\ed lramc •eel·
dl'ftt• clalme<I the Mf• or an ~~·and Uaelt n.• ehhdno Sunday .•
In a tr.me accld•t N1itet tD
a m*'5llde t.bat clos.e4 ~. ot
lntertiate ~ t.Dd foreed evacaa-
Uon of bullneas• aldD1 a eoaa·
&am .. ~ kDOWjl .... Ora,...._
Calf tonal• Hllb••1 Patrol 51t . .Sntte D .. WIOG _., lM v&c· Um.·,....··m • Cd .... was ,. •• , ...... ...., FortTeJoa wblJe
waiting t.o IO north along the open 1 northbowld lanes of Interstate s
near a stretch called the
Grapavlne. The hithway was
partially closed down Sunday f
after a mudslide which also
caused evcu:uation of roadside
bu.stnessea Cb the h1thw1.1 Qear
FortTeSon. ·
Chlem·Llang HUaq, 1, 1nd his
sister, Chia-Ying, were pro·
nounced dead Clft arrival at the
Kern Medical Ceoter in
Bakersfield. Their mother. Yen
Yen Hwan9, 28, dlod shortly
after she was taken to the
hospital. and their father, Jin·
Tsann Huang, 34, died early to-
day. officiall said.
The driver of the H('Oad ear,
18-year-old D a n D irlam of
Reseda, also was reported in
critical condition and was
booke<f for h1vestl1attoa of
manslaughter, auUtoritles aald.
Witnesses reported a vehicle
was golnc about 90 to JOO mph
when it reached the halted traf·
fie and rammed several vehicles. ·
F ro9'PageAI
SUSPECT. • •
reilster. 'l'he man armed wlth a club
s truck the clerk t hree times
before the ylctim grabbed a
wood stick of his own and began
the chase that. ended a few
minutes later when kokey was
flushed from hiding.
Police said they are attempt-
ing to det"rmine if there is any
connection with the two beatings
Sunday and two, one of them
fatal, that occurred late last
week in neighboring Fullerton.
Man Wounded
In.Snow Tiff
COLOMA, Mich. CAP) -An
e mpl<>Yee of a company remov-
ing snow from South Bend, 1n<C,
streets in the wake of a blizzard
was shot and seriously·wounded
by a man who didn't like the
way his street was being plowed.
police said.
Authorities said John Frost.
38, of Coloma,. an empJo.yee of Consumers Asphalt Company,
wns operating a front-end loader
Sunday on the southeast side of
South Bene, near the Jndiana· Michigan state line.
A resident of the street, Tom·
m y W. Dent, exchanged words
with Frost over the way snow-
left over from the Jaa. 26-27
· blizzard -was being dumped In
front of his house. After the ex-
change. police said. Dent went
into the house, emerged with a
pistol and shot Frost.
~ SNOW HITS EAST. • •
MARYLAND-DELAWARE:
The storm was less severe than
originally expected. By mid·
morning. only the central por·
tion o( the Delmarva peninsula
and northeastern Maryland re-
mained under heavy snow warn·
ings. Tho Maryland forecast
called for four lo eight Inches
and police said 2 inche! had
fallen by early morning.
\ * * *
PENNSYLVANIA: Three
inch.a or snow bad fallen in Philadelphia by 8 a.m.;
Phlla~elphla International
Airport was closed while crews
worked to clear runways.
P~edictlons of accumul~9f)s
ranced from 6 inches to more
i than a foot and f orecaslers
J warned Qf near-bllzzard condl·
1 lions. •••
NEW IERSEY: Three to four
1nches of snow had Callen by the
start or the morning nmh hour
and from 10 to 12 inches was pre·
dieted. Flim:casters warned the
storm was a .. classic
Nor'•uter .. "ltb blizzard-like
condlUOM. Winds of u'p to 40
mlles an hour mdo drlvlng
haurdoua at>d the speed ltmlt on
lhe New Jersey T~mplke was
cut to-35 mph; i>OJlc:e said many
roads probably would be fm·
pl&JIOblo by afternoon.
***
drifts. The clty declared a 1lntit·
ed snow emergency, Umltlng
travel on key streets to cars with
snow tires or chains. A snow
emergency was declared for all
parkways In Nassau and ~ufColk
counties on Long Island. Umitinf
travel to only necessary
vehicles.
***
CONNECTICUT: The Na·
tional Weather Service at
Bridgeport said llght anow
began fall111~ at about 3 a.m.;
forecasters said they could not
preaict "how much "Would ac·
cumulate, but warned.. that the
storm had the potential tpi match
or top the January blluard that
dropped six inches on t be state.
Gale warnings were Issued for
the coast with heavy sud and
'tides well ab6ve ttormal ex·
peeled.
***
llH ODE ISLAND: T b t•
woather bureau predlc~d two.to fou~lnches of snow during the day and sbQ Inches more during
the htgbl ~nd Tuesday. The
situation w c:ompllcattd by a
t'1reatene strike of state
1 workers -including some SQO>V
rezuoval crews, •••
91A.SliACRU8BTTS': Snow
be1an drlf'ltna acron the ate~
at 8 e.m. Tht Nat.tonal Weatbt.r
Service said accamulatl01'•
c0ul4 ranee rtom e t1bt to 1•
inches and wamed that low·lYlai
coastal 1a..-u would b6 ~·
Forecutora 1Jld Uclei 'wlDi'\e
two to four feet abOve qotJUI
tOaJ.aht. . " • •
7
. . .. /' " . ' '
VOL 71, NO. 37, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A
·Storin Cl·aiRis Six
By The Associated Pl'eH
A Pacific storm bas drenched
Southern California, leaving at
least six people dead as the re-
sult of traffic accidents lri'g-
cered by rain and mudslides.
All1'ougl'l forecasters predict-
ed a ohance of showers through
the week from a ser ies of Pacific
storms Jined up offshore, most of
the upcoming wetness is expect-
ed to hit Northern California.
"It )Qoks like a fairly rainy
week for most of the Wesi, but
less doWJf here \han elsewhere,"
said forecaster Oscar Nichols ot
the National Weather Service.
PHt Rowe. • weather 'sel'\'ice
spokeswoman, said the chaqce •
of rain in Southero Callfornla
will drop to 10 p~rcent by
tonight.
But while it hit, jt hit hard,
especially a'ong the~oast. Santa .
Monica received l. 9 inches of
rain, and Catalina I land, where
the drought has .still Heen of-
ficiaJly in effect, rot 2.0S inches.
COAST AREA RAIN
I EXCEEDS INCH-A3
STORM SLAMS NORTH:
MORE ON THE WAY~S
By today, Los Angeles bad re-
ceived an inch of ralh since the
storm began Saturday morning.
That brought the season total t.o
15. 7t lnches, more than l ~ inch-
es over the normal rainfall for
an entire year and double the
7.21 incheS recorded a year a"o. The , California Highway
Patrol reporte d generally
normal traffic flow through the
morn\ng rush hour, except for
transition ramp between th~
northb9und San Diego and the
w estbound Santa Monica
freeways, which was block~ by
wi overturned truck for two
hours. a spokesman old.
TJ\e mos t ser ious of the
wea~ber-related traffic acci-
dents cl!lmed lhe Hfe of an
Albany couple and their two tiny
-:hildren SUnday.
In a tramc accident related to •
a mudslide, Interstate S was
closed and businesses were
evacuated along a mountainous
stretch known as tMGr•P4t•lne.
Califom1a Highway Patrol
Sgt. Bruce DaWIOI\ said the vle-
ums were in a ear that was
rear-ended near Fort TeJon while
waiting to go north along the open
northbound lanes of Interstate S
near a s tretc h called the
Grape"lne. The highway waa
partialJy closed down Sunday
after a mudslide which also
caused evacuation ol roadside
businesses. .. .·
Second 1 8Ii*~~d Po~ds -~ast r
'
\
I •
TENN .
~ N.C.
A .. WI,...,_,.,,_.,;
SHADED AREA LASHED SY HEAVY SNOWSTORM IN EAST
East of Broken Line Snow Reported Moderate to Heavy
Everything Stops
As Snow Piles · Up
8)' The Associated Press
M lllions of East Coast resi
dents struggled through a wand·
driven snowstorm today as
schools closed and traffic, busi-
ness and government slowed to
a.. ms,ar standstill fo r the second
time'in 17 davs.
From Wash ington, D.C ..
through the Middle Atlantic
states and into New-1England, aut horities reported drifting,
blowing snow that started before
dawn and continued through the
day, cutting visibility to almost
zero.
By midmorning. there was as
much us half a fool of snow piled
on the ground in some places
ForecasL'> generally called for
anywhere from one to H :z feet by
the lime the storm ends Tues-
day. , '
Commuter train and bus lines
reported lengthy delays; airport
r\.lnw•ys were closed while
crew-/ tried to clear the snow;
major roads were passable -
but just barely.
Newark Airport was closed at
12:30 p.m. becausf) of the snow.
Planes were still departing from
Kennedy and LaGuardla
Airports at midday, but there
were Jong delays. Arriving
flights were diverted starting at
midmorning.
Children in hundreds of com-
munities got an extra holiday as
<See SNOW. Page AZ>
i Irvine ~eopens Culvft~ il~¥e
"· By PIDUP ROSMARIN
ot.,. oa11y "'""suit They celebrated the opening o(
a "new" road in Irvine Satur-
day-Culver Drive, first dedical·
ed in the 1960s, washed out by
rains Jan. 4, almost reopened.
and washed out again Jan. 15.
Cify officials treated the event
as though a new highway had
1 just been opened. The washout
I of portions of a bridge near Bar-
. ranca Road. overpassing a
drainage swale. had closfd lhe
highway to traffic 1 full
month.
The resulting detour irked
man y resid ents of Irvine.
because Culver is the major
north-south route through the
city.
So the reopening included at·
tendancc by city councilmen.
the city m anager, city
engineers. and an honest-to·
~oodness ribbon cutting.
"t got word late Friday that
they would have it complete
Saturday," Mayor Bill Vardoulis
said. "All the council members
were invited to come out."
Council members Mary Ann
Gaido and David Sills jolned
Vardoulis at the site at 1 p.m.
Va rdoulis peeked under the
bridge to check Ort.the new steel
pilings and rock work t'Ke Irvine
Co mpany installed to shore up
the embankment. ~
"Somebody had a ribbon,"
VardoUJis said. "I didn't know
there'd be a ribbon. We didn't
even have sclssors."
Somebody else produced a
knife, and while Sills held some
Christmas package ribbon and
Vardo\J.lls sawed away at it.
·Mrs. Galdo gunned her station
wagon to be first across the
bri<ige.
"She almost ran me oveT, she
was so eager," Vardoulls saJd.
.. :Mayor Urges S111Tender
The barriers that had closed
Culver from Main Street to Bar·
ranca Road wel'e then re~oved
~nd the rl~bon-cuttlng party.
started dodging the ears of ttSi·
dents acutOQig by.
"It wa.n't five minutes," said
Vardoulia ••and we bad io get
out oJ there. 'cause cars were
shuntln1 "P ancl down.
Maii Writes to Bradley Offering to Give Up .
LOS ANGELES CAP> -
Mayor Tom Bradley today invit-
ed a man claiming to be the
lJillside Strangler to surrender
to the mayor's office.
lo a news conference at which
Bradley d ecJined to ·answer
· questions, the mayor said he re-
. celved a letter from a man
· claiming to be the strangler who
.. wishes to surrender himself
and a. friend to the m ayor 's of-
fice. , "He (the letter writer) also m-
AceOrd Reached
M11.LETIN
• WA.Sffl'N OTON (AP) -
Nelltlaton reaeW aareement
oa • teaaattte eom&ad this af-
tenlMe &laat could end the '3-
d11 .. ld coaJ. •trike, the Joacest
Ill tlte ••U.'• hbtory, sources .Nlld.
dicated he wpuJd forward a cer·
tain item after he received as-
.!:urance for his safety from the
mayor," Bradley said, reading
from a prepared statement re-·
leased earlier.
The statement said Bradley
wanted to reassure the letter
writer than the two persons
.. will be afforded any protection
necessary."
The writer was advised to
mail the unidentified Item to the
mayor's office, addressed exact-
ly as the original envelope was.
The Jetter apparently was
prompted by a Jan. 19 news con-
fe rence by Assistant Police
Chief Oaryl Gates, who said he
hoped the s trangler or
stranglet"S would reatiie they ul-
timately wlll be caught and
Billy Buys
· PlaiiU Paper ·
would voluntarily surrender.
Bradley said the mystery let·
ter was postmarked the same
day as the Gates news con·
ference. Gates also called a news con·
ference for Tuesday· lo discuss
the same letter.·
Further details were not im·
mediately available.
Bradley spokeswotnan lJrenda
Banks said the mayor called the
news conference at the request
of Gates.
Mea nwhile, police Cmdr.
William Booth said Gates was
delaying his news conference 24
hours because "we're very
hopeful that by tomorrow we
could have some reaction, sotne
positive response."
Booth declined comment on
the authentlcityoftheletter.
''Tbef just came roaring
tbrou&h.fhere."
The mayor Nld that as far as
he could t~ll from h1s peekaboo
ins pecUorr of the 'bridge, it isn't
likely to wash away again. "lt bet·
ter not." hesald.
The Sltuher ·
Had Guts
l r\11ne-police say the
van4-l wbo flashed the tlte~ of two cars this we~end e<fde<\ insult to
inJur)'.
T.he ve.h.icles were patrol
cars, pat'ked Jn the police
Jot.
t:nusually serious-faced clowns take part in the 32nd an-
nual Clown's Service at the Angelican Holy Trinity
Church in London. More than m clowns ~athered for the
celebration of the birth of Joseph Grimaldi. remem·
bered as "the greatest clown of them all..... who was
born nearby.
Light Winds Jam
Manzanillo Fleet
By ALMON LOCKABEY the cl.ass A yachts apparent.1"
• OeM9 !""" ._... WriW • sailed into a light air pocket Light winds off the Baja while the class Band c entries Callfon:U~ coast S~day .nJ1ht... 9 ere bringing up wind from
and. tb\s monung Jammed the •astern. Strongest wind reported .CO-~t4Manze~ Yac~t Race was about five knots out ol tbG fleet mto a 4iO·mile radius with north ·several of the class B and C •
yachi, mo~tng aflead of the
clmss A favorites. (See earlier
stoey,PageAll).
}\eporting a positio11 or 29.05
dejrees latitude, the 40-foot
sloop Vendetta, a class B entry.
was in the boat·for-bost lead
ahead 0£ such cl~s A s peedsters
as DrJfler, Merlin arid Christine.
Drifter wu the cl88S A leader,
followed by Jrtec-lin, two miles
astern, then Freewheeler and
Chrlstine.
Three CF,31 sl,oo~ in class C were involved in a close duel for
both ela_psecl tune and handicap b<mora.
Tbe handicap leader was the
CF-37 Je!fenoll se..mshfp, skip-per~d by Diek Ack,r of .tbe
Palos Verdes Yacht Club. Second
o"eraU was Vendetaa, skippered bJ!avier'~~ofAcapulco.
Sailing dead even were two
CF-37s. Co«ontall, .robn Arens,
81.tboa Yacht Club, and Vecw..,
Herb JohnsclD. SaQ D&e1to Yacht
Cl\ab. Vector wu third overall
and Cottoat•U tOUttb. .
The leJd boat.a ~t;e •bout-60
mUll-AOrtb Ol c.edr<I& Jala•d.
• J~~ ~ WIHlU. reports.
~
Mesa Council~
To Eye Town
~Center Plans
A pubJlc hearing on plans foie
the South Coast Town Ceoter.
billed as the largest professional
office complex in Orange Coun:.
ty. will be held at tonight'sj:;t)
p . rn. meeting of tffe Cos ta Mesa
City Council.
'
f °'1l Y PllOT C
J1 olunteer; &J?.1ke ~oati · lli
WASHINGTON CAP> -The S.Me~lll~Rk ... • -JttenattmtUct all-volunteer military service mfttee. ' fi.4 bfllion. -. '
has cost an additional $18 billi9Q Subcommlttee Chatrman Sam -Improved milltary housing
since the end of the draft in 1971, Nunn, D·Oa., a trequeDt ctltic of $1.2 bllUon. '
fa r more l h an pr• v Io u • the alt.volunteer .()Ofteept, Hid -lncenUves for doctors and
estimates, the General Account. he asked the GAO to do the dentists to join the mllltary
ing Office said today. study after "venl unsucceSIM services, '932 million.
R e l e a s ing the study, attempts to obtain a cost TheGAO.saJd$289mllllonwas
Comptroller General Elmer B. estimate from tbe Pentagon. saved b)C pbasiog out the Selec·
Staats said the biggest addi· Nqnn said previous Defense• Uve ServlceSystem:
t1onal cost orthe volunteer force Department eaUmates on the In bis testimony, Staats
is the much higher pay for new costa 'have varied wldety.from a acknowledged that it the
military enlistees. high of $300 million, with iome military draft were restore<! It
Staats, who beads the con· Pentagon oClicials malntainbfg is unlikely that the blgher 00st
gressional auditin& service, said that an all-voluntary force wu would be elhninated. No one can
it cost the taxpayers $1~1.2 billion actually cheaper than the draft. determine that saving, be said.
jn higher pay to entice enough Besides hicher pay for The Pentagon disputed the
volunteers for the Army, Navy. younger enlisted men and GAO's findings, asserting that
Air Force, Marine Corps and women and junior officers the the agency uud oversimplified
Coast Guard. GAO attributed the bi&ber' C06t. accOW\ting methods and mllat-S~aats tei;Ufied before a to a number offacton: trlbuted some costs.
Era.Page Al
SNOW PILES UP •••
classes were canceled. Public
offices and courts were dosed.
Legislatf ve sessions were called
off. Many businesseS said they
planned to send employees home
early. Snow emergencies were
declared in several areas as
authorities tried lo limit traffic
as much as possible.
Trading on area stock ex-
changes was light. ·'rhe .New
York and American exchanges
announced closings t.wo hours
early -but said they hoped to
cpen Tuesday as scheduled. Also
dosing early because of the
weather were the Philadelphia
Stock Exchange, the New York
.Mercantile Exchange, Com-
modity Exchange Inc., New
York Coffee and Sugar Ex-
change and New York Cotton &change.
Flood, Tide
Soak Autos·
On Bal Isle
'Flood damage from Sunda,t'I
t>lorm that dumped more than
an inch of rain in Newport
Beach was limited to a few cars
parked on the Balboa
Peninsulathatgotflood1!d.
Faoodiog occurred when the
morning downpour hit at the
same \ime as a high Ude of 6.S
feet. '
Jake Myndetse. director or
s:enoral services, said aoout :ii.I
•torm drains Qn the Peninsula
and the drains on Balboa Island
that run directly into the bay are dosed at high tide to keep the sea
water out.
The National Weather Service
issued blizzard warnines•for
many areas. For.casters said
up to 2.0 inches of anow iqlaht
fall in some New York Cfty sub-
urbs as the storm continues
through to.nigh(.· The one-day
record rorthecity-17.Slnches-
was set Feb. 5, 1961; the J an. 20
s nowstorm brougbt13.6 inches.
Weather officials, who failed
to predict tbe severity of la.st
month's storm, had been warn-
ing of today's snow since Satur-
day and autborltles tried to take
extra ~auUons. New York Ci-
ty. for example. called out 10
times the normal number ot
sanitation workers for the 4 p.m.
to midnight abift on Sanday, but
officials said snow removal
would still be difficult because
equipment ls in bad abape.
Mo&t of Ne~ York's large
public hospitals were reported
functlonin' normally, but am-
bulances were havin1 dllflculty
getting through snowy cit,y
streets. Joseph T. Lynaugh, act·
inf d irector of the He1tlth and llospltals Corp., asked all
employees to report to work ear·
ly at the 17 municipal hospitals.
Road conditions were ex·
tremely hazardous. The speed
Um it on the New Jersey
Turnpike was cut to 35 mph
early Monday; at midday, It was
cut still further, to 30 mph, on the
northern part of the highway.
Motorcycles and utility, boat and
house trailers were banned. . .•.
State Department of Trusportation. CftWI, trytnr to
salt the streets it\ Philadelphia.
which bad six inches of snow by
noon, were forced to bait at 10
a .m. because they could not get
around cars and other vehicles
stuck in the snow.
Dead Pilot
' Of (:rash
Identified '
A pilot killed in a midair col·
lision of two light aircraft near
Marina del Rey Friday, whicb a
Garden Grove man survived, w-.s
identified today as William B.
Lyon, 33,orLongBeach.
Lyon was district manager of
Airflite.lnc. South, a Long Beach
dis tributor for the Cessna
Aircraft Company. Airflite of·
ficials said he was in a company
plane, a Cessna Skymaster. on
routine dealer calls, when the ac-
cident happened.
The tail of his airc1"8ft was cut ln
two by a collision with a smaller
Cessna 182 piloted by Larry Lam·
boy,«, owner of a Garden Gro·1e
burlgar alarm and security de-
vice business.
Lyon's plane plunged to the
eround, stn.k\ng an unoccuple<J
ear parked at a landing fleld
llear Los Angeles International
Airport; the pilot was killed In·
atantly. .
Lamboy managed to keep his
plane in the air long enough to
crash land on a nearby beach.
where the craft nosed over onto
its top.
Lamboy escaped wilh only a
minor scalp injury.
Federal Aviation Administra·
tlon officials were lnvestiiallng
the cause of the crub. ~
•
. . . .. " . .. -.... . "'
E·xe_Soe
AvcO for • .
Rights •I -.
lty ToM BAKLEY Ol .. bell, ... Mlit .•
An Oranse Count)' ~
court jwy ts bearing tu -lo a lawsuit filed by ,..,. f~
Lacuna Niguel resldenta wbO
''chim Avco Corumanlty
Developers Interfered wttb tbeir property rights wbell they buUt
homes in the La Veta tract
seven years ago.
The plaJ.nUCCs In all aet.Son that
seeks $12 mWJon m dama1e1 are
Eugene W. Ventre of Coat.a
Mesa, Floyd and Sharon
Harton! of Yorba Linda. Pet4a
Peterson of Diamond Bar and'
Chester Lautienbeiser of AJll)le I
'Dptoeing W.ith Ting
Entertaine1· Tiny Tim <ind actress-model Vi ctoria
J ohnson ~hare a dance at Studio 54. a Manhatta.n disco
that has become a watering hole for celebrities.
Vandal's Parents
Make Reparation
-
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) -The
parents of a 14·year-old bOy
were so upset when he van-
dalized his school that they did
chores around the school and
went into debt to make repara·
tion and J'Cstore the family's
honor, school officials say.
"A lot of the time, the parents
want only to defend their child,"
said one official at Westridge
Junior High School where $4,000
damage was done during two
break-ins in September.
School board member Ethel
Kennedy commended the famlly at a school boud meeting, &RY·
ing the boy and his parents werf•
immigrants who had moved to
Florida.
"I just wish most American
pa rents would res pond this
wa·y," Mrs. Kennedy said.
School officials asked that the ·boy's identity end nationality
damage and meanness ai; was
dis played in these cases by van-
dalism," Weslridge Principal J .
C. Tyson said.
But even as he was deliverini
a letter recommending the boy
be expelled from school, the
youth's father was in the prin·
c1pal's office offering lo make
amends.
"It's a parent's r esponsibili·
ty," said the boy's father . "His
sin is my sin. His punishment is
my p\Jbishment."
School secretary Peggy Smith
recallf the father's horror Qf his son's deeds.
")ie said, ·I Lake total responsibility. My son says he's
guilty so I 'm euilty.' "she said.
Valley. ' The act.loo ls ~ eounier •uit tot
a lawsuit filed aeainat tbe five !
by Avco, in wbicb the develop-'
men t company sought $12 l
million in damages. t
The Avco lawsuit never l
reached the trial court and ap-;
pears to have been abandoned
after a series of pretl'Ull J'Ullnp
went ~gaJ.nst the ~velopment t\ company.
Avco lawyers argued In. thatae· t tion that the defendants, who are
the plaintiffs in tbe current t
Jalt'suil ~fore Judge Robert H.l Green, unlawfully conducted real
estate transact.ions from their
homes. I
Plamwrs• attome1 Herb B•fif c
has described the aUo;atton dur· ,
ing the current trial as "pure !
fantasy" and accuses Avco 9fl
fillng the lawsuit as a form of:
harrassment. :
Hafil said his cllents wlll)
.testify that Avco tried to Impose 1 buildlng restrlcUons on homes in
the La Veta tract seven years l
ago when the company ltnew full I
well that no such restrictions I
could be Imposed in the ar.,a. l
' He told the jUry in his opening :
statement that ''Avco always :
backed down when anyone pro-:
tested at the way in wbicb his ~
home was being forced to con·:
1orm to Avco concepts." :
' And he arg~ that Avco:
sought to impose architectural i
restrictions on homes in the La .
Vetn tract to ensure that valua-:
t ions on nearby property were:
not arrected by designs that did"
not fit in with Avco plannin~. J
Hafi! satd a key witness wt.a!
be Garden Grove engineer~
Barry Lippert. who Ls still=bl '. to coUect "$1.1 mlUlon Judgmen
against Avco that wu a
him by an Orange County-:
Superior Court. jury nearly fouJ::
years ago. ,
Unfortunately. when a high
tide occurs during a storm, the
rain water collects until the tide
subsides and the drains can be
r eopened.
Gordon Tait, a meteorologist
with the Nation a l Weather
Service in Philadelphia, said
there were dif!erences between
Monday's storm and the one
Jan. 20.
House Fire
Under Probe
In Newport
Newport Beach fire in-
vestigators labeled as "v~ry SUS·
picious" a fire that gutted a
s mall Newport Heights home
this morning.
· not be disclosed to spare him
problems al the school to which he
was tl'a~nferred in Orange
County.
"Ile was very distraught. He
was very sincere. He said, ·1
want to do so mething ~ -
anything -to repay the school
for what my son has done. I am
so ashamed.' "
The father, his wife and their
five children showed up on two
Saturdays in November to pick
up trush around the .school.
A vco's appeal against that
award is before the California'
S11preme Court and will, Li~
·predicts, go before the Unltf(I
itates' Supreme Court before the1
issue iii resolved. I .
ll was successfully alleged for~
Lippert ln the trial that he was
the viclim or a conspiracy by!
Avco and other defe.ndanll to ,
slander him and his tiUe to pfo•I
perty in the La Veta tract. 1
Mynderse said ''three or four" cars parked in the Peninsula
street ends had waler over their
floorboards Sunday morning but
he s aid no area homeowners re-
ported any flooding.
Accordin~ to Mynderse, the
car flooding was the only prob·
lem reported Sunday. He said
there appeared to bave been no
furthel' el'0$1on of the roadway
on San Miguel Drive.
Portions or that ro:id have
been blocked off for repairs of
damage that occurred during
January's storm~.
Mesa High Offen
·Income Tax Co111'8e
A tree, i&ve-week Income tax
wbrklbop for Indochine&& begins
this Saturday at room 119 of
Costa Mesa High School, 26SO
Fairview Road.
J .. ternal 'Revenue .Service
employees will be on band to ex·
plain ta.'C Jaw8 .. at the protnm
sponsored by the Newport-Mesa .
Unified School District's Adult
Education D,epartment. For
more information call 556·3301.
OM_.COAlf
DAILY PILOT
.. The last one was a wet.
heavy snow," he said. '.'It was
hard lo move around. This is
eolder and dryer."
In Connecticu t, tbe snow
began about 3 a.m. and more
than 4 inches had ac<iumulat~d
in parts or the state by mid-
mornil)g. Part of the Connec·
ticut Turnpike waa closed
because of a three-car accident
and travel on other r oads was
restricted.
Forecasters in Massachusetts.
where eighl to 16 inches of snow
is expected, wamed that tides
will be two to four feet above
normal Monday night. and said
low-lying areas faced the threat
of floods Monday nlgbt and
Tuesday morning.
In Rhode Ialand, the problem
was complicated by a
threatened strike of state
employees, including some soow
removal crew&. Negotiators for
the workers 1cbeduled a meet-
ing tonieht lo decide whether to
call a walkout.
Trash Blaze .:
In NB Blamed
OD: Cigarette
Fire· department spokesman
Art Morton said the origin and
cause of the blaze al 414 San
Bernardino Ave. are under in·
vestigatlon.
The fire broke out in the small
home al about 8 a.m. Firemen,
ca lied to the scene by a
neighbor, said the fire gutted the
home before they could ex-
tinguish the names.
Morton said the home is ap-
parently in escrow and w~ un·
occupied at the lime Qf the fire.
He said damage was esUmated
at $25,000.
Newport~an ...
Hurt in Fall
A young 'man apP.arently
despondent over a· fainUy quar-
rel is hospitalized tQday 1 after
teapina from a Newport ~ach
apartment balcon,-.
The victim, 20, who took t.he
plunge from a ra1llng at 1880
Park Newport. his residence in
the Park Newport Apaf\ments.,
sustained apparently s~us in·
juries ~ be lan4ed on his •
bead, police s~d. . ·
lie was admltttcJ to Ho11 Mesnortll ~ with a trac-. hte4 jaw, a COllC\IHloll and br0ken sboUlder tollowlnr the
leap .f~om tb• 1eccu1d·lloor
MICOQ to Uw s-wment below • •
The boy and a l6·year·oia
com pan ion were charged in
November with vandalizing the
school. Offices were rans acked,
fife extinJuishers discharged,
food ~u;nped all over the
cafeteria and musical instru·
ments destroyed.
"Never in my years of ex-
perlence have l observed such
TONIGHT
COSTA MESA CITY COUN·
CIL -Regular meeting, City
Hall, 6:~ p.m.
TUESDAY, FEB. 7
••BEHIND THE
HEADLINES" -Dr. Giles T.
Brown lecturer, OCC Forum,
7:30 p.m.
"A DOLL'S HOUSE" -South
Coast Repertory Theater,
Tuesday.Sunday through Feb.
19,8 p.m.
Joh Service
Helps Mesans
Find Work
An audio-visual presentation
on how to get a job 1s reportedly
helping as many as seven out of
10 young Costa Mesans find pa rt.time or fu ll·ll me work
through the local Youth Employ.
mentServ1ce <YES).
Carolyn Sweetland. executive
director of YESI says the free a udi o-v is ua workshop
sponsored by Pacific Telephone
1s glving youngsters added
knowledge about the techniques
needed to find work. The lO·mlnute presentatio11
may be vlewcd Monday tbrouah
Friday from l to 5 p.m. at the ·
YES office al S42 W. a9th Street.
The local office processes
nearly 5,000 job appUcations an-
nually for youths aged 1(
through 22.
For more information on the
new program call YES at
642·0474.
Lippert testified In the 1974 fl
trial that he bought a two·st.ory
house in Mission Viejo and then J
• attempted lo move lt to a site he J
bought in the La Veta tract/
Laguna Niguel.
He claimed Avco sought to
prevent the relocatloo ot tbf!
home and engaged in a aertes of
public meetings, distributed In·
accurate reports and resorted to
vandalism lo force blm away
rrom the properly.
F18h Show Planned
At Plaza Village
A koi flsti eot'npetltlon an~
show wilt be held March 4 and.,
al South Coast Plaza Villa~t
Sunflower and Bear 1treet.1~1*
Santa Ana. , r·tt
The colorful fish wW be on~
play from noon to 5 p.m. :w days. Japanese dancen wn •
perform on tho mall between
a.m. and2 p.m.
' •
................. ' .... • •• > •
Monday, Febr'Utry 8, 1978 f OAllYPllOT A3
Mo~e Rain Alieai for Dr-enehed Co~t i
So~ C•li Orl)ia's welcome SUn.ny spell or the last rew weeks
may be over for a while, but
weather forecasters say they're
nots l1l'e yet.
Don DePauw or the National
Weather Service said the
forecast la for variable cloudi-
Deu with a 10 percent chance of
abo•e.ra tonight and Tuesday, IJian there ls a pogslblllty of more
llllowers on Wednesday.
He said the rain ts due to a
s ystem or fronts known
technically as s hort-wave
troughs moving in from the
Oregon-Washington coast..
11owever, DePauw said most of
the rain Will tall on Northern
California.
Across Orange County,
rainwatchers went into action
over the weekend to tally the
rainfall.
J . Sherman Denny of Hunt·
ington .Beach measured the. most
weekend wuter,. 1.M inches, for
a season tot.al of 14.51 inches, up
from 1.80 inches last year.
0. nly slightly less, 1.33 inches.
was tallied by Charles Lewis at
Orapce Coa.at College. The
season total there was 14.70
inches, up from 6.16 inches last
year at this time.
Tb~ Orange County Harbor
Patrol at Newport Beach
measured 1.16 inches for a
season total of 12.77 inches.
more than twice Ju t. year's 6.6'
mchcs.
The Moulton Niguel Treat·
UleDt Plant. in Laguna Niguel re·
ported only .73 inches. brinejng
the season sum to 14.90 inches.
Last year to date they had re·
celved .5.89 inches.
John Gietzen of the Orange
County Flood Control District
noted that 1.09 Inches had been
received in S~nta Ana, for a
season total of 13.49 inches com·
pared to 6.'8 inches last year.
Santiago Peale on Saddleback
Mountain received exactly one
inch of rain, Gietzen said. bring·
ini its season tot.al to 32 inches.
up from 14.60 inches last year.
Gietzen said exact ficures
comparing this season so flU'
wlt.b pre\'ious seasons to .date to
determine ll t.bi.1 is a record &f9
not available, but that beeaus•~
of tho weeks of sunshine dqrin&
what la normally a rainy period.
he doubts any record hu been
set.
However. HuntlnJ::~ Beach's Denny poin.ted out • normal ·
season throogll the end of June
is 11.32 inches for bit city. and that this year tbat figure bas
alread.y beeJl $Urp&S.'Mld maaths
early.
Mi11ion Westminster a Blaze
I
'
(
-.,. •. ,..,.....
SANDY KUPPER NOW 'ONE OF THE BOYS' IN DETROIT
City's First Female Firefighter Holds Her Badge
Fiery Baptism
First Female Firefighter
~
DETROIT (AP) -Sandy Kupper says she will hang onto
her $14,700-a·year job despite the occasional "prank" of a fellow
firefighter -such as cutting off her oxygen.
Miss Kupper, 20, was presenled badge No. 1437. signifying
she survived the four-month probationary period that followed
graduation from the department's Fire Academy last Sep.
tember.
SHE JS DETROIT'S FIRST female firefighter but says she
does not feel accepted by most of the men in the department.
'1Jt. wu a tough-llm•that I wouldn't necessarily want lO l'e·
pe11t," she said, speaking of her probation. "But lt was also
n .. tcachin~· cx()('rience-how to~more toler ant person. but
also more agJlressive ...
"Being t)lc first woman at the ompany, l went through a
mess of hazing, heard at least 5,0QO Jokes, and had several
very uneasy times while out on fires_
"BllT I st:R\'lVF.D. I DID my job, and that's what counts.
Now it·s my tum Anybody thal hassles me is going to get
hassled n J{hl back "
Durin g Lhc probationary period at Engine Company 32, Mass
Kupper s::iys she was given some bad times, such as having her
mask ripped off when fighting a dense smoke fire. Once
someone turned off the air supply on her backpack oxygen tank
durln g a house fire.
"Some guys may have thought that was funny -but it
scared ... me and made me angl'y," she said.
HER ONLY INJURY OF consequence in fighting about. 15
house fires was a minor nail puncture in her derriere, suffered
while crawling out a bedroom window. ·
.. Naturally, everyone wanted to see lhe wound," she said.
.. I thought about showing it to them -but changed my mind."
MeJ)onnell Douglas
Union Seeks N elV
Chemical
Fumes
Battled
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of ... OellJ P>ll« ·~
Flames fed by chemicals that
could have generated lethal
fumes did an estimated $2
milli on an damage to a
We stminster radio-electronics
plant Sunday.
The blaze at Silicon General.
Inc., 7382 Bolsa Ave., was bat·
lied for more than one hour by a
task force of 4S firemen and 15
pieces of equipment. Seventeen
men required hospital treatment
afterward.
Westminster Mall, a s hop-
ping complex with more than 100
stores, is less than 400 yards
from the site of the blaze. It was
largely deserted when the first
alarm came in at 7:48 a.m.
Hydrochloric, s ulfuric and
nitric acids used in maoufactur·
ing at Silicon General created
potentially lethal fumes as the
plant burned, firemen said.
None of the 17 stricken firemen
required hospitalization but the
extreme potency of the chemical
fumes made dangerous absorp·
tion throu~h the skin a
possibility.
The firemen all wore oxygen..-
·back pack devices.
Investigators said proximity
of the devast a ted plant to
Westminster Mall also created
the possibility that the ac1d·
laced smoke might be sucked in·
to its vast air conditioning
system.
lovesticaton old only • few
employees were inside-the mall
adjacent to the San Diego
Freeway when the fire erupted
and as it turned out, they were
nol affected.
Ironically, firemen said, the
Silicon General Inc., blaze OC·
curred just as various firefight·
ing agencies from all or Orange
County were massing men and
equipment for a disaster drill
scheduled in Fullerton.
Severity of the blaze virtually
e m ptl,ed fire station s in
Westn'ftnster and two Orange
County Fire Department truck
com panics from Mission Viejo
were dispatched lo r eplace
them. ' Firefighters from Huntington
Beach, Seal Beach and Fountain
Valley joined Westminster men
in battling the blaze Of Un·
determined origin under the
west county's Net Six. mutual aid
plan.
Despite heavy rains at the
time, il still took the firefighting
ror ce more than one hour to
even control the inferno. which
creat e d traffic jams of
sightseers on the freeway.
Westminster Fire Department
N R d Inspector Dave Merz spe11t more \ egotiation oun 1::U~~~b~~:tug,~a§uf:~
General Inc. plant huntin& clues
Negotiations will r esume
within two weeks in the effort to
break a deadlock between the
International Association of
Machinists (JAM) and McDon·
nell Douglas Astronaulics Com·
pany in Huntington Beach.
... -The threatened JAM strike
similar to one in errect now {or
tbre.e weekS involving the United Auto Workers (UA W) aet~ly
affects Douglas Aircrafl Com·
pany facilities at Long Beach,
Great Lover
Dead-at 7
Torrance, Palmdale ::.nd Van· to the explosive blaze.
denberg AFB near Lompoc as He was on th~ scene.again to· well ' day and aut!lpntte& saad it. may
· be some time before any cause
Spokesmen for the IAM Lodge is determined.·
720 in Torrance said today they
have requested to begin talks
again someUme around a weejc
to 10 d ays from now.
Don Hanson. a Douglas
Aircraft spokesman In charge of
media relations dealing with 'the
firm's labor force, said today no
specltlc date has been set.
The JAM membership voting
10 days ago narrowly turned
down a Douglas wage and fringe
benefits increase oUer by a frac·
tion more than 5l percent
against.
Currently, IAM employMS,
about 1,450 or them at the Hunt.-
Jn gton Beach plant, receive
about $7.23 per hour tor wol'k
which includes constructlon o(
the Delta rocket en&Ine.
Otriclals of the UAW are
claiming their current strike, ln·
volvlng a~t 8,000 employees lai1~l1 workln,c on JeUiner and
orbttal utelllte proJecta, haa
h~rt the gjant aerospace firm.
Hanson, the Douglas labor re·
Jatlona ~pokcamiart, declines w
connrm that.
Rites Slated
For ·Marme
€rash Victim
.,. .........
QUITS UNDER FIRE
Columbia's Begetman
' Columbia's
Prodnction
Chief Quits
NEW YORK (AP) -David
Begelman, under fire for alleged
mishandling of corporate funds,
has resigned as president of the
motion picture and t elevision
division of Columbia Pictures
Industries, Inc., the chairman of
the board of directors confirmed
today. Jn a statement, board
c hai rman Leo J aHe s aid
Begelinan's resignation was
.. errective immediately," he
said.
The production chief resigned
."with the view that. we must re·
s ume a more norm a l at-
mosphere for Columbia," Jaffe
said.
Begelman's resignationwas
was .. effective immediately," he
said.~· Jaffe s · the board had been
salisfie t. its independent in·
vestiga ion of the allegations
was "prompt and thorough."
Begelman bad been r einstated
to his post in December .. with
full confidence of management
and the board," he said.
011 ABCTV's ''Good Morning
America" today, Rona Barrett
reported that an "emotionally
drained" Begelman bad told her
of the resignation Sunday night
jn New York City.
She quoted him as sayin g the
decision stemmed from "an in-
ability to stand by and watch in·
nocent men and women be torn
apart by headline-grabbing ac·
cusat.ions. ••
Balifl Deat'la '.l'rial
Ouster Order . '
Piqued Nurse
By TOM BA.KLEY Of .... o..11,. ...... St.1tff
A nurse who tried lo revive an
a iling newborn infant, allegedly
strangled by Dr. William Baxter
Waddill in the nursery at
Wes Lminster Community
Hospital, told a jury today that
she resented being ordered by
the doctor to leave the nursery
last March 2.
Registered nurse. JoAnn Grif-
fith testified in Orange County
Superior Court that s he wa~
leading resuscitation efforts on
the child when Dr. Waddill, 44,
ordered her and other hospital
staff out of the nursery.
It is alleged that the Hunt·
ington Harbour physician used
his hands to choke the life out of
the child after the nursery staff
had left.
The prosecution claims that
Waddill. after his failure to
abort the se~n-montb infant~
resorted to strangulation and
suggested several other methods
lbat could be used to take the
life of the child.
no prooC that it bad a heartbeat
or c1ther forms of reoocnizable
life while being treated In the
nursery.
Throughout his questioning,
Watson has reterred to the vic-
tim as .. the product of con~p.
tion," "this tblng •• 8Jld 0'thts
creature.'' By contrast prosecutor Robert
Chatterton refered to the victim
as .. the baby," or ••the Infant•
and argues'tbat there bas been
abundant. evidence tbat the cblld
lived aft.er it survived a saline
abortion administered to the
unw~ lB-year-old mother.
Riverside
Man Held
In Slaying '·
Mrs. Griffith, now in her
fourth day on the witness stand. By GARY GRANVILLE
told defense attomey Melbour Anahei: .. po~,....:question-
W atson that she was .. disap-i id t....a .... ·
pointed and angry" when Wad• ng 8 Rivers e tnan VtM14J an connectloll with tbe bludeeoning dill ordered her to Jeave the deaUa. of an elderly m an in a baby. ; d .-6...u._ Sund aft . Shtf •••lit .&he felt alllf tota eecota ·hand aVJIS"V ay er,
another rtune at the tlme that nooa and tbe beatinl ancl rOb-
wad dill bad betrayed the trust bery of a liquor store clerk a few hours later. invested in him as a physician Police identified the murder· when he did not allow her to con-tinue efforts "that would have robbery·assault suspect as. Stephen C. Hokey. 24. o( given the baby a chance." Riverside.
But she denied under intense Hokey was arTeSted after the
questioning that at one point had battered liquor store clerk
her weeping in the witness stand grabbed a convenient stick of
that she ever regarded herself in wood and chased his assailant.
Watson's description of 'a self· 'dential 'gbbo hood appointed savior." ~to a res1 ne1 r · In a sweep of t h e "Don't. you tend to look on neighborhood. police reportedly
yourself today as the hero or flushed Hokey from a hiding
March 2?", Watson asked the place, arrested him in connec-
witness. tion with the liquor store rob-"Not really, .. Mrs. Griffith bery and began ihvestigatln&
said. "I was just doing the best. I any possible link with the
could for a baby that needed second-band stbre murder.
help." That slaying was discovered
The . defense contends that ·shortly after 2:30 p.m. when a
Waddill cannot legally be customer in the store found a
charged with murder because still-unidentified elderly man Jy. there is not suffici~nt evidence ing behind a counter.
to show that the child was alive Police belleve the man died as
in the time that elapsed between the result of two massive beat.
its delivery and s ubsequent ing wounds inflicted about his
death. head.
Wats.bn argued that the child's They said both wounds ap-
br~athing ra~e of .four gasps a peared to have been inflicted
minute was msuff1cient to SUS· "with a heavy blunt instru·
tain life and that there has been m ent."
. t
Ai:I ONlY Pll.OT
BLACIC GOLD DEPT. -ft
was Just over a year ago that. the
great race to find oil beneath the
sea be&..an oft our shoreline. The
locattoif was a place known as
Tanner Banks, rou&hly 85 miles
off our beaches and 40 miles
from San Clemente Island
The results of that hunt re·
main clouded in corporate mystery today.
All or th.is was the result of
federal leases gr anted to oil
companies in February of 1975
for conslderaUon of nearly $175
miUion.
Now when oil companies drop
that kind or Long Green, you can
figure they figure there's a pret-
ty good chance that sizeable de·
posits of black gold lurk out
there beneath the octian bottom
which, at Tanner Bar\ks, is un-
der some 700 feet of water.
STILL, THAT'S A lot of jack
to put on the line for one roll of
the dice. The search for un-
dersea oil ls still a gamble.
Four companies, Shell, Gulf.
Texaco and Exxon, were the
main competitors In the hunt.
Each had bought a piece of the
action in the 1975 federal sale.
Gulf was one of the first into
the race, steaming out of Port
Hueneme in November of 1976
with a $40 million self-propelled
floating platform named the
Aleutian Key. The others got in-
to it about the i.ame time. The
hunt \\a~ on
SLOWLY THEN, throughout
lai.t year, reports filtered back
from Tanner Banks that the
companies had punched down
their exploratory wells and then
pulled out.
Gulf, for example, reported it
was still drilling on Jan. 16. On
Jan. 18, company s~kesmen
:-.aid the well had • bottomed
out'· at 9.000 feet. Did they find
'l1I ?
"l can't answer that ques -
lion ," a co~mny spokesman said at that tlm .
Later repo suagested that
all four compani were pulling
out of Tanner Banks.
THE CLEAR Implication here
is that the oil people failed In
I hei r quest for offshore
petroleum. They rolled tM dke
and came up snake eyes. They
hit dry holes. They lost.
Don't be too sure.
You have to remember that
the companies were drilling ex·
ploratory wells. They don't use
these holes for production even
. if they do strike oil. The ex·
ploratory hole Is capped and
•
they come back later and J>\lf\ch
down another well for produc-
tion purposes.
Then only thl.s weekend, a new
report by the U.S Geological
Survey was released out of San
Diego Indicating that a major oil
field has been discovered at
Tanner-Cortez bank. Thls is In
the unleaaed section. The
federal ~pie estimate tbls new
oil p ool could )>roduce 235
million barrels of oil.
AND SPEAKING of the
pullout of the aforementioned
four oil companies, U.S.
Geological Survey spokesperson
Joan Werner sald, "Our as·
s umptions that they found
nothing are probably wrong."
To date, the companies }\ave
remained mum, as they have
every right to. Oil companies
have been known to play cat and
mouse with each other. You drill
and pull out, making lt look like
you mlued when actually you
struck it rich.
The CIA should take some
lessons from our oil people.
. . . . ·~
NATION I WORLD.~
.
Czech Hijacks Jet
Fake Bomb AW B i d /or_Asyluin
ly Carlsbad. on a cheduled
flight to Prague. penallf of five yean \n prllon. FRANKFURT, West Germany
(AP) -An unarmed, 24.year-
old Czechoslovak man, aeeklnf
political refuge in the West, U!led
a fake bomb today to hijack a
Czechoslovak jeUlner with 46
people aboa rd to Frankfurt,
police said.
: THE TWO IDJACKERS are
s till awaiting trial in a
Frankfurt prison on charges of
interfering with air traffic,
,wllich carries a maximum
. In a prevlou1 case. Ru.~
Becvar, 2e, wu aenten.c:.ed .
1
elaht yeara lmpr-isc>nment by
Munich court tor eoounao
ing a Soviet-built JJyu.shin 80 ..
,. with 110 passengers and crew t
.Munich in October, 1976.
~
Nkaraguans Protest .,~
Women and .children staged a demons tration in El
P araiso. Nicaragua, to call for an end to President
Anastasio Somoza'::. dictatorship. Meanwhile, voters in
much of the country boycotted municipal elections today
in C1 n anti-Somoza effort. The protest follows nearlv a
month of demonstrations and a general strike. ·
U.S. Builds Force
In Ethiopia Battle
NAIROBI, Kenya CAP ) -Both Ethiopia and Somalia reported
new fighting in eastern Ethiopia whale Somalia made a new appeal
for Western arms. •
The United States brought its nav;Jl force off the Horn of Africa
back to Cull strength because of the general tension in the area, U.S.
Secretary of Defense Thomas
Ross reported today from
Washington.
Ross said a destroyer nf the
U.S. 6th Fleet normally assigned
to the Red Sea area was sent to
the waters off Ethiopia to join a
U.S. destroyer and tende r
already there. Usually three
vessels are kept in the Horn of
Africa area but one destroyer
was in drydock in Naples.
Defense Department offici~l re-
ported that a destroyer o( the
U.S. 6th Fleet was rushed out of
drydock in Naples and sent to
.1oin three American wars hips
already in the Red Sea off
Ethiopia.
Frankfurt pollce spokesman
Hans Neitzel told a news con·
ference the hUacker. identified
as Vladlslav Molnar. surren·
dered m eekly to German
authorities after the twin jet.
Soviet-built Tupolev 134 landed
here. It was unknown whether
his requelit for asylum would be
granted.
NEITZEL SAID the hijacker
slipped a note to tho pilot soon
after the Praiue·boqnd lll&ht Of
Czechoslovakia's state·owned
CSA airline took off from East
Berlin's Sehoenefeld airport. It
warned that Molnar had a bomb
in his briefcase and would det·
onate It unless the ellot flew to
Frankfurt, Neitzel said.
In Frankfurt, Molnar handed
police a briefcase with two pro·
trudlng wlres connected to a
switch fixed to the handle. "A
careful e.xamlnation ... showed
it was a dummy," Neitzel said.
It was the seventh hijacking or
a Czechoslovak airliner to West
Germ any since 1970.
THE BONN government has
refused to return air pirates to
the Soviet bloc nation in the
past, but so me of the
Czechoslovak hJjackers have
been convicted and served
terms in German prlsons.
Less than four months ago, on
October 11, a 29-year-old
Czechoslovak man and a 22·
year .old woman companion hi-
jacked a twin jet Yak-40 carry-
ing 24 other passengers and a
crew of five to Frankfurt.
Brandishing pistols smuggled
past security guards, they took
over the plane shortly after It
took off from the Czechoslovak
resort of Karlovy Vary, former-
'Ne Wayi Oat'
, . • .
Chilly Trio Saved
/ .
, Fr.om O,ahu Ridge
HONOLULU (AP> -The hike becan ln the Mat of da)', an
cursion to see the fruit trees on the lush windward aide of the island
of Oahu.
It ended with actress Kathleen Nolan, former Federal Com-
munications Commission cemmlasloner Nlcholu Johnson and a
14·year-old boy s hiverlna·
through the night on a narrow
mountain ridge,
The three were rescued in
good condition Sunday after fire
department searchers spotted
their smoke signal.
"WE GOO' UP TO A ridge with
a 100-foot drop on each side,"
said Johnson, 43. "There was no
way out without rolling down the
mountain."
"It seemed very clear we
were going to spend the night,"
said Mlss Nolan, president of the
Screen Actors Guild. She was
"Kate" in the former televl!lon
series "The Real McCoys" and
has recently appeared in
television movies and series.
They had started out Into the
Waikane Valley Saturday,
dressed in shorts an<J short-
sleeved shirts. They were guided
by Donny Callaway, the son of
John Callaway, at whose home
Johnson and Miss Nolan are stay.
ing.
THE BOY THOUGHT they
could hike up a mountain and
down the other side. J otinson
said. They hiked about four
miles to the top of tbe mountall'I
then walked about a mUe abil
the ridge, which raneea ~
one lo two feet tn width.
The trail petered out into ~
pile ot rocks. •
"lt was washed out." Jobnsort
said. "We could go back the wa-J
we came, but we didn't llavtt
enought dayUgbt left."
I
THEY BUILT A fire for
warmth and u a signal an4
wrapped their arms under thel•
shirts. lt was too cold to gea
much sleep, Miss Nolan said.
A search helicopter passed
over twice, at midnight ~d at 6
a .m . before spotting them. ,
. Meanwhile, the Somali gov
ernment radio said the rebel
forces Somalia aupportl' In
Ethlopla 's Ogaden desert reaion
infiicted "heavy losses" on the
Ethioplan garrison at Negele, In
the aoulhern region or Sida mo.
H y.011r • _ • . . ~ . · 1
The broadcas t from
Mogadishu, the Somali capital.
said two Ethiopian military
camps were destroyed and large ~uantities of arms and ammuni-
tion were captured.
M EANWWLE. THE Ethio-
pian news agency reported lhal
70 Somali army troops. were
killed and l50 captured In a
"search and destroy" operation
in tlle Karage region east of Ad-
dis Ababa.
British diplomaiic sources
said the Somali Foreign
ministry made Its· new pitch for
arms aid a l a meeting in
Mogadishu Saturday with the
ambassadors oC the United
States, Britain, West Germany,
France and ltaly. The British
said the Somalis did not make a
diteet request for arms, but the
"trend of the conversation"
made clear that's what they
wanted. ~ by the United States. the
Western allies have reCused to
supply Somalia despite the huge
amount of arms and planes the
Soviet Union baa been pouring
into Ethiopia and U.S. In-
telligence reports that 4,500 So-
viet and Cuban personnel are aid-
ing the Ethiopians.
THERE HAVE BEEN re·
ports, however, that Iran and
Saudi Arabia are sending the
Somalis some o( the American
arms they are buyin& in vast
quantities.
Although Washington gave no
Indication of reversing Its re·
fusal to arm the Somalis, a
savings 1qsf1tut1prt
sees you like this, come see us.
At First Federal Sa~ings, we'll
never treat you like a number.
Never.
We know the importance of personalized
service. And we make sure all of our
depositors receive it. Every time they
come in.
That's why we have some "very
special people" who check all our offices
every month for "a smile at every
window." These people, whose identities
remain a secret, perform actual
' transactions to evaluate teller
performance. Later, extra .. courteous
employees receive cash awards for a job
well done.
With these "courtesy
check-ups'' we're taking extra
efforts to try and give you the
best service in town. If that's
what you're looking for, stop
by and see us today .
rf
,.
I
·1
'
Modem,.day 'Ripper'
BlameH in. 1 Deaths
.,
.. ,
I
\
•
. ... . .., ......... ' ... _ ,
). . ... -............... ,. .. , ... .. .. •"' ....
AmRMATH OF UNU$UAL HIGH WINDS THAT HIT SACRAMENTO AREA SUNDAY..,.... . , ... Five Homes Were Demollahed In Mobile Park, Minor lnJurtee Reported •
ioroi PunChes North; '
any Homes Destroyed
By Tbe Associated Press
rrwo new storms h ead e-0 for
orthern California today as the top
half of the state shook orr the effects
~~~~~~~~-
Ballot Nixed
SACRAMENTO (AP>
-A state attorney
general's oplhion says a
taxpayers' group in
Placer County can 't
legally use a local ballot
initiative to limit the
county 's power to in·
crease property taxes.
--...........
LOS ANGELES (AP) -¥1 oris~re liq1'effe(,
njtural gp.te_rmtnal would cut th& risk of an LNG
spill, but. it would take 'longer to 6ulld and be mu4b
more cosUy, i. 'callfomia Coastal Commission re.
portsaya.
.. Construction ol an offs.hol:'e LNG termiaal ls plwyslcally and tecbnoloaicaJly feasible, '1 the staff
said in a snllmlnary report. "Jt would not req.tre
m-.)or MW technology developmept, but w,hat is
needed ts site·specific de~ign work ...
TRI!: STUDY actnowledited. however. tb.&t
suitable otrshoft sites would not be easy to find.
. The state Public Utilities Commission is st.Udy·
mg several onshore sites for the first LNG
terminal ln California. The Leplature bad d~·
ed the coula.\ commission to study the feasibility
of offshore sites.
• . ,I
TUE OOASTAL commission said an offshore
terminal atl&bt work for a aecond LNG site. w for
a fl.rat site if all current sites betn, studied are r•
Jecled. Critics maintain that an on.shore LNG aite
poses a threat in the event of an explosion.
THE OFFSHORE terminal would be "separat·
ed from populations by mlln of water which would
vaporize and dissip ate an accidentally spilled LNG
pool," the atudy said.
The stqdy noteCI some new en·gineering tech·
niques might have to be developed to get the plPellne
across the ocean bottom. Also, supports for the
storage tanks would have to be able to withstand
strong eatthquakes, itsaid.
BUT SUCH construction would take longer and
cost more than the onshore site currently pro·
posed, the study said. ,
"An accepted engineering rule of thumb is
that anythiQg 'attempted ln the ocean will .take-.
twice as long and cost four times as much as on
land, U_it is possible at &11," tbe study nid.. · • , I' ...
THE OFFSHORE terminal proba~ •ould ,
have 1to be b1.1Ut relatlveJy close to the coast. said
the stu<b', be/ore the conUnent.l ebelf dropa off to
e xtreme deptm. ·Also, tt probably could not be
bl.lilt north of Point Oonee~ becaue tbat put
of the coastllbe b batteffcl b7 HYCe s&orml. we
report sald.
Areas that would fill tbe \lU are in tlW astenl .
end o( the Santa Barbara Chunel and ta Santa
Mollica *"d San Pedro bays, ·~ -... jast
judged inconslstent with the eoacept of remot. aft..
ing for potmtially hazardous LNG t.ermlDals.." the
report said. • • ·
OTHER SITES considered pcssittle. ill adcli·
lion lo the eastern part. of the Santa Barbara Chan·
net, w~ off Camp Pendleton ln San Dleio Coun-
ty; Bechers Bay at Santa Rosa island and tmee
areas at Santa Cru.i Island. Both those islands are
olf the Ventura.Santa Barbara coast.
4 Serve for Speed
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Fov mea ~
ed with tM Hells Aqela motoreyde dub w.e MD-
tenced to,tederal prison after pleaclln& aullt1 to ift.
volvement in the manufacture and sale d ...
pbetamtnes -speed.
U.S. District Court J~dte Samuel Conti
rejected pleas for probaUpn, saying "society Just
can't tolerate such a situation .•. soclet)' sbouta be
made to know you can't c:ommit crimes ol this
nature ... nobody ls cryln1 for the victims'' ot us·
ing speed. .
A maximwq five-year sentence wu bni>osed
on Bobby Vernon Ensland. $5, an Oak1an4 trDck
driver, who pleaded guUly at mldl!'lal Jut
December to lllegally manufaeturing the druf. ~ a wild weather front that sent
werful, rain·laden wlnds charging
bore to cause widespread damage.
·Winds packing eusts clocked at
J.POre than SS miles an hour felled
trees, one or whlch kllled a man, and
downed power lines along a stretch of
~veral hundred miles. On the
yolden Gate Bridge, a car was blown
from the southbound lane to the
no,rthbound lane.
County a4',horll.ies said 50-ycar-old
Harvey Cross was killed when a
redwood tree over three feet in
d ia mete r fttll over his house,
crushing him. And in Hillsborough, a sudden ,--------------------,.----------------------------
' THE STORM· punched into the Bay
Area with lightning speed, accom·
panied by thunderous, leaden skies
that s howered rain by the bucketful
on San Francis~. u half·inch in less
lhan three hours. .
1 Before nightfall. the storm had
passed to the east, dumping heavy
snows on the Sierra and northern
mountains. Forecaster Bill Sapp•of
the National Weather Service said ef-
fects from lhe next two s torms-
probablywouldbefeltthroupFriday. y. AT BOUµ>.Ea Creek, Santa Cruz
blast of wind Sunday blew down a
lOO·fool tall cypress tree onto the
home of the Michael Tappe family,
destroyine one side of the two story
house and caving in three bedrooms.
"It was unbelievable ... thank
God nobody was hurt," Tappe s aid.
I N' SACRAMENTO, a 1ust or wind
estimated at 60 m'iles an ·bour
destroyed five trailers in a mobile
home park and 300 persons were
evacuated . Sutter County sheriff's
deputies said.
Jn reports from Northern
California, Lake County sheriff's
deputies said a roof was lifted off a
house in the tiny town of Nice an'd
sailed 20reetintolhe air.
Paclftc Oas & Electric.reported un·
counted thousands of power outages
between noon and at 2:30 p.m. from
Morro ~ay north to Chico. ,
Panel Probes Tragedy ...
At Magic MoUntain
LOS .,(\NGELES CAP) -The
California Department of Industrial
Safety today was seeking the cause
of tho traitic Magic Mountain a niuse-
ment park accident that ended the
hours·old marriage of Miguel and
Cathy Garcia. ·
The 50·foot tumble 9£ the skyride
S?ondola in which . they we~ riding
killed the groom, 23, and left the
hride, 24, in ciritical coodltion, of-
ficials said .
LoeN D"fP Capturefi
OXNARD <AP) -At least 20 dogs
were back in their pens todey after
som~ set 40 anlmalJ Joose by cut·
ting the padlocked gates to the hold-
ing pens of the Ventura Coun'ty
Animal Sheller. officials say.
The breakout was reported by
passersby who noticed a pack of dogs
near the shelte r Sunday.
McCarth• 1t'o•'t Hun
. SACRAMENTO CAP) -Assembly
( ___ ~_:4_TE_)
Speaker Leo McCarthy has rejected
the urgings of some lnfhJential
political leaders to run against Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr. in the Dem·
ocratic primary, the San Jose
Mercury·News bas said.
A s tory from the ne~&'paper:s
Capital bureau quoted McCarthy as
sayinf, .. I'm damn pleased, of
course. but I never let the conversa·
tions get orr the eroond.''
a..ic ie P•• 81t1te
SACaAltfEN'tO <AP) -State Con·
troller Kenneth Cory says Security
Pacific Bank has agl'eed ·to pay the
state t&.4 million that the bank de·
ducted as service charges from un-
claimed accounts.
Cory's office will try to find the
original owners or heirs to restore
the .m~ey, he said.
Ex-NixoD Aide Denies . . '
.'D~ep Tfu:oat'· Role
, ( iN SHOR'l'· )
OpJH;fttio• Leflfb
r .; ..
·-... ••t • . "
..
really gives is
a lot of taste. And
with much less tat
than what I'd
smoked before.
'What arri I
doing about
smoking?l'm.
smoking Vantage'
J/~.S.~
f'Amonds.~'
Regular, Menthol.
and Vantage 100~
\
l
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J
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r1
11
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,11
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at ...
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JD
Jtl
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~ .. _..,. ___ ,_ ......... ,... __ ~OSJll!il!l"....,4--4-"'4S--.+-·---·••"4•-•.....,r-•.-. .... • • .......,.....,..........., ____ _ ....... ,,, ...
; · ~fter months of doing whatever it ls county ·r supe'rvisors do when they realty don't want to do '·anytl)ing, Orange County supervisors this week will once
: again consider doi.ng something about political campaign
refOl'.Jl'! • · \ , ~ortunately, the prop<>sed reform ordinance that
' has,"'1te from the supervisors' earlier deliberations is a
\ forlorl\'1\odgepodge that lacks substance iri many areas. ~ · · For ex.ample , the suggested ordinance would
· establish a fair political practices commission !or the
; county. But the commission would trave few powers. Its
I . membership would come from the ranks of political
1 activists and, in certain circumstances, commission
#r
·members could be removed from t1\.eir posts by countx
supervisors.
Also, the proposed reform measure woµldn 't really
co\ttr:el the influence of high rollers on county
l~ government or end the high·cost campaigns that have
m;t'de'Qtange County a political laughing stock. ·
'l'hiWs because t~e proposed individual campaign
. limit is set at Sl,000 for each election, hardly an amount
within.the spending range of rank and file voters.
1f"eounty supervisors do not ·correct those .anct other
--sliortcomings in the proposed ordinance, th,y will have
done little to put their own we11-indi~ted house in ord~r.
Until now, we have felt the supervisors c~n •. should,
and would respond to the obvious public outcry for
political reform. Now we are not so certain.
..
JC that be the case. then Orange County residents
should line up behind the pol~tical ref o.rm ballot initiative
s ponsored by the group called TIN CUP.
Despite shortcomings we have cited before, it appee'~ the best chance to bring political sanity back to
the cot!lty could well be the TIN CUP initiative.
The Cost Qf Freedom.
The cost of all our insurance premiums has been
rising steadily, and insurance on our security and
. freedom can be no exception.
That was the message in a recent speech given by
Admiral Isaac Kidd who commands both the U.S.
Atlantic fl eet and the NATO neet. •
As a simple example: In 1942 we could build a
destroyer for S5 million. By the early 1970s a similar
vessel cost $65 million. But the price tag on each vessel in
the new missile·equipped destroyer class is a staggering
$1 billion. ·
So who needs all this h pensive floating hardware?
Unfortunately, we do.
Ten years ago the Soviet Navy was. primarily a
rather unsophisticated coastal defen se force.
For reasons not yet clear, the Russians are building
tbesxi~qlves a full-scale glob~ navy with the largest
submal"ine force in any peacetime fleet. They are
launching one pew ,nuclear submarine every seven
weeks. We laUnch one or two a year. ·
The flag of the rapidly growing Soviet "blue water"
navy is showing up around. the wor}d and there already
are enough new Soviet-operated naval bases to threaten
our supply lines, says Kidd. •
An official Russian document s~\s forth the priorities
for this fleet as: (1) to at~ack and neutralize the forces of
the free world and (2) to sever their lifelines.
The divide and conquer theory has never gone out of
style. ..
That's why experts like Admiral Kidd see the future
as something quite difference from the single ''tsig bapg"
approach to war that some use as an argument against
maintaining adequate land and sea (orces.
It's much more likely, Ut their view. that the Soviet
aim is to keep us hom>ing -and occupied ~ with
scattered P.ressure a pplication and power grabs around
the globe. no single ooe of which would justify use of the
· atom""~OJb. . AQd, while we may have a degree of parity right now,
it's. ~ming clear th~t ~he trend is strongly towar.d
eye(a(ual Sbviet1n,tperior1ty if we don't keep pace.
l<ldd's vtews are echoed ·~y Gen. Alexander Haig,
comm~er of the NATO forcea in Europe, He warns of
the groWing superiority of Warsaw Pact land and air
forces-six tanks to one •. eigpt artilieey weapons to one
and two ftrst-llne aircraft to one.
We all can hope that none of our military and naval
"insurance policies" wW have ~ be used -just as we
hope ..we won't need our health, fire and accidebt,
insuf'°ance policies. Bdt we still tr)' to keep them in line
with cfurrent costs. ·
• 1'1:tmiral K:idd tells why, quite bluntly: ''Russia's ·
butld·up or its armed forces is the greatest peacetime
effort ever recorded in history. Never in history has a
nation done what the Russians are doing without an
intent to use that force."
. Freedom, be wquld have us understand. ls not free.
' r· I '
• •
Opinions expreased In the space above are those Qf the Dally Piiot.
~·~on tttl1 pa~ are those of tMlr·authora 1nd wt1• "•ader comment le Invited. Address the Dafly Piiot, P.O. Box~rCosta Meaa, CA 92628. et\one (714) &4M321. . .
U YOQ'(:e cbarled with be-:
Ing 1•oryd~... bear lD
mind It anb' means you eat
rice. · '"
W ASHINGTQN -The hlstcSric
Senate debate on arm& control is
belne Inexorably delayed,
perhaps Into ne.n year beyoncJ
the 1978 elecUons, thanks to de·
velopment in Wasbfngton and
Geneva tied to a single word:
verification.
In Washington. prospects for
Senate ratification of a new
S A L T
(strategic
arms limlta· tioo talks )
agre e ment
are going
down instead
of U$) because
of s.e r ious
doubts about
Sovief com· . . ..
pllance. ln
Geneva, U,S. efforts at veHfica-
tlon are partJy resp(>nsible for
u.pexpec~ delay in negotiating
an-agreemenL
. CentraJ to this-prel>lem ·ls the
Soviet Backfire bomber. The
Senate Insists on verif}callon
that the bomber will not be an
intercontinental weai>on. the dif·
ficulty of which bas s~mled the
U.&.Sovlet t al](s. The U.S.~(Ort
to bar mode rnization or
•trat~gic weapons, another un· . resolved point. also reveals the
limits or verilication. .
Earl Waters
But ques tioni' larger than
verificatlon are raJst'!l:f, Does the
willinjness of U.S. neaotlatocs to
Accept. the Backfire as a non·
str•tegic weapon betra1 o•,t'· eagenans for ag~menti ls th•
U.S. aL&Uipt tD bar mooerntza.
tlon an_ e(f ort t.o compensate for
the -vulnerability or u .s.
Minuteman strategic tnissUe$?
INDEED, expert critics of the
nearly completed SALT II
agreement feel it gives the
Kremlin a dangerous strategic
advantace even if all limits on
the Soviets fOUld be verified.
But tt ls verifica\ion, more un·
derstandable to the layman, lhat
causes unea~e among \lneom·
milted Senator• ~ particularly
John Glenn of Onto.
H•ving supported chief SALT
negotiator Paul Wamke ia his
cfosely contested coAfirmaUon
fight, Glenn was counted on by
the White House-as -a --YOte for ...
ratification. But after attendlng
the Geneva negotiations as a
Senate observer, the former
astronaut came away worried
about verification. Unless
restrictions on the. Soviet Union
are made ,more verifiable than
they are today, Glenn will vote
no on SALT Jl.
Consequently• s enior ad·
.. .
..
. .
THE aUSSIANS Insist.it la
not a strategic weapon, will not
• c'Ount !t In SALT'S n"'merlcal
limitation on strategic wea]IOM,
and will not even mention
Backfire in the SALT D asree-
Dlent...lnstead. they ofter a Jetter
from President Leonid Bre&hnev
promislng not to o:.e the 8ackftn as an inte~tlnental we•pon.
In • recent iotervfew over
RKO General Television,
Warnke told us any Backfire
agreement "will bave to be
sometbin1 which is letalty bind·
ing aod which ls verifiable ...
What the U.S. bas In mhid ia co-
signing Brezhnev's letter to
make it "legally blndin1." But
S1•tn.TA.NS0'18LY, Soviet
uecotJators use th~ non· vwiaab\e &rffment in >reststlng U.S. demands t o prohibit modernluU<lk Of iaterC9ntinen•
tal mtiJlleJ, Tt\11 d~mand is In·
telWled, by preventlnc Soviet
. moderM.at.Um, \o bolst.w t.he
largely dbcreclitea U1¥01eot by
tb• arm& eoftltol c•mm~lty Utat SA.LT ll ~let ~nt•in the Soviet. tbr .. t to Mt'A._ieman
~.--~, Sovle Htotlatora ar6
•d•Jn lll'lt. One recent officl.al C!l·
ble back from • describes
thlt potidoa ~Y let negoUator -Shehukin: "' P' eeiint any im·
provemeot.s to ting ballistic
missiles (f 1' exa~ple ,
CU\cJan~) Wal knSM*iblt and unverifiable. An.1 mllltary man
who wanted to introduce im·
provementl to tll11 systero could
do so, could pat be stopped, and
it was absolutely UQ,Veri.fiJble.:•
The Russlana are saying: we
couldn't stop our mJlitacy iC we
wanted to.
IP MISSILE improvements
are unVerifiable, why should the
Russians complaint The suspi-
cion i.a that Mos~w pJang a~ extensl~ modernlaaUon ol mis-
siles that eome ot it would surtly
be observed. Tbua, tbe .,,a1 cOn·
cem raised by SALT II la aot just lack of verlflcaUon but the Sov~et Unlon'J implacable tm-
provement •ot ltl'•teglc systems
white the U.S. scraps the B·l
bomber. slows development of the MX moblle missile, apd ~rees to limit cru1se mlsslle de-
velopment.
In repl)I Paul Warnke is
known to feel there must be
some measure of confidence.in
Russian (ood Calth. But if such
confidence ta all that is
necessary, the entire tedious
procedure ol SALT negotiations
would seem 1uperfiuou1. Ttle
fact is that Gleu and many
otbef feoce-1lttta1 Senaton lack
Warnke'• ~uure di confidence
in the Ruaal'°5. and that ls the
baalc r•aeon why tbe ad·
minlstratlon II by no 11',)eans re-
ady fOC' ,a SALT. debat.; in the Senate.
State Pension Plans Add to Tax Bqrden
Although the Legislature wfil
be giving its primary attention
to home-owner property Ulx re·
lief durin1 the coming weeks it
should not overlook the causes
which liave contributed to the fn.
ordinate 'bl\rdens put upon
propert.yownen.
It now. ls quite apparent that
one or these cootributou 1o the gl'.O'Win« COits • -• -
of govern-,,,.. ... .._.
ment Ja the"
myl'iad~of ....
publlc 'pen·"
11Jon pro·
grams belDI '
OJ>erated In-
dependently
by the .v~
ou11 local governments.
While attention has been
called to the plight of certain
state operated peoslon plans,
namely those of the teachers,
judges• and legislators
themseh'es, wblch bt<f l>fen hm·
nlng along SfOSSIY. tmderfunded,
the Legislatdre has acted to re-
medy thole l;Onditioos.
The cone~ I DOW •houl4 be
·with the ~ aystema ol the
cities, eountl• and special di&-
tricts, some of which are
threatening the fiscal integrity
of such cities as San Francisco,
Oakland and Sacramento and
edging them to the brink of
financial disaster.
Fortunately, for many others,
the cities and counties which
had ttte wisd9m to contract wfth
the Public Employees RetJre.
ment System, which operates
the fuhd for state employees,
these programs are relatively
sound and amply funded.
BUT THOSE that have ecoe 1t
alone have been subjectecf t.o
pressures due to "leapfto1gin1"
wherein employees of one gov·
ernmental entJty match benefits
with mote ienerous aystems and
. win benefits with little or no at-
tention to the impact on fundin1.
Until recent years enrich·
ments of local pension proirams
which required legislative sanc-
tion found that •pproval •lllily
obtained as the la•makers act· eel wlthQttt awareness' of the
overall eff ec:ta.
Thia has been partly corrected .
as the Aaaemt>lt and Senate
establlabed committees, staffed
witb ~t penoQQel to ad-
vise the solooa of the fiscal lm·
pact or enrichment proposals.
Even so there appears much if
yet t.o be done to bring order to
the public pension proira~
within the state.
An awareness of this was
evidenced by Senator Newtoo
Russell who, as chairman of the
Senate Committee on Public
2mployment and Retirement,
held liearinga during the winter
legislative interim to dtacusa,
among other thln,a, w~ or
not the time bad ettme to c<IO·
solldate state and local govern·
ment pensloo 9rogums.
RUSSEU..'S committee devot·
ed considerable time to studflnl
the quesUon of a ~ermanent
legislative retirement com·
mission which would prepare
audits ~ actuarial reports to
guide the Lea1slat"" in deaUnc with penslan benellt propo-.la.
Teltlmony was received re-
g a rd lng auch commlssiona
whieh now functl°' In U other statet. \
InterestlnalY, the idea ls not
new ln Calllomla and the state
could have beea the leader ID tM
esta bllabment of a retirement
com mtuiqn 'and perhaps
avotdef so19.e of the current
problemihadltheeded tlllJ advice
elven the Le&lalature back in ¥169.
AT TKAT Ume William
Payne, tMI\ executive officer of
the state's PERS, reCQmmendt!d .. a permanent independent com· missl~ to review, develop facts.
cost.a Pel recommendations to
the Le~ture .and the eovernor
on ail JesialatlOG affecUn1 the
several ltatutory public retire-~ent QStems u a prerequlslte to enactment of any retirement
leglllatioo ...
Payne said the obJecUve or
such a coaimlsalon was "to de-:
velop a means of providing re-
tirement allowances and related
benefits to pablle employees ill
the Usht ol employer objectl.es
and Undel' pr9"alllol toDCepU,
an" ln ao doing to follow rea.·
.-.qnably uniform retirement pottct thfOlillbout the several
1-&hlative eantrol aystems. with uauraoce cl proper recop[Uon
and fundlnl /6 the coats of~
ayatemL" .•
... 4 --·. '
..... -. . .... . . . . . . . . .
' ROSEBURG Ore. r:;::;~ ,..-(AP> -The Oreaon
-. Hiahway Department
;: plana t.o erect goat
n
.. n1
J l :
croHlq signs here on
Interstate :S.
Bud George, state
trafflo engineer. says
they will be the llrat
goat crossing sians on
the U.S. llHerstate system .
1 The signs are an at-
tempt to protect a herd
·fl/
1:.i
ti. of stray eoat.s tt:iat craze f\1 on nearby Mt. Nebo and r. • occasionally eo near the
'· "I'm gonna sdy my prayers, Daddy. ts there freeway to eat newly-planted grass at the side anything you wont?" of the roe'd. •1•.: _______ ..,......___, _______ .......,..__ Tiu goats have
911
•6'.)
;.-.9(
"JOJ
·rn
')ti.
' ., '
Ii~
n1;r
rn
Mn
hn,
'?
•Ill .. ,
"Got.a problem? Then write to Pal Dunn. P.al tpill
cut red tape, getting the. anawers. and, action you need
to 1olr~ inequities in government. and bwineu. Mail
your queationa to P.al Dunn, At Your Sermce, Orahge
Coa&t Dml11 Pilot, ·P.O. 'Box 15601 Costa Mesa, 'CA
92626. Aa many letters.as possible w{U be:~ed.
but phofu!d inquiries or letters not includi,ng the
reader's full name. addreis and businen hours' p~
num~connot becon&idered. Thucolumnappearsdai·
ly ezcept SQt11rdcifl'." ~.:j
" d~
..... Btll'ea11 llenete• 0.4'rftw
·~I DEAR PAT: I tithe yearly and change the or-
'g'anizations to which I make my donations. r would
like to know how to find oot if certain charities are
honest, and if they have good reputations.
M.A:. Costa Mes-.
A CoudcU ti Better-8-lness B~-. .. booklet.
"Standards for ChatUible SoUcltaUoaa," bas
valuable Ups for penou who donate to tbarWes.
i.,, For a free copy, write &6CBBB, 1150 nc.b'St. N:W .• . ,4 Washington, D.C. 20038.
I Before making a donation, check any UD· .. I tam Ular charity's reputation with your locaJ BBB
., 1 or consumer protection asency; contribute only by
l check or money order ,nade out to the organJza-;n tlon, not to the solicitor: P._lake sate the charity ls
tu-exempt and n,en-ptoflt to' ~sare the tax·
.,: exempt status of yoir donation; demand a fell H·
·counting of the fwad·~ uses; cheek to see wyt'the
.:'.: organization ls doblg lQ,your comniuhlty, ud re-
roamed the hillside for
several decades and
have no owners.
Two goats were struck
and killed by a car on
tbe highway last week,
prompt.Ing~~ s~P'S·
"I've been cleaning carpets lo Orange 'Ci!:ty
for 7~ years. A few months -90 I gave th'
usual heavy equipment and chemicals hat I
brought Into your hon\e or business.
"Now I have-<Mte latest In heavy duty truck·
mounted cleaning plants. I make tt\8 steam and
mix the chemicals In mv van. I enter your home
with only a wand and a hose.
• 1 member that )'QU do oQt have to accept or pa7 fo-.:
• 1 unordered, unwldted ~laandlae;·
. The CllBB 6a1 c;omplled tnformatioa oa lum-
: l dreds of charitable otJaalaatioas. U yea waat to
aak aboiai s~ tb'1ttles.. send a self-addressed.
stamped envelo~ to tbe b>andl. Be wary of .,,f cbarLUa wla1ch ~taae U;-Abmlt Oauclal ppen·
lion data to tbe CBB'B t.flf,r it bad been req•ested
WE PAY YOU MORE ON INSURED
SAVINGS THAN ANY BANK
"· ,,
tn
at least two times. · .... ... ..
\ Guide Bop Bold Prfl'llefle• ·
DEAR PAT: Is it true that blind persons ac-
tually do not own their guide dogs? A blind frilnd
or mine told me ,this. If that's tl}e case, wh\>'s
responsible !or. ~Y dam au a guide <tog inig~ d~ --~ G.R., CoistaWe~ The gwCle dog belongs lo ._ licensed r ~0091
providing it. Any guide dog ~r ls responsible for
damage done by the dbg he us-. and all, blln~
persons and trainers cany an identification' card,
Gulde dog ours have s~clal rtgb&.s to accom·
... ,! modatethetrdogs, however. Landlordscan•hetuae
,. to rent to • bllnd person, or a trainer, can.'& be re-
fused entry Into a public place. or on any common
carrier ot any ~,el Of place of public accommoda·
&Joa, 'musement or resort when accompanied by •
guide do& nor cu added charges be made beeJllle " I,
·-·~ ..
•'111
"\J '
.'.ft'J!r
oftbedoc. ..
DEAR PAT· I r~eived a 1964 Kennedy bal!
dollar in chance ibe other 4a..r, and saved 1t because
it appeared to be all sU.yer Instead of·part ~p'per.
Then I noticed this-coln,bas the same JFXbead im·
print on both sides. ls it. valuable as a collector's
item?
ltJ ' L,P., Fountain Valley
• •b Aalde from ·H• sUver toatent, thla se-eeM piece ·n · b11 Do nlue at all. These colu were made ID
h 'lJ! Japan aa •a.."enln or la~y p&ec-. aacl tfOld (U
111 iii' sucla In ~ eoQlQ'\ Two Keuedy •ball WOU1n ~'Jvl were cul le halt and ,.., toptbet~ formaa ·-MW
:ot"· ~In. 1'hll cola la Bo& ._.._.a tendel' t.a.e U.S. nd.
• B"1 coald.,.. ~Jted )Y;~ ~UUf l)epultqeD~ •'
fl!' .. Tile • .,..._ II that YP" )lave a laeq .ttlece •4
1s'1~ tonaeone~JOU so, • ..._. ··r
1fr• . • '
./
OTMP CPTil'IOATI! ACCOUHTa:
7 79~ IU"lnuar yl•ld on 7 50%
a Mlnlmum$1 ,000,4yc4ar;. •
6 98% •nnual rt•ICI on 6 75% ~ a !'41nlmum$1,000,30montha. ,.
6 72% . ant:Jual Jleld ~n 6 5"" • Mlfllmurns1,ooo.12~. • V" ~~--~-~--,--------...... ----~~ IXnfA..,. ACCOUWf:
5 9~ annual Jleld on 5 75%
• """ MlftlmumS1,000.~dcryL •
8TAT1!MENT8AVINGl.V®~deWtedmonthlymtil6mentswhentraMIC1lona
have oocurTed, plus r.gutar quartettymtement. S.V~Card
· MfVM ••your puabook for ell cfepolti., wlthdl'IWala and Mrvlcn.
WE · GlVE YOU! MORE ;THAN ARY BANI{ ~ ... ' .,p~b ·~ \~ .
fl!BBBI lmport,;,.t ~
lhaanelalserDlee•
---~-----· ....... ------~~--.SOCIAL SECURITY DIRECT DEPOSl1' ~VICE
"Miracle$ happenl Ttlree ~Imes tht 'dlrt1 way
down deep, quickly but gentry la extracted by
' powerful steam.. No damege to cat~tl. then •
strong vaouum on the wand q~ckly remove•
dirt and water to a stalnlMS steel tank on my
van. -~
"No shampooing, brushing or toaklng. No shrinkage-er
fading. Sterilizes, removes spots and odors. Longerftbe{Uf•.J
No noise. Experienced. Licensed. Llablllty Insurance. ' ·.
Introductory Rates 20% off." John Burton
CARP•T CL•ANBllS. ' . . .
327 W. WtLSQN #60. COSTA MESA 642 55' ~5 Serving all Orange Courtty • ,, :
24 lwan a .daB
7 days II week.
No need to 90 to your ~ank. Once your ac<lpunt
la eatabllshed, pick up tne phone to transler
money_ from your bani< checking aecount-
whlch earns no Interest-to your Gibraltar
Telephone Transfer savings account-which
eama 5V• % cornpoooded dally. Funds aleo
returned to your bank by phone.
Call toll-free ,nytlme, day'w night. from any
part of the State. This tlme-avlng, m<>n9Y"
eatnlng ISel'Vlce la trM When you malntaln a mfnimum
$1000 balance In your )"-eJephone Transfer account.
Minimum transfer amount $100.
, .
i
For mot-e lnlornaade• -MTOEma~nMr;;;;;;,:;;:e (800) 252-0194
OftVISIT TOUR fl£AR£ST Cll!MLTAI OFFICL ----------
EXTENDED HOURS
u
*SIJQAY ........... 11:00t04:00
...... f,Dl~ oMc:la OfllN IMIDA't8: .......................
... ...,.. ............ 11 ... ,... .........
I
I
I 1 I 1
.... .. .. ...... . . . . . ' . , . .., :-"\ .... ~ • •, • • ~ •\. • \ • t t · • • •I • • • •' ·• • • , 1 • • .. • .. . . . . ,, . ,. .
..
OC-·Women's
...
Panel Chief
Setting COals
By KATHY CLANCY °' .. b.tly ...... , ....
It was part-lime work as director of the
Orange Coast College Women's Center that led
Karen Klammer to the doorstep of the Orange
County Comml.ssion on the Status ol Women.
The commission's first admhl.lstrator 1noted,
"In my work at Orange Coast I became aw.-e ol
things being done in lhe county by and.for wornen
and realized how much duplication was being
done
"l reahz.ed how much was being done for
much too small an audience 11nd that was because
it was not known in the county," said the 33-year·
old mother and former teacher
"Doyouwaqttbtquarterlyreporl,theannualrepart,or lT IS MRS. KLAMMER'S hope that the two· DlY~totwf_,,elfyoudon'tatoplootinCatmel.lh. year.old commJsslon can help coordinate existing
that? -programs aa well as seek ways to fill gaps in
a:::::::::11ac111r:;::aa:iaa::z:sr:"""::-'X:;:~::::~2=:;.:!'.:!Ea needed services for county women.
Deaths Elsewhere
S AN l'ltANCISCO
<AP) -Kea.eth K .
B e c lltel, ts, an in·
"'"""~ .... \. ....... '04MS.li, C.C Uli¥CR
.,antt'll• °' 1nrt .. •, panel'! el""r ,..,,_.. 4. I~ h \'Uryl•t'd ~!It•
MAMI, U. C5iif411 & Mil 'ill!ll\)m
G. ,,,,..._.~ MarL.~r, ..,..._ o. " of un-. .,. • .,.._. '•~··~II -.n,"'~1-"•~•· Ge.iro1•. ......,., ......... ,~
Tu.s•er 1 '\'' "'"" c ... "et. t..t PHI\ ' \11,1• MeM•fl 11 ... • tl~lt 1:: Vlt• MotMfy~
HAltMn M. Mf:\..SOt. ... Sil flf .._,,...,._ ....... e.. ...... _,, • ,......_,a. ""'~ "' ..... ~ br. w.--... '"""""· .... . <lllldre11, ••• "\l•••rt He1 .... . •••tllten, .... ., NelM11, Ole,..
Se u eM, "'"" ..... e ... aht e ... t•9fldC1'll~e11. T.oay • ..., \uah "--w --Mn S-.rt f ...... _...._ .. ll,....IE.H-
-·-~ --tltM<l'S -...,.. "'*-"' 1•1'1 _,."' I :Jt ~.M. el All S.111116 f:PhCOIMll
~. '-""' 9Nch. Ca Mn Nt•li•"
-· e ""-.,.°"-eo-v IOr u -·· c"' ..... ea."_.. ",.,...,...., of Pac.ltlc Al\.Qlf'r\ of Nrwpc'' Ur•t.n
•"• HunllnQ~On Holrbour l U\
Pflil(•rtUfl Fl\ht,,q Club ut Nftwpcnt
llMt ll end thv M41rlm C:lub of S•n
0 1eoo ana Or•no~ C:ountr
f'ftt01•rmon1C Sott~IY \rr VI\.•' 1H
raftlements dt Pt:•' F••'T'ilV ( olon1.tl
FVftet(ll Homf', We\lmin\ter, C/14 t
Ut-t~t.
SHIO.t.KI
JOHN SHIGAKI, '""04'nl of C:o-.ta -... c.. p .... _, 9'1,.....,...,..),
IWI el Ille ... tf G, W . $11io4kl WH
surance ex~cutive, civic
leader and co.founder of
the W. A. Be<:htel Co.
('Onstru~Uon ntrn. died
Saturday. 1
~-..,
li\RMINGHA1\1 , Aht.
(AP > Former
i\ I i'I b a m a L ~ . G 0\1,
Albert ~tweJh 75, who
wa!) elccled m.-yor pf
Birm angham in a ~Uib
race aaa,nst the lale luge~ "Bull .. Connor.
dted 'Friday.
TOKYO (AP) -»••cl•• Overton# 6~ Cormer director o the
Japao So~\e\j Ii\ ~ew
York and a leadii\g
fi sure in J apaoese -
Amcrican culJ.ural ·rela·
lions. d~ Thursday.
PRO\'J NCETOWN.
~tasi; fAP) -Jonathan
J . Thomas. 39. who
;.1•akd the 253·fool Pil·
).!l'I m !\lcfT\orial Monu·
nwnt in a £eat lh'lt htls
m·n·r been dU~icaled,
died Thursday in Stowe,
\'l.
LONDON (AP) -Dr.
James Ansell, 63, the
The Laguna Beach resident became the com·
mission's $16,()()()..a.year coordinator Jan. s.
Since then, she has been working with the
commission's 15 members, drafting proposed pro·
jects that the -county advisory group might un-
dertake over t.be ne.i 16 montm. .
CotWtY super vllors, react1ng in part to
criliclstrf from some quarte\"S Uiat the coin mission
has failed In the _pw to.npr~~t ~ ctq!f&·section of 'Vf~.wpOll\ts. wtJl be a skeO to alfPl'Ov~ \M(t )ltlt>·
jec(s 110Jbet4ne ln March • 4 :
"~J y,flop.,. Tltt\T \he oOIJ'P\USiOf\ ~·n fir!~
project• tor wtyoh thete is. a ~ll-eslabli1heti need
an\J whi~ll are ••Pl•-.t\t \ti tU f•ctjc)p of {he c~unm\lttt\r l\s weU aa ~ mtn"'I~ ·• Mn. Klalbm~sald.
Mrs. Klammer, 'fheae husband, Tom, teaches
English at Cal Sta~ hllerton. said it was her ID·
terest In both a4~lrttat~alion and countywfde
women'li luu. that prom pted her to seek the c!om·
missiqtt assignment.
·• At Orange Copt t found myself get,lng in-
vol\ted ln Issues that ~e much broader than at
ttte college district, i. ah. explained. ·
Two Orange CO\ft College programe; she ~piped develop include a new progiam for tounty
.newcomers and a six·week prograwp for so.called
dl11placed homem~ers,-women who in the past
were financially depend~nt upon another person
but suddenly are alone. .,
BOTH ARE SCHEDULED to begm at Orange
Coast next month, Mrs. Klllmmer said.
Man Facing
Murder /
-emplo't'ff tw .. MIN1<4'1 e .. -.1 Gir9cery St-tit 9-ll Herbor,
aa..e Mesa, C.. Fune .. t .....,Kes .,. •
..-ilng •I Sm1tll Tutl'llll Lemll C.1<1 -.Mort--y.~
doctor who certified the Tri S
death of King George VI al &De
LI\ 1952, died Thursday al" wooo
llONNIE COLLEEN WOOD, rtt•
.... of ~I.A Me .. te. ~HMO e•ay
9" Fet>ruery 4, 1976 .c \"9 eQt ol O
~ -· ol -..1c1111rc1 Wooo OI !.Mite ..... ._ Ca , .-• .,..,_ Wood ol
his home in Norfolk. A man found Insane
e a s t ern England, his aner being charged with
family said. the murders of a Santa
C.a Mew, C.. ...., Mar1orot Woot of
Sefll• AM , c.. IOv•no "~tor ot C::.IOrl•
E...,to<I of "'-1 Buch. Ca., lttn-
-Harris ef S...t.t An•. C:.t M•• ~ w .. • 11 'ff'•• ffnPIOvtt ol II••
... ~ Ntu ll•I In s ... 1. 4M '"
Gravttldt ~"''"'' *"' .,. Mid Wtd -•Y Fellrua<y I, 1'18 Al 10 00 A M
M felrtla,,.,, -mo<l•I Par• In S.tnte
.t.t1e, C:a. wllh lht R.. Oon•ld
Sturo.on ottlc1at11111 tnltrmtllt will De et l'•lrll•~n Mt!mo<lll P•rll Friend'
iwao whn 10 °"Y U-.f,. rtM>itcts m•~
t e ll e l the Smllh Tulhlll Lemll
TEMPLE, Texas
(AP > -Rebekah
Johnson Bobbitt, sister
of the late President
L) ndon B. J ohnson, died or cancer s aiutday at
S('ott and White Hospital
ht•rc.
wu1e11t1 CNpeH11i; 0111s1 .• ~1e NEW \'ORK <AP> -Mesa, C• ""TueMl•v februarr I •'1• trom t .oo .t. Nt. 10 u o P M smllll Wendy Barne, 65, one of
!~:':!,~:~1e Me .. Mor111m t h e .. r 1 r s t m o v i e
c.-ue• personalities lo appear
ROBERT M. CRUC& ol Lnou~a in tt•Jcvision adverlise-8 .. t ll, Ce. P•sMCI 11wey on "1brU<1ry . • , 2, me. survived by 1111 wll• Tony o1 • men ts, daea 1 hursday
L•ouna e .. ch, ca..'°" Mt._, Cruce uflt'r a long illness. She
ot W'5hlll010ft, ~ "*'' of Sen • oi.oo. c.. -•..-c11&1c1r911 ttea1P1e1, clrcw favorable reviews
R1>11er1 111, ,,,_.. .i "'"" ~'I' for her performances in and Mau tf OlrllllWI lloKlel Mrt lle4d • • at s1. ca11>«1ne o1 !llM• c•111o11c the 1933 Brillsh film
Cll\lf<h, u.-8MCll, ca w111> Rev "The Private Lives o(
Myll'• F•UOlll*I ""°' olll<lallno. In· I I l " ., D termtnl WU lllld toClar •I the cnry VI I. ead
As<eftslon Ceme1 ... .,. NttCorm1n End .. in 1937 and "The
Mor1uerv LAOOiN "°~"aired~ II o u n d s o f t h e
LIEL.t. ROLL. rH1m n1 ol S..I• ....... Baskcr\'illcs" m 1939.
Ce. PHM<I -•'I' Ol'I F.i.r ... r, ' 1'11
•I Ille •oe or 91. Survt ... d bv nn ne..,ew Harold Htarin4 ol G••dl'ft
Grove, Ce. """9r•I IWVl<et wlil be lletd on ,_., Ftbr...,r 1, 1411 •I
11 :00 at St.1111 Tlithln L..1"111 kllte ......
Morlu••\I a.. ... 1 wllll lltv, I O
Mt Cl ti Ml of Ille Pree MelltoCll\I ~ti\ o«kllll"I. l111er,,_1 will be
al F•lri.....n ~ P•r•, kftl•
AM, C.. Smith Tuthfll L•mo !><Int•
An. Mori...,,, Cllreclon S41·41JI
I.OS ANGELES (AP>
Funeral services will
be held Wednesday ror
.th e R ev. Crawford
WUliam Brown, 83, who
w as In charge of the
healing ministry of the
~:::;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:::;:::;::::;::;:~ Episcopal Church of Our
.a. llOADWAY
MOll"fUAIY
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642-9150
SM~TUTHIU.4.AMI
WHTCWP cttAPIL
427 E. 17th St.
Costa Mela• ~888 Santa-AN Chapel
518 N. Broadway
Santa Ana • 647-413'1
PlllCI laOT'9S
SMmtS' MOUUAH
&27 Malll St. Huntington Beach ~~9
PlllMMILY
COLOteAL FUMIUL
HOMI
7801 Bolsa Ave.
Westminster
893-3525
Saviour in San Gabriel
unlll his death Saturday.
LOS ANGE~ (AP)
' -Memo,rial services for
Abraham Uncoln Wlrln
the firsl ruu-ume couruiei.
for 't"f! American Clvil
Liberties Union will be
held later. lhis month.
The 77.year·old Wirin
died or a heart attack
Snlurduy.
LOS ANGELES (AP>
-A ·Mass of Christian
Burtal wU1 be aaid Tues-
day lo•KObtrt w. Fllb· u,. vice eteSident of E.
F . MacDooald locentlv.e
Co. of Beverly Hills. The
58·year-old 1''\sher daed.
Thursday of a heart at·
tack while in Hawaih
Ana woman and her
foster son has recovered
his sanity and can now
stand trial, an Orange
County Superior Court
jury bas ruled.
Judge Ph1Tip E
Schwab accepted the
jury 's verdict on
Nathaniel Hicks, 32. an()
ordered him to stand trial
March 27 in Judge Robert
P . Kneeland 's
courtroom. He Is held·
with bail denied.
HICKS WAS jailed in
December 1975 after he
allegedly used a shotgun
to end the lives of Ola
Jean Daniel, 38, and her
foster son, Richard M.
Caywood,lS.
Hicks told the jury
from the witness stand
that he was in the coun·
ty jail "to do God's
work" and minister to
Qther inmates. 1
He urged the Jurors
who subsequently found
him sane to lead godly
an~ sober lives and need
the message of the Bible
whic h be quoted at
length during bis el·
amination.
DEP UTY PUBLI C
Defender James Merwin
told the jury that Hicks
i s a paranoi'd
schl1ophren lc who ls
mentally unfit tor trial.
CoU~eBite
Panel Fol'me,t:
Com mltte~s have
beeJI formed to prepare
for the Jn~atlort or
Chap1')11\ e1e's ,tQth.
presideol, .T. Smfth. ·
on Feb. lT.
PACflllC VllW
.....OllA1PAU
Cem4ttery Mortuary
Chaoet
Oroge Oout commit·
tee members .,.. ~Jlle
'ft'alliitb of Du a POln"t,
-----------thalrmu of the pro• cram commtttee, and
La Verne T h omas of
Laguna .Beac h ;
3500 Pa<:lf1c View Dnve
Newport.
C.litbmfi 044-2100
·BOYS4rEf)
FROMSNOIV 9*pltality.
o.11, l"llel ...... l'Mte
'FILl tNO GAPS'
Karen Klammer
ORANGE COUNTY I POLITICS I OBITUARIES
, By o.c. numNGS
Of .. Delly Pt.let lt.lft
. Legislation authored by As·
scmbJyman Dennis Mangers. D-
Hunllnatoo Beach, that would pro-
v lde $5 million for maintaining
recreational lands bas passed' th~
state Assembly 88·1.
The bill, which now goes to the
state Senate, includes $3 million in
beach fun~ to reimburse cities' like
Newport Beach, ~an Clemente, Hunt·
lngton Beach and Laguna Beach that
attract nonresidents to their'beaches
but pick up the cost of cleaning and
auardlng those beaches out of city
funds.
that calls for S2 milll9n in statefund-ma. T
"These public playarounds -1
particularly the beaches ln t~ are• l ·~
represent -are a resource of
i.tatew1de interest.'' Mat\iel'$ said.
* •• l DONAW W. MCINNIS, a Newport -::.
Beach councilman and former t
mayor, has been named chairman of
the Badham re·electlon committee
by U .s. Rep. Robert E. Badbam, R·
Newport Bea~ ••• DA VE BERGIAND of Huntington
----------Seal Beach. for example, bas been
Beach, 1976 Libertarian Party can-
didate for vice·presU:tent, will be
u m o n g th s peakers when the
Liberta rian Puty of Callfornla
glllhers 1',eb. 17·20 at the Ambassador
Hotel in Los Anaeles.
losing about $100,000 a year on beach Three Sue malntcnanee, according to Mangers Inland lakes apd rivers are· cov·
ered under another section or the bill Se al Beach .....-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9
In Beating
Three Seal Beach resl·
dents who elajm police
beat and kicked them
and then jailed them op
unfounded charges for
24 hoUQ have sued the
cit.,y for damages to be
det~rmlned by a trial
<:ourt. ~tMed Aa defendant.I
in the Ot'angf Count~ S\J~t'lor Co\ltl lawsu~ rt 1-e d by It 1 c tt u r ~tackPQle, Patricia SI •
co~k Ud. he? daughtn',
Shert)' Cl\tl•t._.., are
tbe clty and '11>Mi t
through 20." •. · •
The suing trio alleges
that they were attacked
by police last Aug. 7 ln
an apartment at 333
Fjnt 6t,. dttQed fl"Qm
lhe premlaet1 and 14"119d
in the city jail.
Seal Beach Poli~e
Chief Ed Clbbarelli said
his 'tnen went lo the
apartment in response
to a family distarbancc
call and lhat the officers
involved arc innocent or
any wrongdoing.
A G"RDEN OF MEMORIES
These serene surroundings that are fourld at Fairhaven
Memorial Park & MortuatY offers much solace to families.
ThEtY ere finding out how convenient it is to have
COMPLETE -Mortuary & Cemetery SERVICES all fn one
beautiful location.
If you naven't visited Fairhaven already, we suggest
that you drive through our lovely park and enjoy the
fJ'aJ .. sti~ tt'ees and fnlgrant flowers that abound .. here .
' .I Y
• ' T alLPH W. GOIDOM. Mortuary Manager and K£LL 'Y W. FUSSELL. fe6m~ CNef 50 years of mortuary exoerience ·1n serving
1· •=1· faml Ues. They both extend a warm invitation to their
' 1•• friends to stop by for. a personal tour of the new
• I,, Htfes. . . . "
. 'f Otrkovm nemorinl ·park
MORTUARY -CEMETERY ..
(714) 633·1442
1702 E . Fairhaven Ave. Between Tustin Ave. & Grand Ave., Santa Ana
Are yoU listening?
' I • skill~d counselor~ help people sort out their own
tM!s . Her-e peoP.lc"'gBin new resources to handle
Jhe '..f>t'Qblems thl'y thought wtre t~ bjg to
· llandle.' ~
If yoo know som~nc '"ho is experiencing an
.emotional crisis, call 'the Problem ;I'•lk ShQp .
A trained counselor will bo at the other end
6£ the line. Ready to'help. Ready to answer any
questions you may have. . · Ple~ake the call that will show her ,
somebcXfy cares enou~h t o listen.
.. ' . (714)997-18~1
1110 EL~t Cb1pm1n Avenue. Suite 109
Orange. California 9~
t (714) 768-3831 .
l
' '
• • ...... ~ ... , .... , . . . . . . . . . . .. .. . . .. ' ...... . .. . . . . .
Reagan's 'Issue' Com~s to F ruition
Train now'°' a new career In th• medical or legal llelda for a F11Ward1ng and tectire futurt aa an· WASHINGTON CAP) What hath Ronald
Reagan wrought? The American people will get an
Sdea this week when. after months of preliminary·
aklJ'mJahlng, the Senate begins debatinc the
Panama Canal treaty.
It's an issue that ha1> come a long way since
Reagan stumbled upon it one night In Florida dur·
. Sng hla campaign for the 1976 Republican preslden·
tlal nominaUon.
THE FORMER CALIFORNIA GOVERNOR
lost the campaign but fathered a controveri.y that
bas produced a torrent or rhetoric and put Panama
at the top or senatorial travel destinations.
The canal issue also has provided a classic
REAGAN
case history for stu·
denl!ii of the enduring
troubles b<'tween Presi·
dent Curter and
Con~rcss
· There was Carter
ittin~ by the crackling
rirc in the White !louse
library .
.. , want rou to hear
the facts,' said the
president.
I le went on to give
a sales pitch for the
canal treaty that was
laced with "facts" even
supporters of the agree·
ment found hard to ac·
C'ept.
Carter characterized the opposition to the two
treaties which deal with transfer or control of the
canal to Panama and its continuing neutrality as
"based on misuncterst and In~ and misinform a·
lion ·· -
HE WENT ON TO SA V HE wanted to answer
"the most common questions about the treaties."
Then he glossed over the economic questions
that have moved to forefront of the debate.
Only hours before Carter's speech. the Senate
Armed Services Committee listened to testimony
questioning the administration claim that the
treaties would cost the American taxpayers
nothing.
"Under the new treaties payments to Panama
will come from tolls paid by ships which use the
canal," said Carter
NOT SO, SAID SEN. HOWARD H. Baker Jr
of Tennessee. the Senate Republican leader whose
s upport is essential for mustering the two-thirds
majority needed for Senate approval
··1 think the claim
that it's not going to cost ( . J the taxpay<'rl> ~inylhing is
'"·''-' "fl.)"l/"I s imply \HOng," i.a id
RakC'r
And flaker was a lot
gentler on the issue than such hard-line opponents
as Rep. Philip Crane. R·Ill .. who cited among
other statistics a C1v1I Service Commission
t•stimate that turnover of the canal to Panama will
precipitate early retirement by many U.S.
employees or the waterway at a cost of about $135
million.
Crane had a lot of other examples to cite, in·
eluding the cost or relocating American troops and
of training Panaman~ans to operate the waterway.
BUT MORE FAR REAOUNG THAN Crane's
questions were those raised repeatedly by senators
who visited Panama recently and returned with
strong doubts ahout Panamanian resolve to use re·
venues for maintenance and capital Improve·
men ts.
They all><> came back to Washington uncon·
vinced that the United States won't be forced one
day to provide financial help lo Panama to prevent
the carnal operation from :oinking close to
bankruptcy.
Laguna Seniors
To See Free Film
The Laguna Beach Council on Aging will
~ponsor the film "Funny Lady" free for senior
citizens Feb. 17.
The film. starring Barhra Streisand and
James Caan, will be shown at South Coast Theater
beginning at 2 p.m. Free tickets are available at
the Human Affairs building, 515 Forest Ave.
The film showing is co·sponsored by Laguna
Federal Savings and Loan Association.
Free
enlargement . orrec
• Whtn you order three a me·slze enlargements
from any comblnstlon of color slides. prints. or
~•k color negatives. we'll only charge you for two. You get ona FREE. Good for 1ny tile Kodak
color enltrgementt up to and Including 16 x 20 ·
Inches, Atk us for det1ll1 Otte,.. ends March 15. ·...-------~
They may be wrong, their doubts may be uD·
rounded. But the president chose to Ignore them
rather than answer them.
He used the same approach in dealing with the
questions of U.S. right to intervene to keep the
canal open and the right oC U.S. warships to priori-
ty passage through the waterway in any
emerge~cy.
BOTU WUES WERE DEALT WITH in a
statement issued in October by Carter and Gen.
Omar Torrijos, the Panamanian leader The word·
mg affirmed the U.S. rights in both matters.
But it's clear that Senate approval 1s impossi-
hle without that language being incorporated Into
the agreement. and thul is what will happen early
an the debate. But Carter Ignored that reaJily and
left many senators with the lmpressio11 he was
adhering to a hard line position that the treaties
should not be amended. even In a way that Is
agreeable lo the Torrijos govemment.
THOSE OMISSIONS RUFFLED FEELINGS
rather than an1>wered questions. One other last-
minute omission prevented a different sort of flap.
Carter's original text included a reference to
the fact that both Baker and Senate Democutlc
Leader Robert C. Byrd were supporting the treaty.
It was deleted minutes before the speech when
Carter aides realized no one had cleared it wath
the two senators
* fMRGIHCY MBtcAL TICHMICIAM * OPBlAn~ •ooM TICH. (Accrecti~ by the A M A.) * •UPllA TOIY 'IHllAPY TICH. I * LA WYllS ASSIST AMT
CALLMOWI
l714• $47.0301
A.-.CAM COUMI or-PAI~ AITI _. SC91C.IS
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personalized service that makes over one million Federal regulatlons requlrw a substantial Interest penaltY r°' earty w11hdrawa1 trom cert1ftc:ate accounts Californians happy American Savings customers.
7% 3 Certificate Accounts are available for 6 to 10 years on $1,000 or more. Whatever your goaJ.
we have the savings plan for you.
AMERICAN
SAVINGS
'•· •.. . ..
} LI u .L
~ii-~~
Safe, Strong and· Friendly ft !~I ~
AMERICAN SAVINGS
Assets owr $7 Billion
Convenient offices serving Southern and Northern Callfomia, lndudtng:
COST~MESA BUENA PARK
8231 La Palma Avenue
at Buena Park Center
522-2801
GARDEN GROVE
825 Sunflower Avenue
at South Coast Plaza
979--9800
HUNTINGTON BEACH
12141 Garden Grove Boulevard
at Harbor Boulevard
534-8690
tAGUNA HILLS
23535 Calle de la Louisa
in Laguna Hills Center next to The Akron
no-2a1s
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Monday's
Cloeing Prices NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
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STOCKS I BUSINESS
Medical llelp
Rule Clarified
B1 sn. vtA POaTEll 11119 .........
I tr a pbyslc1an &•1' It ts 1nedleaUJ lmperaUv• ror You
to install an improvement in your house -such as a poet.
air condiUonln& cc-an elevator -Trc&SW')' ntulatlona aJ.
low you to treat the cost of the imJlf'Ovement. less the in-
crease in the valuo of lbe house. es a mecllcal upetllO.
A 1977 Tax Court case bu eaubllsbed lbat this kind o!
medical expense need not be limited to the cheapest
amount needed to achlevo what lbe physician recom-
mended.
ADOPTIVE PAaENTS WHO pay tho birth expenses of
the mother whose baby they adopt were bJt with an uo-
favorable Tax Court decision last year. To the extent that
they pay for medical services for the lnfant.. the payments
may quality as medical expense deduct.ion.a even lf they
were performed before adoption. ,
But the boipjtal and medical ~ts paid ln conn~
tion with the mother's giving birth are, as a 1eneral rule.
not deductible as medical expenses.
Only if the '.'services rendered to the mother were 8$>
proximately or direcUy
related to the health of
the chiJd us to con-
stitute medical care for
the child" will birth
costs adoptive parents
pay qualify as medical
expenses. And for this
Money's
Worth
purpose. It is not enough ''to s~ only that the health of
the unborn child was promoted generally by such services.••
Tbe IRS may allow medical ex.,pense deductions for
payments to certain .. halfway houses," suggests an IRS
private letter ruling in 1977. The ruling involved a cbila
who was d.is~arged as a full-time patient from a men~
hospital but who continued to receive day treatment w~
Jlving at a halfway house.
THE GOAL WAS TO provide transitional care and
help while the child adjusted from life in a mental hospital
to life in a community. Admission to the halfway house re·
quires recommendation by a psychiatrist and continued
psychiatric supervision during the stay. TM hallway house
staU includes a psychiatrist and mental health counselor.
The IRS ruled that the parents• paym'ehts to maintafft
the child at the hallway house, including rdom and board~
are deductible medical expenses.
Two cautl00$: (1) IRS private letter rulings generally
cannot be cited as pTecedents for any other taxpayer. But
they indicate what others might expect in a similar situa-
tion. (2) Don't expect this treatment unless the halfway
house situaUon includes similar medical elements -such
as a required medical recommendation for admission by a
physician. a good medical reason for being in tbe halfway
house, and required medical care while in the Ulfway
house. •
Nut:~ deducffona
·Stock Market Closes·
Lower and· Earlier
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'SAU:t
HEW YORIC (AP) .tfVS'9dl salet A_.o11 final................. tl,430.000
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ATJNG I BUSINESS
Sunkist Sailed. .
l'ruk Astrell1, Laauna Niguel, bas been ap-
l>Ointed chairman and lloger Bobbs, Orange, co-
"cbalrmao oft.be adftac>ry board of 8oatll Coast Na· ............
Winti-y Weather Piapea Skippers
•
Two new members were appointed to the ad-
~ board, Bad HJcks and Jlm Yates. co-owners
ol GolcSenWest Plumbing, Costa Mesa
* • The ~et.v of LoalsUcs Enlineers of Ora,nie· Citf bu eteded officers for 1978 : Don VUlonl,
AnabeilJl, chairman; Joe Faber, Huntington
.. Beach. vtce. chairman: and Mike Koo, Newport Beaeb, secretary-treasurer. SOLE's members are
'elllployed in the logistics fields in aerospace, com.
pierce and Industry~ • Offtcer promotions have been announced by
A•to 1'11umc:lal Services, consumer finance com· pany headquartered tn Newport tieacb, and lhe AFS
subsidiary, Avco PlauclaJ lu\l.ranee Group:
-Boa Ballow, Mission Viejo, from vice presi-
dent to vice president-treasurer.
-Jaek M. Trapp, Mission Viejo, from senior
vice president, AFIG, to executive vice president,
AFIG.
-Robert J. O'Brien, Santa Ana, from vice pre-
aldent, AFIG, to senior vice president, AFIG.
-Olftord Dean, El Toro, from department
maoae•, AFJG, to assistant vice president, AFIG.
-Barbara Koch. Santa Ana, from department
-.upervtaor, AFIG, to assistant vice president, 'AFIG.
-Ted &&epbens, manager corporate services,
Canada, to assistant vice president, corporate
,services.
The Balboa Yacht Club wound up
its annual Sunkist Seriea Saturday
with a blast of wintry weather that
completely blotted out tbe sun and
doused skippers and crews>OD outside
courses Sunday with occasional
showers. , '
The series Is sailed on the first
weekend of December, Jariuary and
February and serves as a tuneup for
the Southern California Midwinter
Regatta later in tt)e month.
FINAL STANDINGS after three
races:
MOTHERS SABOT -1, Coline
Gibbons, BYC. SABOT A -1, Doug Teulie~ BYC;
2. Jon Pinckney, BCYC; 3, John
Pernick, BCYC; 4. Joann Norman,
BCYC.
SABOT B -1, Mickey Sundone.
BYC; 2. Jeff Grant, BCYC; 3, Todd
Podia, BYC.
SABOT C -1, Renee Mouleen,
BYC. I
LID0-14A -l , Chad Twichell,
BYC; 2, Al Perez, BYC; 3, Don
Robertson, NHYC ; 4, Bill McCord,
BYC: 5, Dick Lineberger, ABYC.
LID0-148 -1, Brian Hench, BYC.
METCAUF -1, Bob Reilly, BYC ;
2. Bob Rollins, BYC; 3, Bill Lawhorn,
BYC.
TH1STLE -1, Duncan Gray-Bill
Kircher, BYC.
LASER A -1, Tim Cannon,
DOYC; 2, Mark Whitehouse, BYC.
LASER B -1, Steve Dr.yei-BYC.
LASER 30 Plus -1, ~ruce
Twichell. WC; 2, Graham Gil>bons,
BYC.
PHRF·A -1, Altheris, Ray Booth,
BYC; 2,, Antares, Alan Andrews,
BYC; 3, Shannon, McKlbbo/Mei·
singer NHYC: 4 Cat's Pajamas, Carl
Last, V~c; s. Stargaier, Headden/·
Deaver, BYC.
PBRF·B -1, Preamble, Robert
Kinney, NHYC; 2, Animal Farm,
Chris Hansen, VYC; 3, Pussycat,
John Szalay, VYC.
PHRF·C -l , No name, Tom
Schoel<, NHYC; 2, Djarv, Dan
Nordstrom, SSYC; 3, Bold Forbes,
Ed Cummins, Capo BYC; 4, Aloha ll,
Glenn Reed, SSYC; 51 Ling, Wallace
Chan~. BCYC,
SANTANA-20 -1., Shlllelagh\
Ralph Winlrode, BYC; 2, Anda&tar,
WUI Templet.on, BYC; 3, Sunshine,
Tom Summers, NHYC; 4, Breaker,
Doug Teulie, BYC.
LUDERS-16 -1, Lollipop, Bud
McNair, BYC; 2, Kildee, Don
Hromadka, NHYC.
-Ronald M. Welnbeader, Mission Viejo,
marketing director, U.S., to assistant vice presi·
dent, marketing. UYC Plans 17th Fete • Golded West Homes, has promoted Clay
Latimer, Irvine, to the position of vice president ot
ma11utacturine at the firm's corporate head-
.quarters in Santa Ana.
Be joined the firm ln i97 l as director of product develop~t. He advanced to general r!lanager of
the company's Fullerton and Santa Ana divisions
and in 1976 became director of manufacturing.
His administrative responsibilities consut
primarily of aupervislng corporate engineering and
manufacturing functions as well as operational
management of manufacturing methods and
wcbn.lquea and companywide quality control pro-
arams. • Joseph Stemler has been elected president,
chief operating officer. and director by the board of
Bentley Laboratories, Inc., Irvine.
For the past 16 years he was with Sybron Corp .•
ultimately as group vice president. He was
responsible for a number of divisions and sub-
sidiaries in the hospital, medical and dental fields.
* .. Howard A. Siegel. president of State Mutuals
Savings & Loan Association, Ne~rt Beach, bas
be'en appointed to the 1978 legislative committee
and the 1978 committee on publicly held companies
of the United States League of Savings Aasocla·
tlom. ·
Tbe league ls a trade organization for the sav·
Inga and loan business and represents more than
4.400 uaoclatlons tbrou&l\out the country.
* . , Daiei llWI, MIUioD Viejo. bu beeli mah'led
The Los Angeles Yacht Club,
founded in 1901 and the oldest rorin·
thian sailing organlzaUon in the area,
will hold its 77th Opening Day Regal·
ta and dinner dance Saturday at its
facility on Terminal t sland, Los
Angeles Harbor.
Many Newport Beach yachtsmen
are members of LA YC and will be on
deck for the ceremonies.
The 1978 officers will be installed
at a n ae-raising ceremony at 11
a.m., followed by complimentary
champagne for all hands. The new
TOILAPLmx ..
Toilet ~Plunger u creative director by B.l. Stewart Advertising ud Pabllc Belatlons, Inc., Newport Beach. U111tko ordiriary plungers. While continuing the operation of his own de· To11n11ox does riot permit compresaed air or meuy sign studio, Bish will become involved in creating water to splash back or mercbandi8ing concepts for the clients of lhe firm. Mcape. Wllh Tollalle1t the * lull pressure plows through
tho cloqgi119 mass and Robert T. Raeckel, Balboa, has joined San-aw11ho11 It dowri .
. uago Bank as an assistant cashier. Ge• the Genuine 'Tollenu·
He bas five years of retail banking and '==$2=.9=8=AT=H=AR=D=W=AR=E=ST=D=RE=S=-i management experience. -• Elizabeth Sanders will become general
manager for the Southern California area and
manager of the new Nordstrom store in South.
Coast Plaza, Costa Mesa. It is scheduled to open in •
May as the first California outlet for the company. it
She has been store manager in Bellevue, •
Wash., since 1975. She joined the company in 1971 it
and has held several management positions. • • WUUam D. Nye has been appointed marketing
communications manager for Hyland Diagnostics
division, Travenol Labora,torlff, Inc., Costa Mesa.
Re spent 13 years with the J. Walter Thompson
Co .• New York, and most recenUy was vice pres·
ident-mana1ement supervisor in the ageney's
corporate communications division . ....
James Dobrott. Newport Beach, bas been pro·
moted !rom vice president-leasing to executive
vice president of Rlnker Company. . ,.
His duties will include the supervision of the ,.
.shopping center development for Rinker it
throuehout the Western United States. He has been • with Rinker for 14 years . • Chrlltopber S. Gaal has been named assistant
vlce president and business development officer at
Buk of America'• Newport Center brpcb.
He bad served as a cqmmerctal lefsdlng officer a.t the Santa Ana main offiee since January 1977. ~e Joined the bank's management credit tralnlng Pl'OIJ'•m the previous year. . -
aldaanl'L. Spraller, South Laguna, bas been
named a flnt vice president of Bateman Eichler,
BW Rldlardl, Ille.
He la an accoet executive and assistant
mana1er of the Newport Beach office of tlie firm. • , Peter S. WeJue\ ha.a Joined MS1 Data Corp.,
C.ta Mesa. u •eneral man._, &uropean oper .. tiona.
Hi Jolned ~mpany after a six-year as-
IOC\'tion wllla Automauaa. Inc.
• · D..W C.'-. U: be«l nalMd eontrOIJer Ud ddtf ftDutlN officer fw tbe 7 QMfl ft11ee c..l .... t Qmll Place Prvperti•, JM., Quall Placis ~ment Corp •• QUall Place Manace· rnent Ccrp. QUaU Place Constnac:tlon Colp., ~all
Place HOUilba CoJv. Quall Place Financial C~ .•
nd QuaU Plac• Secus>ltlea .corp., baaed in
NewponaiUIL
· Be ta fonlMr' dhilloa cont.roller for E•ste De.velOlllnellt eo •• a bGlldlnc and d•velopment ot~ cantaalioil, wtt.h o»eraUona in San X>le1• and
ona1e counU• and Dallu. I
officers are William E. Hosken, com·
modore; J . William Scott, vice com·
modore; Willard llell. rear com·
modore, and Don Black, fleet cap-
tain.
Starting at 12:30 p.m, there will be
races for Cive classes of sailboats, in·
eluding ocean racers. Trophies In·
elude the Flagship and the Van-
derbilt awards.
In the ocean racing classes
families will sail their vessels in a race during which arews will prepare
hors d 'oeuvres for the evening
cocktail party .
~. Febtuary 8, 1971 EWLY PtLOT AJJ.
Haine&
ln.Qip
Robbie Haines of
the San Diego Yacht
Club won the 10th
berth in the ·
Congressional Cup
match racing 'sades
Sunday by defeatlhg
Tim Ho11n of the
New port Harbor
Yacht Club i'1 a
semi·flnal bout and
D_,n nis Durgan.
NHYC, in the final
race.
Durgan will be the
firit altemate In the
Congressional Clip
series which starts
off the Loni Beach
Yacht Cl.ub in
Marcb. i
!Drifter Leads ·
f'
'.Jn ManzaD.illo
The 10 Clus A yacht& ln the 1,1'°9mlle San
Diego to Manzanillo race -with a few ex.eepUons
-were living up to thelr pre-race ballYhoo 1n t~
early stage& ot the race, All 10 ot the Cius A en·
trits had.covered 100 mllei or better ln 20 bova ol
sailing. ' ' ·
'the e'lapaed time leader was Barr1
Molosbco'a 69-foot sloop Drl1\er out of the Lonf
Beach Yacht Club with 111 miles under her keet
Second Wi\h 120 mllea logged was Fred Prelsa:
84-foot aloop _Christine, Pacific Mariners Yach~
Club, and t.b)rd waa Jacob Wood's .el·foot aloo'
Sorcery, 11t miles. • ·
TUE SuaPIUSE ELEMENTS ln the earlY go;
ing -~ on latitude and lonsttude poel~
from the fleet -were BiU Lee's 6'1·foot aloop
Merlin, Santa Cruz, 11'1 miles h'om the start. and
the 62-foot Ragiline, under charter to Jim Pbel~
of the l.ol'll Beach Yacht Club, with a cillappoUW,,
ing 100 miles. Ragtime is the elapsed time record bolder for
Bacardi. ; . . the race. Other Class A yachts and t.Mlr distances troui
San Diego were Hawkere, UM; Tribute. Desrrado
.. and 'Fantasia, all with 100 miles. : Cup Won HAWKEYE IS A LO<;AL entry owned~ Davld Cuckler of Newport Harbor Yacht Club.
' Cuckler '\'&a unable to make the race at the last BIV w:..:·.,.J.1 minutes and the boat is being sailed by Georgei
J & aeaa Wect as skipper and Ule rest of the crew from
MIAMI CAP) -Peter N~~ber local yach~ and their post posiUons ~i
Wright of Elmhurst, Ill., th~ 8 a.m. Sunday rollcall were Free Splri\;
won the 1978 Bacardi RiChard Ettinger, NHYC, 96 miles; Cottontail,;
Cup in Star Class Yacht John Arens, Balboa Yacht Club, 94; Huckleberry:
racing Friday on· the Frog Joseph Hoffman, Bahia Corinthian Yacht,
basis of four races in· Club.' 92, and Audacious, Mike Kennedy, Dana:
stead or the customary Point Yacht Club, 89. :
!ivFe·1• ck le winds that Light winds and rain during the early stages o~ the race had carried the leaders as far south as plagued the series all San Quintin off the Baja California coast. ·
week -strong enough -;;;;;;;~~iiiiiiii:;;;;;;;;;;;:::;;;;~?~~~':t! to break several masts J 1~1~~~ in Sunday's tune-up race It:!
an d th e n so weak
Wednesday's race was
postponed until Thurs-
day -were only three
knots Friday
The race committee
decided to abandon the
final race of the series
after two legs were com·
leted.
. , .
Buy a large ~;Cola and get
a free Tiffany sfyle glass
(while supply lasts).
Come to our grand opening.
and y~'ll see that Sambo's is
just wh~t your family ordered, ·
Our dining room is perfect for i:
romfortable family dining. Andi
when yonr check arrives you'll
find that our prices are just ,
what the family ordered, 1<>9·
I . I
\
I
Mondrf, February 8, 1971
Star Even Cleans Elephants' Feet
BJ BUGH A. MULUGAN AP..,.JMC..r J Jrt
VENICE, Fla. -Remember
the at.cry of the two guys who
,joined the clrcua and got. a job
sweeping out the elephant
caces?
The work was onerous and
odlferous and they griped all the
time.
''Hey,•• said the boss
roustabout, ''if YoU guys hate do-
Jng this so much, why don't you
quit?"
"WHAT!" THEY exclaimed,
".and give up show business?"
Well. the old gag doesn't work
anymore because the work isn't
avallable anymore.
Guptber Gebel·Williams, the
wodd's greatest animal trainer with the Greatest Show on
Earth. deans out all the animal
cages blmself for his menagerie
of liobS, tigers, leopards, pan-thers, horses and elephants, so
they'll get used to having him
a.round. Not only that, but he
also gives the e lephants a
pedieureonce a month.
THESE ARE SOME of the
things a columnist learns walk·
ing around the winter head·
quarters here of the Ringling
Bros. and Barnum and Bailey
Circus with owner Irvin Feld
and bis son Kenneth.
"You know how you can tell
the difference between a circus
elephant and a zoo elephant?"
Irv asked with considerable
pride. "Look at their feet. Zoo
elephants never have-those
white shiny toe nails."
Almost on c ue, Sally and
Congo, two of the show's moie
ponderous pachyderms, did a lit-
tle, or rather a big, twinkle toe
two step to show off their recent
pedicures.
AP..,.,...
PLANNING NEW ACT
Gunther Gebel-Wllllame
The one he's got now is pi;etty
sensational, like the flrst·act
finale where he rides in on the
back of an elephant while hold·
mg a tiger on a leash.
OUTSIDE THE CJ)GE, a
midget was helping trim the fat
from steaks piled high' on a long
table.' ..
Irvin revealed that it costs
$4,000 a year to keep a hon or a
tiger In butcher bills alone. Each
eats 25 pounds of meat a day,
with the fat trimmed clean,
alternating between two weeks
of horse meat and two weeks or
beer, with a dozen eggs every
Sunday to keep their pelts look-
ing gorgeous.
-~~)
ma rked "Lou Jacobs" and
"Duane Thot"Pe" and racks or
costumes glittering with
rhinestones and real ostrich
feathers out to the hoofed
animal compound where over
the wukend two baby camels
had been born.
.. Both females, very rare,"
Kenneth said. "Strante thln&-
We haven'L had a female cameJ
born in the show for years and
years and now we get two in
three days, I'm gojne to neme
them Egypt and Tel Aviv after
the peace initiative."
TUE RED UNl'I'. ONE of the
two shows touring 80 cities un-
der the Ringling Bros., Barnum
and Bailey name, was' getting
ready for the big "move out,"
going through It s final re-
hearsals before loading its 300
performers, 200 ~mimals and
thousands of tons of props,
scenery ¥d costumes onto 38
railroad cal's for a 6-week tour.
Since the big t.ep folded its ttmt
forever in 1956 in Pittsburgh, the
cir cus has played ~indoors in
auditoriums and armories. New
York's Madison Square Garden,
with an 11 -week run at
Eastertide, r emains the big time
for the big show, as it has going
back 108 years to when the old
original Garden was built to
house the original Ringling
Brothers extravaganza.
THE BROTHERS, OTTO,
John, Charles, Alfred and Al,
look down from vintage and in·
valuable circus posters adorning
Irvin Feld's office at winter
quarters. which has a big pie·
ture window looking out on the
rehearsal ring .
Jrvirt doesn't have t~~ loo'k at
•John Ringling's old grandfather
•
..
I.a• Partrter
Carla Hills. U.S .
secr etary of hbusing
and urban develop-
me nt under Presi-
dent Ford, ha s
become a senior
partner in th e
Washington office of
a Los Angeles la w
firm. It will be re-
n a med Latham,
Watkins & Hills.
AnORMEY AT LAW
BANKRUPTCY $95
DIVORCE $95
Uncontested 64~2507
I' , .. • I I I•,,.,
NATIONAL
'It's Overdue' · ltlcoh:ol
·Abortion Fight Studies
Effort VoUJed FunHed.
1 UC Irvin.e's Collete of NEW Y~RK <AP) -Pledging an eflort to Medi cine has been
restore Medicaid payments for elective abortions, awarded a research
the newly designated president of the Planned grant of fl0.000 a year, Pare~thood Federation bu declared war on anu. ·ror an mttefinite period,
abortton groups and drawn a speeial bead on the to sut'port the trainlnJ
Right to Life organization. of resident pby~lciabs ln
. "I'm pulling !be world on notice that we are t b e tr e at meat of
.going to take a much stronger position. l think it's alcohollsm. lo~g overdue that we take an aggressive stance," Comprehensive Care
satd Faye WatUetop. Corp., a national health
it1RS w TTL 0 care managerpent firm . A ET N, THE FIRST woman and h e 8 d q u art ere d in
the first black selected for U,e post, was named New port Beach an-~an. 27 to a three.year term in the $70,()()().a.year nounced its award'
Job. She will begin in the post April 17. Her pr~· Doctors will study at
decessor. Ja~k Hood Vaughfi, resigned as pres1-Care Manor ~pital, a
dent last April. . . . . company subsidiary in Referrlni spec1f1cally to Right to Life, Mrs. Orange·
Wattleton,, called anti·abortion groups "a vocal ·
mlnoriti)'" and said they seek to impose "their own-------....----
personal and religious dogmas upon everyone
else.''
MRS. WATTLETON SAID AT a news con·
ference that her aim is to restore Medicald pay-
ments for abortions for the poor and to prevent
passage O{ an anti-abortioa amendment to tbe U.S. , .........
Constitutio9.
Febl\lary Special of the Montn
A ttalf pound of fresh ground bHf (precooked weight) on grtlteet
sourdough bread with hot trench fries, lettuce end tomato 9Jlcea. £
SERVED 24 HOURS
GUNTHER, BARE TO the
waist, was in lhe big cat cage
alternately poking with a po~
garnished with a sirloin steak
and petting a young lion named
Oscar, while ah assortment of
tigers, leopards and cougars
watched from high stools like
guests on a TV talk show.
"Circus people never stop re·
hearsing," said Kenneth Feld,
who roams the world looking for
new talent. ··Gunther is working
out a new act that will combine
tigers and elephanl<> and camels
for the first time."
"Tigers and leopards may be
an endangered species in Asia,
but they aren't around here,"
!>aid Irving. "They breed like
mad in captivity and you can't
give one away. Zoos don't want
. any more. That's why Russian
and Bulgarian circus~s go in for
trained bears. They're a lot
cheaper to feed than the big
cats." clock in the comer, the one wiCh '=================' the clown face, to tell what time
\
. WITH AERIALISTS swinging
overhead and jugglers tossing
Indian clubs ·about, Irvin led the
way through a profusion or
animal cages, property trunks
I
I
1t is. He looks out the windnw.
.and if the high wire acts are up
th~e:-be knows it's time' for
lunch, and if the acrobats are on
it's dinnertime. The dog acts
come on at breakfast.
. .
C•ll 642-'5678.
Put • few words
to work tor ou.
(
" I ~ INSIDE: •Movies •Television
•Comics •Entertainment
Monday, Febtuary 6, 1978 DAILY PILOT '
· MBss Exodlis: I 0 Million Give Up Tenilis Smith
Rallies By Will GRIMSLEY
NEW YORK <AP) -Lost: 10
,; million tennis players.
Last sighted, they were wear·
ing $50 ahorts, S2S shirts with a
.., crocodile on the chest, $65
• warmup suits and $45 kld shoes.
, :They were carrying two $75 rac·
quela in a fancy satchel and
were racing toward the closest
indoor bubble.
Anybody seen 'em? Where did
they go? And why?
"Just got 'fed up," the Sports
Training Insti\ute of Chicago
said today in reporting on what
it pictures as the greatest mass
exodus since Moses led the
Israelites <fut of the wilderness.
Within the past decade, tennis
became the fastest growing parttcipant sport in the country
lls ranks mushroomed from six
million timid souls -almost
embarrassed to be seen '!Vith a
racquet under their arms -to a
bustling l> million who went de-
liriously mad over the pastime.
Green Wins Pl.ayoff
13 Was Lucky
In Hawaii Open
HONOLULU CAP) ·-Hubert
Green was shooting for his 13th
PGA victory an the 13th
Hawaiian Open and he got lucky
on the 13th hole at Waialae
Country Club.
Green, who says he 1s not
superstiUous, won the $250,000
tournament Sunday with a par
on the second hole of a s udden-! death playoff against Bill
l Kratzert. Jle ~ank a seven-foot
' putt for a four on the hole. No.
16, while Krat.tert massed his
'
par putt from five feet.
.. I'm not superstitious, but I
was aware of the l3s and wasn't
s ure what it would mean.··
Green said afterward.
"I thank the biggest turning
point came on the 13th hole.
when I hit a couple of bad shots.
but then sunk a 35-foot putt for a
birdie. 1 wasn't sure I deserved
it."
Green took the lead in the
second round, then held it alone
until falling into a tie with
• Kratzert late in the final round.
Jlc had a 71 Sunday. his worst
round of lhe tourney. finishing at
274, 14-under-par over the
7,234-yard, pa r -72 Waialae
course.
Krat.zert, who joined the tour
leu than two years ago. shot a f final-r ound 68. forcing the
\playoff.
1 The wan ning putt m ade a
S21,500 difference f&<. Grl'cn. l who colleclcct sso.ooo for the '1c-
tory. Kratzcrt. ~ho won $134,748
last year and is one of the most
promising young players on the
tour. got S28,500 for finishing
second
* * * Golf Finish
lacked Out;
Fans Furious
LOS ANGELES <AP) -The
decision to go wllh scheduled
programming Instead of cover-
ing the Sunday playoff at the
Hawaiian Open Golf Tourna-
ml'nt led to more than 200
te lephoned complaints to the
ABC·TV atnliate in Los Angeles.
KA BC-TV reported.
Hubert Green defeated Bill
Kratzert on the second extra
hole for the $50,000 first prize In
Honolulu.
"The lines wt>re inundated." a
KA BC-TV spokesman said of the
phon ed response an lhe Los
Angeles area.
"Yes. the people were livid.
they were just furious." t The station ex plained that the
1 A BC Network feed of the golf
t o urn a m e nt. was handled
through New York. When the
golf telecast was ended at 7 p.m.
Eastern Standard Time, the
ABC 25th-Anniversary program
went on as scheduled in the
East.
At 4 p.m. Pacific Standard
lme on the West Coast. ABC
ogramming bad. no access to
e · golf tournament, and no
oice but to turn lo the
heduled Wide World of Sports.
'
Mike Mo~ley, Bob Wynn and
Hale Irwin ,lied for U1lrd at 275.
Morley s hot' a closing 66, Wynn a
68 and lrwln a 69.
Gene Littler, the first round
reader with a 6S who stumbled lo
a 73 on the second day, finished
al 276 with '1 70 Sunday.
The final two rounds of the ·
tournament were telecast h\'e
by ABC Television. with the ex-
ception of lhe playoff holes. The
network switched lo regular pro·
g r a mming after Gr een and
Kratzert finished the 18th hole.
Kralzert has won twice on the
tour. taking the Hartford Open
last year, and teaming with
Woody Blackbum to capture the
World National Team Play title
Green and Kratzerl are close
friends, and Green said he had
to play Jekyll-and-Hyde when
the two went. into overtime. r "You h•ve to ~l up a hale for
hirn wherf you're in a playoff."
said Green. '"You'\'e got lo con·
centrate enough to get up a
grudge."
Green's experience edge over
Kratzert was probably lhl' de
<'iding facrpr in the playoff. Th<.·y
both hit mto bunkers on the final
hole, then. hit good s hots from
the sand. But Kral%ert, wtio said
he felt the pressure, appeared to
hesitate when he took the club
back on hi s pull ancJ m1~M'd the
cup
F ll\<tl r.<oru '" l .... UloO 000 H•w••• ... OPMI Q<MI
tourl\amel\l Ofl IM 1.n• y•ro. P•r ,..J6 II
WaialM Co<ll\t,., Ctul><<>ul\•
CGrHl\patred--hOl•ol,ucldeftOHthlowon
pt•vott>.
Hubut O~n. \.W.l.M.I
B111 Kr•llert, ue !00
Ml-P Mortev. "J 750
Bob WyM, Sl3.150
H•le Irwin. \ll,150
Gene Llltt .... 19,000
C~fChl ROdrl~I, \1,6.'!8
8111 Calfff. S7.618
Git Morgan, U,HO
Bob Glider, U.ISO
M•rll H•yH, \5,750 Dl!VtStockton. \5.llO
Jim CllM'•Y. \5,150
Ron Hlllkte. "'· 111 Biii R09er\. ,.., 12S
Don Boes,"'· tU Geor~ OurM. \.of, US
l(ellh Forgus. '3,000
Jim Slmot1s, '3,000
Gr •llf m MllMIV, U 000 Johrl MaMff9Y, S:f)iii
JQfttlScllroedW,U.•
II-M•llble, U.1St Fuuv 1oe11«,t2. ll6
Tom Wat\OI\, "-U•
Jay HH,, '2.IM
Stan Le•, '1,1ll0
G•y 8 t.Waf'' '1.100 Tom Sflaw, 1,100
AMY Hortll. $1,IOO
l5a0 AOlll. Sl,1'0 Sltve Verlatci. '1,100
8obby Cole. Sl.100 G~ PoW<tn, ,l,1'11
J C. Snua, Sl,2'0
Pllll Hancoc~. SI ?«I
Geo~ Archer. 11,1'0
lte EIOer. "·190
Alen T•PI• \900
&'1 ....... 11 11•
10 .. 1 n .. 11•
•& 13 "8 Ill> 1/S
•I 69 It .. US
1t9 10•1·6' 1/S
•• 13 68 10 ,,.
111t9 ltl 10 111
,, 10 11-10 ,,,
II IJ 08 Ill> 111
11 13 69 6S 111
It/ 11-0 IS 111
61 ltS .. Ill '178
11 68 ... 10-111 ...... ,,.,, ,,,
10 70-6811 ,,..
IJ·o9·fll>.lt 11• ,, .. 6f7l ,,..
•• , ..... 180
,~,.,., no
11-70716&-?IO ro-n•• ••-no ... ,.t-n••-uo
Tl·lt -11•1-HI f1•11•1 11-111
.._7H91J-tel
n ..... •n-te1
7t 11-10••-1~ 70.7).70_.._,.,
70.IJ .... ll-m
10·7H1...-1a 70.11 .... 11-m ... ,. ... 1)-111
... ,. U.IS-212 ... ,3.1,.._m
, .. , •• ,Q.41.--ZllJ
11·7Nk7-1111 ,,..._,..,a-m
10-13-1--lQ 73-,..IO·ll_,..
NEW ORLEANS
SELE~NOUN .
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Dick
Nolan, former SJ.O Francisco
49ers' head football coach, who
has been defensive coordinator
for the New Orleans Saints, was
selected the Saints' head coach
today.
Nolan becomes the fifth coach
of the National Football League.
club in JlStll·year history,
replaci.ng Hank Stram. who "as
fired nine days ago
It was the "In" thing. You
couldn't go into an airport
without seein g scores of
travelers lugging cpurt equip-
ment under their arms. Indoor
complexes mushroomed. Real
estate couldn't be cleared fast
enough to build the courts in de·
mand. Sporting goods stores, in-
structors, publishers and pro-
moters prospered. The touma-
m en t players became the
millionaire elitists of pro-
fessional sports.
Then something happened, the
Sports Tralhlng Instit.ute said. A
wave of disenchantment set in among the new recruits .
Learners lost th•lr interest in
clusters -untll the casualty list,
by the lnstltute's co'unt, nwn-
bered lOmUllon. .
What happened?
It was a question the. lnstltute
decided to learn for itself, s~ it
assigned researchers to st~nt
dropouts, instructors and court
toperators. ThB\ ls what they
Heels Over Head
tound. J.Jsten to the deserters
nnt:
"Leaming was not fun. J\ was
actually quite frustrating."
"I was making a fool ot
myself out there."
"The hyped-up advertising
and promotion made you feel
like a second-class citizen lf you
didtl't have a $75 racquet, ~
shoes and color coordinated
warmups."
.. {f a guy says, 'No. I don't
• See Tennis Page B·l
..........
Whe'n Fr;rnldin Jacob~ of Fa1rl e1~h
Dickini:,on l "n1ve rsitv cleared 7--t• .' to wm
I ht' high jump in New York·~ ~ladison
Squ<Hl' Ciarden Saturdav night. this b all
that wa~ ,·bihlr of the." jumper \\hen lw
I ~in cl NI.
Winning Is Secondary
Cheers Go Unlward in Tourney for Deaf
GREENFIELD, :-.;.H. CAP) -
Out!>ide the gym nas ium . it
sounded like any basketball
game: noise. cheering. even
"The Star-Spangled Banner ...
But for the players. it was dif-
ferent : they and most of the
~pcclators arc deaf.
tu re of sign language and speech
lo get their message across.
blended their shouts with the ·roar of l~ crowd and the s tamp·
ingof feet.
Re ferees Steve Cutter and
R ick Zccha bll'w whistles to
catch the attention or those
players whose hearing is im·
paired. and w11vcd their arms
for those who arc deaf •
Most of the teams come into
lhe playoffs after a regular
sea son that includes gam es
agains t con ventional high
schools in their areas. The
Austine players. who entered the
tournament with an 8·4 record.
led a southern Vermont high
school league for most of the
year.
I i
East Five
ATLANTA (AP) -Jolttt
Hnvlicek wasn't surprised.
Neither was Jack Ramsay.
"I sort of had a feeling if
anyone would turn it around; 'it
would be Randy Smith," said
Havlicek, the reUrinc 4tar of~
Boston Celtics. ·
'1What you saw him (Smith)
do today, I've seen him do many
times, .. stld Ramsay, who
watched helpl~ly as the c.at..-
q u i elt guard of the .Buffalo
Braves scored 14 points in the
fourth quarter. sparking th~
.East to a 133·12.S comeback vie·
tory oves: Ramsay's West.squad
Ln tbe 28th National Basketball
Association All-Star game 8\m-
day.
The West had <)ominated play
until Smith took charge, aided
by the aggr~sive rebounding'bj
Boston's Dave Cowens al'ld
Philadelphia's Julius Erving, to
erase a 12-point West lead in lht!
final 10 minutes.
Smith scored six s traight
baskets. two on layups and four
on jump s hots from the 14-foot to
22-foot range, chopping the lead
to 113-112 with 5:42 remainln~.
And Erving put the East ahead
for only the second lime in the
game, this lime for good, on a
three-point play with 5: 10 lo go.
P/aying despite five personal
(ou ~ with seven minutes r e·
ma inmg. Smith triggered the
rally that resulted in a stretch of
15 consecutive Easl points .
ll e ve ntually carried to a
21·2 edge. changiiig a 113-104 def-
icit lo a 125-11 5 lead as the East
captured its third all-star game
in four years and its 18th against
10 defeats.
Smith was nn overhwelming
('hoice for the most valuable
player trophy and nn accompa·
nyin g 1978 automobile. He
scored a game-high 27 PQints,
had seven rebounds. six assists
and two steals in 29 minutes.
·'This was one of the highest
achievements I have ever a c-
com plished." Smith said of the
MVP honor. which be said his
wife. Terrion, had predicted he
would win.
.. She didn't keep me out late
lust nii!hl. so I had all the rest-4Q._
the world." Smith said.
fi e• also pa id tribute LO
Rumsa:.•. coach of the defending
NBA champions. the Portland
Trail Hlcners. who once coached
Smith at Buffalo.
* * * WEST CIHI -Luca) 11, Walton IS. Tno,.,,_n
11. Wo tp"6110. 0.¥1• 10. Gll...-e 10, HolllM 10
Jon~• 7, Wint.,\ I, l.anter I Total\ SI 2J.J1 IU .
EAST CIUI -Ervlr>g 16, K•non 16, C-...s 14,
G.-rvtn •. Havtocelt 10. Colhns 14, Robi1>50fl 1,
MCAOOO .. SIT>ll~ "· Havn 2, Matone •• Totals SJ
'7 H UJ
WU I J'I 11 34 U-IH
Eo1 18 19 JS 0~133
FoultO out ·~ B~rrv Total IOul• -Wo1t, 1'1.
E••t 71 A I~ •91 A bout 130 students and facult y
ml•mbers from New England
schools for the deaf came lo
Crotched Mountain Rehabilita·
t1on Center in Greenfield for the
thre·e·day tournament ending
Saturday night.
On Thursday. the Austine
School for the Deaf of Brat·
tleboro, Vt., s~red a decisive
112-43 victory against the Gov -
ernor Baxter State School for
the Dea! of Portland, Maine.
"These kids know the rules."
Cutte r said "They a re well-
coa ched . and they certainly
know what a foul is The Brat
tleboro t e am co mpares
favorably with any high school
I've officiated.
'Tm working a little harder
than usual lo get their attention.
but once somebody catches my
eye and stops playing, the others
stop right away.'' he said .
Porsches Dominate
In Daytona Race
But winning took a back seat
tq, communicating, as players
from both states offered• en-
couragement and suggestions
even as they battled for a slot in
the elimination tournament.
The atmos phe re at the
private. non-profit school at
tournament time is "as electric
as anywhere else," said center
spokesn}an Bill Roots. He s aid
everyone at Crotched Mountain
becomes involved, from severe-
ly handicapped students -"wh<>
help hang up the signs in the
gym and root for the players" -
t.o center director Joseph Handy.
By game time, the gym·
naahim was packed with fans,
w.ho came on fool, on crutches
and ill wheelchairs bearing the
names of 0.C O<:CUP!lnls' favorite
teel'l)s . Th e ~ustlne
cheerleaders, who used a mix·
There was no bending' of the
rules -by either the officials or
the players. Fouts were called
as rigidly as in any high sch()Ol
contest.
"But I think some or them
may be saying a few things
behind my back In s i gn
language," Cutter said.
Some of the players have
teaming or physical disabilities
in addition to hearing problems.
•·1 have one kid with con-
genital poliQ and one with minor
cerebral palsy on my team ...
said Crotched Mountain coach
Don Tilton. ''Those kids try as
hard as they can and they come
to every pr.actice. lf they're will·
Ing to give 110 percent. I'm not
going to tell them they can't
play."
DAYTONA BEACH . Fl a
CAP) -"lt wasn't as easy as 1t
looked."" said Rolf Stom melcn
after he and Toine Hezemans
had driven a turbocharged
Porsche 93.5 lo victbry in the 24
Hours of Daytona race Sunday.
beating the second-place car by
115.2 miles ~
Stommelen said that night
driving and heavy traffic in the
rtrst half-hour, with 67 cars on
the road course, always presents
problems.
But an added factor was that
his team had to nurse Its high-
speed ~exotic machine through an oil problem over the final 121
hours.
"When I'd lift the throttle, oil
would come through the exhaust
pipe," Hezemans explained. "I
had to keep one fool on the brake
and one on the throttle at the
same time,$<> it wouldn't smoke
so bad. Otherwise. I was afraid
they'd blackflag us ...
A puff of smoke boiled out the
rear of the new machine every
time the driver downshifted. If
officials bad deemed it serious
enough, they would have black
n agged the car out of compel\·
lion until the trouble was fixed.
"I lhmk now we will sell it
It he car ) to an Indian camp for
s moke s ignals." a relieved
Jl ezcmans said after the gruel·
ing race. •
Slommelcn, 35. or Germany
and Hezem ans, 34. of Th'
Netherlands had an unexpeded
third driver on the team -Peter
Gregg of J acksonville. Fla., who
entered two cars for his Porsche
dealership and was principal
driver ln one, who lost one hour
and 45 minutes chang~ng an
engine In early mornJng and
finis hed ninth.
Gregg drove one hout' and five
minutes In the Stommel~n
Hezemans c1tr during the d.ight.
"Rolf had a little .sJ<>m~h
ache and as.ked me ir l would
drive," Gregg said ·
ys ~e~H Race Again , Although it made him Utt only
rour·lime winner of this race, be
refused to join in the Victoty
Lane celebration. :
''I felt It was their victory and
the credit should go lo them,"
Gregg said. "They did all the By HOWA1l0 L. HANDY
°'*°""YPllMIWf Doane "Pancho" Carter, injured during a test run of bl.a
Cosworth·PoWered Lightning championship car at Phoenl:it ln·
t11rnatlonal nacewav Dec. 2. WU teleased' from St. Luke'a
Hospital ln P1'oenlx last week and began outpatient theraJ>~1 today ln Indiana.
"Wo Just 8C)t ho~e Th\41'SdaY night," hi.a wlfe Carla told lM
Dally ftlot by telephone. "He sets tired awfully eaay rtaht now
and baa apcnt mo1t or hls Ume sleeplna si"ce we got home.
"H wlll atart therapy but I don't know ttow tons lt wUt bei
before he can retum to drtvmg a race car aaain. ·
"Yes, M deClrlttely plan$ to ~tt back drtvtna as aoon aa
possible and when h feels up to It.·
Carter, a 1raduate of Marina High &choa ln Huntlntton
S.ach, hu tJeen drivlng profeuiollally aloee tm;
He made a awttch after the 1m n•NllD from Dan
Gurney'a t\ll·Amerkan Racers ~d CO llitiai for Ro1*t
Ji'l•tcher ot Phoenix. lie spent lwo~ n Gurney Ud hid
two earnpaillM with n.tea..r prior'°'*...,
Wblft his accideDt occurrid ~. wu,:talltlt1 1
teat run on the ma.in stratght. The cu s~ddenly swerved risht and tben to the left and struck the lnaide guard ran. The car was
de1troyed and Carter sustained numerous injuries.
Ilia ri&ht leg waa pinned at the knee, both arms and b1s tef\
wrist were broken along with both sides Of his pelv11. His blad·
der waa damaged and fequiNd corrective auraery. he also had
a cratked hip and damaged rilhl elbow.
ln Januarv. Carter un~ent disc sureery to correct a back problem before ht• release l84t week.
Carter Is the only USAC driver to ever wln both the sprint
11nd mldaet division national championships.
He captured the mldcet crown In 1912 and won sprint tlUes
1n 1974 ancl agaiJ\_llt 19'76. He was sfllected u rookie <>f the year
ln the lndlanapoftl :iOO In 1974 and later lhat same )'ear, wu
chosen USAC's championship car dlvtalon rookie of the year.
Ht ii :sWl lookiea Cor his first champtonlhlp c:•r victory
a O\ijtl he has three second place tlnlahet.
All exhaustive lnspcctlon by USAC c:ifftclaJa r ve&l4l'd that a
rllbt rtar U·Joint failed. caUlinl lho half 1h1f\ to comt 1dr1f\.
Th .. ~ lhe ddvint1 _ol tho rlahL•hML throwlq I.bit cat"'-'·----
out of tontrol and uuslnr tbe accldent.
work." ~.
The winners traveled 2,611.2
miles, at an average speed. ol
108.74~mUesperhour. •. ,
Porsches domtnated the race,
as they have in recent yeara,.
taking ts of the first 16 places.
Two·llmo Indianapolis winner
Jot\nn)' Rutherford of Fort
Worth, Texas. Joined Manfred
Schurtl oC Liechtenstein and
Oick Barbour or Costa Mesa in
the second pince Turbo Pon~
They lost time in two ear'b
smashu into lhc wall which rtd·
died the glass llber ~. bllt
they finished tron1.
Third place went to a stock
Pnr1cht C1rrera driven by
OaJtou Pa1e B·2 1 i ·• ':·
.. .
JIZ DAILY PILOT
I I I • • • I I I 19 • + f 6 • • I I
MISCELLANY
Area Man Sparta Clipped Slwrt
Coaches Swimmers Sparkle
U.S. Girls
AM ERSFOORT, Netherlands -
Dale Flickinger, head American swimmers grabbed nine of
of the Orange County the 24 finals i.Q a top international
Volleyball Club, bas meet that ended Sunday and coach
been selected as coach Frank Ke«e called it the best show·
of the U.S. Junior Na-lng by a U.S. team in Europe lo ten
tional West squad and 11 years.
of the 13 players chosen ''We performed better here this
for the team are from weekend than anyone could have im·
the Orange Coast area. aglned," K~fe said. "I am very ex-
The West squad is one cited by the performances of our
of eight regional learns young women swimmers."
in the United States with Cynthia Woodhead, a 13-year-old
others in Atlanta, from ~iverside, and ~he youngest
Pol'tland, Chicago, Pitts, comr.tltor in the 22-natton, three-day
burgh, El Paso, Houston clas • led the way by taking three
and New York. finals.
Fllckinger's 'aelectlon"' tMn-..oo 11><1. =r:.= 1''""1"" v1e10>. was based on the •••·4'· 200 lfff-a.otw lc.n..M> 1.u .1t. 100 -1 -• ICruter cw.st 0.MW14'1YI, 1:07,ft. JIO lly-ter-~ OCVBC team record for o.rn-r1. 2-01. ... * 1N1Ct1-E•""" 1Ne0Wf'->1.
the past four years. Dur· "~200 ,,..~ <A1vers1c1e1 2:02.n. 100 lng that time OCVBC llf'M11JtnK~•11v certtiMnl, 1:1u1. 100 (1y-Poll.ck
bas Won se en' tional <E•at Germ•11yl, 2: 11.0 . 100 b.clt-Bo•v• V Da (Ne01e.-i.nchl. t °'·"· 400 Incl.. meoley-Te'*-' 11!411 age group ch am. o.r-r>.•:su4.
plonshlps and placed '-1-..•-i·•-lt'las ••••-second five times. ~-• """
The eight regional RICHMOND, Va. -Vitas
from a narrow ftrst-set loss and de·
feat Evonne Goolagong 6·7, 6-2, 6-2,
to win her third straleht tennis
tournament Sunday.
Navratilova stretched her victory
streak to 20 matches. She bas won
four of the five tour even ls this year.
...,rezoaTep
MEXICO CITY -Top-seeded Raul
Ramirez defeated Pat Dupre, 6-4, 6·1
·to take the $8,000 first prize in the
Mexican Tennis Open.
.£eteplaot Pap 011
ARCADIA -The Iongshot ".Mr.
Redoy" came on w1tb a stretch run
to capture the $230,000 Strub Stakes
for lhe 4-year-olds at Santa Anita
Su11day, and then survived a
steward's inquiry into the fmlsh or
the rich thoroughbred race.
Text finished second witb'tbe even.
odds favorite J.O. Tobin, only con-
querer of Seattle Slew, winding up
third after leading by seven lengths
at one time. Dangerous Business squads will hold a Gerulaitls, whose serve was so effcc·
tournament in June in live he never lost it once, trounced
Chicago with ttwt winner John Newcombe. 6·3, 6·4, in the fin als
representing the lJ .S. in Sunday or the Richmond stop on the
the Pacific Rim junior World Championship Tennis tour.
IUdaarib Flglat• Boele
Referee Tony Perez ducks under a punch
from Wilfredo llcnitcz (left) during
welterweight boul with Bruce Curry at
New York's Madison Square Garden re·
ccntly. Perez was trying to break up the
fighters as· the bell sounded at the end of
round seven when he became entangled in
the action.
championship in Hawaii Gerulaitis earned a $30,000
in AugusL paycheck from the total purse of
In the recent ANVA $175,000, while the 33-year-old
NEW YORK -Renee Rieharru.,
the transsexual tennis player who
won ,.in court the right lo play as a
woman, said Sunday she will begin
taking legal measures against
women who refuse to ~lay her.
j unlor tournament, Newcombe picked up $15,000.
1ENNIS EXODUS. • • DAYTONA •• OCVBC was the winner S•--"-• with teams Crom several ~•• Talces To•r11eg
of the other regions also NORTH LITI'LE ROCK, Ark. -
"It's very, very diTficult. I don 't
enjoy being put on tMal every week.•·
Richards said of repeated incidents
in which women have retired or de·
faulted from matches rather than
play her. Contlnda From Page B·l
want to play. I just hkc to h1l
'em,' he's considered some kind
ofnut."
"Tennis did not giv<.' me the
exercise or the tram figure I cx-
,pected. •·
"Th<.'rc are faster ways to gel
a workout.··
In!>tructor::. had their own
versions:
"T\' discoura~cd m any who
could sec they would never
m ake the big t1me."
.. They swarmed out on us .
They came flabby and un·
coordinated -totally out of con·
dition -<md expected us to turn
thC'm into a Jimmy Connors or a
Chris Evert in 10 easy l<.'si.ons."
"They refused to practice
between lessons. Their attitude
was, 'Okay, I pa!d my money.
Make a tennis player out or
me'."
"The manufacturers, ad ~en.
des and the press made gods out
of the champs."
Operators checked in with
\ arious excuses:
Keys Now
A Hurdler
Kathy Keys, Golden West
College's outstanding middle
distance runner, will switch to
the intermediate hurdles during
the coming track and field
season .
Keys qualified in the state
meet in the 400 (55.4) and the 800
<~ 14.4) meters but says sh' will
roncentrateon the hurdle event.
Teresa Jenkins, a freshman
from Long Beach Wilson High,
will compete in the 800 meters
for the Rustlers . In a
recent indoor meet at the
Sports Arena, she ran a 2:15.5
race for first place.
Other sophomores on the GWC
team Include Marilu Bueker (S·O
in the high jump), Olivia Leon
(123-ol"'.t in the javelin) and Lin·
da Seymour (15·1 in the long
JUmp).
Marina High graduate Pam
Banks who had a mark of ~4 in
t!fe. high jump last year, is
a nother of the outstanding
freshmen on the team. Others
from this area include: Diane
Stuart <Marina); Sherie Drevlck
<Edison); Delma Vargas (Hunt·
lngton Beach); Tami Engle
(Fountain Valley).
"Tennis was oversold lo the
publtc as a magic key to health,
companionship and prestige.'·
"When the crunch came, we
made instructors out of any
charming person who played
well. .. They taught body
poses."
"Instructors' methods were
authoritarian and rigid. heavily
influenced by Vince Lombardi.
Very f~.w returned for more
les~ons.
''The marketing strategy of
tying into cclebriltes hurt in the
long run J\nyone with a few
bucks can huy Chanel No 5
"helher or not they look lake:
Catherine Deneuve. nut wearing
the same shoes as Chris Evert
won't get you to Wimbledon "
Conclusion: J\fter all, who
wants lo be Chris Ev~rt if you
can be Catherine Deneuvc for
the pr1ccofanounceofperfume?o
Hot Corner
Continued From Page B-1
Diego Febles of Puerto Rico and
Alec Poole of England. They
finished 19 miles behind the
second-place car.
Pole sitting Danny Ongais of
Costa Mesa and car owner Ted
Field of Newport Beach, ran into
engine problems. The duo blew
two $40,000 engines on th.eir
Porsche and had to retire from
the race after setting fast time
in qualifyingtotakethepole.
The IOI> llnlW-1 SuncMy In llW 14 ~ Of D•ylon• tno.Kant• rk•. wllll <lrtvtr, .........._,,
or Nllon•llty. 1-,i>e of <e<, laps compi.i.cs •nd winner·, tV.,89f' ~
t Rolf Stommtl•n, Germ•nv; To1ne
Heum•M. Th• Nflh('rl•n•n. Ptter Gre9g,
J•ck\o<wtllf, Fla Pot\<l>t OS, MIO I~, lot.7'J
mllttper"°"' 1 JOMny AulherlOf<I, Fot1 W0tlh, M..mre<I
!'><hurll, LtlcMeMt~ln, Dick B•bour, Cost•
~••; PotKhe 9lS; •so. l Dlf90 Febln, Pv~o Alco, Alu Poole.
C ngt•rtel, Pott<M CM'rH•; ..U.
4 Phil Currin. G•tM,vllle, G• ; JOM Pllul,
C0<0;t 8•11<h, Fl•., Bonky Fern.1nc1e1, Pwrto
Rico, Por'>Che C•<rtr•. UI
S JoM Wlnlff, Gf>rm4111y. Dr.ttr 5<hornS1Pln,
C.•rrrwny. ~ Br•mbong Germ•nv. Porw;IW •u. 6U.
-
competing. Top-seeded Dick Stockton won a
One of the .you_ngest $50,000 tennis tournament Sunday
-squads competing i.n the when Hank Pfister retired during the
South«:rn. California second set with a s prained ankle.
open d1vls1on (average Stockton won the first set 6-4. Pfister
age 16Yz). OCVBC is was leading the second set S-3 when
currently rated fourth. he sprained his left ankle while serv-The following girls ing.
have been selected for
the west training squad: . NaeratHoea rrt ... plu
Marie Lundie, 17 ~ CHICAGO -Martina Navratilova
Karen Olson, 17, Kar~ used her strong ser e to ch b k Ru s h , 15, and 1' . v . arge ac
She said she intends to start fight·
ing back. "I'm not going to continue
bemg put in double jeopardy,"
MaNfttet'te Gets Beare
COLUMBIA. S.C. -Third-ranked
Marquette, helpcd by two technical
fouls against South Carolina, scored
a fl9·66 double overtime victory over
thl' Gamecocks in a college basket-
ball gameSunday.
Pu 1 ask i , ls, f -=============::-::-::::-::-:-: ........ ::-::....--
Newport Harbor h1~ .. ,
Cheryl Johnston. 16,
Aileen Semonsen, 17 and
Dale Keough, 17, from
Corona del Mar High;
Kim Hachelder, 18 and
Linebacker Willie Hall
of the Oakland Raiders
on the day of a game
starts off with French
toast and then has an ice
cream sundae.
Wendy Ba kl win, 18, ;::=.=======-=-=-., from .Mission Viejo
High; Kim Oden, 13,
from Vl'nado Middle
School in Irvine; Kristen
Brown. 13, from Lincoln
Middle School ill Corona
dcl Mar; and Casandra
Overby. 15. and Selina
Ware, 16. from Morn·
ingside lli J?h in
.LEASE
ORDER
YOUR '78
WE LEASE
ANYTHING OH
WHEELS
NOW!
}G.__, FORD
All POf'UUa MAH AND MODB.
Reader Gives View Inglewood.
COMPARE OUR COMPETITIVE RATES
CARS and TRUCKS
Dear Sir:
George Allen and the fickle
ringer of fate did it to Chuck
Knox and the Rams. Once again
old crafty George, with a new
JOh In mind had his players sky
hlgh for the game with Los
Angeles in Washington. He
managed lo knock Simpson. not
only out or the gamC'. but out or
the playoffs us wdl._ Then his
b litzing over -the-hill gang
eliminated Haden, and gn,·e him
a bndly bruised throwing arm
for the Viking game. When tht•
men from Minnesota brought
their own weather. it seemed
like another tri'ck of fate to Corel'
Knox out of Los Angeles.
Can anyone imagine the Vik-
ing second string quarterback
completing five straight passes
with Simpson leading the de·
fensive secondary for the Rams
Wilh a sor<' arm and a -wet
heavy ball In a driving rain
storm it's hard for a guy
Haden·s sile to rifle the ball or
throw it a long distance. This
caused the crucial Interceptions.
So they lost the game. and Knox
was happy to get away from an
angry Rosenbloom and a sour
situation. Even If lt O"l\!ant the
Buffalo ice box.
Dul Rosenbloom better watch
Men'8 Golf
out. the fickle finger may be sel· MHA vuoe cc
ting him up. Some year he could G•t _.,_.._ er .. 111as1 T--
lose to the Bills in the Su""r m•11t Cl-91'0U, lies OKldeel by ,.., malcllln9 K0ttce<4sl: Bowl. Chuck will be older and u -1. R~ Lom&ardl, Robert wiser then, and he is still a fine L•w, He11rr 1<111e11. ~ ~rk•; 2. David ~. We,,_, Perklm, COaCh. !>ttw Slletet, Te<I WOO<Mro; J. DHn
Now that Chuck Knox has a1-.11, Jkk eonrec1. Fr•11k PIM, ' h · Rolle rt Crevier; 4. O..rte!> aonneca,
24/36 Month Malnlenanoe Plans Avallable
Free loan cars to lease customers.
THEODORE ROBINS LEASINa CO.
l ~ .. !gp!m~· 20~~:.~r:.o:,:'.yd,
540·8211 or 642·0010 gone, let S get SOmeJ. Ing" Robert Cunllf, Roger Ne•I, P•ul
str a ii?hl about Sewickley, Pen-_ROC>_1MOf' _________ L. _-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_--~~======================================~-n::.ylvan1a, his home town. The
nearest steel mill is at lC'ast
eight miles away and the only
coal manes ar<' across the Ohio
River, over the halls and through
the woods. There arc some blue
collar workers who like Chuck's
father livfl lhC're and commute
to the steel mills. However most
of the residents arc white e<>llar
toilers who work in Pittsburgh
offices. just twelve miles away.
And up on the hills back of the
little borough, there's Sewickley
Heights, where the steel mill
and coal min<.' owners live.
Sewickley is a quaint, very
old. and pretty little town with a
~onderful Y .M.C.J\. Here
athletes Uke Knox and Bones
Hamilton of the Stanford Vow
Boys, got their early training. It
always had facilities for most
sports, even a nine-hole golf
course. I know. I used to live
there in my youth.
Arthur L. Hite
Huntington Beach
February 13-19.
Sports Calendar . '
For seven days and two nights,
one of the richest, most exerting tennis
tournaments in the world-the American
Airlines Tennis Games -will be held at
Mission Hills Country Club.
Brian Gottfried will be def end-
ing his title against stars like Bjorn
Borg, Arthur Ashe, Roscoe Tanner,
Harold Solomon, Raul Ramirez.
•
,.
• ••• ,..,going to tMI .. .....,...,. It,.,.....
"'1 MW Unoofn, I got IM belt trtnMnt It
Johnlon A Ion.''
HAROlO E. CUl'F
• Anlhelm
Orange County•• Oldtlt
Uncoln·Matcuty o.Jerahlp
Temfic tennis, serving a worthy
cause. All proceeds go to Desert
Hospital Foundation.
Get your tickets at any Mutual
TicJ<et Agency (call 213-627-1248). Or call
CHARGIT toll free 800-223-1814. And you can use your American Express card .
The American Airlines Tennis Games .
Don't miss it for love or money.
f
(
I .
I
BASEBALL I MISCELLANY
SoCal Nine Has Tough Schedule
Mike Scheel~ and Randy Greer, u
palr or NAIA Distritt ·3 a ll-star
performers, return to bolster the
Southern CaliCorniu College (Costu
Mesa) baseball team th as M:ason under
coach Doug Adams.
Adams will be starting his fi rst full
season as head coach after taking
over in mid.season a ytur :igo.
The SCO Vangua rds face a tou~h. 52-game sche dule in c luding 14
doubleheaders. Inc luded among the
foes are UCLA. t:C Irvine. Cal Stall•
(Fullerton>. S~1n D iei.:o St·1t1" C:il
State (Long Beath>. San Franc1Hrt
State and Chapman.
The Vanguards will fll•lt.I a tNlm
with a mixture of veh'rllns ;ind first
y ear performers indud ang onl·
freshman and s i x sophomor es.
Several junior collegl' trnnsfers arc
a lso on the 20·m::in roster
Scheetz, a transfer from P <icafic Bi·
ble College <i'ullcrton) last y<'ar. is a
senior a nd was thl' st arting catcher.
He finished the.• 1977 t;im p;.11gn with ;i
.328 balling aver age and figure's to
s tart most J;?amcs this vcnr. He is
backed by Cypress Co lll•ge trans fer
Randy Reno, a j unior.
Greer will st ar l ;igain
t erfield. Ile had a .325
average Ja)t st'~1son :incl
bases . )l'CO n <I on l .\
in <·l·n
h;1tt 111 i.:
stol1• :I.\
to 1):1 n
Katella Retains
No. I Ranking
With one \\Cl0k 's ·•<·lion of lhl' n·i.:
ular s eason H•ma in1nf.!. Katl-llJ
<Anaheim) ll1~h's Knights l'Onllnut•
their firm grip on th1· =-:o I runkm~
in Orange County pn•p ha~kctb:ill
circles.
The Knij!hts h.n 1• roll<·d to an 8·0
Tecord m Empire Lc•ague <'11 cles. a
circuit that com pill'd .in R 2 rt:Mrd
against Sunset Ll0.1glll' t1•;ims prior lo
le a gue play
F ounto.11n \':ill~·,· ll 1gh·~ Raron~
moved up a not t h. l•>ll<>\\ mg S1•rvik
(,\na hl'1m l H 1gh's up~l't lo~s to
flb hop :\tontgonwr~ (1'11rr.in1·1· I Ill
Angel us Lt•agu1• al'l1on.
The only battle among r.itt•d 1t-,1m:-
this week is in thl' Or:rn l!e U'ilf.!Ul'
where No. 6 Brea vii·:. at No. R \'.tlcn·
cia (Placentia> lligh Frido.1y night
Orange ('ounty To11 lO
l'rl'p Cage Poll
Pos. s~:hool, Rl'cord
l. Kalella <20· I )
2. l"ountain Va l k~ < 17 I l
3. Servile (17.J1
.t. El Modena <1 1 :J)
5. Los Amigo:> <17 :J>
6. Brea Cl7 ·6>
7. Huntington lk;il'l1 115 lil
8. Valencia 05·41
9. Estancia \IS 7>
10. Cuny1m ns h i
PoinL-.;
f,()
51
t9
·10
25
24
21
18
12
8
Che11kau1>kas <57) who re mamL'<i out
of :wtlOul this year Greer . according
to A(foms, could r<'a ch 50 thll> scuson.
"Ra ndy '!> one of the fastest plf1ytrs
on the k a m :1t1d he is a potential pro·
fcs&ionul athlete," Adams ~ays.
"We are playu1 g a much tougher
s chedule this season but l 'm r eul op.
t imi..,l ic aboul this te am . I don't know if W l" cun equal or beat last year's.
rl'cord hut I tlunk we ha ve a bctlt>I"
team "
A ~ t«lr ,1go thr Vunguurds finished
32·25
P1tc hmg for lht• Vanl(uards will ht>
1·cturn111g lettermen Larry Adams
18·9, Jr , rh >: Tam Lynch <3·1. soph.
r h); Kent !\liyashirn 17 I. Jr . lh >:
.ind ku tch W;ird 14·3, Jr . rh >.
Oth•rs include Bri.lll Costello<', a
tr ans1er from Golden Wei.t Collc~t·.
Bill H idckll. a tra ns ft:r from Cal
Sta le ffullerton); and Tony Bren·
nan, .i lrunsfer from Santa ,\nu \II
but R1ddt•ll arc right handed.
St an Thomas <.290) returns at ftrst
b..ise. llt• is a junior and wall be ll'
lit:\ ed by Reno when necessary.
t\ t ~l·cond base. Luke Griffin. a
freshm<in fro m E st ancia <Co~ta
Mesa 1, has t aken O\'cr with Mal<e
Peter'!. a sophomort'! who didn't pla)
.las ts~ason,rcady to stepin.
Butl'h Plunk. a j unior trans fl•r
from S1t•r'l'a College < Rost•\·i lie> and
\I 1ke \\h ill• from Porll:ind. Or~ .. an•
h:ittlini.: lor the.• sturt1ng ~hr1rhtop
-.pol.
Dai c \\'ilson • ~i5l. a <,OJ)homcin·. n·.
turn~ ut lhircl hai.<•
Othl•I' out f11·l <lc.•rs includt• Hut.I
Stont li1k1" ;1 rdurnin~ ll'ltt•rrnan
sl:t1 l••r 111 11·11 llclcl, :\l ark Woocl
( <!82 .1 -.ophomorc.· r~turntn i.: 1n
ri g h 1 I 1" I cl ; Sten· W ag n 1' r ;1
fr<'sh1t1J11 from Hl\~rs ldl', and l .. 111 \
llou h .. 1 :-ophomore tr,in~ft·r 1ro1n
Or .rn;:eo l'o.1sl Collt• J.!t•
Thi So('.11 19iX sc.·hl'dUlt•
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UH I l
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Tut\ prll 4 Wholll~< •I sec,, JOI
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Thur~ A<>rol ll sec •I Pel)Ol'rdlM (' JO• S..I Ao"ll~UC~nO-•ISCC INOOf10HI
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Thur; AO(lt 11 G'""" c.~.-on di\(( 11 JOI
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W•·d ~v l C..tl Stdl\" 1~ultt·,tnn1 ·•' \C\.
Los Al Entries
FOf' Toni9M
Fo~I Po\11 0
"I AST RACE UO Y••• I Yt'M
\l,)(l()
{JUf)l1t'4fh• (h1• IH.ut II
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("-'" H1ll -:_l\dt1n tti;.f\111'11' II
Skvwu,d• r ((~t101,,1 11
I
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1
Pro Cage,
Hockey
Standings
old'J &. up Cl•fmtnq P.n+·
(1..t1m1tHl prl(~ ~7.~
S1111ann11h \1111 ht.Jrt1
M• I C I ICIM~'' ...
N•llOft•I 9 .... elbotll AUO<l•Oon
Eo\SfE .. j CONFERENCE
AUMIO< Ohltlon
W L
PholadtlP"I• II 1'
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WALUCON,lllENCE
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W L 1 l'hOI' OA
MqfttrMI JS I I I~ 110 fl)
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C.ood Coov • P,.r ,,.., '
f d l J&•I Win fM1hhrll 11 I
)orttbeH•t IP~·,oer ) \I ' FIFTH RACE ~10 y.iod\ I yur
Old \ & VP (l.t1m1nq r•urH' \A,100
(la1m1nq pr1ct• \\ 000
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111 ~·~ ;!~':.!."'tr.;~::..~ )I~ Tr•• Moon (C:,dot&I
s-o~ o~ lM11<11e111 Aom~o Sir Ip IHfrtl
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Mary Ann Ora
Shelley Phllli
Lynn Griswold r
give the Golde
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n asties t e am
nucleus around
build the team f
Ttiis trio hel
Rustlers to post
dual meet record
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PUBU C NOTICE
11·11 ...
SUl'IAIOll C9URT 01' THE
H ATE OI' <ALIFOllNIA l'OA
THE COUNTY OF OllANGE
Ho.A·..UM
NOTICE OF HIAAINO 01'
PETITION F,Olt PAa.ATE OF WILL
ANO COOi ti LS AND FOR LETTE AS
TESTAMENTARY AND FOR
AUTHOlllZATION TO ADMINISTE R
UNDEll THE INOll'ENOENT
ADMINllTRATIOH 01' ESTATES
ACT.
E•l•l~ ol lHOMAS G MYtRS,
Dt<••\l>d
N0TIC£ IS HEREBY GIVEN IMI
R[ATRil (,ARCI A ~OTO •net
E OWANO A L4'NOAY h•v~ hi..,
t'Wlr .. 1n a pruuon tor PlObare of w 111
•nd lo, C.ocUcth •nd tor lrtt~r\
Tt\tlM•l'\tail'y.,,., for Autr\Ot'll•H~n to
AOm1n1,t•r unotr tne-l~nl AO·
tn1nt\U•t1~ o« E.\l•ltt Ai<t rrtrrencr
to whlth " mttde tor f urtht'r
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ot.cf' or PW>«tno •~,.,,,.ft•""""~·
•or Feor,..ry 11 "71, ot 10 00 • m 1n tft~ courtroom ot Oe~rtrneru No. l of
w 1d CO\olrl. •t 100 Ctvl< Center Or1~•
Wol. In the City o• S•IH• And
Cdlltorru•
04leel Feb<Wry 7. 104
WILLIAM E. SI JOHN,
eoun1 v Cle<~
MUSICK, l'EELE ll & GAlll AET
An ... ,..v•tuw One Wll•lll,. 11..i., !Ot~ Fl-
LOS ANGELES, CA. 90011 T.,. '1'-IMI
Atlor"eo for ,._1111on•rt
Publ•\ht"d Or«tnQf" Co.~t Ddtly PtJot
f •O 6, I I), 1911 ""'~
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Tf'I.,. tonow1no p.;r\iOfl 1,. OOenq bu\1 ,,,.,h .)
G w WE'lDINC. 11110 w.-i•rn
111 vunut Sta"ton. Cdltt<1rnJit •JC>c:.bl)
Gwen 1th W Sry.1oen, .&q '1 Sn•nar in
Or , Hunt1nq1on tJeactt. C•IHorl"t·• '7449
Thi~ bu,tf'tl!S.\ I\ CCM"IOVCINJ by .an tn
c11 v1oua1
G w Stltloen
Tiii\ \lalemenl WA liltd wllh IM
Cou "" C••"' 01 OrdM)<' County on
f'ebru•rY 1 ••11
Monday, Febtuary &. 197& OAILVP\LOT
""'* P-1.-O'-Coell OeUr PllOC1
J,.,, >O -""'° '· 1J, 70, .,,, ... ,,
PUBUC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
.. ICTITIOUS aUSINISSS
NAMll SfATIMl!NT
TM tollowlno .,.,.._ IS CIOi"9 blltl·
MHH
THE STITCHING POST, 1•s Uu L•M , Cotl• Me ... C..Ohtornla ,,.,,
C•rol~rt M Sii-••, US llMI une,
C<Kt• Mew, c.1o1oml• ta71
Tiii\ l>llsllltfl ll cOlldwcl~ by an In
dlvld .. al
(;Molyn M. $11hf'
Tiiis SU-WA$ flled Wiii\ 1 ...
Counlv Cltrti of Of•noe County on
J an ... ry :.., "" -Pu4111"*' O'-Coelt o.lly Pli.t
JMI JO -Fdl. 6, U, 20, f'1t .,.._",/
PUBUC NOTICE
•
. . . . . . • t .. .. • •
Monday, Febru41Y 8, 1978 Television TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS
\1(1\.I>\'
l-EVENING
L'OOI i :. NEWS
I Bi11!ROEHCY OHEI I A llgtlt IMna c:rur-Into t' .,. ~·t houM. I D MOW!
**"A WI/Ill. In The Spring f Rain.. ( 1110) Ingrid Baro--
"""· AntNny Quinn. A ~ Nlpplty married
WOINn ~ and laNe In
loV9 wilt! a down-t~h
mountain man. (2 hr )
Q) THE BAADY BUNCH
The children are angry at
Cindy for being a tettletala. e THE A0010E8
ForMt, a toogll car.. c;op,
Wt• $ 10,000 frOOI Iha eeena of a robbery.
f£I ELE<:TAICCOMPANY
~ OOV£RNMENT
AEGlA.ATION: WH6'£
DO WE 00 FROM HERE?
Senator Wlltlam Proxmire. sanator Jonn c. Danforth,
Otftoa of Manlgement and
Budget'a Ex!IOU1M Auo-Admiral Fonda
clate DlractOf' Harrison
Wellford and Peul W.
Mac:Avoy diecuas govern-
mwit regulation.
(.fQ) A8CNEWS
t:.308 MOVIE
Henry Fonda heads an all-star cast
in the second half of the epic mov-
ie "l\Iidway" tonight at 9 on NBC.
l'hannel ·I.
na Summer, Joyce
Bogard. Leo S11yer.
**'h "The Loat Wotld"
(1960) Michael Rennte. Jiii
St. John. A zoologocal
axpectltion aearchea lor a
"1011 world," betlllno
gigantic lnMcta and CAnm-
balL (1hr.30 min) ID BEWfTC..ED
Refusing to obey the
Wit~· Council and give
up Darrin, Samanlhl IONS
her magleal powers.
7,00 D NBC NEWS 0 LIARSCLUB fJ ABCNEWS
Q) I LOVE LUCY
Elli OVEAEASY
Guett: Theodore Blkel
(I) UNTAMED WORLD ®J MERV GRIFAN
Guests; Nell Bogard. Don-
Ricky has planned 11
surprise party lor Lucy's
birthday
Q) ADAM-t2
Malloy and Reed are out to
cateh an eluaive NbOteur
on a one-men a'10·pollu-
t1on campa1gn.
Channel Listing•
0 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles U KNBC (NBC) Los Angeh:is
0 KTLA (Ind) Los Angeles
fJ KABC-TV (ABC) Los Angele<.
(I) KFMB (CBS) San 01ega
0 KHJ-TV (Ind) Los Anqoles
@) KCST (ABC) San Diego
Q) KTTV (Ind} Los Angelel> IE KCOP· TV (Ind ) Los Anqeles w KCET-TV (PBS} Los Angeles
all KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Be.ich
fll) MACNEIL/ 1.E>iRER
REPORT m COLLECTIVE
BAAGAJNIHO GOES TO
SCHOOL CJ) TO TEU. THE TRUTH
7:301J CONSUMEA BUYLINE
Oevld Challangaa a glue
con-clal, O'-tome
1nllde tlpa on used car
buying, and axpoteS soma
trlghtenlng feet• about
ba~ c:uh«'S ched<L 0 NEWLYWEDOAME fJ THArS HOLLYWOOD
"The 60llg And Dance
People" m THE BRADY BUNCH
Greg almost has an accl·
dent In the family car.
CD ADAM-12
Malloy dlsappaar• Into the
wilds of Griffith Par!( whlle
pureulng a robbery
sua~t. a;) LA. INTERCHANGE
· Popcorn" 88-year-old
octot Clarence Mu1e
d111Cusset his long htStO<y
1n the film Industry.
GD FRENCH CHS'
"Veal: Pollrlne Farde" (RI
Cl) 1100,000 NAMETHAT TUNE
OJ) WILD, WILD WORLD
OF ANIMALS
"o..dly South American Snak•·· e.-oo 8 Cl> 0000 T1M£8
J.J~ Thelma and MldlMI
,_. tor theff llYee When
they dilcooler their my.te-
rlout MW boerder .. the
only IUMY!ng wt1-In a
trial llgalnat a ~s
crook. 8 UTT\.E HOUSE OH
TMEPfWAIE
"The lnherlt8n08" Charles
lngall9 flnde hlmselt dMply
In debt wnen he malt•
pw~ on credit In
expectation ol a large
lnhefitano9 that doeen .,
mlle<laUza. 0 MOVIE *'·~ "Two ~ 81edttop''
I 19711 JtmM Taylor, WW·
ran Oa .... Young...._ old In
• croa c:Quntry car r-. (2
hrs.)
fJ (II SIX MIWOH ~·~-Auttln must work '-t to recover
a stolen ~Ilion dollar
maat~ frOOI Clime
lord Chllton.~Kane and
return it to a ouring Rus-
aian art ax lbit. Bibi
Beadl, Len Birman oi-t
star. 0 JOKER'S Wll.D
Q) CAAOl 8UANETT
AHDFRIENOS
a.-t: Joanna W~d.
CD MOVIE
***"""Roman HOiiday"
I 1953) Outgory Pack,
Audrey Hapbwn. A pttn.-
CMS talla In iov. with a
newspapefman whlla on
vacation In Ronw. (2 hrs.)
t1i) THE PAISOHER
"free for Al" The Prtaon-
er atands k>r election u
the,_ "Num~ TWo."
'11) QUE PA.SA. U.8.A.?
Juana dacldaa to go bacll
10 Kt\ool, laaYlng Joa and
Carmen In charge ol the
llOUSeWOrk.
1:30 8 Cl) 8A8Y, rM eACI(
Ray Ellla Is gteeted by two
atrong-ann men woo show
up to COiiect a loan shark
debt that'• grown utro-
non1ically while he was -•Y· 0 CONCENTRATION
Q) $121,000 QUESTION
~· ·--
TUBE TOPPERS
KCOP Q\ 8:00 "Roman Holidav."
Audrey Hepburn won an Oscar for her
performance in this 1953 comedy.
NBC 8 9:00 -"Midway." The con-
cluding episode or the all-star war movie
about the decisive sea battle or World
War II. Charlton Hes ton and Henry Fon-da head the cast.
ABC f1 9:00 -"The Initiation of
Sarah." A college s tudent <Kay Lenz>
possesses psychic powers which her
mother (Shelley Winters) urges her to
use in this new TV movie.
Ci) OVER EASY
GUMI' ThaOdor9 Blkal.
8:00 8 Cl) M•A•s•H
Lono-anted mail from
t>oma cauaes Klinger to
quit hit job U ptOjac:llonlst
1n the middle of the movie.
0 MOVIE
••• ''Midway" (1978)
Chllrnon Haston. H41nry
Fonde. The aplO World
W1r II alt-naval blttla
bat-toe Ja~ and
Amar1can PIC:lflo naet1.
(Pvt 2 of 2)
fJ 9 A8C MOVIE
"The lnltlatlon Of Sarah"
(Premiere) Snelley Wlnte<s,
Kay Lanz. Whan a college
etudant Is humiliated by
aororlty gins. tw mottw
urgee her to retaliate by
unlNahlng her terrifying
psychic pow.a. 0 IRONSIDE
In debt to a IOan·shark. a
gambler la lat ott only It ha
aids In a bank robbery.
Q) MERV OfUF'FIH
Gueatl: Neil Bogard, Don-
na Summar, Joyca
Bogard, Lao $ay91', Rich-
ard Pttrfy.
6i) THE OUTTERING
PRIZ£8
"A Country llf1 ' Alan
Partis and hie wile Barbara
are entertained by Alan'•
old girlfriend and Barb•
ra·a Old boyfriend. WhO are
now married and Nvlng Ill •
small town.
Ci) DAVIDSUSSKIHD
"Sex Tllefapy" and "Chit·
dren Of The Holocauat"
8:308 Cl) ONE DAY AT A
TIME
When the apartment l>uild-
lng ii purc:hesed by ii
woman. Sc;hneld1r'1
romantic: 8'torl1 to lnaur1
hi• aupartntendenl'• job
mey get him into more
trouble than h• can
handle.
10:00 II Cl) LOU GRANT
Lou Is plunged Into the
world of Iha Krlehna moya..
mint when Trlb editor
CNwlta HufM,..,. m eon
le loet 10 the strange 'Ho· Ion.
08 NEWS
• HONEYMOOHERS
Spurred by hie wife. Ralph
ettempll to regain hie Iott
youth, aod and• up trying
to Show olf at a roller 11111-
10:30 Q) NEWS i rlr>lt.
THE OAIOINALS:
WOMEN IN ART
"Mary c-11· lmpree..
llonllt FrOOI Ptllladelpn\1"
The reletlonahlp bat-
her ffl• and art le revealed
through her paintings.
put.... groptllcs, Inter-
views, letter•. personal
memotrt and olliclal docu·
mwits ot lhe period.
11:00 8 a fJ CJ) III NEWS 0 LOVE. AMERICAN
STYLE
"Love And The Trl1ngte" A
ventriloqu111 takes h11
dummy along on h••
honeymoon. "Love And
The Fly" Babe goes to
•xtremes to oat her
h111band's attention.
0 MOVIE
• • "A Walk Ir> Thtl Spring
Rain" ( 1970) lngnd Berg-
man, Anthony Quinn A
-lngly happily married
woman meeta and talls 1n
love with e down-to-earth
mountain man (2 hr )
• TH5 ODO COU~LE
Felix •-to lat Oecat help Ml! Changl 1111 waya
el&ar hie tlfltdly attitude
,_ n.ttned a raconclliaoon
~ w1th hl8 lormar wlla.
I LET'S MAl<E A DEAL
DICK CAVETT
0-11. Donal 0onnany,
aci<>t. 0 MACNEIL I L!HRt!R
1111"°"1
11:30 8 (f) C88 LA TE MOV!a
• • "How To &Mk Up A
H"'9Y Divorce" ( 19711) ~bala Edon, Hal lltldon.
A ~ trlaa to win her
d·huaband bade by dat-
a Mll·-red man-
·t-n.(R)
ONIOHT quut hOll; Biii Coaoy.
duast1: Loretta Lynn, Bltl
SaluQa, Kraaltltl. 0 LOW, AMERICAN
STYLE
'love And The H-
keapar" A Sloppy hOUM-
wlle develops arnn•la.
' Love And The Jolcar''
B111'1 practical Joie••
threaten his ron1enca.
fJ t!1J POLICE STORY
"FlretMrd" When a youno
police Offtc.f's hand• are
-ely bumad and cnp-
pled In a helicopter crash,
ha sel• out lo prove he can
perform hi• dutlaa. Tony
Lo BllnCO, John ,..hn,
MacOonald Carey guest
•tar. (RI
Q) NEWS
CD O!TSMAAT
Smart s 1Nort to poaa 1s e
daratiCt are hampered by
Agent 99, WhO doesn't
know he is • double agenl. tD CAPTIONED ABC
NEWS
MORNING
12:t0 8 TWIUOHT ZONE
"You Drtva"
Q) CROSS-WITS CD MOVIE •** "The Well" (t9511
Richard Rober. Harry
Morgan. P11ty pr1judjces
disappear When a black
child becomes trtpped In a
wall. (1hf'30 min)
12:30 I) OENE AUTRY
··Hearl 01 The RIO
Grande"
I AL.FRED HITCHCOCK
12:31 ST ARTIME
'Parties To Tne Crome"
J11frey Hunter, Oarren
~ 9 IAOHSIDe.
81npac1Jng a jUry lht by a
gangatar daiandant, Iron-
.Ida Ma6l1 ptoot to avoid a
hung juty.
1:00 8 TOMOMOW
"Olaaio oar Night" v~
tag41 catt w1ll be dltc>t ....
by"' clUb membar9. 0 ISPY
''The LOfler"' 1:30 ·~ • *. "lmllltlOO Of u ....
( 1934) Cteudatta Colbert,
Werran Wiiiiam. Two-.
.,,. and tMlr daughter&
9hlt'9 trlendship and IUC>
CMS but-~
total happlneaa. ( 1 hr., 30
min.)
1:37 fJ NEWS
2:00 0 NEWS ,.~
2:06 f) "90VIE
* * "Six Blactt Hortaia ..
(19621 Audia Murphy, 0.C
~A woman hlNlf
two man to eaoott ha9,
aetoaa llldlan 1arrlt0ty Wfl4' •
Iha lnMtnlon of klfllno oM '
of !Mm. (1 hr.,"° min l
3:0011t NEWS
3:.a I NEWSMN<ER8 4:15 NOONTIME
T~•dal('•
Daytl•e lflovl~•
AFTERNOON
12:00 O • * "Sleml Baton"
( 11158) Brian Keith, Rick
J1ton. A ruthlaaa land
gnbbat hlr.s • gunellnger
to kill a Mexican land
o-to gel control of his
vaat holding• ( 1 hr , 30
min)
Q) •*YI "The Liii Vega
Story" ( 1962) Victor
Mature. Jene R111aet1.
Gambling, colorful llOftlS
and a murder 1><0Ylda the
framework for 11111 tk:tlonal
guided tour of"the city. (2
hrs., 20 min.)
3:00 @I ••~ "Beach Blanket
Bingo" ( t96Sl Frank ta
Avelon. Annetta Funicello.
Kldnlpl>lng la alt part of
the fun and froltc of the
tMnaga baaoh Ml. (1 hr.,
30mtn)
3:30 0 **'A "Follow The
Boye" ( 1963) Connie Fran-
aa. Peuta Prantlu. Four
young gtrl• stop •t no\hlng
10 remain dose to their
boy1rionda. (1 l>r., ao IJlln.$
Britt Finds Her Roots
Sisterlg Saga
Kay Lenz Oeft) lives in the st\,.adow of the sunny smile of
her sister (Morgan Brittne~) •in "The Initiation of
Sarah," a suspense drama an ABC's Monday Night
Movie tonight at 9 on Channel 7.
( J A breath ot treah air.
OUTDOORS · ' In the DAILY PILOT
Actress to Star in Mimseries in Sweden
By JAY SllARBUTT
HEVERLY HILLS (AP)
Bratt Ekland, who no lon~er
Jives with rock star Rod
Stewart. was in NBC's "Ring or
Pa~ittOJI" last week and is in
N BC's' "The G rcat Wallendas"
next Sun.day. And after that'?
She'll staq filming a six·part
min iscrie~ on Feb. 20. But the
beautiful blonde actress says it
won't be for NBC, ABC or CBS.
It 's for non-commercial
television in her native Sweden.
The show is ''The Shipowner."
by British writer Norman Crisp.
Miss Ekland, 35, soys she'll play
the friend or a British journalist
who marries the playboy son of
a Swedish shipbuilding family.
"l'VE NEVER WORKED in
Sweden before, never said a line
of dialogue in Swedish, and it's
scary." said the lady, calm, as·
sured and confident when in-
terviewed over a few toddies at
a famed hotel here.
There arose the inevitable
ques tion of her recent settle-
ment with Stewart, whom she
sued last August for $15 million
when they split up after living
together 21.!? years here sans
benent of marriage.
The s uit. filed in Los Angeles,
was called off last month with
an out-of-court agreement. Miss
E . politely but firmly declined to
. say what was worked out by the
opposing forces.
"It was a private settlement
between me and Rod which will
never be known to the press,"
she said. "Neither he nor I will
discuss it.
THAT BEING setUed, she was
asked why she's returning to
Sweden to make a TV show -at
relatively low pay -Instead of
continuing to lab«>r in
Hollywood's lucrative film and
television hatcheries.
"Well, it was a hard de·
cision," she said. "But I'm so
fed up with Sweden not recogniz-
ing me for what I am -an ac-
a, .. ,,..,.,..
BACK TO SWEDEN
Actress Britt, Ekland
tress, not a soap opera. not an
object.
"I'm a working actress and
have been that for close to 15
years," said the veteran of near·
ly 30 movies, including "The
Night They Raided Minsky's"
and ''The Man wilb the Golden
Gun."
Miss Ekland, ex-wife or Bri-
tain's Peter Sellers and mother
Burns Will Host
LOS ANGELES <AP)
George Burns will be co-host
with Marilyn Beck on the
··second Annual.Hollywood Out-
Takes," which features unused
film from Oscar-nominated
films, on NBC on Sunday, March
26.
of lwo young children , isn't
a bandoning movie-makiJlg here.
But she concedes that her accep-
tance of that Swedish TV offer
has caused some distress to cer-
tain parties here.
"MY AGENT IS tearing his
hair out, my business mana~er
1s quitting, but what can 1 do?"
asked the actress. wbpse career
began when she moved from
Sweden to England al20 to study
acting and work.
"The ties lo my oJn country
are stronger than the ~es ire just
to make lots of monty and be
very. very famous."
She spoke of her life ere since
she and Stewart bid ach other
adieu.
"( was very, happy ere until
we broke up ," ~ e said
pensively.
"This place ca led Los
Angeles is not a very place
for a woman on her wn. Sue·
cessful. famous, a ractive.
rich, it makes no diffe nee.
"IT IS NOT A pl:
women are either re.
wanted for anything lse than
pure pleasure. And It's not what I want out of my e."
In her view. the me lk h~re.
particularly the rich, mous or
powerful types, consi attrac-
tive women little mor~an lov-
ely personal accc sories,
trinkets to boost their egos .
She wants none of hat. she
says emphatlcaily.
"It's a very peculiaplace --I've only discovered at slncl.'
l 've been on my o n." she
added. She says she '11 has a
home here, her kids re very
happy. here, but so day she
may bid LA farewell.
•'ULTIMATELY
my sanity, I feel l'l
moue to Europe," s h
have alwaya liked it
have always like(il
been in a relationship.
"And octside the rel
s torfure. I feel alm
prisoner.''
'Gri%.%lf1' Baek
Actor Dan Haggerty meets
th(' press to announce his
full recovery from burn in-
juries. He'll return to the
filming of his NBC series.
c;rizzly Adams.
Everett Set
For Cop Role
LOS ANGELES CA P) -Chad
Everett stars as a police
negotiator who tries to persuade
two bank robbers to surrender
their five hostages on "The
Mouth Marines," on NBC on
Saturday, March 4.
Warren Oates and Bruce
Davison also star as the two
humbling j!unmen and Academy
Award·winner Sandy Dennis
stars as onl.' of the hostages in
the Police Story movie.
Trish on 'Columbo'
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Trish
Van Devere plays a scheming
network exeeutive who kills her
boss when she's passed over for
promotion in ''Columbo·• on
NBC on Saturday, Feb. 25. Peter
Falk stars as th<.' rumpled detec-
tive.
l
I
BOOMER
MISS PEACH
"I hate these silent alarms!"
) .
~FUNKY WINKERBEAN by Tom Batiuk
I
WE REALL<J APPRECJAiE ~
~ING 10 ~ ~ 10
SPEAK AT OJR ~ ~
6ANOOET, MR. GARAGIOLA !
we:u. , 11~ ~ PLEA5URE ! r
CDJL..DN'T BELIEVE rT ~EN
I GOT ~ L.ErrtR 5A'(tNG
'THAT .XX:K MAGAZINE WANltD
TO Pf?EbENT" ME WITH lHE 1.5R:>R'TSCA51tR CJ= lHE t.;EAR.'
~ARD RIGHT HERE AT~
5C.HOOI... !
' I
~ ,:l'.lt ... ABOUT -rnAT
~ .. .
:CASEY By ChlrlH RodrfguH
Mt( ~EC.ONO WIFE
WAS AU IPf.J'TICAL
l Wlli/. WlJ COl.Jt.DN'T
7ELJ. ~ER AP.ltRT
FR°" UER 61ST'eR ...
MOON MULLINS '
GERIATRIX
~ WHfN SOYEONE:
CAU..43 ~ ·A "'7eNIOIZ
CITIZEN" 1 GO UP n-1~ WAL...L..!
by Ferd and Tom Johnson
GORDO
JUDGE PARKER
YEAH ... I GOT THE JOB! I'M HERE
A PICKJN6 UP MY THINGS! I~ JUST
!> IWSTY Q.EAAS A&OOT REAO'f TO LE.AVE!
OllT HIS ROOM /!if AREN'T YOO IH SC~ P
8AR>4EY'S PLACE FOR ~IS 11\0VE TO
SPENCER FARMS,
HE RECEIVES A
CALL AA0M LIU!
. . .
by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson
~l'M 6Tll.L. ~I~
Ott Llr:~ ~
Df"Al"H .' ~"-F'----~
~&N~ ON WMAT
YOLA'R'E COM PAR'1 ~G
IT TO ....
OR.SMOCK
wei...t..., RU1"'H, J:
TOOK "f'He wHee:t...s
OFF MY
TRAl'°"ING eF<A
0
by Gus Arriola
I 51<1PPEO MY CLASS! I WAS
ANXIOUS ro l<~OW IF 'fOll GOT
nif JO&! THl515 MARIE'S
DAY OFF AND IF Mt55
5PENCER GOES Ot1T W1TH MR.ORIVER, I CM 5HOW
'IOO THE 5AfE TONIGHT!
by Harold Le Doux
&ilonday, ftbtu.ary B, t978 DAILY PILOT~ .• ,
PEANUTS
OJT 10 THE WLLP ~
COUNTR't' WHERE MAN
HAS NEVER TROO!
l
by George Lem•t
.:i: csuess ... .; S/Gi-1:
IT vUS'I
FE:L.t... oveR!
TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLl
ACROSS
t Robu1I
energy
4 Lend·····
to
9WH Plrtlll
to
, 4 Exlat
1 5 Batt•• of the
18Grow1ng
outward
17 Hairdo
19 S~undla·
Otnt
46 R11ym1no
work a
47 Egypt
Hcredbun
49Mlntral
1ulllx
50 Noun 1ufflx
.~.
UNITED F11tur1 SyNdlcate
Setwd1y'1 Punle Sol\ted:
51 Georgia···· liHIMtfllt-'rtiiillii ... 1t1'1'W"W.illlf 52FamalH ..
S4 FOfceovt
58 Metric unit
60Anlmar
tnclosur• 61 ··--$Quad
HMS 82P1rm1t
20 Sletl·m1ll 84 Frtctlon
prOduct 68 Antwer
:>1 Tr1111oortation 67 Try for of.
mun1 flet ag11n rtceivtd word1 . •. 22 Andlfon 68 TllrH ' ' Au11ra111n 42 LOle • .:;
23 Cervin•
1n1n111
24 Essential oo
26 Mutlllll
29 Fox
31 Oiall'IOnd
SI.Ing
32 Eno1ng for
d1v or 1nv
33 Condition Of
hit
38 Ofg1nl1m
38 Endtno tor
deporlmp
39 FOfmtr
Englltll
coin a
4 I DINl>Cltl~
gradu1lty: 2
wora1
43 Tnm
44 Fttnlle SIU·
1t•ll1n
69 Rtm11t11
70 Flow
71 E•trtm1ty
m1r1up11la mo111ure; ~ ... ~
I 2 Fr1ncn word1 -'
111son 45 Ft rtlllty ~
13 ••• Moines gocld11a .• ...
18 Muule-48---TUH-"l-DOWN loadlrtg c1n-dty ":t
non 53 ·· ·•• nous:
1 Ltclilng 24 Lymphoid Conhdtn-
IPlflt tisaue mass hally
2'M1. BOt'don1 25 Experiences 55 Join In m1r-
3 Blend llJlin rlegt
togatlltr 21 Crux 56 Expr111
4 Bllnd as •••• 28 Comes upon contempt
5 Slater 30Of1111 ur 51 ···-oown·
8 Seiter for 13 Mu11Ctl key MOdilltd
olflet 34 Lie on• 59 Pltclltr
7 Akin on Ille 111nt 81 Reatr111\
lllllef's side 35 In• CUf'rtnt 82 HotMCI
8 Went beck m1nr1tr viper
ewer 37 LOOll 83 M1un1 ·-,.
9 Solt mate I ot>llQ111ty 65 8t 1n ooer•· I
1 o Money 40 Spactc1 2 hon
I
...... . ........
t 88 DAILY PtLOT Monday, Febrvll"( 6. 1971 ENTERTAINMENT 1MOVIES 1 PCr' MUSIC
,.
l
i
I l:
'Orange' Cleared
Pet,er Graves Tells Location Woes·
BRASfLIA, Brazil (AP) -Brazilian
censors have approved Stanley Kubrick's
' film "A Clockwork Orange" for public s ... ing after holding it under wraps ror
nhrl'Y four years. lt will ~ shown without
cuts to viewers above the age of 18.
The following ~ Billboard's hot
record hits for the week ending
P)bruary ll as they appear in next
week's issue or Billboard magazine..
ROT SINGLES
1. STAYIN' ALIVE -Bee Gees
(llSO)
2. SHORT PEOPLE -Randy
Newman <Warner Bros.)
3. LOVE IS THICKER THAN
WATEJ\..:!.Arldy Gibb <RSO)
4. Wk ARE THE CHAMPIONS -Queen (Elektra)
5. JUST THE WAY YOU ARE ~
lfilly Joel (Columbia)
6. SOMETIMES WHEN WE
TOUCH -Dan Hill (20th Century)
1. BABY COME BACK -Player
(RSO) ~
; 8. EMOTION -Samantha Sang ~riv ate Stock)
9 . DANCE DANCE DANCE
1t>WSAH YOWSAH -Chic (Atlan· ~O. HOW DEEP IS YOUR LOVE -Bee Gees CRSO) •
TOP LPS
1. "Saturday Nieht Fever"
Soundtrack CRSO)
2. ROD Sl'EWART -Foot Loose
& Fancy Free (Warner Bros.)
~ 3. EARTH, WIND & FIRE -All 'All (Columbia)
"
4. QUEEN -News 0( The World
ektra)
HB.D OVER "DERSU
UZALA"
Cr.glall~)
5. BILLY JOEL -Tbe Stranger
(Columbia)
EASY LISTENING
1. WONDERFUL WORLD -Art
Garfunkel with Paul Simon & James
Taylor (Columbia)
2. JUST THE WAY YOU ARE -
Billy J oel (Columbia)
3. DESIREE -Neil Diamond
(Columbia)
4. CURIOUS MINDS -Jolmny
Rivers (Big Tree)
S. EVERYBODY LOVES A RAi,N
SONG-B.J . Thomas (MCA)
SOUL SINGLES
t. WIDCH WAY IS UP-Stargard
(MCA)
2. ALWAYS AND FO!tEVER -
Heatwave (Epic)
3. TOO HOT TA TROT -Com· modores (Motown)
4. OUR LOVE -Natalie Cole
(Capitol)
5. JACK AND JILL -Raydio
(Art1sa>. · ·
COUNTRY SINGLES
1. I JUST WISH YOU WERE
SOMEONE I LOVE -Larry Gatlin
(Monument)
2. YOU'RE THE ONE -
Oakridge Boys (ABC -Dot)
3. DON'T BREAK THE HEART
THAT LOVES YOU -Margo Smith
<Warner Bros.)
4. TO DADDY -Emmylou Harris (Warner Bros.)
5. WHAT DID I PROMISE HER
LAST NlGlIT -Mel Tillis CMCA)
C.11 642-5178.
Put • few words
to work for ou.
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Observes
Peter Graves: "When things went
wrong on a movie set, an act.or used
to be able t.o call his aient and
say, 'Come on down and foe it.' But
what do )'OU do when you 're filming
in the middle of Iran?"
Graves expresses the perplexity or
his fellow actors in dealing with a
totally new Cilm business. No longer
i'l the movie world controlled by
eight Hollywood companies with
direct lines of authority. Films may
now be financed by a network of con.
sortiums and-or governments, with
locations in far·off lands.
CONSIDER liRA VES' recent film,
tentatively called "Cruise Missile."
lt was shot in Iran with these ele-
ments:
1. An American
producer,
Yugoslav-born Ika
Panajovtavich,
who supplied the •
director (Leslie
Martinson),
screenplay and
U.S. actors
CGra ves, John Car·
radine, Michael
Dante).
. 2 . . G e r m a n HAVIS frnancmg, pl45 ac·
tor Curt Jergens. an actress and J>r'O·
duct ion personnel.
3. Spanish financing, an actress
and a cameraman.
4. ItaUan money, cameraman and production, personnel.
5. Iranian money, an actress and
workers to fill out the movie crew.
"NOW I KNOW what the Tower of
Babel was like," said Graves.
Many American act.ors, including
some big names, have embarked on
A 1DOVing story. A romantic story
A story <X ~ bat:red, friendship, triumph. and love.
:;. CITY CENTRE ClrollMA!I
~~E~"1
AMERICAN ~
S.A. FRWY (MANCHESTER E)(J a.a . FRWY (CITY DA. EX.I
THEATAU-ORANGE CO
SENIOR OT1ZENS $2.00
M11"11t*A.14f.m1 mt,....
"SEMI TOUGH" CIJ
·DAILY ~
6.-tM:OO-fnr--....._1~'1'l-·
SO COAST PLAZA
MllllWa.Mf.1111 ,_,_
"SAM.DAY MleH1' ........
BURR"t"Z ENDS SOON
At SpeciaUy Se.lected Theetres And Driw-lne!
ONLY SUNN COMPLIMENTARY PASSES ACCEPTI!D
SEE DIRECTORIES FOR SHOWTIMES ANO 2ND FEATURES
MESA, Costa Mesa • &41·5025
El CAMINO, Tustl1 • 544-1696
CENTURY 21, Anallel111 • 772·1902
MJRAUR, Saa Clem111te • 492-0056
CIMtlA WEST, Westnllnster • 192-4493 FOUMWll YALLEl. Fountain Y'llley • 839-1580
SADDLWCK, El Taro • 511-5110
DRAlQf ~LL. llrlll1e • 631·0340 cums CJ1K•11·121-1111 FOlllli W.l£Y DRAM, f 0111taln YJlley • 962-2481
BUEH PARI DR,·111, Baena Pa~ • 121·4070
Nl;tJEL. lapn • 491·1253 .
MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY·
"CLOSE ENCOUNTERS
OF nte THIRD ~IND: (PG)
"WORLD'S _GAEA TEST LOVER''. (PG)
"MONTY PYTHON "
"JULIA" (PG)
"'oPENING NIGHT:
such foreign adventures only t.o re·
turn home without pay, having
worked under sqOalid conditions.
How can actors protect themselves?
"It's not easy, when your agent 1s
6,000 miles away," sald Graves.
The flJm is set in a future London and
portrays a materialistic and decadent society
ii\ which a gang of young toughs practices
nton violence for sport. 1t was first shown
io th United States and Europe in 1972.
''You can't guard against everything,-=========~=========:::::::~ but there are certain conditions that I
insist on.
''First, my salary is placed in
escrow bete, to be released by stages
as lbe picture progresses. Second,
the round-trip transportation is all
arranged before I leave, plus any
traveling I might have to do to
varioua locations.
"THIRD, THE expense money
must ~ fortbqoming on time. If it
doesn 't arrive, I say, 'l'll"show up on
the set t.omorrmir when the money is
her,.' Fourth, lmust be asaured that
tbe acco.Ql'lllodations are as good as
possible. Is there a tratler on the
location? ls it heated? Is the hotel
room satisfactory?
"Nol that I insist on deluxe treat·
ment. If we're in some distant place
where nothing much is available, I 'U
say, 'If this is it, okay. Just find me
an extra blanket.'
"At times you have to be tough.
0Qming Wednesday, Feb. 8th
MELilROOKS
In
HIGH
ANXIETY
edwards NEWPORT
NEAR COAST HWY. & MACARTHUR.
NEWPORT:::: CI:NTI:R 644-07 60
edwards HUNTINGTON
HACH AT IUIS, H.L
848-0388 You find yourself doing things you
don't want to do, and it gets to be un-
pJeasanL But hell, that's the way the ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!
business is today. The actor bas
become a gypsy again, and he has to
protect himself any way he can."
ONE MATl'ER OF protection can
be serious: Stunt work:. Actors in
faraw~y locations are sometimes
as,ked t.o perform hazardous action
that. would normally be the work of
stunt men. Eric Fleming, Clint
Eastwood's co-star in the TV series
"Rawhide," drowned during a river
scene for a South American mm.
MATINEES DAll.Y LAUWOOO CEHnR 6 LA ..w>A
'"WI a.a NOf ... ~ClOSI INCOUNTllS Of T* THIH klND ll'OJ litO e a1.ao e •100 & a.30 IOlllT, NO "111111
OCCMet -NS e IOt9f DINVCI
OH OOOl(N)
'LUI
SUNSHINI IOYS CPOI
CMAICU llONtotc
nUFONINt MC*.-. T11S & f'M Ur. & MIN. 1rM e 4rU e .. IS e l rto & lo.to
l79-M50 YO't'AOI TO 1::.1 Of WOILD .. I
l1UU AO!Off MIJI
1, OUTH MAotrNU t11t
2. HUSTUI SQUAD Ill>
i . KUNO-IU MAMA llJ
~~iJ5 l1!
llOlUOllUllO\ Iii!~
r-7--.-r.:i<>:m......,~ -..._ -.....,._
"'Across the
GrHt Dfv6':$e" (G) ___ ..._ ........... -----·--
"Beyond end
Beck" (G)
8 PERFORMANCES MfNt THRU FEB.11 .. lil
'
. • • ~ .
INSJDE: •Ann Landers •Lifestyle
•Horoscope •Classified ·----
Kid.free,
Carefree
Couples
When they married six years
ago, Nova and Susan Pack
planned to have children.
But as time went on, and
their careers expanded,
they changed their minds.
By MARC'IA FORSBERG
Of tr.. 06oly Pilot St.II
00Wc w11l razseafam1ly.
A boy fo r you, a yirlfor me.
Oh can't yousee/1owhappy we would be?"
-·reaforTwo."fromtheplay
· NoN0Na11ette'"
Words by l rvrng Caesar
Nova Jnd Susan Pack don't want a hoy for
him and u girl ror hc:r. In fact. they are so com-
m1Hed to a ch1 tdrn·c hrestylc that they have
chosen pt•rmam•nt stc.:nh£alion as a means of
birth c:ontrol
J\lri1ost two Yl'urs ago. when Susan was 26,
she hud a laparoscopy. a surgical procedure
that p<'rmancnlly doses the fallopian tubes to
the passagl' or eggs. thus preventing conception.
The ir story parallels that or thousands of
other American couples who bt.'11eve that par·
enthood 1s optional. P eople like Nova and Susan
Pack arc those who want freedom to pursue their
intcrt·sts and career!> and who arc concerned with
the world'soverpopulat1on
Tht• Pach' hfe!>tylt· 1s a combination of ac
live soc·ial calendar. wN•kcnd trips and yearly
vacations. antiqut• collt•tting. photol'(raphy, dis
c·o dam·mi? 1£•ssons, laney chnners al restaurants
on the \\Cekends. parties, movies and long
walks on the bcad1
THE\' AR f:N'T Ol'T play in~ all the t ime
thou~h. As prort .... s1onal pt•t>plc. their carc<·rs de·
mane! mort• than till' stundard 40 hours or work
l':t I' h \\'Ct'k
'\O\ <.I I!> a partm•r 10 the luW firm or
Wl'aVt'r. Stn ckl<'n and Pack in J\nahr1m As ad·
1unl't prori>ssor of law ut American Colleae of
I.aw in Anaheim. hl' tl•uches leJ!al ethics' and
prctf<'ss1onal respons1tnhty to law student:-. -it 's
pa rt of his effort lo bring about change a nd up-
grade lht• i m a~l' of lawyers. He is al110 a
membe r of the board or directors ro,. the
Worn en's L aw Cente r in Tustin and the
An aheim Counselin~ Center.
CSee KJDFREE. Page C2>
Nova and Su$pn Pack get ready for a weekend trip.
One out of every 20 Americans doesn't want
to have children, says Dave Dismore, president
of the greater Los Angt'les Chapter of the Na-
tional Organization for Non·parenl.i.
go along with the notion that parenthood ls op·
lion al.
The number of married women in thelr 20s
who have decided against ever having children
was 1.3 percent In 1967, By 1974, that number
had grown to 5.2 percent who wished to remain
chlldfree, he adds.
Yet frlmds, co.workers, relatives, parents
and the mecUa ap~ar to reinforce the idea that
''everyone has children and there's something
wrong with you If you don't have them," says
DavP Dismore, Los Angeles N.O.N. spokesman.
The birthrate among women aged 20 to 24
dro~ped from 261 per 1,000 In 1957 to 119 In ]91A.
The rate among women aged 25 to 34 dropped
from 157 to KG. while that among wo01en 35 to 44
"t'll from 60 to 20.2, according to a Rand. Corp.
study.
It's called "pronatallsm," be says. It's de·
fined. by a uthor E lle n P eck In the book,
"Pronatallsm, The Myth of Mom and Apple
Pie." as any attitude or policy that Is "pro·
birth,·· that encourages reproduction, thal ex·
31ts the role or parenthood.
In 1975, 4.6 milJion men and 3.6 million
women underwenl permaQent sterilization
operations, according lo estimates from . the
New York-based Association for Voluntary
SterlllnUon, Inc.
N .O.N. isn't a nti-parenthood or anU-
cbildren, but rathef it Is concerned with 1>ptlons
and the freedom to c hoose parenthood or non·
parent.hood. The group's goals ~re to pro.mote
the (dea of "free choice and respoulblJUy," sa11
Dis mo~ ..
· Statistics show that a lot of people see m to
Jn the short term. N.O.N. tries to help PCO·
Dream ~~
Homes?
By Jl'DITll OLSON
Of Ti.. Oitll' "'°'Stiff
. '
.. . ' .
, ,.
The race of the Southern Californi a
landscape Is changing. especially as you drive
south to San Diego from Los Angeles.
Bedroom community after bedroom com·
· munlty line the freeway, creating a sense of
m a:1s humanity. The neighborhoods are in·
d lv1dual. of course, and range greatly In price.
but to the freeway driver they look like a
sprawling suburb.
The new houses there. and elsewhere in
Orange County. are not 1ne~pens1ve. They often
1 epresenl the dream home for a fa mily which
has been movmg steadily up.
Too often the homes also represent a pro·
blem that can become serious with a turn of
fate. Too often the family has overbought and
can bare1y m ake the payments with both
husband and wife working. If there 1s one Ul-
ncss, one unforeseen expense, the tide t~ turned.
Counselors often see people who are unhap-
..
py because of financial problems but the renon , r~""-14r.~ ...
almost never is presumed to be money, accord·
ing to !ltarr members at Family Service As·
sociation
INFLATION HAS taken its toll along with
the high house payments. "Middle class
families are racing an identity crisis." said
' Rbbert Wallis, Jl counselor serving the west
county area .
. "To keep up with what they're used to they
have to kE!ep their income up. Women often go
to work and from that foJlows other prt>bJems."
"With two people working both are tired at
the end of the day. They h~e no energy to do
the kJnd of parenting they were able t.O do
before.•· he said.
Couple! oftert fac" feelings or guilJ. too. "iC
they've still Invested In tbe idea that a woman.
shouldn't work.··
pie deal with the pressures to have children; ln
the long term, It hopes to eliminate the pres·
sures.
The non·pront, educational organlutlon Is a
group .of single and married people (some have
children, some don't> who believe It ls .. vitally
important that the cblldfree lifestyle be a r~·
allstlc and HMlally accepted and r espected op-
tion and that those without children shoal" fa
neither social nor economic discrimhuation." ~1 Dismore says that "In the outside worlcti
you don't meet that many pec)ple who are i
coromUted to being childfree." lie adds th
N.O.S. runs projects, ls supportive of those wl
. similar beliefs or those who are trying to decl~
whether or not to have children and also offers lt
chance for liOClaUzlng. 1
"It's niee to. find other cblldfree coupleit
who can be ready to go, at a moment's notice,
who don't have to worry about babysitters,"~
says.
. · . •
There is guilt too if their unsupervised
ctilldre.n get into trouble, WaJUs added.
In the south end of the county. a'ccordlng to
RoseaMe Stone. there many Umes Is an addi·
Uonal problem. fl'amiles buy theit· dream hoJne,
nre "house poor" amt then f'ace addltlon•I
withdraw frGm one another when there's a
linanchl pinch, .. Mrs. Stone reported.
"Husband and wives nee<1·1ood times together.
When they wttlldr.w °Uta>' project tfOstility
-
gasohne and cfir expenses )Nhen ttie husband
has a long cotnmute to his job.
toward one another."
a linancial
area
residents.
•
DAILY PILOT Monday Februwy I . 1978
'
.~Say 'Thanks'
~DEAR A)!N
ANDERS : I'm late
~ath this but I won't
eep until I have It oft
y chest.
vlcllng the perfee& exam-
ple.
Chrlst1t1as is supposed
to be a special day and
not one Cor hurt feelings.
So why cnn't a person
just say, ''Thank you,"
instead of "f already
have three or these, .. or
"What did you get this
for?" or ··You shouldn't
have gotten me
anything . It wasn't
necessary."
Ann
Landen
DEAR ANN
LANDERS: I know you
news paper people usual·
ly stick together but J
would like t.o know if you
wj\J venture an opinion
on something I fmd ap.
palling. 11 I nm over·
reactlne please tell me. ·
A newspaper
publisher in Virginia has
announced that he is go·
ing to prin1 the names,
ages and addresses of
r a pe victims in his
paper. He claims the
cµstom of protecting the
anonymity of rape vie·
tims does not serve the
cause of justice and that
both tl\e victim and the
accused should be iden-
tified, because 'anythine
less ''results ln uneven
cover age."
The kids saved all
year apd bought their
father a very nice gift.
l'.)le fi rst words out of
lls mouth were. "I don't
need that." When he
nw how d isappointed
the kids were he said, "I
was only kidding." Of
course the damage was
a lready done. Ir you
have to say, "I was only
J< idding," y.ou weren't,
and they know it.
ll doesn't make any
dtrference how much the
gift cost or whether you
can use It or not. The
polite response is
"Thank you." Sorry lo
inject thi:. sour· note but
l had lo tell !;omebody.
-NO SMILES TODAY
DEAR NO SMILES:
I'm glad you chose me.
It'• amuing bow maay
people can give
graclou.sly but have ,no
concept of bow to re-
ceive. Thanka for pro·
Where do you stand?
-MODESTO BEE
STINGER
DEAR STINGER: I
~ •• Life
<From Page Cl>
waler, orange juice, and very
seldom a sleeping pill. On the last
night. I saw him al 11 :30. He
rouldn 't sat up, thl•y had to turn
him.
"I wiped his fa ce with a cloth.
He said, 'Don't do that anymore, I
have to go to sleep.' Two hours
later he was dead."
His cfeath on June 26 was as he
wanted, Mrs. Hutchens said, and
in the same circumstances s he
• would like lo die the same way.
··If I thought there was no possi·
ble cure. I would want to go
\\ hy prolong il with artificial
lhings?" she said. "[ have a writ
ten will. the saml' as he had. We
::.rgned it at the ::.ame time."
The California law. hotly con·
tested by pro-lifers and since
adopted In some form by u half·
dolcn other stales. has ::.trangtmt
pro\' 1 :.ions.
Thus Mr::.. Hutchens. who hves
in Leasure World. and many other
healthy people like her who have
signed living wills, may have trou·
· ble getting their wishes carried out.
• The document must be re-
newed every five years, following
stringent rules for witnesses.
• • Jl does not apply to pregnant
women.
•It applies only when death ii im·
minent. notto comatose patients.
• A physician is not bound to his
patient's li\'ing will unless it has
been signed by a patient diagnosed
as terminally ill al least 14 days
earlier.
"H's unreasonable to expect
s omebody who 's already
lcrm in ally ill to file the dcclara·
tion. People in that condition are
ortcn unconscious of what'::. hap·
pening," says Ben Nicholas, 83. a
chief organizer of Leisure World
support for the law.
Nicholas says the doctor at the
com munlty clinic has declared
thal he won't let a patient die un.
less the law requires Lt -a stand,
he says. that makes most of his
neighbors' living wills meaning-
less. •
"All people are psking is to be
left alone and Jet nature take its
course," Nicholas says. "We see
too many examples of people
around here suffering needlessly."
The California Pro-Life Council
argued against the bill, saying
that it would be the first s tep
toward euthanasia. Marian Ban·
ducci . representing Friends of
~tothers and Babies and the Help·
le::.s Aged. urgued that "the real
target is to get rid of the people
who cost too much to keep alive."
1'nd Dr. Philip Dreisbach of
Long Beach. prcd1c:ted the law
would bl• used by doctors "who'
have outright contempt for pa·
t1ents of l'ert ain ethnic or
economic backgrounds."
One of the major supporters
of the legislation was the
California Medical Assoc1ataon.
The bill exempts doctors from
lawsuits and criminal chaDges if
they let a patient die after making
every reasonable effort to save
him.
But Dr. Laurens White. a San
Francisco cancer speciahsl who
heads_ the CMA committee on the
right to die, says the law as writ·
ten "has had essentially no impact
at all "
No one knows how many living
will forms have been filled out or
how many people hnve been aJ .
lowed to die under the law, but the
consensus is that the number is
very small A preliminary CMA
s urvey shows that the average
per::.on who has signed a living will
b middle-aged, above-average in
education, and in good health.
say!. Dr. Murray Klutch. a CMA
official.
"Only two of my patients have
chosen to sign." Dr. White says.
TENNIS
LESSONS
Does your
group
need to raise
funds?
If your non•proflt
organluUon Med•
help raising Junda, oall Huntington Center
and ask us to mall
Community Help
(formerly Charity
Fair) detalla.
r MBODl s (
8 Lessons · s 1.2so
a.Mt$TlATIOH
MOH.. Fii. '"' COSTAMISA .· .. . . . ,
TBMSCWI
-557-0211 cm111a
Phooe 897·2533··------------_________ .,.
FEB.
Oearance
SENSATIONAl
V,6J.U£S
. . . . ' -.-..-..-... •• • spa ................... -..
... ¥'• 0 µ
ANN LANOERS7HOROSCOPE
___ •_.H __ o_1_1_1_e_s_. ___ ·[~ __ B_o_r_o_s_e_o_p_e __ ]
<Fi-om Pase en dhegree with ttie
publl1ber. A woman who
bH been raped aaffera
HOaClt w1Utou& laavlng
&o earry <e added
1t1cm • el tbe pubUclty. u•a bad enoatb tlllt
ta.oee dole &o a.er bow.
T bave It •nouced In tit~ prMt would be ex·
&remely bamlllatlng.
And what forT
I hope &bat publl1her
thinks It over aad
cbangahll mlnd.
DEAR ANN
LANDERS: This ls in
response to Phoenix
Phan who says that,
sta tlslically. Siou x
Falls, S.O., is the safest
cit~ to drlve in. I'll beL •
he's never ~n there.
One reason for the
problem ls that South
Dakota was the last
slate in the union to is·
sue drivers' licenses. All
you had to do was pay
$2. Driving tests have
been in exlst~ce only in
recent years.
1 f Sioux Falls is the
safest city to drive in
(as that statistician ,
claims) the good Lord
surely has a way of look·
ing after old ladies and
fools -and we have
plenty of both driving
around our town. -NO
NA ME PLEASE , I
MAKE A LIVI NG
HERE. •
DEAR FRIEND: I
woalda't th1Dk of print·
Ing your name. You'd
have &o move to
Watertown.
<:ase B. again focuses on values. this time
m iddle class. The couple have five children and
Mrs. B. is happy in her role of housewife and
mother.
"BUT THEY FEEL trapped by t.he needs of
lheJamlly and themselves," Wallis said. "Their
vafues lnolude saying yes to high school pie·
t\ll'es and a dress for the high school dance.
''They're heavtly in debt ln spite or Mr. B. ·~
well-paying job. They fight coostanUy and Mr.
B. feels guilty about not being ab~ to provide."
Their house Is up for aale, Wallis said, but
the real estate market has been slow aod relief
is not imminent. '
Several things can happen to these famihes
and others like them . Jr they lN! fortunate they
receive counseling from an -.gency like FSA or
help from a consumer credit bureau in
straightening out. their tangled money pro·
t>lems.
The first step in counseling is "lo help them
realize actually wh.i is happening, John Von
Glahn said. "When people see what is wrong it
put.s them ln charge."
"THEY MAY NEED permission to adjust
to a lower standard of living. Once you talk
about how you're lntluenced by advertising you
can be more objective about it.
"Yoo begin a communication process .. Peo·
pie don't Lalk about what the new house pay-
ment is doing to their relationship."
Wall~ asks his clients lo spend just ah hour
a week t.alkjng to each other at first. Mrs. Stone
sungests that families don't have to think on~
In terms or either/Or ... A lot of people aren't
aware of alternatives," she said
ONCE COUPLES· begin lo outline their pro·
blems and make major decisions in their lives,
perhaps even opting to move back to the
Midwest for a $impler lifestyle. 70 to 80~percent
of those with problems will have improvement,
the counselors said.
"We encourage them to make the decisions
~em selves, to make their own priorities."
••• Kidfree
<From Page Cl)
TUESDA~. FEB .. 1
8y SYDNEY C)MARR
ARIES (March 21 ·
April 19): New Moon
position acce n ts
fri~ndshtp, romance.
wlsh fulfillment. Money
situation Improves, you
get credit for past ef·
forts. Member of op·
posite sex is drawn to
you ·and doelij\'t care
who knows It TAURUS !April 20·
May 20): Fin1::.h rather
lhan begin. Tic Joo~
eods. be rid or burden
not rlghlly your own.
Aries, Libra figure
prominently. Accent on
achievement, broaden·
ang horizons. making
room at top. Present
pl an. concept or for mat.
GEMINI <May 21·
June 20): New start ID·
dicated -Leo, Aquarius
figure prominently .
A void lifting heavy ob·
jects. Make trnvel plans
or break fr ee from
restricting inCluence.
Open lines of com·
munication become
familiar with another
language.
CANCER <June 21
Jul y 22): New Moon
position favorable for
basic tasks. tame to cor·
rect past mistakes.
Aquarius. Leo persons
figure prominently.
Stick to number 11.
Keep medical-dental ap-
point m en l s. Do
somcthana t•onstruchve
ubout nutrition!
LEO (July 2l·Aug.
22}: Emphasis on what
lo do about delays, legal
barriers. Gemini, Sagil·
tarius figure in plcture.
ln m,.tters of specula·
tion, stick to number 3.
New Moon lights up
area of chart a§Soclated
with partnership and
m arital status .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.
22): Your natural
talents are called into
play . You leave
sidelines and get Into the
game. Added recogni·
lion occurs. You break
free from restrictions.
Aquarian could play an J
active role. Number 4
figures prominenUy.
LIBRA <Sept. 23·0ct.
22): Secrets are 1·e·
vealed; be discreet.
Member of opposite sex
cares and \\'ants re-
assurance. Emph~ls on
se lf-exp re ssion,
personality. personal
magnetism, physical
res ponses, exciting
plans and changes. Go
ahead. Ob~tacles will be
rl'moved.
SCORPIO <Oct. 23·
NO\'. 21): What was a
block becomes a step·
pings t onc. You can
climb, sur vey, tuke
cha. ·e of your destiny.
Know 't aod step witlr
confid ence. vetve.
Home, family situation
is sorted out, becomes
m ore harmqntous.
Susan. a former newspaper reporter, is pre-
sently editor or the company newspaper at
Rockwell International in Anaheim. She is a
freelance writer and 1s involved with a number
of professional organizations.
lla\'e you faced peer prel>sure or disap-
proval?
SAGl'ITABIVS (Nov.
22-Dec. 21): Brother,
sister or other close rel·
alive is not seeine too
clearly. Web of decep·
lion could be present.
Note, call or s hort
journey might be in or-
der. Pisces. A 1uarius.
\'irgo person: could
figure prominent.)'.
Night work. business trips and pursuit of
their individual interests mean that Nova and
Susan often grab a hamburger or slide a TV din-
ner into the oven for supper -·and usually al
different times, so there are few traditional
meals served at their house.
THEY LIKE THt;· WAY . they live. and
although life as nonparents isn't brand new for
them, the idea of being child!ree didn't r eally
cross their minds when they got married slx-
and·a·balf years ago.
As newlyweds, the couple had planned to
have children. Friends.naturally assumed they
would and often asked them how many they in·
tended to have. People even told them, "Your
children will definitely heve blond hair."
During an interview In lheir s pacious,
three-bedroom Huntington Beach home. Susan.
28. and Nova. 29. talked about how th~y changed
their minds.
"I had planned on a career and thought that
if I had children I would pi-obably just take time
off.
"I thought it might be fun lo be a housewife
at times," continued Susan, "but after we got
back from our honeymoon. Nova started law
school and I played housewife for a week before
l went back to school (at Caliornia State
University, Long Beach>.
"I went craiy! He would come home and
tell me aboul an exciting day and I would say, ·1
scrubbed the floor today.' ll was awful."
AS SHE BECA!\1E more and more involved
with her career, Susan discovered she wasn't
happy "away from the stimulation of the out·
side world." Susan added. ''Il's possible to com·
blne a career and family, but 1 think it's very.
very dafticult, and in my case, something would
suffer:·
About two years after they were married.
Susan told her family that if she had children
she would take them to day care centers and
continue to work. Her. grandmotber asked,
"Then why are you going t.o have children ?''
"That day I didn't have an answer for her,•·
recalled Susan. Without realizing it then, her
grandmother planted the idea of remaining
childfree, Susan admitled.
• Alter reading "The Baby Trap" by Ellen
Peck, Susan and Nova joined the National
Organization Cot Non-parents. One of lhe
women in the group had had a laparoscopy, and
Susan talked to her abobt it .
··1 like the idea or being ih control of my
own body," said Susan. who had used birth con·
trol pills for she years. "Because I'm the one
who would get pregnant, and l want to be the
one who would prevent that pregnancy."
SAID N~VA, ''It wss a mutual agreement.
The chlldfree lifestyle flt so well with our lives
at that Ume ... Susan had become a liberated
woman and she liked that taste or freedom.
Becomine a childfree Pt!rson liberated her even
more, and sh& liked lt so .much that she made lt
permanent."
The decision was made, but Susan put otr
calllne the doctor, thinking she might w1t until
she was 30, or W\Ul she had the money. he as-
sumed her medical insurance woulctn: cover
the operation alnce it was voluntary.
But her mother ("Our parent.a have been
aupportlva or our decision -they have always
felt It was our lives and they want us \0 be hap·
PY." Sus,n laid) showed her a ma1utne arUcle
that exsti~tned that manJ .iDlw-ance policies
cover voluntary sterlllzaUon.
I
81lE WENT thr'Ou1h wtth 0.. operauon, and
her medical inlurance covere4 991 but taO ol the
total _. bW. She noted that. ''tbe're lt not much
literature on laparoacopy and l don't. think
women an •• encouraaed to tiave il u U..y
1hould be."'
Nova and Sunn are fated with ltie at.andard
qu-.tloaa: Y•'• dtichled oq,a Uf• wltMllt c•iklr .. ol ·>'"' owa. Dell"&,_ Uk• ~t Nov• ldlwwed qulclllY, •·v., l •· .. 'ut SG•H ... more t~tlah •:n.ty're ohy.
Some chllclMa uuc-. MIR• I doQ'\'JJle. l +!b"t .. hau ~bUt I'm Ddt na•tiPillhl att.raetid to ~~~J*Cll· .,.. ... i-:=_-=:-±'_
·'Some of our co-workeri. have questioned
at," said Nova, adding that their inquiries are
more out of curiosity than a put down CA PRICORN <Dec .,
22-J an. 19): Spotlight on
eonservation, building;
for futu re, collect1ng
needed data. Protect•
possessions. Le ave.
nothing to chance where
moving of fragile items
is concerned.
··None of our close friends have children -
I guess we're drawn to people like us. We
hnven 't had any peer pressures nor have we had
any great pressur e from our respective
fam ilies," said Susan.
What about those who regard you as above
average lntelllgent people who think you would
be maklag a contribution to tbe next generation
by raising children like younelves! AQUARIUS (Ian.
20-Feb. 18): You can
··bend'' cir cumstances
to your favor. Take in-
itiative, make personal
appea~. appearances"
Stress inde pendence,
originality. Imprint your"
own style. Highlight in··
div1duality -make your
views known in direct
manner. Cycle is very
high. '
. -
..We can offer a lot more to the world by
havinlf the. freedom to use our own intelligence
ho our respective fields). If our chlld isn't there
to be lhe next Elnsten someone else's will be,"
said Susan, adding, ''Besides, there are already
enough children in the world ...
Have you ever been asked. "What ,Jbout
when you're old? Who'll lake care of you!'\.>
"Oh. boy, yes," laµghed Nova. ··We 'll have
our hobbies and our friends. Ml>sl people who
are old don't have children around .them all the
time, so they'll be just like us."
Susan added , "Most children don't 'take
care' of their pnrenls when they get old, .and
even· if they do, it's an impositiOJl and they don 'l
want it. We will have each other and our
friend$."
PlSCES (Feb. 19·
March 20): Dreams are
clarified, sense or direc·
lion becomes clear. You
are "enlig hte ned."
Study Aquarius
message. Erase fears,
doubts . Your cycle 1s
moving up; restrictions
are temporar y. Don't
fear "checkup." Vitality
returns.
In the past, bow did you cope with ll when
you were told you'd change your mind ad
eventually have children?
··1 got sterilized." grinned Susan. •·1 got
tired of hearing that -it was probably another
reason why J had the operation. I wanted to take
a stand." •
r
LOSE
UGLY .
FAT
AND .
INCHES
THIS
WEEKI
* FOUR MONTHS
MEMBERSHIP
$38.00
*REGULAR PRICE
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' .. "' .... MILDRED SHEEHAN
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PUBUC NOTICE
"ICTITIOUS I UStNUS
NAMI STATIMINT
The fol._"'9 ,.,.,.. I~ oolrio lxnl·
MUI\:
TllANSNATION llEALTV, lf1S
S.t>rlM Terr~•. Corona clel Mat, <:.A mu
su .. nne 8roughten. 1'1S S.btl,.. Ten~e. ~ o.I M•r, CA ~'HU
Tith •uwneu I• CIOftducte<I by an In· CllYldWf.
S1Aanne Bro119llt1n
Thtt stat-I was 111..S wllll the
Countv Clerk of Oral\99 Countr on
PllllMI P"'" 11 ,, .II
I Phofon'Y IS S) .o.
. Plll\OU•Oh II> v .10
P'll•ncl. """ 10 I
P'll•ncl, o .... St 4' .ts
Ro<llmond n .,.
St LOUIJ JO ...
Sall L.••• S• 4J San O>tQo 61 ., .3'
San Fr•n S9 S4 . st ~·1111 St 4 .27 w .. n1no1on Jl 2~ ·°'
CAUl'OllNIA Ml LO
Boke,.fleld 7' St
fres,no .. SS
O•kland •• )4
Puo RoblK 6S SJ Red Bluff ~ SI S..cramento j9 St
Therm•• SI
L.onoeuch 63 SI
NltWPO<l BH<h .. ~ 6S
Palm Sprlno~ 10 .,
S~n 8rrnard1no 61 H
Sdnt• Ana "' )S
!:.anta 8arbdr4 61 So
IJ.S. Summary
Thr-w1nlet" \tOf"m ttwf'•t -"ff•clrd
Nrw Or1~ans, wher' the M•rdr Gra\
<tlebr•t1on "'"full \w•nq until TUI'\
d•Y
JO\•P" Fredleri<.k, m.n~r-ot tn ..
Hilton Hotef •n ~tW Or•t•M • .S41d
m•ny norttwrn 'Wi\llOf'~ s.t•yed atw•y
tor , .. , blln•rd• l>.Kk -mogl\l
<IO~ •oroort• -11<9'1..,l I.hem from gell I 1>9 llome.
Ottwlr PMIS of ttw ""'°" aho .,.d wlnU·r we•ttwf' Pf'alHenn.
Snow lell from tM us...-n GrHt
P UBUC NOTICE
CP.HU
HOTICli TO CREOITOltS
01' IUU( TltANSFElt
ISo<s. •1014107 U.C.C.I
Nolle~ I• hortbr glvon to the
CredolM\ of NEAL A. CHAR60N·
NEAU •nd MARV C. CHARBON-
NEAU. lr~Mlef'Or-~. wtwK• bu$UWH
.oorou h 111»2 Sft«kl.,.ord C1r<1e. Cl·
tr of HunlltwJton Buen, Coul\ty of
Oranoe, Slat• of c..111or,,1• '"•1 a !Nik tronslor ts •DOul to pe m•Oe to
F11ttmef\ Stwna\1. Tr~ieree, w~cu.e
bu•lneu aoctre\\ Is 51• 171h Slr.,.t, C•·
l•••• , .. Ion -r MU<I\ of U.. Ol\IO
Vall..,"'° jOlned Willl lN Other -
'Y•lem In ~em New York •nd
»VlllWatd llw'-'> ll'e ~1~111.,.t
AllhoU91\ Ille ~ell In -tnl•nd no1ons WH -rally l~er ,.,.,. ••ono 111e <-. e1t1n1no encl 111-1no •now m-,,..,.. ~s U..t•
""'· There WM etso SllOw lrom So.Ill\
Oaloola to KAMM -•••n trom tlle Pa<llk c.-1 ll'lo t1W llockles..
Temper•tvres wore cold
thtougnoul tr.a nation, Hpeclallv
from tr.a northern PlatnJ lntougll tM
$outl\Hlt.
Early tocsar. for ewamp1•, II wH 16
ano snowing In Nohvoll•. Tonn .• compare<! 10 n In N ... York City,
wn•re ft a110 w•' JftOW1nQ1.
TtmPtt•turtt at lf>AI hOUt r•n99d
from 20 bet-reto •t Grand Foru.
N o .. 10~01San o~
C alifornia
Ventura city 1>1t1<l•I• clo•.., tn•
Plt-r 1ncrr bc<•u'-'Novf\ dumitQed
olhno• •lro•d'I' wu••,.ed t>v lau month1\ ~torm'(
lhl' for•c,.-.t 1.110 k•qh tem
peraturos 100..y wwlO bf' 1n the oos.
wltn c""'nc:e of light t••n 1nrO\IOh
'luf\4ft~
A K1'rn County fttr Oto•rtm•nt
Call 642-5678.
Put a few words
to work fo r ou.
PUBLIC NOTJCE
FICTITIOUS IUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Th• lollowtno Ptf\On\ •re c101ng
bu''"'~'." AERO II, 1711 Bro>."' Hiii Cl.,
1"orb• Lindi, C..l•forn•• •-
L YI& IC~l C.llltllt, HI I Bro~tn
Hiii Cl , YMtw l•no• C..iolorn•• 4~
Jonn Errol AtOd, lllt1 Tu\l•n
Ea•I Ori,.., Tu,,.ln. Calllotnl• ·-
Thl' tJu\1M\\ I\ conduct_.d by •
llmiltd p.Ar-tnitrS.h•p
Lyle t<enl Gllll'llr
t.Pollasmen s.t•d -.i 200 __,,
""" IM•~ •• .. v•t«11trom -.t 10 ~Htour•"''--vlcest•llons along
1.ntetlU•I• i WCOUMOf mud •ndlloocli..
A 1'·vur-okl YOU\h l<nockecl down
by • mucl•lkM WM resc-by Olher
•tronded portons. the •llOO •m•n
wld. Mark Sall,,ger ol S.r•t-w••
hk•n 10 M•rcv Ho•plt~I In
Baktnllold Wl\ere ""•"'" lrMted for llCrapo •nd brUlle\.
AuthOrltles warr>ea motorist$ to
~l•Y •w•y frlSft tho •llOt MU. A
manl•w trefflc ;..,, was roported
Ille re •I \unYt Sunday, -• numi..r
of vehlcl• were .iranooa llr '"' mud.
111 anoll•r .,ttdent ~oay, two
,,,.,. died wt>en '"'"car <ollloed with
anotllar c•r u lllao •pun out of ton·
trol on w•t o.Avemtnl on Pacific
Co.t•I HIQl\way at>OUI 10 mile\ east o4 Oxn•rd
Benjamin ROll¥t lJ. of Malll)u •nd
hi$ cCklill\ Roto si,....,t•I, u . '"''' pronounced ooect '1 -scene altar
V..V w•re NI by 0 Slatlon WOQOn
Tiie drill'tr of u.. stall°" .. _, wu
reporttO '"good Condition ., .... SUI· f9r1no~•"''"'"''""·
Coastal Weather
Chance o f sllowoo co,,1lnuu
lh'°"O" at -I T-y, w1tll veti ..
Ill• Moh<'->
A •m•ll crilfl advllOrV wo• luu..:t
few mos1 ol tne .,.., '"'" 50Ulh to aovlhwHletlV wind\ 8 lo IS II not\.
Coastol •-••lures will r•noe btlwun S4 and 4• 1n1and tem·
POr•turH will "'noe between S. and
&t. T"• water temperature Is se.
Sun, Moon, 'l'ide•
MONDAY
S~COllCI IOW 2.4• p.m. 1 5
!.o<ono h1on ~ o.t p.m • 1
TUESDAY
F1,.11ow 2 2Sa m IO F I'll hogh 8 JS ~.m b I
S.tond lt>w J 2J p.m 1 •
Secono hiO" • '3 p' m • 9
Sun rl•H 6 4e am . \11tlii ~ 18 pm
Moon """' S .. it m , \-1.'i\ <t, S? o m
Suri Reporr
HUNTINGTON BEACH SUrflno
vtry poor, wl~ out of south 20-2S
m p "·, ch09Py wctV•\ o4 t~J •eet. w .... , t•me>er•tun &O o.QrHS, aor se.
NEWPORT BEACH Cloudy wll"
occ •t•on•t r .. n, MiUttwast ¥r•nd ot 11
m Ph, w•w~willtsouth-•-II ol
1·1 1 .. L S..rtlnQ POOt.
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTIT10US aUSINESS
NAMESTATEMEHT
Tf\e foltowlng ~rson• ••• Oolng °'"'"''' M • PANDA PLUMBING, INC., ISIS
W MacArthur Blvd. "•8. C.0.1• MeH.
C.•lltorn•• 92U6
Paf\Od Plumbln9. Inc . ., • C•lltorn•• corpo,._.t1on, 1s1s w
MacArt"v' 8fvd., ; 11. Costa ~w,
C•lllornla '1262111
Thh bu\hW~~ Is c°"'ducted by it <or·
pontt•on.
Fett. I, 1'11. l'ltHO Iv of Hunrlr>gton Beach, Counly of Oranor. St•te Of C•llfornoa
Thl\ Jt•letn.,..I w•> t1lr'(S w1lh lht'
County Cltrk of OrMo• Counlv on F•bru1ry l 1918
PancM Plumb1no. Inc
HOWM<J 0 KttnMt
Prt\1df'!"I • PULOr . llOLST'Of4,
aUllNS I McKITTRICK
"''" llW<-•tw. ,..,,-' 9Mcll, CA t2'41
Publl.-Or-Coest O•Hr Pllo1,
The PrOPrr1V to be tr3n4ifened 1\ CIP\Ctl.,.d In Qenertll ... All sloe• In
trade, ft •h-''f's. equ~cwnent Met OOOd
will of l!Wlt Fast Food bo'l""u i.nown
" P IC 8urQ('r• Mid loc•tt'd •I 18/S
FIUJ> Publl~n('d 0r ... 1m C.0..\1 Odd~ PllOI,
Ftbruuy b IJ 10. 11 1qJR
UI II
Tr11\ ~tnlHT'ltrnt Wilt. hlfd with lhtt
County Ctrl"tc of Ordnqt-Countv on
Febru.trv 1. •~18
Ft0.•. U, 10.11, mt
40.11 l'locentla, Cllv or Co•la """'•·County ~ Or•nqtt St.ite of Cclhtorn1• P UBLIC NOTICE
l'Hl30
Poor.~.~ Or11nof" C..0.:t't o .111y Pltot F~bruary b 11 io.11 1~/k
.S9 11
PUBLIC N_OTICE
rh~ DUlk lrtlif\Sfer wlll ~ C'Oft$otn•
m•tf'd on or 4lfter tf't• 1&fh oay o•
F•oruiory l~li •I 10·00" m at Gro•er
l.\crow CorPOt~hon. Attn Ardith
RuueH, w~ liddir-t!'!I.\ is t11 Soutn H-
llno•\, AtlalWlm. C.lllotnta
So tar •S '' •u'O'Wn to the TrMt~e,.ff.,
all buSIMS• Mmes ----~
FICTITIOUS 8USINliSS
NA.ME STATCMENT
l he fOUO'Wlnq pt-(\On h dO•l'U) bu'•
M•\ a'I
YORK TOW~4 CLEANER. '97S
York TOWlft'I Avenu•. Hun11no1on
IMt.cll, Callfornl•
P UBLJC NOTICE
~ICTITIOUS SUSINIU by Ille Tr..,.teron tor tl>P p.u! tlwte s-> Ja Rllte. 17 .. 1 Rd•nql~n Ln
Hunt1n9ton Bff<ll. C.lllor,,.d ,,. ..
A•l1*
SUPERIOll COURT OF THE
STATE 01' CAL.ll'OltHIA FOR
THE COUNTY OF OltANGE _ .... $1J NAMI STATIMltfT yean •re· Same
'Tlle follow!no Slff1or\ Is dolno t>usl· oateo· Nowm.,... n. 1i11 Ttus b\l\ln•n t\ COf'\dUCI~ b• tn '"
d1V•OUal NOTICE OF HEARING OF
l"l!TITION FOR PROaATE OF WILL
ANO FOlt LETTERS TEUAMEN·
TARY ANO FOlt AUTHORllATIOH
TO AOMINISTER UNOElt THE
INOEPliNOENT ADMINISTRATION
01' ESTATES ACT.
MU es: Fall!fnfl\SlleMsl ~JaRhff SHA.It. RACING ENTEAPAISES Tr-fertt '"ft.I\ ital~l Wd\ hlM With t~
County Clerk of Or•n9" Cou,.ty on
Febr\l•ry 2, 1'71
U30 E. SL Andttwl Pl. Santa Mo, CA OltOVli R ESCROW CORPOllATION
9'11111 • 111 se.1111Mi1
Gll!Mrt Dorrell WllM>fl, 20102 Bircll AAalWI"', Cat'-• t~
Sl,. Santa Ana, CA 92107 · Eurew No.. 11Sl4-0l FUJ?t
Publlshod Or•~ CAM\I 0•1ly Piiot,
February 6, IJ. 10, 11 t91e E\lot•OIJOESTEELE OK'"'""' NOTICE I!. HEREBY C.IVEN lh•I
MARIE L STEELE ICURBATO~F
Ms file;:t ""'~'"a Pfl•hon for Pre>Wt~
of Wiii and '°' i...\.U4nce ot Lttte-r~
Roborl Scott D•l••Y. 1S6S2 Publlshod 0r.,. Coast Dally P•lot.
Wlllla"''· Apt, I IG, Tushn, CA 92... Fobruary 6, IUI ••1·11 .. , ,.
Tommy Ray INc••••k. tU52
Whit•"''• A.Pl. tlG. lust1n, CA "* Thi' llluslnen •• conouct•d bV • ...,.,., pertner.,,lp
R-rt 5'oll oe1i.v
T"h ····-· Wal 111"" Wllh lh• County Clerll OI Or•noe Goun•r. F•b l, ,,,, ,.,,..,
Publlshed Or,,_ C.O.st Delly Piiot
F•b. 6., 13, 20., 11, 1'18
•3'·18
PUBUC NOTICE
P UBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE •-------------I tts,•mtf'\l•rv •I'd tor Authoriu11on 10
------------FICTIT10U5 IUSINISS Admlnlll•r -r '"' 1no_.,d...,t Ad SU l'lilllOlt COUllT OF THE NAME STATEr.l!NT ml,.l\lrallon ot Eslalp\ A<I r~IC•<'nc~
STATEMCALIFO•NIA,-Olt Tho followlnQ ~'"°" t< dOlllO llUJI-lo whlcn IS mdCIO for turlhtr
THE COUNTY OF ORANGE ..eu as Pirllcullt\, 3nd It.at tno '"''' •nd
No. A.-MW2 ART CENTER FASHIONS. 1'16 s. piece ol fwoanr>g "'" ........ "•s t>ttn "" NOTIC E OF HEARING OF Coul HIOh•IY. Laqun• Ruch, torF~bruary11, 1•1R.•l10004.m ,tn
,ETITION FOii l'R08ATE OF Will Ollfornla ms1 IM courtroom of D•p~rt,,,..nt No Jot
ANO LETTERS TESTAMINTAllY, Marv Emily FtntOf'. ,,.93 LA 'Wld court •• , 100 C••IC (Mier Drov•
AUTl40fl1ZATION TO AOMINISTEll Capilla, Ml\\IOllllltjO, Calolornl• '17675 W•\I, In the C••v ol ~anl<t And,
UHDE It THE INOEl"£NOENT AO· Thi\ bullntu I\ conduct~O by a C•llfornoa
MINISTllATION OF ESTATES ACT g~Mral OMllll't\hop Oiled February J, 1•13
£\lat• Of ROBERT PAUL. MARTIN M••Y F~nton WILLIAM E. SI JOHN,
SR. Ak" ROBERT P . MARTIN, Thi\ $1all'fl'Pnl w• fllf<I wolh tf\r CountyCltrk
O•ceasod. County C•or• of Oren<)e County on aAUNOAGE & ROSEMAN
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN ttt.t Ftb•uary 3 1'11 ROIE RTE. 8AKER ROBERT PAUL. MARTIN JR has tllld FIU" IUSW. Otympi< lllvd , #II»
""rein a petlllon fOf' PtolNI• of Wiii PubhShed Or•noe too•• Dally Pilot, lOl A ........ C..lllorlli• ondluu.,•<•ofL.•ll~Test.tmfnt.arrto February 6 13. 70, 11. ••18 Attarneys f0t· ,..ttllOl'et t~ Pelllloner -'°" .wt/loriiatlon to •6211 P\lbllslled Oranoe C""" Oallv Piiot.
umlnht•r l#>der Ille l~ndent ad--------------I February 6.1. ll. 1•11
ministration ol Estain Ac't reference
to which Is made fot f vrthtr P UBLIC NOTICE
pertlcular,, and that Ille lime and -------------1 place of hHt"'9 lhe ~ti.• tiff" MC
tor F•bruetV ti, lt11. •t 10:00 a.m .. In
the courtroom of Oeper1ment No. 3 ol
said court. ot 700 Ovlc Center Orlw
Wost, In Ille Cl1v of Saf\U An•,
t.ellfornl•.
Oateo F.WU.ry t. 1m.
WILUA.ME. StJOHN,
County Clerk l'AULM. KONA,IELSKY Jll.
AttwnoY•tl .. •w HU1 I NIM leule¥Md. Svlle ft
T1111lt1,CA ....
(1101at"'4J:2
Att ..... eyfw: l'wllllM•r
Pvbh•-Or•noe Cout Dally PllOl.
Fob. 6, 7, IS, tt78
SU PElllOll COUllT O~ THE STATEOFCAUFORNIA l'O•
THI. C:OUNTYOI' OllANOli
IM. A-MS11
tfOTICI! 01' HEA•IMO O~
l'l!TITION Riii l'llOIATE o,-WILL
.. NO LITTERS TESTAMINTAllY.
1'011 AUTHOllllATIOH TO AO·
MIN ISTElt UNOEll THI!
INOE,INOIENT AOMINISTltATIOM o,-ESTATES ACT.
E~ I ii I e o I J 0 SE PH I N E
ICATHl!RINE HALE. Of<uK"CI
NOTICE 1$ HEREBV GIVEN It.el
GARY KEHOE HALL,... fll«I Mreln
o pflltlOfl tmr Prob<lte ol Wlfl •ncl I•·
lUMC.I ef Lil\l,ef'ttest-nl&ry In lOlhe
Petfll•r lf'CI for IUlllOrlMllon 10 ad·
1111..r~1•r under ,,.. Incl•"""'""' ad·
mlnlttr•tlon ol E"•'"' Act. rd•r"11<e
-------------towhlclt lsmlldetorturther 1Nnlcul1rt,
PUBUCN<n'ICE
FICTITIOUS IUSINH!S HAMS UATEMEMT
Tne 1011-1no persons ''' dolno 114nlnoss iK: 1
HANOS IN SElllllCEI, f1011 Sotn·
btu. MlsJlon Vlelo. Call~• ••rs
Donald e. -·· 2701t .......... MIU!Ofl Vlflfo, C.aHforlllatWJ
T•At• C. Muell9r, '1071 ~-,
Mluton Vl•Jo. Callloml• twJ
Tiii• t1u1IM11 ts 'eftdU<Wd llY •
O'fl9ral pett,.t'SlllcL
()o¥d E. Muefftf'
Tftlt ate-w~ ilhtd wlll\ '""
afld Illa\ '"' lin'll' •no pUKI ol Maring tho Hme .,., .,.,.,. ••I for F•btuary t1.
1971, •t 10:00 a.m .. In Ille counroom of
0.pettment NO. 3 ol "Id coun, .o 100
CMc Cenltf Oflw WHI, In,,.. City Of
~nla Aha, C.ellfor"I•.
0•11<1 F~v t, 1971
WILi.JANi I . St JOHN,
c-rtyClerll
DOUGLAS L. HAMILTON t14!t ,,,,,,.. ........ Sell• ..
t1"1 .... C.eOi.ntle ·-A"91'My fW: ""'ll'-"'" ~ll""" Or.,... Coest Oallr Pflot,
F-rv•. 7, tl, lt7'
..,_Tl
P UBLIC NOTJCE
NOTICE OF ,llEl'A•ATION
01' NEGATIVE OECl..AltATION
PROJECT: PURCHASE OF REAL
PROPERTY AT HUNT INGTON
BEACH HIGH SCHOOL
TM Hvntlnglon ~Kit Union HiQll
·School Ohtrl<I llas preP•••d •
N99111YO 0.l•r•llon of Envlronm..,
tal Impact lor Iha •bo,.. prolec:t -
lnt•nd\ to Ill• ,.,.,.. wltll '"" County
c1..-11 01 Oranoe County on Fet>r-u.ry 1.
1'11.
CoPl•t of l!>e 11\ltlal Envlronmtnt•I
Evalu•llon Slud'I' and the Pt'OPOHd
N1tO•ll•• Oec.1-lon are postecl at:
Ol1trlct Eoucatl°" Canttr. S201
BolH Ave,. Hunttnoton Buell, Cl
92447
H"'1111\Qfon 84'acll Hlgll 5<'-1, 1~
M•ln Street, H""llnoton Beach, CA
m"8 M•rln• H toh School, 151?1
Sl><'•no<l•I• St1ttt, HuntlnQton e .. ch,
CA92M9 Date: Fetinan-5, 1'71.
Robert C. 8'1,..,
EllVl-..t.11 Eval1.>1lor
Publlflled Or-Coast Dally Piiot,
Feb..,, 1'71
PUBLIC NOTICE
Cou"ty Cletl! ot Orono-~"I\' °" ------------
Fabrvary 1, 1m. PUBLIC NOTICE 1----------nt:an ~lfslled Ora-Coellt Delly Pllel, ----,.-l-CT1_TI_OU_S_l_U_S_IH-l-U---I
'•brvary .. u. 20, 17, 1'11 NAMa STATIMtlNT -------------
PUBUC NOTICE
.,..,. ..,,.. lo19-lnt "'"°" Is doing ~
neuas;
CROlflN ROUTT ENDUi.AHCF'
140Rses. os Ct Bosque. u,un•
ltM<I\, Catllarnl• _,,
MOl!y Cl'Olt" "-1, '"-1 El hequo,
w.oune 8""',CAa.s1
Wllllllm ...... ,ltoutt, •tS l!I 9-
41U1, uoi-~ c.1110t"111• nut
Tiiis ~J h tonMIM ltT • .._ .. ~
Yftl\. "9utt. MD
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
D
A
I
L
y
p
I
L
0
T
c
L
A s
s
I
F~
I
E
D
6
4
2
•
Monday. Flbruary &. 1978 DAILYP1LOT ,_ __________________________________________________ .....,...,
The Bluest Marketplace on the <>ranee COlst
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS
You Can Sell It, Find It, ( 642 5678 ) Trade It With a Want Ad -
One Cal I Service
Fast Qedit Approval
Rtol htott .••.•••• 1000.2999 lost & "~:::f'· ,., 's.,, MerchondiM •••••• IOOCM099
Rtntols ..•••••••• 300CM699 ServicH & R ... • == ~ ~9099{
Business. lnveatmtn1 & Empioy1Mn1 & ~··;.·· '
flnanclol. ......... 5000-5049 Pr ation ...... 7000.7199 ,a;; J.n .... 9100-""'
~~!.':!'".~ ....... , ~=:.~~~ ...... .
Gewol I 002 GHeral I 002
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
PW»llsher'sMoffct:
All real estate advertised
m t.bi.s newspaper is sub·
ject to the Federal Fair
Housing Act of 1968
which makes ll Illegal lo
odverttse-"any pre·
ference, limitation, or
dJ.acriminahon baaed on
r11ce, color, religion. sex,
or national origm, or an
intention to make any
such preference, limita·
Lion, or diacrl mlnation.' •
Th.ts newspaper will not
knowingly accept any
advertising for real
estate which Is In viola·
tion orthe law.
ERRORS: .Ad .. rtlsen lhollld ctwck their ads
daily .ct r.port H'-
rors imme~atety. Th•
DAILY PILOT ossumH
NcmHfty for the first in-
correct lnffrtiOft oftly.
Houses for Sol• •••••••••••••••••••••••
GeMral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
DUPLEX
3 bedroom unit :.
SlOS,000. Pride or
ownership. Ex<·cllent
Costa Mesa location.
Owner anx1ou!I.
642-5062
C...tury_ 21 Crocke~
WESTSIDE
FIXER
$63,000.
Potential plus! Nice 3
Rt'd room, I·'• Bath
home Need:. u lot of
TLC. Carpt>ti.. drape:;.
paint II' you're handy
and have a lot of 1m
ui:inat1on 1·all now
645.0303
REAL ESTATE
SALES
Want Z amb1tloui.
~alespeoplc for peri-onal
tr:untng. On comput<'r,
super loc. Progressive
1.:omm. For your bright
ruturc. call
:.liak-9.
Balbfwl Island Reatry
.\.,I•'" t'""'IN,._YT PfW"'JUn'
673-8700 ·----
NEWPORT
HEIGHTS
Only once In awhile d~s
a hm like this come
along. 3 BR, family &
d.srung. Tn·level, loaded
..............................................
CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX
One of the largest & nicest duplexes in
Corona del Mar. 3 Lge. Bdrms., 2
baths & enclosed garage for each unit.
Close to stores, bus & restaurants.
Priced low at $179,500.
759-0811
4r,o NEWPOHT CENT!:H OHIVE 7!>!! 081 I
G....... 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
NO DOWN
MO CLOSING
CO$TS
Any VET can own this 3
BR home w /no money
out o[J>ocket, just move· m & eitjoy your home. Of·
fercd at $53,500
540-3666
Wltela11
RfAl l>TAfl
HUNTINGTON
IEACH
FOUR UNITS
Four luxunous units with
$48,000
This is not a m1!>pr1n1 '. It
is a super 2 Br twnhmc.
w/pool, clubhouse &
sauna. Prime end unit
location w /pvt patio,
cloi;e to shopping.
754·7800
Inv~lltlent Property
Sales
Specialized 9mall firm
needs licensed assoc.
Some coUege & saJes ex-
per. pref. 838-4921
BRUMFIELD & ASSOC.
FIXER UPPER
Bargain hunters. 11ee this
disaster. 4 Bedrm, 1''•
bath, needs paint and
TLC. It's a money maker
at '60.900. eau ~ 1151
~~HERITAGE
• • REALTORS
•VETS*
Zen>Dowwt
Zen>Cosh
Homes in all areas, all
sizes. can:
Veteran Housing Agt.
541-0800
CLASSIFllD
HOURS
Ad\•1'r1 1-.erq mav phtrl'
thl-1r ari~ hv ll'l!'Jlhonc
11.0011 Ill lo!> OOp m .
Mmdt1~·thru fridrty
· 11t.onoonSaturd11\·
I~ IRTA ~H:.<;A OFFIC~.
J:IU ~ Ila'
tl42 ~ill
Ill ' Tt"; 111' II~ \!'It
lilli:o ~.ll'h lllHI
~·:ao
LAG\ 'NA nt:AC'll
11116Glennr~rr
Lacuna Bnc:h 494 ~61>
SAOOl.F.RAl.I\
~I a Put Ru11d l.11.:una lhll~ Siil 6310
v1n1 t1 l•0t ,n·
d1JI I rt'l' !>10 L!:!ll
CLASSIAED
DUDLIHES
llt>adhnl' for <'OPV & kill~ ·~ !> JO " rn Hll' d11v hr·rorr J)uhh<'allnn. 1•x
C'f'µI lor :o-und,I\ & \Ion
rlJ~ ~·ri1t 1nn' v. h<'n
tk-.tdho1> •~ Salurd .. v. 12
OOl'MI
CLASSIFIED
REGUlATI0"4S t:n llOHS. Advl'rl 1~1·r~
i.htiold C'httk 1h1·ir atb
l.la1lv & r t'l"'rl ('rror~
1mmrd1ult•lv Tll ~:
11\ll.Y f'll,CYr a~w1n1•'
h11htlilv for the l1rM 111
l 'Cl!Tf'ct ins en inn on I~
f'A.'l/C f.1.1./\ Tl O '.:!-.
~ lulhnit l!n wd tH'
.,ure 111 makt' a rl'corrl nr
the I< II.I., NU M II f It ~1vtn ~ou bv \ nur ud
taker as r~tpl nl vnur
c:11n~ll1111on. Th" ktll
numhr>r must l'M" ftrl'•efl·
lt-d bv 1tw odvt>rl""' m
Clise' Of a d1~pute.
w/rustic wood finish.----------CA1'C'F.1.LATl0'11 OR
CORltf:CTI0'\1 01-'
"' t: w A o n ~: r o rn:
Versatile const allows
personal taste in de·
coraUng to blend to any
motif. Brtck frplc.,
range.oven. &dshwshr.
$149,500
JACOIS REAL TY
675-6670
MAIM
A TTil.ACTIOM
Four year new twnbme
just minutes from S.
Coast Plaza. Ground
floor. angl story unit,
with no nelghbon above. rrtced for qu.ick sale at
$."ill.900.
754-7100
8 ASTR/I ~ ..... ( .. ··~···
Open Doily I ·5
1526 HighlcM. Ml
4+F.n. $114,500
I 07 ''A." St, lol ftftl
3 Stry $265,000
4604 SN1ltor., Ml
Dpb SI 15,000
-
WATERFRONT
HOMES
AE"l ESTATE 631-1'400
SMDPIPERS
RUNNING:
Everv effnrt Is mad!-to
kill or corr~t a nrw ·"' lhdl hos been ordt>rrrl
but v.r canoot 11uaran·
ff'(' to do Ml un11t 1he nil
hus appl'ared In the
paf)('r.
DIMF',..A·fJNF. AOS· ~ Dds 111~ ~1r1rtly
t'ti!<h 1n udvancr hv m:1ll or al anv ont' or 11vr 111
f1et~. NO phone orcln~.
De11dllne: 3 p,n1.
t'ndlly. C.()l\I.• Mc~u of·
fl~ & 12 noon at all
lrurbolllccs..
TllE OAILV rrt.OT ~l'rvn thl' rlaht to
('lallstfy, f'dtt. ctMor or
reh111e any ad ~•r·
llllelTK'nl. •!Id t.o C'Mn11e •l~ rate &c "'11ulauon1
~prlOf'notl('t'.
CLASSlflED
MAWHG AODHSS r o. no .. UM.
eo.ta. "'.,.. ~
•••••••••••••••••••••••
4-ft.IX
$165,000
Unique income propertY
w/room lO add 2 addl·
uona.l units. Xt.ra larite
owner's unit w /formal
din. rm. & deluxe master
auite. Xlnt income. ~I
for detail.a i46-717l Cf'fN lit 0 •II S ft.HTOUH
SPLITLEVB..
Excitmg 3 bedroom. 2
bath executive home in
the hills back from the
beach. Spacious s uQ-
deck , formal dining, •
built-in kitchen. in one or
the best beach area lo<' a·
tions in Orange County.
$106,000. CALL 751·3191.
c;;sELECT ,
I PROPERTIES".
BEACH VILLA ·.
$105,000
Unbelievably low price!'.
Just blocks from tht>
water. Xlnt Newp·o r l
Beach location. Sprawl-
ing contemporary home.
Wood dt'ck entry.
Spacious living area,
with massive fireplace.
rustic family room. Open
beam cellings & wet bar.
C\rcular stair leads to
fantastic s un deck .
Hurry on Lhis one!! Call
today 646-7171 Oil"''' O• ,, '1 u~ ro~t N"'~ •
[~IRMtll]
NEWPORT
HEIGHTS
CHARMER
INVESTOR'S
SPEC I.AL
$47,500
Guarded gateway pro-
tects lavish grounds with
pool. Seduded entry to
t.'Xecut1ve hvmg room.
S uns hine gou rm et
kitch en overlooks
private courtya r d.
Sweeping mast.er bdrm
& child 's retreat. Owner
tl' anxious. Submit any
offer! 847·6010
nPll< Ill 0 • fl ~ IUN TtJ If 111'/ '
CAPE COD
$53,000 /$2, 150
TOT.ALDOWM
Wi nding roadway to
soaring 2 st.ory retreat'
Private grounds protect
secluded entry to lavu;h
living room. Gourmet
kitchen overlooks sun·
shine courtyard l Wind-
ing stairway leads to
sweeping master bdrm
plus child's r etreat!
Hurry! Seller,ls anxioiiS.
847·0010 L !
OIYN Ill O •tr S ft.JN TO II ~
IACK IA Y VU:•
2,000 Sq. rt. 3 BR. bois
rm., lam. rm. wt tft
bar. Swim pool, jac., WI
area. $130.000· J'ee. 4
t&IMl.DO
UALTOll 64c;.o
1002 GtMe ..
C S P P U M R E P E l • E G U l E B E
WTOSVESBRGRWWNSLIQT
H E D l E T 0 E A M 0 M ~ 0 L I T A A
H HP H I"!$ REP I P NA SJU HM
8 M U L S C I T P T H N X I Z 0 8 W A
I ETK UDWPEEAOEOWNORL
DJXRTERRALLNRET S EVL
TQLHSAUIPLTPRYM BSRA
EEOTEMCUAIMUROTPOWP
WUELPYLRABCAWUOTOCI
£RO.EA E 0 k CWT LT T P 0 W 0 M
UtOKATNMBIESTESTTPE
PCESC8WYLSPEQXOHDAS
"RTE ZROOAGD1NYk1£tD REPCORSTLAULPBDA~KT
.............................................. ~ ......................... lill ... • .. ~
SOPHIS'TICA110M Wl'nf flOOL 1M
OLD COIOMA D& MA.I
Beautltully appointed & well main·
ta.ined. Separate guest ctuarte.rs Oil an R-2 lot. Lots of wood tones, and
south of tbe hl•hway for only
$225.000. . •
.I
• •
.. . ,... ,..,... ~,,,.,.,••••••••r ..... -•
DAILY PILOT Mond!y Fetwuary e. 1171 ~!!.~~-~4!': ........ ~:.~~.~ ... :., .. ~!!:.~~ ....... ~::.~.~ ........ !~~!!!.°!.~~ .•.•••••
~!:!':~ ....... ~~-~~ ....... !~-~~ ........ ~!~~-~~ ....... !~~:!! .......... !~!~ ~~~ ....... !~.~~ ~~~ ......... !~.~ ~.~~~ ..... !~.~~·~~~ ..... !~· •
..... IOOZ .... ,.. 1002 G ... ,.. 1002 G....... 1002 -------· FOua .. ux • oCEANVIEWDUPLEX ,
••••••••••• ... ••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••• ••• • •••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ISi.AHO con AGE JUST LISTED Live in 1 let ye>Ur ten an
SPYGLASS SP'ICIAl.S Call for detatls on
brand new 4 bdrm homes from
$259,000. Make every day a
HOLIDAY-live in SPYGLASS. Coll .
64Ml61
MESA 4 IDRMS -MESA DB. MAI -
New on the market, hardwood Ooors.
great family neighborhood. Close to
parks, walk to all schools. Priced at
· $81,950. Call 546·4141.
Serving Costa Mesa-Irvine
Huntington Beat.h -Newport B each
UDO ISLE
Newly remodeled 4 bdrm .. den. 4
baths. Jiving rm. w icathedral ceiling.
Lge. master bdrm. suite. $224.950
llG CAHYOH
~ BR, fam. rm., 3 baths. Beaut1fully
decorated Broadmoor Plan 3 w:patio
\'il'WS from each room. $325,000
BAYFRONTS
Several fine bayfront homes
with pier & slips
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Bay\1dt' Driv1· N B 675 -6161
' 1002GtMral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
HARBOR VIEW LUSK
IAYFtlONT MAHSIOH wmt ftlElt
At last! Prime So. Bayfront location!
5 bedrooms and 4 baths upstairs,
downstairs is a 6th bedroom plus
sitting room plus the entire Newport
Harbor! It's fantastic! Close to 'the
stores, on a super beach. yet still
quiet! A family home of distinction,
now vacant. Presented at $534,500.
U~l()UI: t1()Ml:S
REAL TORS•, 675-6000
2443 Eas-t Coast Highway, Corona del Mar
also 1n Mesol Verct1• JI 546 5990
1002°Getteral 1002
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
ESLEY N
~YLOR CO
HEJ\LTOHS silll'l' HM
CAMEO SHORES -Sl I 0,000
Exciting ocean & sunset view from
this lovely 3 bdrm home . Spac
step-down living rm. Den w/wet bar,
mstr bdrm w/separale Mr. & Mrs.
bath, formal DR-all o'looking pool.
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., REALTORS
2111 Son Joaquift Hlls Road
HEW'ORT CBfTER. H.I. 644-4910
$169,500 paythe laxes. fireplace
Sunny and bright 3 bdrm t'our umt4 in • cood & balconies. 3.1866 Diana.
home with rormal dining nelgbborbood in Costa p ,ooo. Mesa. Near schools & rm and pvt patlo. Just shopping. Oreol Invest· 111•1 ''&f4tqJlorq,, enough yard lo plant A • your pansjes behind the menl. ct now before 67$.4160
packet fence! This home llus one is sold I M5·9491.
offers Lhe opportunity to
paint, c arpet and
wallpaper, then you 'II
hilve a Dollhouse.
-
SALJSBURV New Condos, 2 Br. 2'~ Ba, 2 frplc's. ceramic tile
REAL t:STAT[ kitchens & balh. Pool &
Balboa lslond spa 675-4912 Broker 673..fiOOO _..._. -------
COSTA MESA
JUST LISTED!! TRIPLEX
2 B d rm . h 0 u 8 c + Prestigious area. Ea. un·
bachelor unit, on corner it has pnvate pallo &
lot, priced lo sell at laundry rm. Frplc in
DAMA LIGHTS
Lovely 2 Bdrm, 2 bath
condominium with mini
ocean view. ~ mile front
Dana Marina . $76,900.
Call 644-7211
,FOR DE."TAJLS
Ung CJ
Rul&tAft
MAGHlflCEt« vtEWS
-U1t..,.0Hed wltltewottf' 9 IO clefl'ft
view frOM thia ..... .-ewe.ct des\11'•11 l b~ wl..-loft & Z'h bath ....... lldt ... ••""Y cMtail ••• $342,500
LAGVNA
NlGUEL
49S·li2U
499.4551
DANA
POINT
493·11812
LAGUNA.
BEACll
497.3331
Sl39;SOO owners urul. Move fast
b7J.JG63 642·22S3Eves onlhi.sone! Brinccbeck t-t....-IO"'"'.__. __ book!54S·9491. 1~~~~~~~~1 · . ..,. ,.,. ..,._ 1044·
/Jn NIGEL
BAILEY &
ASSUCIATES
INCOME!!! l-••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
BALBOA PENIN. S BeautiClll new home
Years young; duplex. 3 Coastline view. s br, 2•.2
up & 3 down: ocean slde ba. $230.000. 831·2049 of b l vd. Pride of1-------------~1~__;_~;____;_.;..:_:._ ____ 1
ownership property; HA ... DYM .._ .._..5 ....... .-leach I 040
good rental his tory. " -"""' •••••••••••••••••••••••
67Sl~3663.ooo Including.,~~~"!"'" DREAM HOME S'5 Resale Specialists. ... "'"' ,,,,_.. 3.4 or 5 bdrm models Fantastic opportunity avail. some w /pooli.
BEST BUY
IN
WOODBRIDGE
$74,000!1!
NEAT 4 BR. Plan S: n1~y lndscpd; on cul de
sac. nr. Irvine Hi&b " llerllage Park. Super
location!
IVB. YH CO,B.AHD
REAL TOR 552.0434 for the handyman aeek· 968-4602 Deluxe STONEWOOD 1n
ini: a large workshop 11t Pennington Properties presugaous Woodbridge Dramatic Exec hme, 3 BR home. Big s cparatll Place. Ideally located on 2 Ba, Dining Rm & associated
ISROKEAS-AEAL TORS
l02', W lolboo ~7 1 JU I
MAGNIFICENT
AXER
UPPER
On full acre, high up in
the Tus tin Hills.
lkautiful view, room fo r
hor s es and tennis .
Between two mansion:..
ha rd work, adea-. &
money c Jn makl· at
fa bu loo:.• S225,000.
T r a d e ~ o k
building In back suilablef---------1 an open corner with Library, prof Jndscpd
for mechanic, wood 21R +Den+ Poot loads of upi:rades. Easy w/hght.s.Closeto30acre
worker, electr1c1an, or Corner lot. RV or trailer accei.s to Woodbrld~e lake fish swlm boating
? ?? Beller hurry ! Call access, hardwood floors. Lake and Irvine's ex· & p~·l ~ach. Call Agt.
645--0303. Ask Ing 570,900. Ca 11 celll•nt schools. Ask an~ 552 441'
546•5880 Agent. only Sl 18,500. -----------
WOODlllDGE
Broadmoor home, 4 BR.,
fnm. rm .. alrlum, pool,
spa, decking, lndscpd .•
fenced. ''The works".
RedlK:ed to $l2S,000
FORESTE
OLSON
•flolL ... •8A\.1Un1 SALE IY OWHER
Sharp 3 Dr, upgraded
Condo. 21/z yrs new, 2 ha.
2 s try Pvl laundry, VACANT-MOVE IH patio. garr+-carport. No
Seller hall movt!d Thi!> common wall. Comm
home Is ready lor am pool S67.800 NO AGNTS
mediate occupancy New 962·3S27
curpets 10 h\•mi: room. -------
clmin.: room. hallway
1:111d 2 Of II:-3 bedrooms
Ciill Soit> 231:1
t. .,,,,,, ,. . •'
BEACH COTTAGE
llAHCH REALTY
SS 1·2000
AGENT 640.5560
TURTLEROCK
PRIVACY~RIVACY-ftlVACY
This 4 bedroom haven is an executive
reward -{{reen hills. blue Pacific. a
home to make it all worthwh ile
Corona del Mar at it's best! 1436
Keyview. Open daily till sold. S259.00o.
I Ownl'r t llrokl'f. Hick [ ! ~=.-!'! .......... !?.~~ ~~~~! .......... !?.o.~ Aldcrettt:. 731 511~ ~ lmlIIIJ I~~ "'llWWI
CLIFF HAVEN-for
Warm & cozy 2 Br 2 BJ,
home w/fres h. ocean
hr1.-eze Cor only $2,000
down 631-4560 A"l.'nt
SANDYlliCH
ONLY $134,950
Whal a hfestyle! \Valk to
I\•~ IJke & beach. Sail,
!t~1m. picnic or ;u!>l ~un·
baths · 4 bi g bdrms. 2
baths, huge fmly rm
w/hag llplc, lrml dan.
vaulted cc1hngs, hvy
shake plus a blrl atrium.
i59·15<ll .
By Owner 3br, 2ba, fam rm. prof lndscpd. elect
spnnklers, lrg cvrd patio
w1vu oC UCI & valley. Nr
pool, tcnni.I & prk&, xlnt-
schools. $122.500. 833·1948
S&STalUVB.
Prire has been reduced on this super S&S Yale
Model. this home has, 4
Ur 2\~ Ba & fresh paint
lhruout. Located in the
exclusive Colle1e Park
area w/comm pool, play-~nds etc. Vacant. re-
ady for a new owner &
pnrcd for :i quick sale by
anxious owner. Fot more
anrormation can :
675·3411
LUSKiREALTY
a Joh II n. /. u sk & Son Co .
25 IS E. Coo\t Hwy. CorOflo ~Mar
MANAGER---IEAL ESTATE
NEWPORT BEACH
\., h A pri me opportun i t y wit an
outstanding real estate orl-!anization
+ high c>arn ings ! Experiencl' is a
mus t. Prl's tl g ious loc ation. All
a pp Ii talion s h ('Id 1 n s t r i r l l's t
ron fid<•m·c. l'lt'ase rl'ply to Ad ::nx
Daily Pilot. P. 0 Box 1560. Costa
Mesa. CA !l2fi2H Gewerol I 002 GeMrol I 002 .................................... ·····. .... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1-------• G..,-ol 1002 G~ol 1002
The Actin Family
:1 Bedrms ano1 f:tmily
room. Complt•le ly re
1urb1shcd and reJrlv Sll~UIOO .
PETE BARRETT
-REALTY-
6~M200
INVESTMENT
4 Bil $lOOO betow marl.cl
pn<'t' 771 Olympic Acsor
Hlly. 731-4!11 I
CUSTOM
EASTSIDE :1 br 2 ba. Nt•w kitchen Stamt:las~ ()uk ti~ I-' I'
Su1x.•r lot Tn•<'s. Dl•ck &.
hol ti.h (1Ull'l t'M)
SrJ :itlll \)14 n<'r ti 12 11:111 -,__._ __ ---
011 l'l'l n •••· l.111..t' Must
,,.,. 11r !'-.1 ~·11.1st l'l.11;1 :!
"''''" l.11<. 11 0111. pru lt'"Ulfl,dl\ (l'l Ul .Jll'll.
n·n1 r.1I .111, ·!llr, :!ll,1.
SB.LIT!!
This 1s what the owners
of lhl!t gorgeous 4 br, 3
bath family room, den,
dmmc area home wuh
plush rupct huve told w.. You could be the one Heal Estate to l'OJOY the C 07.y ---------
lln•placc & your rh1klren
walJ lovc lhl' pr1\';11t· play
area • I ..... ,., I w
LOOKING TO USE
YOUR V.A.
1h•11. ~.lnll' rA\. "'uncl ---------
WOW , wh ul .111 np
11urt un1l \. St•c 1111 ~
l)l:au111ul Hrookf1eld in
the G rel.'ntrec llomes
arl.'a 1'\•alurc~ include 4
'63·0191
NEWPORT IEACH
Canalfroot4 Br. ram rm.
rumpus rm Rcdwd.
deck : walk to beach,
pools &e tennis . Only
$1'5.5,9001
CORO HA DEL. MAR •• • • • • • • • • • • •••• ••••• • • • • • •• • • • • • • • •••••••• • • •
Spac ious Duplex. 31---------1
Bdrm. 3 baths. patio. INVESTOR'S DREAM
fareplllre 2 Bdrms. 2 Can Ix' yours in 1h1:. 3 Br.
bath, sundeck. fireplace. I':? bath, h:e din1ni: area.
FOURPLEX
lk't 'l"'ndJhll• 111 ~n·a l
L"1,.,IJ ;\h•'J h>l·.1t111n .\II
2 bedroom unrh ~1th m·~
p;11nl & curpo.'l'. Full~ "'
c upled Fu 11 pr11"
SISoi.000 C.\ LL 5.'>G 2G1o11
11r l'tJr ll'r h1111w . ,h.1r 11
'"nil'<' 3 hdrm . t 1: h;ilh
h" mt• . ' I 11 1 (; ,, r cl I' n
1;r11\" 111·1i.:hh111 huucl
lk•lll'r hurn·' s,'1:!:;:;11
C. F. Colesworthv
REALTORS 640-00iO
.,~:-lt·m l'uol. J .. MJ/11 &
l'l l1h -.l' II ' "'' _..,f Sl :!~1 0110 ,,.,1; ~ llli ttr
~().l:!t
HEW FHA PROGRAM
UNl>ER 5'1 do~n. onl}
SliOOcluwnon $60,UOO We
Ira' c 10 ch1>1ce huml'S
bl·droom!>. up~radcd. ~l&iilli!l prore ss ionn!l :1
landsC'apcd. Community
pool and Park. Asking
only S)5.500
CAYWOOD R E1-\ L TY $165.000. pn\'ate palto tuwnhOU!>l' OWNER MUST SELL
Lm 1•h :! t"lrrn . 2 II.1th n111il•~. I-I' \ t '. h:1•
p.1t1u. ~1 11u111I t lour
Sjll !•lO
S32 975 trom S5i.OOO to Si I !'>()(l ' W\lh FllA terms Call for INC 548-1290 644-7270 m pnml' I()(' at um PIER HOUSE 1M:iils 531.5soo o p .. 11 :=:~i:;~IT!r.:~~:',~ A7j.":1f...""'' --
• adult, all security bldg .• .:;;;;;;;;;R;;lA;;l;;TO;;R;;S;;;;= Walk lo ocean. pier.
C::::SELECT
tPROPERTIES ffrPI:ii·«•
t'or lhc:-1.' :J 2 HK h•lllH'' 1-;, c:.
1h.1t rll't'<I a 1111 Ir Tt.C ·' Inti RE Network
lol 14111 t,1k1• Ull ,11ld1t 11111.il~~~~~~~~~1 111111 1-
1042
vlllage, shoppmg, boat -------1·---------
BRAHD HEW li!!_.~:J\~
3 BR·S65,900! 11u•u•1' HASEVIERYTHIHG lh lrut" A hrJnd n\·~ ~ o"'""ouU•UlTV JUSTLISTIED
••..•..................
slip avail. All this for
' $149,500! 1 lalK>a lay Prop.
IHltort * 675-7060 * *VETS ___ , FREE
FOR S87,900 <'Ustom 1111111 home al 011 Balboo P"'inwla 1 OOJ .-X wno ... ,,., .. l,,.,,..,_.,. 'I bo I ., H ., ••••••••••••••••••••••• v \ ,-ar ur .. ane,, r. -·~ that the family m'l'!h ly 51;.r,.000 full pra\·e . Ex ; L:nil!t . i; . ;!ll r & 1 ____ 645~9161 __ ba end unit w1:!·t' boat Charming •l hedrm. :! <'l.'llt•ut IO<'all!1n on trl'<' ~lip . Super s harp' hath. formal din1n J.! + hnl'<I ~ln•cl. 1-: ... 1alih~ht•1I nachclor. pool. Mt'ps lr in:,\ DY f-'OR OCCl'Y 431! SlS.">.OOOCall now.
kitchen breakfa,t arl'a. nci,::hborhood :1s pa1·11111s IK'h. ~so.om 20·. clown Prmcclon. •l Ur 2 Hu . PURCELL REALTY
Great Ooor plan. lo~·l•l.v bedrooms + :! haths. _o_~_n_c_ri_;.i;,.o;2_i ___ pool. re<lccor'd. S!l!l.!JOO. 1714) 1146·2828
backyard & pal 10 Eye F'umaly room. Trailer ac· l'cnimmla Point fixer. R~ Ownr ~~7_:1:~1 1 cvc' 1 t....-· 10 ... 4 ap&Ealing.See1L now. cess.Calllust 7S2·170ll <Jwner J brm 11, ha R 3 RI'2 11 E """' ,. 40 E.17" • fOft All "",.11 ,,, .; •• , ._ ,.,,, i~tt• ,,.,,. ·-• y owner. \, a. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 613·8698 side. Lrg lot. Quiel. pvt,
A REAL BUY!!
RANCH REALTY
SSl-2000
WOODBRIDGE
2 PRt::SCOTTS
Larites l WoodbridJ:l'
homes 2600sq, rt. +3 car
gar. 5 or 4 br+dcn. 3 Ba.
atrium. air cond., fully
lndsl', highly upJtr. Ml'\·
acan Paver~ talc. Li:c lot
Nr Park & lake. Slll6.00(l
& $196.000. Lse $826/mo.
Bkr/Ownr 552·4121 or
GI BILLIHFO
Ustof Homes
Credit Info
·Move in Free l~~C.M;.;;;;;;;;;;u;u~s' [~ •. ·. I CoronadefMor 1022 SK9.S00.645·233.1 "' ' ....................... ---------
CORONA DEL MAR BACK BAY Pop u I a r l 04 i n the _w_k_d_IJ.;..y_s -~ __ -3535 ______ _
CHARMER
2 Bdrm.. 1 bath hnu'ie Mo"• In Cottdltion
WOODIRIDGE
411·$99,500
Creekside, Willows
Owner/Agt. 833-1768
THE
MEADOWS
tr your next move Is to a
mobile home· take a look
at what we have to offer:
:? Bdrm .. 2 ba .• A/C
1368 Sq. Fl. $37 .900 ••• 2 Bdrm, 2 Ba. +den
1400Sq. fl. $36.900
All Prices
All Areas
OCUHFROHT
REDUCED
SI 5,000
with 2 g ues t units S pac 1o u-. 4br . Jba
Sl-5 ooo lwnhme. Om rm. frplc. 1 • • modem bltnc;, F II. pvt
California Homes. Ideal· Deerfield. Aspen ; 3 BR,
ly located 3 bedroom 2'At ba., gas BBQ, end of
home with formal dining cul de s ac. Open Sot,
room. Asking only Sun.12 5. Ay o~hcr. --------•
Sl.62 per DAY
That's M.Lyou ptty
rora
30d1y ad
ln the
DAILY PILOT
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
THE
HOME STORE
lcoll 24 hours)
~·HERITAGE • .• REALTORS
964-2455 ONLY $62,5001
I n.1 L I Brookhurst Fresh paint! Clcnn 3 bd 7"TO home. New Ule floors an
Huntington Beach kitchen & baths. New 1-----=------1 roof! Don't hesitate!
NEW
FHA
Program!
Low Payments!
Call Now ror Details!
RED CARPET 754-1202
Phone today!! FHA·VA
terms too! 545-9491.
ILUFFS
&id unit, X·Plan. Tennis
Villa former model.
Spacioua s BR,. 2~ be.,
fam. rm .. form . din.
Owner anxious. low
down. mflke offer. Prine
only. 548· 7219 or 559·4221
/Jn Nll,11
1'1\1! I Y ~
r,<1':llL "~ i [CJ
Wide greenbelt. SlSl,000 1--------HIUH I . DOWD
RW.TOlt 644·0134 Want Ad Result.a
HORlt-IS REALTY patio, attch dbl jl&r. 1850
• 494-8057 * !IQ fl Co mm pool, jacu21i. sauna. tennis
crts. clbhse. $89.SOO. Agt
/Jn Nl[JlL
GAILEY &
ASSUCIATES
YA.._.
CRECK TfftS OUT
!Tl Broadwa1 '74.900.
Aft~
631·1266or 549·14311
LIKEClUCKEN SOUP
. , ll couldn't hurt to call
Chuck Nash about a re·
warding career In real
estate. Free training if
you quallry. 540-5101.
$83,500. SELLER WILL $98.500 "-m .J844
RE-CARPET and paint ------
entire interior. BEST WOODBRIDGE PLACE
BUY IN IRVINE Special offerlni: 3·5
TODA y • 1 bdrm Contemporary de·
tached l1m1ly homes in
open, ~oodc;y dcs11l n
Just ~hnrt walk lo lake &
parh an \'illaRe of Wood·
bridge. From SI IS,000
~·4101
EXTRA-IXTRA
EXTRA
We could go on and on
with an endless llat 0(
i:oodles. but come see ror l you rself. It's the
cll!ltomir.ed Exeter Park I
IJ Univers1ly Park home
1n Village Ill.
rroless1onally decorated
a nd professionally
landscaped. You own tbe land and the financing ts t
very flexible. Can be
youn for $124,500. ll'• worth looking I . t
red hill ~:.:.
552-7500 '
4 .
7
. ,. . . . . . .. . . . . -.. . .. ••• t • ............ -.... " . . . . .. . . . . . .. . . . . . . .... .. . . . . . .
~.~.~ ....... !~.~~ ....... ~~~ ........ ~~!:I!. ...... ~.':.~ ........ ~!~.~~...... ..Mondly _ _..._._F .. ebru!ry ..... ....,_,e...._10 ... n ...... _______ OM.-.-;,;;o,o.v.-11n..-;.;OT-.._C&=:..
L.tl-IMd 1041·~.... IO .............. • • ............ 1069 .... AM ~ ••oc=~~·w•·othffRHI•.... ...... .. ,., ....
• -..-.--..... •••• H •U• .. •••••••••••••• -~ .......... llHlflUllflff
0
Pllll2
•
0 e 11111-HllOFJ Tl J •• .... IJff ._,. __ ••••-...... •••••••••••• .. ••• .... • -··••••e .. er .. •n••••
Lingo
Rulb.Tt
llAUllRIL OCEAN VIEW
-Tlnea.•a-,3.....,...LagmcthocJe.
LoYtly mlt,,.... wt.ltewettr wl .-bHda
•lew. Wolk to dowatow• and
........ $161,100.
DANA
POINT
'98-881Z
495-1720
SOOTH
LAGUNA 499-4551
LAGUNA
BEACH
497-3331
MWPTCllST BeCAP'l'lVATEDbythll ....................... a.ie-r.1p1rty 2000 Hswpwtleealt 316' c.teMtM 3JZ4-• COMDO Lm0 SAtieDS .coo prtee r..tuctlon. OONDO • OwDcr wt .. m· ....................... - ........... •••••••••• ...... •••••-•eh••t••.
Ach.mceoh lltcUmeto l'blocktobeacb.SBdrm. ComtemporarJJr de-ey~ for thi. wnd 35.SVIALIDOSOUD MaS.C.PLAJA :• own a COl:Klo lo Newport I ha. 2 ~. dbl far, ccr'd. C«ltra.l a.Ir, s. Cat ooly, otfen aavtnp 1n sura 4-ft.U DRIVE BY. 2 bdrm, J ~ EseeuUve ,,,o1.
Beach. 1blt model has 3 l.ncdy.vd. Prlvac1 at thf Plua uu.. Sacrince at ~'tUul Ne~rt ~ea, Side by elde, buf one or eteaa.oUt l\arn.llhcd. c:oa· bome. HOO aq •. n.._ • bdnna with clfn ofC the) bad\ and we rut lt>r $11,!00.Hurrratc:all~ a twn ee, ave both.Alldlx2bdnnunll$ or TV, deek. vlew ol BedrlQ, s bat.I).~ •
master, 2~ bat.ha. dlnlna you durlnc t.be wiAt.u. VERN JOHNSON RLTR ma~ th 0 u I a D d.. w/frplc:. Will HU~ COD· water';. S?OOl'mo. pool Ml'Ylce. ~
room, It vlng room. • Tbl.I bouM hH 'utb ap. ~6 548-tract. at 9~ int. Priced to W:i\1'EB.FRONT HOMES (Dave) S&5-1SOl evta.
fireplace. Tbie uoJL la pea1.Aak1G&Sl38,000. 1. New exec. condo, .____ ..._..., 1000 aell fast! Call now! SU·140CHota_ppt. Vl:'DY """'l 9• i..011 near the pool. 1auna, ... ~Pier lllty -.-.-~"1 ., S5l.m7 '.,... '""" • a .n
j•cuzzl " WJlnls courta. u3-2ose j~ .,se:~.~~· ~~ic ·······················~~~~~~~~~!....-.. ... ,,., an uiu w .. ~ Owner Must Mil a~ wiUf entr' '87,500. m."2, PRIDI OF Duplex. Nwpt. Bch 3 & a ....................... =:: ~:• ~ .Wt
liaten to. .re&IODa..-Cl · OWMIRSHIP BcirmS atde by slde 800 GtDlt II 3202 MMG3 ;---..-.:-' ter.St&-2313 IYOWMR 5-lllL4111M I086 makethls uillquetrt.plex blkof W. Balboa Blvd. l ••••••••• .............. , ________ _
<>l'fN"49·llS'IMJOWH1Cr• CbarmJ.o&Npt Hta. 3 Br ... •m;::;:"•~••••u one ot the belt valub in blktoOCD&l bayooPenn. •YIT~ Nett 3 Br I .. Ba. I car !(.~-e 11~1·11,~1 FR. 2 ~a blb to Npt 1n1AllMCt Dana Point. Exc:ell~nt Prinonly.6'5-20&4 You foutbt I« tt, own a iar , fl>lc, c ptl, d rps, · ' B•Y· Trop 1ardana, Ocean view; deU1bUu.l2 tu shelter with Capital »Mee of lt now bO 40w8 E/Slde, $SSO. Gl-o:llOI & ~ 1. : ~ : 1azebo. Aak foe Dan or BR. 1\4 be. apt. <you'll Galn~Ual.$215..000. COV1MGTOM4"PLIX VeteraaHouttftsAlt . Nlo-'IOIS --•••=-Frank. •at. 751·8189 lcwothe1toraie 1pace). HOllMSR••LTY aiotce area clOM to s 141 "•oo · •--------days, eva 6'5·2549. Lee. l)OOI. Near beach. ... , ... 0~57 Coast Plaza. 8 yr old un: -aeaa I Br •faar. adlta.
WIST $129.000. OnlYS89.500 * ~ .,.... * lta in prime condllion. Brad new i brm I~ ba oopeta. 773w. Wllsoo.
MEWPOllTDUPLD MIWPOITHTS. O~ER 499'20IH NEWPORT Just listed aodUitriced to fam r m, toed yrd: MJ..8205 ~!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ on a earner lot w/oeean Near Cliff Dr. 4 Bdrms, 3 WHt1 I itw I Otl sell. Hurry on one! mlcrowav• kit, frpl, 1 Br, epta., drsls. I a c •
...... hfllCll I 041 Lapncl MicJuef I 052 views from both unit.I. 4 ba .• family rm, frpl. • .-........... •••••••••• HEIGHTS 963-0ltt lndscpd, 6'l·l'73S.. ~. poccbea, fn~ ~-$.100.
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• BR upstairs, Z BR unit RoomforRV. $104,500 3br Condo. 2~ba. frplc, DUPLEX HOMEnNDERS Wlrpd.675-511.0:aG
GlEA.TESTA.TE downstairs. trnlts •how STUA.ITFtME dblcladpr.Sbowsllkea Extra sharp 2 BR units, niousandsotReotals MESA VERDEi Br.Pa
OFRRJHGl Executive's pride of owner.ship. UALTOI 6 l l·5454 model. Brl&hl open int. botb w/prvt patios. Allu.uaUpricet J\m, 2 fplc'•, .a c
Best buy in area. 4Br, Owner will help fmanc· Sell by owner. S76,900. Owner will help Ona.nee. Sample: dl'Ptl. $475 gNllr in~
2Ba, 2 frplcs, amenitie~ Dream mg.AllkinJS189,000. BayfroQl, luxurious con· 8118-T722 For 1 ale or trade S80Bachcottagefreeut. 839-045
galore, nlcel,ydecorat.ed, Private comm., 3 BR, 3 ~liiiiili~~~ do; open daily l2:30to 3; OlilerRHllstah $139,500. $1S02brWOG'tlHtl
near beach. Now ba., with l.80' ocean view. I P\QQ! «J3 Udo Park Dr., A·l. ••••••••••••••••••••••• CA.LL t5S.03SO $2703br kids welcome I~ 3 br, 2 ba new ~
$175000 s · •-· t 121i.500Act675-5200 ........a....u.~ UFE11MESERVJCE •torr. $585/mo. WW lse • . pacious "' stuon1n1 '[)DO\ £5~ -~ rs7 ".22 opt au H 37 eye.,_ SCHULZlsLEER.E. homd. Features too ~ HARIOllVUHOMES ParSale 1100 " _. ~ • '
81618 Coast Hwy numerous to mention. 2 br, +den or 3 brm, 2 ba, •••••••,••••••••••••••• 2br, 1ba, Back Bay on Best u~ .. VERDE ·-a. S.Laawia 499·2281 Trueprideorownership. llGC"' ..... YO..... · all ....... nnousoW ..... ER 2 Pl ~~ .. 000 .......__ --·"" -~ •n• $389000!S4) Ar" " parquet.entrance, up---. "' -4 exes~-· ea uuuvrauu •• $325
1
mo. Dehute4Br.~ famrm,
LAGUMA CHA.RMER • IA.RGA.IM trades. 8Y owner. Pri.ll. Sesame Street-Sharp & ORAH'iE S.PrideorOwnenhip 67U53 bltns, f'l"plc,°'n~ paint " ~btn&:i,blksJro~the 0Hl.Y$15t,SOO :i~=·750. 644·7"3, ~~·o~k~9~n2 COUMTY S315.000.Agt645-1103 MbooP•ftlla 3207 carpet. eardenv $$45.
ac • 4 t 2 a, en, Elegant new Eldorado w/eoclosed porch. Many PRIDI OP l UMlTS FIXIR ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~361K ~~ jactuzu, gdam~ rhm. model. 3 big bdrms, 2~ Seavtew, by owner. Ex· xtras. Vacaot. Priced OUA.1USMIP Gdprlce.Bc:b /Cbapman. 3•J3oor 2mBoay, tnlyr.Pwa.vllllllo~.:. 3-bdrm--1-t\_a_, -.. -,...-a-e-p-., .....,men, sun ec .. as baths Near p ool ~ otic vu, ocean, Fashion · h t r (Js.700 2 l """ o di 2 s A ~ U'll: ...,., panoramic ocn & city jacuzzi, tennis & 1olf Isl. mnt. Nu 3br Broad· rig DI 1-pn y 1 • • e t . shown Sat/Sun Noon Ul Ready to move lo. $400
view, lrplc. fncd yd. By course. Upgraded ever-moor, Hampton mod. PAC 1 F 1 C C 0 AST POTENTIAL 554-533'1 • tPM, 675'r8618or675-38M mo.5'8-2049
owner, appt on l y1-========"-1 ythlne. sunken liv rm, tJpgraded.lmmed.poss. RESAL.ES,INC.&9l~ CONDO'S 26-PLEXES $235,000. 497·1381 Ldctfonst IOSS wet bar, lrml din, bla $259,000.644..s.st9 .ZO'KENSKILL.Treasure ~"'-'oleoclal211 New condo w/tranquil eves/wknd.s ••••••••••••••••••••••• bd /b 1 30. 4-yearold. 2 bedroom, Localed ln H.B. Sales ••••••••••••••••••••••• pa u or am a view. ---------SELLING at COST! New mslr . rm w a cony. laland. South Laguna. 1~ bath townhouae unita. price S25(),000 each. For 2Bdrm beach house. large Fireplace, 3 master al.u: Warmington in W.oods. Secunty gates. 759-tSOL WIS1'CUFF $3300. Taylor Made Rlty. Excellent. area. Garden more in!o: Call 645-8256 yard $375. 4~ or ~. 3 ba\hs, ceramic Connoisseurs! 2500 s.r. under warr. Spacious 3 BR, den, 499-2986"495-4486 Grove. Beautifully oc9'79<'3378Prin~only. 86H161JQdy tile entry, beauttrulll
Superior quality 3 HR ooo c · t RE farnilyrm.bomewith3~ landscaped, pro· urpeted•ctr.*,tras
home featuring heavy ~i!581os oving on baths, lie. laundry rm. LADOLCIVITA. feulooally mnna1ed. LohforSale 2200 CoroM .. Mir 3222 eom1l9ctor. Bil1con::i
beams, exposed Jevelors.1---------1--.....:.:Re::::al=..:Es=.::la:.:t::e __ I with walk-In pantry; Live in a Beach Club, Refinance or contract. ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2~ car 1a~ .,,el
appliances, special j) RT brick frp}.c. & w /w ~.pool. clbbse, near Will exchange. AD ex-IUILDEIS 2 BR. 1 ba., trpl, ~~ opeaer.KidlOK.oo
ftnanc;lng, low laxes and HEWPO . carpets over bdwcl. nrs. beach. Btfl 20it$8 elusive oUerln g or South of Oranee County ~~vt~~$42S. "4J' p.soino.183-NM.
more. $149.000 (647) HEIGHTS Tastefully d ecornted Parkland w /encloud Q u A 1 L p LA c E choice lQt " acreaee'. • •
-• Charming 3 BR, 2 BA, wit.babutt.ers,paoellna& porcb,oewal~.totally PROPERTIES, INC. Many to choose from in Gingerbread House for klDS""50IC • ~1--family room hom e wallpaper. Lae. paUo & upcraded. <FPT'896•7> (710 752·1920,1400Quail beaut. areas. Last or lemse. 2 BR, frplc, lr& Eutslde.2 Br,pr.*3ZS.· ,,/J(Jf,Ult ----w/wood deck.a & eazebo, 2-sty. playhouse lor the 1967 • Call Toda Y Street , Suite 135, speculative market. patio, so. ot Cout Hwy. '*4848ort7~ -LAKE FOREST new carpe t & really ldds.$170.000 PACIFIC COAST Newport Beach. Ca. BKR. No pets. $400. Dave, 2 brbLNo ......,. -~ 64S H···" l •.r.111· /111
•Ith' c;1,·1111t·t"' S11t!t•f
494 9473 ~4q U316
M I s harp. Of!ered ·at MEWPOaTIEACH RESALES, INC. 2lOSE 92116() (714)8775691 844-7211 --ore or your money, ........ TV 67r 1642 B r ookh urat. H.B. • 0 · Vic:tGrta.Clll
nearly new, 3 bedroom, $13.5,000. ,_~ __ ·•-'-------I ~1 R522-0:530 CosNM.M 3224 S4f..8124
-2'~ bath, !amily room 540-3666 3 Br Trina plan end unit in Ready to build on lot. fan· ••••••••••••••••••••••• C'.i..-3 n.. 1• ... ,,._ bi
---------<Meadow Homes). faMllyPwk U tew & Ik MESA WOODS ....... ., --.,... .._, g LA.GUMA. IEA.CH Unusually large, cool The Blutra. $149,750 firm. <--ialist las c ocean v wa family rm wlfl>lc 674 covered patio. Hume is Principles only. Agent -..-tobeacb,Laguna. 3 BR, 2 BA, bie fenced CoveSt sm mo ~ CHARMER 835-0739 aft.er5pm We have 2, 3, & 4Br. Owner/aeent673-7296 yard, 4 yTS. old. $S2S/mo. · ·
Older, well bulll Lagunu Insulated. 3 Car garage, ------·---• mobile homes listed in CALL '751 3191 3 br 2 i.. 2 car 1arage storage & boat. door.•-----~----isEAVJEW, 3 Br popular NORTHTUSTIN ' · ' 1H1e ' Be1:1ch home with fan· Community associa· M.l .COMDO BarHar .. -,prtmeocean PARKSKYUNE MESA VERDE frplc:. Kids olr. No clop. tastlc view of ocean. 2 .,.... 4 BR B I ed rd $U5 mo 645-2274 Master bedrooms. one lion-pool, tennis, sail· JUST REDUCED view $,975. ~•7·7044; Laste.tate lot, located in • , 2 A, enc ya • · ·
<'ompletely sepnrate Ing.clubhouse. !Al mile to beach. Btfi 833-321S the Beverly Hills of new paint. & carpeUne. a BR duplex, fp)c sar,
from main house. Swim· COLE OF NEWPORT condo professionally de· ---------• Orange Co., known as ~/mo.. CALL~2660. tipts, df119, •tove. indry,
ming pool.1179,000 REALTORS <.-orated. 3 big bdrms, 2 ILUPfS SPECIAL Banana Bel~ MESA DB. MAR lfdnr & wtr pd. '290 per 675·5511 baths -close to pool. ~ust listed, stunning 3 SEVEMUHITS Tom Fatterer 4 BR, 2 B:\. big kitchen mo.'""5849;581-4179
Mission Vltio 1067 sawia & jacuzzi or walk Br, 2~ Ba, pro!essiooal WE CA.RE This is a bot one! Sharp Bell lnvestmen~ w/buill·.ins. Gardener tn-•-----------
to the beach. Only Europeandecor.Elegant Wewanttofindtheright investmentwithgreatin· 364E.1slSt.Tustin eluded. $675/mo. CALL Lee Condo, Silt, air, mJr
3 Monarch Bay Plaza
Laguna Niguel
496-7222 831-0836
•••••••••••••••••••••••
$6,000
TAKEOVER
PAYMENTS
$00,000. 759·1501. home, fantastic view & Mobile Home for you. come & priced right a t 832-2440 &830·0343 556-2660. ~2··~~;~ '47S.
manyxtru. For details Professional frie ndly $130,000.HURRY !!! C-2 ZONE. Downtown HO FEE .,_.. 1-~......--. 1
call: Agt. 552·4414 staff, member multiple 540..3666 CM, 100x180. $90.000. !p SELECT Nice 2 BR, 1 ba, fnc:d
listing services. Xlnl 645-4200&645·1103 yardJ.. encl gar, $,ill> IDOJ~
, _________ ,San aemttttt I 076 ~~~~I PgAaCvlaFiJIC. CCaOIASI UTR 5..-.. ,cuJ~p,..,.,.an front. 3 PROPERTl~S 2544uranp548·Z'm LogllMHQ&s 1050 On large 2 story corner OCE"' ..... VllW ••••••••••••• • • •• •• •••• .A""""' ....... .-... ..,... ...
lot modern home. Pay· ~ · IUCHDOLLHOUSE RESALES.INC. adjocentlots.3ArchBay ........................................ . LEISURE WORLD ment.s Sl,032, no qualify. COHDO, REDUCED Walk to Riviera Beach. Anabeim99l..&660 So.Lag.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Finally, a chance to aet Ing necessary. Vacant. $ THOUSA.MDS S On na.LW'&I canyon with Hunllngton Bch 963--0991 TltfPl.IX, C.M. U> $265,000
int 3 Bdrm., 2 bath & 542·36760wner/agent. Reduced for a fast sale. ocean view. 3 Br, 2 ba, 2Br, 2Ba, tge patio, ocean Great Eaetslfde toed, m :::
brand new hilltop unit. Vacant & seller is anx· with extra ~ lot. Never v iew . s 0 • La 1111 n a newer 3br, 2ba, rplc, y . Will sell slngly or as 1 Expansive views of the Aliso Villa. ious. Beautiful 2 br end aga111at only$1.25,000. "99-47l0,6'75-l606 <2> 2br lba pa\ios eocl valley. $85,900. By Owner. 2 brm 1~ ba unit w/(plc. Community gar. $1Ss,oo0. ' · pare/I el Pvtbe cho~muni~y .._.ORIMSREALTY condo wHh gar age. pool,sauna &jacuizl.At PRICEDRIGHT SIASIDEllA.UTYHI TomLee.Rltr,6'2·1603 w arge ac ... tennl.S " 961.500.213/969·2363 ... ,_ rl I · I t ' courts. B.M. Craig * 494-8057 * uwt P ce t wont as · SanClemente'sforemost Seacaps&sunsets.abtn Wider~ owner. n._.99.3070 or ---------•Newport hoclt I 069 Hurry l Call 645-0303. value. "Cantamar" 4 Br, famUy paradise. 2Br + 21!Ml82 3305
Lovely 4br, lrst fam rm ••••••••••••••••••••••• ramlJy home on cul-de· bonus rm in El Morro By 2 DUPLEXES LEFT ---·------
w/ftplc. Liv rm. d10 rm GRE "'TEST BUY sac com er, hilh above the Sea, your own pvt Near S.C. Pi na Bier Mmmt• Dnert,
Bltn china closet. Prof ..,.., the city. Call for long list bcb, park rent only $160. 5S7•97lO RftCM't 2400
deco, 3 car gar. Yr old. in Newport Cres t . of outstanding features .. CALL T 0 DAY I OCEANVIEW Duplex, •••••••••••••·-~····~·
Owne 768-5183 Spacious 3 Bdrm., 2'h Transferred, asldn.only tPK1096) steps from beach Upper At Snow Summit . lJ1g
r, · batb. Kitchen with __ ,_·~-----c_..---1 $154.500. CALl1'."0RNIAPACIFIC 3 bedroom. lower 2 Bear, fum. townhouse
Starter Home· Why Con· separate dining area. up· SPACIOUS LIVIHG BERTHA 1tENRY Mobile Home Realty bedroom. 8 Car garage, facing ski slopes. Great
do? Corner lot 3Rr 2ba gradedcarpets&drapes, REALTORS 2706Harbor.Ste208 h1.1ge fenced yard. Ask-rental record. Partnets
$76,000 Covingt on RE 2 car garage with 4stBed1·g1roooums,2Wbeastht lcnlpifrer·. 215DelM•r 492-4121 540.5937 ing $180,000. Make an or-splitting, must sell. 768·8106 aotQmatlc opener. Ex.-_., ~ 500 tr d f l 1 cellent location & condi· Formal entry open to Mobis. Home Ll•lftCJ re r ! W or l o; W l d e ._,, . or a e or oca
VIEW LOT
3 Bdrm Townhome. Up·
graded. r esales at
S83,000. Sacrifice for
$75,000. with 30 dny
escrow. 551-1234
tion. Tennis courts. pool. large living room with $11 950 OWN A.t th Fintst Brokers, 873-4545 property. 642·9666
jacuzzi. etc. Pfeoty or ~~c: J~1la~~/~1~Ye ':f: ..._._ t.••.~ ... __ .......... We hav~ numerous & *2 TriDleHt* W'EEIEMD CABIH
guest parking. $113,500. landscaped'Yard, fenced. l"llV Cndlt "..-u beautiful mobile homes Near Lake \>ark. Min. to w /view on 2'h acres.
By owner. Leaving for fruit trees, vegetable Big 3 Br, 2 Ba home with for sale in established bch. 1-4 BR. 3 ba; 1-3 BJ\, TonlM' & groove beam
Europe. Call G42-l88S. garden, 2 car . garage. 0 C E A N V 1 E W · parks in CM, Nwi>t Bch, 2~ ~; 1·3 Bit, 2 ba. 5 celling, uUllUes avail•·
Hart.or VI M $140,000. Owner I Agent. Coqipletely remodeled, Hunt I n gt o n B c h • gara1es. frplca. $185,000 ble. Clean air environ· ew ottoco 67~7400 ~waer w/carry contract, Laguna, El Toro, Ftn each.1709-1713 Alabama, ment. Call Geo. Frey l.alJlnaHICJMI 1052 with natural stone ________ _. $11,9SOtotaldwnlnclud-Vly, Anaheim & Hunt. Bch. ~36·1718 542-3M6!orinfo.
••••••••••••••••••••••• fireplace 7 encl. front SEAVJEW BESr VIE:W lng cJoatng ~ See to Westminster. Jn price Owner. BEN HJNKLE R.E. Inc Olarmlngnew3Bedrm + yard for complete New, uparaded ;tBr + apprec., & move 1D to-rao ies t o flt moat•---------1---------1
.den, 2 bath, fam-rm, privacy. Ownr /Agt FR at builders price day. Total prke onl)' people's pocketbooks. 7 Uoit1, 6 • 2Br le 1 ~,..__
A/C, French dra, pvt1_759--08__:.:_~19-------S250,000.6'MS97 $11i,500ormat.eoUer. S10,000to$t0,000. Weare Bachelor, pool. ateps Gro•M 2700
1ttint courtyard, $123.ooo. o~ ---------· THE HOME STORE as near u your pborle. bch, $4.50,ooo. 20ilj(, doWll. • .............. ·-····· Owner.&11-7098 $15,000 D "" 1M1 Monaco 3Br, 2Ba. CAIJFORNIAPACJFIC OwnerMS-0721 FARK,9'Acrest84Acra
A New Feeling
SEA VIEW xlnt cood. else to schl & gl?J 2455 Mobile Roaie Realty ma good crass. 3 Br. '
llrand nu 3br comer lot pool$1.36,500.640-l440 Irr 2706Harbor.Ste208 7UMITSC.M. modern hse. $60,000. ~il'oo.11'1'
home. Owner will carry S4G-S937 Beautiful brand new 4·1 Write Lee Kaiser, R.R.2
•• ............ ,., ....... = ... ...
n.,., .... . .,.., ... ~ ...
t~.$:"1-w
bal of ri~ooo at $1650 BAYSHORES AXER-UP·SAVl "'-fors..a-1200 br,ton,rtp.~2br,l"'ba Box 230M .. Mo~ntai n · ....,.... "'f -"-·'""T' -townhouse, all bltns. G 65711 per mo. No qualifying Located on the Bl.u s, ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• ...... dr Hurry b roves. 1SS0Un, nee, vac, move ri"ht In. lantasUc: ocean view 2 c,.....,, pe. • uy Call (417)948-2333 "' f 1 b "'6 l ... VESTORS now · JJt user deprec. --------Guarded gates. 759·0«8 $170,000 Br. p c, wet ar ...... tale " Tom Lee, Rltr, M2·l803, lea! Estate
F sale. Needs work, you Five . a.er es South or Er'"--2800
•ALIOA CONDO Cute2 Br cottaae. orm. cansave$$'$. Corona on paved road. 4 rux· •r•cH -_..,. din rm. Central location. y•~ R~ Good for lot split. BKR. --••••••••-·••••••••••••• Elegant, large lbr condo Owner ...... ! ... •• ma .. e o!· -.__., $115 000 Will tr d 2 n 2 B P I bo t """' """'• • 71'"'""'"' 4"" 7722 (714) 676·5717 • a e ur, a . on bay front. 00 • a lerl 645-7221 ....,....., ...,.. OR S22·20llO Xtra eDarp Covington home on Lido+ cash for slip avail. Full sec. bldg. S. ..._ 4-plex. Prim. H.B. loca 3 brm home on Lido.
'99,500. Owner/Agt. Ontu CGplttlwo 1078 tloo. Jmmac:l Need fut 873-1202
675-7520 ~ •••••••••••••••-•••••• ltlVl!llSJDt sale. *185-,ooo. 752.1100
IT'S TRUE MIWOH $$$ 95 Acres preseotlf ln . 752·1'105
Slll,500 '~.""". ,~ clt.rul,•uitableforbom• CWNrUf•llSM4JOllMCt• . I I U VIEW er lotsubcllvlllon. a Miles ~ -' THE REAL 'BR. 2~ BA condo in the Wntdlff 1.-.,
Bhu• Bluffs. Close to +Plex. lOO ft. homocHn; Newport Back Bay & $248,000W/landl .
Fubloll Island. OU!\ M.arabaU !ptr 875-4600 BESl'BUY.C&lltodayl •
YALUY 640-9900 Trade your old ltuff for iiii-.1 new 1oodiu with a
aa.lfled ad. &u.5871
OVER 60 YEAAS OF SERVICE
PIOMT IOW.
IAY VIEW
from th1I 5 BB home SoQlb of the Rl\'enlde located on pri•ate lot 1D Fwy. ID the Arllnatoa
pr ea ti 1 l o u • AU o area; 8 miles from Tylcr,.--=====---........ ---i
C&pistrano. Wakh the Jlall.SJ.2,000Peracre. ---------•
[~_TATER~_,
boat• sail into Dan• '7>-4400
Harlxr.$1.95,000. HARBOR
AMCHOIAM
IMftSTMIMTS
t714't 496-7711
Jiffy Sat
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. g DM.Y PfL()T Mond!f· FebN!y•. ,979 H1U1"U•fw I. d If .............. lld ~ ...... u..... ................ Apwlmah..... OffkalMhl 4400
,r 1111 ............. ................. HwetUlifn .... IAlll.,..,_. . IJH .... d•IHC:lt 3740 c.r..iillfM• 3'ZZ Mtle""'r."' 1124 .... 3'ff J
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t • C19'f.lh1• J JJ4IWL-as1Mc11324 Int.a J44 Ede 5 ~borne. Wood.I. S1UDIO SDotJtu,WtJlltoktt. L4CASA&AMCA ~t~':'°b~wb~k ALTBMATIVI
'-· •• ,,. ... -• .. •••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• .... ·-••••••••••••••• A/C. Beach tmolJ c.'lub. --w,:••.. 4*aaaFmnn1lOOlqrt •.-.:;.r,.· 1 ~ ............ _ -""" 2 c=-ar all kit ~ · ~ llMTAl.c. lrnmedoccup.$100.C.sa Yrly,Sl»AcaclaMS-7CMI -__._ ... ..-w -· .. · Mo. to mo. rent Incl: Sastalde, new ~rpll II ~ Padllca lUty '17o.o882 Jl'llU.kitc fl TV All UW. I'd. c~. chw, caovtn. • nuna, 4 R • c • pJ·~ •er v • ,
•••••• dnla .. remodeled 2 br AJ LASJ 38R.1Ba ..••••. ~/575 IJnena"VtillU.. Luxur7. lbrw/m1nloctaa pooL b)dij lacs. AdUlta jacu.ul. thr/d.ryr. Yr penoMllJed pbooo cov.
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, "'*'"·Rlri•,paUoll 3BR.2'ii~a .•.•...•. sszs br,2b&ddacbedtnbae. llILETOOCEAN &iettYvtnw,onlY•teps over as,')i0 f'.Ot• or he. A••ll llamed. uaa•. eoat'1m. mall
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1,(' ~yd. No pet.. $125 A ...... s.r.lu •BR.2\-iba .... tQS/8$0 dlnnn•drplc, A/C,dub lONIW...Mohl to·Cb!na Co\lt. l'ZS/mo. cblldren. Ca 1 SUe i f7S.J.255°'.-r"2180 141fY,, ~round prk1 ~. r•
1
tao.-.aDO · 'YOIC•ffff •BR, 3Ba ....... '82Sn•5 "lak.eprlvp.871.Jll89 '127Yorktown Blvd «nS-Z53Sor7Sl-4U7 556·7107 or Henry ; limon~. ~ MCI IAY At..._ Wfftl INdl 326' BeacbBls.,,vf !~Ylorl ktown 2 Bdrm, 1 ba, clean w/o. sa•m IACHROR APT. "1J~ITE.'40•s11~E s d .11-~ eean view, lnclds frplc. '""' c: pa Ou.I a br, ZIA ba WEGUAIAMTH Ol"EE!Houaes,condos, W/D,bltn.s,crpt.s&~. N-u .... ,n .. aBr2 ALL ... ~~PDI 2SO ft d J m w town home. Fr p l c, •Wi_.__t-•'A .... ,~ """""'· SMALLBIACH HOTEL "'· b •-..... "'".,_ .... -100' from t bt ocean. aq. · e uxeo ce, • _...._ bJ~W/D hoo ,-~..,.. .,....... du p 1 ex ea. Ren la l ROOMS..., \Nn pore "' aar. naa og Ba, all elff. Blt.ns. J>kq, •--• t • b d .. II 19th St C M $160 mo ·••••• ...,....."' • k· •Iftbousecomputersyll. PaVlllon,87s-49UBkr. --SOWeek $475. (posa.leaatocouple children OK. Walk to """uumui'l.fbO. nva Tom s.0.2ioo' • • u up, Flbe• • dbl aar, •Dally telephone service Apt$UO/mo. 53&-3056 W/~. furn).67s.at l1t.bSt.642-2lM; t73-0m2 DOY "'1 l ~. Blvd., _ __;• __ .;__ ___ _
n -fpcd yd, comm. C l· •Vacanclesveri.fieddaily WESTCUFf ............ 374' ry -rir mo. N01--------Jaculll, tenDia "c:I bee. •Fulla .. fofcounselou 4 BR, 2 BA, Cplo, lenced •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• 28rdelwcea\'8dlo,uUl pd. FEE. Ca l : S-.e at OC~Area
-• "25.mo.Aat.631·1268or •Fnetol1ed654cover yard, frul~ treea, 2 oar GUNA BEACH MTR. PRIME LOCATION Bltns, crpt.s, pool. $275. 5.se.'1707a.nytlme on MacArthur Blvd. 1 • ' • -.U31wlmd ·~ren.tal counseling gar., apaczlOUI, $600/mo. INN. SSS/w~ & up. Maid , 1971 Maple~ 6'5·7625, Pi-e1U1e ottlce space.
'• '• l'Mtaide4 br,1~ba,fncd e()pea7daya8:oo.a:oo ttS23CAMPV5~fR'/lWE lst&lasi.67~. 'aorv, color TV, heated 2 BEDROOM, fplc, '350 eves~ LUXURY BAYFRONT '200aq .. ft.AttracUvelm·
. ~~era St. s;w. RENTIMES Woodbridge, New -4 br. 5'1CIAL ~· (71') 49'·5296. 98S ~~~:C,,:!i~23ll daya, Nlcel·Br, pool. adult.a, no ~!>:a~!>:-i>o~~·::!td!:ci ri:.::::· prl.Dc: only.
---------• For Prot . , Se i 3ba. fam rm., A/C, or 3 Br 2'h Ba condo newly ·Coast Hwy. • • ~aft!:'.!'!!7
Daya, avail. ~ mo. 11a.eaa&; I~~~~~~~~~ atr, wall to wall Crpt.s, euaona1 rv ce park & pool $550/rno. decor'cL Opt avati. Near Out of thi.a world I Ocean· ..,., ~ I-
••••• drpa.amlfncd)'fd,sar. Call898n771 640-10'4 Hoac Hosp. $495 mo. front on Crescent Bay, 1B~':'!,~yr:n1lyi:f." 361E211I'HST.Huae2br, TOPIXICSUmS avail. ta.so50 .., 640-2981 yrlyreotal. 496-2718 -uW pd. open beam11 $29$ Wxur)' adult.2 l>r · Stepe to Penooal senices for all *'' ORSTOPBY Terrace Twnboi 3 \JR. 2 67s.&828-SPM mo M6"'387 ' . bch., ocean view. $425. types of businesses·
1
EMTSIDE. a Br, 1 ba, 1401 Wn._.Jter Ba, frplc, wet.-bar Pvt HEWSIAYllW ...... Mlglet 3752 CoMMeM 3124 · up. SSU River Ave Phone coverage:
", · 1 ·~:.~~d;'p1.o.Kr:~?·P!:!: (2 bloclu E. of Beach} patio. 675·401<& days, 3 Br 2 Ba, pool, tennis, ... •••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 Br, cpt.s, drps, stove, 6'2·2566 aecre!arial service!!, re·
O.K.Call
!LY,c•on ..... for,_A_Ca_lll_._eo_,,.....:.....·--S-m_F_ee_1._6'1_~ __ e_v_es_. ____ 1.=..Ja_c..:..,$MS,;._.:..yr~ly:...;.;..;61.:..~_:;.::..;;.:;.--1Soenlc views, luxury 1 ... ..,. ...... cu.11. ... _5 ltlds ot. no pets. $22S. .. Br 1 Ba tri 1 ceptioolst.. mucb more. _.......,.,"",. .-., ·-adult apts, furn & unr. -~ l"'WAAr"• MS-22'7' • P e:r, new Excellent location near
Lelli• ~anieTree:(' SR, ~ew. Newport SIMwff Near ReliooaJ Sboppme Lar1e 2&3 bedroom thruout. quJet loc. Gar. So. Cst Pina & Frwys.
•••. JBr,l.Ba.aarqe, fenced ENJOY ~ ..... lb 3Bl'2Ba,newlydecor'd, Center . Ho~ted pool. garden apts. Dshwhr, VIEW QF OCEAK " AdUa,$295.548-S306 Call~l6ltoday.
yd. view. pet. k..lda OK, THEIEACH Liff AcentG4H 133 $650.640-2981 Jacuzzi.Nr. eomerAllcia bltm, encl. car, gas b1;t F· 2 bri 2 ba. frplc. CLOSE TO BEACH
s:&Wmo.14.5-1014 New2story3Br.ram·New ZQr. ZBa, 2 caf~CanyonTownhome 3 f'.ltwY&PMeOdeValen· ~~pcl.T786coUP .::.':ec~ •• ~a~; single, $175. lSlO w'. T=AMD~H:.:!l~SO-
_.._ ____ ..;__ ___ • rm. 3 Ba, frplc., laundry teH(e, pool Jacpni • --.i C°'1 oient 1 • cia. ~s Balboa,8'75-7101 lC ra • 4 Br, 2 ba. trptc, pool, book-up, dbl. garage. temm,Ml5mo' 559-50SO' ,.....,.. ve oc. ALICIAPLAZA Adult 3 bedroom super , In the dynamic N.B. kWl/peW ok. '550 Call '525/mo.Cbild/petsOK. · BJowner.MW187 fsVILLAGE l ocation N~ p eta2BR.1Ba ll'l fncdyard Owner aUllltSacriflce All'portbua.8"a.Space
;-· llMDQorfN.3079 Agent, 846·1311 or4br..t~a,frplc,2caraar.NewBroadmoot&eaview :iBl.-6151 . 581-61311 $HO/month . sea w. rec1ec.c:ie.n.$300.0pen L&e 2 b~, hl&bly u p· avall:l53Sto'22tlaq.ft.
• 960-616L Ba4o1. cJoae to parks & Hme anglsty 3Br3Ba Sorry,nopeta. WUacn,lnquireapt.E Sat -Sun 10·8 1779 sraded.50 tobe.atbeacb. Call Pr op. Mgr Jud1 • "· :----....... 322 scbls. $4.50. Call aft 6PM 2 f 1 '· dbl • ll el ' • w t i t • 1 8 $39S. wlater. 111·2058 Clark. 83S-8813 or stop by ' . ~ 2br,2ba.gar,11.amitobch ss&-7478 • p ea, 1ar,a ec ttawport.._. 376' EASl'SIDE B u m ~e er . Patt.Y: w ev•••knds commerce Park, '100 i -••••••••••••••• .. •• $395 ldlcll. pool, &ennb, apa, ....... •••••••••••••••• , MW 3 r, 2 8'6-SM&, 831 1096 675-67-49 81rc:bSt
• Paaoramlc ha r bor & • brm 2 ba lv rm dib rm view of Or-ne Co. All ~a. 2 car rar, pool/· 1 BR utll pd. cpta/drps •
I t'J'..!!.• w ater vlewl 3 3br,famrm.1rgmast.er tam i:ni. uoo mo'. thl.aldapvtirdcommof ADULTCOHDO ~·~~I~-~l, adulU,nopets.$215.3830ceanv1ew,1UJ'IY,2bf,l AIRPOBTOFFICES ~. den, 2~ ba, lrpl, bdrm pool $475 &l4-1480, 8JO.S050 #22 NB. $850 mo. 2 BR 2 ba 1 .,..,.. ..~~ ..... ~· r;:;: ...;0 w Bay .. ~. IMIM6 ba duplex. '450. m o . 1 & 2 room suites, all ·•· bft.tns. 33802·8 Dana Vis· ' ' 963-31Uor968-61623 ' 'yr y. ~~ .,.......,.. v,.,...., ' ._.....,~ M&-811Qor842·3889 services. No lease req'd. STEPS TO IEACH .J...-.P Fr s ta."8$nio.213/3'12·8659 4br. pool,~ mi to ocean, • IAYCRIST l BR Zb unf $475 *8Br, 2ba. am yd, ctn. 2 Br, 2 Ba.~ mo. 968 Ar I MsFw9'1•d om $1'5. mo. 2082 .E. Teanla $S2S Laguna ltach · 3248 Bach. hru~).ur'ly$235 Kida ok, no pets. Firtit, Mission Drlve. eee ...... ~.-ct 3900 Bristol. Suii. 200, N.B.
• 11.J ... utileoado, 3 Bl r 2 ~a. 714-846-5666, Bob Graf •••••••••••••••••• ••••• 3 BR, 2 ba., form. dining 3Bo 2 ba, yearly •i.75 lat + dep. $310. See mil' Manaler, Apt 1. ••••••••••••••••••••••• (114)557·7010 • .-, rm, poo ear , rm., Crplc; lge. cov'd. ·~ .-113 ?6&Shallm 6'5-4159 1--...;;;..~-=-----•98-1'53' . SUPER 4 Bdrm, 2 ba DOWHTOWH patio, entry court . .Beaut. IAYRtOMT CONDO • ar East.aide 3 brm duplex, THE EXCITING Neat ofttce in Laguna
: Lrc•BR.SBa b& w/Crplc, DW, crpt, led LAGUNA decor.2Car gar w/door Sec.blda.2BR,yrly$800 CO,STA...)IESA-2UO cul·de·aac, Jrg ~rd , PALMMISAAPTS. area,mOQlb to monthor
-• • Full & • ~w _.~· yrd. $425. 963-4567 Agent, Deluxe 2 bdrm • 2 bath QPeOer. A horticulturist's Tburln Street. Brand $395. Agt. 646-4884 MINUTES TO NPT sub-lse. •
99
-11
70
-. ... • ._ 1 CU1,,;~p•~t·ng · no fee. duplex rental. 9utstand· dttW/Damref. lnricl. gr~ws1e. new deluxe % bedroom E,.,,'de 1Br: lba w/patio BCH. OOSTAM~A -··'111151~ ... ~ · ingocean&villageview, , I 4r .. ~r. n unit. Lovely spacious ,.,. • • Bacb.1"2BR. On fl
i.O • ~. 2 brm 2 ba, very besltgorl
0
Y eCondto, dNew yet only a fe~short blks. one,. oft Newport,· ~cpb's townbome t1pe with ~ no1 peta. $ZIS/uio. from$220."up.. ~'!!' 0:,11'!~428i!~i~l~
·.. • mce.PboneUP&raded e .n cps, rps. to town & .,..acb. Huge tneS areas. _.,., er family rooms. $350/mo Ad~:NoPeu util · · • 1
'93-T78S · New paint .. 3 Br, llhba. bv. rm. & dining alcove. mo. on Jae. Mr. Bester CallCarolatl91·101'. • -•....t...& 3126 Wl•oaa Dr ,. .. ..i!i 8U',lTOmusE.lC. 7thamp5 e
.,,, ' pool, tenrus, rec ball. Lge. kitchen w/bilt·inll 833-9781 - -• parsiog. . 1 t • .... _ $3'75.PhSS7-8623 incl. wash /dryer'. •-•-••••••--••••••• ~BlkaEastofNowport M8-Gll80 • ,.. ,...,., *UDOISLE• w.-n....a VOk-Duplex_. spect a cular Blvd.) •---------
........ ••••••••••••••• pts drll6 f t dbl Separate 2 car garage. RUUUMlllU ~u oceaovwtr.N91'1640eq. ~ tqft,SC)tcs an amonth •... \Ve have all sues homes & car~patlo, lncd rpyd~$400· . An out.standing offcrin& 3 BR. 2 ba, newly decor., BACHROR APT M5'Paulartno ft. 2 hr + eonv. Cleo,%~·-~-..;......;...;.. ___ , to moath tw DO loneer CcGdos I $350 c II at ssoo ·Mo. Ret. re· access to tennis, bch & • Beautiful, new, adult ba. $450. mo. 1SM)708. . It..-thanS tbs todaJ. C.:~acilica Jt.,_67_Wl_l_0.;...;642--0383 _____ ~ quired.CalJ: club.$750yrly.673-8443 ALLUTILSPD! apts. Great locaUoo. 2 . •••••••• .. •••H•H••••• ~tci?o
ty. T10-Glll2 3 Bdrm. 2 ba, DW, MISSION REALTY 100' from the ocean. pools 2Jacuu:b Spaaous dplz. 2br, 2ba, Boomw/ldtcbenetto
crp s. fed yrd. $395. PhoM494·0731 Semi furnished. Avail Mcnrelnlmmedlat.ely e.ocl'd l at, dect, mdry $S()week&up. o.Costa Mesa,5rm803 SUperbeauWul3bdrm,2 963-456'7Agent-Nofee ON WATER. 2 Bdrm now!201E.BalboaBlvd. fac.S375mo.529-806S 541-9755 sq. ft. $321 mo. All
ba, w/fam·rm, frplc. . $600/mo. On the ocean al Condo w/view. Side tie Yrly $2:iO per mo. NO Bab lor....,.._..,AS _,..,. Ooor,trontprkg.
2200 r b b
· ava.11.-u./mo. FEE. Call·. Sue al c e __,...,.. 2 BR 2 °" 1 -1 from .. _ .. __ .. __ Co _..,...... DW, A/C, super area. sq l. 4 rm. 3 a, tn· Blue Lagoon Villa. 2Br, ~ 1 Bdrm$265-$27S be ch .~D ... H bo ruuut1»a ..... Inn ID sta A/C. prof. bldg, etc.
$450. 863-458? Agent. No plex, 1 yr old, 2 car gar, 2ba, pvt bch. pools, ten· DOVER SHORES. area. s.s&-7707anytime 2Bdrm$295-$32S a • ana ar r , Mesa, 2Z11 Harbor. Cen· 540-~ ......_ fee. fenced yrd. frpl, $450. nis. (213)703-0230 or !Arge 5 Bdrm, den, din· ~~~~~~~~~I $29S.G3-0075 tntlylocated. 23Srooiru.1
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Snrnaf• V...._
3234
Eves 536-3964, or 960-4648
8
(7ftl
3
4 )327 ·6771; 499-3084 !~el rm le pool. $1200/mo Oceanftontturn: 2 ""r, lba Rental Office Hwtt.,,.• •--a. 3140 MANY wllb kitchen, llewt.. 4450 .--_.., "' 0 0pe o u 9'°' ...,. --pbooe & TV Swlmmlna ...................... .
•••••••••••••••••••••••4Br2Ba,nrGoldenWest CORONA DEL MAR. overg~.$325/moincl'g TSLJan!e:ment •••••••••••••••••••••••pool, jacurtl, and rec. 4DaUXEOFC'S
$425/mo. Lrg. cln, 4 Br, 2 & Slater. Lse ~t ~. 1st T~p of World, 3 BR, 2 ba, Cbarming2Br, Cam rm, 2 utll. Wmrer. 646-2510 7~1or642•1603 lltAMD NEW room. Dally & weekly Cont. rtn,. aeat 25, all
ba, across from Mile Sq & last. call 536·3145 or ruce ooean view! Im med. ba house. Walk to beach Bach Apt, Attract. Sm ______ :...;_ __ • 3 Br apt/condos, conve· rates startlnS from $48 a paneled, sm. whse ln re·
Parlc.Call7S1·2060. 847-0293Avl 3/1. occupancy. $495 Mo. $525/mo. yard. 620'h Clubhouse. ua~•YTllPL.EXES nleot loc,S unit.s avl ~ week. ar.lor 2yr.lease.Lake 494.3433 days; 49il·0346 "....,,.,.. up 964-1507 6'0-1751 A..rll..olll.M ·Lovely2br,l~b,condo,3brmllhba,condo,pool. eves LJDONORD.Bestloca· Seeweekeodsor calllate COSTA MESA • ' vrr== For est area. Kent
frplc, dbl iar. •325. tennis. park, newly de· tion. Exec 2 Bdrm, din· weekeves213/9:U·3675. BRANDNEW New dehate twDhs apts ll lBr ...,,,,. _ .. _..:..b lb •-Har.kins. .... • """"' "'""2990 "'--n1 w--.a Co I N i -· --f"'1 bl.... WD ' ... ' ...-. a "' 7• ~.581·9393 ,_,.5120 co.r. _,., . .....,.. "'"""a ronl, uuus ve. ng rm. ew n/out, OCIAHFROMT 2 Br From $305. .....,., -,..c ..... kit, non .. moker~ mo.1-----------
1 .. .....,. •--la
3240 4 BR 1 S 3 BR, 3 ba., comp. re-$700/mo. 3Br,2BaFrom $39S. ~E~~l!.,.~~18h&ar +ut.ll.83lM178afUPll ic. 400 sq. ft. e-2, "-+'*--• J>OO • pa, frplc, done; lease. Turner As· ON LIDO. Special 2 Avl now t.il 6/1/78. Dhc·4 -_,_ ........ •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• Kids. pet OK. Nr shops, soc Bdrm+den. Glamorous Br 2 Ba, 2 car gar, sun· · ' Sleeping room w/batb. AJC, at 130 E. 17th St,
3 Br, J b,, nr bch scbls & lcboola, $450 mo. 548·5669 Cali Donnie 499-4591 bide-away $850/D'lo. deck, W ID, D/W, Familr LIVE Near The Beach! Over SO. Sl20 mo, $50 SlSO/mo. Doyle5'8-ll
68
eboplJ.Fullyfn~yd.$350COZY 3 bdrm,~ ba,&.ogunaHills 3.250 Watetfr011tHwa :to W°g':~:~~~~~it: · c .. cWSol cleanlnc dep. 5'1·5337, SHOPtlHTALS
· mo.961-8918. w/cr;A.. fed yrd, kids & ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call 6~1·1300 174-1973or535-6017 (110 ~au~WA~pl~p4ts ~~ Artistic atmosphere
3 Br Country kitchen pets ok. $385. 963•4567 New condo view 2 br • • a.--· C~Y VILLAGE cncldin1frplc $395/mo' A&ent.Nofee. beaut c;pts &. drps' 3 Br, 2 ba, spacious dlx. 218619Brook.b6• ,.,unS.,,t,HB Several Availablefrom • .,.,, • ._. • · • . · Cute A·Frame 3 Br, Fam -• $8Sto$'3()per mo.
__ ;__....;.;.;,._ ______ 1VacanU BR. newly paint-l1bbse. tennis, pool $395 Rm . beach. lenms, Pool,
llACHHOUSl>3 I ed.,Xlntloc.$450.Askfor mo 1714) 552·1518 or $480.545.4157 lse. $495/mo. 209 ~ ~ Keith,968-13170t'962-447l 87~ . (213)8m-~ or 9".-6914
mo. 2 brm condo, l lh ba. frpl, Laglwla Hi~ 3252 l~r~~~~~= ;~:;:~~i!h or <n4)673-3057
.. ; •LOOK• pet.lo, pool, $340. 532-4015, ••••••••••••••••••••••• & bath. $695 mo. Other $425. Furn. 2 br, 2 ba. Ul2 Short or Jong term reD· eves. 768-8266or497-3976 eao4 Br, 2 ba. 1600sqfl. rentals av all. by pri•. AW, Balboa Blvd. Newly ---------
tal. lmmac 3 Bdrm + r~111c. screened patio, party. 644-5403. 847~ redec Avail Feb 15th
Fam. rm. +Din. rm. Nu JUally neat 2 Br, 2 ba ruce yar\i. $395. 1st + de· Own • IA s· · ·
l~urr Whtl.: (~(.ilt~r
• •I(,, Nr·'"'i""' Blvd NB
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• ··~ lmrned. $42.5 mo. C.ll yd. $385. 963-4.567 Agt-No Eves (1) 744-0555. . all.r 3 Br 2'h Ba, encl day, 5"-i5'9eve .
• • . Jllb,8'7-6010 .fee eat.io,pool.$490.631·1475 s.a..... 3776 ----~---• • New 2br, 2ba. Dbl at· . ••••••••••••'•••••••••• Clean 2 brm rear of Delwc.e/Prof. Decor 4 br 2 tacbed gar, pool, jacuzzi. EAST.BLUFF-VIEW
,. ....
duplex, 1 ba1 2 car gar, ba F /R, F/P, D/W, Cov Adlt comm. $425 mo. 4 Br, Fam Rm. (l)lc, dbl 2:;i• i""t' n1ear besc~.
nq crpt, aaults. $285. patio & Waten ,all Dbl Avail on lse. 659·5767 garaae. 549-0345 $285 ·rn 00.':1;95• 55·7 · ~Oi;;6:;;;1A;;:;=·;;;St;;;. ;:634;;;;·2590;;;;;:;.!.;;;;'ar;;;;:. Le;;:;;as;;e;;4';:;50;;. 644;;:-8;:;:;13;;2;.!iOwu;;:;;' A:;;gt=;;:;;;;;;;=::::::;I ,,_ -0
• • • ; S..Cle•ftte 3276 _.....,..., __ , _____ _ ........................
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TMIS V ALIMTIMl'S DAY send your love a greeting an
the world can share with a Daily Pilot Heart of Love. It's
Magniflceitt ocean v).ew,
executive h ome: Lr& ..........
fam rm, trlr access, pre· «u:t::I{~ etlge location $550 ~1772 • • •••••••••••••••••••••••
• •• ,.. 3102
S...Alto 3210 ...................... .
••••••••••••••••••••••• 13742 Newland St. (Garden
2 8edrm. 2 beth. $300. mo. Grove) Beautiful 2 bdrm
Ask for Keith , Bkr. a p t s i n x l n t 168-1311or~71 neigbborbood. Private ~nlifR1a.._ '!t29a patio view from loVely
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FROM$250MO
Quiet bldt w /beautiful lndscpe, cov'cl garages,
adulta, oo pets. Ideal for
older people LEEWAR APTS. 2020 Fullerto
Ave, 1 blk E~of Newpo
easy. oompqse your personalized
greeting Jnd we'll set y0ur message In
type to fit the border of your choice or
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• in the tX>rder you select.
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use a black pen & ~-· ··._. • draw yOur design to • ·.
frt one of the-dotted
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And, It you Ilk,,
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Charge or
BankA""'°icard. ...... -.....
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... , ... I c.,.t S..-.lct Coe• wdw ht 1 r 1 · Gr -*J U•t "wee -_:_ ........ 1'••""'9 Pallos i.. -• "t •... , ......................................................................................................................................................................................................... .
Mother to watcb your Carpet• & upholstery Oen. contractor, new, ad· Ralpb Caballero & Son'• SKIPLOADER. Dump Heavy work It cleanup. All PROFESSION AL Cwltom Redwood Pallo ~·For •~All Ly~. mild ln C.ll. Fenced yrcl ateam cleaned. 3 nns ditloos, re mod., r es.l Free est. Clean up's, tree truck. HAULING, trte st.a. wan. avaU. SUS br. Paintlnc. lnter/Exter. Coven" Deck1, aldlnl &. Uc/bond'd. )C.ur. ~'tff
bot lunebel. $14.95 (400 sq ft). Cb airs comm. Free • eat. Cal trim. 646-4654 aJUPM WOC'k, cradinc, demo e~ Ha.rd wrkr. M2'5"9 Reas, work cuar 642·038e panelln1. MS-2333 ettlmate. JH·0421 or
C.llKaren.MS-6741 llO. 11,c·,1:;} '~:f.J~· Spi.ro5'7-0204 Exper aardener, full S3l·US7 t111•, · PalnUna. Elltr/lnt.r. Ex· ......,./a.,.... ._sn_-0_33 __ ,.,..._ ___ _ C.,.."'• ~~ · 'Ca •11•1 · malat, lodscpnf. "H•llAg ., ... , .................. pr"d honest. n1at~ reu. ....................... ·M
•••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••.-•••••• cleanup. CaJl for $10 off•• .. ••••••••••••••••••• Brickwork. Small Joba. Uc'~ll64-100Dave · VERYNl!:AT PATCH tu.
Lou'a Home Repairt 3(1 C...../C:O.Creh PSYCHIC M8HUM lit mo. service. 831·74M OCC Student. ~ T. truck. Newport, Costa Mta• & YOUNG MAN 5 ., /OBS& TEXTURE •••••••••••••••••••••••
ynexp. Doors rcaneiina ••••••••••••• .•••••• , ••• Rea.dl,oas 527.3406 n....I J T ·-ds Trash tree trim. Randy Irvlne.6'75-3175eves. i all .i .,.ra .,:xpr Free est. 893·1439 ~..11ramic Tile-Spec ln · d 't 'Ou:ato Co te & Block .-.va apanese ..._ cap-642-~ ua ...,,.,., n w cover ne~ & ree · wm owa, pa oa, etc. m nc::re DI ~ in& & aardeni.na Malnt. ... .....,............,.. Br I c It, blocks , esta 6'5-8576Andy PAroHPLASTERING enlries&noora,ZSynex·
55l.·205f :..~~~·. t~~io & co;:!~e~ ... ~.=............. ind. mowing, ~·mmlng, CHEAPEST baullnt In alumpstone, planters, p~ v C. &1-A JI t y pt s , Fr e e per. 962•l8S3
Build it, install it, repair 6'2-8894 Drapery Fabric Sale apr:aytng, weeclin&. Free tmm. Fr eats. CHEAP! walls, Qpertly in.staUed, ...., • CMr ..... estlmata. CallMO..ms CERAM.IC Ule. New one·
it. Rouch & flniah 47,000 yda in atock muat esumates. 5'S-707Z 6'Wlll5or~l390 _ very reu. Alai> repaln. Averqe ExtrtStry $39S Pl.MTERlNG model. Free est. Sml jbs
carpentry.SSJ-4820 ~.Masonry.slabs, be aoldl 70')1, uvlngs ln· JapaneM&ardener, lSyn Ila Ullde•lslr ~;..~ !~~~d. Bob. 2Pri~l$S4.S,Int.r$4.Srm Home•-additJona, H· welcome.~·autaltS foundations, hJgbwalls, ventA)l')' reduction auar M i t & lll' v•.rv.1..,.; .....,........, ttAt ncl matfl/labor ..,. Maste r Craftsman. patios, Licensed Eves lst ualJt Ken Butcher exp. an enance ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• • . Guar/lnar-Freeett. atucco, free eats, low J ~~aJty: Remodeling, ~l Dra~ [510 E. Edlncer aomeclean-up. 6'6-487t Want a R,EALLY CLEAN ~................ Uc320881, Te<l636-708S rates.-....Z ,......... -•
•repair.499-3105 Pacific Concrete. Low ~ Santa Ana 5'1·0203 a.EAN·UPS~~G HOOSE. Call Glnibabl "Two Meo Wiii Move CUSTOMPAINTJNG. "• .... ~ ..................... .
c..pet Stnolce day " full day rates. 5U·2'80 ~-PJ ~9907 Girl. Fr!f eat 64~5123 You" We handle Ir& & Exterior Spteclallst. lS ....................... PIAMO
••••••••••••••••••••••• 661·2423 or&4S-3257 CU!torn drapes apreada Freees . BALBOAISLANI> sml mov••·ofClce & yrs local ftfs. Ue/bo!!{ HOMESAVERS. Plumb-tMmUCT10M
Carpellrtanwilllayyours ' . shutters & ail wlndo~ G_r .. SerYlces & vicinity. Empty'a boutehold. Du ance Ir aed/l.osrd. 1uar work. ins&HNUna. Free al, Xlat Creden\lab ·Jn
or mine. Repa_lrs 'Ce .m e n t ~W o r. k . coverint• at dbcouat ••••••••••••••••••••••• welcome. Reliable, reu. Joca.I, aJao pack inc. Free, ~ts. Won't be un-llO hr. Honest" reliable )'CUI' homll. Call Terry clean.i.na tool Guar work Driveways, patios. pricea,·Sbady Deal, 743 HANDYMAN: Carpentry, 673-()869 Lowest legal rate. derbidM2.a>OS service. BofA, M/C OK. 535-'7005 ,
at bl11er savinas. Free walkways, Reas. Free Baker St, C.M. 54.9·3325 electrical, plumbing & ,.. R ..... 1, .... .1'!.. Uc/lnsrd. Cal T 111·9'4. Paintlnf. Homes ' tntr • 75i·3UOor8'7-0383 • c~ est,645-3646 FBts.5.56-07S7 Doors 847 Z781 ~7..c.5M _ _.. ".. Ph84'M271 E . .__..__._, 1--'n 1n-'¥f ---. ...:..;..:.:..:..::..::.:...:.;;.._ ____ ,. _________ ,Btdricd · · • Painttni&repaln xter or. Specialty: .--_....~ • wr-te••••••••••••M••••••••
Shampoo & steam clean. Quallity Cement work,....................... NEWPORT 645-7918 • Wiil do lit• movinc Allff·Lorates.63f-2598 ....................... SPARKLING CLEAN
Color brightenel'f; wht done the right way. 18 ELECTRICAL SERVICE HOl4ESI1TING w/van, Reaa. Ricki---. ParaJoo Pool Service. Wtndowa 41 b®seclean• cptiqoininbleach.Clean Yrs exper. Call JeH CALLS$15 br &SMALL Wbeo travel calls don't Xlnt housecleaning done 83!-55el.atl8:30wkdys. 1c~est :r-in~I~ Complete IJWlmminc lnc.960-SIM(,538·1111
hv,dinrm,halll15.Avc S8H452 JOBSS42.&233' leave your bome un· bylad,Yw/exp.Dependa· tL~•-J ~24c.:..._ms ... J pool malnteQaoce. rm $7.50, couch $10, chr ~ call N rt ble,owotrans.M7"'837 .._...,_....... c" · me. uni. 875"9798 $S Guar ellm l odor CG11hodor _... ~. . ewpo ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •---.--------• ... --_....,..,. __ cPt repair 15 .rrs expr. ....................... .......... c Slf\inc, pet care, Tiit S.1•t.1 Gftoft Nune comultant 30 yrs Prof paint I 11 paper '-dll & • .,.... USI TMI
Do work myself Refs R.J.Hu!fman & Son Gen Llc32'1136 ' ~ant Bondable, residential " office exp Priv d t If mu han1lng, work guar. ....................... DAILYi PJLOT
531.0101. • Contr.CustomAlt&Add, EU:CTRICIAN·Pri~ '"""e-~~ Nwp!e~ceh cleanlna apeclallsta. oriented ~fr':. aC•l~ ~~eat. 536•4383• carpentry, ~ablnet. elec. "F~ST
patios, cabio~t~. right-free esllmate~O'b. Ren 11vai 24 Hr Bonded, lnaured. Free 213/867~6foriDlorma· & plumbloa repairs. "'
We Care Carpet Clea.nen. formica. ~ew CQnst. Res large or small Joba. r-~'106e • eats. 640-9525 lion &iappt. PainUog Interior Alwnlna.ted celllof: in· . RI SULT" ~i::P~~~~;~~~= ~'.tf~:'t!"~~~. or IJc:ensed 673--0359 HANDYMAN Homes & Lalldlc•IRg ./' ,.,../P.,.rWJ FGoRrEGPreed Est. Call ~~~:.63f"Js1 all. SHVIC4
guar. Truck mount unit. .___ C . . ti ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• -ay or eve. DIRECTORY lL ~ apt1. onsc1en ous .. ..... G ~ Fr est, re as rates. MARKS ER CONT. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Craftsman. c.u145.0302 ~ .. DSCAPIN • PETERS PAINTING 1---------•.-a-For Result 645--37111 Newconat. Res/comm'l. R'loor & window cover-Reasonable pr\ces. Expr'd. R·eas Ra tea. _.,....
Rm add, remodel, patio ings cork wall tiles. People who need people 968-8783or 54'7·58411 Free Est. Call Gene 1be futat draw ln the ••••••••••••••••••••••• Se~ce Call
,Havesomethlngyauwanl Uccoolr.CAll979-4'11 tark'ett, et c. 27 yrs sbouldaiwa)'tcheckthe 552"°'58 West ..• a Dally Pilot ROOFS lnstallod fllclory 6415678
to sell? ClasslCled ads do SELL idle Items wlth a lic./sales/contr. Cameo Service Directory in the F\nd what you want 1n Clasalfied Ad. Phone direc.'t; est.ab 35 Yl'I· Call w:iu
it well. 642·5678. Daily Pilot Classified Ad. Interiors. $31-8440 DAILY PILOT Daily Pilot Clusllieds. Qaaitled Ads 6'2·5678 fO.l5678. Harold Gunn 549-7.Ml . . -
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••••••••••••••••••••••• •MICHELLE'S* BARMAID·C.M. Area, ---•·EPER. exper-CLEd~-7-11 .Market, FACTORY WORK-Ute Exc~tlent distributor OutcallMassage Accountina top pay, nights &wlmda. to do cbecb, lnvoic• & pert.time, graveyd, 1920 Delivery, Afternoons, machine. operator.
busineu. Great poten-10AM·2AM 731-4462 Sr.AcdftCJCl.n AVON 754-M97bfr5PM handle front d~slt for W.BalboaN.B.673-6910 Nwpt Area. o;:~r 18. 1 femalede(iartmeii.t will tia.I. No agents. Call for 'lbelrvin Co ls t. local Manufactun.qg Co. n.ys, The Rea ... ter. Ap-into part " fU.11. tune.
appt. 644-8234 or 493·2010 RELAXING MASSAGE 1Y ~lrin~ S~ ~~!:t· ~ OP bands, tired of BARMAIDS.Port 17, 130 Send resume to: Ad. No. Clertt: M.ature penoo for Jll'OL $300/mo. M0-3006 CM •642.JJtt · ev~. BobJames-Lic'Masseur in&Clerk.Req.'slyraex· s~g atubome? Mee~ E.17tb St. CM Ask for Zf, Dally PUot. PO Box full time employment Delivery Driver & · · ' ' MoMyto&.o.. S02S Oulcall9·9,494·Slll per in A/P & A /R f:!Pef m :emoney ma.oager,646-3666. 1590, Coata Mesa Ca. nites. Apply 7-11 Food Production Worker $3lo FU.5CLllt(
••••••••••••••••••••••• w/s~me exposure to A~JN ur~·pres~~~~iv1e~ Beautician with strong Q2826 ~p: =A:~· start.Call6'2·22S6.. Begin.net spoffot brl&hl I t 2M & lrd TD • MASSAGE computerized systems & For more information following, 'ltlnt. proposl· ' BOOI'H RENTAL. kd e • • person. PleMftnt work· ~OANSAVAILABL~ FIGURE MODELS 10 key by tou .c h . call 540-7041 or Zenith tion.HB.863-3438 Beautyshop,O>staMeaa w ys. Deotal Asa't, ortho, cbr, log ~oncts. Oppor for
Credilnoproblem. ESCORTS .PreferencewlD beg1ven M.3S9 CallaftS6'2"83US ,,.. __ ....... uw.--... NBR
0
.4'1\dys.°"=xp.& training &c adv. 37~ hr
to appUcant w /construe-· ~uty Operators Wanted · -~.. . .A. req.,6t2·==" work wk. $450 per mo to
lroker, 752.5903 OUTCALLOHLY lion 11cctng background. ·sooths avail. Days IOYS·GllLS ,5Uoo1 • start. Call 549-4700, ext
Money Available, many 611-3811 Xlntworking conds&co. Babysitter needed my 642·1084 Eves 640·7807 12-16yearaofaae. Even· Learn an exciting. DendodontalUAasbt 1Ex_i;r. e~t W . benefils. home, 1-6PM, Mon·Fti, 3 Ask for Joan I k Obt l glamorous highly paid c c a "'1 e llSS •---------sources, 3lt projects. DANCE OF FUN PleaseCall 644·3389 child Call846-03'l3 s~f.:;fprUons fo:tbe ~~! profess. Da YI eve needed full time for very Finance Co. Bfckgi;ound $SOK min. 752·6052 Blfi nude girls dance & gam UJ Noon ' BEAUTY OPERATORS· n clJlSSeS. Placement As· busy Nwprt Bch ,Prac· 'nred oC low pay .& pro· ~w tect SOJO rap session. lOAM to THEIRVIHECO Babysitter Cor schJ age Corbusyshopptnccen~r. lyPilotworkin1witha sist. 714/751·~94. or tice. Excell. oppty for mises! Collection =:":! ••• :i:'. ••••••••••• 3AM Mon-Sat, 12PM to $50 N . rt Ctr 0; boy l :J0..7PM. 3 dys wk, rent space, need own =ri~ '::'';1:0!.:ee~a~ 213/428,..853. So. Calif. right person. Non-smkn service wants a good
Private Party needs lat or 8PM Sun. 625 N. Euclid, Ne= Beach Garfield & Beach area, following 536·1738 aft more. Call (213) 597·9396 Cocktail Waitresses, only.~ man w /loan .com.
2nd TO Private loan. Anah. 559-6150 EqualOppor Employer 963-9203 5PMor53M2«days. noon to 5pm. (213) Inc., Irvine & Long Bcb Dental Asst, X·ray, ln· r:r:~'i:::c~oiilctl~~
sooosq.f.t. beachfrorrt FREESESSJONW/AD BABYSITTER for 1~ yr IEAUTY 498-2f7ll 5pm-9pm. Call locations. sur~ce,tobetrainedfor work. No .. blu.e sky ...
Estate on sand. Sold for UNDA & VICKI old. 3 ni&bts wk, from 4 Assistant, Will train. Collect. ·-~· .• w/telepbone exp ofh~e mana1ement. Just 1reat Hl2'rY &
$850,000. Please send • Acotng Bkkpog pm. My borne. 751-6869 Manicurist w /followlna •CANVASS ER• wanted. Xlnt salary & Medical benefits. comm. for ,our results.
, Teplles to P.O. Box 533, Outcall ~assoge TIMPORARY Babysitter. Teacher prel'd. Faciallgt Assist. $Sllr+Bonus 5:30-8:30 comm. If you can handle 645--2652 Call Mr. Kane for appt.
Pasadena,CA91101 Fortltefmofit! RlcbardOuelletteSalon, p.m. Call S·8 p.m. largebalaftces,Call,Mr. -....... ~SIST. atMS-2640 • ---------1.,__.. llOr Co Re,Uler Today to work wants home·chUd care 200N ,.,._Dr NB .,.___ , ... ..,., __ ~S. Tmt ~·mi• ange • oovariousaccounUnc& for9mo.&4yroldinmy !Wport~ • · ' 1»2861 n.AUG&t6'5-2640iorappt. Newport Ctr. Rover~ataorLadles
DMdi 5035 835-7313 bookkeeping assign· Irvine home. $110 week. ~ Wuh Cashier Nwpt !Concrete Work era· bet.wn front deak 4' Oterld!Kete4-••••••••••••••••••••••• *SA .... DY'S* ments. Work close. lo 552-5622 IEUMlqullM 71 & Laguna ~a. 'Pletse Finisbers le Form Set-chnd. X-ray -eert. Must OYw~flecl
1 1"111 your home. Figure Doesthethou(btappeal call6'4-4460 ten. besh~.Xlotoppor.for Penonsaadedtowork · LOWEST -OUtcaUMassage Clerks to Sr. Accoun· Banking to you? If so, <onslder Call5'8·7001 ri~IU'l.64().0300. in N.B. nee. Xlnt in·
hthtnstlahl 973--0329 t.ants needed thruout joining the prestigious ~bier JmmecL employ. Dental Assistant, X-ray come potent. for am·
•sHERILEE• OrangeCo officesofUnlqueHomes ment for car wash COOK bi ' ltftarler Call htT.D.'s. Clho Certified Masseuse ~rt Half's We have immediate for a fantastic 1978. Ac· cashiers. cau 844-«60 or Dinner Howse exper. Ap· license ,.quired. Lapna tiou9 se •
2ftd T.D. a.o.t. Bouse Calls. By appt. Account~mps openings in <>Yr San Juan celerated commission 833-1105 ply ln person, S.am s Hilla area. 830-1395 EWC, 6*6765. -
Fairest Terms since 1949 83tMi838 SOOS. Main, Ste 501 Capistrano omce for sd>edule, in-bouae swing ICuhier wanted for Pier 1 ~°C!JI· 3801 E. Cout DOG GROOMEll ~ OFACE
Sattlet'Mtg.Co. No.Tower,UnionBank theseposltions: IC?ana, creaUve sales Importe, Mon-Frl wy, Erper'd. 125~ J.Jflrbert 642-2171 545·0611 FQ~VV I .._DY In The City of Ora nee aids ceml)UW terminal ,.__ L. Broadw.v eo.ta Mesa. Rall Je1tcillers ~ 1 a.A 714/1135-4103 Ta.LEA & active lralolng le ad 9:30-SPM. Eltper. req • ..,...,k·ahort order. ~art -InSo. CoutPlaza
Retired couple has money o.ec. M•.,.... Duties include working ministration. Be unlqu~ mo Hubor Blvd. C.14. time, Fri lunch., Sat/Sun DOMESTIC ..-t. a resp. person to ~-• ...ith d 540-7337 breakfa&t, exper. pref. u ·~ to lend. lst & 2nd T.D.'s 7Jl.JHI ~ctMtlt1Dlnctor ..... new accounts an in '78witbUniquelipm• Call for appt. Salary IJve-ln, Ht.ecook'creq-u. ~It in tbe ofc. Variety
Agent.837·3744 Certified, f/Ume. Mesa general teller work. RWEatat.e.ContactJhn k:eratnic caster needed open.673-351Sbwtn9-5• Cal1Heleo548-SSS3 . ofduUes. Exper. helpful,
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. Pbyelcal Massage by v·--'e Coov. Hosp, 661 Must.h•veatleastlye.ar Woodat.675-4IOOO for hlfb volume shop, DRAPERYWORKER but.willtrai.D.Callpet.sy, Pri ply wants $40,000 2nd Therapist. My studio, """ experience d ift E t .u"l.379 TD, well secured by near N.B. Leait massage. By Center St. CM 548-SSSS. ay s • xper • no Exp. women t.o ~leat, _.. •
ln rt 3 .... Pl lyln .... _ .. _ neceaury. Apply ln COllESPOMDEMCE k tac .. or em ..:.--____.------new come prope y, Appl. only 9·7, Steve AmbitiousCoupleWaoted eaaeapp person: DWU~., _ _.., ... EE P.erson Q~ons SICRITARY ~!~u'• ... . G--W Factory to5yrs,lOo/o.S42·0758 "'•"2817 to lib I '"""" Ceramic• 34 W _..M>'O'll ~-....... ma.aage a sma us · t • • Excellent oppor for ln· •---------1 ......._. ~ Ith/ PREGNANT? Caring, ness p/time. Will not. in· HOMIFIDHAL :'~~~. t~a~~~':odi~: MacArthur Bl, SA. div. wishing to become DRIVERS.MOVING for Sporting Goo~ com· ';:::="'/ confidential counseling & terfere w/your ftresent SAVIMGS •LOAM to collate educational <lllld Sitts needed. Reap. Vldec Operator in word household aoods. Ex· pany, 7 :30·4Pm, Mon· Lo.t Ir F!..d referral. Abortion, adop-~ob. Must be wl Ung to 32039Camloocapistrano materiala. Stal:tin' waae penaa to atay w/3 boys ~euing center. Typ. per'd only. Cl au 1 Fri.
tion&keep'-.. earn.Mr.H.all,642·1634. SanJuanCaplatrano $500 .... mo+ good co a"e• 8 •. 11 from 111&5Swpmsbandlemlsc. drlvsslic.768-o643 sto-6142 ••••••••••••••••••••••• APCARE ...... ,,,.., .,..,.. CA._.,S _. • • •ft" U l •--'" ..,., • ...,....A P A R T lll E N T ""'" benefits. Apply in 3:::'tm Moo-Fri. Also, corresp. ....us ca .. 1c GllLS ... ...r..8' ••~••• SIOu ~ .. ~AGERR .,__.. person, Nallon•l lite stpnl&a=aEader legal document lyplng. Orui "COsmetlc Cle~' "-••••••••••••••••••••••• Artlat Jooklng for ao en· """""i" t . e, ..... t;UC csotu· An Equal Opportunltt Svc•-ms r-, ·-i B'_:h r-~' .-.. _.,, Good com)nllnication F\ill or p/Ume. Exper d. Sandwich deliYery, 5
SCRAM •as Ulusiastic fem to go to pie 010ma~~ t ll~I a& Emplo,et M/F St,"wN....,B. (N:--vr•.r oc-='~) ~m. -.. -an 1ldU.1 inGli>dlng gram· M o U 1 t O A P l a I a 4-Y9 wk, 4 brs day. Own '1. ErWJ&Dd w/hl.m. m-1"2 Mesa UUl.I u n .,..,....,... -mar spelllng editing & Pharmacy, La1una transp. Earn ovr $3.SO
ANSWERS pita. ~c~~~rC:r:"'':i~e:~~!: BWdnc EOE.546-7380. CIVIL Enslneertn• de. punduation. Wlutrain. HUis, Mr. J>reyfus, hr. call sam·lpm,
Would penon witb new 38 Pleuecall&CM471. Tl'l l(RS Boatllanul'acturer slper/dra.t\sman. Ex· Call&f4.3389 7l4/78W7M. _54().«139 ___ • -----
Bicker-Newly-license plat.es please call Apt Mana•er, couple lu.L per. ID stree\ fr srading nfeam ·wDOOCl Dry c:J•nlna presser, ex· ~
• Opera-Camper a(ain6'2-3.17t Caeml·reiu:ca)fot' 65 unit 1fUDtime.1 part.time, ERICSON YACl{T$ plant..Ca11'H 0563 llVIMICO. per: Pftf'd, but we can GUARDS
I'm notAt~~ about . adult complex in Costa coptact Mr. Cady Has tbe followtna fttll· CIVIL N~ewc~~~ t.ra.ln.O.M.,m-4357
my IU"L 1 told her 1 •as $I 00 UW ARD Mesa. Salary $670. iroes 96.>5613. Ume openinp for ex· a•e-.MG .Equal Oppor Employer B.ICTIO"IC =· t~~~J::J:
aoinl to th• Tbouaand Gold watch (Jules) "To Nopets.631~ a.cs.r-1.-perld help. Wacea bued DISl•tB · Eqlneen Technicians Many employee J>enelits.
Islands and she told ine Carla, HaPJ>Y Landing". Ar bit t al D ft Of CtiflforWa oouper. Eaper'cl In aub dlvlalon Cosmetic clerk with 'fr Asaemhler~. Back· Must have auto• pbonc. t6 speftd A WEEK on No question• asked. c ec ur h ra •· Ao atnrmaUve action AMISH UMI worts. App11 In penoa, to drugstore n BB area 1round In digital & Apply in person tton-Fri
.eachooe. 4.M-289 ~~t~· fe~efo~'::!':i~ employer C.....,..S Kr. Puent••· Robert, ¥r/llrdlaJi;.847.2SfJ3 • analogue circuitry. 9AM-4PM ====~===t company needa person CAllMIT Sffo' Bein Wllll•m Fl'oat le Diverallled workload In BURNS INT'L L01t • '-d 5300 Pel IOMI ~Cff 5360 expdr. lo sbopplna center Bantiq ASSIMILBS · Aa10c., 1401 Quall St, Counter help, lull tlme. design & testing or In· SECURITY
•, •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• •• .. ••••••••••"••••••• eite plannio,. Full IEMPLOYMIMT HAIDWAU N.B. Xuater'sCleanen.184S E. etrumentatlon. Ad ·~-177SE.Cet1terSt • Lc:Mrt~ 1/28. Smt aold rsui· Royllty Ll!housine benefits. Please send re-l.MbSt.5'&"'243 venced KJneUce 11\.c.. Anabe\Jn ~ getooiioldc!faln.H,Uaria Service. Daily, Hrly, aume & salary require· OPPOITUMmES IMSTAUllS Cle n' 11-lr 1231 Victoria, C.M. GU ... ""~ •
1 Way <neat Hoaa> NB. Weekly rates. Also, ta PO Bo 2'80 ATLOCAL' . ~IMIMat 01"/Ume. 499-2835 COUMTllHILP 6'6-716SE.O.E. ~"'
lltucluenUmemal value. speclal.8 to La• Vegas or = E.O.E. • it ' S>.VIM6S •LOAM · • STOCI lM Q.IC$ ~ ... ~.!>~ea, t~!ysveral& Bldroelc Aan•l1r Full & p/tll:. areas.
Reward.5'8·3358 ~l~i:::··~~~~ bpeotn~onlat F11a4M.STOUCHUP a.lCal ~~~YCO:-Tac"; Bell Tralnee.EOE.HumBcb. ~o:.~=·~~m~~ ...
Loiter.Found a pet? Call 'our new cu.atom built ASSEMBLERS Cb1 Teller DlrAILllS¥ -UCUATIOMOPC locatlou. can tor an In· CaU-.cJNQ Applf UnlveraaJjProtec·
, .. AAJsnal A11l•t8nce Lincoln to1n cu N A taRtp ' J\IU benefits. medical, ASSISTANT tenwat>pt. tiooSerylc:e;µalW.5\h
" ·LeuueGIT·~nofee •. nmouame.71'/sau331. SOtrJJneeAMemblert "p~~en • dental, opttc'1. PJeue l'Jtlme potllt1on worldns TACOl8.LS42-S716 ISCIOWOfflCB ~..!.~~11rtu':}.nFrtervwl.i •r ffeedecllmnn1d.lltely 11 Satunt Sunda11 -nb'.baPtnOO•t bt,_...UOaotutlars• --------............... ,...~
In ~ ... ~!.k# • wbl ~at l'rJllOID«blnlatew. Mup· Lont•Slort1'e'nl\ 6~~· 1'Yl>lnl lllCSecurl&J<>!OeeCHTS apt compln. Clerical COUMTaPBSOM :::r:'~~·:~' HAIR~,_ 11 -~,.em.. Wm. 1m1 pet abowa for blrtbday Anlpments 50 wpm red..-Jt•p SOM YA U1U1 6 bowled1e u P/thoe. Ful Food belp .._...... .._...._. ....
J .. 1••1·'·Vlo: -Avocado/ pattl#. Rsnbl • fun. 3Shtft.aAndlabl•. pref'd. for appt, mi.DeereAve.S.A. well ., tome ml.Ille wanLect. Over 18. Applv :JP'R·:~~ OUiou ~~~~t;!:=
l'a1mew 11& &tward, Qma.818-0312, Kuatbueownttamp. )In.Jenae • · abUlly pref'cJ. EoJ01 la penon at 1>e1uey'i CoatacthnoN:lelJ>ept
en.mo .,....... 5450 c:.IT~HMSZO 58ddlebackSavinp, BoatMaafacturwa wortdGi w/varioUI .,e Salty Sam•s, f30 Lido SAMTIA.01>.Mk Halntyllat wltb strooi ~:Gltllblke,.Tf~ ................ , ....... P?ee.TopPar.VacPay 1»01l1 MASTSHOP =Bm7tel=· PartDr.N.B. 635E.11tSt.TuaUA followicg. xlnt proposl·
lY lie.a v.tae. Call a: LOOKING~• weektnd VlclwTHf DF.Y -~·. $UP11Y1S0.1 • 'Hndl. t.owork "-DATAIMTaYCl.K 714/812-5200 Uon..HB963-343.1
idandlt. MN8115. mount.in retNat? TtY s.nscet Qaallty PJaol, beneftts, p-.. o.u 9'4 -Rspomible for data en· F.qual ()ppor Employ&r r. ""'
lf'OUN}>: G•rm aii Caltlorol•'• Oldest DlYWalterKhSde•Co BANK ' "'Co.) workinicoadl. tam'UINoon tr)',documeotaudlUeatr JlC7I'EL ~'I
'• Sbipbenhaale epproxt NudtstC.~p. O>upl•" J012S.B:Brilt.ol *TB.LER* BobWalab.iw THl•VIMICO. repart~E11per. Tllta..hfryHohl
1 mo. vt_c'hltlA~.U• famlUe~ 0011. Wrlte: StelO Newport Beach PART·'l1ME BrtalOD Y•cllta , flONewportOtDta'Dr Clft CJlT belp(uL Coatact Jsc.owsac"Y Js~looldqfor
.-.man,, . ~~",°c!°~' <~,:=• lmmtdlai. opaiol IQ L n4/..-ot ._.1!-~!'.!!L. ~~~ .. 0°!:• 1larlner1 Sav101• baa qualifiedJ)eOlilein .... -,.00 -..... •· ' -·-C.ltl'•Jt) ~J.anD& omce.; sa... ~ .. · --......---... -__ uunn_,.__ ....... 1Jnmecl opeoln1 tor an U>tfol~~u:
Small •t~k poodle _ • _: & ·~ m 'to.n • Mak •s· IOAT'WDl'D8RI~ SDI· ,. ~ .. r _. ,_ ~M;.,yJSt1 I iia &crow Seeretar1 ln Its PIX QR .,...._ .. lilt ... 'Ile. .. .• ~--.... L .i..;. • llldMeeDl'tf~Kut ...... exp-.d metal .._ lleil. J'/tlme. See MW Irvine olc. Mhl I Consol• uoll. Varylnat =••••PCB . ..-.......... ••••.. ASS••• be •llll.01 to work IDMtoftl'tw_/..,..ed Qldcal ' "· <>:~ llarOtd. as g, l'ltla St, IOO'I •crow .Spel". re-slllft4. Good entr7 lenl __ •:. ·i .1111'¥~ 707' WewUUrilD.Aiiiib''7a"9 ~-oeull• die••••'OlllllWIOl ·•·Niaw Oaillball .. e_ ca'd..Xlnte.i. worllnl po9Jllgp lDto bot.el hl· , •.• ~ ~.. .. .... ................... ~ Ytdll eorp. ~ for worlt. ~ 111twatcJeat. -. -.Miil 1 c.'Glldi It ~ta JDcld dilltrt ~~"":Ail-•-..... -.Cll .=1 =-~i:::.... ... ·=;= ~-· R'CLEB ~~ OIUYI!.!_..._ '-=---=:.\mo ... HTA'8trrol N a ....,.. DomO. Pa~. -.S..-..:11',~:. ·~ c~ll'• ,.~ Tw4aJ • e ~ --'~ •• .,..,~ w..ic.unl>t.-Wa NCR GOO• 2SO e.J>Ct. .. ~ ........ ,,.,.,.. · ~111.i.at•.llWl1,~M-ror :...._,,lMJl ·to•--..:....! --. ... a... • &a•a!tl,JASST ' t!Jlr11'LPl&lmeam• ~P~~ Nll'4fvcom1U.,.room ; ~·~-.:~'¢·~ !' .,.,.,*" ~: ~ ... ,..,a11. ,_.,. •• -......... ~ · -"""'11-r:mJ:::..~Zf~t." .n•tMMOOO audlt.1111~ . ~ ~;:;=r-..: Me.~ ~11:~~~ ~·J•! ~.f.ia.1~ r~s:= IOClli . -::'2 J = J:_ :_'t:.,J .,_. i ". g;'0ppor&!ap!o1!r Rotelaper.PNf'd.Mut :2/J. v , 1 .. aa .. I f:i;;;~!" --:¥12": ~< 1 ;tu.a _ _.~ '"r•,11Wllll al cifo ...,.,. ,.;.,.. C•ll ·1 .. ,llCIOWOMC• bea~.aiLtowort•tpinlC a .. wlew,. a1warUllltila=: II ·.~· 7lllAilt.APt•..-.~eiih .-.-~ 11.r:::, Uelt.iid-= ,_.,I ...:.,."' • 11Dmo+bc11H8.Mu1t ~Oa tultbeaeftta
.,,_ • r ,.. ,~ •. \ ...._ C.IL oa.a,a., ,.,..,... \ ... ..., MO,... , J!i._ gv , a.a.e I Jn aper. Ir be k er 4tco petlt' .~...... '• -., .. -?l•ll• te ..... ..,,!J' lrooiil!O;,._, , F'la~•,:: • -~ 11 · capable or mana1ln1 pac •I• '!1.. wo :,....-, ,.,.. . ---umL ; ...... -j«M/r .,. •'-!'.\'!"' f8J ffi • fw tlCftJllJF ClO. Send N1ume calaryl'9-•· ·~ r, r.e. ~ eta ftl... ...JM·· ~ W/UJJ'••-»-0 Ce • • .:..,'== ! to Wlalt Real Jraa..te; ~ln~
c arwrp---•• la~ Qlllf .. ,...... .. , ... ~ ~· ...... --~ -overload ·DA&YPILOT 1111110.atn.wA••· H\U\t• ~~ ~C:m =· -... .,,. --·~ r:.'1:w~~r. ... 1 ........ ;l~l·=r·...;:...-_ · ~~RE.=1 .. -.-.=r ....... _, .~ .Mel .,_ ~~.r"· MonllaJ.~ ... ~a.,
1• • ............. ''B. ,.... ,__ . ..._. ~ . ....,...::...:-·JI.-..: • ......,_.. 1 , ... , •
-~ -'1.. CL ~ •11111ac.a-..~ ....... I nvs=· ... ~·......., .•:.•, .... .... '" ll&Cm:Ji., 1• W.llClltAaY ...... -· -·77 ~'·!.·~·· ~ •p·~ -'=~~ :-.=:..: ,~J··s·-~1 'L_:!,,... ... ~~a.~-'"~. <-'fOm\1 ,'·=;:~-==*---°'""·~,... [ -~' .
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11
3848 CCllllpUS Dri••
54&-4741
<Across From Orange Co. Au·Port> Equal Opl)Or Employer
. .
-.
..._a~ IOtO ...... ,....,. . f04 c ,.,... Sale/ Tn.cb '560 A.altos. hnportwd ........... ,...-. I Mondey,February&.1978 DAlLVPILOT a;·
........... ••••••••••• ............ ~··•••••••• a.ill tlZG ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •
\\'urllt.ier Orau, .,p}K'r. l9J8 ~··•1•1•d••••••0•••••:••••d• ·snntem'J PU. Short box, C.,.. 97 I 5 Mere ... len '740 ~.•.i:po.."'W ...... Used ......._ UM4 ~~:
lower• pedal 0 •1 ver,.ea whtapokewhla,lraknGb-•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••w•
keyboard.a. Xlnl cond. camper aheU $600. Caab, bies. 4-cyl eng. Ofr. '76 C8pri. mint. <'Ond, all '74 '50SLC. 5 pan. 1po1U Valcsw.,_ 9170 AMC ttOS 'tJJ
$S50.-.3680 SEA RAY MC,Vl.sa,orBA646-9669 979-0l83or7S40146 pow~r.auto,alr,AM/FM coupe. lmmac. Fully~··••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••-•,
S. I t~. r---.L. 1094 30' a......i.._ Camper Shell with Boot cass .. 556-6328 equipped lncl. factory 68 VW pop.top camper "14 Sport about 8 cyl ette '60, restored in eJr,; ....,-., .. , ...... _.,. F u d F d 70 elec sunroof, atereo w/'12 rblt eng, new llr~ Stereo, roof rack air ceJJ.cood thro""houL , , ••••••••••••••••••••••• Loaded or ... ai a or or v... 95 1974 Capn V6, auto, 28.000 cassette. leather In· & a.bocks, ru~ns aood. cood. PIS. P /B .., 495. 675-9899
Glrl•a Ice skates, slie Owner's Demo Cowier64&-223t S200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• nu. AM /FM 8 trk, snrf, tenor. P.l'. 64().9323 A$k1ng $1800. See al 118 642-3379 .... • '••
5N·U5.00 ; 1''laher s•vE.•SSS Datsun Camper Sbell '72DodgeVian,widelires, new brks, great cond, 47tb St. NB. Lv mag at ttll'~
Super1lass anows k is, ~" $.1.00 Or best otrer. Tr.; cust seab, pirneled. crpt. $2800. 496-3469 1971 2SOC, xlnl cond .. lo 673-4695 Md& tt Io ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,
195cm with Salomon HARRISON'S .,c.Jecomplet~.MB-6490. AM/FM 5ter .. AT. P /,S, Datsun 9720 mi, S6.900. Pvt Pty. Dys 197 VWD b d ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1.-XR7. L.o~ded, xi;;,; 1
utety bindin&s Sl!ARAY Motomedlllln 9140 ~:S.~~i;.695,000 mi s .... '••••••••••••••••••• ~~oo. evs/wknds, xl~t con:~ ~~:o r;~~i '7Z~bre0onvt. nart cond. PP. Mu.st seU...,"'
new-$265, now $1~. Call 3101 Coast Hwy N.B. ••••••••••••••••••••••• *DRIVE A * 1 sell 640-079l • car In mint cond. Call &297~/ofr. 714-848·3278 60-0138. 631 2547 MOPED Bl '77 Chevy Van Cu.atom . '74 Poniche 914 1.8, Im-• . Ra.lpborSaJlyS407144 evs,213·553-0t24dYS
SNr.. lnt..-..t • . ue/sllver. $5600 includes license *LITTLE * mac cond & must sell. 76 AM/~1\t stereo New '62Bulck5r.cl•I Convert. 9t3J
._: • 1095 '78 13ft. Whaler type util. Foxl GT. 6 mos new .. Call64.5-63.10 . ••• Pvtpty,496·1528 ~~fl!.-.s .... J!!t~:. .. P.~eet Nelda work. *"""'. Pb: ••••••••••••••••! .... ~.
b t 2 "'HP M l Seats 2. Xlnt cond. $400. s •vE ... LOT .. VDU .UC .... , ....,._ -••••••••••••••••••••••• oa . ... anua 759-l'799 AMtos Wanhd 9590 " A • • •Wet'ies. '71 Charger Super Edi-
Nearnewwallracks, card Evlnrude $1400. Days ••••••••••••••••••••••• Slli"IMPARE MGI '744 Good•••SM..$6$0 tlon, auto. PS, PB.
racu, old cub register. S94·53S1Eves840-4474 ~;f!-:SI WEWILLIUY IJ ' ii 'llil ~;1·.~~~--~~~~·;;:;.-~·; 2516Vua&r,$57~~ ~.2~~1ark. '1300· ~~!1:iPJ109S/Ofr.'
960-6lll 2"'74MARAUDER,com · tl50 YOURDATSUM -:-. '·--·· .ii:--·-rru. Offer. Call c:•0 .2169, "''"'l'IY••'' .. --.f, a,...·FM. ~ TY Radio mand brdg, twn 165, dual •••··~··•••••••••••••• • I; ,,...., ""' ""'· --tum• '70
l.B ._,:___ 8098 Sta. Loaded, lo hrs . MUST SELL' PAJTOPOFODROOLLR~ROT 968-6887 reblte_nt.MC). ·--~·e we'°' 9 1)85$, ..-.n, --• A • •1'15-1'41111-Ci•H tt I 5 ..... ~. '72 bevy Vega .
•••••••••••••••••,.•••• Sl2.SOO/olr.PP.840-4836 1974 2so Yamaha MX FORTOPC•Rs The781AreH...e Storkforcesaale!Lale'77 •• .. •••••••••••••••••••wen. 4-apd, atr. $99e' Stereo console m anllque 1977 ~uPi k 24 with extras. Good cond1· A All models & colors. MOB, SK miles, Green/-'68 Weatpballa cm pr. each. 114>1448 evs/wkdys• ·
reproduction cabinet. Open c~1 s°:r with Lion. S4SO or best orter lmlM'dlah tan, xlnt. 1araged. $.5125. Cherry, no rust. 66M mi. 8'· '
xlntsystem as well 115 tandem trailer, OMC C811962·9898aner7p.m Deli•eryTodayl :,:;:74838-464' PM 's $1895.494-2130 1~t=&eo~sr~sWl1~
beaut. furn. piece. 3yrs with only S5 hours. VHF SUZUKI RM .,.,OMX .' ~ss ' Xl 842-6169 old. $350 or bst ofr. ... .,... 74 VW 412. ot cood,
552 1790 radio, compass, leak than s hrs running lime. Last chance for fantastic 1987 MG B·new engine. $2,90C)lbest of.r. Randy Ford
· swim platform , bail lnclud1ng 1 set of ue WE BUY sa\'ing.s Ob all remaining pain~. top, 1nter1or & Osborn. eva ~. 471 •
25" RCA Color TV, 1 yr. system. dual batteries, downs a ramp & a bike CL11:•...ac•RS '77 modelslnstock. stereo. ID"'Ctrerry co.ndi· m.4m.1 Or-..C-ty's warranty $178. For Bururu top with full cur· ata.nd.'$850. Call alt •PM _,... A OOQ. (1183HDE). Pri ply. ________ _,, s..a.e-.... :=~PHIL ~LONG FORD,
berv1ce also 642·5340 talns and mooring cove~" 751-3474 . & TIUCICS Call631-5761 after I pm. WI IUY A SB.L .. c.~i. ~~. :~.1;,a !:.1:U ~~~ ma x.wuati K'U50, soo ,_.. 97IO YOl.ISWA•INS •
2 Tower Speakers, Paid 838-4139 mi, $HOO. CONNELL 2845 HARBOR BLVD. ....................... ~~
Sl75 ea. new. Any reas. . , ~ev~. 54M4lH40.0JIJ '719115 Taraa, t,000 m~ , tnTbeAre61!1
ova100
CADILLACS
TO 4=ffOOSI FROM
.AT AU TIMES
offer. Brent 6«·9174 or '73 SkipJack 24 • trlr, eng . CHEVROLET Emerald a.en metallic WIST aaMAM 89'7-6026 elec olt, equip'd fishing '75 Indian 125 dlrt. tx· paint. 7' r· Alloy wbl1,
$'9500. 549-2976 Mon/Fri cellent condition $400. 2.1129 Harbor Blvd. stereo. leather int, 5 apd, IMPORTS
Beaut. stereo cabinet 9-5. Call840-4853arter5pm. COSTAMESA lowered. Mint cond. 1 1985HarborJHvd.,C-.IL
CMahog) w/shelvcs. 4 •-...a... R 1974 H d 546·1200 '77~ <>Wner. 9UKSR. $20,900. 714/5411186 drs In front, hrt uv ctr top _...._ tftt/ on a SSOcc, •-cyl Demo & executive sale 586-7666 ot 768·4419 lv • 111ii.l-L ~rs for components,\\•, re· Charhr 9050 '!¥/Wind screen & wind WEPAYTOPDOLLAR no ·1110 -h ' '68F tb le ood d•· .l~ , ........ a .. s.•O...O'r••••• .. ·• cords, spkrs, bar, etc.••••••••••··~··•••••••• Jammer. ~Int cond. Lo FORTOPUSEDCARS wgo\ovn urry. msg as ac, g con\. •11·-·-c-.. ,_ ~ ,.
$125/ofr.Aft S,645-7857. CHARTER Plush 60' mi.tllOC>.642·0762 FOREIGN, DOMESTIC (N~~ac~~~~:xd. '12 911T T¥ga, E·Mtr, S Uon. $1000. 7&8-tlH or Cad1•11ac •••
-Yacht. re_asonable. hour· 71 HON QA 1so. custom or CLASSICS & Jamboree Road) spd, 63,000 ml, 13,000 ml 586-Mal atU. 1966 1''ord Wagon. R/H.-.-loah & Mari ly or daily. 675·2172 or paint, pull back bar:.. 110 H your car is extra dean NEWPORT BEACH on com PI et e re b It, '71 VW convert. Xlnt 2600 11.irlun Blvu ai.r, PS. PB. runs great.
s-.i _ _. ne 675·5585 ___ rear tire, etc. Like new. set: us fl.rat. 833•1300 stereo. recaros, spoiler, body. Great eng, nu brks. Cosi.i Mn.i ;411.y I (JO $450. 968-3037 '• ...,...r··-"'' BAUM IUICK etc. &st over $10,000. $2300673·7475 -- ---•••••••••••••••••••••••loots. Sall 9060 l2,000 tni, Sl200. 673~ Z9'"'Harbo· r Blvd 49!H237 'M R11nchcro, new enginr. Ml ·n 240Z, clean, AM I FM, v...L.o 97 .. 2 f d b It • loah. Power -9040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• VZ12SD '77, only trail rid· Cost.a Mesa .. 979.2500 air cond, mags. Koni .,._..,. .1 -Cad r ont en · ra es .sr ••••••••••••••••••••••• RIJI. YA~A den. S700 or best offer. "' IUY OR LEA.SI ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• ... Eldorado Oonv. shocks. $15001bst ofr. to, shks. $1000. 831·0744. •77.911-s-1area, -fully IWOU YOU IUY Allxtras. Reg. gas. Good 536-2990
MUST SH DIALHS 833-8146 J-· .. .., 7nnn l' •USID VOLVO, CQOCI, ,100. 759·1676. U-urv 995·0 • TOAPPRECIA.n YacbtBrokera1e DOLLAR 78210%2+2. ........,.., un er ~ma, ~ ........,....._, 28 ft . Uni!ll l e UstinaaWanted! ~YamabaCbamps,60 MI NT ! Musl sell, full warranty. Copper See~· at Southern Bea~ .'74 wht & bllt•••••••••••••••••••••h
Sportafiaher with padded Southw....,. ~ea .. like new. $650 PAID . metallic blue, GA car, DO ~~~ s;(,~~r l:!'!i Or&llge Coun\'1'• Volvo ~ Ville, loaded. Lo ORANGE COUNTY'S
cockpit, custom interior. Yoe.MS.. .861-~ FOR CL.EAN emiaaton cootrola. Save $338 mo. 115·9111 or Headquarters. . mla,$4995.P.P ,586·5540 MEWEST
AC/DC natural gas for 2Sl6NewpertBlvd. Kawuakl "ft KWJO 2 into IMPORT CARS hCuodredsl 1 4®,,,P1rice2&4Cu9eJ~ 875-1331 -MAIOUIS VOLVO '75 Eldo. Lo mi, and, LINCOLN-MERCURY
cooking & refr;ige.raUon. Newport Beach 1 exhaual DID rtm.s $450. •LL MODB. a • • • " MISmON VIEJO loa4ett Gd cond SUver Deal bl ls OPEN ADF/VHF wh1teUne re· (714)67,_9211 P.P.NU218 "" S eve:stfl)mds. '81Super1600. By owner. 131-2 .. 0 495-1210 blue.Bstolr.499-i47T e•ersy .J' ... ':Ewl"" .. ~.~
corder & encloaed . Completely restored. nu ~ ~ V5' •;,,1 fl ybridge. "One of a New 24 ' American Mohrtto.s.StN' '74 Dat.sw Piclcup, AM· tires, Clauic. $SOOO. ~ICOUMTY •ctr.A/C,fUllpower, LINCOLN-MERCURY~
kind!" Call Dale at (714) Sailboat. Take over pay. a.t l5t•8CJ9 160 ~b~t1fneo~ad'i!fs, wtbo~'. M&-7613 VOL VO ( DIW Ura, as is 8S7S. 16-18 Auto.Center Dr. _:3
498-2709. menta. Has trlr. '93-2612 •••••'•••••••••••• •• ••• ,. M'f SDf'wy.Lalte Forest exrora ---------1...:.:==~::.:::.=.:.::.=...:~:..:::=--lRent a 1977 Excutive neau cover, Mint cond, '72 91•, air, nu rin&e, EXCLUSIVELYVOLVO lRVlNE
26 ft. Thunderbird 36'SEAGOERYAWL Motorhome or Mini· $3000.640-6337aft6pm valves. cltch, brk1. LarlestVolvoDuler htetwood. tood Urea, 130.7000
F'ormula Corfshore). ~J Honolulu Veteran -motorhome from Herb '7S 210 Htcbbck. Lo ml. Webercarb.49Mml. inOranieCouctyl nma load. ..,00. 206 W.1---------
Vl!s, all nav1galionol Deisel, radio, VHF, pilot Friedlander. Call any of W'E IUY AM-FM. orig ownr, 42 ~ 494·2130 B~f~~~ASE Wilson, at Fairview '75 Monarch. PS/PB. ~ear & ground tackle. $14,500 A y 646-these numbe's mpg. 1st orr over r>CONI R--.AA 9755 548-1915 AM I I'' M • air. new Sleeps four. Und~r SC 191 USED CARS! _,.,., ~ ~ radial:s Xlnt cond $3600 hours used since new. 6 1977 L11n cer 25', xtra • 777 We're the new Chcvrolct takes. J /6J9-2744 d>_s. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~llij~f~-~' ·~ '73 Cpe DeVllle, loaded. Ph495·S16o ,_.w
wheel trailer included :.harp. pvt part y 537.7777 deaJersh1p in the Irvine 675 ·4424, 675·8127 TEST DRIVE OUR 'f • • mustsell,wholesaleBlue --'
also .{ull canvas. Call 714/496·7077 821-1188 Auto Center. We need evs/wknds .. LE CAR Book673·0«4 --MltltCllHJ 9952
JohnFclterattl42·0010or 3 ' E • d 1 your"•edcar' 74260Z manyxtr11 · 20255 Manchester '72 El..._ convrt, gold ,•••••••••••••••••.•••.·~·, ... ,. o211. I ricson. pe est a RENT F1'reball 23' S."lr ..., . , :>. OF THE YE•R.. • uv '"" , I Gh """'.... ~ ' JOE Ne d monc ~aso A natur al llhr int. Nu ...,.4 r. us~ang I ia,s~-, st~nng or: compass. xlnt ronl. Auto/air. CC, CU. e -l9'1·-17~°i .,.., · Good Inventory ln stock. Anaheim 750-2011 radial tires Jo mi. spot· roor, PS. PB, air, lo 11\l, .'
'74 28' Cab Crsr . .,.~/G, sails, s tereo, VHF & stereo,slps664S·2283 MAC PHERSON Hurrywhllcthcylaat! I 0 i ' f AM/FM 8 trk, auto.' F/B, T/S, well equip'd, RDF. Cash to loan, gd NewJy r c blt Datsun Swedish Volvo Mee.hank ess. pen oro r. 968-3089afl6PM see at Htg. Har. 846-3033 pymnu. 586·9893 aft Spm 29 ft. Appollo motorhome CHEVROLET engine for •66 Datsun, MIRACLE now at Ivans Forelgn 642-9270 ! · ··; 1
1 Must see to appreciate! 21AutoCenler Drive $200. Will sell rest of car MAZDA/RENAULT Car repairs, 1~ Harbor '77cad El Dorado retired Mom's '69. 6 cyl, au\o 1977SEARAY ls anderJOMKU.Sharp. Call John Fe lter a t IRVINE forSS0.839-0078 21.SO llarborBlvd. Blvd.CM.645·1982 GMexec.,l get~cwcar trans, PIS. xlnt cond:
240 Sedan bridge. Full fil4f:!4.~1 Pvt pty. ~·00l0or540-821l. 7 68-7222 COSTA MESA every year under special $1SOO. 675-3063 '.
dual everything. Still on . MCYrOR HOMES '78 2+2 280Z, only 2300 645-5700 '75 164E, Lob ot xtras. purcbue plan. Nu earls '68 Fstbk 289, mecb.
wrnty, Volvo 255 hp I /0 . Mu.st sell 18' Venture Cat. FOR RENT orig mi's. 3 yr warranly, Very clean, Xlnt cond. here, must seU, $9450 or sound needs minor bdy
Too many xtras to hst. Ready to go. tiiOO/ bst From $150. wk. 770.0622 Alltos. hnpcwted new car. Lower than de· Rois Royce 9756 "500 or bes~ o{Jer. Muat ofter. 493.71193 , wrk. ~.Dan, 642 "~ Slip 1n N.B. Call aft ofr.493-4110evs ••••••••••••••••••••••• aler's price. 9{13-7171, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mlt.548.o48ll' .,.,.,., ..,....,.,
6::.!PM. 714 540.5618 PP . FOR RENT 20' Motor Ad 9707 96J.2333 eves. . #1 DEAUR IN U.S.A. .a...a-. .... ~ °76Coupede VUle, 'tl \18, AC. PS. PB, 60,000
For sail: 26' S.2. fully Home coropl etely ••••••••••••••••••••••• --v..-u ~. ml, $1,8SO. Orig ownr
R
r •r aailboabaled. complet.et liv1e-1 · equip'd, very ctn tm-S133 •73 AUDI I OOLS 1=w.t. 1~f~':~~·27x!:}~ lffi ROY ••••••••••••••••••••••• •962·5669• 499-36311 G SA FOR a r · mus se · a!t6pm Automatic trans with p~ • CARVER GeMrd 9901
FISHIMGI! 648-6341or67S·5193 -only 47 000 original ~ _t_ -ROLLS·ROYCE ••••••••••••••••••••••• CGINrO 9917 ·ss Mustang. xlnt condl
21Ft. CHAMl'IOM f'or sail-sailjng school ~ .. s:;:::;..~:"t;400 miles !61.0GWX). Now 1970 Sta Wagon. needs ~~~::~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Uon, $2,~5-0789 : .. •
CFS417BB. Flybndge, banltruptcy~all types & ••••••••••••••••••••••• ONLY $2150 ~~~~se~~l~~~ offer ~ PROPERTY '68 Chevy Camaro, 350 -----_.,. •
sinsle screw, 11allcy. !HUS. Priv. Party. '84 ·'77 Used Mustang .,...,., .. llMtrs ClOSlOSUNOAY$ Eng. bit to the max. ·~1 Mustang Eng. xlnt.
head. bait tanlt. Sleeps s 646-6341or675·5193 Parts. 990 No Parker, l989Hatbor, Co~ta Mes . 'TS 280Z. wht. xlnt conc.1 RmUCTION Custom body Nds so· JU.~l sen·1ced. 49,000 m1
Engine completely ~e· loah. Sllpt/ Orange. Call 997-2000 '4Z..07ts Best o((er. 673-5785 mtc XLNT BUY SALE meone to fin ish. $2500. Bod Y n eeds Pain l . built. Electronic gear in· DocU 9070 or day Sharp '66 Silver Shadow. 536-3591 Aft4pm $1100 bst of~2-7387 ·
cl. depth finder & brand white. R.R IUght band · new, unused 2-way FM ••••••••••••••••••••••• WANTED : Hard top for '74, lOOLS: 4 door . '76 Datsun 280Z. silver/ dr. Xlnt cond. $15,900. fleet replacements re· '7 1 M u:. t 11 n g · 3 5 J radio & RDF S7500 or WANTED-REWARD slip 1966 MB 230SL. Will pay Maroon, stick, :.tereo black. Low mi lca~e. Call Patrick, $52-4414 quire the Daily Pilotto Ii· O.Yf'Olft 9920 ClevC'land ~ng. pwrsteer
beilt offer . c.·u evea & in NB for 42 ' Grand topdollarforany colorin cassette. $2700. 640-2359 mags. stereo. s tic k. qwdatel2PlymouthSla· ••••••••••••••••••••••• & brks. 31 ~· nu pamt. wlutds. 645-931& Bank.a trawler840-8208 good condition. 646·7698 eves $6300/offer. 494-0476 Toyota 9765 tion Wagons from exist· flOld, wht vinyl top. Ph
before 12 noon. •••••• •• ••••••••••••• • • ing inventory. 675-1201
23• glass in/out, sips' 3, Need slips for 21' & 34' sail '73 Audi lOOLS, <l·spd, Xlnl Rat 9725 BEFORE YOU • • -.L-L.ll• • --9-9-55 trai le rabl e . $4250. boat.s.MrWhlte cond, lo mi's, 4·apd, ••••••••••••••••••••••• it ' '-'-'"'"'"" _835·3437 doy, 673-8484 eve 675-1393 SUI & VOLVO 28mpf, nu tlrea. 551·5580 '78 Fiat 124 Spyder con\'t SIU. YOUR 197 6 * l : ••••••••••••••••••••••• i.;;~:::::~~=========:=iiil Comp I. service on all eves · w I radio & cass. Only TOY OT A, VOLAR ES • • , it PRIVATE PARTY . .
Swedish cars, latest fuel IMW 9712 2,700 miles. $6850. . SEE:US! 3tochooselrom.Allwith • • '740LDSCUTLASS
CJ/eatts of CLove
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 yo\,lr
personalized greeting & we'll set
your message In. type to fit the
border of your choice or your own
handwritten thoughts may appear
In the border you select.
Borders "come in 3 sizes: $15, $1 o.
& a special child's size for $2. (You
must be under 12 to qualify for this
one). If you wish tQ ·Create your , o'wn greeting, use a black pen &
write your message In the heart
below or draw your own· Valentine
of this size. ·
For help with your ad, J"'t caO 842-6878 & a frlendly alentlne
ad-Ylser wlll b& happy 10 assftt you.
JwJ. If you Ilk•, you can charge
yo~r . Vetentlne ad or use your
Miiter CharQe or Bank Americard.
DAltY PILOT
~ .• 04tes12ters . .Call today •••••!••••••••••••••••• 640·6389 u.a.a~UIS TOYOT• factorY a1r conditioning, • • 2·DR. HT .,..., ..._ ~ 318 engine, luggage • h iJ -19'76 124 Spider , AM/FM Ml ION VIEJO racks. tr'aller towing • * Less t an 47.000 m.J es. P~c~ers Wltb WOX15 ~~~~o, !,~~d.l~"f :· ~ug ~~ '. ll I ·2HO 495-1210 pa~ck~:p!r ~f: spole~:~ * : :~;~~~~g~~YF~!~:;;
642·3379 orange w /blk int. _,,,,,.. MINT CO"""' '7' "-llca · • it 111r conditioning. Pow~ ••
4; ~ ,,,., ~ , ws. Priced from: d b k firm. 752-7179 dys, or 32,000 mJ'a. 1 Ownr. P.P. S2 I S • it steerin g an ra es •. Sale 752-7896 eves. $3400. 64().Q18. 1 vinyl roof, good tire's. ' ' ••••••••• .. •••••••••u• (Uc.n8SBPCW) ROGER MILLER•SAYS, AM/FM rndio. Sacritic,e.
G1•ral ts Io 1978 BMW's Hoftda 9727 "IS TOYOTA COROLLA "SHOP IY PHOMr M4-04S8 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• 6!1,000mJ 1976 49 .. l Ill 14'-tt671 ________ _,_.
WANTED: Hard top ror HERE MOW! Brand New 77 CALLM().()998 G~ FURY '~:t'us, BrouJh•~·
19616 MB 230SL. Will pay topdollarforanycolorin HONDA Cars '78 Celle• ST. Loaded. Station aaon. 2 to ~-7749afUpm
&ood coodltlon. 646·7698 COMPLm MA.MY cu.tom pa.l.nL $4200/ba choole trom. 4to t bbl. PWe ./"\ 9957 befO«"e 12 noon IODY SHOP «r. 754-1810 en&lne. AM~ stereo. \ . MOW OPEN To Choote "'°"'' power wlndQwa, roor ••••••••••••••••••••••• •------UNIVERSITY '7l Corolla, told, eticlt, n cka and factory air '12SqulreWaion. Yellow. mutt sell. $795. !filthy. condllloniog. Priced new tires!. !ecent mJr
EXCELLENT Okhmobh 84M217 from: overhaul. ua cond. rest
SIUCTIOH OF Honda Can •. GMC ,,.... 97'7 $2150 ocr. 759-9335alt6 •.
Convt ' seat street legal IMW RESALES T'nlCb •••••• ... •• .. ••••••••••• <Uc. #eOOPCY>
9530 ••••••••••••••••••••••• r---------1'7' Pinto Waton. Lutirage •
dune bugty. $800. Call We may have your next 285()HarborBlvd. 197$ 'l'rlumpb Spit
529-8486 i car lnourlnventory. Call Costa Mesa 540-9640 fire-io 1 ooo rollu, i..;..-__:. _____ --1 us today! • AM/FM eteNc> UP6 &i ln
4WllHIDrh•n 9550 lll·2040491-4t4t 17 Honda Accord, 6000 excellent conattlon
•••••••••••••• .. ••••••• mi's, all xtras, $5900. ~nlcally, inside & COST A MESA • •837-4149* out. "1,300. cau 548·5tss CREVIER AMC & JUP 9730 att.erepm.
# l 1 .. c..afonla
FREE
100 &allone of aas with each new car aold-wlth
tbls ad only. ·
549-1023
ZSUHARBORBLVD.
COSTA MESA
Tnlckl 9560
&I sr • alOADWAY
sa.erA AMA
835·3171
TMI U\,l*Aft DflMltO MAei.I
•USIDIMW'•* '7UOOOAuto. S98LPO
miraclf:'
rre azdcl
1' Y"jll9 ·-
J972'MonteCarlo rack, mag wheel s-. 1975 FUIY Autob>&Uc.11Wt1tcer1nt (wlde), 8·tNtck ta~
Cu 1 t.o m Suburb a n air cond, vln,yltop. )lust deck/ radio, auto., while'
Wa1001. S to choote eeU ('114)49H089 exterior, blue lnterlcir.
from.. Alt •ltb. factory .6' Corvalr Spyder con· 50Kmlles.$1'795.8C·ar'{t;•
alt, n¥!I racu, aeo 4 bbl. · wn., ••pd, 1oocs cond, "Y-utlt tt6~' enilne. Dllterent Cholce '1250 ~a33 .. ••••••••••••••• .. •••• • cl atru on each car • ....--..--·--,------• Prlcedtrom: .,.. maro, pcnrer Item•, m• Ply. SateWte Sta. SI 975 air CODd, AM•J'M atereo Wair. 9 paq., PIS. P/S, ,, , ...,CG t .... •~soo p • • Air, Gd. Urea, s.rans. ~c. 1.m. ) a.... .. • v. \)•Y Cooler, air ahocts .
5t0-7800 traller hitch, ca Radio
1 1976 1'970 Cbev7 Malibu incl. GoOd Cond.. $1,llOO.
CiltAM FURY Waeoa. PS, PB. air, a.lr 13f-O&. ·
Custom Suburban.. Pac-ellocb • trlr bitch, nm1 19119 P11moo.th s.t.imte:
tory air, HO • bbl. irood.$8SC).48Wl27 Runa·1ood.. $SSO Cir-bet
entloe. IUIC•I• rack, '71 Moote Carlo. Mint offer.t48-(987 · -
heavy duty abocb, tint· cond. 19,00Q mt. 411 "13 PlYmouth P/8. Air n:J"8• 8old metallic xtras. *'900, MD-5513 NII tlres, t'..cyl fl900: .. •
sttlO ttZI Muthell.64.5-1732 ·
(Lie; f191NCF) ••••• .. •• .. •••••••••••• ,...._ ft65
Cordova, •••••••••• .. •••••••••~•
'
'
.
'
' .. • •
f
: : . 'I
I
f ..
I
\
'
'· . .
Lighter in taste. Lower in tar. And still offers up
the same quality that has made Marlboro famous.
J\lso a\'ailable in king size.
'
•
' ~
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7
7
:VOL. 71, NO. 37, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES
SoUth .
By The A1soclated PreSJ
A P~clfic storm ha'> drenched
Southern California. ·1e11ving al
least six people dead as the re-
sult of traffic a ccidents trig-
gered by rain and mudsUdes.
Although forecasters predict-
ed a chance or showers through
the week from a series ot Pacific
storms lined up oCCshore, most of
the upcoming wetness is expect-
ed to hit Northern California.
••1t looks like a fairly rainy
. I
"' .....
week for most of the West. but
less down here than elsewhere,"
said forecaster Oscer Nichols of
the National Weather Service.
Pal Rowe:, a weather servic('
s pokes.woman, s aid tt\c chance
of rain in Southern California
will drop to 10 pe rcent by
tonig ht.
But whiJe jt hat, it hit bard.
C6pe~lally along the coast. Santa
Monica received 1.69 inches of
rain, and Catajina Island, where
the ctrought hus still been of-
ficially In effect, got 2.05 Inches.
COAST AREA RAIN
EXCEEDS INCH-A3
STORM SLAMS NORTH:
MORE ON THE WAY-AS
By today, Los Angeles had r~
ceived an Inch of rain since the
storm began Saturday mom!ng.
That brouebt the season tot.ii to
lS. 74 inches. more than 11 :i Inch-es over the normal rainfall for
an entire year and double the
7.21 inches recorded a year ajlo.
The Cilliforhia Hi&hway
Patrol reported generally
normal tra(fic flow throuch the
morning rush hour, except for
transition r'amp between the
northboWld San Diego and t he
westbound Santa Monicfl
fteewa.ys, which was blocked by
$2 Mil·lion
Baby Death Trial
Ouster Order
Piqued Nt1rse
SEEKS COUNCIL SEAT
Attorney O'Connor
ired Depqty
·ty Attorney
eeks Office
By ROBERT 81\RKER
01 Ille Dtlly l'llel SlaH
John O'Connor, who was fired
11st month as a deputy city at-
orncy after a long and bitter bat-
le with City Attorney Don Bonfa,
klisclosed today that he is a can-f~idate.for the Huntington Beach
'ily Council.
O'Connor said that his con·
troversy with Bonra. who also is
seeking re-election April 11. will
not play a major part in his
camoaum
"All 'thnl the dismissal ,has
done for me is to opeh10ptions to
seek office," O'Connor said.
O'Connor was dlschara:ed last
Jan. I8 al\ec a physical .altel'ca-
lion with Bonfa in O'Connor'' cl~ ~Y haJl oftlce Dec. 27.
Both men claimed they were
attacked by the other. Both.are
armed with results or polygrapb
tests that ttiey s~ baok up their
stories.
\
O'Connor says he still plans lo
appeal his dismissal before tm
administrative law Judge.
O'Conno also has a pr~ous
grievance med agairwt . Jt
Superior urt
By TOM BARLEY
OI Ille D.All' I'll« 51.AH
A nurse who tried to revive an
ailing nt:wborn infant. allegedly
o;trangled by Dr. W1Jli a m Biu:ter
Waddill in th e nurse ry at
We s tmins ter Community
Hospital. told a Jury today that
she rt'scnk d bt:ing ordcrl'd by
the doctor to leave thl' nursl·ry
last :\I arl'h 2
Registered nurl>e, JoAnn Grit
f1th testified in Orungc County
, Superior Court that s he wu:.
leading resuscitation tifforts on
the <:hild when Dr. Waddill, 44.
ordered her and other hos pital
staff out of the nursery.
ll is alleged that the Hunt
ington f{arbour pbyi.iclan J,1Sed
his hands to cho~e tho lifo OQt of
thei child af\er the nursery staff
had left.
The prosecution claims that .f
Waddill, afler his failure to
abort the seven-month infant.
r<'so'tted to strangulation and
:.uggested several other methods
that could be used to taloe the
'life of the child. t
Mrs. Griffith. now ·in her
fourth day on the witness stand. ,
told defense attorney Melbour
Wa tson that s he wa.s "disap-
pointed and angry" When Wad-
dill ordered her to leave the
baby.
She said she felt and t old
another nurse at the lime that
Waddill had betrayed the trust
jnvested in him as a physician .
when he did not Jillow her to con·
tinue efforts "that would have
given the baby a chance."
But she denied under intense
questioning that at one pOlnl had
her wefi!ping in the witness stand
that she ever regarded herself in
Watson's desc.-ipti~n or 'a self-
appoil)tedsavior."
"Doh 't you tend to look on
yourself toda'y as the hero of "" ::\tar<!h 2?", Watson asked the ~tness. '
"Not really,'• Mn. Gtirfith
said. "1 was just doing the best 1
could for a baby that needed
help."
~ ~ SHADED -4REA LASHED ey HEA VII SNOWSTORM IN EAST
Eaat of Brol(en Line SntlW A•rt•d Moder•t• to lfSlht
tt.0 O\.'erturned truck for two
hQurS. a sJ)okesman said.
The rno_st serious or the
weather.related trarrtc ace\.
dents chfimed the life of an
Albany couple and their two tiny chi~ren Sunday.
Jn a traftic occident related to
a mudslide that closed part of
Interstate ~ and forced ev:n:ua•
.tion of ~tnesses alon.i a mOWl· t..al~ous s~tc!l know • ~ Grapevine.
By ~ ,.'5.oc:iated Press
A wind-drt\t~n snowstorm hit
toe ~iddle Atlantic and
Norttaeast ,states today. closing ~choo.Js, .. slowing traffic to a
cr awl and disrupting life for
millions. The storm was· the
second for th~ area in 17 days.
Tile snow began· dUl:ing the
night and as much as half a foot
'Was pil~ up in some attas by
the middle of the morning. Ac-
cumulations ofi up to 20 inches
were predicted for parts of the
region, with :wtnds of 40 mph and
higber gusts cttallng hazardous drifts.
Court and legislative sessions
were cantreled; airport runways
were blocked; schools closed; so
did some publtc of'f'icu and busi·
nesses. lleads general)~ were
reported passable. bUt sllJ>Pety
during the morning. Authorities
lolriered speed limits and urged
people to avojd driving \f a~ au
possible.
Cqru1J1uter frtins ind buses bringing hundrtls of t~ ot w9rkers to Manhattan /rorp
X..9ng , Isl~~ an~· s ubutbs ih
'Westcheafer C~unty., Connec-tl~t add ·~ew J'el'$eY..·J'1'pc)rte~
"Seti<MJS de1afs. , •
11\ ~ ~ Pi~k $nowfatl was' e~~ fQ' cfotnclde 'With
-tfie' evenfns 1*h hqur aM of-
fieia'ts safd tbe)' ~lght ask busi·
ne\ses to send _P.eople hQme eapy. ~SNOW, Pase M> , ,. . '
Cantornla Highway Patrol
Sgt. Bruce Dawson said the vic-
tims Wfre in a car that ~
rear-ended near Fort Tejon wt»~
waiting to go north a'ortg the opeii
northboW1d lanes of Interstate $
near a stret ch called the
Orapevine. The highway wu
pftrtiaJly closed down Sqn44g
after a mud Ude wlltcb •lio
caused evacuation of JlOadsl~ •
busloesses on ,lbe hlgb'N9 near FortT~
F>11mes
Battled·
By AJtTllUJl 1t. VINSEJ.1 Ot .. o.lly Pl ... S&Mf
... ..
Flames fed by chemicals that
could have generated lethal
fumes did' an estima t ed $2
million in damage to a
Westminster radio-electronia
plant Sunday.
. The blaie at Silicon Generan
lnc .• 7382 Bolsa Ave •• was bat-
tled for more than one hour by a.
task force or 45 firemen and 1S
places of equipment. Seventeen
men required hospital treatment
afterward.
W e~tminster Mall. a ~bop
ping complex with more than 100
stores. is less than 400 yard.S'
from the site of the blaze.,]t Wa&
larsely deserted when the first
alarm, came in at 7:48 a.m.
Hydrochloric, ~ulfuric and
nitrtc acids used in manllf'~ctur·
inf at Silicon General created
potentially Jet.bal fumes as the • ~ant burned, firel't!en said. •
None of the 17 stricken firemen
required hospttalJ11ttlon bUt the
extreme potency ot the chetnical
fumes made dangerous absorp.
lion throu gh the skin a
possibility.
The firemen all wore oxygen 'back pack devices.
Investigators said proximity
or the devastated plant l<1
Westminster Mall also created
the J>OSflbillly that the acid·
laced smoke might be s ucked in•
to its vast air cooditioning-
system.
lnvestigators said onl1·a few
e mployees were inside the m all
a djaeent to the San Diego
Freeway when the fire erupted
and ,as ~ turned out, they were 1 (See FIRE, Pate AZ)
·-#-
Captive 47
Years Dies "
BETHUNE. France (AP)
An elderly woman, Jocked in aJ\
unheated room by her sister 47
years ago, has died four days
after bein(1 d~overed by ace~
dent by a delivery man. olficialf
disclosed. •
The 70-year·old captive.
Mudelelne Delton, died in a.
psychiatric hospital n ear this
northern French town. Sbe
wei,ghed 66 poqnds At deatht of•
!icials said. :-
Her 72-year-old sister. Marie.
Lquise, told police -She had.
locked her then 23-ye~~ld sis·
ter behind barred \Vlnaows lo.
1930 because "she b ad lost her mental facul\Jes" ino"rUy after
their mothet dled. · • •
I .,
J
-' '
Supporters ot a plan lo plant a
1;oa.e earden at the historic
Newland Bouso 1n HunUni\Oll
Beach said today that extreme
care had gone· into the plann,\Dg
of the site.
The landscapina efforts by the
Historical Society havti run into
oppoatuon from two Orange
County archeologlsts.
The archeologists cll\im that fhe garden would be plaoed on
ttle top of an Indian midden, or
dumplng ground, "and that 5,000
years of Indian history could be
destroyed."
Sblrley Kerin~. m charge of
landscaping, said that research
and old photographs showed that
~ardens h ave previous ly.
·been planted at the proposed site
by the pioneer Newland family.
"We planned to go only into the areas where gurdens had pre·
vious ly been planted," Mrs.
Kerins s aid today.
Mrs. Kerioa said that only 143
rose bushes 'Wer~ planned fqr t.he ~·9uth ~l~ ana in front. ot the
house , not the 238 as previously
reported.
She said that roses are rare
and are or the variety that grew
in California at the turn of th..,
century.
Plans to plant the roses are at
;tn impasse but the Historical
Society is trying to work out a
· eompromlse.
!Jooded 'flwgs
Rob, Wound
County Man
A Buena P ark man was
wounded today when three
armed, hooded men broke into
his home, robbed u vjsitor there
or $5-00 and th~ opened fire
when the man attempted to bolt
out a rear door.
Police said ThQlllas Floyd
Pugh, 31, of 5821 Las Amigos
Drive, Buena Park, was sttuck
twice by bullets fired from guns
carried by the hooded invaders.
However, they added, Pugh
was able to escape the trio as he
dashed out the rear door of his
h ouse into the predawn dark-ness.
He was later taken to La
Palma Intercommunit,y Hospital
. where be was later reported in
f>erious condition.
Pugh's wife, Karen Sue, 35.
was unlnj~ in th~ 4: 30 a.m.
fracas, An overnight visitor iD
th e Pugh II o m e ,· D en i's e
Burnside, 22, was robbed of $500
when the masked trio ransacked
the house, pohce said. Like Mrs.
Pugh, the woman was un·
harmed
Neeclles Cuts
' Street Lights
NEEDLES CAP) -Hoping to
stave off a deficit caused ,by ris-
ing electrical power rates, the .
Cify Council has voted to darken .
the city's 385 street llghf4l in· .
•definitely.
: · ln addition, the council voteC:
to replace its two-man Tireflaht-
Jng force with volunteets and to.
lay off one police officer.
City Mnnagcr Frank Freeman
~aid that the actions were taken
a(ter the cost of street. ll&htlng
Jncreased 13 percent and other
public j>ower prices rose 23 per-
.cent.
TheSkuhsr
Had Cuts
Irvino pollco say e
vandal who slashed t,he
tires of two cars thi1
weekend· added insult to
·injury.
T"e vehicles were patrol
earl>, parked in the police
lot.
No Time tar (!loaming
unusually serious-faced clowns take part in the 32nd an-
nual Clown's Service at the Angellcan Holy Trinity
Church in London. More than SO clowns gathered for the
celebration. of the birth of Joseph Grimaldi. remem.
be red as ''the greatest clown of them all ... who was
born nearby.
Yosemite Park Trip
Scuttl~d by Board
Fountain Valley (elementary)
School District trustees have re·
jected the plans of 8$ ei1bth
grade students at Talbert School
to take a fleld'trip to Yoeemite
National Park.
Last Thursday school board
members upheld a district
aide's denial of the four.day trip
request on the grounds that too
much time would be spent on a
school district bus.
Trustees also said the denial
sienals a change in district
policy away from long fi eld
trips. Trustees said they would
prefer that students take study
trips of no longer than one day.,
But Talbert Elementary
School teacher Allen Worrel
pleaded with school board mem-
BE~ SUGAR
PAD lTAUANS
MILAN, Italy CAP) -A
medical research ~am sal'i in-
creaa;ed consumption of bet'r,
sug~r and fats is to blame for
the three-fold Increase In over-
wei1ht people in Italy the past 2S
years.
A report by a nationwide
group or pharmacists said
that since 1950 consumption 1!>
up 700 percent for beer, 100 per-
cent for fats and 200 percent for
s ugar and that 25 percent or
It a ly's population past
adolescence ls overweight.
Doll Show Dates
For RB ~orrected
A show of historic dolls Is
scheduled Saturday from 10
a.m. to 9:30 p.m. and Sunday
from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Hwil·
ington Cent~r in }{unlington
Beach. •
Last Saturday's Daily Pilot in·
correctly indicated that the
&bow was scheduled last
weekend. The Daily Pilot
reg{ets the error.
hers, ''Thia ls the best educa·
tional experience for the kids I
have seen in two yean," he
said.
A bout 20 angry parents also
criticized the board uror chang·
ing field trip policy ln mid·
year."
Parents asked the board to
take a votF on the luue. But
none of the trustees wanted to
put the matter up for a vote and
instead allowed t he distriet
aide's decision to stand.
Assistant Superintendent Ed
Moon, who denied the trip re·
quest, said other possible one-
day trip possib11ities are availa-
ble to the eighth graders ln
.Orange Co1.1nty and the San
Dcrnardino Mountains.
"This trip is not really tor
study, but is used as a gradua-
tion present," said Trustee
Roger Belgen.
Worrel pointed out that the
students would raise funds to
pay the $.1,068 cost of the trip.
The district would only provide
a bus and teachers, he asserted.
But Trustee Betty Mignanem
said, "The district can not con·
tinue to offer fr1Us. We have to :.ay ~toptofieldtrips."
Worrel said this year's cigtith
graders have helped r aise
funds during the past two years
to aid other ~raduatin~ classes
making Yosemite trips.
No fund·raising erforts have
been undertaken this year, he
said.
School board members ex-
plained that the trip was initially
denied. Oct. 31 by district ad·
min strators.
¥ al approval of the trip for
the t two years has come
direclly e sc ool board,
said board ent Karen
Ackley.
No plans have been tnade Cot a
one·day trip for Talbert School
students. .
11 Face P~t Raps
MIAMI (AP) -Eleven people
were arrested as they attempted
to unload 20 tons of marijuana
from a boat, the Coast Guard
says.
p,,... Pflfl8 ,41
FIRE INJUQ:S 17. • •
By GARY GRANVILLE ... D4lllY .... lt.tff
Anahelcn police are q'-'UUon· ir\g a Riverside man today in
connection with the bhadgeoning
death of an elderly man in a
aecorid·band store Sunday after·
noon and the beaUna and rob·
bery of a liquor store clerk a few
hours lat.er. Police identified the murder-
ro b bery~assault suspect as
Stephen c. Hokey, 24, of
Riverside.
Hokey was arrested arter the
battered liquor store clerk
grabbed a convenient aUck or
wood and chased hls assonant
into a resldenUal neJghborhood.
In a sweep of the
neigbbothood, police reportedly
Jluabed Hokey fn>m a hiding
place, arrested him in coanec·
lion witll the liquor store rob·
bery and beaa~ lnvestlgatlng
any possible link with the
s econd-hand store murder.
That slayinJ was discovertd
shortly after 2:30 p.m. when a
customer In the store found a
still-unidentified elderly manly·
lng behind a counter.
Police believe the man died as
the result of two massive beat·
ing wounds inflicted about bis
head. They sald both wounds ap-
peared to have been inntcted
"with a heavy blunt lnstru·
ment."
About two hours after the
elderly man's body wu fo\lftd in
the used goods store at 219 s.
· Anaheim Blvd. by a customer, t.he cleric at Capp Liquor. 2161
W. Lincoln Ave., wu aceosted hr a man who demanded he be
given the money ln a cash
reg"ister. ! The man armed with a club
struck the clerk three times
before the victim grabbed a
wood stick of his own and be1an
the chase that ended a few
Rlinutes later when Hokey was
nushed from hiding.
Police said they are attempt-
ing to determine II th'ere is any
connection with the two beatings
Sunday a1td two, one of them
fatal, that occurred late last
week in nelgbboring Fullerton.
Anaheim Man
Arrested in
Gun Slaying
Thirty minutes after a man
was shot lo death on a quiet
Placentia street Sunday night.
police arrested Henry Lopez
.Salnez, 35, or Anaheim, on suspi·
cion of murder.
Police said Sainet was arrest-
ed about three miles from the
scene of the 10:10 p.m. street
murder u he drove h is truck
near Or~naethorpe and Chap·
man Avenues.
Inside the truck the arresting
officer round a .32·caliber
handgun and a 1?.ox of
amumunition, t->hcc said.
I
They believe the gun Is the
weapon used to pump two
bullets lrtto Jesus Valerio, 21, ol
Placentia, as he stood on the
sidewalk in front of the house at
209 S, Ma~n St.. Placentia.
Police said Valerro was
struck by two bullets and died at
the s.cene. Early today they.said
they did not know of any motive
f()r the shooting, nor of any t1e
between the suspect and victim.
Ftte Toll Rising
KANSAS CITY, Mo, (AP) -
the number of known dead b\
the Coates Houq hotel fire ro,e
to ~ OYer ti.e wlekelld witb tM
c:\lscovery of IPOt1*' bod1 ta the
ashen rutna. Five of the vlcthns
killed when fire raced throuth
the UO.y9'1-old hotel Jan. 28 re·
main unlm.allfied and ~o tto· • pie are IUll 11ste4 u mllllng,
pollce l&ld.
..... ,.,.....
QUITS UNDER FIR~
Columbla'a Begelman
Columbia's .
ProduCtion .
Chief Quits
NEW YORK (AP) -David
Begehnan, under fire tor alleged
mishandling of corporate lunds,
has resigned as president oft.he
motion picture and television
division of. Columbia Plc:tures
Industries, Inc., the chairman of
the board of directors «>nfirmed
today. •
In a statement, board
chairman Leo JafJe said Begelman's resignation was
"effective immedlateJ1.'" he
said. ,
The production eb~f resigned
.. with fhe view that 'fie most re-
s um e a more normal al·
mosphere for Columbia," J affe
said.
Begelmen's restgnationwas
was "efleclive immediately,'' he
sald.
Jalfe said tbe board had been
salislied that its independent in·
vesllgatlon of the allegations
was "prompt and thorough."
Begelman had bee,n reinstated
to his post in December "with
full confidence of management
and the board.'' he said.
On ABC-TV's "Good Morning
America" today, Rona Barrell
reported that an "emotionally
drained" Begelman had told her
of. the resignation Sunday night
in New York City.
Begelman. 56, removed
himself from hls post last Oc-
tober. admlttlng to financial
misdeeds alter a COlumbla in·
ves llgatlon disclosed that
between January 1975 and May
1977 he obtained $61,008 In cor·
porate funds through improper
means for his personal benefit.
But Begelman was restored to
his jo~ two months later, when
Columbia said that he had over·
come the emotional problems
that caused the financial ir-
regularities.
Miss Barrett said Begelman
would become an independent
producer associated with Colum·
bia.
Mitchell
Leaves Care
· 'WASHINGTON (AP) -
Former Attorney General
John N. Mitchell lert
Georgetown University
Ho,pltal today after a
U ·day stay for arterial
suraert. His destmatlon.. was not discl<>!fed.
Tbe '64-year-old
Mltebe)l. on medical
turJougb from. tbe rederal
prison. camp at ~axwell
A l r l' Qr c e -~-~ s e 1 n Alabaipa. UhdwweOt tb~ ..
abclomlDal optri.tlon. Jan.
24. The leave was :ex-
tended to ,eb. 27 to l)ermlt his recuperatton..
Mltihell 11 serving a .Ge. to four.year sen.tepee for
ta lt ine part ,Jn the
WaleriateCP~t·\Jp.
Neaollatlons wllt resume
within two weeks in the effort to
break a deadloc~ between the
Jnternotlonal Auoclatlon of
Machinlst.s (lAM) and McDon·
nell·D<>uglas Astronautics Com·
pany In RlGltintton Beach.
The threatebed JAM strike
Almllar to one in effect now for
three weeks involving the United
Auto. Workers <UAW) actually
affects Douittas Aircraft Com·
pany facilities at Long Beach,
Torrance, ·Palmdale and Van.
denberg AFB, near Lompoc as
well.
Spokesmen for the IAl\f Lode&
720 in Torrance said today tbey
have requested to begin talks
ag•ln sometime around a week
to 10 days Crom now.
Don Hanson, a Douglas
Aircraft spokesman tn chuge of
media relations dealing wilh the
llrm 's labor force, said today no
specific date hu been set.
The JAM membership voling
10 days ago narrowly turned
down a Douatu wa1e and fringe
benefits Increase offer by a fr•c·
lion more than 51 percertt
agalnsL
Currently, IAl\f employees,
about },450 or them at t.be H'1nt·
ingtori Beach plapt, receive
about $7.23 per hour for work
whlcl\ includes construction of
the Delta rocket engine.
Officials or the UAW ar e
clalmlna their cU?rent strike, in·
volvine about 61000 t!mployees
largely working on jetliner and
orbital s atellite projects, hd
hurt the 8)ant aerospace firm.
Hanson. tbe Douclas labor re·
latlons spokesman, decl.lnes to
confirm that.
"You have more than 6,000
who are not at work as they
usuaOy are. YQO can draw your
own conclusions,'' be said.
p.,...pflfleAJ
SNOW •••
The National Weather Service
pr~dlcted up to 20 Inches of snow
in some New York City suburbs
and said the storm would COD•
tlnuo through tonight. The one·
day recprd for the dty-7.S
Inches was set Feb. ~. 1961; the
Jan. 20 snowstorm brouabt 13.6
inches.
Two low pressure syitems T-
orie 9tr the Carolina cout. the • qthc~ .1n the Appalacblans -
werf blamtHl for th• now.
Unlike the January storm. the
current round of anow was sire-·
dieted aod aulboriUet took ad·
vanc~ precautions.
The New York City Sanitation
Department put 1,250 men on the
streets -10 times the number
normaijy on dllty eac:b. day -
but a spokesman said the new
storm' WO\lld "be a rough one to
fight" because equipment is in
bad aha~.
. Here Is a rundown or the sltqa.
tion in some areas:·
***
DISTltlCf OP COLUMBIA:
Two inchea of snow fell over·
night and another 2 Inches was
· expected during the day.
***
MAJlYLAND·DELAWARf;:
The storm was less severe than
orig inally expected. By mid·
morning, only the central por-
tion of tl\e Delmarva peninsula
and northeastern Maryland re-
mained under heavy snow wam-
ings. The Maryland forecast
called fo,.t four to eight inches
and police said 2 inches bad
fallen by early morning.
***
PENNSYLVANIA: Three
inch.es of snow had fallen in
Philadelphia by I a .m.;
Philadelphia International
Airport was closed while crews
wof'lced to clear runways.
Predictions of accumulations
ranged from 6 inches to more
than a foot and forecasters
warned of ncar·blizzard condl·
lions.
•
Ois••d;• Mm• Safety omce ud hi Atlantic Strike Force. a
team of oU 1pUl ~pert& on call
2' hoW'S a day In Elisabeth City.
N .C •• ~ cau.d for cleanup operaUonl, whkb were ex"c:ted to be complicat,cl by wind and
Wa\ttl ·kJ•lnl 11p in advance of
•'aortbeuter beadlnC toward
Mante. ·~
Olfldala of tbO Maibe Depart· .-.,.t ot Jl;nvironmeDtal Prottc•
tlon .. 1cs ~f hoped mucib ot \!Wt •Pilled oil wou1ct b$ blown .,,a to .~.. .
\
7
Irvine
VOL. 71, NO. 37, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES O~ANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1978 TEN CENTS
e Cuts ·RfbbOri for 'New' Culver
By PIDUP ROSMARIN
OI .. D.tlty Met Si."
They celebrated the opening or
a "new" road in Irvine Satur-
day--Culver Drive. first dedicut-
ed in the 1960s, washed out by
rains Jan. 4. almost reopened,
and'YashedoutagainJan.15.
City Dfficials treated the event
as though a new highway had
just been opened. The washout
t>f portions of a bridge near Bar·
ranca Road. overpass'ing a
drainage swalc, had closed the
h ighway to traffic a full
month.
The r esulting detour irked
many r esidents of Irvine.
because Culver is the major
north-south route through the
city.
So the reopening included al·
tendance by city councilmen.
lhe c ity manag e r . city
engineers, and an hqnest-to-
toodness ribbon cutting.
"I got word late Friday that
they would bave it complete
Saturday," Mayor Bill Vardoulis
said. ''AO the council members
were invited to come out."
Council members \tary Ann
Gui do and David Sills joined
Vardoulis at the site at l p.m.
Va rdouhs peeked under the
Aft WI,.....
LONE PEDESTRIAN MAKES HIS WAY THROU GH MIDTOWN MANHATTAN TODAY
New Snowstorm Lashes Northeast, Slows Traffic and Cloaes School•
I.Another Blizzard .
·Pounds East Coast
By The Associated Press
r A wind-driven snowstorm htt
th e Middle Atlantic and
ortheast state~ today. clos1nJ!
chools. slowing traffic to a
rawl and disrupting life for
illions.~ The storm was the
econd for the area in 17 days.
The snow began during the
ight and as much as half a foot
"was piled up in some areas by
(the middle or the morning. Ac-
icumulations of up to 20 inches ~ere predicted for parts of the
region, with winds of 40 mph and
'l:ligher gusts creating hazardous
!drifts.
1 Court and legislative sessions
'were canceled; airport runways
!were blocked; schools closed; so
>did some public offices and busi-
nesses. Boads generally were
'Bigfoot'
A Burglar?
1he blll'glar had big feeL
That's the best clue Irvine
police have to a solution to l~
break ln of the 5592 Southall Ter~
rate home of Sidxley Brow~.
65. •
Tbe master tiedroom Vias
ran.sacked Satutday1 and an 'Un·
Jmown amount of jewelry was
.iaken. .
•'The suspect may have large
feet,"' investi-ting officers re·
ported. They found footprints in
a flower bed out.tide the kitchen
window through "'hich thd baralar clhnbed. From the
prlnta1 J)Olice estimated the man
JnSt nave worn she 13, triple f:
aboee. .
reported pa~~able, but slippery
during the morning. Authorities
lowered speed li mits and urged
people to avoid driving if at all
possible.
Commuter trains and buses
bringing hundreds of thousand!>
of workers to Manha~tan from
Long Is land and s uburbs in
Westchester County, -Co nnec-
ticut and New J ersey reported
serious delays.
In Boston, the peak snowfall
was expected to coincide with
the evening rush hour and of·
ficaals said they might ask busi-
n esses to send people home
early.
The National Weather Service
predicted up to 20 inches of snow
in some New York City sul)urbs ·
and said the storm would c:on-
tlnue through tonight. The one-
d ay record for the city--7.5
inches was set Feb. S, 1961; the
Jan. 20 snowstorm brought 13.G
inches.-
Two low pressure systems -
one off the Carolina coast, the
other in the Appalachians -
were blamed for the snow.
Unlike the January storm. the
current round of snow was pre-
dicted and authorities took ad·
vance ,precautions.
The New York City Sanitation
Department put 1,250 men on the
streets -10 times the number
normally on duty each day -
but a spokesman said the new
stOrm would "be a rough Of\e to
light" ~use equipment is in
bad shape.
Here iS a rundown of the situa·
tion ln some areas:
**"*
TheSlaslwr I
Had Guts
Irvine police say the
vandal who it•hed the •
Hres_of two cars thh
weekend added Jns'u)t to
injury. ' •
Tbe vehicles were ,patrol
cars, parked in the f>lice
lot.
Two Valuable
Rings Stolen t
lnBurglfey
Two . women's rings, together
valued at $7,050, were stolen
Saturday in the burglary of a
Marine Corps colonel's Irvine
home, police reported.
Ddnald Mickle, •6, of 18286
Foxglove Way. said his wife's
jewelry was taken from the top
s he lf of a mas ter bedroom
closet. He said he was puzzled·
how anyone outside family
could know tbey were. re.
¥issing was a le·carat 'white.
g.Q[d. ring with an aqµamarlne
s tone and three marquis
diamonds set on either side, and,
a gray star s&ppbire· and
diamond dinner ring wlth 23 fUll.
cut diamonds set in 18-catat.
white gold.
The diamonds in the first ring
totaled 0.6 carats. Mickle said;
the second ring con~illed two
qarats in dtamoods.
bridge ro check on Ul~ new steel
pilings and rock work the Irvine
Company lnstaJled to shore up
the embankmenL
"Somebody had a ribbpn,"
Vardoulis said. "l didn't. know
there'd be a f ibbon. We didn't
even have scissors."
Somebody e lse produced a
lfoife, and while Sills held some
Christmas pack.age ribbon and
Vardoulis sawed away at it,
Mrs. Galdo gunned bu station
wagon to be first across the
bridge.
"She almost ran me over, she
was so eager," Vardoulis said.
The barriers that had closed
Culver from Main Street to Bar-
ranca Road were then removed
and the rlbbob-cutting party
~tarted dodging the cars of resi-
dents scuttling by.
•
• "Jt wasn't five minutes," said
Vardoulis, "and we had to fet
out of there, 'cause cars were
. shunting up. and down.
"They just. came roaring
through there.·•
The mayor said that as far as
he could tell from his peekaboo
inspection of the b(ldge, it isn't.
likely to wash away again. "It bet·
ter not," he said.
6 Stor.m Deaths
,
Calif Ornia Drenched Again
By The Associated Press
A Pacific storm bas ~enc~d
Southern Callrornia, leaving at
least six people dead as the re-
sult of traffic accidents trig-
gered QY rain and mudslides.
Although forecasters predict·
ed a chance of showers through
the week from a series of Pacific
storms Jined up o((shore. most of
the upcoming we~ness is expect-
ed to hit Northern Califprnla.
"It looks like a fairly rainy
week for most of the West, but
Jess down here than elsewhere,"
:said forecaster Oscar Nichols or
the National Weather Service.
Pat Rowe, a weather service
spokeswoman. said the chance
of rain in Southern California
will drop t o 10 pe r cent by
tonight.
But while it hit. it hit hard,
especially along the coast. Santa
Monica received 1.69 inches of
rain, and Catalina Island. where
COAST AREA RAIN
EXCEEDS INCH--A3
STORM SLAMS NORTH:
MORE ON THE WAY-A5
the drought1 has still been of-
ficially in effect. got 2.05 inches.
By today, Los Angeles bad re.
ceived an inch or rain :;ince the
I .
Strangler Urged:
.Give lJp to Mayor
LOS ANGELES <AP>
Mayor Tom .Bradley today invlt-
~ a ~c:J;aiJQillc to ~ t~
Hillside Strangler o s urrender
to the mayor's office.
la a J\eWS ~b'ence at which
Bradley d~lined to answ~r
q\l~sUoos, lhe mayor said he re-ceived a letter from a man
claiming to be the strangler who
"wishes to surrender himself
and a friend to the mayor's of-
fice.
prompted by a Jan. 19 news con·
rerence by Assistant Police
S:bief Daql Oaies. who s~d. b~
fl.ope'il the s tra ngler or
stranglers would realize-they ul-
ti10 ai.ely Will be caught and
would whmtarily surrender,
Bradley said the mystery let-
ter-was postmarked the same
· day as the Gates n ews con·
!erence.
Gates also called a news con·
ferertce for Tuesday to discuss
storm began Saturday morning.
That brought the season total to
15.7' inches. more than 1\-'.t inch-
es over the normal rainfall for
an entire year and double the
7 .21 inches recorded a year aKo.
T h e Californ ia Hi ghway
Patrol r e ported general)y
norm al traffic flow through the
morning rush hour. except for
transition ramp between the
northbound San Diego and the
westbound Sant a Monica
·freeways, which was blocked by
an overturned truck for two
hours, a spokesman said.
T h e most seru.ibs of the
weather-related frame ·a cci·
(See RAIN, Page AZ)-
Mitchell
Uaves Care
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Former Attorney General
John N. Mitchell left
Georgetown University
Hospital today afteJ" a
15-day s tay for arterial
surgery. His destination
was not disclosed.
"He (the letter writer) aJso in·
dicat.ed he would forward a cer-
tain item after he received as-
surance ,fOf' his safety from the
ma.yor." Bradley said. reading
from a prepared statement re-
leased earlier.
the same Jetter. ·
Further details were not im·
The 6 4·yea r -old
Mitchell. on medica l
furlough from tbe federal
prison camp at Mat well
Air Force Base in
Alabama. underwent the
abdominal operation Jan.
24. The -leave was ex·
tended to Feb. 27 to permit
bis r ecuperation.
The statement said Br~dley
wanted to reassure the letter
writer than the two persons ~'will be afforded any protection
ne~essary."
The writer was advised to
m ail the unidentified Item to the
m ayot's ofnce. addressed exact·
ly as the original env~lope was.
The letter apparently was
mediately ~\tailable. ·
Bradley spokeswoman Brenda
Banks said the mayor called the
news conference at the request oc Gates. .M eanwhile. p olice Cmdr.
William Booth said Gates was
delaying hjs news conference 24
hours because "we're ver y
hopeful that by tom~rrow we
could have some reaction, soroe
M ltcbeU is serving a one.
to four.year sentence for
taking part in the
Water gate cover-up. --~~~~~----------·
positive response." •
Bpoth declined comment on
Oil Tanker
Spills Load
Off Maine
the ~uthenticttyorthe letter. PORTLAND, Maine <AP>-A
coastal tanker 's truck a sob·
m erged ledge in Po rtland
harbor early today. s pilling.
about 23,000 of its 500,000 gallon.s
M home heating oll before the
leak was stopped.
The ship was later renoated.
but within hours some oil had
washed onto ice-encru$led rocks
and beaches at South Portland
about a mile and a hair away.
the Coast Guard reported.
The 223-foot Har<>ld Reinauer.
with a seven-member crew, was
shutUing light No. 2 oil from the
King Resources tank farm OJl
Long Island to the Texaco pier
"in Casco Bay in South Portlancl
about 1 a.m. when it ran
. aground in 15 feet of water on
Diamond Island Le<fge. said
J ohn Bablilch, a spokesman f~
the Coast Guard in Boston.
The·..tllp is owned by Boston
Fuel Transportation Inc.. said
Bablllch.
Cmdr. John Ekman of the
Coast Guard )farine SaFety Of ..
(Sff TANKER. Page A%)
Bill~Buys
PlairiB POJfflr
,
2 D>\llY Pit.OT
J7ol~teer Serv~ e.,. ..
WASmNGTON <APl The
all-volunteer militar y servl<'e
has cost an adrut1onal $18 billion
since the end of the drart in 1971,
far m ore than previous
estimates, the General Accounl.-
ing Office said today.
Rel easin g t h e stud y,
Comptroller General Elmer B.
Staats said the biggest addi·
tional cost or the volunteer force
is the much higher pay for new
military enlistees.
Staats, who heads the con-
gressional auditing service, said
it cost the tax payers S14.2 billion
in higher pay to entice enough
t
volun~ lGP the Anny. "9~. •
Air Force, Marine Corps and
Coast Guard.
Staats tesUtied before a
Senate Armed Services ·subeom·
mittee.
Subcommittee Chairman Sam
Nunn, D-Ga., a frequent cr1Ue of
the all-volunteer concept. said
he asked the GAO to do the
study after several unsuccessful
attempts to obtain a coat
estimate from the Pentacon.
Nunn sa)d previous Defense
De partment estimates .on tbe
costs have varied widely from a
high of $300 D?mroo, with tK>me
.
Light Wimls Jam
Manzanillo Fleet
By ALMON WCKAl.'EY
Ollty 1"1.-.... , .. Wrtt.r •
Light winds of( the Baja
California coast Sunday night
and this ·morning jammed the
40-boat Manzanillo Yacht Race
fleet into a 60-mile radius with
several of the class B and C
yachts moving ahead of the
class A favorites. <See earlier
story.PageAll>.
Reporting a position ot 29.0S
degrees lat itude, the 40-foot
sloop Vendetta, a class B entry.
was ln the boat-for-boat lead
.ahead of such class A speedsters
_Flood, Tide
Hits Autos
On Bal Isle
Flood damage from Sunday's
storm that dumped more than
an inch of rain in Newport
Beach was limited to a few cars
p a r k c d . ·o n t h e B a I b o a
Pen msula that got flooded. ·
Flooding occurred when the
morning downpour hit at the·
~ame time as a high tide of 6.5
feet.
J akc Mynderse. director of
~eneral services, sau1 at>Out ~
:storm drains on the Peninsula
<1 nd th~ drains on Balboa Island
that run direcUy into the bay are
-closed at high tide to keep the sea.
water out.
Unfortunately, when a high
tide occurs during a storm, the
rain water collects until the tide
:;ubsides and the drains can be
reopened.
Mynderse said "three or four·•
cars parked in the Peninsula
s treet ends had water over their
floorboards Sunday morning but
he said no area homeowners re-
ported any flooding.
According to Mynderse, the
car flooding was the only prob-
lem reported Sunday. He said
there appeared to have been no
further erosion or the roadway
on San Miguel Drive.
Portions of that road have
been blocked oft for repairs of
damaj?e that occurred during
.lanuary'sstorms.
Captive 47
Years Dies ··
BETHUNE. France CAP)
An elderly woman. locked in an
unheated room by her sister 47
year s ago, has died four days
a fter being discovered by acci·
dent by a delivery man. offlclals disclosed.
The 70·,Yea r-old captive,
Madeleine Delton. died in a
;psychiatric hospital near this
northern French town. She
weighed 66 pounds at death, of•
ficials said.
Her 72-:vear-old sister, Marle-
Louise, told po)ice she had
locked her then 23·year-old sis-
ter behind barred windows In
1930 because "she had lost her
menW faculUes" sbQrtly aftet'
their m~ died.
DAILY PILOT
as Drifter, Merlin arid ChrisUne.
Drifter was the clan A leader,
followed\ by Merlin, two miles
astern, then Freewheeler and
Christine.
Three CF-37 sloops in class C
were involved in a close duel for
both elapsed time and handicap
honors.
The handicap leader was the
CF-37 J efferson Steamship, skir>
pe red by Dlck Acker of the
Palos Verdes Yacht Club. Seeond
overall was Vendetaa, skippered
by J avierVelasque:iof Acapulco.
Sailing dead even were two
. CF·37s, Cottontail, John Arens.
Balboa Yacht Club. and Vector,
Herb Johnson, San Dte~o Yacht
Club. Vector was third overau
and Cottontail rourth.
The lead boats were about 60
miles north of Ced.roe Island.
Judging from weather reports.
the class A yachta apparently
sailed into a licht air pocket
while the class B and C entries
were bringing up wind from
astern. Strongest wind reported
was about five knots out of the north. ·
Hooded Thags
Rob, Wound
WuntyMan
A Bue~a Park man was
wounded today wben three
armed, hooded men broke into
his home, robbed a vi1ltor there
of $000 and then opened nre
when the man attempted to bolt
out a rear door.
Police said Thomas Floyd
Pugh, 31, of 5821 Las Amigos
Drive, Buena Park, was struck
twice by bullets (ired Crom IUDS
carried by the hooded lnvach!rs.
However, tb.ey added, Pugh
was able to escape the trio as he
dashed out the rear door of hls
house .into the predawn dark·
ness.
He was later taken to La
Palma lntercommunlty Hospital
where he was later reported in
serious condition.
Pugh'• wtce, Karen Sue, 35.
was unirijured ln the 4:30 a.m.
fracas. An overnight visitor in
the Pugh Home, De-nlse
Burnside, 22, was robbed of $500
when the masked trio ranaadted
the hous~ police said. Lllte Mrs.
Pugh, the woman was .un•
harmed..
~ ... offtd• ........... ,
that an aU·volWltary force was
actually cheaper than the draft.
Besidu highet' pay for
youncer enlisted men and
women and Junior orflcers. the
GAO atirlbuted the higher cost to a number of facton:
-RecNIUng and advehis1ng,
$1.4 billion.
-Improved military housi.ne,
$1.2 billloa.
-lncenUves for doctors and
dentists to Join the mWtary
services, '932 million.
The GAO said $289 million was
saved by phuJng out the Selec-
tive Service System.
Jn his testimony, Staats
acknowledged that U the
military draft were restored. it
ii unlikely that the h11ber cost
would be. eliminated. No one can
determine that saving, be aaid:
Tbe Pentagon disputed the
GAO's findings, assertln.: that
the agency used overslmpllf.ed
accounUne methods and m¥at·
tributed IOJDe costs.
CmahYktim
Jdenil~dtu
· Ctxut Pilot
A pilot kllled in a midair col·
llsion of two light aircraft near
Marina del Rey Friday, which a
Garden Qrove man survived. was
identified today as William B.
Lyon, 33, of Long Beach.
Lyon was district manager of
Alrllite'Inc. South, a Lone Beach
distributor for the Cessna
Aircraft Company. Airflite of·
ncial1 said he waa In a company
plane, a Cessna Skymaster, on
routine dealer calls, when the ac-
cident happened.
The taUofhis air~raft was cutin
two by a collision with a smaller
Cessna 182 piloted by Larry Lam-
boy. 44, owner of a Garden Gro 1e
burJgar 11larm and securllY de-
vice busmess. -
Lyon's plane plunged to the
ground, str1klng an unoccupied
car parked at a landing field
near Lo& Angeles International
Airport; the pilot was killed in·
stantly.
Lamboy managed to keep his
plane in the air long enouch to
crash land on a nearby beach,
where the craft nosed over on.to tts top.
Lamboy escaped with Qnly a
Jnlnor scalp injury. · •
Federal Aviat.ion Administra-
tion officials were inveati1aUng
the cauae or the crash.
Newport Man
Hurt in Fall
A young mao apparently
despondent over a fa~ quar·
rel ls hospitalized today, aft.er
leaping from a Newport Beach
apartment balcony.
The vlctlm, 20, who took" the
plunge from a rallinl at 1880
Park Newport, hla re•ldence in the Parle Newport Apartments,
1ustalned apparenUy serious la·
juries 'When be landed on his
bead, police said. . .
•• He ·was admitted to Hoag
memorial Hospital with. a fnc-wed jaw, a conc}lulon ancl broten 1bodlde11 roUOWIQI the leap from tbe aeeo.acl·floor bal~ to tbe pavemeat below.
N.C.'
/loP_.,...INi
SHADEO AAEA LASHED BY HEAVY SNOWSTORM IN EAST
Ent of Broken Une Snow Reported Moderate to Heavy
Frem P.,,e AJ
SNOW •••
and northeastern Maryland re--
mained under heavy mow wam-
lngs. The Maryland forecast
called for four to eight hiches
and police aalst 2 lncbea bad
fallen by e~ly morning.
***
PENNSYLVANIA: Three
inches of snow had fallen In Philadelphia by 8 a.m.;
Philadelphia Internatlontl
Airport was closed while crews
worked to clear runways.
Predictions of accumulations
ranged Crom 6 lnches to more
than a foot and forecasters
warned of near·blluard condi· lions. ....
NEW JEBSEY: 'three to fov
incbea ot saow had f•llen by the
start of the mo~lna rusia .hour
and from 10 to 12 lnches wu pre.
dieted. Forecasters warned the
s torm was a "classier
· Nor•easter" with bUzaard-lllce
conditions. Winds of up to '°
miles an hour made driving
baiardous and the speed limit on
the New Jersey Turnpike was
cul to 3S 10ph; police said many
roads probably would be lm·
passable by afternoon.
***
LWnsSeek
5Irvine
Honorees
The Great.q Irvine Lions Club
ls looking ror five outstanding
lrvlne men and women; it wants
to honor them.
The. club's third annual
awards to Irvine's t op live
citizens will be presented April
22 at the Airporter Inn. The
publlc is invited to nominate
candidates.
Recommendations for awards
should be adtiressed to the club.
P.O. Box 4092, Irvine, 92716.
The categories:
-Citizenship· Award. To non·
governmental person who ltas
been a leader in civic affairs.
-Community Award. For
personal time and eCfort, on
behalf of the community, that ·
resulted in significant moral and
social growth. .
-Achievement Award. For
outstandin~ contrtbutlons
toward improvement or the lives
of blind, deal, mentally retarded
or otherwise handicapped
persons.
-Medal of Valor. For life·
risking effort to save another
person.
-Press Relations Award. For
a journalist who significantly
improved the quality of life in
Irvine, through the use o(· his
medium.
,..._Page AZ
NEW 'YORK: By 10 a.m .•
between 3 and 6 inches or snow
had fallen in the New York
m e tropolitan area. Major
roadways were wider snow and
ice. wilh gustin& winds c~eating ·
drift.a. The city declared a limitr ~d snow emer1ency, limiting ~ravel on k4)y streets to cars with
snow tlres or chains. A snuw
emeraency was declared (or all parkw~ in Nassau and SufCollc
counties on Long Island. limiting
travel to only necessary
vehicles.
RAIN •••
.. • *
CONNECTICUT: The Na-
• tional Weather Sei:vice at
Baideeport said Jlght snow
began falliJ!« at about 3 a.m.;
forecasters s41id they could not
predict how much would ac-
cumulate, but warned that the
!ltol'm had the po~Ual to match
or top the January blizzard that
dropped she lnchea on the state.
Gale warnings were issued for
the coast with heavy surf and
tides well above normal ex-
pected. . \ ***
RHODE ISLAND: The
weatbet buruu predicted two to
four lot~of snow durtn1 the
, day ando1t.x:mcbea more during
the niltit and Tue1day, The
aituaUon was compUc~ted by a
threatened strike of 1t1te
workers~ Including some aow nmoval crews.
dents claimed the life or an
Albany couple and their two tlny
children Sunday.
Jn a traffic accident related to a mudslide, Interstate S was
closed and businesses were
evacuated along a mountainous stretc~ known as the Grapevine.
California Highway' Patrol
Sgt.. Bruce Dawson said the vic-
tims were in a car that was
rear-ended near Fort Tejon while
waiting to go north along the open
northbound lanes of Interstate 5
near a stretch called the
Grapevine. The highway was
pattlally ~losed down Sunday
after a mudslide which also
caused evacuation of roadside
businesses.
Chiem-Liang Huang, '1. and his
sister, Chia-Ying, were pro-
nounced dead on arrival at the
Kern Medical Center in
Bakersfield.
.-·~· ----..--
•
ii~e Sue
Avco for .
,, lf;iglits
8y TOM ·BARLEY ·"
Of .. Otl!! l'Jli.t lfillf I
AD Orange OOUhty SuperlO'l'I
Court jury is hearing test!.moQP
ln a lawsuit filed by rive rormetC
Laguna Niguel residents wto
c l aim Avco Community
Developers interfered with their pro~rty r!g'hts when they built
homes in the La Veta tract
seven years ago. · ·
1'he pJalntilftl in an action that
seeks $12 mllllon 1D da~aea are ·•
Eugene W. Ve.otre of. Costl'
Mes a, Floyd and Sharon
llartord of Yorba Linda, Pete
Peterson or Diamond Bar ~ Chest~r Lautzenheiser of Appl
Valley.
Tbe action ls a counter 'wt ~ a lawsuit ftled against the flv
by Avco, in whlch the develo
m ent company soug ht $1
mllll~>n in damages.. J
'l'he Avco laws ui t ntveq
reaobed the trial coun ancl •PJ pears to have been abandoneq
arter a series or pretrial rulln~
went against tho developmeoq
company.
A '9co lawyers argued in that ac
tJon that the def~danta. who ar
tbe plainUlfs In the c:urren
lawsuit before Judge Robert H
Green, unlawfully conducted rea
estate ·transacUons from
homes.
Plaintiffs' attomey Herb Hafi4
has described the allegaUon dur
1
1
ing the current trial as "pur
fantasy" and ac~uses Avco o
flling the lawsuit as a form o
harrassment. J
Hafif said bis clients wil'
.testify that Avco tried to lmposEJ
building restricUons on hQmes bl
the La Veta ttact · seven ye:l
ago when the company knew f
'well that no such reatrictl
could be iml)06ed in the area. I
He told the JIU'Y in his opening
statement that "Avco alwa)'l(
backed down when anyone pro'
tested at the way in which bUi
home was being forced to conJ
form to Avco concepts." I
And he argued that Ave~ sought to impose ar chiteclura
restrictions on homes in the L
Veta tract to ensure that valua
tions on nearby property wer~
not affected by designs that di<J
not fit in with Avco plannjng. ..I
Halif said a key witness Wilt
b e GaTden Grove englneet
Barry Lippert, who is still try=in
lo collect a $1.l million judgme
a1ainst Avco that was awar
film by an Orange Countr
Superior Court jury nearly fout •
years a~o. ~
A vc<> s appeal against~ ta award is before tbe Califomi
Supreme Court and will, Lip
predicts, go before the Uni
States Supreme Court before th 4
-
issue ls resolved. 1 •
lt was successfully alleged fof
Lippert in theJ,r.jal f.bat be wat
the vicUm of a cOllspiracy bJ
Avco and other defendants tq
slander him and his UUe to Pl'Ot
perty in°the La Veta tract. •
It was s uccessfully allege4
that Avco violated his privacr
throug,h "a campaign o! terl
rorls m, economic deprcsslorl
and vexation. I
Lippert testified in the 197.C
trial that he bobgbt a two·stor:i
bouse in Mission Viejo and the~
attempted to move it to a site h~
• bought In the La Veta trac~
Laguna Niguel.
He claimed Avco sought to
prevent the re1~atlon or the
home and engaged in a series 9f.
public meeW1as. 'distrJbuted iir,.
accurate reports and.resorted to
vandalism to force him away
from the propert.y.
I I ,
I
7
I
I '
J
• VOL. 71. NO. 37, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAt:IFORNIA ' MONDAY, f.EBRUARY 6, 1978 TEN CENTS
'Resented'
By TOM BARLEY
Of llo9 D.tllr ~I ... Si.ff
A nurse who tried lo revive an
ailing newborn lnlaot, allegedly
strangled by Dt. William Baxter
Waddill in the nursery at
West minster Community
Hospital, told a Jury today that1
6he resented being ordered l;>y
the doctor to leave the nursery
last March 2.
Registered nurse. JoAnn Gnr
filh testified an Orange County
Superior Court that she ~as
leading resuscitation e(forl.!i on
the child when Dr. Waddill, 44,
ordered her and other hospital
staff out of the nur:.ery
It 1s <dle~ed that the Hunt
ington Harbour phys ician U:.t'd
his hands to choke the hfe out of
the child yfter the nur:.ery :.taff
had left
The prosecution claims that
Waddill .. after his failure to
abort the seHm·ll\onth infant.
r,lag A mid the Pines
resorted to strangul{ltion and
suggested several other methods
thut could be used to take the
life or the child.
Mrs Griffith, now in her
fourth day on the witness stand,
told defense attorney Melbour
Watson that she was "disap-
p<nnted and angry" when Wad·
dill ordered her to Jeave the
baby
She s aid ~he foll and t.old
anolh<'r nurM• at the time that
Dally Pllel $\all Phote
' ..
.\ pl :a~· ~lnH·lun· a t P11H·:-. Park 1n
('ap1:-.tr;1•,o lk;1l'h attr<1 <"kcl a full eompli·
mcnt ,,, l'hildn•n a nd l'\'t•n a clog la:-.t \H•ck
in l hl' lull lwl \\ t'l'll ra m::itorm:-. The lo).!
Loy. huill'l'or climb111g. s liding an cl s wini.!ing .
wa:-. 111:-.lalll'tl l:t:-.l :-.ummcr in U'll' popular
Cumino Capistrano \ tt•w park on the
Capt!)lrano Pali~tlck~ a bow Coa~t Ui~hway
The park b m<\i"taim•d hy th~. Capi.'ltrano
Bay Park:-an<I R<'<·n•at ion Oblnct
2nd Stonn
Ripping
Northeast
I
By The Asrmclawd Pless
A wind-drivC'n snowstorm hit
h c M i d d It· A ll a n ti c a n d
orlheus t state~ today. closing
schools . slowing traffic lo a
crawl and disrupting li(e fo'r
millions. The s torm was the
second ror the ure:i in 17 <lays.
The snow began during the
night and a.s ml.le~ as half a foot
was piled up iri some areas by
the middle of the morning. Ac·
cumulations of up to 20 inches
were predicted for parts of the
.region, with winds of 40 mph and
higher gusts creating hazardous
drifts ..
Court and legislative sessions
were canceled; airport runways
were blocked; schools closed; so
did some public oflices and busi·
nesses. Roads generally were
reported passable. but slippery
during the morning. Authorities
lowered speed limits and urged
people to avoid driving if at all
possible.
Commuter trains and buses
bringing hundreds oC thousands
of workers to Manhattan from
l..ong lsli\nd and suburbs in W. ea.tchestei' County. Connec-
ticut. and New Jel'sey rep0rted
serious del~ys.
• In Boston, the peak snowfall
(See SNOW, Page AZ)
..
The Sltuher
Had Guts
Irvine police s ay tht'
\'andal who slashed thl·
tires of two cars tht!>
weekend added tn!>ull to
injury.
The vehicles were patrol
curs, parked in the police
lot.
Masked Man
Robs· Woman
At Gunpoint
A 41guna Beach woman was
accosted in her garage Friday
afternoon by a masked man who
forcec;t her lo hand over $37
before fleeing.
T h e woman. who police
declined to identify, told officers
a man wearing a black mask
with eye holes entered her
garage at about 7 p .m ..
threatening the 34·year-old
woman with a paring knife.
"Give me all your money and
you won't gel hurt," the knife·
wielding s us pect told the
woman.
$he handed the m asked man
$34 and4e ran out the garage on·
to ~omih~lde Drive. Police lieve the s uspect is
white, haS lond hair and stands
~bout five teet, 10 inehel tall.
·Income Tax
Help Offered
Riverside
Man Held
In Slaying
8y GARY GRANVILLE
OI Ille Dally 1'119' Staff
Anaheim police are question·
1ng <a Riverside man today ln
connection with the bludgeoning
death of an elderly man in a
second-hand store Sunday after·
noon nnd the beating and rob·
bery or a liquor store clerk a rew
hours tater.
Police 'identified the murder·
robbery.assault suspect as
Stephen C. H okey, 24, of
Riverside.
Hokey was arrested after the
battered liquor store clerk.
grabbed a convenient stick of
wood and chased his assailant
into a residential neighborhood.
In a s w ee ~ of the
neighborhood, police reportedly
flushed Hokey from a hiding
place, arreste(l hhn lo connec-
tion with. the. liquor store rob·
bery and began investigating
any possible link with th~
second-hand store murder.
That !ilaying was (liscovered
shortly after 2:30 p.m. whep a
customer In the store found a
still·'unidentlfied eldetly man Jy.
lng behind a counter. '
Police believe the man dieij as
the result or two massive beat-
ing wounds in/Jicted about bis
head. .
They said both wounds ap.-
peared to have been inflicted
(See SUSPECr, Page AZ>
Waddill had· betrayed' the trust
invested In hjm as a physician
whel'l be dld JiOt allow her to con·
tinue efforts "that would have
given thebabynchance."
But she denied under Intense
questioning that at one po\nl bad
her weeplng in the witness stand
that she ever regarded herself in
Watson's description of •a se11-
appointedsavior."
"Don't you tend lo look on
yourself today as the hero of
March 2?", Watson uked the
wllne&11.
"Not really,'' Mris. Grlffllh
said. "I was just doing the best I
could 1for a baby that needed
help."
The defense contends tbat
Woddill· cannot legally b e
charged with tnurder because
there is bot sufficient ~vidence
to show that the child was alive
in the t;rae that elapsdd between
its delivery and subsequent.
death.
Walson argued that the child's
breathing rule of four easps a
minute was insufficient to SUS·
tain life and that lhcre has been
no proof that it had a heartbeat
or other forms of recognizable
life while being treated in the
nursery.
Throughout his questioning,
Watson has referred to the vie·
tim as •'the product of concep-
(See WADDILL. Paie AZ) .
.·
6 Stonti :Deaths
California Drenched Again
By The Assocla~d Press
A Pacific storm has drenched
Southern California, leaving al
least six people dead as the re·
suit of lraffit' accidents trig·
gcred by rain and mudslides.
Although forecasters predict·
ed a chance of showers through
the week from a series of Pacific
storms lined up offshore, most. of
the upcoming wetness is expect·
ed to hit Northern California.
"It looks like a fairly rainy
week for most of the West, but
less down here than elsewhere,"
s aid forecaster Oscar Nichols of
the National Weather Service.
Pat Rowe, a weather service
spoke5woman, said the chance
of rain in Southern California
will drop to 10 pe rcent by
tonight.
But while lt tilt, it hit h11rd ,
especially along the coasL Santa
Monica received 1.69 inches of
rain, and Catalina lslaf\4.,..where
~OAST AREA RAI N EXCEEOS INCH-A3
STORM SLAMS NORTH:
MORE ON THE WAY-AS
the drought has still been of·
ficially in effect, got 2.05 inches.
By today, Los Angeles had re·
coived an inch of rain since the
....
storm began Saturday morning.
Thal brought the season total to
15.74 inches, more than l 'At inch-
es over the normal rainfall for
an entire year and double the
7.21 inches recorded a year a~.
The C.olifornia Highway
P atrol reported generally
normal traffic flow through the
morning rush hour, 'except !or
transition ramp between the
northbound San Diego and the
westbound Santa Monica
·freeways, whic6 was blocked by
an overturned truck for two .hours, a spokesman said.
The most serious of the
weather.related traffic accl-
(See RAIN, Page AZ)
Teacher .Hikes Viewed
(
]~ lniti~ti~ Coul,d Lower Budget . -t
By STEVE MITCHELL or Mttw...,...
Laguno Bet\ch Unified School
District officials have res1>0.,ded
to A teacber request for more
than $600,000 In salar:-y ~nd
benefit hikes with an $88.055 of·
fer o( their own.
That's about a ha lf million
dollar spread between the two
figores, says district educational
servkes director Bill Barnes.
·But declining enrollment in the
five.school district. plus the
thr eat or the Jarvis tax in·
itiative, may be the determin>ng
factors in how much teachers
will receive next (fiscaJ) year.
, "The problem .facing our
board -and other agehcles -is
J arvis," Barnes said In an in·
terview following receipt of the ·
teacher union request.
"Our board has to look down
the barrels of drastic" reductions
in our budget."
He said t~e dist9,ct is not taUt-
ing about raises. We're talking
about cutting programs and
possibly eliminating staff,"
Barnes said.
"We're alf hoping lbe
legislature wiJl come• around,
but right now, we have no rea-
son to believe anything but that
Jarvis will pass ln June."
The Laguna Beach Unified
Faculty Association salary in-
crease nquest is for an "across
the board" bike oC 10 percent for
the district's 152 full-time
teachen, interns and lona;term
substitutes. .
That would mean · an addl·
tlonal $W2,321 slapped °llnto the
$2.7 million in teachets;salaries
in tbe district, Barnes said.
The union propbsal' also in-·
eludes raising the u.rittatlons ori
howf much bachelor and master
degree holders cnn make, and
yearly step& between the 12th
and 25th year of service.
That makes for a 17.2 percent
increase in the salary budget.
Barnes said.
An<l. tbere are 9ther cost f'c-l~rs that Sataes bys teacbttf>
don't realize when a district put$
more inw the payroll
·•For eitaaaple,.'t he said,
'"there's more for: the state
teacher!> retirement program
<an additional $37,000), workers
compensation ($8,000 more) and
a new unemployment com~a
tion law ($9,300 more).
.. So right now. just salary and
::,alar y r elaled costs means
\
we're talking about $519,000, er
17. 71 percent," Barnes said.
Then there's the health care
costs.
"Ju~t wlth the pttsent •
m-edical and dental plans, we're
talking about a 15 percent m·
c rease Jn inflation alone.''
Barnes said.
Ile said new programs sought
by the teachers' unioll including
vi.sjon care •. lower C06t depen· <See SALARY, Page AZ)
'Bmi(l~G!f Gromt"la' (
Dana Pobit Views
Stricter Conirols
By ANNE COOPEll
Of Ult Dlillr P'll« Staff
I
DAIL V PILO L SC
,...,_,,9f#AJ
~GROWTH •••
• chamberforbu.sinoas. ••
As a first step t oward in-eorpor=~ the three clY.lc lllOUJI work ~,.
a municipal advisory coundl,
like the one operating ln Mission
Viejo, be said.
Such a council, often called a
''.MAC " is elected by local ~oter• •to represent their lo·
terests with county "overnmenL
M.cGeary manages a wine re·
t ail outlet in Dana Point in a·
buildin~ that follows the Mediterranean·~tyle architec·
ture of orlainal Dana Point
buildings of the late 1920s.
lie believes an arcldtectural
c ode in the downto\vn area
would give it a greater feeling of
community and h eritage. he
said. "I lived in Amsterdam for a
while where architectural con·
tTols along the unals have been
very s trict for many, many
years. Looking at the beauly or
:.\Uch a historical landmark. T
don'.t see how ..anyone would
question the value of controls,"
)ie said.
In addition to protectlng Dana
:Point's white adobe buildings
and red tile roofs, McGeary said
be would also like to sec Dana
Point it.self preserved. •
The point, located just north of
the bualnesa district, has never
been developed •
.. The federal govcrnmenl
:-hould buy it, put in walking
trails and that's all," said
McGeary. "People who can af-
ford it get oo a boat and go out
to sea for therapy. But a family
man who bas kids but no boal
needs a..place that's unspoiled.
where he can go to unwind.
O*y ................
LONG ARM OP LAW INCLUDES SHOULDER PATCHES OP INFINITE VARIETY
Sgt. James Sprelne Shown With Hts Colleetlon at San Clement• Dep11rtment
Police Patches Pieked
Clemente Officer Has Quit,e ~ Col'lection ·
By ANNP4 COOPER Of U. o.llf rtlet S ... H
Some ar e square. others
rQund. There are big ones and
s mall ones. Some are boldly let·
tered. others brightly em·
broidered with colorful pictures.
states and foreign police agen.
~ies. Other collectors bave written.
offering patches, bats or badges
in trade for San Clemente
patches, so Spreine now has
police hats worn by English bob-
bi es. German police and
Georgia state troopers -who
wear peanut.a on t.helr hat brlms.
Sprelne said the patches are
too good looking· to keep In a
box.
"Besides, I get as much
pleasure from seeing bow much
other J>«>ple enjoy the collection
as I do from the collecUon Uaelf, .. be 1ald.
NEW YORK (AP) -Davlcl
Begelrnan, under fire for alleged
mishandling of corporate funds,
has resigned as president of the
motion picture and television
division .of Columbia Pictures
Jndustrles. Inc., tbe chairman of
the board of directors confirmed
today.
In a statement, board
chairman Leo Jaffe said
Begelman's r esignation was
.,effective immediately," he
said.
The production cblef resigned
••wtth t.be~iew that we must re-
s ume a more norm al lit·
mosphere for Columbia, .. Jaffe
said.
Begelman's r esignatlonwas
was ••effective immediateJ.y," he
said.
Jaffe said the board had been
aatlsfled that it.a independent in·
veaUgatlon of tbe allegations
wQa "prompt and tltorough ...
Begelman bad been cotnstated
to h1a post in December .. wltb
full confldence of manaaemect
and tbe board." )le sald.
On ABCTV1s "Good Momtn1
America .. today, Rona Ban'ett
reported that an ••einotionally
drained .. Begelman had told her
of the resignaUon Sunday ntgbt
ln New York City.
.. I go up on the point .myself.
but when I think those hills may
not always be here. I just don't
)cnow, .. he said, shaking bis
head. "'Americans have great ar.
nuencc bl!L it remains to be
seen whet'.her we have the style
to live well"
They nearly always catch the
eye of visitors to the San
Clemente police Department
Sgt. James Sprelne's collec·
tion of law enforcement shoulder
patches, mounted ln d isplay
cases at the station, includes a
dl\11 grey patch from the
Chicago police department, a
more decorative one from a tiny
West Virginia hamlet, a New
England patch embroidered
with a colorful old covered
bridge and hundreds more.
Oil Tanker Spills
23,000 GallOm
Buelman, 58, removed
himself from hLs post laat Oc-
tober. admittlng to financial mlsde~ after a Columbia ln·
v estlaatlon diaclohd . that
, between January 197$ and May
1977 be obtalned $61,008 in COf'o
porate f\mdl through lmpro_.per
means for hLs penonal benefit.
~ Fr091PageAI
RAIN ... ·
dents claimed tht• life of an
J\lbany couple and their two tiny
children Swiday.
In a traffio accident related to
n mudslide, Inters tate 5 was
closed and businesses were
evacuated along a mountainous
t>trctchknown as the Grapevine.
California Highway Patrol
Sgt. Bruce Dawson said the vie·
tims were in a car that was·
rear-ended near fort Tejon while
"-'aiting to go north along the o~n .
11orthbound lanes of Interstate 5
n ear n stretch call ed the
Grapevine. The highway was
partially closed down Sunday
after a mudslide which also
caused evacuation of roadiidc buslD...._
Chiem-Liang Huang, 7, and his
sister. Chla-Ying, were pro·
llounced dead on arrival at the
Kern Medical Center in
Bakersfield. Their mother. Yen
Yen Huang, 28, died shortly
after she was taken to the
hospital, and their father, Jin·
Tsann Huang, 34. died early to-
day. officials said.
''There are very few native
Californians," said Sprelne. "A
lot of people who come through
here tell us they're from one of
the towns represented 1n the col·
lection. If it's a small town
they're especially happy to find
its patch on display."
Spreine started the coll~ction
eight years ago when he was at·
tending the police academy, so
he could have a memento from
every police (lepartment
represented in hls class.
Since then his collection has
grown to include more than 2,000
patches from city police depart·
ments across the countr y,
highway patrol agencies 1n all SO
Marines Held
In Theft Try
Two Camp Pendleton M~es
were arrested in San Clemente
early Sunday, when police
responded to call reporting a burglary ln progress' at a
downtown drug store.
PORTLAND, Maine CAP)-A
_.coastal tanker struck a sub·
merged ledge in Portland
harbor early today, spilling
about 23,000 of its 500,000 gallons
of home heating oil before the
leak was stopped.
The ship was later refioated,
but withio hours some oil had
washed onto ice-encrusted rocks
and beaches at South Portland
about a mile and a half away,
the Coast Gu¥"d reported.
The 223·fool Harold Reinauer,
with a seven-member crew, was
shutUine light No. 2 oil Crou:i the
King Resources tank farm on
Long Island to the Texaco pier
in Casco Bay in South Portland
about 1 a.m . whe n it ran
aground in 15 feet of waler on
Diamond Isla nd Ledje, aaid
John Bablitch, a spokesman for the Coast Guard in Boston.
The ship is owned by Boston
Fuel Transportation Inc., sald
Bablitch.
Cmdr. John Ekman of the
Coast Guard Marine Safety Of·
fice in Portland said an ln·
vestigation will be conducted
Thursday .. to determine w~t happe~. wby it happened and
who.was at fault."
The groundlni punctured one
port tank below the water line.
but the Coast Guard said the
leak later stopped :when the
pressure of water entering the
tank became equal to that of the
The driver of the second car.
lB-year-old Dan Dirlam or
Reseda, also was reported in
critical condition and was
b ooked for invesUgatlon of
manslaughter, authorities said.
Witnesses reported a vehicle
was aolng about 90 to 100 mph
when it reached the halted traf •
fie and rammed :s-everal vehicles.
Patrol officers dispatched to
Taylor's Pharmacy, 167 Ave. del
Mar, confirmed that a burglary
attempt was being made and
located two auspecta on the
atore's roof.
Stephen Andrew AlleQ. 23, and
Stephen Edwin Doldo, '20. were
arrested on eusplclon of at·
tempted bw'alary. Th•>' were
each betni held on ss.ooo._ball to-
day at the San CletPentt 11all.
oll seeping out.
The Coast Guard said the leak
apparently was confined to the
No. 1 tank, which contained.
nearly 60,000 gallons.
Personnel !rom the Coaat
,,...PageAl Cmtodial Overtime
WADDILL •• ::~~~;;~is tbtng .. and .. this. ·Faces B .... ~""'et Trim
By contrast pro!ecutor Robert ~ 1
Chatterton refered to the victim ' as "lhe baby." or "the infant' School dlatrlct lnJltees an to-
and ariues that there has be~n Inf to try to cut '3,000 from the a bundant evidence that the child budaet next year by cuttllll Jlv~d after tt survlved a saline back on overtlme accnaod bJ
abortion administered to the c~i::1~iuna Beach Unlfte4 '!J1~•-e_d_,_1B-_ye_ar_.o_ld_m_o_th_er_._, Sebool Dlatrtct board voted un.
• OMNGaCOMT ~ antmoualy lut week to hire tw
DAILY PILOT euatodialJI to work weekends on·
ly, a move district offtciala aay wm reduce overttme uom fll.'100
to te.ooo annually.
The district has been provid·
fog custodial service at ap-
pro~ed school and coinmunity
events 'on the five school
.. lfOUDds in the district.
B1 emploJlnl two mtn to work weekend.I. the dlswtct
saves CID time-and·a~lf pay·
ment to retul~ 40-hov RU ... C\lltOdf.llW. •
'1'lle oal1 cUa•4•1at11e tnaatees .., with tbe new ~ •
gram Is that the blah scbool
pool will not be serviced and
cleaned on weekenda. District of ficlals also 1a1d lt mllht be dlt~
floult to find two peopte to work
weekends only. Truatees said they will try the
new program and aee how 1'
works. • •
p,._P.,,,,AJ
SUSPECT: ••
Guard•s Marine Safety Office
and lt.s AUantlc Strike Force. a
team of oil spill experts on call
24 hours a day in Elizabeth City,
N.C .• were called for cleanup
operations, which were expected
to be complicated by wind and
waves kicking up in advance of
a northeaster heading toward
Maine. ·
Officials of the Maine Depart.
ment of Envtronmental Protec·
tion said they hoped much of the
s pilled oll 'Would be blown out to
sea. Ekman said the spill appeared
to be the largest in Cosco Bay
since 1972, when the Norwegian
tanker Tamano spilled 100,000
gallons of industrial oil. The
Tamano ·s pill blacken ed
s horelines !or 70 miles.
Trustees Eye
School Site
Leasing Plan
Caplstrano Unified School Dis·
trict trustees will be asked tonlgbt to approve a $27.2
million lease-purchase aeree-
b"lent for the Jwte 6 ballot. re-quiring majority voter approval
!or a 36-cent tax increase for
new school construction.
Tonight's school board meet-
ing will be&).n at 7:30 p .m. at dis·
trict oUtces, 32972 Callt! Perfecto
1n San Juan Capistrano.
Capistrano Untfied voters·wm
decide a $49.3 mUHon bond elec·
tlon and a S1S mllllon school ap.
portlonment election March 1.
Botb measures require two-
thlrds majority approval.
If tbe bond and appartionment measures pass, the school d).strict
would cancel the proposed lease~
purchase election in June, aal<A ~upt. JeromeThQmsley.
.. What we're asking the 6oard
for tonlibt ls simply a place-
holder on the Jwe ballot hi case
the bond elecUoo falls. .. be 1ald.
LB Council
Meet Slated
But Beselman was restored to
his Job two months rater, when
Columbia said that he had over·•
come the emotional problems
that caused the finaQcial Ir·
regularities.
Miss Barrett said Begehnan
would become an independent
producer associated with Colum·
bia.
She quoted hlm as saying the
declsion stemmed from "an in·
ability to stand by and watch ln•
nocent men and women be tom
apart by headllne-grabblng ac•
cusations."
Mitchell
Leaves CaTe
WASHINGTON CAP) -
Former Altomey General
John N. Mitchell left
Georgetown Univeraity
Hospital today after a
15-day stay for arterial
s urgery. His destination
was not disclosed.
The 64·year·old
M itchell, on medical
furlough from the federal
prison camp at Maxwell
Alr Force Base in
Alabama, underwent the
abdominal operation Jan.
24. The leave was ex·
tended to Feb. 27 to pennl~
his recuperation.
M Ile hell is serving a one·
to four.year sentence for
taking part in the
Watergat.ecoy_er·up.
San Clemente
A 7Z0year-old San Clemente
pedestrian was irtjured Sunday
when he was at.ruck by a north·
bound car in an Avenida
Granada crosswalk on El
Camino Real.
Samuel C. Matthews, of 501
Ave. del Mar, suffered an in·
Jured hip and cut.a on hil face,
said San Clemente ftrf,men who
t ransported blm bt city am·
bulance to San Clemente
General Hospital following the 6
p.m. accident.
The driver of the car was Mar.
jorle Ann ~rrlo, 54. of 139 W.
Ave. Ramona, police said. She
was not cited at the scene.
].t atthews was reporttcl In
satisfactory co.ndltJon at the
hospit.al today.
Capistrano
For•i••• Slitted
QUITS UNDER Fl~~
Cotumble•a Begefsn•n .
., .......... 1
SALARY •••
dent coverage •ftd lnereased
health ca.re coverase would C<ISt
tbe cliatrict an acld;Uonal sa.ooo.
That figure, combined with salary increases. means a
$601,ooo Increase over tbl•
year•s budcet.. brtnatne 11lary
costa to s:u mtlllon from 12.f
m1Won.
Newly-elected union presldmt
Ray Glllesple, an El Morro
Elementary Sctw>ol teaclwr. aal4
he wm reserve remarks about
teacher demahds until neeotta·
lions wi\11 the district are under
way.
F,...P-AJ
SNOW •••
was expected to coincide with
the evening rush hour and of.
ficials said they might ask hmi·
nesses to send people bome
early. • The National Weather Service
predicted up to 20 lncbea of tnOW
l.D some New York City suburbs
and said the storm would con-•
tinue. through tonight. The one·
l!ay record for the cjty-7.5
Inches was set Feb. s. 1961; the
J an. 20 snowstorm brouaht ll.6
inches.
Two low pressure sys~ms -
one off the Carolina coaat, the
other in the Appalachians -
were blamed for tbe 1now.
Unlike the January storm. the
current round of snow w.u ~
dieted and autborillea toot ad ..
vance precauUoM.
The New York City SanltaUon
Department put l~men.on the
streets -10 times the number
normally on duty each day -
but a spokesnum said the new
storm would "be a rough one to
fight .. because equipment la in
bad shape.
Here 1.S a rundown of the altua•
• tion brsome areas: •••
l>ISTRicr OP COLCMBL\1 ~o Inches of snow fell ove,..
night and another 2 Inches wa.a
e.xpected during the da,y.
*** MA.RYLAND·DELA.WABE:
The atorm was less aevere than
originally expected. By mld·
morning. only the central por..
tion Of the Delmarva peninsula
and northeastern Maryland re.
mained lDlder heavy snow warn.
in gs. The Maryland forecast
called tor four to eight lflches
and police said 2 lncbea had fallen by early morning.
••• I
PENNSYLVANIA.I Three
Inches of· snow h~d f111Jn ill Philadelphia by 8 a.m.i
Phlladelphla Internatlona
Airport was closed while crews
worked to clear runways._
Predictions of aceumulaUont
ranged from 6 inches to mor•
than a loot and forecasters
warned of near·blluucl condl•
tions.
**'*
NEW JOSEY: Three to fodr
inches of snow bad fallen by thf
:;tart of the morning rush ~
and from 10 to 12 inches was pre-dict~. Forecasters warned tht
storm wa1 a ••cl••!'1' Nor'east..-0 wtth blluard
cond.itioos. Wlncls of up to
miles an bou~ made drlvlDI
huardoua and the speed limit ClQ
tbe New Jene; TunipJlc• w• cut to as mph; police a&ld many
. roads probably would be lm• puuble b)' anemoon. ... . .. ,
\.
' (
\
(
' I
'
..
Orange .~oasi
• EOIT IQN
. t ' I
VOL. 71, NO. 37, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE.COUNTY, CALI FORNI A MONDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1978 N TEN CENTS
California ·StorJD Clai1ns · Six Lives
By The Associated Press
A Pacific storm has drenched
Southern California, leaving at
least six people dead as the re·
sult of traffic accidents trig-
gered by rain and mudslides
Although forecasters predict-
ed a chance of showers through
the week from a series of Pacific
storms lined up offshore, most of
the upcoming wetness is expect·
ed to hit Northern California.
"It looks like a fairly rainy
"'eek for most or the West, but
less down here than elsewhere,"
::.aid forecaster Oscar Nichol~f
the National Weather Service.
Pal Rowe, a weather service
::.pokc::.woman, said the chance
of rain m Southern California
will drop to 10 percent by
tonight.
But while 1l hit, it hit hard,
especially along the coast. Santa
~looica received 1.69 inches of
rain and Catalina Island, where
'
the drought has sUJl been of-
ficially in effect, gol 2.05 inches.
COAST AREA RAIN
EXCEEDS INCH-A3
STORM SLAMS NORTH:
MORE ON THE WAY-AS
By today, Los Angeles had re-
~e1ved an inch of rain since the
::.torm began Saturda:r:, morning.
Thal brought the season total to
15.74 inches, more than H'2. inch·
es over the not:mal rainfall for
an entire year and double the
7.21 inches recorded a year a~o.
The Californ ia Highway
Patrol reported generally
normal traffic now through the
morning rush hour, except for
transition ramp between the
northbound San Diego and the
wes tbound Santa Monica
freeways, which was blocked by
an overturned truck for lwo
hours, a spokesman said.
The most serious of the
wealhet-related traffic acci·
dents claimed the life of an
Albariy couple and their two tiny
-:hlldren Sunday. ·
In a traffic accident related to
a mudslide, Interstate 5 was
closed and businesses were
evacuated along a mountalnoUs
stretch known as the Grapevine.
California Highway Patrol
Sgt. Bruce Dawson said the vic-
ums were in a· car that was
rear-ended near Fort Tejon while
waitine t.o go north along.the open
northbound lanes of Interstate s
near a stretch called the
Grapevine. The highway was
partially closed down Sunday
after a mudslide which also
caused evacuation of roadside
businesses.
Another Storni Pounds East ·
PENN .
Oc ton TENN.
~ N.C.
A• w1,.,.,._ """•
SHADED AREA LASHED BY HEAVY SNOWSTORM IN EAST
East of Broken Line Snow Reported Moderate to Heavy
.
Everything Stops
As Snow Piles Up
By The Msoclatcd Pres!.
Millions of East Coast re::.1-
dents strusrnled through <i wind
drive n s nowstorm today a::.
::.chools closed and ~r Cfic, busi-ness and government lowed lo
u near standstill for e second
time in 17 davs. f<'rom Wa!>hington , D.C.,
through the Middle Atlantic
slates and into New England,
authoriti<'s reported drifting,
blowing snow that ::.tarted before
dawn and continued through the
day, culling visibility lo almost.
Zt'rO
Ily midmorning. there was as
much as half a foot of snow piled
on the ground in ::.ome places
1-'oret·ast:; generally called for
anywhere from one lo J 'h fttt by
the ti me the storm ends Tues-
day.
Commuter train and bus lines
rcport~d lengthy delays; airport
runways were closed while
crews tried to clear · th~ snow :
major roads were passable -
I.Jut just barely.
Newark Airport was closed at
12:30 p.m. because of the snow.
Planes were still departing from
K e nnedy and LaGuardla
Airports al midday, but there
were long delays. Arriving
flights were diverted starting at
midmorning
Children in hundreds of com·
munilies got an extra holiday as
(See SNOW, Page A2}
Irvine · Reopens Culver. Dci¥e. ,.
. ,
By PIUUP ROSMAIUN
OI U. Oall, P'llet Shtl
They celebrated the opening of
"new" road in Irvine Sutur·
ay-~ulver Drive, rirst ded1cal
d m lht.' 1960!.. washed out by
ains J an. 4, almost reopened,
ndwashcdoutagainJan 15.
Cilv officials treated tht• cvt•nt
.a::. though a m·w highway had
•just bct!n openl'<i. The washout
lo£ portions of a brid~e near Bar·
ranca Roarl. overpas::.1ng a
drainage swate: had closed the
hi ~hw ay to tra ffic a full
month.
The resulting detour irked
many res ide nts or lrvine.
because Culver 1s the m a~or
nnrlh·soulh route through the
l'ily.
So thl' r<•optming in cluded al·
tcndance by city councilmen.
t h t• c 1 t y m a n a g e r , c i t y
cngint'ers. und an honest -to-
goodness ribbon cuttin g.
Ex·Neu{port Aide
"I got word late Friday-that
they would have it complete
Saturday." Mayor Bill Vardoulis
said. "All lh<.' council members
were invih.'<i to come out."
Council mcmber!'t Mary Ann
Guido and David Sills joined
Vardoulis at the site at l p.m.
Vardouli::. pecked under the
bridge to check,en the new steel
pilings and rock work the Irvine
Co mpany installed to s hore up
the e mbankment.
Ivens Files for R ·ace
N e wport Bench's former
personnel director filed nomina-
tion papers today to become a
city council candidate in the
third district.
Frank Ivens, who resigned his
post :.s personnel director and
assistant to the city manager in
October in a dis pute over
personnel policies, will oppose
former Parks , Beaches and
Recreation Commissioner
Evelyn Hart and another third
district resident, P aul Caldwell.
Dash Appointed
• NEW YORK (AP) -Samuel
bash, former chief counsel or
the Senate Watergate Commit-
tee. has been chosen to succeed
David W. Marston as U.S. at-
torney in Philadelphia, the New · ~ork Times said today.
Weatla~r
Variable cloudiness with
a chance of llghl showers
through Tuesday. Slightly
warmer days. Highs 63 to
68. Lows in low SOS.
INSIDE TODAY
Filtng for the April 11 election
closes Tuesday at noon for the
first, third and fourth council
districts. Filing in the s ixth dis·
trict, the only one in which the
incumbent i s seeking re-
·election. closed last 'fhursday.
According to documents on
file with the city clerk, the
following people will be can-
didates in the upcoming cam·
paign:
-First District (Peninsula
BEE~ SUGAR
PAD ITAUANS
MILAN, llaly (AP) -A
medical research team says in-
creased ~onsumption of beer,
sugar and fats is to blame for
the t~·fold increase in over-
weight people in Italy the past 28
years.
A report by a nationwide
group of pharmacists said
that since 1950 consumption is
up 700 percent for beer, 100 per-
cent. for tats and 200 percent tor
sugar and that 25 percent of
Jta ly's popula lion past.
adolescence is overweieht.
Bi,lly Buys
Plititu Paper
PLAINS, Ga. <A'P> -Billy
CaiUr, brother of the president.
has bought. a P81'tQenhieJ ln a weekly newiipaper. the ·plains
Statesman. and the apeement waa recorded on a tirown peper
bag, acCOl'dlrl• to the latest. ~ lion or the newspaper.
Jotbua Forett. editor of u,.,
year-<>ld amall newspaper, said
ho aned Carter to become a
partner In i11nua17. 1ftet carter
h·aa sold nd"t than • UIDulabd.
J11ue1 at hil tervlee atatlaa -
manJ of wlllola lM pfel.I-.'•
brother had autosrQMd.
und Lido Isle): P eg Forgit.
2205•h W. BalbOa Blvd.; Donald
Strauss, 101 Via Venezia; John
Tucker, 813 W. Bay St .. La Verne
de la Cierva, 310 Via Lido Soud.
und Bill Von Esch, 110 Via·
Orvieto.
-Third District (Newport
Heights, Cliff Haven, Westcliff.
Bayshores and Linda Jsle):
Fr ank Ivens, 1215 Sussex Lane:
Evelyn Harti 435 Redlands Ave.,
and Paul Ca dwell, 1214 RuUand
Road.
-Fourth District <Dover
Shores, Mariners, Baycrest, Up-
per Bay and the Bluffs ): Jackie
Heather, 1500 Dorothy Lane.
-Sixth District <old Corona
del Mar and Irvine Terrace): In·
cumbent Lucille Kuehn, 1831
Seadrift Drive; Paul Hummel,
4U) Heliotrope Ave., and William
Doh\', 20S Carnation Ave.
"Somebody had a ribbQn,"
Vardoulls said. "I dldn't know
there'd be a ribbon. We didn't
even have scissors."
Somebody else produced a
knife, and while Sills held some
Christmas package ribbon and
Vardoulls sawed away al it,
'Mrs. Gaido gunned her station
wagon to be fir::.t across the
bridge.
"She almost ran me over, she
was so eager ," Vardoulis said.
The barriers that had closed
Culver from Main Street lo Bar·
ranca Road were then r emoved
and the rlbbon-cuttln g party.
started dodging the cars or resi-
dents scuttling by.
"It wasn't five minutes "said
Vardoulis, "and we had ' to get
out of there, 'cause cars were
shunting up and down.
"They jus t came roaring
through there."
The mayor said that as far as
he could tell from his peekaboo
inspection of the bridge, it isn't
likely to wash away again. "It be~
ternot." he said ...
TheSlaaher
Had Guts
Irvine poJlce say the
vandal who s lashed the
tires of two cars tbls
weekend added insult to
injury.
The vehicles were patrol
cars, parked in the police
lot.
corridor
No 1''-e tor Cloll'ning
l.Jnusually serious-faced clowns take part in the 32nd an-
nual Clown's Sendce at the Angelic an Holy Trinity
Church in London. More than 50 clowns gathered for the
relcbration of the birth of Joseph Grimaldi. remem-
bered as "the greatest clown of the m all. .. who was
born nearby. ,
Light Winds Jam
Manzanillo Fleet
By ALMON LOCKABEY the class A yachts apparently
• Oeltr ~ ._... ._,.._ • sailed lo to a light air pocket
Light wmds orr the ~aJa while th,t class B and c entries
Californil\ coast Sunday .night were bringing up wind from
and this morning jammed the • astern. Strongest wind reporte4 40-bo~t Manzanillo Yac~t ~ce was about five knots out of the fleet 1.11to a 60-mlle radios with .. north
·several or the class B and C ·
yachts moving ahead or the
class A favorites. (See earlier
istory, Page AU).
Reporting a position or 29.0S
degrees latitude. the 40-foot
sloop Vendetta, a class ~entry.
was in the boat-for-boat lead
ahead of such class A speedsters
as Drifter, Merllo arid Christine.
Drifter was the class A leader,
followed by Merlin, two miles
astern, then Freewheeler and
Christine.
Tbree CF-37 sloops in class C
were Involved in a close duel for-
both elapsed time and handicap
honors.
The handicap leader was tbe
CF·37 Jefferson SteamShip, skip-
pered by Dick Acker of .the
Palos Verdes Yacht Club. ~nd
overall was Vendeta~ skippered
by !favi~VeJ.asquezor Acapulco.
Salling dead even were two
CF·37s, Cottontail, John Arens,
Balboa Yacht Club, and Vector,
Herb Jotm.son. San Die~o Yacht
Club. Vector was third overall
and Cottontail fourth.
Tbe lead boats were about 60
mllt1 north ol Cedros Island. •
Judging from weather reports,
Mayor Offers
Invitation
To Strangler
LOS ANGELES CAP) -Mayor Tom Bradley today invit·
ed a man claiming to be the
Hillside Strangler to surrender
to the mayor's office.
In a news conference at which
Bradley declined to answel"
questions, the mayor said he re·
ceived a letter from a man
claiming lo be the strangler who
••wishes to surrender himself
and a friend lo the mayor's of.
lice. ·
''He (the Jetter Writer) also fn.
dicated he W01,ild forward a cer·
lain item alter he received as-
s urance for his safety from the
mayor," Bradley said, reading
from a prepared stateincnt re·
leased earlier.
The statement said Bradley
wanted.. to reassure the Jetter
writer than the two persons
• 'wil\ be afforded any protecUon
necessary."
The writer was advised to
mail the Wlidentlfied ilem lo the
mayor's office, addressed exAd·
Jy 81 the original ~o~.
The letter apparetflly ·~
prompted by a Jan.19 news ooo.
lerence by Aasistant Police
Qllef Daryl Gates, who aald be
boped the etraneler or
.tranlledwouJd roallze they ul·
tUnalely will be uugbt and
,.ould voluntaril1 surrender.
Bradl~y .aid the mystery M·
tet Wal \)OStmarkod the Ame
day as tho Gates news con-
ference.
Gata alSo caUed a news eon·
ference for Tuesday to dlac s
the Hate letter. Furtber detudl..._.w~e-re..._.ftot ...... ~liii.
mtdiately'lval.lablc.
. •
. .Jr! DAILY PILOT N
I
WA SllINGTON (AP> -The
:ill-volunteer military service
bas co&t an additional S18 billion
:sli\ce the end of the draft in 1971,
far more t h an previous
estimalt•s, the General Account·
ing Office said today
Relcus ing the study,
Comptroller General Elmer B.
Staats snid the biggest addi-
tional cost of the volunteer force
is the much higher pay for new
military enlistees.
Staats, who heads the con-
gressional auditing service, said
it cost the t axpayers $14.2 billion
in higher pay to entice enough
volunteers lor the Army, Navy,
Air Force, Marine Corps and
Coast Guard.
Staats teslifif'd bcforf..' .i
Senate AriMd Ser'Ytees aubeam-
mlttee.
Subcommittee Chairman Sam
Nunn, D-Ga., a frequent critic ot
the all-volunteer concept, said
he asked the GAO to do the
study aftet several unsuccessful
attempts to obtain a co&t
estimate from the Pentagon.
Nunn said previous Defense
Department estimates on the
costs have varied widelr. from a
high of $000 million, with some
Pentagon officials maintaining
that an all-voluntary force was
actually cheaper than the draft.
Bes ides higher pay for
younger enlis ted men and
women and junior orricers, the
GAO attributed'the higher cos(
to a number of factors~
f'ro91 Page Al
\
SNOW PILES UP •••
classes were cnncc.>lt·d. Public
offices and courts were closed.
Legislative sessions wer<> called
off. Many businesses said they
planned to send <.'mployl•t•s home
early. Snow t•mcrgenc1t•s were
declared in several ureas as
"llthorities lr1ed to limit traffic
GiS much us possible.
Tra ding on area s tock ex~
changes was light. The New
York and American exchanges
announced closings two hours
early -but said they hoped to
open Tuesday as scheduled. Also
clos ing early because of the
weather wen! the Philadelphia
Slock Exchange, the New York
l\Ier canlik Exchani.:e. Com-
roodity E xchange Inc., New
York Coffee and Sugar Ex-
change and New York Colton
Exchange..
Flood, Tide
Soak Autos·
On Bal I sle
Flood damage from Sunday's
titorm that dumped more than
on inch of rain in Newport
Beach was limited to a few cars
parked on th e Balboa
.Peninsula that got flooded.
Flooding occurred when the
morning downpour hit at the
t>amo time as a hi~h tide of 6.S
fret.
J ake Myndcrse, director of
).!cneral services, said aoout :JlJ
:-.torm drains on the Peninsula
;'Ind the drains on Balboa Island
t hat run directly into the bay are
dosed at high lldc to keep the ~ea
w aterout.
Unfortunately. wh<'n ,. high
t ide occurs during a l>lorm, the
rain waler rolkcts until the tide
::-ubsidrs and the drains can be
TCOPClll'd
Myndersc said ''three or four"
cars parked in th(' Peninsula
~treet ends had water !)Ver their
floorboards Sunday morning but
.he sa id no area homeowners re-
ported any Hooding.
Accordinf,! to Myndcrse, the
car flooding was the only prob·
Jem reported Sunday. He said
there appeorcd to have been no
further erosion or the roadway
on San Miguel Drive.
Portions of that road have
been blocked off for repairs of
damage that occurred during
• January's storms.
Theater Party Set
'For Field Service
The Corona del Mar chapter or
the American Field Service will
s ponsor a theater party Feb. 23
to raise funds to help bring
students lo the U.S. and send
J\merican students nbroad.
The party will preview
"Volpone" by Ben Jonson at
South Coast Repertory in Costa
Mesa. Tickets are $10 per person
and can be obtained by calling
640·U91. ·
ORANGECOMT H
DAILY PILOT
The National Weather Servire
~sued blizzard warnings for
many areas. Forecasters said
up to 20 inches or snow might
fa ll in some New Yor~ City sub-
urbs as the storm continues
through· to.night.· The one·day
record forthecity-17.5 inches -
was set Feb. 5, 1961 ; the Jan. 20
snowstorm broughtlJ. 6 inches.
Weather officials, who failed
to predict the severity of last
month's storm, had been warn·
ing of today's anow since Satur-
day and authorities tried lo lake
extra precautions. New York Ci·
ty, for example, called out 10
times the normal number or
sanitation workers lor the 4 p.m.
to midnight shift on Sunday, but
officials said snow r e moval
would still be difficult because
equipment is in bad shape.
Mos t or New York's Jarge
public hospitals were reported
functioning normally. but am-
bulances were having difficulty
gettin.g through snowy city
streets. Joseph T. Lynaugh, act·
ing director of the He~lth and
Hospitals Corp., as ked all
employees to report to work ear-
ly at the 17 municipal hospitals.
Road conditions were ex-
tremely hazardous. T he speed
limit on the New Jersey T urnpike was cut to 35 mph
early Monday; at midday, it was
cut still further, to 30 mph, on the
northern part of the highway.
Motorcycles and utility, boat and
house trailers·were banned.
·S t a te D e partment of
Transportation crews, trying to
salt the streets in Philadelphia,
which had six inches of snow by
noon, were forced to halt at 10
a.m. because they could not get
around cars and other vehicles
s tuck in the snow.
Gordon Tait, a meteorologist
with the National Weather
Service in Philadelphia, said
there were differences between
Monday's storm and tbe one
J an. 20. ·
"The last one was a wet.
heavy snow," he said. ''It was
ha rd to move around. Thia is
colder and dryer."
In Connecticut, the snow
began about 3 a.m. and more
than 4 inches had accumulated
in parts of the stale by mid·
morning. Part of the Connec-
ticut Turnpike was closed
because or a three-car accident
and travel on other roads was
restricted.
Forecasters tn Massachusetts.
where eight to 16 inches of snow
is ex peeled, warned that tides
will be two to four feet above
norm al Monday night and said
low-lying areas faced the threat
of floods Monday night and
Tuesday morning.
In Rhode Island, t~blem
was complic•ted by a
threatened strike or state
employees, including some snow
removal crews. Negotiators tor
the workers scheduled a meet·
ing tonight to decide whether to
call a walkout.
Trash Blaze
In NB Blamed
On Cigarette
A cigarette smolderin1 In a
trash container was blamed t.odaY
bf Newpo,t Beach fire 1n·.
vesUgators for to~hinl off a
blaze that caused an eatJmated
$10,000 in damage to a New~
.Cres.tboroe.
The fire broke out at 27
Seaside Road ot about 10:80 a.m. Saturday.
Fire department apoftt'rnaa
Art Morton said the fire •tarted
In the condomlnbun•a kltcbeo
while the hom e•• oecupa.att, Torry Benton and Don
Armstn.i. were out.
Moncia Wd tM~ ~ the time
flamu 1'VO ~. the nu had au\ted Ule1i hom••• around floor. There ~ no~en.
Junes NPOrt..s la ccmnec:uc. Wlli .
tlM fin, lit•"Ud.
llFaeePot~
MIAMI <AP> -Blavea ~
were Ultl&ed • the7 attelDthd \0 1mlollid 20 ta Ol.iaaUUW:.
.-. a ~ &M °'*":Giiiri ..,..
-Remdttn dtl advertising,
$1.4 billion.
-Improved mWtuy housing,
$1.2 billion.
-Incentives for doctors and
dentists to join the mlUtary
services, $932 million.
The GAO said $289 million was
saved by phastng out the Selec-
tive Service SY.stem.
Jn his testimony, Staats
acknowledged that if the
military dran were restorf!d, it
is unlikely that the higher cost
would be eliminated. N1> one can
determine that saving, he said.
Tbe Pentagon disputed the
GAO's findings, asserting that
the agency used oversimplified
accounting methods and mlsat. tributed some costs.
Dead Pilot
Of Crash
Identified
A pilot killed in a midair col-
lision of two light aircraft near
Marina del Rey Friday, which a
Garden Grove man survived, was
identified today as William B.
Lyon, 33,ofLong Beach.
Lyon was district manager of
Airnite Inc. Sou;th, a Long Beach
dis tributor for the Cessna
Aircraft Company. Airflite of-
ficials said he was in a company
plane, a Cessna Skymaster, on
routine dealer calls, when the ac·
cident happened.
The tail of his aircraft was cul in
two by a collision with a s maller
Cessna 182 piloted by Larry Lam-
boy. 44, owner of a Garden Gro·1e
burlgar alarm and security de-
vice business.
Lyon's plane plunged to the
ground, striking an unoccupied
car parked at a landing field
near Los Angeles International
Airport; the pilot was killed in-
stantly.
Lamboy managed to keep his
plane in the air long enough to
crash land on a nearby beach.
where the craft nosed over· onto
its top.
Lamboy escaped with only a
minor scalp injury.
Federal Aviation Adminlstra·
tion officials were investigating
th~ cause of the crash.
House Fire
Under Probe
In Newport
Ne wport Beach fire fn·
vestigators labeled as "very sus-
picious" a fire that gutted a
small Newport• Heights home
this momlng.
Fire. department spokesman
Art Morton said the origtn and
caus,e of the blaze at 414 San
Bernardino Ave. are under in·
vestigatlon.
The fire broke out in the small
home at about 8 a.m. Firemen,
'calle d to the scene by a
neighbor, said the fire gutted the
home before they could ex•
linguishtheOames.
Morton said the home is ap. •
parently ln escrow and was un·
•
'liptoeing With Ting
Entertainer Tiny Tim and artr ess·m odel Victo ria
J ohnson sh<ire a dance <lt Studio !H. a Manhattan disco
that has tx>come a w;Herin~ hole for celebrities.
Vandal's Parents . '
Make Reparation
ORLANDO, FJa. (AP ) -The
parents of a 14 -year·old boy
were so upset when he van·
dalized his school that they did
chores around the schoo l and
went into d('bt to make repara-
tion and restore the family's
honor, school offi cials say.
"A lot of the time, the parents
want only lo defend their child."
said one official at Wcstrid~t·
Junior High School where $4.000
damage was done during two
break-ins in September.
School board member Ethel
Kennedy commended the family
at a school board meeting, say-
ing the boy and his parents.wer"
immigrants who had moved to
Florida.
"I just wish most American
parents would respond this.
way," Mrs. Kennedy said.
School officials asked that lhc
'boy's identity and nationality
not be disclosed to spare him
problems at the school to which h<'
was tras nferred in Orange
County. ,
T he boy and a lG·ycar-ol<t
companion were c har~cd in
November with vandalizin~ the
::-chool. Offices were ransacked,
fire extinguishers discharged,
food dumped a ll over the
cafeteria and musical instru-
ments destl:oyed.
a letter recommending the boy
be exp<>lled from school. the
youth':, father was in the prin·
cipal's office offering to make
amends.
l 'Jt's a parent's responsibili-
ty," said the boy's father. "His
sin is my sin. His punishment is
my punishment."
School secretary P~ggy Smith
T«:calls the fntber's horror of his
son's deeds.
"He s aid, 'I take total
r esponsibility. My son says he's
guilty so I'm guilty,' "sbe said.
''He was very distraught. He
wns .very sincere. He said, 'I
want t o d o something -
anything -to repay the school
for what my :;on has done. I am
so ashamed.'"
The father. his wife and their
five children showed up on two
Saturdays in November to pick
up trash around the school
Humphrey's
)
Widow Takes
Senate Seat
FiVe Sue
Avco for.
Rights
By TOM BAllLEY lll•o.lly........... .
An Orange COUl\tY Superior'
Court jury is hearln1 testimony.
ln a lawsuit filed by five .fOrmer
L3guna Niguel residents who'
rlAim Avco Community
Developers interfered with their
property rights when they buiJt
homes in tho La Veta tract
tieven years ago.
The plaintiffs in an action that
seeks $12 million in damages a.re
Eugene W. Ventre or Costa
Mes a, Floyd a nd Sharon
Harlord of Yorba LiQda, Pet.e
Peterson oC Diamood Bar and,.
Chester Lautzenheiser of Apple '
Valley. l
T he act.ion is a counter suit to
a lawsujt filed again.st the five i
by Avco, tn whicb the deveJop-l
ment compa ny sought $12
million io damages. •
The Avco laws uit never \
reached the trial court and ap. •
pears to t\ave been abandoned•
after a serles or pretrlal rulings·
went against the development 1
co mpany.
f\ vco lawyer.; 3rgued in that ac·
lion that the defendants, who art
the plaintiffs in the current
lawsuit. before Judge Robert .H.1 Green, unlawfully conducted real;
estate transactions from their
homes.
Plaintiffs' altomey Herb Hafif
has described Ute allegation dur-•
ing the current trial as "pure
fantasy" and ~ccuses Avco of
filing the lawsuit as a form of
ha rr assr:nent.
Haf1f said his clients will
.testify that Avco tried to impose
building restrictions on homes in
1 the La Veta tract seven years ·
ago when the company knew full
well that no such restrictions
could be imposed in the area.
He told the jury in his opening
~latement that "Avco always
backed down when anyone pro.
tested at the way in' which his
home was being forced to con·
form lo Avco concepts."
An d he argued that Avco
sought to impose architectural ,
restrictions on homes in the La,
Veta tract. to e nsure that valua-1
tlons on nearby property were
not atred('d by designs that did'
not fit in with Avco planning. •
Hafif said 3 key witness will
be Garden Grove englneer1
Barry Uppert, who is s till trying'!
to collect a $1.1 million judgmenUI
against Avco that was awarded'
him by on Orange County'•
Superior c.ou:rt. jury nearly four! years·ago. • • .Avco's appeal against that ,
award is before the California
Supreme Court and will, Lippert,
predicts, go before the United
States Supreme Court before the'
iss ue is resolved.
It was successfully alleged for
Lippert in the trial that he was
the victim of a conspiraoy by
Avco and other defendants to ;
s lander him and his tiUe to pro.
perty in the La Veta tract.
Lippert testified in the· 191• i
trial that he bought a lwo·story:
house in Mission Viejo and then;
a ttempted to move it to a site he,.
bought. io the La Veta tract,,
Laguna Niguel. 1 "Never i'Q my years of ex.
perience ha~e I observed such
damage and meanness as was
displayed in these cases by van·
dalism," Westridge Principal J.
C. Tyson said.
But even as be was deliverinJ(
WASHINGTON (AP) -• He claimed Avco sought to~
Muriel Humphrey was swom in prevent the relocation of th@'
today as a senator, officially as· home and engaged in a series of
suming the legislative duties of public meclings, distributed in·
her late husband Hubert and accurate reports and resorted to
becoming the Sen ate's first vandalism to force him away,
woman member in five years. from the property •
occupied at the ume of the rire. notice Seek lle said damage was estimated c ·1 at $25,000.
Minnesota Gov. Rudy Perpich
named llfrs. Humphrey, 65, to
the seal after her husband died
oC cancer on Jan. 13. She will
ser ve until a special election in
November for the fin al four
years of the term, and has not
r uled out seeki n g the
Democratic nomination.
Apartment Thieves
Get $2 ,100 H aul N M Yacht Burglar ewpOrt 8ll Newport Beach police said lo-
• day a burglar helped him~elC to Hurt m Fall $1,600 worth or tools after break-
A young man app arently
despondent over a family quar.
rel ls bospltalbed today, after
leaping from a Newport Beach
apartDJent balcony. ·
ing into a 140-foot yacht this
weeJ. nd.
T he break-in on board tJ>e
Wildcatter, docked at the Li~o
Yacht Anchorage, was reported
Frlday.
· The tools, accordlne to police
report&, w.ere taken from the
yacht's engine room. Also llsted
as missing were $200 worth or
towels and bath linens.
Mrs. Humphrey took her oath
of office from Vice President
Walter F. Mondale, a long-time
friend of the Humphrey family
and a political protege or her
husband.
She beeame the first woman
sen a tor since R e publican
Margaret Chase Stnlth of Maine
· lost a re.election bid in No•
vemberlf>'12.
A Promontory Point couple,
who told poli ce they neglected lo
use their apartment's deadbolt
lock, lost guns and jewelrjl
valued at more than $2,100 to
burglars this weekend. ,
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Cbarllil
r eported the theft at 4 p.m.
Saturday. They told officer~
they were gone tor about '90
minutes and when they retumed-
they found their front door opea
and their apartment·ransacked. ·
The victim, 20, who took the
plunae from a railing at 1880 Park Newport, his residence jn
the Park Newport Apartments,
auatalned apparently serious in·
Jurte1 'Wben be landed Oil bis
head, Police 1~ct ·
He was admitted to Hoag
Memorial JlospUal With a Inc.
tared Jaw, a coacasslon an4
broken shoulder following the
lellp from the second-floor·
balcoa1 to the pavement belowf,
Oil Spills-Off Maine ,
l i
J TtiiikBr MU.hap ~eletue8 23,000 Gallom
>
Guard's ttartne Safety Otflcet
and Its Atlantic Strike Force, a
team of oil 1plll expertS on canj
24 hours a day In Elizabeth City.,
N.C .• were called for cleanup
operations, which were expected
to be complicated by wlnd •nd.t
waves kicking up in advance of}
n northeaster heading &oWardJ
Malnq. _ J
the Coast Guard in Boston.
The ship is owned by Bost.oil
Fuel TraasportaUon .loc., said
Bablitch.
~mdr. John Ekmnn ot the
Coast Guard M'arlne Safety Of.
fice In Portland s:tid an in·
veslieation will be conducted
Thursday "to dctermlno what
happened, why it haooened and
wbo wa,s at fault."
The eroundinl punctured one
p0rt tank below the water Uno,
• but the Coa!t Guard sald tho
leak lat r &lopped when tb
pressure ol water entertn1 thO
tank became equal to that ot lho
oilseepiniout.
The Coast Gu.at'd aald lba leak
appar oUy was conttned to lbO
No. 1 tank. which cont.alDed
nearly S>,000 lallon...
Pere,oand uom the Co&it
Oetlctals of the Mallle Depaft-l
1nent of E:nvlronmentel Procec-)
tlon eaid they hoped much or tho3
1pllled oil would be bloWD out to$
sea. l
Ekman aatd tho 11>ill ll'PtlNCU to bo the larceat tn Ca.seo ~l •tnce im. wl¥!n tb NofW'elians
tanker Tam1no •PWe<l 100.000 ,!
1attons of llidustr11l olli The' Tam nno epSll blacteuei lbortl1Aol lot 70 ~ _. -----+.:..--:.o1.11 •
7
Saddlebaelt
EDITION
' VOL. 71, NO. 37, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORr.JA
Nurse 'Resente d'
By TOM BARLEY Of*"' 0.llf pojf.C Steff
A nurse who tried to revive an
ailing newborn infant, allegedly
strangled by Dr. Wllliam Baxter
Waddill in the nursery at
Wes tminstcr Community
llospltal, told a jury today that
she resented being ordered by
the doctor to h:ave the nursery
last March 2.
Registered nurse, JoA11n Gr1f
fith testified in Orange County
Superior Court that s he was
leading resuscitation eff.orls on
the child when Dr. Waddill, 44.
ordered her and other hospital
~taff out of the nursery.
It~ 1s alleged that the Hunt·
ington Harbour physician used
his hands to choke the life out of
the child after the nursery staff
had left
Tb(• proi.ccution claims that
Waddill. after his failure to
abort the 1:ieven·month infant.
Sadat's K i d s See L A
resorted to strangulation and
suggested several other methods
that couJd b& used to take the
lire of the child.
Mrs. GrlUith, now in her
fourth day on the witness stand,
told defense attorney Melbd_ur
WaLson that sb~ was "disap·
pointed and angry" when Wad·
dill ordered her to leave the
baby.
She :.aid she fell and told
another nursP Bt the time that
, Bill Sehult1 l ldt I. assistant m ;inagL•r nf
J lhL' Los t\ngl•ll•s Boat Show. 1•xplains Uw
ft•atun•:-. ol ;1 ru hht•r r.itt to Ei.:~ ptian I Pn•s tdt.•nt .\nw:tr S;t<lal ·=-:-.on Gamal (\l'ft
t:e nt~r l and :--on ·111 -law llas:-.CJ n :-;ayecl
~1 a rt•11nghl t·t·ntt·r l a:-. the Sadat family
w1·nl on a t our of Los Angeles. The man
.it nJ.?hl 1:-. with lht• Stull' Department.
Thn•t• Sadat daughter~ · Lubna, Nohn
;1 nd .J 1h<1n · jo11ll'cl t hl' t·ntouragl'. which
,tl:-.o indudl'd a tour of Dbneyland.
Waddill had betrayed the ~t
invested in him as a physlclan
when he dld not allow her to con ..
ttnue efforts "that would have
given the baby a~hance. ••
Bui she denied under intense
questioning that at one point h~d
her weeping in the witness stand
that she ever regarded herself in
Watson's description or 'a self-
appointedsavior."
"Don't you tend to look o.n
yourself today as the hero of
.
March 2?'. Watson asked the
witness.
..Not really," Mrs. Griffith
said. "I was )ost doin1 the beat l
c»Uld for a baby that n~
~p."
The defense contends that 'w addtll cannot lefally be
charged wltlt murder because
there is Mt sutficient evidence
to show 'that t.be child was alive
in the time that elapsed between
its delivery and subsequent
death.
Watson argued that the cbild'S
breathing rate or rour gasps a
Minute was insufCiclent. to SUS•
taln Ille and that there has been
no proof that it had a heartbeat
or other forms of reco1UiubJe
life while being treated In the
nursery.
Throughout bis questioning, 1
Watson has referred lo the vie·
tim as "tbe product of conce~
(See WADDILL, Pu& A!)
6 Storm Deaths . . ' ..
California· Drenched Again
By The Alsoc11ted Press
A Paclfic storm has drenched
Southern California, leaving at
least six people dead as the re·
suit of traffic accidents trig-
gered by rain and mudslides.
Although forecosters predict·
ed a chance or showers through
the week from a series of Pacllic
storms lined up offshore, most of
the upcorqing wetnes' is expect·
ed to bit Northern California.
"It looks like a fairly rainy
week for most of the West, but
less down here than elsewhere,''
said forecaster Oscar Nichols of
the National Weather Service.
Pat Rowe, a weather service
spokeswoman, said the chance
of rain ln Southern California
will drop to 10 percent by
tonight.
But while it hit, it hit hard,
especially along the coast. Santa
Monica received 1.69 inches ot
r ain, and Catalina Island, where
.. ,
COAST AREA RAIN
EXCEEDS INCH--A3 .
STORM SLAMS NORTH:
MORE ON THE WAY-AS
the drought has still been of·
ficlally in effect, got 2.0S inches.
By today, Los Angeles had re·
ceived an inch of rain since the
storm began Saturday mornin1r.
That brought the season total to
15.74 inches, more than l lh inch-
es over the normal rathfall for
an entire year and double the
7 .21 Inches recorded a year a~o.
The California Highway
Patrol reported generally
norm al traffic now through the
morning rush hour, except for
transition ramp between the
northboWld San Diego and the
westbound Santa Monita
·frt,ways, wttlch was blocked i.y
an overturned truck for two
hours, a spokesman said.
The most serious of the
weather-related traffic acct•
(See MIN, Pap Ai)
Fund Minue, Otargetl $2 Milliori
·Columbia Pictures Chemiclil
President Res~· Fire Out
,_,;· · • ' t,. By AllTllUll Jt. VINSEL
NEW YORK <AP> -David oi•OaAr,..._...,. -
Trustees Take Advice
SVUSD Educators Ask /or· Tnai, Advocate
Saddlebark Valley t :nified
chool D1!>trict trustees allowed
he tables Lo be turned Friduy
nd accepted definite but
diplomatic criticism from their
principals und key ad ·
tninistralors.
The trustees, who normally sit
~n j u d gm c n t of t he i r ad
piin i:.trators' efforts. sat and
listened for five hours as the ad·
minlstrators repeatedly asked
for more trust, invol vement and
~om m unic:.ition.
"I think lhc administrators in
this di:strict desperately nt!ed an
advocate,'' said Barry El·
lerbroek. principal at La Pa:& In-
terme<liatc School and president
9f the Saddleback Valley Ad·
minist.rators Association.
••Although we are well paid,
everything we have at this point
is the result of someone's im·
position on us, .. he said.
. He and others continually not·
ed lbat although they are pro-
fesa lonals hired to administer
their schools and departments.
their recommendations often
either are not solicited or are
overturned by trustees who are
lay people.
"The word we've got right
1'\0W. up and down the ranks, is
that we've got superintendents."
said Jtm Mitchell, administrator of personnel services.
lie a nd olher top ad·
ministrators asked trustees to
slick with making policies and
allow them to adminizter the
ctistrict.
Ell('rbroek complained thal
a dministrators were never
asked what they thought about
merit pay. health and welfare
benefits. new administrative
positions. ~peciol assif{nments
or policies before decisions were
made by trustees.
Several. principals objected
that now, because of a rcccnlor·
der from trustees, they can no
longer hire people they reed im·
mediately until arter approval is
given by trustees.
"l wish you would trust that
we're going to do the job," said
The Slasher \ .
Had Guts
Jrvine pj>lice say the
vandal who slas hed the
'tires of (wo cars this
weekend added insult to
injury.
The Vehicles were patrol
cars. parked jn the police
lo~.
I lerm an Schmidt. principal at
El Toro High School.
"If we had that trust up and
down the whole li~e'd have
l he greatest sc .district
a nywhere," sa ·~ail ey
Daughtery, J:>rincipal at
Sil v~r ado Continuation Hi ch
School. ''Without that, we'll just
be IT\ediocrity."
After other adminiatrators
a lso asked for more trust.
Trustee Wllllarp Kohler com·
mented, •Trust bas been bitting
home very ertectively. •• ·
Elementary S"Cbool principals
(See SVUSD. t-age AZ)
Trostees Eye
School Site
UasingPlan
Capistrano Unlfted Scb'ool Dis·
trict. trustees w\11 be asked
tonight to approve .a $27.2
million lease-purchase agree-
ment tor the June 6 ballot. re-.
quiring malority votel' approval
for a 36-cent tax increase for
ne'it' schOOI construction.
Tonight's school board meet·
ing wlll beltln at 7:30 p.m. at dis·
ttict offic~s. 32972 C~lle Perfecto
In San JullD Cllpistrano. , Capistrano Unitled voters Wlll
decide a $49.3 mUlion ~d eUc·
tlon and a $15 h1illio'n school ap-
portionment election Much 1.
Both measures req~lte hyo·
thirds majority .aet,>roval. ff the bond and aps>0rtionment • meuures pus. tbescboold{strl(t would cancel the ptopoSed lease-
purchase election in June, aaJ~
Supt. J~romeThornaley. .
.. What we' ~ng tile bOUd
tor ...... ~•JQ a 'Pltce·
holder on tile~· bal~ in cue tbebonllh~I•~ 'heuid.
Be&elman. under fire !or alleged FJame!J fed by cbemicaJs that
mishandling or corporate funds, could have generated ~~al
has resigned as pr~ident of the fumes did an estimated $2
moUon picture and televlsion million in damage to a
division of Columbia J>ictures Westminster rad.lo-electronics
lndustries, Inc .• the chairman of plant Stmday.
the board of directors confirmed The blaie at Silicon General,
today. Inc.; 7382 Bolsa Ave., was bat·
Jn a state ment, board Uedformorelbanoqehourbya
chairman Leo Jaffe said task force ot 45 firemen and 15
Begelman's resignation was pieces of eqnJpment. Seventeen
"'effective immediately," he menrequiredhospitaltreatment
said. · afterward.
The ptoduction chief resigned Westminster MatJ, & sbop-
••with the view that we must re-ping complex with more than 100
su me a more normal at· stores, is less .than 400 yards
mosphere for Columbia," Jaffe from the site of the blue. It was
said. largely deserted when the first
Begelman 's resignationwas alarm came in at 7:48 a.m.
was ••effedive immediately," he Hydrochloric. sulfuric and
said. nitric acids used In manufactur.
Jaffe said the ·board had been ing at Silicon General created
satisfied. that its independent in· · potentially letMI fumes as the
vestigation of the allegalions plant burned, firemen said.
was "prompt and thorough." Noneotthe17strickenfiremen
Begelman had be$\ reinstated required hospitalization but the
to his post in December '"With A,.w..._. extremepotencyo(the chemical
full cobfidence of management OUtTS UNDER FIRE fume' made dangerous absorp-
.and the board," he said. ColumbfA'a Begelm•n lion through the skin a
On ABC·TV'S .. Good Morning possibility.
America" today, 'Rona Barrett The firemen all wore oxygen
reported that an "emotionally Columbia said that be bad over· back packdevices.
dralned'' Begelman had told her come the' emotional problems Investigators said proximity
of the resignation Sunday night that caused the financl&l ir· of the devastated plant to in New York City. regularft.les. Westminster. Mall also .created
Begelman, 56, removed Miss Barrett said Begelman the possibility that the ackf·
himself froro his post last Oc-would become an ind~t laced smoke might be suc;ked in·
tober, admitting lo financial producer associated with Colum· to tts vast air conditio~ing
misdeeds after a Columbia in· system. vesUgation disclosed that bia. Jnvestigators said onl1 a few
between January 1975 and May She quoted him as saying the employees were inside the mall
1977 be obtained $61,008 Jn cor· decision stemmed from "an in· adjacent to the San Diel(o
porate funds t~ougb improper ability to stand by and watch in· Freeway when the fire erupted
means for his personal benefit. nocent men and women be tom and as it turned outy they were
But Begelman was restored to apart by headline-grabbing ac· not alfected. his job two months later, when cusatioos." Despite heavy rains at tbe
time, it still took the flrefigbt.lng
Another Blizzard
force more than one hour lo
even control the inferno.
Coast
We athe r
Variable cloudiness with
a diance of liaht showers
through Tuesday. Sllgl\Uy
warmer days. Highs 63 to
68. Lows In Jow SO:s.
Tiptoeing Wiih Ting
Enll!rla11H·r T in~ Ttm ~ntl actress-model Victoria
. Johnson ~hare· :1 d:1m'l' :1t Studio 54. a Manhattan disco
l hat ha:-. h<·conw .. ".tll'rtng hole for celebr ities.
Light Wimh Jam
Manzani·llO .Fleet
Ry 1\Ll\lON l.OCKABEY
, Dally Pllol -•"•Writer
Light ~in els off lhe Baja
C .d1fornia to.isl Sunday night
• ind th1.., morn111i.: .1:imml'<I th('
HI ho.it :\-tunzan1ll1) Yntht }{ace
lli-l·t into a 60·milc radius with
:-.t'\ C'l'lll of thl• clas~ B and C
'a di ts movin,:: ahl•:td of t he
t'l:1ss A favorites. <See earlier
.-.I 11r). Page A 11 ).
lll'porting a position 01 l9.05
dt·~r l'c·s latitude, the 40·foot
sloop Vl'ndi!tta, a cluss B entry,
\\ ;1., in the boat-for -boat lead
:1 ht· ad of :.uch class A speedsters
''" Dra fter, Merlin and Chru~linc
Drifter was the class A leader.
followed by Merlin. two miles
,1-.l<'rn. then Frtewheclcr and
Christ me.
Three C£o'-37 l>loops an class C
\\ere involved in a <'lose duel for
holh l'lapsed liml' und handicap
honorb.
Thl' handicap leader was the
CF-37 Jl'fforson Steamship. skip-
pered b) Dick Acker of the
Palos Verdes Yacht Club. Second
ovcrnll wa~ Vendetaa , skippered
l1y .r av1<'r V<'lasquc7.of Acapulco.
Sailing dead even were two
CF.J7s, Cottontail. John Arens,
Halbon Yacht Club, and Vector.
Hcrh Johnson. San DicJ!o Yacht
Fro•PageAJ
WADDILL. •
t ion," ''this thing .. and "this
creature."
By contrast prosecutor Robert
Chatterton refered to the victim
:1s "the baby,•• or "the infant'
a nd argues that there has been
a bundant evidence that the child
lived after it survived a saline ;ilJortion administered to the
unwed. l8·year-old mother.
Nepal Aid Seen
K/\TMANDU, Nepal CAP) -
Chinese Deputy Prime Minister
Teng Hsiao-ping today wound up
his second foreign visit In two
weeks with pro~ses of aid to
t his Him a l ay king dom
'!<andwichcd bctwe n China and
:India. ,
ORANQI COMT
Club. Vector 'was third overall
and Cottontail fourth.
The lead boats were about 60
miles north of Cedros Island.
J ud~ing from weather reports,
the class A yachts apparently
s;.i ilt'd into a light air pocket
while the class B and C entries
were br~n¥ing up wind from
astern. S~ngest wind reported
was about five knots out of the
north.
Fro.Page Al
SVUSI) •••
obviJusJy were still smarting
after only recently being told
that they may not be involved in
their school"s s ummer programs
this year for the first time.
Noting that this decision will
affect their paychecks and thelr
job responsibilities, they asked
to be allowed some "input" on
iss ues which affect them pers~nally and professionally.
"It's being involved In the
process that is the most Important
thing, '1 said Ruby Edman, prin·
cipal at Esperanza School. ·she
said principals know the final de•
cision won't always be what they
want.
The prlnciJ?als also not4!d that.
although they are expected to
explatn trustees' decisions to
teachers and parents, they often
are not informed why decisions
are made. .
Encouraging more open com-
munica.tJons, Dr. Pat McDaniel,
principal at Rancb'o Canada
Elementary School, said, "You
cannot operate in ignorance."
Trustees invited the criticisms
as they asked each of five
groups of adminlatrators what
they t hought about
·'participative management ..
and what changes they believe
are needed in the district.
'They scheduled a similar
meeting with their remaining
managemen~ employees for 4
p.m. WednesdaY, Feb. 24..
I
Billy Buys
Plains Paner
PO~TLAND. Maine (AP) -A
coastal tanker struck a sub-
m erged ledge in Portland
harbor early today, apllling
about 23,000 of its 500,000 gaJlons or home beating oil before the
leak was stopped.
The s hip was later refioated,
but withln hours some oil bad
washed onto-lee-encrusted rocks
and beaches at South Portland
about a mlle and a half away,
the Coast Guard reported.
The 223-foot Harold Reinauer,
with a seven-member crew, was
shuttling lleht No. 2 oil from the
Kine Resources tank farm on
Long Island to the Texaco pier
In Casco Bay in South Portland
about 1 a.m. when it ran
aground In 1;; feet of water on
Diamond Island Ledge, said
John Bablitch, a spokesman for
the Coast Guard in Boston.
The ship ls owned by Boston
Fuel Transportatio~ Inc., said
Bablitch.
Cmdr. John Ekman or the
Coast Guard Marine Safety Qf.
lice in Portland said an in-·
vestigalion will be conducted
Thursday ·"to determine what
happened. why it happened and
F,....P.,,eAJ
SNOW •••
Two !ow pressure systems -
one off the Carolina coast, the
other in the Appalachians -
wer e blamed tor the s now.
Unlike the January storm, the
• current round of &now was pre·
dicted and authorities took ad-
vance precautions.
The New York City Sanitation
Department put 1,250 men on the
streets -10 times the number
normaJJy on duty each day -
but a spokesman said the new
storm WOJJ.!d "be a rough one to
fight" bccaofic equipment is in
bad s hape.
Here Is a rundown of the situa-
tion in some areas: •••
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA:
Two inches of snow fell over-
night and another 2 inches was
expected during the day.
*** MA RYLAND·DELAWARE:
The storm was less severe than
or ieinally expected. By mid·
morning, only the central por.
llon of the Delmarva peninsUla
and northeastern Maryland re-
mained under heavy anow warn-
ings. The Maryland forecast
called for four to eight inches
and police said 2 inches had
fallen by ~arly morning.
***
PENNSYtVANIA: Three
Inches of snow had fallen in
P hiladelphia by 8 a.m.;
Philadelphia Intern ational
Airport was closed while crews ·
worke d to clear runways .
Predictions of accumulations
ranged from 6 inches to more
than a foot and forecasters
warned of near-blizzard concli· tions. •••
NEW JERSEY: Th~ to four
inches of snow had fallen by tbe
start of the morning rusu hour
and I rom 10 to 12 inches wu pre-
dicted. Foreceatera warned the
storm was a "classic
Nor'eastu .. with bllnard·like
condltioos, Winds or up to .co
milea an hour made drlvlng
hazardoUI and tbe speed limit on
the New Jersey Turnpike was
cut to 35 mph,; police sald many
roads .Probably would be im·
pa.,uble by afternoon.
***
DAILY PILOT PLAINS. Oa. fAe> -BJfl1 . Carter, brother of uti& prealdtnt.
has bougllt a partnership in a
weekly newspaper, the P~ains
Statesn;ian1 . ~d the •ir-,.,..
NEW YORK: By -10 a.m ••
betwe6Q 3 and 6 Inches of snow
had fallen in the New York
metropolitan area. MaJot roadw~ were under snow and
jce, wlth ausUnc winds creating
drifts. The city declared • limit· ed snow emergency, lhnlting
travel on key streets to cars with
now tl(es ot chains. A no.,
mner1ency wu deelaNd for all
parkwa)'a tn Nuaau and Suffo1k
countlts on Long Island, lhniting
travel to onJ:v neceHary
vehicles.
·was rel'lOC"CleCI on a brown,paper.
bag, according SO the latdt 'edl·
lion of the newspaper.
Joshua Forest, editor ol th3
year-old small newspaper, said
be asked Carter to become a J)artn4:~in January, after Carter
had send mote tbu a tbo..nd
1'1Sues at his aervtce at.atlQb -many of which tbe prealde.r.'• brother bad autograpbtd.
"'I'll give you • tpr Ult OI your n•WIJ)aper. • Carter
replled, accotdlar •to th• newt paper.
• ••
who was at fault.''
The grounding punctured ane
port tank belo.w th!' water line.
but \he Coast Guard said tbe le ak later stopped when the
pressure of wa~r tnterJn1 l~
t ank became eqtlal to \hat of the
oil seeptnrout. • •
The Coast Guard said the leak
apparently was confined to the
No. 1 tank, which contained
nearly 60,000 1tllons.
Personnel from the Coast
Guard's Marine Safety Office
and its Atlantic Strike Force, a )
team of oil spill experts on call
24 hours a day in Elizabeth City,
N.C., were called for cleanup
operations, which were expected
to be complicated by wind and
·wav~ klcldng up In advance or
a northeaster beading toward Maine.
Orficials of the Maine Depart.
ment ot Environmental Protec·
tion said they hoped much of the
spilled oil would. be blown out to
sea.
Ekman said the apnt appeared
to be the lareest in Caaco Bay
since 1972, when the Norwellan
tanker Tamano spllled 100,000
eallons of industrial oll. The
Tamano spllJ blackened
shorelines for 70 miles.
Ht;mgover Nearly Killed Man ,
CO P~NllAGEN, Denmark CA P ) t\ )·oung
Dane decided to s leep o{C a hangovt."t' in a. garbage
containet--snd it nearly kilJed him.
The container was hoisted to a garbage tr uck.
As the destruclor mechanism began rotating, an at-
tendant spotted a protuding le& and stopped the
mac hine as it was about to crush the s till sleeping
man.
Sti-llngler lJrged:·
Give Up to Mayor
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Mayor Tom BradJey today invit·
ed a man claiming to be the
Hillside Strangler lo surrender
to the mayor's office.
Jn a news conference at which
aradJey declined to answer
questions, the mayor said he re-
ceived a letter from a man
claiming to be the str angler who
"wishes to surrender himself
and a friend to the mayor's of.
fice.
"He (the Jetter writer) also in·
dlcated be would forward a cer-
tain item \af\er be received as-
surance fol' his safety from the
mayor,'' Bradley satd, reading
from a prepared statement re·
leased earlier.
T he statem.ent sald Bradley
wanted to reassure the letter
writer than the two persons "wm be afforded any protection
necessary.''
The writer was advised to
matl the unidentified ltem to the
mayor's office, addressed exact-
ly ,s tbe origi.nal envelope wa.s.
The letter apparently wu
prompted by a Jan. 19 news con-
ference bf Assistant PoUce
Chief Dary Gates, who sald he
hoped th~ strangler or
stranglers would realize they ul·
tlmately wlll be cau1ht and
would voluntarily surrender.
Bradley said the mystery let·
ter was postmarked the same
day as the Gates newa con·
ference. . 4 •
Overwater Aircraft
Gates also called a news Clon·
ference for Tu~day to discus.s
the same letter .
Leave Rafts Be~d
MlAMl <AP> -At leut two airlines fiying overwater rout.es
have removed life raft& from
thell' aircraft wlth federal
perm l.sslon, a Federal A via lion
Admln.i!traUon spokeaman aald today,
The airlines include National,
owner of the Boeln1 727 that lost
power in all three engines while
ll;ying l5S miles oU the Florida
coast Jan. 27 during a flight
from Miami to Newark. The
pilot restarted the three engines
F,....Pa,,eAl
SUSPECT •••
before the victim grabbed a
wood stick of his own and began
the chase that ended a few
minutes later when Hokey wu
flushed from hldlna,
Police said they are attempt·
ing to determine if there is any
connection with the two beatings
Sunday and two, one of them
'fatal, that occurred late last
week in neighboring Fullerton.
Crtuh Victim
Identified aa
CoaatPilot
A pilot killed ln a midalt col· Jiston ot two lllbt aircraft near
Marina del Rey Fridayt which a
Garden Grove man survtved, was
ldentlfled today as William B.
Lyon, 33,ofLong Beach.
Lyon was diatrict manager or Alrrute Inc. South, a Lone Beach
distributor for the Cessna
Aircraft Company. AirfUte of-
ficials,sald be was in a company
plane, a Cesana Skymaster, on
routine dealer calls, when tbe ac-
cident happened.
The tall ol his aircraft was cut In
two by a collision with a smaller
Cessna 182 piloted by Larry Lam·
boy. 44, owner of a Garden Gro ·1e
burJrar alarm' and security de-
vice business.
Lyon's plane plunged to the.
ground, strlklnC an unoccupied
car parked at a Jandinl field
near Loe Angeles International
-Airport; the pilot was killed in· atantly.
Lamboy manaaed to k~p his
plane in tbe air Jona enouib to
crash land Oil a nearby beach,
where the craft. noaed over Clnto
lts top.
Lamboy eaca~ wttb Olll.1 a
mlnor scalp injury.
Federal AvlaUon Admlnlltra·
tJon officials were lnveat11a.Una
the cause ol the crub. . '
and made an emergency landlng
at Jacksonvme. but the 103
passengers would have had to
rely -on their life jackets had the
plane been forced to ditch ln the
Atlantic. ·
Jack Barker, FAA spokesmarl
at AUanta, said National and
BranUC have removed life rafts
r.-om 7'ns n ying over the two af-
fected overwater routes -the
Atlantic coas tal cor ridor
b e tw een Miami a nd the
Northeast and on Gulf routes
between south Florida and tlli!
West.
At least three other airlines -
EasterQ, Delta and Western -·
were given permission to re-
move the life rafts on aircraft
flying those routes, but ap·
parently have nQt done so.
"The requi rements wer e
drawn during the days of pro·
pellet craft," said Barker.
He said the reliability of Jet
aircraft is much greater.
"The idea of three engines go·
ing out is W\J'eal," he said.
]he reques ts apparently were
granted chler for economic rea-
sons. National 727s flyin g
without the rafts -which cost
$19,000 each -result in a report·
ed saving of $149,000 in ruel costs
annually.
Braniff was the first to request
a nd receive permission to re·
move tbe life rafts, Barker sajd.
National followed In June 1977,
about seven months before the
incident involving one of its Boe·
ing 727s.
All aircran continue to carry
lif e preserv ers for all
passengers and crew "and the
e mergency chutes used to
deplane during emergencie~
float a nd .can carry
passengers,,, Barker said.
H e did not know if the
emergency chutes were capable
or carrying all passengers
aboard a 727.
Further deta\ls were not im·
mediately available.
F,...PGfleAl-
RAIN •••
'dents claimed the llte ot an
Albany couple apd thelr two tiny
children Sunda)l.
In a traffic accident related to a mudslide, Interstate· 5 was
closed and businesses were
evacuated along a mountainous
stretchknownastheGrapevine .
California Highway Patrol
Sgt. Druce Dawson said the vic-
tims were in a car that was
rear-ended near Fort Tejon wbile
waiting to ~o north along the open
northboWld lanes or Interstate 5 n ea r a s tretch called· th~
Grapevine. The highway was
partially closed down Sunday
a fter a mudslide which also
caused evacuation of roadside
businesses. '"
Chiem-Liang Huang, 7, and his
s is te r, Chia-Yine, were pro·
no"nced dead on arrival at the
Kern Medical Cent er ·in
Bakersfield. Their mother, .Yen
Yen Huang, 28, died s hortly
after s he was taken to the
hospital. and their father, Jin·
Tsann Huane, 34, died early to-
day, omclals said.
The driver of the second car,
18-ye ar·old Dan Dirlam of
Reseda, also was reported ln
c riUcal condition and was
booked for invest11atton'of
manslaughter, aulborlUes said.
Witnesses reported a vehicle
was going about 90 to 100 mph
When it reached the baited traf-
fi c and rammed several
vehicles.
Envoy's Home IDt
PELHAM, N.Y. (AP) -The
home of a member of tbe Egyp.
tian mission t.o the United llla·
tlons Wlllf firebombed Sunday in
this New York City auburb,
police said. No injuries were re·
ported and damage was minor.
.. ~·February 6, 1918 s DAIL 't' PILOT
If VFO Can't Hurt, Neither.. fian Prize:
C HESTER. 111. <AP) -
Nobody could remember ju:.t
when the alien creatures in 10 to
20 flying saucers strafed Chester
and left lt 1n a nile of rubble, but
just the same towns folk ac-
cepted an award from Official
UFO, the magazine that swears
it really happened.
Abo ut 75 of Chester's 5,300
citizens turned out at City Hall
to receive the magHine's "Let·
ter of Appreciation" for their
cooperation in the investigation
<>f the village's "destruction··
Five Sue
Avco for
Rights
By TOM BARLEY
oi-. O..ly l'\1.t S~H
An Orange County Superior
Court jury is hearin~ testimony
In a lawsuit filed by fi ve former
Laguna Niguel residents who
claim Av co Co mmunity
Developers interfered with their
property rights when they built
homes In the La Veta tract
seven years ago.
The plaintiffs in nn action that
seeks $12 million in damages are
Eugene W. Ventre of Costa
M esa , Floyd and Sharon
Hartord of Yorba Linda, Pete
Peterson of Diamond .Bar and
Chesler Lautzenheiser of Apple
Valley.
The action is a counter s uit to
a laws"uit filed against the five
by Avco. in which the develop·
ment company sought $12
million in damages.
The Avco lawsuit never
reached the trial court and ap·
pears to have been abandoned
after a series of pretrial rulings
went against the d(•velopmenl
company.
Avco lawyers aq~ucd in that ac-
tion t hat the defendant:., who arc
the plaintiffs in the current
lawsuit before Judge Robert H
Green. unlawfully conducted real
estate transaction:. from their
homes.
Plaintiffs' attorney Herb Hafif
h as described the allegation dur-
ing the current trial as "pure
fantasy" and accuses Avco of
filing the lawsuit as a form of
ha rrassment.
HaCif said his clients will
.testify that Avco tried to impose
building restrictions on homes in
the La Vela tract seven years
ago when the company knew full
well that no s uch restrictions
could be imposed in the area.
lie told the jury in his opening
statement that ''Avco always
backed down when anyone pro-
tested al the way in which his
home was being forced lo con·
form to Avco concepts "
And he argued that Avco
sought to impose architectural
restrictions on homes in the La
Veta tract to ensure that valua·
lions on nearby property were
not affected by designs that did
not fit m with Avco planning.
last year
Thl' weekend crowd wal>
somewhat below Official U FO's
proJeclion. It had promised "an
1m mense crowd, num bering
20,000 to ~.000 people" lo greet
"famed war hero Ed Ferrar and
his team of UFO investigator:.."
Ferrar said he was a World
Wur II flying ace in Europe and
now is a tennis professional in
New York Aller his speech,
Ferrar collapsed, having suc-
cumbed. he :.aid, to forces from
outer space
•'I have an idea they (the
forces) didn't want any more
suid," he explained.
A helicopter also arrived for
the festivities. much lo the de-
light or the-crowd that consisted
mainly of children.
"I came to see the
helicopter." said Thomas Welge,
1 .
Police Chief Harold Howie
was on hand to receive a sealed
envelope that the magazine.
based in New York. said eon·
taincd the names of 50 people
Al'Wl...-.e
SANDY KUPPER NOW 'ONE OF THE BOYS' IN DETROIT
City's First Female Firefighter Holds Her Badge
Fiery Baptism
First Female Firefighte r
DETROIT CA P > Sandy Kupper says she will hang onto
her $14 ,700 a year job dC'sp1ll' the occasional "prank" or a fellow
f1refight<'r such as cutting off her oxygen. . . .
.M 1ss KupJ>('r. 20. wus presented badge No,. 1437. signifying
she survl\ ed the four month probationary period that followed
graduHtion from the dl'partmcnl's Fire Academy last Sep·
tcmbcr
SHE IS DETROIT'S FIRST female firefighter bul says she
docs not f<'<'I accepted by most of the m<'n in the department.
"It was a tough time that r wouldn't necessarily want to re·
peat," she said. s peaking of her probation. "But it was also
a •teachmg' experience how to be a more tolerant person. b~l
also more a~gressivc. . . • "Being the first woman at the comp.any. I went through a
mess or hazing. heard at least 5,000 bad Jokes. and had several
very uneasy times while out on fires.
"BlT I SURVIVED. I DID my job. and that's what counts.
Now it"s my tum. Anybody that hassles me is going to get
hassled rtJ!hl back."
During the probationary period at Engine Company~· Miss
Kupper says s he was given some bad times. such as having her
mask ripped off when fighting a dense s moke fire. Once
someone turned off the air ~uppfy on her backpack oxygen tank
during a house fire. . "Some guys may have thought that was funny -but 1t
scared ... me and made me angry," she said .
HER ONLY INJURY OF consequence in fi ghting about 15
house fires was a minor nail puncture in her derrlere. suffered
while crawling out a bedroom window.
Hafif said a key witness will
be Garden Grove engineer
Barry Lippert, who is still trying
to collect a $1.1 million judgment ,
against Avco that was awarded
him by an Orange County
Superior Court jury nearly four
years ago.
Avco's appeal against that
award is before the California
Supreme Court and will. Lippert
predicts, go before the United
States Supreme Court before the
issue is resolved.
"Naturally everyone wanted to see the wound." she said
''I t hought abo~l sho\\ ang 1t to them -hut changed my mind."
SC!hool Danaaged
Vandal's Parents
Make Reparation
It was successfully alleged for
Lippert in the trial that he wa~
the victim or a conspiracy by
Avco and other defendants to
slander him and his title to pro·
perty in the La Veta tract.
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP ) -The
parents of a 14-year-o ld boy
were so upset when he van-
dalized his school that they did
chores around the school and
went into dcbl to make repara-
tion and restore the family's
honor. school official~ sny.
School officials asked that the
boy's identity a nd nationality
not be disclosed lo spare him
problems at the school to which he
was trasnferred ln Orange
County.
who witnessed the attack on
Aug. 2, 1977.
"I'll give It to the mayor,"
said Howle.
.Mayor Stanley Mucieskl did
not attend but was said to have
grave doubts about the Incident.
One resident conjectured, the
mayor was probably upset that
the aliens rebuilt Chester exact·
ly as it bad been, passing by a
good opportunity for urban re-
new a l.
On the bleak day in August,
the magazine said in its January
issue. sau~ra swooped down on
the town on the banks of the Mts·
siaalppl rlvcr, about 75 miles
soutbeart or St. Louts, "and
burned it co t he around, disrupt·
Ing normal coiQmunications and
causinc mass ~n c."
However, a statue of "Popeye
the Sailor Man," erected in
honor ot EJtie Segar, the cartoon
strip's creator and a n ative son
or Chester. eitber escaped the
destruction or was restructured
in a park.
UFO's cnse is a series or ptc-..
lures in the rnagazlne purPort ,
ing to aihow the s aucer attack.
Unfortunately. those s howing
evidence of the extraterrestrial •
phenomena were blurred
No one thumbing lhrouab the!
magazine di1>trlbuted fr t<>:
townspeople could recall the in·:
cident. But, said Official UFO.:
that was because art.er the di$ ... ~
lister Chester was "mysterious·
ly, frighteningly ... somehovr
resurrected and the memory Of ;
the event was erased from alh
A key ingredient in Official but a select group of minds.'·
More Rain Ahead?.
!IJt' I :
Coast Weathermen Ponder t he Skies
Southern California's welcome
i.unny spell or the last few weeks
may be over for a while, but
weather forecasters say they're
not sure yet.
Don DePauw of the National
Weather Service said lhe
forecast is for variable cloud!·
ncss with a 10 percent chance or
showers tonight and Tuesday.
but there is a possibility of more
showers on Wednesday.
He said the rain is due to a
system or fro n ts k n own
t echnicall y as short-wave
troughs moving in from the
Oregon-Washington coast.
However, De Pauw said most of
the rain will fall on Northern
California.
Across Ora n g~ Coun ty.
rainwatchers went into action
over the weekend to tally the
rainfall.
J . Sherman Denny of Hunt-
ington Beach measured the most
weekend water, 1.34 inches, for
a ~eason total of 14.51 inches, up
Crom 8.90 inches last year.
Only slightly less. 1.33 inches.
wa9 tallied by Charles Lewis al
Orange Coast College. The
season total there was 14.70
inches. up from 6.16 inches last
year al this time.
The Oran~~e County Har bor
Patrol ut Newport Beach
measured 1.16 inches for a
l>eason total of 12. 77 inches.
more than twice last year's 6.04
inches.
The Moulton Niguel Treat-
ment Plant in Laguna Niguel re·
ported only .73 inches. bringing
the season s um to 14.90 inches.
Last year to date they had re-
Rites Slate d
For Marine
Crash ·victim
Funeral ser vices have been
set for 3 p.m. ~esday for Capt.
Ralph Thrash. 30, of Laguna
Hills who was kiUed last week
when his plane crashed during a
U.S. Marine Corps tra ining
£light.
The services will be held at
Pac ific View Chapel, 3500
Pacific View Drive, Newport
Beach.
The reser ve officer worked as
a superintendent for lhe Presley
Companies. headquartered In
Newport Beach.
He was making a low pass
over the desert at Twentynine
Palms Marine Base on Saturday
when his plane crashed and
burned. Capt. Thrash is survived by
his parents. retired Manne Lt.
Gen . and Mrs. William Gay
Thrash of Corona del Mar, and a
brother, Maj. William Gay
Thrash Jr .• 33. stationed al
Camp Pendleton.
ceived S.89 inches.
John Gietzen of the Orange
County Flood Control District
noted that 1.09 inches bad been
received in Santa Ana, for a
season total of 13.49 inches com-
par ed to 6.58 inches last year .
Santiago Peak on Saddleback
Mountain received exactly one
inch of rain, Gietzen said, bring-
ing its season total to 32 inches,
up from 14.60 inches last year.
Gietzen said exact figures
comparin2 this season so far
wllh previous seasons to date to
determine if this is a record are
not available, but that because
of the weeks of sunshine during
what is normally a rainy period.
he doubts any record has been
set.
However. Huntington Beach's
Denny pointed out that a normal
season through the end of June
is 11.32 inches for his city, and
that thls year that figure has
already been surpassed months
early.
That's All, Volks
Car Fished Out of U River
LOS ANGELES (A P) -A
Volkswagen was back on dry
land today after a brief ex·
perience as a boat.
The car, stolet\ and aban·
doned, drifted some 15 miles
down the r a in-swollen Los
Angeles River on Sunday before
being fished out, authorities
said. .
The car's voyage began after
il was reported stolen Sunday by
its owner, said officer John
Hinson.
The vehicle ran into a car in
Monterey Park, apparently
while still being driven by the
car thief. The second vehicle chased the
stolen car after the accident.
Hinson said, until the second car
ran off the road and hit a fen ce
in Alh ambra. Hinson said the
driver, an unidentified woman,
was unharmed.
T he Volkswagen next was
spotted by a person who report-
ed seeing it in the Los Angeles
riverbed near Elysian Park >Yith
its headlights on and windshield
wipers going. Hinson said.
Police and ftrefighters noticed
nobody was in the car and called
a tow truck.
"The car was stuck by debris
when wt.> go\ there," Hinson
said. "The r iver was gaining
force while we were standing
there, and a gush of water hit
the cur and sent 1t off before we
could do anything.''
The cu r was next seen in
Vernon .. Vernon police dis·
patcher Cheryl Stover said the·
car was tracked down the river
near the border between Vernon
and Be11.
A fin' truck attached a cable
to the car, which was then towed
from the r iver and impounded
by Bell police. Ms. Stover added
that a Vernon police officer Cell
into the rtvt'.r during t~e re·
covery operation.
2 Countians Jailed
OMAHA. Neb . CA P )-A
federal judge has given prison
sentences to three men. including
two from Orange County, convict·
ed or importing cocaine with an
esllmntedstr~l valueof$16.000. Senior U.S. District Court
Judge Richard Robinson Friday
sentenced Roger E. Struble, 20.
of Sergeant Bluff, Iowa; Randy
G. Hollingshead, 27. of Garden
Grove. Calif.. and Michael G.
Muckenthaler, 25, of Anaheim,
Calif.
A federal jury found the three
guilty Jan. 11.
Federal agents and Omaha
police arrested the men June ~
at Eppley Ai rfield after Holl·
ingshead and Muckenthaler ar-
ri ved on a fli ght from Los
Angeles. Evidence showed Stru-
ble met them on arrival.
About 160 grams of cocaine
was seii.ed from hand luggage.
Robinson sent enced Holl·
, ingshead and Muckenthaler to
four years in prison, followed by
s pecial three-year parole te rms.
The judge ordered Struble con·
fined indefinitely under the
federal Youth Corrections Act --
a term not to exceed six years.
3 In Family
Die in Crash:
RIVERSIDE CAP) -Three
members of a Riverside family
were killed when t heir car was
ram med by another vehicle
which ran a s top sign.
authorities say.
California Highway Patrol of-
ficers said Sunday that Edward
Prieto. 38, his wife, Elizabeth.
39, a nd their 7-year-old
daughter . Christine. were killed
in Saturday's accident at the in·
tersection of Highway 74 and
MenaCee Road near Hemet.
The Prietos' 13-year-old son.
Edward, was in "very serious•·
condition, a spokeswoman at
Riverside County Hospital said
early today.
It was successfully alleged
.that Avco violated his privacy
through "a campaign of ter ·
rorls m, economic depression
and vexation.
Lippert testified m the 1974
trial that he bought a two-story
house in Mission Viejo and then
attempted to move ll to a site he
bought In the La Veta tract.
"'A lot of the time, the parents
want only to defend their child,"
said one official at Westridge
Junior High School where S4,000
damage was done during two
break-Ins in September.
The boy and a 16-year -ol<l
compan ion were ch ar~ed in
November with vandalizing the
school. Offices were ransacked.
fire extinguishers discharged,
rood dumped all over the
cafeteria 'and' musical instru-
ments destroyed.
1-~
~--------------------------~
Laauoa Niguel. •
He claimed Avco soueht to
}>l'eHnt lhe relocation . 0£ the
.home and engaged in a series or
'public meetings, distributed in·
1'CCurate reports and resorted to
vandalism to force him away
from the property.
At ol'le pOint, Llp~rt laid his
J1oroe was described as "a
:J,ayloft" and be was accused of
·tu"'ln i the neighborhood tnto
••an instant ghetto ...
Lippert testlfie41 lhat the .~sure by Avt<>w• responalble
for a heart at~ he auffel'ed
hlle UYSni at the Lapa Ni,uel
hol'.I'•· Hanr aald be aptcts the c•· reat trial lAt lilt UlNe or tour
monthl.
School board member Ethel ·
Kennedy commended the family
at a school board meeting, say-
ing the boy and his parents wt!re
immigrants who had movf!d to
Florida.
"I just wish most American
parents would respond this
way," Mrs. Kennedy saJd.
------------------~--''' Great Lover
Dead-at 7
DUBLIN. Ireland (AP)
-Hamlet1 known to many
or hls fans as "Ireland''
greatest lover," ha! dl~d.
Hamlet. was found dead
In bl1 1tall at DubUn '• MUil BOml uttflclal In·
semtn1tlon stat.ton. He
was otil.v 7, wbtcb 1 young
for a bull. Hamlet was
recogotud as ono or
Ireland's most. prolific
sires and had thousands of
offspring scattered' around
the world;
A board otrlclal aaid
Ham let dl~d or he.-.rt.
fallurc ond odded teraoly.
"bull1 ln hls line of work
" aenerally do."
"Never in my years ol'Ax·
perfence have I observed such
damage and mea.Mess as was
displayed in these cases by van-
dalism," Westridge Principal J.
C. Tyson sald.
But evecuur he was delivering
a letter recommending the boy
be expelled from school, the
youth's father was in the prin·
clpal'a office offerlnc to make
amends.
''It's a parent'• responsibill·
ty," said ti'\~ boy's father. "His ·
sfn Is my sin. His punl8hment is
my purtlshment."
Sebool aecretary Pein Smith
recall• ~ father's horror of bis
son'• deeds.
••He said, •1 take total
resPbnstbUity. My ton uys ~·s
auUty ao I'm jUlltyt' "abe said. .. H• wa1 v rt distraught. He
WH very sincere. He aaid, 'l
want to do aometblng -
anythlnfl -to repay the 1choQl
for what my son. l\att done. I am so ashamed!"
Tb• tat.her, Ml Wite •nil t"*
five cbJJctr.n 11hoWed YP on two
S turdaya ln November to pick
up truh around the .c:hool.
ln ordir to pay the Sl ,:IOO fin
levltd aMlnst h\1 son, the l•tl'lr
borrowed from a frlend. A
juv nUe Justice orDC!lll slid the
court recelved payment within
twodar1.
buti:Dn down ginghams
colorful gingha_m checlcs
of f'!JNY,Te.d,or brown.
offer-id in short orl?J19 sluw.s.~ right for
sp:n:t or dress.
madtz, for us by
r -:Qfdtm """'~ --
..
JI:, D~LY PILOT
tlast •
.::.'~~,. ...... .
'f:·. Tom ~bine
··~:· ...
BLACK GOLD DEPT. -It
was just over a year ago that the
great race to Clnd oil beneath the
!>ea began off our shoreline. The
location was a place known as
Tanner Banks, roughly 85 miles
oU our beaches and 40 miles
from San Clemente Island.
The results of that hunt re-
main cloudc:d in corpora t e
mystery today.
All of thb was the result of
fe deral leases granted to oil
companies in February of 1975
for consideration of nearly $175
million.
Now when oil companies drop
that kind of Long Green, you can
figure they fi gure there':, a pret-
ty good chance that sizeable de-
posits of black gold lurk out
there beneath the ocean bottom
which, at Tanner Banks. is un-
der some 700 feet of water.
STILL, TIL\T'S A Jot of jack
to put on the line for one roll of
the dice. The search for un-
dersea oil is still a gamble.
Four companies. Shell. Gulf.
Texaco and Exxon. were the
main competitors in the hunt.
Each had bought a piece of the
action in the 1975 federal sale.
Gulf was one of the first into
the race, steaming out of Port
Hueneme in November of 1976
with a $40 milhon self-propelled
fl oating platform named the
Aleutian Key. The othe rs got in-
to it about the ~ame lime. The
hunt was on.
SLOWLY THE:-1, throughout
last year. reports mtercd back
from Tanner Hanks that the
companies had punched down
their exploratory wells and then
pulled out
Gulf. for example, reported it
was still drilling on Jan. 16. On
Jan. 18, company spokesmen
said the well had "bottomed
out .. at 9,000 feet. Did they find
oil?
"I can't answer that ques-
tion ... a company s pokesman
said at that time.
Later reports suggested that
all four companies were pulling
out of Tanner Banks.
THE CLEAR implication here
is that the oil people failed in
t heir ques t for o ffshore
petroleum. They rolled the dice
and came up snake eyes. They
hit dry holes. They lost.
Don 'l be too s ure.
You have to rememt>er that
the companies were drilling ex-
ploratory wells. They don't use
these holes for production even 1r they do strike oil. The ex-
ploratory hole is capped and
they come back later and punch
down another well for produc-
t ion purposes.
Then only this weekend, a new
report by the U .S Geological
Survey was released out of San
Diego indicating that a major oil
fi e ld has been discovered at
Tanner·Cortez bank. This is in
the unleased section. The
federal people estimate this new
oil pool could produce 235
million barrels of oil.
AND SPEAKING of the
pullout of the aforementioned
four oil companies, U .S.
Geological Survey spokesperson
Joan Werner said, "Our as-
s umptions that they found
nothing are probably wrong."
To date, the companies bave
remained mum, as they have
every right to. Oil companies
have been known to play cat and
mouse with each other. Yon drill
and pull out, making it look like
you missed when actually You
s truck it rich.
The CIA should take some
lessons from our oil people.
NATION I WORLD' ... .
Czech HijackS Jet
Fake Bomb A.ids Bid for .Asylum
NicaragUans Protest
Women a nd children s taged a de monstration in El
Paraiso. Nicaragua. to call for an end to President
Anastasio Somoza's dictatorship. ~leanwhile. voters in
much of the country boycotted municipal elections today
in a n anti-Somoza effort. The protest follows nearly a
month of demonstrations and a gener<al strike.
U.S. Builds Force
In Ethiopia Battle
NAIROBI, Kenya <AP) -Both Ethiopia and Somalia reported
new fighting in eastern Ethiopia while Somalia made a new appeal
for Western arms.
The United Slates brought its naval force oft the Horn of Africa
back lo full strength because of the general tension in the area, U.S.
Secretary of Defense Thomas
Ross re ported today fro m
WashingtOn.
Ross said a destroyer of the
U.S. 6th Fleet normally assigned
to the Red Sea area was sent to
the waters off Ethiopia to join a
U.S. d estroyer a nd tender
a lready thert>. Usually three
vessels are kt>pt In the Horn of
"frica area but one destroyer
Defense Department official re·
ported that a destroyer of the
ll .S. 61 h Fleet was rushed out of
drydock in Naples and sent to
join thre~ American warships
already in the Red Sea off
Ethiopia
FRANKFURT, West Germany
<AP> -An unarmed , 24-year-
old Czechoslovak man, seeking
political refuge in the West, used
a fake bomb today to hijack a
Czechoslovak jetliner with 46
people aboard to Franklurt.
police said.
Frankfurt pollce spokesman
Hans Neitzel told a news con-
ference the hijacker, ldenUlied
os Vladislav Molnar, surren·
dered meekly to German
authorities after the twin jet,
Soviet·built. Tupolev 134 landed
here. It was unknown whether
his request for asylum would be,.
granted.
NErtZEL SAID the ~acker
slipped a note to the pita\ soon
nfter,..the Prague-bound flight of
Czechoslovakia 's state-owned
CSA airline took off from East
Berlin's Schoenefeld airport. It
warned that Molnar had a bomb
in his briefcase and would det-
onate it unless the eilot new to
Frankrurt, Neitzel said.
In Frankfwt, Molnar handed
police a briefcase with two pro·
truding wires connected lo a
switch fixed lo the handle. "A
careful examination ... showed
it was a dummy," Neitzel said.
ll was the seventh hijacking or
a Czechoslovak airliner to West
Germany since 1970.
THE BONN government has
refused to return air pirates to
the Soviet bloc n~tion In the
past, but so me of the
Czechoslovak hijackers hav<>
been convicted a nd ser ved
terms in German prisons.
Less than four months ago, on
October 11, a 29-year-old
Czechoslovak man and a 22-
year-old woman companion hi-
jacked a twin jet Yak·40 carry-
ing 24 ottler passengers and a
crew of five to Frankfurt.
Brandishing pistols smuggled
past security guards, they took
over the plane shortly after It
took off from the Czechoslovak
resort of Karlovv Vary, former-
ly Carlsbad, on a scheduled
flight to Prague '
THE TWO HIJACKERS are
still awaiting trial i n a
Frankfurt prison on charges of
.inte rfer ing with air traffic.
.which carries a maximum
'No Way Oat'
penalty of five years in prison. •
. In a previous case. Rado~
Becvar, 26, was sentenced tGi
eighl years imprisonment by
Munich court for eommandetr-:
Ing a Soviet-built Jlyuahin •
with 110 passeniers and crew to
'.Munich in October, 1976.
Chilly T_rio Saved
Fr.om Oahu Ridge
HONOLULU <AP) -The hike began in the heat of day, an ex-
cursion to see the fruit trees on the lush windward c;lde of the is1anl
of Oahu. .....
It ended with actress Kathleen Nolan, former Federal Com·
municatlons Commission commissioner Nicholas Johnson and a
14-year-old boy s hlve r i ng
through the night on a narrow
mountain ridge.
The three were rescued in
good condition Sunday after fire
department searchers spotted
their smoke signal.
"WE GOT UP TO A ridge with
a 100-foot drop on each side,"
said Johnson, 43. "There was no
way out without rolling down the
mountain." ,,
"lt seemed ver y clear we
wer e going to spend the night."
said Miss Nolan, president of the
Screen Actors GuHd. She was
"Kate" in the former television
series "The Real McCoys'' and
has r ecently appeared an
television movies and series.
They had started out into the
W a ikane Valley Saturday.
dressed in s horts a nd short-
sleeved shirts. They were guided
by Donny Callaway, the son of
John Callaway. at whose home
Johnson and Miss Nolan are stay-
ing.
THE BOY THOUGHT they
could hike up a mountain and
down the other side. Johnson
said. They hiked about four
miles to the top of the mountain
then walked about a mile along
the ridge, which ranges from
one to two feet in width.
The trail petered out into a
pile of rocks.
"It. was washed out," Johnson
said. "We could 10 back the way
we came, but we dldn 't have
enought daylight left."
TH EV BUILT A fire fot'
warmth and as a aignal and
wrapped their arms under their
shirts. It was too cold to 1et
much sleep, Miss Nolan aaid.
A search heUcopt~r pused
over twice, at midnight and at 6
a m. before spotting them.
was in drydock In Naples.
Meanwhile, the Somali gov
ernment radio said the rebel
forces Somalia s upports m
Ethiopia's Ogaden desert region
Inflicted "heavy losses" on the
Ethiopian garrison at Negele, in
the southern region of Sida mo
H Y.OlJr • . • • '
savings 1n.sti~ut\on
sees you like this,
Th e br oadcas t fr om
'Mogadishu, the Somali capital.
said two Ethiopian military
camps were destroyed and lar~e
quantities of arms and ammuni·
tion were captured. '
1\1 EANWHILE, THE Ethio·
pian news agency reported that
70 Somali army troops we re
killed and 150 captured in a
''search and destroy" operation
in the Karage region east of Ad·
dis Ababa.
British diplomatic source!';
said the Somali Foreign
ministry made its new pitc h for
arms aid at a meeting an
Mogadishu Saturday with the
a mbassadors of the United
States, Britain. West Germany,
France and Italy. The British
said the Somalis did not make a
direct req'uest for arms, but the
"trend of the conversation"
made clear that's what they
wanted.
Led by the Unlted Slates, the
Western allies have refused to
supply Somalia despite the huge
amount of arms and planes the
Sovlet Union bas been pouring
into Ethiopia and U.S. in.
telligence reports that 4,500 So·
viet and Cuban personnel are aid-
ing the Ethiopians.
THERE HAVE BEEN re-
ports, however , that Iran and
Saudi Arabia are sending the
Somalis some or the American
arms they are buying in vast
quantilies.
Although Washington gave no
lndicaUM of reverain~ its re·
fusal to arm the Somalis, a
come see us.
At First Federal Savings, we'll
never treat you like a number.
Never.
We know the importance of personalized
service. And we make sure all of our
depositors receive it. Every time they
come in.
That's why we have some "very
special people" who check all out offices
every month for "a smile at every
window." These people, whose identities
remain a secret, perform actual
, transactions to evaluate teller
performance. Later, extra .. courteous
employees receive cash awards for a job
well done.
With these 0 courtesy
check .. ups" we're taking extra
efforts to try and give you the
best service in town. If that's
what you're looking for, stop
by and see us today.
\
•
· Modem,.day 'Bip,~r' ·
Blamed in. 7 Deaths
(
r
.. . .
•' 1
A 1• DAILY PILOT s
2 Monday's • NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
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STOCKS I BUSINESS
Tcu Ti111e
: Medical Help
Rule Clarified
By SYLVIA POJlTD ,dll .... ~
If a physician says it is medically lmpeuUvo (Of' you
to lnstaU an Improvement In your house -suck as a pool,
air condiUortJng or an elevator -Treasury ttau.laUons al--
low you ~o treat the cost ol the improvement, loaa tbo ln·.
crease ln the value or the house, as a medlul expense.
A 1m Ta.x Court case bas estabUahed that this kind of
medical expense need not be limited to the cheapest
amount needed &o achieve what the pbya1c1an recom·
mended.
ADOPTIVE PARENTS WHO.,_, the birth exptn1e1 ol
the mother whose baby they adopt were hit with an c.m.
favorable Tax Cou.rt decision last year. To the extent that
they pay for medical services for &be infant, lhe payments
may qualify as medical expense dedueUons even if tbey-
were performed before adoption.
But the hospital and medical expenses paid in co~
Uon wUh lhe mothers gtvtng birth are. as a general rule.
not deductible as medical expenses.
Only if the "services rendered to the mother were so
proximately or directly
related to the health of
the child as to con·
slltute medical care for
the child" will birth
costs adoptive parents
pay qualify as medical
expenses. And for this
Money's
Worth
purpose, it is not enough "to show only that the health ol
the unborn child was promoted generally by such
services.••
The IRS may allow medical expense deductions for
payments to certain "halfway houses." su.ggests an IRS
private letter ruling In l!n7. The ruling involved a child
who was discharged as o full·time patient from a mental
hospital but who continued to receive day treatment while
living at a halfway house.
THE GOAL WAS TO provide transitional care and
help while the child adjusted from life in a mental hospital
to life in a community. Admission to the halfway house re-
quires recommendation by a psychiatrist and continued
psychiatric supervision during the stay. The halfway house
staff includes a psychJalrist and mental health counselor.
The IRS ruled thM the parents' payments t.o maintain
the child at the halrway house, including room and board,
are deductible medical expenses .
Two cautions: (1) IRS private letter rulings generally
cannot be cited as precedents for any other taxpayer. But
they indicate wbat othen; might expect ln a similar 3ltua-
tion. (2) Don't expect this treatment unless the halfway
house situation includes similar medical elements -such
as a required medical recommendation for admission by a
physician. a good medical reason for beine In the halfway
house, and required medical care whlle in tbe halfway
house.
Next: ~ deductiom
Earl E. lleddtng, Fountain Valley. has been appointed as
assistant vice president of Coldwell Ballker Managemeet
Corp. ·
He has been cont.roller of the development manage·
menl services division since joining the firm in 1973.
* Kea P. Esteves has joined ~&omwene Carpeta, Inc.,
Fountain Valley, as marketing represent.alive for the Los
Angeles area. He previously was with Cabin Cra!t.s as ter·
ritor y manager. • RoUo D. West, Huntington Beach, has been honored
for "tt>mpleting 30 years of service with General Telephone
Co. or CalHomla.
He is planning director and is based in the utility's
Santa Monica headquarters. He joined General in 1948 as an engineering draftsman and has held various poajtlons,
including division manager and service direct.or.
In June of this year West will receive a bachelor of
arts degree in public service from the University of
Redlands.
* Bob Kelley has been named general manager or the
Victoria Stat.Jon rest.auraDl in Westmins~r.
He bas held managerial positions at the chain•s
restaurants in Columbus, Ohio; Birmingham, Ala.;
Southfield, Mich.; Indianapolis, Ind.. and Montreal,
Quebec. • Frances l:. Park, assistant vice president o( USLlle
Savings and Loan Association, h as been appointed
manager of its Huntington Beach of£(ce.
She joined the association in June 1.963 at the Redondo
Beach office as a disbursing clerk. She proo-essed to loan
service clerk, new accounts s upervisor a.nd· asslstant
manager before becoming manager of the Redondo Beach
office in October 1977.
* Eiward E. Schmidt., Dana Point, has been named vice
president of marketing for Valencia Bank, Fullerton.
Schmldtjolned Valencia as director o! marketing ln 1974.
He also teaches small business mana.tement at Sad·
dleback College.
General Predicts .
OC Phone Growth·
(;enenl Telephone f oreca1ters have oredlcted a 1ain
of 16,316 telephones in Orange County during 1978, a~cord· ina to Herb Gasser. manager ot the utWt1'1 Oran10
division.
The dl'fisfon serves H~tlngton Beach, Wnt.mimttt,
f'ountalt) Valley. L.,uno 8-0aeh and parts of Gardea
Grove and Stent.on.
..
WASHINGTON (AP} -Whal hath Ronald
Reagan wroueht? The American people will aet an
idea lhis week when. after months of preliminary·
skirmishing, the Senate begins debating the
Panama Canal treaty
It's an issue that has come a long way since
Reagan stumbled upon it one night in Florida dur· . mg bis campaign for the 1976 Republican prealden·
tial nomination.
. THE FORMER CAUFOllNIA GOVEl\NOR
lost the campajgn but fathered a controversy that
bas produced a torrent of rhetofic and put Panama
at the top of senatorial travel destinations.
The canal issue also has provided a classic
REAGAN
case history for stu·
dents of the enduring
troubles between Presi-
dent Carte r and
Congress.
There was Carter
sitting by the crackling
fire in the White House
library .
. · 1 want rou to hear the fact!>,· said the
president
Uc went oo to give
a sulcs pitch for the
canal treaty tbat was
laced with "facls" even
supporters of the agree-
ment found hard to ac-
cept.
Carter characterized the opposition to the two
treaties which deal with transfer of control of the
canal lo Panama and its continuing neutrality as
"based on misunderstanding and misinforma-
tion."
HE WENT ON TO SAY HE wanted to answer
"the most ~ommon questions about the treaties."
Then he glossed over the economic questions
that have moved to forefront of the debate.
Only hours before Carter's speech, the Senate
Armep Services Committee listened to testimony
questioning the admm1strat1on claim that the
treatles would cost the American taxpayers
nothing.
"Under the new treallc!> payments to Panama
will come from tolls paid by !>hips which use the
canal," said Carter
NOT SO, SAID SEN. HOWARD H. Baker Jr.
of Tennessee, the Senate Republi can leader whose
support Is essential for mustenng the two-thirds
majority needed for Senate approval.
.. I think·the claim
that il's'oot going to cost ( . . . . J the taxpayers anything is NEJr ."i f\.U,)."i/.~ !>imply wrong," said
Baker.
And fl;1kcr was a let
gentler on llu .. • issue thun such hard-line opponents
as Rep. Philip Crane. R-111., who cited among
other slatisti<'s a Civil Service Commission
estimate that turnover of the canal to Panama will
precipitatt• car1y retirement by many U.S.
employees of the waterway at a cost of about $135
million.
Crane had a lot of other examples to cite, in-
cluding the cost of relocating American troops and
of training Panamanians to operate the waterway.
BUT 1'10RE FAR REACIUNG THAN Crane's
~estions were those raised repeatedly by senators
wbo visited Panama recently and returned with
s trong doubts about Panamanian resolve to use re-
venues for maintenance and capital improve
men ts.
They also came b:1ck to Washington uncon-
vinced that the United States won't be forced one
day to provide financial help to Panama to prevent
the canal operalion from sinking close to
bankruptcy
Laguna S e niors
To See Free Film
T he Laguna Beach Council on. Aging will
sponsor the film '·Funny Lady" free for senior
citizens Feb. 17.
The film, s tarring Barbrlf Streisand and
James Caan, will be shown at South Coast Theater
beginning at 2 p.m. Free tickets are available at
the Human Affairs building, 515 Forest Ave.
The film showing Is co-sponsored by Laguna
Federal Savings and Loan Association.
W1°'en you Ofdet thrH s1me-alu enltrgemtnta
trom •ny combln1t1on of color slides, prints. or
t(odH cotor negatlvea. we'll only charge you for
1WO. You get one FREE. GOOd for 1ny alze K~•k
c:Otor enlargement• up to •nd Including 18 x 20 ·
lnehea. Ask ua for detllls Otte,.. ends March 15.
They may be wrong, their doubts mar be un-
founded. But the president chose to linore them
rather than answer them.
He used the same approach In dealina with the
questions of U.S. right to Intervene to keep the
canal open and the richt of U.S. warships to priori·
Ly p assage through t he waterway In any
emergency.
BOO'H IS8UES WER E DEALT WITH in a
statement issued in October by Carter and Gen.
Omar Torrijos, the Panamanian leader. The word·
Ing affirmed the U.S. rights in both matters.
But it's clear that Senate approval is impossi·
ble without lhat language being incorporated into
the agreement. and that is what wiU happen early
in the debate. But Carter lanored that reality and
left many senators wJth the Impression he was
adherlni to a hard line position that the treaties
should not be amended, even In a way that ls
agreeable to the Torrijos government.
THOSE OMWIONS RUFFLED FEELINGS
rather than answered questions. One other last·
minute omi:lslon prevented a different sort of nap.
Carter's original text included a reterence to
the fact that both Baker and Senate Democratic
Leader Robert C. Byrd were supporting the treaty.
It was deleted minutes before the speech when ·
Carter aides realized no one had cleared it with
the two senators.
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