HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-02-07 - Orange Coast Pilot. I
tianned Man _Collects $4,500
..
Teen Charged
...
Awarded. in OC __ 1 In Shooting of
Crash Lawsuit Huntington Cop
·DAILY PILOT
* * * 10< * * *
TUESDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 7, 1978
VOL. 71, HO. 3t. J SECTIOtlS, Jt PAOl!S
7 l'World Rerord'
! ·$128 Million
f Damages __ Set
By TOM BARLEY
OI IN o.lly Pllet SUff
Damages totaling more than
$128 rnlllion were awarded to
two Orange County families
lMonday in a Superior Court
1verdict that sets a new record
1for that type of civil lawsuit.
I The huge judgment against
the Ford Motor Company ended
1 more than three days ·of jury de-
liberations in the courtroom of
Judge Leonard Goldstein. The
i Teen Charged
I Jn -Slwotinn I .. ·~
!OfHBCop
' I A 17-year-old transient has
lbeen charged with attempted
murder after he allegedly shot a
Huntington Beach police oCficer
in the band Monday night.
, The unidentified youth was
later arrested after he was
i;truck by shotgun pellets in the
chin and both shoulders from a
1weapon fired by another police
e>fficer.
Police say the youth fs in·
l"olved in a burglary rlng in
1•hicb 13 other suspects were ar-
rested Monday nigbt. i The wounded. officer. Patrolman Jerry Fuhrman, con·
I fronted the youth in a backyard
on Camaby Street. after being
I called to investigate reported
burglaries tn that area at about
· 9 p .m., police said. l The youth allegedly fired one
labot lrom a stolen .9mm Smith
1 and Wesson pistol. The alut
rat.ruck Fuhrman's left hand.
Other police omcera cb&sed
tbe youth through several yards
and into a lumberyud on
Talbert Avenue where lbe su&·
pect was lbOt before hb arrest at 9:45 p.sn.
The yoUlh is ret>Orled in ~
condltlon at the UC Jrvme ase. ornc~, Pap AZ>
trial began lastAug~L
The principal beneficiary in
the judgment is Richard
Grimshaw, 18, of Anaheim, who
was severely burned over 90 per·
cent or his body she years ago
when a Ford Pinto in which he
was a passenger exploded and
burned. Grimshaw was awarded $125
million in punitive damages and
$2,841,000 in compensatory
damages by a jury which was
told during the trial that he has
undergone more than 50 opera·
tions in the past five years with
medical bills totaling more than
$125,000.
The jury agreed with a team
or lawyers headed by Art Hews
of Santa Ana that negligent con·
struclion of the Pinto by the
Ford Company was the primary
cause 9f the accident on May 28.
1972. ~
It was testified that a poorl.Y
designed gas tank in the Pinto
owned by Mrs. Lilllebetl Gray,
~. of Orange, was installed in
such a way that it would rupture
in almost any type otcolllslon.
Mrs. Gray died ln the burning
car sbOrtly after it was involved
in a collision on Interstate 15
near San Bernardino.
Grimshaw, then 13, was rushed
to a nearby hospital in critical
condiUon.
It was testified in the trial that burns caused the death or Mrs.
(See l'OllD, Page AZ)
EingerCut
·1nProtest
Northern
# .,.., ............. ~ COSTA MESA BANK BANDIT STRUCK HERE IN DARING RAID MONDAY
PoUce Say He Now Has Hit Four of the City's 17 Banking lnsUtution•
Tuu-Wek H"aril~ $4,500 for Unarmed Man
matched his blue windbreaker.
police said.
A bank alarm went out within
seconds after the bandit fled, ap.
pareoUy on foot, and the nearest
pol~ unit was Jess than three
blocks away. Pollce bead•
quarters is about a mile away.
His escape> was so quick that
'
police conducted a !learch or
cars in the bank's parking lot to
make sure the bandit had indeed
lert the area.
All four of the robberies have
taken place at what Det. Set.
Sam Cordeiro called .. easy ac.
cess" banks with both front and
rear exlst.s. ·
Each robbery bas occurred at
a different fmancial institution.
With the lat.est robbery, the ban.-
dlt bas robbed five o( the city's
17 banks.
Police believe the bandi~ ap.
pr_oximalely silt feet taU and
wei,ehing about 170 pounds, lbay
also be linked to a recent Santa
Ana robbery and similar JOb.o
beries in the Long Beach uea.
Blizzard
·Disrupts
Millions
By The Associated Press
The Northeast from Penn-
sylvania to New Hampshire was
paralyzed today by a
blizzarll that brought from one
to l 1h feet of snow to the region,
knocked out power in parts of
Boston and disrupted virtually
every facet of life for millions.
While the snow -steady, but
less severe than on Monday -
continued through the morning
in the East, crippllng
-
•
i
• transportation and business fol" i
a second day, people in the rest
of the nation faced their own pro-1!
blems!roma varietyo(slorms.. r
The rush hour in Chicago was
complicated by an unexpected
snowfall that left nine inches on
the ground by this morning.
Parts of Montana and North
Dakota were struck by a
blizzard which stranded
travelers and made lt feel like it
was 45 below zero. Oklahoma re-
ported six inches of s now;
lakeside areas of Wisconsin got
from six to 12 inches; there were
record low temperatures in
other parts of the MJdwest. and
cold and a forecast ot possiblo
(See BUZZARD, Page AZ)
-----------& '
Coast
Weather
Ratn moderate at times
tonight ancl Wednesday.
Lows tonight 50 to 55.
Cooler on Wednesday with
highs 58 to 63. Chanco of
rain 80 percent tonight, SO
percent Wednesday.
INSIDETODA.Y
T heJl'H coiled .. The Moeota .. and the]l'~membttra
of .o ~ breed -the HighwaJI Patrol motoreycleof-
jicer. Bul thdr JlOIUima q
vif'Wtd bf/ tnan!I cit cm clUe one. See F«JlwVtg,Po.gc Cl.
. . •
...
tl2 DAfL Y PtlOT s
Blizzard Douses Bost.on Lights
Panel Vote&
Webster Pick
WASHINGTON (AP) -
The Senate J udiciary
Committee recommended
by a 10-0 vote today that
the full Senate confirm
Presid e n t C arte r 's
nomination of U.S. Circwt
J udge William H. Webster
as FBI director.
Webster , a member of
lhe 8th U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals in St. Louts,
would succeed Clarence
M .. Kelley, who plans to
retire thJS month.
Web:.tcr, 53, returned to
St. Louis after confirma.
lion hearings last week.
lie soid he had a number
of opinions still to write.
Forget Bets
AgaimtRain
For Tonight
It's i:ioin,c? t o rain.
That"s the for('c·ast of the Na-
tional Wcal11(•r Ser vice. They're
·not l'\'l'll hedging their bets this
t im<.·. The chance of showers
ton 1,c?hl 1s listed at close to 100
perc•t•nt. decreasing to 70 per-
C<'nl Wt•dnt•sduy.
:\I etC'OroloJ,ltSt John Henderson
nolt•d that l11111ght's storm was
or1.1:111ally l'\f>l'Cl<.'d to urrive a
da~ IJll'I" hut 1s mo\'ing at an un.
11s1wll~ fast !"iO knots
\nd. he sJ1d, more :.torms are
111 :.1 ~ht, with periods of rain
110:.s1ble the rest of the week.
Lows ton11-:ht will be ln the low
tn mid S(r..., with highs Wednes-
da v 1wur fiO.
Southrrn Orungc County re-
<'C'l \'c•d tlw hl•a\·1c•st rainfall in
the 24-hour 1>1.·riod ending this
morn 1ni.:. with the Mo ulton
Ni gut>l Trt·atmenl P lant in
Laguna N1gul'l measurin~ .19 of
.in inch.
Santiago Peak on Saddleback
~1ountain rcceivl'CI .30 of an
1nth. while Santa Ana received
h·ss I han a tenth of un inch.
Nl•wport lkueh meusun•d only
.02 inches and Costa Mesa .04.
.J. Sherman Denny M Hunt-
ington Beach suid no measura-
ble ~ain fell there al all Monday.
Man Rescued
From Drain
BEL MONT CAP ) -A
workman was rescued after· a
rush of chilly rain water from
hills around Belmont swept him
WO feet down a huge drain pipe.
Mike Hayden . 24, of San
Carlos was treated for exposure
at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood
City after he was pulled shiver·
ing nnd numb from the pipe
Monday.
Para medic Casey Terrlbilini,
:.!2. reached Hayden In the six·
loot diameter drain after two Wt·
~uccessful attempts by Belmont
firemen. Te rribillni was also
treated for exposure, along with
one of the firemen.
Pat,iem Leaps
To His Death
SAN F RANCISCO (AP) -A
19.year-old patient at Mt. Zion
llo.s pltal jumped through a
dosed window and fell to his
death on a ledge five floors
below, hospital offi cials have
reported.
A coroner's spokesman iden·
tlfied the dead youth as Daniel
Tabo, of San Francisco, who had
been a patient at Mt. Zion for
more than four months.
Monday's suicide was the
third in which psychf atrlc pa-
tients have jumped from the
eight.story hospital in tbe past
eighteen months.
DAILY PILOT
BOSTON (AP) -Much or
Boston and its suburbs lost elec-
trical power for several hours
today after a blizzard blew a
section of a roof into Boston
Edison Company's largest
generating station, setting off a
chain reaction that knocked out
above-growid transformers.
The powu failure occurred at
3 a.m. and cut off electricity for
some 75,000 of the utility's
' 220,000 Boston customers.
A spokesman for the company
said power had been restored by.
8 a . m . t o all but 20 ,000
customers. leaving a two.mile
stretch blacked out from the
Public Gardens downtown west
lo Kenmore Square.
"This is probably t he worst we
have had it since 1965," the year
of the Northeast blackout, sai~
Boston Edison spokesm an
James M. Lydon.
Lydon said the damage caused
by the roof from a building near
·the generating plant combined
with snow a nd ocean spr ay
driven by 79 mph gusts to knock
out a number of above.ground
transformers.
City officials told commuters
to stay home.
AU automobile traffic except
e mergency vehicles was banned
from the city's streets, which
were covered by at least a fool
of snow.
Buses were not r unning and
the city subway system that
transJ)Orts 500,000 com11Juters
daily was reported operatin1 un·
del' an emergency power supply
but officials said there were "very prolonged" delays,
Abo\•e.ground electric t rolley
cars were r eported out of
:.ervice and being replaced by
buses. ·•we have every single car
deployed through the city with
their blue lights on." said Boston
Police Sgt. John McLain, but he
said there were no crime pl'Qb·
Jcms and police were looking
primar ily for anyone stranded in
the blizzard.
State and Metropolitan Dis·
trict Commission police said
thousands of motorists were
stranded on major arter ies and
side roads in and around Boston.
Many major offi ce buildings
were reported to have no hN1t
because the steam heat ing
:.ystem also operated hy Boston
Edison was out of service.
Amtrak service in and out of
the city was halted because thJ
powe r fa ilure knocked out elec-
t r 1 c lty required for track switching, a sp0kesman said.
Gov. Mic hael Dukakis
declared a state ot emergency
Monday night, and four National
Guard units totaling 1,000 men
were activated to assist in plow-
ing and emergencies.
Massachusetts Ge neral
Hospital, the city's largest, said
it had an emergency generator,
as did some hOtels.
John M~hy. Boston Edison's
public information o!ficer, said
the core area of the city, lnclud·
ing clowntown, Beacon Hlll, the
college Back Bay section and
a djoining areas were without
power at one point.
Waltham, Weston, Sharon and
Weyland were among the sub·
urban areas wlthou\ power and
there were scattered outages In
other nearby c9mmunlties
served by Boston Edison,
Murphy said.
PoUce said the storm, which
was expected to dump 18 inches
of snow before ending today,
w as worse than the Jan. 20
storm that left 21 inches of snow
in Boston.
Gusts of 79 mph were recorded
in the clty and 92 mph ~ts
were ~gistered at Chatham at
the eastern Up of Cape Cod.
Winter r esidents of Long
Beach Island, a half·mile·wide
sliver of land off the New Jersey
coast, were trapped when snow
drifts and abandone d car s clogged the only bridge to the
mainland. The Army and Coast
Guard sent amphibious vehicles
to rescue them.
Flooding and evacuations
we r e abo reported in shore
areas of New York City and
Long Island, where s evere
beach el'06ion waa predicted.
'Police Probe
_ ... --.i..-ill , ,,,. ............
WHO'LL TAKE MANHATTAN? THIS IS NEW YORK'S 33RD 1STREET AFTER BLIZZARD
New Storm Paralyze• Northeaatern U.S. from Penn1ylv•nla to New H•mpshlre
BUZZARD STRIKES. • •
snow in Georgia.
More than two dozen weather-
relatcd deaths were reported
uround the nation. Thousands of
people in the East remained in
hotels, hospitals, schools and
emergency shelters where they
Look refuge Monday from the
wind-driven snow which drifted
to six feet and more.
They were Joined by hundreds
of other families evacuated from
low.lying coastal areas flooded
d uring the morning by high
tides. All roads along 18 miles of
seacoast in New Ham pshire
were closed.
The blizzard in the Northeast
was the second In little more
than two weeks; the Midwest is
still r ecovering from heavy
snows that struck less than two
weeks ago.
Airports in the Northeast were
c-lnscd , und officials said they
would stay shut through the day.
The New York and American
stock exchanges, which closed
early Monday, opened late to·
day. Four o! the five commodity
exchanges In New York were
closed today.
The storm in New York City
was the worst since Dec. 26,
1948, when 19.6 inches or sno)V
fell. At 7 a.m ., there were 17.7
inches ofsnow in mid-Manhattan,
21 inches in some sections of
Queens ~d 23 inches in some
sections or Nassau County on
Long Island.
Ltke other orrlclals, Gov. Ella
Grasso of CoMecUcut declared
a state of emergency, closing
state hi1hway1, achools, courts
and ttJte offic.s. She and Jbode
lsland Gov. J, Joseph G~rrahy
asked President Carter to
declare the region a federal dis·
aster area.
A state or emergency also ex·
lated in Maasachusett.s where
10,000 National Guardsme~ were
called to deal with the storm
that was expected to leave 1 ~
feet of snow before it ended. AU
state highways in the approx-
imately one-third ot the state
east of Worcester were closed.
The rt weather-related deaths
included those of three Rhode ·
Island heart attack victims who
could not be reached by rescue
vehicles and those of two men
who suffocated from carbon
monoxide while marooned in a
disabled snow plow truck out-
side Philadelphia.
Hundreds of famllles were
evacoaled from their homes by
a mphibious vehicles in New
J ersey, Massachusetts, New
Hampshire and New York when
wind-driven surf vaulted
seawall•· . Airports shut down from
Philadelphia into New England.
Air trU!lc controllers at
Boston'• Logan International
left their pasts in the 285-foot
control tower, the tallest in tbe
world, when winds were clocked
at79 mph.
''The blgh winds are causing
tre mendoua problems,"
Massachusetts state police dis·
p,atcber William Chase said.
'The anow plows clear the roads
and the winds blow it back on.
There ai:e snow drifts of five to
e lx feet."
In New York, one official said
of the blow.lat snow, .. ~t's like
trying ti> shovel reathers. •
Hundreds of stranded people awakened toda)' in movie
liouus 1ports arenas and
ho1pitala used for 1belteri.
lfotttt were mobbed ln Bostoo
and N" York ~ben commuters could not pt home.
Some ~ n>ot.orlatt 1'et• ovacuated trom Jluaadlaletts
128 at DtdhalQ, ao mlle1
aoutbw•t or J)olton, Put •bc>Ud b~••• creepln• b•)lad 1nowplol!• and tatea to·• Dedb1m QiQm bDUM tor Ooft'•
and aJl-tlllht moYl•.
Somt 11,000 fan1 ""°at~ • CoUilt ..... , ~I&
Wtoa o.-...... MW to
....... ~.Qaltllld ,.....,.._. -..... Clf. ·ncw.1a14.., llO dMJM. ~
· overnight.
A Guard convoy making its
way from its base at Indiantown
Gap, Pa., lo Harr isburg, 17
miles away, picked up dozens of
i.tranded motori:.ts along In ·
terslatc 81. Others were rescued
by volunteers 1n ~nowmobiles
and four·whccl·dnve vehicles.
Rhode Island Hospital in
Providence "admitted" hun·
dreds of stranded motorists who
abandoned their cars on Jn~
lerstate 95 and slid down em-
bankments to reach the hospital.
Operating room uniform:.
became pujamas for some of tht•
refugees, some of whom had
waited up to sbc hours m their
cars.
Even as snow still fe ll Mon<lay
night, New York residents wcn•
:.tartled by the flush and crash
o f a t h und<'rs torm. but u
:-pokesman for the National
Weather Service said tl was not
tha t uncommon.
•'We get tbis with • storm ol
this intensity," he said.
The thunder and llghtntne was
created by "the mixing of warm
and cold air aloft at about 12,000
feet."
The storm whi pped t he Atlan-
tic Ocean Into five.foot waves
that flooded low·lying areas. Up
to three feet of water washed
-through t he streets of Hampton
Beach, N.H. Hundreds of homes
we re flooded in communities
east of Bost.on.
Proa Page Al
OFFICER •••
Medical Center jail ward.
Officer Fuhrman is also re-
ported in good condition at Hunt·
in g ton Inte r c ommunlty
I lospital.
Police Sgt. Bert Cha dwick
said the youth was initially
sought in connection with at
least two burglaries on Camaby
Street in which a shotgun and
four pistolS were stolen from two
police officers' homes.
Chadwick said the youth is
believed to be involved witb a
r in g of 13 ott\er burglary •us~
pects who wei:e arrested in the
vicinity Monday niaht.
Police s a id. $he alleged
burglary ring included two other
juveniles believed to be from
Costa Mesa .
The adults arrested ranging in
age from 18 to 26 years are
believed lo be from Huntington
Beach, Co:.ta Ml'sa, Anaheim,
Sunta Ana and Fountain Valley.
Thcy have been charged with
burglary, possession of stolen
prope rly aod Posseuion of
danaerous drugs. Police refused to Identify the
youth char eed with murder
because of his age.
Unity Suggested
TOKYO (AP) -North Korea
said today that steps should be
taken towar d reun ifying the
divided Korean peninsula while
leaving the social systems of the
North and South undisturbed for
the lime being.
F,...PageAl.
FORD •••
G roy amt lh.e serious injuries
s u ffered by her passenger.
There we.re no other 'injuriesl
from any other cause, the juey.t
was told.
Hews s aid the Ford Company''
kne w then and has a l wayS' I
Jcnown that Pinfos are defective I
an d dangerous cars with a pro-
pensity to catch fire in a rearend.~
collision.
Mrs. Gray's husband and two
daughters, none of whom were .
invol ved ln the accident, re-•
ceived $6:i9,680 in compensatorr
damages plus $6,600 for medlC!.i~
costs. Again, the judgment went
againstlheFordMot4fCompany. •
Lawyers explained that the
awar d to the Gray family might
have been on tbc lines of that
awarded to Gr imshaw if Mrs.
Gray's survivors had sought'
punitive damages in addition to
their auccess!ul wrongful death..
action.
Ford Motor Company official$
today refused to comment on the
record verdict. A spokesman in
Detroit would only confirm that
the verdict would immediately
be a ppealed with the Fourth Dis·
trict Court of Appea ls in San
Bernardino.
It was testit~d during the six
month trial that the carburetor
in Mrs. Gray's Pinto malfunc-
tioned' on May 28, 1972,· fo rcing
t he vehic~e to s tall on t he
freeway near San Bernardino.
It was testified that the car
w as struck in the rear by
anoCher auto and that almost im·
mediately Mrs. Gray's car was
enve loped in names.
The jury was told by lawyers
for the two families that both
victims would have walked
away from the crash without in-
jury 1f it had not been for the
badly dtsigned and defective
1as tank.
1'he Jury was told that the
death and Injuries could have
be~n avoided if the Ford Com-
pany had taken the trouble to in· ~t•ll a •. 98 part ln the rear end of
the car which would have pre-
vented any contact with the gas
tank in acolllslon.
It waa unsuccessfully argued
by the defense that the Pinto and
its g as tank had met all federal
and state laws and inspections
and the Ford Company could not
be he ld responsible for t he
leakage of gasoline in a col-
lision.
The orieinal lawsuit !iled by
both /amUle8 named both tbe I
Ford Company and Willoft Forcl t
Sales of Hunt!ogton Beach a.s de-1
fend ants.
But the verdict r eturned by
the jury Monday named only the
Ford Company in assessing rcsponsibl1ty and damages as
cla imed by the plaintiffs.
The jury was told during the
t r ial or a recent nationwide
study m which 1t was claimed
that more than 500 persons had
died since 1970 as a direct result
of rcarend collisions in which a
Pinto automobile caught fire.
.
Orange £oast
EDITION
Today's Closing
N.Y. Stoe
VOL 71, NO. 38, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES
By MICHAEL PASKEVICH
Of .... o.11, l'llel 11.tff
Costa Mesa city councilmen
fought off fatigue and the taunts
of a local res1dent early today,
then approved plans for what is
expected to be the la rgest com·
mercial office and entertain·
ment complex in Orange
County.
Developers C.J. Segerstrom
and Sons and the Prudential
Insurance Company can move
ahead with the 2.75 million·
sqU~·foot SOutb Coast Town
Center.
The center will cover 62 acres
at Bristol Street and the San Diego Freeway near the Soutt\
Coast Plaia Shopping Center.
Its traffic impact, expected to
create a year around Christmas· like traffic jam in the area,
prompted Verlyn Marth of 3197
Cape Verde Place to lash out re-
peatedly at the council.
ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A
He f'lrlt called the Envtroo;
m.,ntal Impact Report en the
center ••a disaster" bee U$e of
smor the estimated ~.ooo cart
per day by 1999 would cause,
and clalmed the EtR contained
"false data" on pollutlQn.
Although 11\0St counc)lmen
wer e upset ab(>ut ¥arth.'• ten-
dency to shout hU polnia in
strong language, Councilwoman
Mary Smallwood agreed with
him, saying the council accepts
EIRs too easily.
In the first of three separate
actions, 1he cast the lone vote
against acceptance of the ElR.
The vote was 4 to 1.
Next, the council took up the
developers· request to expatfd
the plans first approved in 1973
from two million to 2.75 mllllon
square feet of bulldine spa~ oo
the acreage.
City planning aide Doug Clark
noted, that, in addition to the
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1978 c
Center
increased load on city streets,
the expansion to 2.75 million
~quare feet would create "an in-
tense lll'ban environment" that.
might tax ctty housing through
the creation or 12,000 new jobs.
Al 2.75 million square feet. the
Town Center is far larger than
Fashion Island in Newport
Beach and the Fluor Corpora-
tion in Irvine. Both contain
about l.S million square feet of
building space.
Marth lashed out against ap.
P.rova-. callinJt the developers
'desptJrados."
Councilman Ed McFarland
said he favored the original two
million square fool plan, saying
"I'm not prepared to vote on an
increase of thls size with the in·
formation I kave."
"There are some drawbacks,''
countered Vice Mayor J ack
Ham melt, "but everything is
(See CENTE~ Page AZ)
5 Mesa· Banks . . Hit • m 2 Weeks,
·Attempt
At Death
Claimed
By TOl'f BARLEY
Of Ille OllllY rt ... Stan
A doctor whose l>tatements lo
police led to the filing of murder
char ges again!>l Dr. William
Baxter Waddill of Huntington
Harbour told a jury today that
Waddill had his hand clamped
1 around a newborn baby's
1 windpipe when he met him in
1 the Westminster Co mmunity
I Jlospit:.il last March 2.
Dr . Ronald Cornclscn of
. Or ange testified in Orange Coun-
ty Superior Court that Waddill,
who had summoned him to the
hos pital, told him: "I can't rind
I the God damn trachea
1 (windpipe). This baby just won't.
quJt brealhinJr." I Cornelsen testlned that he Im.
I mediately examined the three-l pound baby which Waddill had
t earlier tried to abort with a
l saline injection into the mother
and noted that it had a d iscerni-
ble heartbeat.
I T he pediatrician testified that
he also noted that the baby was
breathing and was, in many
respects. in an identical condi-l tion to that of a newly born •
m ature baby.
It is contended by th defense
I that the infant did not show ac·
ceptable signs of life when de·
livered last March 2 and that
Wad dill cannot be legally
~ charged with murder .
I
'Very Sick Man'
. •
DMl,1'1 ... ,...._._
TAKES WITNESS STAND
Dr. Ronald ComelHn
Cornelsen, 42, testified today
that be urged Waddill to leave
the baby alone after seeing the
defendant again place his hand
a round the baby's neck and
squeeze.
He testified that while he was
examining the infabt be noticed
(See DOCTOR, Page AZ)
LA Polfee Probe
'Strangler Letter'
LOS ANGELES (AP> -A let·
ter from a person claiming to
be the Hillside Strangler says
the letter writer killed "those
evil ladies" at the behest of his
mother and says be ls a very
sick man who needs help.
Assistant Police Chief Daryl
F . Gates told a news conference
·today that the letter, mailed to
Mayor Tom Bradley• may or
may not be authentic.
"There'• nothlnl in the ~er,
that autbentlcates lt,.. Gates
sald. "There are some ,thlnp in
it that 1lve lt an air ot urlf!llCY
• ~ • some thJnp pique the in·
terest of myself and ln·
vestlgalol'I."
Gata read the ltnt pap ol.
the pencil·printed six-page letter
to newsmen at police head·
quarters. It reads:
"Dear Mr. Mayor.
"Please listen to me. I am
very sick, but 1 do not want to Co
back to that -place. I hate that
place. My mother told lhe to kill
those evil ladies. It's not my
fault. • • • Mother makes my
bead hurt. That's why 1 kill ber.
But I can't get her out ot m)'
head. She keeps comlna back. That's whY l bate ~r.'" ·
•
Creating a Monster One Man
Soug~t
In Four
. Mesa Youngster Geu City's Backing
An unarmed bandit with a
droopy handlebar mustache
pulled off his fourth bank robbery
in Costa Mesa since J an. 24
Monday, escaping with $1,900
even though police were on the
scene in less than a minute.
The 1:10 p.m. heist at the Im-
perial Bank at the corner of
Harbor Boulevard aftd Fair
Drive raises the bandit's total
take to about $4,500 from the
series or robberies, pc>llce said.
This bandit is believed to be
responsible for four of the five
bank robberies lhat have OC·
curred in the city since Jan. 23,
police said. . , ..
David Wingate oC Costa Mesa wasn't ta1c·
ing any chances that city officials might halt
his upcoming ''Monster Play" planned in a
fellow cast me mber's backyard.
The 10-year-old remembered a television
show in which the Brady Bunch ''almost got
in trouble" fo r raising funds without a city
permit.
SO DAVID AND HIS ca!>l of three -
there is still a "Wolfman" role open -
brought their performance plans before the
City Council Monday night.
His head barely vlsible above the public
podium. Dayid said the play would be kind of
like a circus and would have a lesson -how
to release anger without hurting anything ex-
cept some cardboard monsters.
• A business permit wasn't really required,
but councilmen lightheartedly.asked.David to
make sure that posters were taken down
after the play and that he keep a close eye on
the anticieet.ed crowd of 1..0 to 12 i>cople.
Dellyfllllllll.lft ......
As wlth the previous bank;-
Jobs. au Iii t.M ~ ~~ the slim bendlt in lli'S Jate 20s ap-
proached ~ fem-1e teller, pre.
sented her wtth • note and a
paper b:tg, and tl>ld her to be
quick in loading the bag with
cash.
•..aa ~E OJ)GINAL ptaya you~ •'
wrl~" asked.., Costa Mesa Mayor Norma Hertzog.
"No," ~eplled David. "I'm Just aort or
making them up.''· · _ ·
M£SA1S 'MONSTER MAKER'
David Wingate, 10
David's efforts were greeted with ap-
plause from those. in the audience, and during
a sneak•preview outside coWlcil chambers.
David said the show may go on this Satur-
day, provided it doesn't rain. Mayor Hertzog
said she is interested in getting tickets
T he bandit has never dis·
played a weapon, police said.
Bank teller Patty Goodren. 20,
of F ountain Valley, "Said a
David, a student at Mesa Vtrde Elemen-
tary School, lives with his mother. Sheri, at
2989 Andros St.
customer had just made a large
deposit when the suspect ap·
proacbed her and handed over
his robbery note.
Unlike previous robberies, the
man's sandy blond hair was cov-
ered by a blue baseball cap that
matched his blue windbreaker.
Eastern Snow Piles Up
police said. · Bitter Cold, Stornu Plague Parts of Midu:est
By The Assodated Press A bank alarm went out within
11econds after the bandit fled, ap-parently on root, and the neares~: Snow, winds and lloodw~ters
p0Uce unit was less than three···· brought a second day of misery
blocks aw,y. Police head··. to millions In the bllzzard-
quarten is about a mile away. • ··. pla-ued Northeast today, and
Hia escape was so quick that · residents of some Midwest areas
pollee cooducted a search of also faced hardship from bitter
cars in the bank's parking lot to. cold and new storms.
make sure the bandit bad indeed Trouble s pots ranged from
left the area. Boston -where a powe r
All four of the robberies have bl.ackout compounded. the
taken place at what Del. Sgt. blizzard problems -to Billmgs,
Sam Cordeiro called "easy ac-Mont., which was struck by
cess" ~ with both front and s!'ow M~day and faced con·
rear exmt.s. tinuedbliuardwamingstoday.
Eaeb robbery JlM occurred at Anc~orage, Alaska, had to
a dif(erent financial institution. close its schools, for the first
With tlMt latest robbe the ban· time since 1964, because of snow
dlt has robbed flve o7ihe city's wb.kh started S~turday and was . 17 bani... still falling heavily.
-· ' ' , ·More than two dozen storm·
Police bellev~ the *dit, ap-related deaths, some from over·
proxlmateb' ,.six feet tall and exertion s hovellng snow or
W•l•hlu aboUt 170 pOunds, may str1,111Ung through drifts, were
abo be..Jlnkecl to a ·recent Santa repotted acro&s the naUon.
Ana rebbery. and ~milar rob-The snow in tho Northeast
berles Ip \he Lon' Beath area. began Sunday r\i«iht-barely two
weeks after "the "last blizzard -
and was still falling in some parts
at o:iiddaf today, although it was
BLIZZARD DISRUPTS
BOSTON'S POWER-Al
Jess severe than earlier ·and was
expected to taper during the day.
Accumulatioos.ranged from one
lo two feet.
Transportation was at a near
standstill. Airports in the
Northeast were closed, and
airports in other parts of the
Forget Bet,s
Against Rain
For Tonight.
It's rolng to rain.
That's the forecast of the Na·
tional Weather Servlce. They're
not even hedging their bets this
time. The chance or showers
tonl.iht ls listed at close to 100
percent. decreasina to 70 per-
cent Wednesday.
Meteorologist John Henderson
noted U\at tonight's storm was
originally expected to arrive a
day later bu\ is moving at an un·
uaually fast 50 knots. _
'And, he aafd, more storms are
, in sl&ht. With periods of rain
poaaitale the rest ot &be week.
Lon 1Glillbt wUI be la the low to d4 ·ao.rwtlh highs Wednes.
daynureo.
Southeni Onqe County re-
fflved :u.e bea\'iest rainfall In
the 24-hOur period ending this
morniDI• with the Moulton
Nl1uel Treatment Plant in La1una Nt-1 meuurfn.g .19 of
ea ineb.
Sutlaao Reak on Saddhtbaclc
JfouDtaln received ·'° of ah m~ wblle SUta ADa nC'e.lftd
lei• l1'ad a teilth or an llich.
Ne'tl'port BMdl measured only :.oa lnebil aDd Coita If•• .o.. J • ......., .. Deftrii of Hilot-
ln,toi ~;Mid .no meanra• ble ruai,Q ~at. all MQllda,J.
country were jammed with
passengers unable to reach
snowbound destinations.
"We're the only thing that's
open," said Fred Wilder, a Civil
Defense dis patcher in the
Pocono Mountains town of
Stroudsburg, Pa. "We're trying
to get everybody in God's crea-
tion to help plow these people
out."
Chicago. still recovering from
a blizzard 12 days ago. was Kit
by an unexpected storm that
began Monday afternoon and
left nine inches of snow·
Near-zero temperatures were
recorded In northern Georgia.
a nd the National Weather
Service forecast snow by
Wednesday. Oklahoma got its six·
th snowfall in 22 days with ac·
(See BUZZARD, Page AZ)
·Coast
Weather
Rain moderate at times
tonltht and Wednesday.
Lows tonight SO lo SS .
Cooler on Wednesday with
highs 58 to 63. Chance of
rain 80 per~t tonight, so
percent Wednesday.
INSIDE TODAY
The11're called ''The
Motora" mad tMJl're mMnbu• of . a vcmfahing .,...., -the
Highway Patrol mot~of·
ficer. But tlwlr J'OfiffrM. ft
11w~d by many Cll an elite
one. Sec F«tttirirtg, Page c 1.
------
OAA. 'i PILOT c
Canine Survivor
Of Pearl Hitrhor
By CHARL~ H. LOOS Of .. Dlllty ...... 111111
YOU DOG LOVERS who watched the movie
"Midway" during its two-night rerun on television Sunday
and Monday might be interested in this footnote to history.
Portions of the film, which dealt with an early turning
point in World War II in the Pacific, recounted the sinking
of the aircraft carrier Lexington during the Battle of the
Coral Sea.
Not too many folks recall -and the
filmmakers may have missed a bet
here -that there was a dog aboard the
Lexington at the time.
His name was "Admiral Wags" and
he almost went down with the s hip.
HE WAS A BLACK cocker spaniel
bt'longing to the s kipper o( the Lex-
ington, then·Capt. Ted Sherman.
The story o( Admiral Wa~ was told
Loos in a 1943 book written for children by
his mistress, Fanny Jessop Sherman.
Admiral Wa gs was the Sherman family pet. He often
went to sea with his master, who later became an admiral
himself
Tiff: DOG WAS ABOARD the Lexington. on
mancu\<'rs ul the time, when the Japanese attacked Pearl
Hnrhor lie ~taycd aboard when the Lexington was or·
dl·red to the South P acific. Sherman and his wife didn't
ltkl' the idea of leaving the dog alone in quarantine for
i-<·,·<·ral wel•ks in Honolulu.
Sr>, when the Lexington came under attack by'
. I :a pu r)<'!>C planes during that first big naval battle of the
l'ac1f1l' \\ar in the Coral Sea off New Guinea, Wags was
tht'rc. lhs battle station was Wlder Captain Sherman's
bed.
Although a warship, the Lexington had made
headlines in peacetime. Jn 1929, its electric turbines sup-
. plied Tacoma, Wash., with power when a spell of extreme-
ly cold weather shut down the city's hydroelectric power
system. And, in 1931, when Managua, .Nicaragua, was
leveled by an earthquake, the Lexington, then sailing out
of Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, was one of the first ships of
mercy on the scene. While the carrier steamed toward
Nicaragua, its planes flew ahead, cai:rying doctors,
medical supplies and food to the stricken capital city.
IN THAT BATTLE OF the Coral Sea in early 1942. the
Ll.'xmgton was hit by at least four torpedoes dropped by
Japane~e planes. '
The ship ste;irped on, chasing the Japanese neet, but
gasoline from damaged storage tanks below decks caught
fire. Explosions rocked the ship as the names spread to
:1 mm unition storaJte areas.
Finally, with the power and steering knocked out and
the fires raging out of control. the order came from Cap-
tain .ShP.rman to abandon ship.
An'ER SEEING TO IT that the crew was getting off
the ship safely, Sherman returned lo the bridge for his
dog. Wags was there, waiUnc. He had llved t)\rou&h lt all.
Thc doR was outrltted with a life jacket and lowered
over the :;id~. As he neared the water. the ship lutched and
hl' landed on the armor shelf, a narrow ledge at the water
Jine. There he stood, stranded, until a lire boat came
11 longs1cle and some sailors, using a boat hook, r escued
him from his perch.
Later. Wags, his war adventures over. was reunited
\\1th his family. lie returned to the Sherman home m San
Diego lo live out the res t of his days in relative peace and
quiet.
Winds, Confusion
Scramble Racers
Changing weather patterns
along the Baja California coast.
or mass computer confusion
aboard the escort vessels, or er-
roneous reporting from the fleet,
or a combination of aJI three has
.. ~ain s crambled the ManzanilJo
nect placing the Class A yachts
r ar in· tbe lead on elapsed and
corrected•tlmes.
Jn Monday's report the Class
B and C yachts had sailed
through the Class A fleet.
Today's position report in·
dicated Merlin. had a 250-mile
day's nm placing her far out
front, 469 miles from San Diego
with 649 miles to go. Drifter was
17 miles astern and Christine
was 10 miles behind Drifter.
Merlin's position placed it 85
miles northwest of Cape San
Lazaro.
win°ds had improved to 12 to 15
knot.8 out of the northwest over
the five knots reported Monday.
Handicap standings as report·
ed from the official escort vessel
Ranjamar:
Overall. t. Merlin 2. Drln.er 3.
Freewheeler.
Class A 1. Merlin 2. Drifter 3.
Freewheeler
Class B 1. Mirage 2. Mamie 3.
Tcrr;il III. ,;
Cl ass C 1. Tinsley Light 2.
WhimseyTres 3. Audacious
'(
Patie~ Leaps
To His Death
I
Weather reports from the
es cort vessels indicated the
°"ANOE~ c
DAILY PILOT
:::,r,:,:.~~~~.·r.=i==~=
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A
19-year-old paUent aL Mt. Zion
Hospital jumped through a
closed window and fell to his
dttatb on a ledge live noors
below, hospital ofllcials have
reported.
c...!-hltl ... ~lty~ ....... __
-·-Mo"CI•• IM ...... l'rldl>V ... C.001• :::4v'::'l.~~"·== ~:~ ~ .. ~ .. ,,....,.c:...1 ... ,,,,..--
1 ...... -·-Sat ..... " ... -...,... 'JM =~~='.'l::~.:.."'"'"' .. , __ ,, ... _
"'"kll"' ..... ,....,_ , ..... ~
Ylte..-t\--0.Wll#N_.-
~"""" ·-,._ ............. ..._i,..,.....,
0.-.91,~ ..._. ........
Mllte .... ~«lllWI
A coroner's sp0kesrnan iden·
tlfied the dead youlh as· Daniel
Tabo, of San F'ranclsc:o, who had
been a patient at Mt. Zion for
more than four months.
.
A '1-~ear'-old Tijuana boy
borrlbtY dlln~ when a can
ot palnt thinner ftJCP)oded tn
front or hlsn may aet a MW face,
thanks to a Htlftltil .... Beach
benefactor nd • •onproQ\ ~ealleil~
•
relotlve."
Hammett noted that any cut-
back In oCfice space would re-
vert the plan to it.s original stale,
thus eliminating the largest.
building planned on the site.
This will be the PrudenUal
lnsurance buildinc. whlcb will
tower 16 stories near the South
Coast Aa.za Rot.i. and require a
four-level parklnC structure to
house 750 cars. I
.. Tbe.re'!l nolhin& we can do
about it but hope for orderly
gl'Owlh." said Councilman Dom
Raciti.
The rl'nal vote on the ex-
pansion request was • to l .
McFarland voted no.
The final public hearJne or the
evening began after midnight. It
involved the specific plan for the
Prudential buUdlng.
.. ~ .......
WHO'LL TAKE MANHATTAN? THIS.IS NEW YORK'S 33RO STREET AFTER BUZZARD
New Storm Paralyze• Northeaatern U.S. From Penn1ylvanla to New ..,.,.~oshlre
lt was approved unanlmously
shortly before 1 a .m ., with one
condition (s u ggested by
McFarland) that a one-year
trial be placed on. the parking
structute fee plan.
McFarland said he was con-
cerned that employees would
park at. nearby free lots for
shoppers to avoid paying the
parkinc lot fee. The lot fee will
now be reviewed one year after
the Prudential building is com·
pleted.
TONIGHT
·•BEHIND THE
HEADLINES" -Dr. Giles T.
Brown lecturer, OCC Forum.
7:30 p.m.
"A DOLL'S HOUSE" -South
Coast Repertory Theate r,
Tuesday-Sunday ·through Feb.
19, 8 p.m.
WEDN~DAY, FEB. 8
COAST COMMUNITY
COLLEGE BOARD -Regular
meeling, 1370 Adams, 8 p.m.
Frora Page A J
DOCTOR ...
extensive discoloration around
the neck. The coroner's office
later ruled that the infant was a
victim or manual strangulation.
Cornelsen said Waddill, 44,
told him: "This baby can't live.
It will be a big mess if it does." ·
And the witness testified that.
Waddill talked of the infant s1,1f.
fering brain damage and of sub·
sequent lawsuits that could cost
him many thousands of dollars if
the child that had survived an
nborlion attempt continued to
live. 1
Cornelsen said that al one
point Waddill ca ll ed fo r
potassium chfotide and was 1m·
meaiately asked by the w1tnc!.s
why he wanted the chemical.
He said Waddill told him: "lt
win stop the baby's heart."
Prosecutor Robert Chatterton
~aid in his opening statement
that Comelsen will also testify
that Waddill also suggested
other methods of murder while
the two physicians discussed the
infant in the nurserv.
Among them, Chatterton said.
was drowning the child In a
bucket of water, drowning it in
the nursery sink or by an inlec·
lion or insulin.
Mesan Struck
With Bottle
In Newport
Newport Beach police are
seeking the unidentified as·
sailant who hurled a beer bottle
into the face of a Costa Mesa
man as he was walking along
the Newport Pier early Monday
morning.
Douglas Jay Moore, 20. suf·
fered lateraUons to his eyelid
and arOWld hls left eye In the In·
cident reported shorLly after
midnight.
Moore told officers he and a
companion, Michael Evans, 21. ~Reno, were walking along the
r, when \be bottle hll him in
face.
Evans ·chased the man he
thought threw it, but was unable
to catch hlm.
Moore was taken to Hoag
Memorial Hospital for treat·
ment and transferred to UC
Irvine Medical Center where he
was treated and released.
Fro•PageAJ
Bf ,IZZARD STRIKES •••
cumulattonsofuptoslx inches
South Bend, lnd .. shivered in
m orning tempe rature1; of 14
below zero -<i record. Parts of
Kansas got up to three inches of
snow overnight and predictions
of two"mOre inches today.
Sections of Wiscons in border·
ing on Lake Michigan were htl
by H:i fe4=t of snow overnight:
the weather service forecast
another two to four inches
tonight.
A freighl tram was stuck for
four hours in a 12·foot snowdrift
in North Dakota. Winds up to 40
mph m ade tl feel like 45 below in
Montana.
From Pennsylvania through
New Hamps hire, businesses.
many of which closed early
Monday as the snow mounted,
ke pt their doors s hut today
Banks in some areas wcrt>
c lo~cd . So were schools and
public highway~
Some.commuters who maqe 1t
to work Monday morning were
unable to itet home and ,iamm(!d
city hotels; others struggled
home, only to find conditions
even worse in the suburbs.
One after another. govemo~
and mayors declared states of
e m e r gency, banning non·
essential traffic. National
Guardsmen were called out to
help clear .snow and rescue
stranded mot.ori11ts. SeVer411f of·
ficials...asked Pre11ident Carter to
declare im Nartb4'atil a federal
disaster area.
Drirt.s in :c.omc a reas of the
l\'orthcast -:-.till rccoverin~
from the Jan 20 :;torm --wen•
up to 10 feet. Floodwaters swept
low·lyinJ! coastal parts of New
J ersey, New York. Connecticut.
M as sachus t'lls and New
Hampshire. forcing the evacua·
lion of thousandf .
The New York and American
,
stock exchanges, which closed
early on Monday. opened late lo·
day. Four of the five commodity
exchanges in the city were
closed as was the Boston Stock
Exchange.
The storm dissipated in Penn·
sylvanla during the morning to-
day, but trailing squalls whipped
up snow drifts that kept roads
a nd airport runways blocked .
Man Rescued
From Drain
BELMONT (AP) -A
workman was rescued aft.er a
rush of chilly rain water from
htlls around Belmont swept him
200 fee\. down a huge drain pipe.
M Ike Hayden , 24, of San
Carlos was treated for exposure
at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood
City after he was pulled shiver·
ing and numb from the pipe
!'tlonday.
Council candidate Paul Raver.
who said Mr. Marth's pollution
data was incorrect, asked the
council to force Prudential to
provide a van pool to tessen the
traffic impact on the area. The
idea was supported' by the coun·
cil informally. but not adopted
as a condition for approval of
the building.
The PlaMing Department of
the City of Santa Ana also took
wrilten swipes at the EIR for the
project.
''The City of Santa Ana ls
gravely concemed about poten-
tial impacts of the proposed proj-
ect and the inadequacy of the
EIR in disc~ing the project."
wrote Santa Ana Plann ing
Director Charles C. Zim·
merman.
"As a result of the Town
Center development, five of the
seven (nearby intersections)
will be operating at or above
capactty, with three of them
hopelessly so ," Zimmerman.
contended.
Another Rain Storm
---
Hits Northern State
By The Associated Press
Northern California com·
mutcrs were socked again today
by hea vy morning rains as the
latest in a parade of storm
fronts marched into the state.
Rains beginnin~ in pre-dawn
hours caused a rash of rush-hour
traffic accidents. minor floodin.I!
and a mudslide or two in Marin·
County that caused hundreds of
com mutcrs to punch in la te.
Pacific Gas and Electric Com-
pany said power lines were
withstanding the rain and gusty
winds for the most part,
although 500 homes in Soqucl
were reported without power.
The National Weather Service
s aid today's rain had dropped
.75 inches in the San Francisco
Bay area in four hours. and
most areas north or Fresno were
expected to gel at least an Inch.
11'erld Reeord'
Damages Set
By TOM BARLEY
• Cit .. Dallr '11eC SUH
Damages totaling more than
$128 lnlllion wel"e awarded to
two Orange County families
Monday in a Superior Court
verdict that sets a new r ecord
for that type of civil lawsuit
The huge judgment against
the Ford Motor Compuny ended
Planners
Endorse
Bomts Plan
By GARY GRANVILLE
Ot ttle Dalfy Piiot Sl•tf
Orangl' County planning rom
missioners endorsl'd a plan !\tun
day t hat would give hume
bualdt-r::. greatl'r hou!>inJ{ cknsit)
111 rt-tum for an agreement to 111
dude low and moderat1.· co:-.t
hOWSIOJ( uniti. an llw1r dl'\l'IOp
men ts
The housing density bonus
plan endorsed on a 3-0 com-
mission vote is aimed at
stimulating construction of low
a nd moderate cost housing,
housing "a f tordable" b y
families with incomes of $20,160
or less a year.
However. a rounty Environ·
m1.•ntul 1\1 ;.inag\'mcnl /q~cncy
(EM Al staff rt> port warnl'd th:il
hy itst.>lf lhl' <ll'lll>ily bonus "will
not r<.'.,ult in any sij.!n1ficanl in
en·a::.l" 111 tlH' cnnstrutt1or1 ul
... ul·h hnu:-.1na,:
'l'lw n•1.1e1rt noll'U that m.111.'
lll•n•lopnwnt pl .in,.. .1p1>ro\l'd b'
1·ounty agc111·1es 1n lhl• pusl
Sl'vcral yt>ur~ li:.l\ l' 1ntludecl
density l>onu~ ancenl1ves an re
tu r n for build ing l ow and
moderate cost housing unil:s .. But these provlaions bBvc
never been utilized," the £MA
rep0rt noted.
It went on to say no housing
density honus plan "can suc·
cecd'' when "at is more profila.
ble lo build low dt'nsaty single
family developments.··
Therefore, the El\t i\ staff re·
port l·oncludcd. the d ens ity
bonus plun will lw effective only
when at as combmcd with zoning
ordinances thul muke it m an·
dutory for builders to include
som e low and moderate cost
housing an their residential dt'·
velopmcnts.
Tho~e forebod ings in m ind.
Comm 1ssioners William !\lac
Dougall. Peggy Cr anston and
Gus Lenain voted to send the
density bonus plan on to the
Board of Supervisors.
Supervisors will inspect the
c-o m mission's handiwork, seek
comme nts from those who might
be affected by the volunteer plan
and then return it to the com-
mission for official action.
Among other things. the hous-
ing density bonus plan would
establish guidelines that:
-Define low and moderate
income fa milies as those whose
annual incomes' are no more
tha n 120 percent of Orange
County's median family income
of $16,800 annually, or $20,160 a
year .
-Define low or moderate in·
come housing as that priced no
greater than 2~~ Umes the target
income ($41,000) or housing that
rents for no more than 25 per-
cent of the target income, roughly
$340 a month.
more than Uµ-ee days of jury de·
liberations in the courtroom of
Judge Leonard Goldstein. The
trial began last August.
The principal beneficiary an
the judgment is Richard
Grimshaw, 18, of Anaheim. who
was severely burned over 90 per-
cent of h1s body sax years ago
when a Ford Pinto an which he
was a passenger exploded a nd
burned
Grimshaw was awdrded $14!5
million in punitive damages and
S2,84 l .OOO an tom pensatory
damages by a jury which was
told durin~ the lraaJ that he has
undergone more than 50 opera-
tioni in the past fi ve years with
medical bills totaling more than
$125.000.
The jury agreed with a team
of lawyers headed by Art Hews
of Santa Ana that nel'(hgent con -
slrut·t 1nn of thl· P into by lhl'
Ford Company was the primary
cuusl' of thl' a1.·<·11.knt cm :\l ay 28,
1972
II \\a~ lt'slllll·d th.it .. poorl~
dc:.1gncd gas t.111k an the Panto
ow nL•d by Mrs l.1l11cbell Gray.
52. of Or:.mgc. \\a::. ans tailed an
:.u<:h a way that at would rupture
in almost any type of collision
l\t rs. Gray d 1ed in the burn mg
cal\ s hortly after at was involved
in a collision on interstate 15
near Sa n Berna rdin o.
Grimshaw, then 13. was rushed
to a nearby hospital In critical
condition.
It was tcstafit•d an lht• trial that
burns c:iuscd lQl.' <.kalh of Mrs.
Gray and the ~crious injuries
!->Uffe rcd by lwr passenger
Tlwrc Wi:rt• no othl•r anjurit•s
from .in\ oth<·r <'<iUSl' lht• j ury ";i ,.. tole!
Il l'\\:-. ... :11d ·till' Ford Compuny
k111•\\ tlll'n and hui. ah,ay,,
J..no\\ n that Pintos arc defl'ct1w
and dan~crous cars with a pro·
pl.'nsaty to catch fire in a reilrend
1:01l1s1on.
Mrs. Gray's h~band and two
daughten, none of whom were
involved In the accident. re·
ceived $659,680 an compensator'
damages plus $6.600 for medici-
costs. Again, the judgment went
against the Ford Motor Company.
Luwyers explained that the
awurd t<> the Gray family might
have been on the lines of th~t
awarded to Grimshaw if Mrs
Gray's s urvivors had sought
punitive damages in addition to
lhe1r successful wrongful death
a<:t1on . .
Ford Motor Company offi cials
today refused to comment on the
record verdict. A spokesman in
Detroit would only confirm that
the verdict would immediately
be appealed with the Fourth Dis·
trict Court of Appeals in San
Bernardino.
It was testified during the six
month trial that the carburetor
in Mrs. Gray's Pinto malfunc·
lioned on May 28. 1972, forcing
the vehicle lo stall on the
freeway near San Bernardino.
IL was testified that the car
was struck in the rear by
another auto and that a lmost im-
mediately Mrs. Gray's car was
enveloped in names.
The jury was told by lawyers
for the two families that both
victims would h ave walked
away from the crash without in·
jury if It had not been for the
badly designed and defective
gas tank.
The jury was told that the !
death and injuries could have ·
been avoided if the Ford Com-·
pany had tuen the trouble to in-
:;tall a $9.98 part in the rear end of
the car.
Tl*day, February 7, 1978
.............
BROKEN STREET LIGHT POLE ADDS INSULT TO INJURY DURING BOSTON STORM
Electrical Power Cut Off for Hours as Blizzard Wreaks Havoc in East
Two UFOs Regorted .
Wwuy Ce mer Appeal,s for More_ Witnesses
ft) .\R'flll'R R. VINSt:L
R eportl•d s i~htin g:-. of twn
L'nadentified Flying Objects over
the weekend hus prompted Dr
Al Lawson. head of the UFO
Report Center of Orange Coun·
ty, lo issue an appeal today for
any other witness information
He said that the sightings oc-
curred Friday and Saturday in
the Fullerton a nd Orange area.
but did not come to has attention
until Monday, when he began
chl'cking into them
One in ctdl·nt .... a~ reportedly
w1tnt.>s:-.t•d by !\I r:. C lair e
Sema.rn and hl'r l'nt1rl' fami\y,
.... ho '"Y llll'y Y.Cfl' LI\\ akenccl an
tht•1r homl· an Orungl• about :1 30 -
a m Saturday by :1 lou<I h11arre
humm111).! no1::.t·
.. , tan'l explain 11 It wa:-. an
1·xtrcmcly loud humman~ All of
a :-.udden our dog Susi began to
wt up a hOwl. 1 wah kind of
a fra ad lo look out tlw window ."
\lr,, Scmaza -,aid toda)
Tht> fumtly 1tu lh<-rt1d and
looked skyward. duanunj( lhey
'potted and watcht'd a round.
clash-lake UFO which ho\1t'red at
high altitude. e mitting revolving
beam s of light
A neighbor a lso heard the
n6ise. .
"It looked like a fl at . round
dish and it was s urrounded by a
gray r loud or smoke. There was
a reddish glow in the sky around
al that lusted for awhile ufter at
disuppcared ." says Mrs
Sern a La
Shl' s~11d during thl' obJecl ·.,
1>resl'lltl'. lhl·ar ,,.. hanmg. wham
rwring dog finally µickcd up her
frC'sh latkr of puµpie., oul of
their bed. 01w hy one. and hid
tht'm ebcwlwrc an the huUst'.
The, Sema ia:-. callt>d l
Oru n ge Police L>epart me
which rdcr rt.>d them dircrtly o
Dr. Lawson·s UFO Report
l'l'nter based an Garden Grove.
A professor ol English at Cal
St ale Unavftrsaty. Long Beach.
Dr Luwson run::. a clearing
housl' tor s1ghttng information.
s ifting data for accuracy.
plausibility or natural explana-
tions.
He said the Semaza faD1ily1s
s ighting of whatever it was
shortly berore dawn Saturday
followed by about s ix hours a re·
po rt of a t: FO rtled by l wo
Fullerton youths
J l'ff Jones a nd hu, companion
claimed they su\\ an odd. box
-,huped objett hovering m th(•
'il'1n1l y of Chu pm an and
Hu} mond :.iH·nucs in Fullerton
L>urm~ thl' pa~l four year...
l>r. Law.son has 111tl'rv1cwed
several hundred per..ons who rt'·
porlt.'d seemg UFOs a nd as con-
vinced there is somethmg to the
phenomena. based on h1:-. find-
ln!'IS a nd studae::..
DAILY PILOT
Traffic
Barmed i
:
' .
BOSTON CAP> -Much of •
Boston and its suburbs lQSt el~-•
trlcal power for several hours -
today after a blizzard blew a
section of a roof into Boston '
Edison Company's .largest
generating station, setting off a
chain reaction that knocked out
above-ground transformen.
The power failure occWTed f t
3 a m. and cut off electricity f~r
some 75,000 of the utillly's
220,000 Bost.on customers.
/\ s pokesman for the company
said power had been restored by •
8 a . m. to all bul 20,000
customers, leaving a two·mile
s tretch blacked out from the .
Public Gardens downtown west
to Kenmore Square.
.. This is i)robabJ.y the worst we
have bad it sfnce 1965," th~ year
of the Northeast blackout. said
Boston Edison spokesman
.James M. Lydon.
Lydon said the damage caused
by the roof from a building near
the generating plant combined
w ith snow a nti ~ocean s pray
driven by 79 mph gusts lo knock
out a number of above-ground
transformers.
City officials told commuters
lo stay home.
All ·a utomobile tramc except
emergency vehicles was banned
from the ctty's streets, which
were covered by at least a foot
of snow.
Buses were not running and
the city s ubway system that
transports 500,000 commuters
daily was reported operating un-
der an emergency power sup~ly •
hut ofJicaals said there were
· ver y prolonged" delays.
Above-ground electric tro!ley
t·a r s were re ported out of
'l'rvi('c and being replaced by
bu::.~:..
\"Yaves, Tide
Westminster
Probes Cause
Of Firm Fire
LB C -. . t• d F:tP~ce Coast · . ops tscip ine Road to Close .~
'
Studies of the charred rubbll·
of a Westmmskr clt•t•tronit''
plant ~uttL·d an a ~ m11l1on blalc
worst in the city's h1:-.tory
rontinued today in an effort to
pin down thl' precise caus<·
Fire Inspector Dave Merz said
speculation is that eilh(•r a ,d<'·
fective oven or elertrical c1rcu1l
triggered the firl' at Silicon
General Inc The fire had Hp·
parcnlly :-.moldered for ~Oml'
time.
The firm. which manufactures
radio and other electronic com·
ponents at 7382 Bolsa Ave .. was
largely gutted except for com-
pany offices and 1t::. computer
room.
A task force of 45 firemen
from four firefighting agencies
required n:x>re than one hour to
bring the blaze under control. a
highly hazardous task in this
case.
Seventeen of the men required
hospital treatment or examina-
tion /or smok~ inhalation and as-
s urance that potent chemical
fumes fro m blazin g a cad s
weren't absorbed through their
skin.
Hydrochloric. sulfuric and
1litric acids ate used In produc-
tion of the electronics gear the
firm manufactured.
In Nov. 8 Slwoting
T" 11 L;aguna Bl•ach police 1n
vei.t1i.:a tor ... and a polic·l'
,,crgl•Jnt lw\'e n·ceivt•d dis·
l'tphnary uclion following an an
ternal investigation into a shoot
•ng incident an South Lagun<t
Nov 8 in which an off-duty
s heriff's deputy was ~hot
Reserve officer H e rbert
William Kanne. 50. was shot an
the shoulder and lower back as
he we nt to answer the door at a
South Laguna home
Investigators Mike Slusher
and Don Barney fired five shols
into the home al 21799 Ocean
Vista. with sever al of the rounds
hilting Kanne
The two investigators were
sent to the home by Newport
Beach police who believed
former Hare Krishna leader Roy
Christopher Richard was on the
premi!>es.
Richard was one of a number
of m urder suspects sought in
connection with tht' killing of
Stephen B<wan Oct :.!2
It was later lea rn ed that
Richard \\US not ut the Ocean
Vista home and was many mile:.
away at the time of the r aid.
Ill' has subsequently been ar
rested and arraigned in Superior
C'ourl on the murder char~es .
An 1n\'e:-.t1gat1on into the
shooting by the District Al-
torney·s offi ce last Dec. 1S ended
with a ru)ing that the shooting
was accidental
But the Laguna Beach internal
affairs probe looked into the
areas of departmental rules and
regulations governing the con
duct of police personnel.
The findings of that investiga-
tion. according to Police LL Al
Olson, revealed that "Sgt. Victor
Sagan, the on-duty watch com
mander. and inves tigators
Barney and Slusher, violated rertaUl procedures.
Sea water driven by six-foot
\\aves and a 6. 7-foot high tide ,1oshed onto portions or Hunt-
ington Stat(' Beach, Sunset
Bl'ach and Surfside Colony to·
duy. l~mporarily forcing the
c l os ure o r Pacific Coast
Highway from Warner Avenue
to Surfside.
California Highway Patrol of-'
racers and Seal Beach police still
had the highway barricaded and
motorists were forced to take
alternate routes at midmorning
as the waters gradually drained.
· Armando Perez, postmaster
at Surfside Colony, said water
flooded some garages of homes
·toward the south end of the strip
of homes on the beach fronL
He sald Seal Beach Public
Works Department crews were
standing by with a truckload of
s andbags to begin preparing
against another high tide on-
s laught.
Further downcoast waves
pushed water o~er the beach
a nd made Anderson Street into a
raver .
Hig~er F.ares Studied.
OCTD Won't Seek Property Tax RevenUe Hike· .
Directors of the Orange Coun·
ty Transit District indicated
Monday that, If needed, they'll
look to higher bus fares rather
than increased property tax rev-
enue to supj)9tt future transit
district operaUoos
As a matter or fact, Directors
Al Hollinden and Ralph Clark
sald. over Ute next r ew years.
they'll be seeking a reduction in
OCTD's existint property tax
rale of & 71 cenb · rot. each GGG
worth of assessed v---.
A progressively lower proper·
ty lax rate will ·generate the
satne amount of income as infia·
tlon of property values continues
and new construction Is added lo
the assessment roll, the two
directors said,
Clark estimated that, because
of the anticipated gain in the as·
seasment roll, OCTD misbt be
able to slice Its tax rate 10 ~·
cent a year pver the next tew
• years and still recelve the same
$3.6 rnUllon ln property Lax revenue.
But tf added local revenue ii
needed to.sunort expandea
OCTD operations, HolUnden tn•
dlcated it ft\IRht be nttesaary
for OCTD \0 increase ltt atan·
dard 25-cent bus rate to~ cents
in 1980.
And ln 1883 bus fal'el could bt
hiked another flve cent&, he
Hid.
bOib HolUDden and C1ar1' aliO
noted thaL oller aourc•• or OCTD lncon>e mi1t1l tielp take
,-,.,~,,.....-
up any .-evenue slack, including
increosi:n& ~ssenger loads
They pointed to adve rtising in·
come from the sale of ad space
on district buses as another ex·
ample. rt is logical to expect that as
additional buses are pressed into
service the amount of income
gained will incre.se, the two
directors a~. .
. Jn any event, Holllnden and
Clafk •sMeCI without any
notlce•ble aiisent from the
other two OCTD dtreclors at the meeunr. bua rares will go up
before tho district's property tax
rate.
The discussion of bua fates
and tbe tax rato came as ocrD .
dlt ctCM"S adopt d a five year.
!tO·callf'd 1horl·un1e transit
ptan.
CcntetPlett in lbe rive-year
plan is the; ~allttton of 315 now
lari• bWM at tti. rate of about 76baet1 ,_.r~ •
-
-A4 OM.Y PILOT TMelldax, f•bru•rx 1, 1971 NATION /WORLD
c.!.a::..g Q Rebel ·Rout Clainied
.t ''{h ~ Ethiopia Says Desert Victory Near
· :·t ·.• Tom ADDIS ABABA. Ethiopia CAP) countrywillnotberesponalb1efor at Madawein. six miles from the •Pnldae -Ethiopian troops are rou~ the consequences t.bat will border with Somalia, said the ~·~-· Somali rebels in the Ogadeo des· follow." Soanalls made only "tactlcal :sl:C!!~~· ··.. ert, the· Ethiopian government Despite denials by the Somali withdrawals here and there" and
MIGRATORY WORKERS:
lC's really too bad that the tax-
paying citizens of our r egion
aren't as well organized as the
owners o£ professional sporting
clubs. Such dictatorial power
would surely give the taxpayers
' a lot more clout.
Just look al what is.happening
s ince the conclusion of the last
professional football season. All
the owners of the losing clubs
are mad. Even some owners of
the winners are steamed up.
So what do the owners of t~c
pro teams do? Well, they don't
r eally lake it out on the players.
They certainly don't blame
themselves.
INSTEAD, TREY give the
boot to the coach. They can the
leader and go find a new one.
Within the National Football
League, the great coaching shuf-
fle is currently under way.
Coaching job6 are changing at a
dizzying pace.·
For example, Coach George
Allen departed company of the
\Vas hington Reds kins. Jack
Pardee breezed out of Chicago
Coach Hank Stram got the quick
kick out of New Orleans. Chuck
Knox turned m his whistle to the
LA Rams' front omce.
'I'hen Allen surfa ced an LA to
gel the coaching post Knox de-
parted. Pardee, meanwhile get. ...
the job Allen vacated. Dick
Nolan, who was head man al San Francisco ~omc time back,
gets Stram's job. And Knox sur-
faces in Buffalo.
EVERYBODY SHUFFLES
everywhere. The hope of each
proressional football ~b owner
as tha t the new face, which wa!t
an old face someplace else. will
hring a wi nning season next
\ l':l r
• 11\o\\ 1f tht' ta xpayer s and
,·ntt•r:; lwd this kind of lalltudc
an hmng. firing. and swappln~.
v. ho knows how much jt might
improve local government.
J ust consider two of our our ci-
t y councils, one in Costa Mesa
and one in Irvine.
ID Costa Mesa, for example,
the clt.lzieos are most pleased
with their council because, after
three decades, the city finally
got Fairview Road flnJ.sbed 80
that it doesn't fJood any more
every lime a citizen expec-
t or ates upon the sidewalk.
On the other hand, the
citizenry sometimes isn't loo
pleased with brief Costa Mesa
council meetings where it might
be s us pected the script was
hatched in advance.
Meanwhile, out in Irvine, the
<'itizenry is delighted that its
council meets all night long in
. open session which is even aired
on cable television. There's no
script here. It's just an all-night
talkatb<>n.
The Irvine eouncil, however.
has a shabby record in the road
departmcnL In the recent rains.
Culver Drive washed right out
from under them.
NOW NEVER MIND all theex-
cuses. Never mlnd who is
really to blame. You just do like
the pro club owners. Fire the
wtfole council in both cities.
So the Mesa council switches
out to.Irvine to teach them bow
to hold short sessions and fix.
roads in 30 years and the Irvine
council .gets jobs in Costa Mesa
wherQ they can meet all night
and give the cilisenry a few gig-
gles on late television.
You cannot conclude all this
trading will make things any
better. But at least it would be
different for a while.
claimed today, butitind.lcatedthe government, foreign observers .. wW resiat andllght to the bitter
long-expected counterotfensive generally believe that Somalia's end."
to recapture the eastern part of regulat troops are fi&hUng Flkre refused to answer when
the country had not started yet. aloneside the rebels of the asked if the counteroffensive bad
C a pt. Fi k re Se la s a i e We$tem Somali Liberation Front started. Western dlplomat.s in Ad··
Wogderess, the secretary of the in the 01aden. The rebels are dis Abat>.say lt has not, althouab
rullng Military Provisional Coun-ethnic Somalis and their go•l ia to the Ethiopians have been step.
c II, told reporters the Somalis are annex the territory to Sob>alia, lts ping up air atrikes against the
.. beingroutedinalldJrecUons.'' easternneilbbor. forces ot the Western Somali
.. IT WILL NOT BE long before
the invading Somalis are thrown
back reeling with shame and
humiliation," he asserted. Asked
about the claims hy the govern-
ment or Somalia that the Ethio-
pians plan to invade its territory.
he replied:
.. IC the invading troops hand
themselves over to the revolu-
tionary forces 0£ Ethiopia, the
necessary care and attention will
be paid them. but otherwise this
A REBEL COMMANDEa.ad-
mltted to Associated Press cor-
respondent Richard 'rompldns
and other foreign nporten vtslt·
ing an insurgent camp I• eastern
Ethiopia that some ot the rebel
forces in the Harar area retreated
13 days ago under Ethiopian air
and artillery bombardments
which be charged were .. directed
by Soviet and Cuban military
persoMel!'
But Jama All, the commander
Lethal Reactor Still
Evades Searchers
EDMONTON, Alberta CAP>-Debris from the mavenckSovietspy
satellite has been located in at least a dozen spots in the wilds of
northern Canada. but searchers have not determined whether the
satellite's nuclear reactor survived the fiery plunge inc,o the earth's
atmosphere.
"It's loo soon to say," Dr.
Roger Eaton, a scientific ad-
viser to Canada's Atomic
Energy Control Board, told a
news conference Monday when
asked if the pieees of metal col-
lected so far provided any clues
to the fate 0£ the reactor's core
of about JOO pounds of uranium
235. •
The search for the core. which
would bo lethally r adioacllve.
has been in progress since the
s ate llite r e-ente r ed the at·
mosphere Jan. 24 and disinle
grated in names over Canada's
Northwest Territories.
CANADIAN AND American
detectors mounted on Canadian
military C-130 Hercules planes
have fotmd no radioactivity high
enough to be coming from the
core.
But Col. David Garland,
whose Namao Base is head-
quarters for the search, said the
core "could be burled in ice or
tundra and shielded by the ter-
r a in·' somewhere in the
Switzerland-size search u~a.
He said low-level, close-
formation aer1~ searches will be made with navl~atlonal
e quipment th l will allow
"deadly accura "pinpointing of
.sources of radioactivity.
THE DEBRIS recovered has
been s hipped lo an atomic
laboratory in Pinawa, Manitoba.
for analysis that the government
hopes will provide some clues to
what may have happened to the
core.
Eaton said one difficulty fac-
ing scientific investigators is
that they have little idea of the
design of the satellite or its
nuclear power plant.
Honesty Pays
Whistle-bloWer Rewarded
WASIDNGTON IAP> -The amount was $10,000 instead of Sl
million, but other aspects or the check given to ~ale M. Kuehn were
reminiscent orthe old television show. "The Milhonatre."
In the show , lawyer Michael Anthony handed out Sl million checks
to people on behalf or a philanthropist who never was seen.
In real life, Kuehn, a former -------------
federal auditor who blew the for the donor. the head of a fami-
whistle on his superiors, was ly foundation .
given hls $10,000 check Monday
o n behalf of an anonymous
donor from California.
KUEHN, 30, SAID he resigned
under pressure last August from
the Federal Energy Administra-
tion. He accused his bosses or
suppressing an investigation into
s hady practices o( oil and
natural gas to a Florida utility.
· The charges spurred
news paper articles and national
television coverage that told or
kickbacks and charges by
fraudulent middlemen that added
as much as $8.5 million to utility
bills 0£ Florida electric con-
sumers.
Harry S. Ashmore, who won 11
Pulitzer prize as editor of the
Arkansas Gazette and now 1s
with the Center for the Study of
Democratic Institutions at Santa
Barbara. acted as intermediary
.. THE DONOR IS a close
personal friend," Ashmore told
re porters.
·•He called me after he
watched Kuehn's appearance on •so Minutes' and said be had
been much Impressed ...
Daly Pilot Dtl•trf lsh•••• Mondlly·Friday: If you do not have
You• Paoer by 5·30 p.rn.. cell betore T
p.m. 8lld rour copy wlU be dehwred.
Saturday and Sunday: If ycAJ do f\ot
receive your copy by 8 a.m.. can
belore 1 o a.m.. and ycxK O/Jlt1'I Wiii b8 delivered.
Cltt.1!ftffo.t Tai ... 1a11
Most Ontnoe County Area• 64J.4UI
Nortnwest Hunt1no1on Be.ch
Md Westm1n1ter •.•••.•• Mo.1120
&fl Qemenre. cap111rano Beach.
San Juan Qiplstrano.
Dana Point. South Laguna.
Laguna Niguel .••.....• 49WIM
L1beradcn Front.
FIKU SAID WESTERN in·
t elliaence reports of some 3,000
Cuban troops and 1,500 Sovjet
mllltary advisors being in
Ethiopia "are baseless.'' But the
U.S. State Department said Mon·
day at least 1,000 more Cuban
troops have been sent to Ethiopia.
raising the estimated number of
Cubans in theconllictto4,500.
Flu Patrol Ali reported Ethiopia's Soviet·
supplledjets and field guns began
to po11nd Somali forces on the ap-
proaches to the key clty of Harar,
in the northem Ogaden, on Jan.
22. He sald the rebels were forced to retreat three days later from
positions on the road between
Harar and Dlredawa, the other
majortownstillbeld bylbeEt.bio-
pian army1.ot.he0gaden..
Cadets use a wagon to deliver s ack lunches to classmates
on bed rest at the Air Force Academy in Colorado. where
classes have been canceled and athletic events
postponed. About" 1.000 lined up for sick call Monday and
more than 800 were ordered to bed ln their dorms over
the weekend with symptoms of Russian nu.
TOWN DECURES 'WAR OF WORDS' ON U.S.
KlNNEY, Minn. CAP> -The town council of
Kinney, population 325, bu voted to secede from
the United States -aod threatais war.
••u would be a war of words,'" adds Mayor
Mary Anderson. "We'.re a peaceful people."
they propoee becomi:ni an independent country.
Ms. Anderson sald the letter expresses t1'e
frustration of the·small village in wading tbrouab
the federal red tape in grant applications.
She admitted that Kinney recel\'ed a '3$.000
grant for new water lines from the federal Depal'tl"
meat of Houslug and Urban Development laat
year. Bllt she said that grant -,.a.sn•t near.ly enough!"
In a tongue.in-cheek resolution forwarded to
Settetary ol St4te Cyrus Vance, the oouncil said it
is easier to get foreign aid than domestic aid. so
In
¥oarBesl
Interest
Higher interest than commercial banks pay plus the 8:ssurance that your ~av
ings are safe, insured by a Federal Agency. A deposit of $1000 or more.ma
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of Deposit Account for only one year yie1ds 6.72%. It's.in your best Interest
to start your savings account today. One mrnute and one signature ts all It takes.
INCOME TAX PREPARATION
Join the thousands of Los Angeles Federal Savers who have their personal
Federal and California tax returns prepared without charge.
AH you need to do is deposit $5,000 in a Los Angeles Federal Savings Pass-
book or $10,000 In a higher rate Investment Certificate.
If your savings are now in a commercial bank or another institution. Los
Angeles Federal Savings will make your tax appointment now and handle
the details of transfer.
Make your appointment early. The sooner you file, the faster your refund can
be malled.
PLUS 20 MORE SERVICES
When you qualify for income tax preparation, there's a long list of additional
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What you save each month on all these services can be earning additional
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\
Storm Cripples <;:hicago
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"' LO ..C " n n ,.. :II .. » • >• 1S ~
ft " :az ,.
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" ,.
'2 11
" ~
G It
6.98%
6.72o/o
.5.92%
5.39%
C!RTIACAT!S OF DEPOSIT
$1000 OR MORE
30 months 6'1• o/o
12 months 6Y2 %
3 months 5.75%
PASSBOOK SAVINGS ACCOUNTS
AHY AMOUNT
Oayln to day out
ALL INTEREST COMPOUNDED OAIL Y Funds ptematunily withdrawn from Certlflcato Acoounta eam
Interest et the Passbook rate, aa provided by Federal regula-tion, for the fun term ot Investment. lesa ninety days.
LOS ANGELES
FBDERAL S~VINGS
Newport Beach
3201 Newport BIVd -act6st from City Hall • 675-4500
ONN M MON.-l'MMI. .... ""'
CALIFORNIA T~. February 7. 11'78 DM.V PILOT A3
'Article Ottenn.,~ Tax Cuts Viewed
Jog Author's
.. Bill Would 'Halve' Payments
• SACRA.MENTO <AP) -Major
amendments are ln the works for a
Senate-passed plan to cut every
Cali(omla homeowner's property tax
bill at least in hair.
another hearing and vote in one to
two weeks.
Brown and Behr agreed that an es·
sential part or the blJI 1s cuttmg prop-
erty taxes In half. which would
make it an attractive alternative to
the Jarvis tax cut initiative to be on
Firing Backed .
The bill by Sen. Peter Behr, R-
Tiburon, received a friendly hearing
in the Assembly Revenue and Taxa-
tion Committee Monday. But both
Behr and Assemblyman Willis
Brown, D-San Francisco, the com·
mittee chairman, said changes are
needed before the bl11 would be ac-
. ceptable to the Assembly
B EHR SAID his bill, SB 1, would
cut property taxes by Sl.9 billion, and
pay for half of that with stJlte sur·
pluses. It would start a new tax on
the sales of homes to pay the other half.
The cut on a $50,000 home would be
from $1.100 annually to about $500.
And every renter would get an addi·
tlonal $50 credil on state income
taxes .
BROWN ADVOCATED an amend·
ment to scrap the 5 percent transfer
tax on home sales now in the bill, and
11ub&titute an unspecHied higher tax
that would apply only on capital
gains of the sale.
He said this would make it more
acceptable politically and resolve the
question of whether the transfer tax
would be deductible from federal in-
come laxes
BEHR S.\10 1t would t<1kc at le<i:.l
a week to draft amendments and
figure out how they would affect ta~·
payers Brown i.aid he hoped for
Teamsters 42
the June 6 ballot.
BROWN SAID it is likely that the
Behr bill will be the tax relief
mea s ure eventually s ent to
Democratic Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr., even though Behr is a
Republican.
Bills from the Democratic maj-Ori ·
ty have been blocked by divisions
among Democrats on rival rormuJas
to split up homeowner tax cuts
Behr's bill uses a different approach.
and was praised by s eve ral
Democrats
"THIS IS ONE of the most tn·
novative tax proposals I have &een up
here that has a chanct' of passage.
You have really taken care of most
of my concerns." s ~id Larry
High Tide
Normally high and dry. th.is is how the launching ramp lookt•d at
the Martinez Manna followinA heavy rains and a nej"r-scven fool
tide. The &torm which s wept through Northern California Sunday
resulted in numerous problems. including mudslide:; and downed
trt'C~
Handyman Cle ared in FiJ.e Deaths·
Kapiloff. D·San Diego. Brown, whose support is con· GUERNEVILLE (AP> -The :.lopped all investigation" of Yochim
sidered critical to any tax bill, told Sonoma CoWlty sheriff's office said in connection with the deaths. The
Behr: "It looks like this is the bill. today a 28·year-old handyman was handyman was only questioned over
Everybody,is lr~g to get 00 it." cleared or any implication in the fire seeming inconsistencies which
deaths of five young brothers and sis-Caulfield said were cleared up.
BUT BEHR was more cautious. He ters, adding that the man had been said the Dcmocrau. proposing to sub· improperly booked at the county jail Four of the youngsters died Sun-
stitult' a capital ~ains tax for the The county jail reported Monday day, a fifth on Monday.
tral"!sfcr tax aren't necessarily talk that Michael Robert Yochim had Yochim told deputies he was asleep
ing about lhe sumc thinl! been booked for lnvestigation of the in the living room of the-Brtan and
He :.aid the bill barel> passed the Sunday deaths. but detective Capt Sharon Sackson home when the 4
St-natl• last wl:''l!k and 1s "a delicate Jim Caulfield said today that was an ti.m blaLe broke out Firemen said
httlc trc;iture" that will take i:real l:'rror that when they arrived Yochim was
l' a r l' lo k ee p a 11 v c in th l' Caulfield said the jail booking nota· trying without succe5s to douse the
L1.·~1~laturc lion was incorrect and "we've blaze with a garden hose
--~~~-~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~---~-----
HOMEOWNERS
' ,
SAN DIEGO (AP) -San Dleao's jouina
psychiatrist is out or a job at Slsten or Mercy
Hospital, apparently because of his comments ln a
national magazine article on divorce and a photo
of him and his fiance bathln«i in a hot tub.
A hospital spokesman confirmed the Dec. lS
riring of Dr. Thaddeus Kostrubala on Monday. but
declined comment on details surrounding the
ouster except to say the Roman Catholic sisters
who run the hospital found the ~rtlcle offensive •
KOSTRUBALA gained national recognition fol'
his book, "The Joy or Running,·• In which he
claimed runnin2 can help cure mental illness.
drug abuse and alcoholism.
The article. which appel\red In the Dec. 13 is·
sue of US, the entertainment magazine published
by the New York Times, quoted the 47 -year-old
psychiatrist as saying he and his third wile, Ann
were " . going lo have a divorce ritual. Nothing
elaborate, just some simple food, a short jog. the
hot tub."
THE OCCASION, he was quoted. would mark
all the spiratual things he and his wife had shared.
Along with the article was a picture showing a
bald-headed, bare chested K~trubala in a bath
with his 26-year-old fiance, Teresa Clitmose, also
appearing bare-breasted.
Kostrubala said he sent a copy of the story.
which he described as containing some errors, to
Sisler Joanne, the hos pital's executive director.
"SHE SAID my effectiveness within the de·
partmcnt and with other departments in the
ho:.pital was ruined." Kostrubala said. "She never
~ot around lo anything specific."
Kostrubala will retain his nonpa1d, elected
po5l as chief of psychiatry at the hospital. but he is
uncertain about his future .
Union Picks
New Leader RABBITI IMS .
si..c. 1t11 yoarmoneJ
oishere. lt1 4 HAAIOI IU D.
COSTAMISA
548·$554 LOS ANGELES IA P l -A slalc of challengers
ha~ tak<'n control of th<' Joint Council of Teamsters
42. repres enting 170.000 union members 1n
~outhern California and :'\evad<A. following elec·
t1ons NEED A LAWYE R ?
The s lall' 1~ hl'adcd by Local 986 leader
Michuel J. Riley. who:.e local is the largest in
California.
The 45-ycar·old Riley was unanimously elect-
ed to replace Pele Kurbatoff. 65, pres ident of the
joint council for seven years.
'°"ce B.,.t 8au llollber
SAN .JOSE (AP) -Police were huntln1 today >for a suspect they call "The Old Man" .after he
escaped with about $55,000 taken in his sixth San
Jose area bank robbery.
Officers said lhe
,,, ,,., i bank robber, held up a (
.---------·man. who at age 40-50 is
.C"F' ~rr-E J older than the nverage
--------First National Bank •
Branch in the Oak Ridge •
Mall here Monday. •
Police said "The Old Man" now has stolen •
more than $170.000 from San Jose area bank:.. •
Slatfer A ..,orded 30 Dop
PASADENA (AP) -Lupe Garcia. 25. has
been sentenced to 30 days in county jail for fatally
shooting her ex·husband, television reporter Joel
Garcia, last May 31.
Superior Court Judge Henry W. Shatford. who
gave Mrs. Gnrcia credit for three days already
spent behind bars. also placed the woman on five
years' probation Monday.
Mrs. Garcia testified at her trial that she shot
her 35-year-old ex-husband in self·defe{lse. after he
threatened to kill her, their 5-year-old daughter
and himself
.SO. Dle90 Co.le Kiiied
SAN DIEGO CAP) -A San Diego couple died
when lh<'ir dune buggy went out of control and
flipped at least seven times in a dry lake ~d 40
miles northeast or San Felipe. Mexico.
The victims or the Sunday crash were iden·
tified as Dennis Allen. 24. and Sandra Lee Hages,
Mexican authorities said Monday.
w ... 11 Strttelc .. l'r•I•
BELL <AP>~ A 52-year-old woman. who ap-
parently ignored nBshing lights and gate barriers
and lay down on Southern Pacific rallroad lracks
Monday, was struck and killed by a slow-moving
freight train.
Authorities Identified the victim as Margaret
Raymond, a resident of a nearby motel.
S•JNet Pied• l1tt1~ll
LOS ANGELE.5 CAP) -A 21-year-old former
piua dellvery man pleaded lMocent Monday to
tbe 1978 D>utder of actor Sal Mineo, and his lawyer
sou1ht to have the charge dllmlued on procedural
groundl.
Lionel Williams entered ttMI plH at his ar·
r•isnment before Superior CoW't Jud1t Paul O.
Breckenrfdte Jr., who 1'et t.be Feb. 21 PN'lrtll·
bearlnt dale '
•
•Divorce
• Bankruptcy
• Crlmlnal
• Wills-PrObate
• Incorporation • Acc:ldent·lnJury •Eviction
640.2507
Stagecoach checks-wouldn't your nome
look good next to ours?
-71?1% /iiWt?:Rmt~
Having a Wells Fargo checking
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history in your pocket. Our famous
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in six style~. Come in, we'll be glad
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With Wells Fargo's Cash Mover
Account, your firm's idle funds can
cam a full 5% interest until they're
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plus you get monthly statements
that tell you exactly how your
money's working. And when
combined with Wells Fargo's
unique Credit Line service, you
get a total financial package al one
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1brn your checking
• • account mto a
Gold Account.
If you qualify for a Master Charge
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bank service package -The Wells
Fargo Gold Account. For $3 a month
and no minimum balance, you 'II have
a checking account with no monthly
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checlcs. cashier's checks. overdrBft
protection, reduced rates on
installment loans and your own
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The Wells Fargo
Reward-
the savings account
that means more
than just interest.
Now, 1f you keep $2,000 in any
Wells Fargo savings plan -passbook
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travelers chcch. An $8 safe deposit
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Wells Fargo Personal Banker .
There are just a bandf ul of names
that seem to !lum up the whole
spirit of the West. Now, the place
where r_ou bank can be one of
them. Come in and see us.
'Ot '8 Cfedrt IOWlll'da a l1<00f St7• Avellat1411ty _., VeKY from olfloe to ()floe.. :,u:,:;:::«eS1 ~ntlttv tor •lrlY w.t'-"-1
..
,,
_,.._ .... __ .., .. ___ ...._...-....... ... -......... --.. ------·-·.,,., .... ______ ._ ... ,.._........_. ......... , ____ .,.~·--.. ...... . . . . -... ., ..,..,._
Tue.day, February7, 1978
· Robert N. Weed/Publlahe,.
8a~ra Krelblch/Edlt«lal P-oe Edlt04' ·~.:~o~yP1~01.Edftoriaf pg_e .......................................................... . .
Computer 'Lesson'
£~st $2.3 Million
OraDge Qnmty supervisors took a rare actioo among
government bodies when they voted last week to
discontinue ftmding of a judicial and law enforcement
program called OASIS that county administrators said
had failed to fulfill its promise.
Major purpose of OASIS was to provide local police.
the sheriff's department. the district attorney, probation
officials and the courts with up-to-date information on
persons aceused of committing crimes.
In effect. supervisors correctly said there is no sense
throwing good money after bad when they voted to cut ·off
the. OASIS funding.
The one drawback to the •ijunk ie" decision was that
$2.3 million, 90 percent of it federal grant money, had
already beeo spent on cleve»ping the computer system.
But it would have cost an estimated $1,400 a day to
continue down the computerized path that yielded only
disappointment and criticism after five years of planning
cind development.
There is a lesson to be learned from the uore \\arding
$2.3 million OASIS experience. howe' er .
Chief lesson.is that local officials tend to spend and
treat grant money and projects on which it is spent in a
::.omewhat different light than local tax dollars.
It is doubtful OASIS would have been allowed to dig
itself into a $2.3 million pothole if it had been local tax
dollars footing the bill.
Fannland Poll
During the 1960s. Orange County farmland {!a\"c way
lo developnwnl ut the rate of some 4.000 acr es a yec.t r. But
more thew 45.000 a cres still r emain in a gn c:ultun.: ~tn<l
nurst-ry µroduction.
~·o unt ~ ~UJH'1·v i -.o r s ha\l' h f'l'rt ponclt:.'r ing llH·
~11lv 1!-.ab1hl~ of t<1k1n~ ac.:t1on to pre:-t•n t• th1::. <h' incl Im:..:
~upply of farmland. They estimat~ 1L could take ..1 S1:!5
million bond 1~::.ue to finance !>uch preservation.
The quc~tton. of coun,e. is whether the voters arc
~qj'iciently interested in saving the farmland lo approvl!
::.uch an invest.ment.
Now supervisors have decided to try to fmd out by
placing a sort of public opinion poll on· the June 6 ballot.
If there is a good indication of public support, they can
proceC'd with developing a bond proposal for the
l'<ovC'mbcr ballot. ,
Jn the intcrin1 they will spend up to $-10.000 to
itlPnl1f~· choice farmland parcels that would qua lify few
Pl"l'M'n ·;it 1011. This information would he available for tlw
.I t llH' fi \ Ol l'.
Tlwn. with ;i l-!l"l'l'l1 li ght ·from t ht• voters, t hL'Y 1:oul<l
,:11 ;il1L·~i<I <md :.pt•rHI •1n <1dd1ti11n a l S:W,000 to de \ l'lop t he
bond propo::,al for Novcmbt-r.
This is a M."ll!-.11.lJl· idea . As Supervisor Ralph Clar J..
noted. delaying a boml b sue vole until the 1980 electwt\-
<·ould mean that much of that prime agricultural land
•·would bemdemeatb concrete and asphalt.··
t The voters should be polled as promptly as possible.
That's the only way to see if further expenditure to keep
this land from being swallowed up is justified.
Space Stirprises
1 n the decade s ince the Soviets put Sputnik I into orhrl
"c'vc all been hurling assorted hardwa rl! into space \\ 1th
proud abandon. ll'~ one thing to achieve a controlled landing-of a n
<:arth ~atellitc . It's quite another to have the thing come
down of its-own accord.
By a fortunate· small miracle. the· first of these
uncontrolled descents (at least so far as we seem to
know) wound up in the frozen northland of Canada. far
from human habitation. Especially fortunate because it
happened to be a nuclear powered job.
Now U.S. space officials r ather blandly tell us that
our own Skylaf.? space station. that served as the space
home of astronaut crews in 1973 and 1974. could fall·to ·•
earth later this year.
Skylab doesn't have any nuclear material aboard.
but it's a substantial hunk of hardware, about the size of
a large house. Just where and when it would fall seems to.
be anybody's guess. But it seems fairly obvious it could
make a good-sized dent on anything it happened to hit.
The original idea was to keep Skyla b in orbit until
1980, .when the space-shuttle will be in operation and its
crew could attach a rocket to push the space station into
a higher, safer orbit.
Apparently that may not work out.
Perhaps one little matter on which we could ~et
t ogether with the Russians is figuring oul some beUc.r
methods of controlling our space trash. • Opinions expt"ft&ed In the apaoe above are those ot the Oalty Pilot.
(>ther views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
tirtlats. Reader comment Is invited. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O.
~x 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 •.
Boyd/Advice
ByLM.BOYD
On the tombstone ot Death
Valley Scott7 la Inscribed
something he aald: .. I got
four things to llve by. Don't
say pot.bing that will hurt
anybod1. Don't giv& advice
-nobod~ will take i t anyway. Don•t co111.Plaln.:
Aodd.on'taplain."
Ezpem~claim to bow
say flrllt·bom and last-born
obildl'\Ul tend to do better
sociaU.v. tbet the middle-born
are more likely to be ex·
tren:lely unpopular.
Tbat natural pigment
ealled myogl,obi.n is wbat
makes raw meat red. But it
hM to combine with oxneo to do ao. It the inner 1*'tion
of plutic-wrapped meat
look• brown iMtead of red,
tbat may mean oftlt" that Jt
baq't had enoup oxy•en,
Ml th.t it's neeeuuib' bad.
Oreo IQlt&UnJ bUtch@r.
. .
Nick Thimmesch
·Price Wars Reflect Oil . GIUt -.
but the new price wara have f
brought them down, t WASHINGTON -Gasoline
price wans have broken out in
scattered areas in tbe West.
Prices across the country are
droppinr and are expected to re-
main stable, and in Phoenix two
independent self-serve chains
will argue in court this week
whether one bas the right to sell
gasoline for 48.9 cents a gallon
-below wholesale price. What's going on here?
There are more motorists in
the republic than voters. So
when Presi-
dent Carter
preaches
solemnly on
the energy
cris is. und
when energy
cz ar James
S c hlesinger
puffs his pipe
and offers
anlonin g
echoes, the ordinary folk who
patronize the nation•s 290,000
gasoline-dispensing joints pay
small heed.
If a citizen can get all the gas
be or she wants at affordable
prices, that is the reality, not
federal pronounce ments, and
that ls why Americans are still
:>elting records for gasoline con· s umption.
THE WORLD GLl'T or crude
orl and the enormous stocks in
the Umt<.'<i States have their con-
M'QUt:.'nce at gas station pumps
Ill c1t1cs such as Phoenix. There,
Giant Service Stations. Inc.
wants to sell regular for 48.9
c·ents a gallon and unleaded for
51.9 at two new stations it will
soon open. These are prices last
seen after the Arab oil embargo
ended in 1974.
But a competitor. Cory's
Gasoline Stations, got a tern·
porary restraining order to stop
Gia nt from offering such
"leader" prices, claiming it is il·
legal under Arizona's Unfair
Sales Acl.
Cory argues that G,iant could
s~ll a l a sm:ill loss for a while
;rnd thus eliminate <.:ory. '"There
is no customer loyalty with self.
!>t'rve," the Cory lawyer argues.
.. The price is everything. You
either drop your ptices or you
lo.sea customer.'•
. Earl Waters
A judge will settle the matter
which is oo)y a aymptoi:n of what
bu h appened dince it became
e~dent several years back that
the petroleum sbortaee would
cause people to pay higher
prices. What happened was that.
in much of the world, production
was accelerated, and new giant
exploration efforts began. Now
we have new oil pourin& out of
Mexko, Indonesia. Alaska and
the North Sea.
TllEU IS NOW a dally world
crude oil production surplus of 2
to 5 million barrels, according t.o
the American Petroleum lnstitut~. In the United States.
there were 245,481,000 barrels or
gasoline in stock in January,
1977. Now, one year lat.er, the in·
v e ntory h as cl i mbe d to
266,962,000 barrels and i.s expect-
ed to increase. lrontcatly, the
)
experience of last winter's ex-
treme cold caused refiners to
hike production fld thus help
cut prices. •
' PLATT'S Monthly Survey.
tak e n in 55 cities· during
De c e mber , :showed regular
gasoline prices average 63.66
cents a gallon. The January sur-
vey is expected to show a slight
drop in that average figure.
Regular gasoline was cheapest
rn Miami. Philadelphia and
Dallas and most expensive in
<:hicago (68.9 cents) because of
lllinois' high taxes.
A comparable state s ur·
vey taken by the American
Automobile Assn. ~AAA) in December showed 1llino1s with
the highest price for regular
167.3 cents) and Texas the
1owesl (58.8 cents). Prices ln
Western states were the highest,
Close Encounters of tfie Fourth Kind
AA A reported the 1u •
tional averaao for re(Ular in
December was 63.1 cents per I gallon. the same flaure for Thanksgiving week. and a
modest drop frorn the 64.6
average of that gas-guzsllng l
Fourth of July weekend. Price ~
surveys by the Department of ;
Energy show similar trends. and ~
tbe department forecasts fai.IV f good price atablllty in 1978.
• So wbat do motorists do, while.
the President and Schlesinger
gnash their teeth and look to l
heaven for succor? Why. they l
burn up gasoline at recol'd. rates. ~
The only year of the past five _,
that .Americans cut consumption
was 1974, but that was due to the
Arab scare and the recession.
Jn 1975 we burned 6.7 million
barrels ot gasoline each day. In
1976 it was 7 million. Last year.
it climbed to 7.1 million and is.
expected to climb some more in
1978. It won't stop unW there ·
isn't any more in those 290,000
gas·dispensmg places. People
love to drive. ~ ,.
MINDL~ liberals blame all
this on the oil companies, now ··
the troglodytes of our economic
community. Greed is readily as·
::.1gned to the seven sisters of
gasoline. Actually, oil company
profits have not increased more, •·
nor are they proportionately J
higher. than. say. the television ,.t
networks. whose news broad-~ 1
casts love to cite oil company ~
profits but never mention what. ·1
TV networks earn. ~
Anyway. the oil companies '·•
spend a iood deal of money ~
these days telling people to coo-•
serve what they sell them. but ·
that doesn't do much good r
either. ·
It is just too easy for most ;
motorists to get into that car. ·:
start her up and purr away.·
America has mass transport.a·
tion. It 1s the automobile. 1t will
t alw Dctroit "s next generation of
lighter mode ls. tho higher
i¢asohne prices that. will come
one day as sure as the sun rises.
or even greater shock. treatment
to make us think bard about our
tremendous gasoUne conswnp.
tton.
• .
Sacramento EVents Unveil an Ugly Mess
The sordid t ales of intrigue
and infighting, favoritism and
backstabbing in the highest
ctrcles <>f state government, un-
raveled during the hearings into
the firing of Dr. Josette Mon-
danaro, will provide plenty of
aJDmunition in the forthcoming
gubernatorial election.
The muck which surfaced re·
veals that Governor Jerry
Brown has
before him a greater Jabor
than did
Hercule s
when he set
out to cleanse
the Auge a n
stables. And.
although lhe
G r e e k
mythical hero
accomplished his task by tum·
igg the rivers Alpheus and
.Peneus to wash out the mess,
not even the Sacramento and
American rivers al overflow on
tbe doorsteps of the Capitol
would seem to be enough to
overcome the stench here.
It is n't just the mean dis·
harmony within the Brown ad·
ministration. starkly unbaring
both the ineptness of the gov-
ernor in his appointments as
;J»aol Harvey
. well as the incompetence and
disloyalty of those chosen. More
shocking 1s the seeming in·
tolerance for free and slrang~.
love among the state's highest
officials.
Where, beneath the thin
veneer of polit.ehess that l>re-
v ailed, the ugly suggestions that
state government at the top was
akin to a modern Sodom or
Gomorrah were only innuendoes
8.J\d rumor, these have now been
given substance in official
records.
THE INITIAL reaction would
have been one of sympathy for a
governor seeking to oust a pro-
bationary appointee found to be
profanely intemperate and a
confessed queer to boot. But
compassion quickly dissipates
when it is realized it was not on-
ly Brown's errors in hiring but
his negligence in remedying
thos e mistakes which have
brought about the ad·
ministrative holocaust.
And commiseration turns to
revulsion when it is learned lha&
Brown's deci5ion for firing Mon·
danaro had nothing to do with
right or wrong but only a con-
cern for his image in the
forthcoming election.
Point by poml the situation is
briefly:
Brown appoi nte d Mario
Obledo, a complete outsider to
slate affairs , to head up the
s tate's largest agency, the
Health and Welfare bureaucracy
of more than 47 ,000 employees.
Obledo, under increasing attack
for alleged favoritism and fla-
grant disregard of state civil
servi in hiring, along with sug·
gest of involvement with
sinister elements, has been
staunchly defended by Brown.
BROWN appointed Dr.
Jerome Lackner. a physician
whose philosophy and conduct
have~ described by some as
"f)aky," as director of the
Health department despite his
own admissions of inadequacy
as an administrator.
When Laclmer's deficiencies
became publicly apparent
Brown was compelled to act.
lnatead of replacing Lackner, he
installed the controversial
firebrand Raymond Procunier
to run the department under
J.actner even though Procunier
!lad beett twice rejected by the
Senate to bead the state parole
burea\L
Mondanaro was hired to work
under Lackner as head of the ~
drug abuse program. Her open
confession of being a lesbian r
might be taken as admirable
honesty or a brazen contempt
for public opinion. In any event
it is contrary to the Bible, nature
and the accepted moral stan· "
dards of the majority. That may
be neither here nor there insofar , ;
as job performance were she not.
in charge or other employees.
THERE ABE those who would
· dismiss the whole squalid affair
as a tempest but for the rumors ·
that similar situations exist in
other departments. Shoring such ~·
suggestions is Brown's instant ,
conduct. For, if the testimony of
numerous witnesses is believ~
Brown couldn't care less
whether a top l evel ad· .
ministrator had odd sexual pref· ·
erences. or wrote filthy letters ~
on official state stationery, had J
his re.-election not been upcom·
ing.
The word from the top was.
"'The lid was to be kept on. No
em b1trrassments for the next 14
months ... The question must be.
''How will the Augean stables
look after the election?"
Business Critics Fail ''Fim.eses' and 'Gazintas'
Jet bro of the Be•erly
Hillbillies liked to demonttrate
bis mathematical educatiOb. by
recittna the "Umeses'' and She
«gaxtntas."
•"fwo times two is four. two
timed our is e1ght •• so forth: ..
complexity or profits and t axes
and deficits"
The Associated PreH recently
designated its business analyat,
John Cunniff, to try to find out
why our nation's private en·
terprisc economic system -
which made us the most
materially wealthy nation Or\
earth -is beine modified in
favor of a SYJtem that has proved
less fruitfuL
He concluded that gqr own~
ple don't understand how °""
aystem workl.
business. Even President Cart«
does not understand that.
Last October President Carter
u1d the congressional plan to
modify government regulation of
oil and aaa "would put $50 billion
into the pockets of the oil com·
paoiet. ••
Wbot the 'Pre.<iident appan:nUY
dtd not understand was th& dlt· leHnce between grosa pro£i.t.s
and .net tncOme.
~RANGE COUNTY I POLITICS I OBITUARIES Tuactay, February '7, t978
,Y Phil lntetlandi
., JAC'lm! BYMAN
Ot•Dally ......... electron and two neutrinos and lntttacls very ady for os lonit as anothl'r 10 years. T~e estimated
weakly With matter.) .. cost bf lhe en lire project lS $3.\ munon. Catchillf a neutrino lS no sJmple matter.
lt helpe if yoq have a lar .. supply of some
cheap. dense' matter -aay a cubic kilometer or
the sea water.
DUMAND, with Dr. Reines aerving as Dr. Reines stressed that althoug~ what hap.~
chairman of it.s steering and executive commit-pens in distant gala~ies may atem remote from
Then you have to bo sure then are as few dil·
tractine sights and sounds as poafble. You might
try going about four mile& doWn ~ ocean.. 30
or more mUes from shore.
You could use the ualstanco of a few scle.11· tl.sts.
AN OCEANOGRAPHER AND an C)Ceano·
l(l'apbic engineer, of course. SolQe astrophysicists,
high.energy pbyalcista, cosml., ray apecJallsts.
bioloelsts, geophyalclsta and Information pro.
cessors. too. And In tbe end yoq can't really hope
to trap a neutrino. Just e~t a fix m lt. ·
A neutrino ltaelf ts no alm·
pfe matter -it's a P._ractical
without mass or electrical
charge that travels at about the
speed of light and can usually oo.---..""--,._-pass through earth without col·
liding with other particle3. •• "Qerchu Ja 10C)(f aecretary• bu always been m7 Jn fact, says UC Irvine's
-
_mot __ to._Wba __ t_cou1 __ d_w_om __ en_'_s_H_b_ha __ ve __ asa_t.mt __ tba_t_!_'"--Dr. Frederick Reines, .. It's a
rather strange particle because
it penetrates matter wltb ex·
traordinary ease. It ~an
penetrate light.years (tbe
distance light travela in a year)." For the Record
Dh•olutlon• Of Marriage
"'" ,,._., ,. AL,0110, kellll .. n I.. •nd A'1hur
t>.; OltTIZ. S.""r• J. -Galo S; ttOTCH, 1..onrti. and Pete Mich.tel:
WARll, R1ct>erd c. -CNrlene F.;
'fOVAAS, Shelly Anr> e"<I AoOert
Ml\chtll; Vou.MER, Bewrty J. •n<l
Death Notlee11
wooo
90NN1£ COLLEEN WOOO •• .,., *"' of C.O.t. .Me>4, c.. p.,.,., .... y
on l'ewuary 4, 1'11 •I lM ~ 04 •3.
... _II ,_r Of R1c,...rd WOOd of
Sen!• AM, C., A•ymqjlQ WOOd ol Costa Mu&, C. ...., Merf°'i. wooo ot
S.nl• An•. C... loving ,, .. .,.of G .. tr•
£verseft .. ~ 84recti, C• , K•n
_,, Huro• "' s.N• ,.,,,., ~ Mr~
W-was • n vw•r employ .. of tlW' .Al.M M•rktl In s ... ,. An•, c •.
Gravesid• Uf'Vl<e-\ WtU b• f\•fd on
Yle~ne~•Y FeD< ... ry I. 1971 •t 10 00
AM. at F•l,,.. ... n t.Mn~"~I P•·-In
Sant• Ane, CA. wltll It>!' RtY Oo"4110
StUfQMn olfltl•lll)9, lnt..,mtnt will bot
•t Fa1rll•-Mem...l•I P••I< J'rlt1•cl\
•h• whh to SNY tN1r re'\.pet h m•Y
ca ll •t '"" Sm•th Tulllfll L•mo Wotcllff O\epel, 07 £ 11th SI 'CoU•
Mtw, C... an Tut-.dey FtD<u••Y 1 t'71
from •:OO A.M to ) 00 PM Smith
Tuthill L•mb Co\ta Moe Mortu•ry
oorecloo ._.. "888
Ml,l>HI t.. ; OLSOM, Bonn•• A •r>d
Wllll•m G ; CHESSER, De6<• LYfl" and Dellu Ronald; FARRIE'il
EllMn •nd Mlt .. ti 0 , ESPINOZ4,
Aol>erl& I... Mid EO..ard R
l'lled ........ ry It
HAOLEY. Glen H. """ Oon• l..vn. t.E180VICH, Aolle'1 E. and P•trl<1•
,. • VAl..OEZ, Lortn10 A. e nel
Art-; SOUTHERN, Roc.rt.io. and
C•lhertne LoulH; THOMAS, Kim
<incl Lennie Z-: SANOEAS. Jer-
ry t y n and Kenneth Oe•n;
LANGLEY, 0oM F -Bourl<e J
WOLCOTT, "*»l W•yne -Sherry Ann; MYERS, Ttrry L .. and "-
D•lt. JOHNSON. Pllyllls o . •no
.J•mtsAlltn.
KUECHLIN, M•• Murry ~nd
Socorro; .JONES, .Juor Arin and
Art!lr P•ul; SLATTON, Jamu R
ancl Darlene D., WAITE, Prudence
•no Nick Go<-. SHOOP. 0o-
and Allred R ; NOVOTNV, Melinda
and G•ry; MERRITT, Vidrle L. •nd'
M •ct>ul I..; WtLl..IS, Metvln R. -
8tverty M.; THOMPSON, Mar1tyn and Slandltll R .K.; FORBES, 5'.tun
1.. vnn •nd ~ Ho.oard.
SUTHERLAND, Mer1l 0. -Ann;
WELLS, Ronald k. eftO S.lly J ,
ORAKE, 8rende l(ay and Stet>Mn
M•rk; COOLEY, DevlCI 0 . and
Gtotla l..; IVSOUTH, Paul Gronem
•ncl LlobMI\ Raeitft; R'EX. &of>nle Lu
and Steven ""'lip. ''""'_.,,.
.. , ... ,
HE O\JGBT TO KNOW. He ajong wtth co).
lea1:ue Clyde Cowan dlscovered the neutrino In
.4956
Dr. Rcmes gave an example to Wustrate the
am umg penetration capacity of the particle.
He said that if neutrinos were belng formed on
the s uJ\ and detected on this planet, and th.at, i(
that entirif vast distance were then completely
filled with earth, the neutrinos would still travel
from the sun to this planet at about the saQle speed
as before.
There's now a move afoot to use neutrinos to
test theoncs about the universe, including such
thin~s as what goes on inside a supernova. one or
the places where neutrinos may _be created.
SOME SCIENTISTS SUSPECI' clues to the
formation of heavy matter such as the molecules
that make up our bodies may be contained in these
extremely bright variable stars, which suddenly
increase 10 million to 100 million times in bright·
'hess
But lo test theories, you've first got to catch or
at least monitor neutrinos as they pass thrQugh the
t.-arth. And that's a big Job.
Jnlo the picture comes an organization of
about 55 scientists from the U.S. and about 15 from
tees, la asking the National Science Foundation for our daily lives. information about them could pro-
$1.5 million for a two-year desien study of a pro-vi de a variety ofclues about a.w,.. ~dour solar'
poaed stant neutrino telescope to be built o!f Maui. system came into being. Ha•a1L
'"1.'bere ts a mlsconceptl• about sclmce and .INVOLVED ALONG Wim UCI ~uld be thet u tliat 1cJence somehow really bun'& tb do Scripps Institution or Oceanaraphy. Harvard with the important and everyday t.binp of ll!e, and
University, the unlvenitles of Chicago, Hawaii that's notri&bt.'' l>r. fteiltes 11id. and Wisconsin, Louisiana State Unlvenlty and
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory 1ll Dlino~. ••Npt only haa 1ctence re-.otutlonln4 our
The "telescope.. would consJat of a cubic physical wodd. but Jt'• an ext.lion of our U· kilometer of seawater 1n which llgJ>t and sound de· perl~ce.·• .
tectors would traco. the faint interaction of-;::::::::====~=====:::;:;::=::::::::::::; neutrinos. transmitting the IDfonDatiorl to an an.
shore station.. (
Unlike with light as det.etted b)' exttstmg
telescopes. neutrinos cannot be focused, Dr-
Reines ex:plalned. He said the vat amount of
seawater is needed to increase the number of
neutrinos thahri.ll happen to como w1thtn aen.slng range.
Among the factors to be consldared ln the de-
sign will be currents, water clarity and marine lite
that could be distracting, he said.
THE TELESCOPE BIUNGS together sclen•
tists from a vast range of human knowledge, Dr.
Reines said, and may be the be11Dnt111 of a new
field. neutrino astronomy.
"'With ordinary astronomy. yoa can see only
the surface of things,•• he said. "You can't see
what's inside. The neutrino looks inside."
What they look into are stars and galaxies, not
planets, Dr. Reines noted-they are not expected to
provide information about life on other plane~ or
mineral content of planets, but about aacb
phenomena as quasars. supernovae and eollap$.ing .stars.
.. The point ts we•re 101.ni to Jeam something
about other parts or the universe that. we couldn't
otherwise learn.•• Dr. Rei.Des said.
HE SAID THE TELESCOPE may bOt be re..
A. nottNn AT LA w
BANKRUPTCY $95
DIVORCE $95
Uncontested
640-2507
~ CITIZENS BANK =.r-OF COSTA M5A
.. ~. ' "': .,,..~""'· ~ ir. )o
I
' ~ " i
l j
•
THllASM
RAL~H M. lHRA~H, Cpl USMCR
'~"iCkl'!I ot trvlt\t' P•tWd •wlfy on
Febru•rv •. \~11 Hf! 1, 'urvl\ltCI by n"
NEILi.., Slephe1t Vincent and
Ct>rhllne ANI; VELL.ANOI, Tutllo E. •nd Mule; SIMUROA, S.rah •nd
Bruu, MORRIS, Mltlleel OHier
11nd Joann• Tu-an; PEARCE,
Shirley M•• and K•nnetit t..H;
DAVIS, """'1'•.endJ-Vt.Jr.;
Other countries called DUMAND, which stands for Call 642-5678. Put a few word• Deep Underwater Muon and Neutrino Detector. CA 10 work for ou. ._: ·~c:~: y ! ~ ·.·ftilAI iv Pl LOT
o .. rentt Lt c;...,..,., & M" Wllll•m C.
Thr•Ht ot Coron• ctrl M•r. C•
broth•'• WHh.,,, (;,. lhr*'n. Ji. of
C~rl,O.d, C•., rnttternet orandmothl!lr,
M". Cecil Murym•n ot All•nt•,
G..irale. Mlllt¥y •ervlc~• wlll be 11110
•t 3 00 '"M. TUftday Fobru•ry 1 "11
•I P•cllk View crw,,.1 Interment M
P•tlllc VI-Memoro~I P•rlo.. P.collt V•-Mort....-y dor!'tlor\
I ..... 11ro~ ....
muon ~an~daWeparticle~~dtta~~toan ·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
JENNINGS. A. Jt•n -"'.,, .. , T : Pola·ia·cal Not~. WEST, Rlllll H -Orm"'d Rou; .:;;;o
llORRELLI. OorothV Mae -Amil
Paul, URETSKY, Erl' R. -Olant c
Tllatlll
FLOVD W. TUCKER. •e-IOeM of ... rt , __ , w ............ ,.._ _ • .,, ... ,._ ... ,, s. 1971. s.,,..,...., ..,,
.... wt .. Vl11Jlnl• T-.JucU' Of IN
r\1td•11<•. s-Clelre Tucker. h•o -.uollter1, Linde Johnson end KH'
Hermenn S.rvtcn w lll 1141 •I UMt
0w·ven•1 Funer.i Ho-. Port Town
.,.nd. W8'1\ifllllori, llvrl•I wlll ff al
l.•urel Grove Cemelery with th•
forw•rdllll dlrKton llell Br-•y
Mortu•ry,
LANE, Leticia I... -Oo<\ald M.;
CHAI.OU, 0..llllne -Jol>n All ... ; •
CHE RN OFF, Llftda I(. -Mark G.; GALLAGHER. R*<I Ann.,.., James
Wllll•m; BRYAN, Paul R. •nd Vlr9l"'•: VOSMJltOH, Ver-.. R. eno Mel .... I ,; LAIUION. -.
-Oovgl• H.; Al.l:XANDER, Con-n ie Lu •nCI Donald llOY: BE,..
HE THUM, Maur-S..s.tn -O•v1d Pierce II; FLECK, Cheryl L. a"<I
C:reloH .
Organ Donor
Speedup.Eyed
8AU.EY
JOSEPHINE TITCOMI 8Alt.EV.
IMri A9ard H B•lleyl peued away
Janu•ry 11. I'll. Mrs. 8•11•r or
NOQ•I•. ArU. •"<I P•~. C. 11.0
0tt1• • r.sldent ol NewPOr1 8ae(I> ti.
P•tl 20 y-a. S,,. II W"ll'!wcl Olf ..,,
son, Breell$11 H. &alley of N--1
8HCll, PTIV•lt ,.,.,-101 ........ llelcl et
Patlllc View Mortuory, Newport
Btacl'I. P4K,llK View Ma(tu•ry OlrK· ters.
i"IGAkl
JO HN IHIC>AIC I, n •llot• •f
C•l •l.,.nl•, r•ldotnt Of Costa Me••. Ca.
~ .. Md away on February S, 1'11 at
Ille •a• of ~. Survl"fll bV 1111 bfotllert
•no 111te~ K••uo Shlg•kl of Cost•
M u•. Ce., $111111• N•ll11ll•r• or
Garden Grvve, C.., O.Orgt Slll11•kl Of
Garckn Grove,~ .• S..mlye Ida OI S-
t• An•, ca. • ..._ ..... $111gakl ol ••11
Gardtnt, ca. Ind s.1111110 Sliva of
Cosl• Maso, ca. Mr. 511,..kl w• • 17
Y•ar empl..,.. ol tt>e Ma•ltet 'llMk•t S•Pffmarltet on H•rllOr -,..,.,.,
CHRISTIAN, David Ralpt\ anCI
ea .. rly ,,..,.; FRANCIS, J-R.
el\d O•rlenu S.; PENOLETOH,
II-Id L--~A.; BROWN
Olrard s. -E,1-; AAELl.ANO,
M• Oel C•rme11 en• Jua1t ;
CHUTNUT, JeM M. -Mery L.;
IAIU<ETT, Judltll 1. -Wllll-A ; HU•ST, L..tunO.M. encl Gary Ea1t;
IUllRIS, .Joye• eon... and FrallCll
Orvllle; SAHCH£Z. Emllla M. •nd
Cllarlftt...
l'lledJ-rrU
COMSTOCK, Olarles EdWard •net
M"tlr•lr5'1.81!Mn: PARSeNlr .i-enice end Marlene Greco
l'i\1.11 .. 0S, U.... EFaa f. encl JflflotT
81!Cl<ER"OITE, J•Clt l.H hd
RlloCI•; McDONALD, Mlcha•I •nd Yuriko; HOSECK, AUdrey C. end
Tllomas M.; BRUCE, St1""'"'°t.Mlle •IWI 1..11\da So;wn; DUHN, CKll'Y C.
Mid GordOll 8.; HUGHART, CarOlff •no M•rk Stewn; TALBOT, llenalv• M and Antonio.
"LOWl!R. Virginia L. Ind
l.11Wrence I..; PRITT, Wllll-.C.and
Norma L.; GARLAND, Trudy
.J••He L• Ct.ir -Rotllrt ltkllllra;.
KOHS, CllulH Cllrl1lot1ller •nd
(9't• MoM, c.. l'llnec.i ~"Wiii C1rol Ceclle ; WOLMERATH,
bt held l'rlOr( ,...._,y IOr 1'71 •t Karll!eln.r T. llnd l:rlU; TltUl.l.,
1·3' P.M. at .. lfnllh TulNlt Lamb ......... JHn -Dwtlllt P.: SPICER,
'Wuttllll O..C.t, l'D E.. 17ttl St .. Coata _ o.flor•ll carot encs ,._.rk k ....,,..;
Mela, C.. wlll R.,,, OcllVld S"'-. ADAMS, Nor..-J, end Dorotlly M.: .. 1 trvtne offlclatl,,., OrnH"• JACkLIN, eri.n """'k and o_,,
Mt'otlc•• -~will ... hel419ft Marl•: RIVEM, Donna k•r •lld S.lur•ay F""-'Y 11, 1'71 at t :ao """"'Jr.
A.M. at '•lm...tn MefNrlal ,.,. In HESTER.Jolw\I'.---... e.;
S.nt• Ana, C.. !'rl_,. w1'o wllll to SWANTAk, Lynn"'°" and Mkl\Ml
•ay U1of.r ,_It ln.t'f Ull at tl>e Mel!MW; KIRBY, Dr.Id Thoml>'°"
SmlU. Tvtllllt '-8"* Wettclllf Ol.tpel Jr. ind R9!NIYll C.nil; W"IGHT, on w~ f.-n -ta 1:00 J ... n Larrr tlftd Mlf"'J"rat eu..,;
.. M •• TllWldrft..,, ••• A.M.tol:GO OAARAl.ANT, Wiim• F. e11d
P.M. end l'rlcloy from '00 AM. to Robert J.; CORREA, R_., -~:JO PM. lml., T111tt11l umb c..i. l.eon•rd; PACE, Bewrt, J. and -..~.-.......... Onld w.: l<ROl<US, st ...... Jolll't -Mar....-M«y; BAtLllY, Morie -----------.Altfl encl Wl"I-&wt; kOS. Bftflda
llLL llOADWA Y
MOITU4H
110 Broadway
eo.taMeaa
642·9150
SMftM.1VTMU.4.AMI
WISTCUl9 CHAP&
.. 27 E. 17th St. Co.st a Mesa 1r MM888 Santa Ana Chapel
5119 N, atoldway
San1aAna • 5'47""4131
~laOTHBS
SMm1S' NOITUAaY • 827Mlln St. Huntington Beach
638-e539
J. and Freflk H • .Jr.
PIKE, f'tlyttls J,..., Wllllam R.;
,MALCOLM, llkll9o'tl R. -01-J ; ELLIOTT, Deldlr E. •nO Ff"llKn E .. HAOl!"N, Orvflle end Betty A.:
ZA•RINNEOAR, Dorotl!y A. •ncl All: PAltkl!.R, M•roo eatit •nd
Stu1rt M.,t111; GAULDIN, R.
Jedson lltd Vlrvtnla S.; WINDES,
O•wn Anotl• lllfd Mitton Dvdloy:
BAKER, St#tlllo Wesley aftd Nlnc'I
Lau; ROE L.adlMA..91od~W.
VER 8U1ta, Je .Ann eod Rk•f lH; HUGH, Wiii._,, A. 8ftd \AM;
McCOLLUM, llll:llffd I.. and Ja.ike
t!.J M&llMON, ..... la I--C"'111a
G.1 CAIAS, JMll Garcl• enll
Barllare Jleftl_RWING, Jonettt end
Stwet1; LAUzel!t,_ a.v.11y Wlnllted Ind NWl!lel RICNl'd.
By O.C. HUSTINGS
Of .. Oelly Pl ... ·-
A bill permilUng a peace officer to seatt)l tor·
legal documents or deceased persons, ~JbJy
leading to a speed-up in organ transplants, is beinc
s ponsored by state Sen. ·Dennis Carpenter.
R ·Newport Beach. • •
Under current law, officers must wait for the.
arrival or the coroner to searcbfOI' or remove pro-perty. .
' Carpenter also sponsorecl U7'1 leaislatiall that
now allows drivers 11,cense holders to lndlcate on
those licenses whether or not tbe.J Wish to donate ·organs. ·
\ *' * *
CARl'ENTD ALSO HAS introduced Senate Joint Resolution as, ur11n# Congress to amend the
U.S. Constitutlotl to require ~t the federal budget
be balanced each year and-that de.flcit spending be prohibited.
* • •
CAKPENTER AND Assemblyman ..Tolln Knox,
D·Rlchmond, are sponsortnaurgeneyleitllatlonto
raise licensingfeesfordebteolledkma1acte.bact
to J e veJsset in the 1960s. · Foea were cut ill half in 19'71 beense of
economic recession ud a larao fund aurpl\11. Carpenter aald.
• • *
BY A 21·11 VOTE, the Sen.ate his sent to the
Assembly a bill authored b7 Senator Carpmta'
that would. allow court.I to CClllSSder 8'1.denct nm
an m~gal March Jt the se.Q'da wu c:onclWU4 la good faith aQd without inJUJ7.
Votfo• for the blll were John Bltr-a
.R-Fullerton..t. !..~~ Dettnls ~tv, Sea. pa Carpenter, u-wpress. voted qilnat u;.
* * •
HERE'S BOW Onqe Coull~'• •tate/leoatoc'I stood on Seoat. BW 3S8 to ban ~ dlscrlmJba~ tion agalnst persons _.th cldldria, which was de-
feated lT·l'l Jn the upper house.
Paul carpenter, D.Cypras, .oted for the bill.
Dennis C&rpmter, R·Newport "»each. opposed it ~d J<?hn~, R-Fullerton. did not vote.
~ IUILT·IN
DIS•ASHEI
• IEYOWTIONARY
NEW POW& MODULE
MICR~FILTER
3-LEVILWA~ ~CTIOM
., UHSURP.ASSID CAPACITY
J
11 DAllY PILOT
't\ARMADUKE
TUllday. Ftbruery 7, 1978 COMICS I CROSSWORD byBradAnderson:-:a~o~O~M:E:R:-~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~by-:W~m~.:F~.B:r-o_w_n_a~nd:-::M~ef~t.=-s-son---;==========================::::==~
· I let him talk me into arm-wrestling for the
chair aga1n1
f •
FUNKYWINKERBEAN
~ MEAN 1HAT SIUFF ABOUT
ME 6ffi1NG ~e:·~
OF lHE 'fEAR I AWARD FROM
JocK /Y\AGA"Z'INE /ff <X)(R
8ANQJ€T TQijlGHT WA5 ALL
~l
CASEY
MOON MULLINS
GERIATRf~
l'U.efT~~m
iM~ ~~-'Y'EAA
rTQ.4 1"eN Tl~~ ..
~w~
MAVt:'" .AN
A~~!Ve~~.4fZv
'°"11J G UP
"~~.,, ~.
~t:AM :r~
s=1rl13f WA'
~~.r~
~D
~ tb ~e ~ WAA1 WtVt
~~t-l M~~p 1£ta WMt?
MISS PEACH
CO'ilt>N,
A.JD 'll{is
~IS
L-U1lle~.
by Tom Batiuk
·by Charita Rodrigues
... z ~ ro 1UE MOllCS
¥44/L.E ~E ~S OtNNEt, 1U£N I ~VS t>tHNER. WUU .. E H~
~s To7USMt:Nl"-
<::1:"""'--_.......,
JUDGE PARKER
1 50PP05E TI4AT
LILI COULD HAVE OVEAAEARD ONE Of US
TALKING A&OUT THE MISSING JEWELRY
. 5UT IM 5t>RE THAT I DiOHTME~IOH
rT TO HEil A&&EY !
'2 '1
DOOLEY'S WORLD
ALiJ.IOU6H THE FOUDWING 1
FUTUR£ HAS 6EEN EDITED, ~ rr MAV NCr et surrABL£ !
fOR IMMATUR~CfS I
DR . SMOCK
MOTLEY'S CREW
MIKe MOfl£Y. nl15
110 IVAN SELOV ~ RU551 ....
~
by Mell
by Harold Le Doux
WRY DON'T I G1V£ MIM A CAlL AAO ASK 1-\IM
Wlo!AT HI~ lttCOUECTION IS OF TJif
CONV~5ATIOH! L7"'~---....,..~
PEANUTS • by Ch1rtts M.5c:hulr
" by Roger Bradfield
. .
by George Lemont
< by Templeton and Forman
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
UNITED FHturt Syndicltt
Monday'• Puule Soh1eo.
ceftfiVes 43c.nc.end
1 Comt Z1 "'°'" cOde 0tl)t1corn t09tthu sound 44 E11pre .. ed ,._ 23 Minor o.pieaauie 2 -...ntu<y "'-11•1 48 Avttrllieo ~·~ ~~ I 3 lrrttil• 25 Rellnqu11h a a111tMI n-
R functton formal 4 ,.:j~llur· 270Htl'l ratlle 47 Conitndtd
5 ••••.•. now 28 Wide· 48 Ae1 Quickly
6 ••• L•ne mouthed 1"'11 49 Do penance
A.oar 29 HIQnway 50 Furnl1ure
te str10 ittm
7 2~1c1"' 30 Cr1ne1111e 53 Parent· fn-
8 Colof9do device l0<ma1
plftl 34 Apply 55 1949oact:
8 Seid 1g1in 35 Detind Abbr.
10 Mvltl-cO-38 State 5e Hu1191rlan
ortd raer1c 37 Dregs ~tty
11 ~hi,. 38 ScoWhno 57 Paul G. -......; 12-~ 40Jaugft1I Fr.pa~nltr
McPhenol\ Paul···--·· eo Of recent
13 trtltatlflO en. 42 u1r1r11 Of191n
NATIONAL /CALIFORNIA Tuesday. February 7. 1978
......... . .
DAILY PILOT A9
'Social Security Card
Laws to Get Tougher
Judge: Polamki Fled
P"rlson Deportation
WASIDNGTON CAP) .:.. The iov·
emment., bopint to prevent illecal
aliens from eeWng Social Security
c:ards, ts going to make it a lltUe
more difficult for everyone to get a card.
Startlnr later this year, anyone
'Wbo ap_pµes for a new card will have
to aubmlt "documentary evidence or
their age, identity and cltlzenship or
alien. status," Social Security Ad-
mlnlatration apokeaman Michael
Naver aald Monday. CUrrel'ltly, only
adults 18 and older are required to
submit this evidence.
THE ADULTS A~ will have to
appear in person at a Social Security
office for an "In-depth" interview to
.make sure they never held a Social
Security card, Naver said. They have
been able to mail thelr appllcation
and documentary evidence unW now.
The government has not decided
* * *·
whether the youths ·will be able to
mail tbelr forms in or il they, too,
must appear in person, N-ver added.
Eighty percent of the 8.2 mUllon
new Social Security carets lsaued in
fiscal 1977 went to persona under. 18,
Naver said. The governmept expects
to issue seven million new cards this
year and 6.8 million in 1979.
IT DOES NOT want them to fall in·
lo the bands of illegal aliens~
estlm4ltes of whose numben ranee
from 4 million to 12 million.
Congress passed legi.alation In 1m
requiring the Social Security ~d·
ministration to tighten card-issuing
procedures to deal with the illegal
alien problem as well as fraudulent
use of Social Security cards by
Americans.
· The more than two million
Americans who report losing thelr
cards and ask for duplicates annually
.. also will have to submit evidence to
show that they are who they say they
are," Naver said.
SANTA °MONICA <AP> -Roman Polanski would have been sent to
prison and possibly deported had he
remained here to face sentencing,
the Judge in the case has discl6sed.
•M'3ilF'"1!-·I .. What I wanted was to get him out
or the country," Superior Court
, Judge Laurence J. Rittenband said
I
Monday in a phone interview. "He
doesn't belong here.''
RJTTENBAND SAID HE informed
Polanski's attorney of his plans
before the 44-year-old movie director
fted the country last Tuesday to
avoid sentencing for a sex offense in-
volving a 13-year-<>ld girl.
Rlttenband said that although his
decision "wasn't definite," he bad
discussed with attorneys a 48-day·
prison sentence to be followed by
Polanski's voluntary deportation.
· Polanski had already spent 42 days
behind bars for psychiatric
diagnosis.
Legs Have It .... .,....... UJ JNTENDED THAT he at least
. THE GOVERNMENT HAS issued 1 serve a full 90 days in state prison,"
256 million Social Security cards The two legs in the top photo belong to the Judge said. "Then, if he agreed to be deport.ed, he would be released. In
deportation, Rilte~band said·.
Polanski would have been ordered to
remain in p~n for a longer term.
RITTENBAND CONCEDED that it
could be assumed Polanski fled
becau.se he was tx:>ld of the planned
sentence by bls lawyer, Douglas
Dalton.
The judge has given Dalton Wllil
Feb. 14 to coax Polanski back for
sentencing. If Polanski does not ap-
pear. he could be sentenced. in al)sen ..
tia.
Polanski pleaded guilty last Augu.5t
to unlawful sexual intercourse with a
13-year-old schoolgirl he recruited as
a photo model.
FLOGGING DEA.TH
BRINGS PRISON
MASERU, Lesotho (AP) -Two
men have been sentenced to three
years and one year in jaU for flogging
·to death a 16·YeJlr-old youth who ran
from a tribal circumcision ceremony. ' . since 1937, with 170 million held by one person, and there's no trick photo-that case, he could not come back
persons alive today, he said. . graphy involved. As the bottom photo h be h "lt r The menwereinstroctorsataschoot The nl·ne-d1.git numbers have com"' h bo h I b 1 p St I ere, cause e was gu1 Y o a ... s ows, t egs e ong to am e ger, crime or oral t "t d Th t Id 1·n the Maluti mounta1·ns that p-pare -into increasing use by other govern-m urpi u e. a wou •"" Cal State Northridge graduate student: .satisfy us." youths for the ceremony to symbolize
Solom Petition
For Cutback in
Pa')TOll .Taxes ment agencies for record keeping. She's a gymnast practicing leg splits. Ir he had not agreed to voluntary their entry into manhood.
Some states use them as driver ,...-----------------------------------------------license numbers.
· WASHINGTON (AP) -Legislation
to .sharply reduce payroll taxes by
financing some Social Security
benefits through the income tax
system has been proposed in both
houses of Congress.
Sponsors of the plan conceded Mon-
day they were motivated mainly by
howls or protest, especially from
middle-income Americans, about the
Social Security tax bill passed last
December. ·· I
"The public will not stand for the
rate of taxes that has been imposed,"
Rep. William Brodhead, D·Mich.,
told a news conference.
If the bill should become law this
year -and :.ponsors agreed there is· .
little chancl' of that -it would mean
.lower payroll taxes starting next
Jun. 1 for all l'mployecs and their
employers
The Social Security Administration
has l ,300 district and branch offices
nationwide. Naver also said the agen·
cy hasJepresentatives who travel to
areas without an office on a regular
basis to handle Social Security work
at post offices. courthouses or olher
facilities.
THE APPLICANTS WILL have to
submit two pieces or evidence, with a
blrtb certificate being the preferred
·document,
Youngsters who do not have a
driver's license, will be able to use a
school record or ll'tter from school as
their second piece of eyide!}ce, Naver
:;aid. ·
The extra clerical. effort will cost
the taxpayers and the government
Sl5 million and 732 m an.years of
work this year, Navl'r sa1cl
Viewers Pay Up
C~e,dJ,wr Pushes 'Off' .~t.ch
• PAONIA, Colo. CAP) ~ Phyllis ·
Whitchurch.has real power, and now
the local ranchers, fruit growers and
miners pay her a bit more respect.
At least they pay her.
:\lrs. Whitchurch owns Grand Mesa
Tl'levision, a firm that boosts
television signals into the North Fork
Valley from stations in Denver,
Pueblo and Gr and Junction. A
household is charged $15 a year for the service. · . ~
JANUARY JS COLLECTION
month. When 1,200 of her 1,500 ac-
GRANNY M4¥ GEi'
SPECIAL DAY ,..
Capitol News Service
SACRAMENTO -Sen. Frank
~ Vicencia, l>-Paramount. bas in-
troduced a measure that, if adopted,
would ask Congress to designate and
the president to proclaim the second
Sunday of October or each year as
· Grandmother's Day ..
counts were delinquent, Mrs.
Whitchurch decided to tum ore the
boosters for a day to teach sub-
scribers a lesson.
She considered turning off the
power on $uper Bowl Sunday for the
·football game between Dallas and
Denver but thought better of that
plan, fearing retaliation from Bron-
comaniacs.
· Instead, she pulled the plug Jan.
23. Residents were outraged.
Many tried to phone Mrs. Wlti~cbUttb, but she had taken her
phone off the hook and gone about
)ler chores on her 12·acre ranch. ·
"I CAN'T .BEU EVE she did . it,"
sputtered one elderly woman the day
after sets went black. ·
But Mrs. Whitchurch says she
• would do it again. During the week
after the blackout, checks from the
outstanding accounts poured in.
At least one subscriber does not
mind if she does do it again.
"I personally don't care if they
ever turn it back on," said Dennis
Richards, a 37-year-old miner. "We
had the most peaceful evening in our·
house we've ever had."
9400 SYSTEM
tntroducing the county's finest "state ()f the~art" oopy center
located conveniently across from 0 .C. Airport at Main and SkY
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SCIENTIFJCTECHNICAt:.BOOI< &. Copy Center .
·17801 MAINsTREET"SUtTEH IRVINECAUFORN1A92714 -:
Stan .Zundell:
65 years old.
first Half: spends 35 years behind a
desk in a bank, raises a family, serves a
community.
Second ·uau: c~s firstmoootain
at 59,conquers Matterhorn at 61, scales
awesome Lost Arrow Spire at Yosemite twice
las_t year.
For Stan Zundell, the second half is the better half.
Personally rewarding ••. "Because I st3rted growini again!•
. We feel the same way at Glendale Federal Savings. 'Ib.at's
why we offer all sorts of savings and retirement plans. To
help you now to start on your own rewarding second half •
Have a great second half. And oome let us help.
CiLENl4LE
·FEDERAL ~YW~~~N.12J-.9~~~£?£1~Jl~.
FVLLERTONa 320 N. Harbor Blvd. 526-83.)t • SANTA A'NAr 51 Fashion
Square (acrou from Desmond1 ) S41*ll14 • COSTA MESA1 2300 Harbor
Blvd. (H,rbor Center) 642*47.11 • NEWl>ORT BEACHt 100 Ncwporr
Center Dr. (uro from Robinaon·s) 644*SJOO • LAOONA l:ULLSa 24221
Qalle de la Lou (acr, from the Broadway) 768-7771 ...
••
I I I •
•
t
•
l ..
.. ~
.. f
AJ8 DAILY PlLOT Tuesday, February 7, 1978 NATJO.NAL
to Prese-rve lf'~rniing Tradition
INTERCOURSE, Pa. CAP) -The Amish are
. · dlg~ing t.heii. calloused h,nds into the pockets of
their plam black trousers fo r the money to pre·
serve the Old Order culture in Lancaster County.
The Plain People. whose ancestors fl ed
Europe 250 years ago to escape being burned al
t~e slake or hed into sacks and dumped into
nvers, i)re pa~·mg record prices to keep their farms from being swallowed by an encroaching
civilization.
THOUGH S01'1E llAVE 1'10VED on to less
congested areas, others are outbidding developers
and land specul ators to keep the land.
"They are determined to continue their simple
farm life in this part of the country. They have
made a decision that they're willing lo pay the
price to maintain their lifestyle," said Darvin
B oy d , f a r m l oan
m a n ager at National ( ' J
Central Bank. REUG/ON • The Amish had (I<·
velopers !>cratching tht.'1r
heads :it a !><'I'll'~ of ~Ul'
taons la~t year. Long artcr the builder dropped out
of the hiddan~. th<' beardl'd laces of A mash farmers
kept noddmg as the price!>"' ent up.
JSAAC llUY.\RD PAID SSl0,000 for a 95·acre
, dairy farm. John L. Stoltzfus and David King
shelled out S569.140 for a 114 ·acre farm. And Eli M.
King bid $305,000 for a 47-acre tobacco and dairy
farm.
that farm. But the)" figure 1f they don't pay for it,
the kids will finlsh It up,'' said Carl Brown of the
Farm Credit Ad mintStration. '
"I can llve to a ripe old a1e and the Amish will
stall be here farming. If they aren't. their kids will
be. They're going to be here a long, lopg time,'' he
added. ,
Lancaster County, the oldest and third largest Aml~h .setUement, h~s about 12,000 Old Orde11 peo.
ple hving here. Nationwide, they are found in 18
states.
A SPUNTER GROUP OF TUE Mennonite
Reformation, the Amish have worked the rich
limestone soil here since William Penn granted
them religious freedom in 1727. They li•e wit hout
el~tricity, cars and modern farm machinery, con· tent to survive s1mp}1city_ on the tenets of faith,
farm and family.
They educate their children in one-room
schools. They hold their ChnsUan church services
m pr1\'atc homes. And they get around in horse·
drawn buggies on roads crowded with flashy cars
and ~arm~ tr uck:..
But their world collides with a modern one.
New housini; developments have mushroomed
a round wheat. corn, barley and tobacco fields. Gift
shops and tourist spots peddling shoo-fly pie and
Amish dolls made m Japan surround the plain
Amish fa rms.
• AP .........
ONE FARMER PA1&$6,400 AN ACRE FOR A 47-ACAE TOBACCO ANO DAIRY FARM
Plain People Pay Top Dollar to Save Their Land for Their Children's Farms
King's bid a mounted to a price of $6,400 an
a cre, the h1~hcst price ev1.·1· lldlU wr Jand that will
remain a farm in Lancaster County.
.\ND A IUODERN Al\1liSEMENT park with a · t:: -~' $ ~-
roller coaster and other rides sits on the site of a aaldwlnfi;:: ;: ~-r
' f
"For production to pay for a farm, it's just im-
possible fur those kinds of dollars." said Robert
BuchCf'. farm loan manager al Commonwealth
National llank .
former Amis h pomestead. What's YourTrade? Pianos · flll'.W·-BARS H
Since It's an Amish custom to provide a farm $1.62per Day and ~--·.·.i~ ' ATE us fo r each son. the Plain People have to struggle to 'Thnt'sliWetopay S ~ I. kec:p their old ways. for an ad ln the Daily Pilot Organs · \ ' 1' • "We're changing the way people meet"
J ay Irwin. Lancaster County's agricultural ServiceDirect.orythutcan Fact01Y Flnanctne ft..agf ~&I..._~
"But they mii:ht own two or three fa rms. And
a com mon thin~ in the past few years is they'll
lend money to their own people. They usuaUy don't
have any terms on s uch a loan," he added.
agent, said the county had 332,800 acres used for establishyourprofessional · LESSONS-INSTRUMENTS •" ,1..,.W
field crops. Since 1930, over 113,000 acres has been 'identity. For more in· ··-MUSIC VIDEOTAPE INTROOU IONS -PHONE llM&Oa lost to urbanization. fonnation call642-5678. Ii CENTER 4341 BIRCHST.,SUITE'105-NEWPORTBEACH ''T~~our ~gg~tpro~m -to k~p o~L--------~~,=·~~~~E~~~[:~~L~~~~~~~~~b~·~·~~·~·~,,~~~·~·~~~~~~
••TUE Al\11SU ARE A Ll'ITLE more devoted
to farming. It's going to lake a lifetime to pay for
children oh the farm. There's just ~more room to -..,-, ...
grow," said Joseph Beiler, an Ami.Sh minister and
owner or a 64-acre dairy farm.
PFF pays ypu l/, % more than an .. ____
on your •· cate
~vings account!.
Do you have a. bLnk savings
oorWlca.te a.rout to mature? At Pomona
First Federal, your oertiftcate funds will cc
earn t/4% more per a.nmi:m than a.t a.ny ~;::;......-p:
'oo.nk in Amerioo.. exrept on· oorta:in
retirement a.£XX>untsl
include up oo $5,000 of free
traveleI\9 checks annually
15,000min bal.); up to
three free money orders a
day ($1,000 m1n. bal.), and
In O\ll' highoot--in~ oertiftcate.
r."'= . '" your funds wm ea.rri a. · · ... full 73/4 % • per a.nnum-~ that's a.n a.nnua.l yield
A of 8.06% when inteM>t
remains on delx&t for
~po._..,.,.,",,., Plf. one "ea.I' Besidoo
Alt Dm S•rt'"''· ea.rnlng ~ interEm, 1
your funds w1ll earn imP>rta.nt free
aervm>I With a $2,500 minimum
ea~ baJa.noo, you'll reooive free use
of a sa.fe depooit 'oox. Other eerv1oes
PFF
free mte and trust deed
rollection ($1,000 m1n. bi.I. per
rollectton. $5 set-up charge, with
payment reooiptB sent~ you freel)
Put your Financial Friend to
work for you.I Bring your sa.~
rert1fta3.te into Pomona First Federal
troay, whether it ma.turoo tomorrow
or a. week from oomorrow. We'll
arrange transfer of your funds at
maturity, with no las of interest oo
you. Pomona First Federal ... wm
been spec1aJ.11Jng 1n F1nana1a.l Fr1endsbip
slnoe 1892.
Aloo, ask aoout specla.l ra.008
on CD a.cmunts of 8100,000 or
morel
Pomona FiTst-F';/J.deral
SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
YOUR fl1'AltCIAl HltMD ••• SIMC( 1nz
IAVINE
PARKV1EW CENTER
University Drive 1t1
MICt'lelson
(114) 552-5325
HOURS:
LAOUNAHIU.S
LagUM Hiiis Ptaia Allele PkWV. at Hwy. S
(714) 581-4100
Monday lhru Thursday, 9 AM to• PM.
Friday 9 AM to 5:30 PM. .
Thee'eat
1978 take-off!
(Pl.J Air Callfomla to San Francisco, ancl take
$19.78 off your room at the St. Francis.)
WhywaitJSnY longer? Air California offers plenty
of convenient non-stop flights to get you to the San
Francisco Bay Area. And the St. Francis is waiting
once you arrive.
Come for a weekend, a week, or as long as you
like. F(om now until February 28th, 1978, the
St. Francis will take $19 .. 78 off any individual stay of
two nights or f119Te.
You ~et superb accommodatrons on Union
Square m the heart of San Fr~mdsco's theater district
for as little as $39 a nigh~ 24-hour room service.
The cable car stopping at your front door. And all
the traditional amenities that make the St. Francis
uniquely the St. Francis. · -
And Air California makes it all even easier to take
with special discount fares, advanced computerized
reservations and ticketing, and an exclusive family
plan that can save you up to 30% imy day of the week.
Just show your Air California ticket when _you're
ready to check out, and the great 1978 take-off ls on.
For St. Francis reservations call 800-228--3000
toll free or your travel agent.
-siogte occupeney, pet ntght. Sub}ect to all appllc:able taxes.
·--
, ,
'I
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• \~
~l
~)
"' .... ,
All
l "1
)
. . . . . . . . ' . . . . . . . ~ ....... . ....... ---" .
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..
Ex·Grid Star Finds Fame ·Fleeti:ngi
By DAVE CUNNINGHAM Of .... .,..., ............
When Bill "Skip" Face
Jeamed he had been elected
to the Stanford University
Athletic Hall of Fame last
week, he let out an ex-
pression of joy that can't be
printed in a family
newspaper.
.. I was overwhelmed. It'\ a
tremendous honor," the Hun-
tington Beach resident says,
prefering not to repeat bis
exact words when he opened
the letter thl\t brought the
good news ..
A halfback and kicker for
Stanford on the 1958-60 foot-
baJl teams, Face will be
formally inducted into the
school's Hall of Fame Feb. 18
during halftime or the Stan~
ford-Oregon basketball game
in Palo Alto.
Although honors and
awards were common for
Face two decades ago, it's
been some time since he's
had something to add to his
athletii; scrapbook. He says
his sports activity now is
limited to social tennis.
"I still follow football and I
guess I'll always be a Stan-
ford fan," Face says. "Like
they ~ay, once a jock. always
a jock. But I haven't been ac-
-t1vely involved in anything
like that since I stopped play-
ing rugby "
SKIP FACE AS A STANFORD STAR IN 1960.
Now a marketin g ex -
ecutive for a construction
products firm. Face has
lived in the Huntington
Beach-Costa Mesa area since
1962. His move to the Orange
Coast area came after a
thigh muscl<.• injury forced
JOHN NABER
New Honor
To Naber
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Joan
Naber got out of bed at 5 o'clock
in the morning day after day to
make sure her son had a warm
breakfast. It was wor~h all the
effort when John accepted the
Sullivan Award as the nation's
outstanding amateur athlete of 1977 ..
Mrs. Naber, of Menlo Park. I shrugged off the difflcullies of
her chore Monday, saying, •'J'm
really a morning person and l
like to see the swi coming op."
Her son, who also rose at the
early hour, became a five-medal
winner at the 1976 Olympics at
Montreal and added to bls fame
by being named the outstanding
amateur athlete in ·the United
States by the AAU.
Naber turned down tnonetary offe.r1 after bis great Olympic
swimming performances to ~
turn to the University of Southern
California and finish the work
!oward bis dell"ff. ....
Sports in Briefs
Nastase Advanees;
McHargµ,e Lauded
ST. LOUIS-Ille Nastase
s owed he has recovered from a
s re a rm by stopptnr Colin .P ley 7-6. 6·2 Monday in the.
·$1 ,000 St. Louis Tennis Classic.
hn Alexander also advanced
the first/roynd by hanging
on t beat Antonio Zugarelli 7-6.
5-7. 7-5, while third-rankled
Manuel Orantes toppled Cliff
Drysdale 7·6, 6·3.
ln other matches Mark Cox
got. by Chris Lewis 4-6. 6-3, 6·1.
Zeljko Franulovic beat Terry
Moor 6-2, 6-3, Bill Scanlon out-
lasted Tom Okker 6·4, 5·7, 64
and Tom Gulllkson mastered
Butch Walls 6-2, 6-2.
Jffdl•.,,.e Bettored
ARCADIA -Darrel
McHargue, who currently holds
a big lead at the current Santa
Anita meeting, is the winner of
the George Woolf Memorial
Jockey Award for 1978, it was
announced Monday at Santa
Anita Park.
M cHargue, 23, outpolled run·
nerup Steve Cauthen by more
·than 2-lo·l in voting by fans at
Santa Anita. The award ls given
annually to a thoroughbred
horse jockey who has dem.
onstrated the highest qualities
~r cbarecter and professional
skill.
Kentlle!lc" Roi ..
LEXINGTON, Ky. -James
Lee came off the bench to score
25 points and Jack Glvens added
22 as top-ranked Kentucky drew
away ftom Auburn in the second
halr for a 104-81 Southeast.em
Conference college basketball
victory Monday night.
......._.rvi-ee
"EATTLE-Zenda Liess
scored an opening·roUJld upset
over Marise Kruger, 6·3, 7-6, in a
women's tennis tournament here Monday.
In other ma~cbes, Wendy
TurnbuJl downed Lea An·
tonopolls 7·G, 6-3 and Kathy May .
defeated Mariana S1mionescu
6·3, 6·4. Renee Richards of Newport Beach beat Sue Mappln
7-6, 6·4, Brigitte Cuypers nipped
Kathy Harter 7 ·6. 7 -6. Michele
Tyler outlasted Re gina
Ma rsikova 6·2, 4·6, 6·4 and
Yvonne Vermaak beal Carolyn
Meyer 6-4, 6·2.
Also in the opening round.
Renata Tomanova stopped Trish
Bostrom 6·3, 6·3 and Nancy
Richey ousted Mi111a Jausovec
6-2. 7·6.
Coaclln lof• Allen
WASllINGTON -Despite
coach Jack Pardee's request that
they stay on. Redskins defensive
coordinat,or LaVem Torgeson
and s~lal teams coach Paul Lanham will go to Los Angeles to
rejoin fired Washington coach
George Allen, the Washington
Post reported today.
Stetgel Rite• Set
GLENDALE -Rosary for
Edna Stengel will be recited
tonight and funeral mass for the
widow of Hall of Fame baseball
maqager Casey Stengel will be·'
,said Wednesday morning in Glendale.
Mrs. Stengel. 83, died Jast Fri·
day following a Jon g illness. She
had suffered a stroke several
months before Stengel died in
1975. Mrs. Stengel will be buried
beside her husband Jn Forest
Lawn Cemetery.
The Stengels had no children.
Dope Claule Start•
PALM SPRINGS -The 19th
annual Bob Hope Desert Classi~
-the only 90-hole event on the
Professional Golf Association
tour -1,{eta under way Wednes-
day at four locations.
A tleld of 128 pi't>tessionals and
384 amateurs will play 18 holes
each at Bermuda Dunes, La
Quinta, El Dorado and Indian
Wells Country Clubs Wednesday
through Saturday •
The field will then be tut to
the 70 low pros and ties for Sun-
day's fmal round at Bermuda
Dunes in tho $200,000 tourna·
ment.
Cliandler
him out or pro football.
''I was signed by the
Dallas Cowboys but I didn't
play much," Face says, "It's
pretty tough to play with a
ruptured muscle."
But Face still has a bundle
of memories.
A graduate of San Marino
High, he was the CIF player
or the year in 1955 and broke
San Marino's all-time scor-
ing records for a single
game, season and career.
Remarkably, Face was
able to duplicate those feats
at Stanford.
His career scoring record
of 176 points stood for 13
years until Rod Garcia
eclipsed it in 1973 with 197.
but Face still owns Stan-
ford's record for most points
in a game (27) and in ~
season (100) •
He also holds the Stanford
record for most touchdowns
in a season CU} and was
selected an All·Amerlca
honorable
senior.
On one hand, it mieht seem•
Face had plenty of op-
portunities to score because
he handled all the Indians•'
kicking duties in addition to
playingh~
But on the~other hand,
Stanford wasn t exactly a
powerhouse in those daya. Its
combined l"ttOrd during the
three years Face played
See Face Pa1e B-1
Col'lege Scoring Ace .r
Wired Jaw
Williams Wary
Of fro Pitfalls
No Problem.
ForBr11in
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Prac-
tice last summer has helped
make Raymond Townsend abOut
as close to perfect as can be ex-
pected this winter.
POR'J;LAND <AP) -His
basketball talents were honed on
the concrete and asphalt that
covers downtown Los Angeles. Last Friday in a game against
Rocky Mountain College, he
scored 81 points -the second-
highest output ever in a college
game. Ile also has had single-
game deluges of 71 and 66 points
during rus four-year career.
lli s name is Freeman
Williams, but his Portland Stale
teammates just call him
"Free "
W~lliams, a 6·foOl·4 senior,
probably will become the first
college basketball player since
Pete Maravich to win the scor·
mg title two years in a row. lie
is averaging 36 points per game
this season. Ile won the title with
_. 38 potnts per game averai:e
last season.
But. with the exception of
Maravich, the big scorers In col·
lege have had trouble making it
in the National Basketball As-
sociation, where shooting ability
1s only one or many necessary
talents.
The soft·spoken Williams says
he knows the pitfalls and is con-
fident he can avoid them.
"Most guys who've led lhe na-
tion in scoring get drafted and
think they will keep doing all the
scorin'g in the pros." Williams
s aid. "I know when I get to the
pros I won't )lave to score so
much. I figure 1· can contribute
m lots or olher ways.''
At Portland State. the team
looks to Williams for its offense.
But, says assistant coach Mose
·Adolph, who went to the same
high school as Williams, the
PSU offense Is not geared lo one
man.
"We don't have a single play
for him," Adolph said. "It's just
that he's a threat every time he
has the ball"
Head coach Ken Edwards
makes a slmilar point.
"Our offense is designed to set
up one-on-one situations," ho
said, "and the better players gel
more shots."
Against lowly Rocky McAih>
talrt, Williams took 56 shots and
made 37 of them. The Portland
Oregonian newspaper keeps a
chart on Williams' shooting
from various distances. In his
81-point game, he was 24 for 26
ins ide 10 feet, 6 of 13 from 10 to
20 feet, and 7 for 17 outside 20
feet.
''That's my job, to score
points," Williams explained. ~·1
don't do it for me but for the
whole team. I do other things
well bcsldes shoot, but mostly
people just come to the eames to
sec me score."
Williams' efforts have come
against one of the strangest
schedules in· college basketball.
Portland State's list of oppo·
nents includes such teams as
Rocky Mountain, Oregon Tech
and George Fox College. But the
Vikings also play Kentwcky.
Southern Cal and Nevada-Las
Vegas.
·Edwards said the uneven
schedule Is causecl by the
school's independent. status. He
said the .VUcings have trouble '
getting big-time opponents in
January and February.
Basketball Ratings
Townsend, a 6·foot-3 senior
guardi has made 59.5 percent or
his field goal attempts, m&l'Y
from long range, in helping fafth-
ranked UCLA win all seven of
its Paclfic-8 Conference bask~t·
ball games this season and 16 -0f
18 contests overall.
To make hls feat even more
impressive, the Sap Jose l'el.i·
dent has been performing wltlila
cracked upper jaw since Dec. m.
Townsend had the wires $·
moved from his jaw Monday,
which prompted UCLA coaqh
Gary Cunningham to say, 4'1
don't know ii it's good or .,_d
that Rnfmond is getting Ute
wires out. The way he's been
playing, 1 may call the doctots.
and tell them to leave the wirb
Jn... ~ .t.
Townsend, who' put up 3tO
jump shots everx,..ifty last swi.
mer, was inj~ -..hen he i slugged in the fM» bY' San 3
State player llort Lowe. •
Townsend Jnissed onl~y game because of the injury\an •.
after making-Only four of 1 ' e
goal attempts in his return,
up where he had le~ ore before
the incident.
With Townsend's help. the
Bruins have all but ended talj< _
that they would be foiled in thelf
quest for a 12th straight Pac-8 ~-,
lie. The closest conference ~-· test for UCLA thus far w~s ·
its 83-71 victory over Soull\t!Jt
Cal, which Is in second pike
with a S..2 record. ~ · Tit• top '"1!1y -..S Inn. AHOClai.<1 Prest
c;olle11• baW<etlMtfl P041. wllh llrst.pl.tee wtH In
CM1ret1!hnft-SN,S011-ds:
In its most recent ga•$.
UCLA demolished Stanf~d ''"1 101·64 and whipped California :~ 94-75 last weekend. The Bru~
,s.i meet the same teams again thls ~t~ coming weekend, this time in
11.1 the Bay Area.
1 Ktntucky(S2l 1&-t 11.0.Paut
2 ArkenwtUI 21-1 12. Tnas 3 Mtrauf'1t. JM U.Vlrolnla ;.~~~~O.mej~l :~~ :;:rt,~~For~t
6.N.Mulco(I) 11·2 16.Fla.SI
7.N.CerollM IM 17.0.tl'llit
t.l(anw• 11-3 tl.S'tfa<UM :~ "It will be much more dlfrtcult ,,.. this time," said Cunninghan\. 'l.L.oulsvllle 14-J 1'.N•llf"•Ska
10 Mldl.SI 16·3 20.Pn>Ylden«
From O'Brien :A.gaiD
camp ln Decatur, Ale.
"I wanted to be near Ron 10 t
a pent my junior hlgh school year
1n Columbus with a family .t.Mt
lived near him to he could keep
an evll eye on me ... •be said.
Before that. Cha.n41• Ud won
the three-meter dl'ilia• IA tbe
117$ Paa-Ameritan Oa~ De
f'mished her jull10r year a feW
months early 10 1be and six
-, ..... -.,...9-=o...._~ o&ber dlven coUI train in l'ort
• Lauderdale, na._ /or the Mon-
treal Otrmpi.cl.
N'tfr that, &tiii 'Wtnt homo to •
Aniti8toD to fliaWi bllh Kbool. , ••n ,.. tM Nit ttme I hid
been bolllC that fc!!c .atoce l was
Now she's back at Ohfo Star.,
1earnlnr from O'Brien again.
8-ldes her springboard dlvd ...
Chandler has taken Qp lO.mettr
J)latlorm divine wlth an •J:.
toward 1980 011J1lplc comped·
tlon.
J -'
' t
'•
• t
lj
t
" -l
.
'
. . .
JIZ DAILY P1LOT Tu.ecs.y, F~ 7, 1979 SWIMMING /SOCCER I MISCEL:LANV 7 --.
Soeee,. £hamp
Edison: Team.
Witlwut Stars
BJ~~
It came as no 1UJ'PriJle thft Edison Rlfb of
Hunttntton Beach walked1 off with tho Sun.set
Lo•IU• IOCcel' crown. Tbat wu tndlctecl u early u a year ago.
But what ls strange ls that the Char"'8.
desptte tho presense of two returnln• 'All.aF
players and ooo four-ftlf •tarter. a.re a \Am~
out stars. Ed1loo wtna wlth IOlld. ~ s_pectacular.
play. Almoet u tf by deslsn. aomtbOCl1 dllfereot
leads the team every 11me.
"The bapr.test tht.DI ls that everybodf mates
lhls \eam (01 • says coach Dave UcLola~ .. Eaeh
player exceJ.s to some deiree at bll oq P"itka.'•
The •oorinl la so 1pnad out that ln OM neent
tbree·PDM atretcta. three Cllf• ferent pla1era 1cored a hat
trlck (tbree 1oal1). Oae of
them, Junior Paul Ktm, ts a re-
serve. '!be otben wen aenlion
Staffan Bulow and' Jeff KU.W.
And none are amon1 the moeC
celebrated quartet bl UM Sunset
Le••~· That ll"O'lP la eomprbed ot
center·mld fielder Brad
Webster, center-forward Chris 1aava•&.a ....
crater, eenter·Mlbaek Herb Boehm an4 .,.Ua
Steve Helhnlcb. All are 11U>n.
WeblW', an All-cJF aeleetlea u a Junior,
traveled to Germany laat 1ummer u a ~ember <>t
the national J\Dltor (under 11) ~r team. Crater.
also an AU-Cll' plek, was the tm Sunset teape
MVP. Boehm lias 1tartect •Ince bit frealunan
season 'WhUe H~Umlcb post.cl 15 abut.outs Jut
1out>n. ·
\
A ~ucly in Contrasts of a Baskethall Coach
{adcllebark College assistant basketball shows conce rn Cl e ft ), appears in a
o.n,,. .. ,..,.. .. ,e.y~ If that wasn't enooah to bulld a powerhouse
annmd, McLelah allo lliberited a larso lf'OUP of
player1 from Edlaon'• ~ leap.hampion juniorvarstty team. -,
coach Bill Brumme l , chief aide for head philosophical mood <center) and shouts in-
coach Bill Mulligan, exhibits contrasting structions (right). Saddleback, with a 23·2
play Wednesday, visiting San Diego City
College. The G.auchos then host con•
ference leader Palomar Saturday ni&ht.
Wltb that much talent around. lt mlcht bt hud
to keep eveeybody happy. But Mcf:Jr.h..,. from
tbe •Wt. the~,... .. ~ ;:tual for a team ~ ... O!. wtnnlq the aJ' cba .epiotions during a recent game. Brummel record, returns to Mission Conference •-rtiere I 10 pluen CIO the flel<l ~ 008
:Girls' JC Swim Outlook MD<-FA.CES
SWORDSMEN
~ugby
ToUrney
Slated
bell eo JOU bave to be unaelftlh ucl -work together 1n order to win." aays Mc:Lellb. ••we do beth. I
think we've lot a V.,., tiabWmit OOUP. ••
This is only the slxth year Edison bas Oelded a
soccer t.eaOJ, five of wbicb hH• been under
lifcLetah'a cllrectioa, but tbe Qmsel'I alrea~
have a proud herita,.. The \Qm'1 caner ll-2M$
record includes all or part of tho Jeque Wm•
9lonshlp for three yean running.
Golden West and Ornnge
Coast colleges figu~e lo be stron ~<'r In women's swimming
com petition this season while
s,ddleback will be under the
'tUldance of a new coach and is ati unknown quantity at the-
pl"J'sent time.
. Orange Coast will get the
j u mp on the sea son l n a
trlan gular meet at Fullerton
Thursday that also includes San-
>
SKIP FACE
FACE •••
Continued From Pa1e B· t
varslty wu 5-25.
SomeUme&, it seemed Face's
PJ"OducUvit.y with a football got
~H notice than h1a productivity
with children. ,..61 wu married at Stanford
and bod !our children before I
Jll'l.daated." Face says wlth a ~Ile ... I was a legend up
U.re.''
lie and wife Suzanne now have
children, but the only one
M:)io haa shown a stron1 lntereat
JjfathleUct ii dau1hter Debble:
lettered ln 1wlmmln1 tut
I son ror Edison High ln Hunt'
ton Beach.
hla won't be.the fltat Ume Ice hu been inducted Into a
11 of Fame. San Marino Hlah
hered him tnto it.a own Hall
I •IJO· .
Fao. HYI M loob back on
'•ch rlvalrJ 11me with Cal
perktlq) u a bl.I moment, but lie can't pinpoint a r,arttcular
lllablltht of bl• il uatrlout
,.rHt.
la l\foniea. Golden West will host
Orange Coast Feb. 23 and will be
al Saddleback April 12.
Orange Coa•t
Coach Ginny F ereira's OCC
Pirates finlshed with a 4·5 dual
meet record last· year but figure
to improve on that mark in 1978.
The Pirates are led by return-
ing sophomore Debbie Blalr, an
All-American selection. She will
compete in the 50 and 100
freestyle alon& wllh the
backstroke.
"Debbie was by far our best
swimmer last year," F ereira
says.
Other returning sophs include
Mary Becket (backstroke), Pam
Rich (breaststroke and ind.
medley) and Jill Tra cy
(breaststroke and ind. medley).
Among the fres hmen are
Lindsay Hathcock (freestyle),
Patty Huggins UM. bullerny>
a nd Julie Kruger (freestyle).
Smith Top
PCAA Scorer
Wayne Smith of UC Irvin•
continues to hold the lead In the
Pacific Coast Athletic A111ocla·
Uon individual scoring race with
a 22.3 average alter eight
aames.
Sm lth increased hls lead from
21.2 after six outings and ls now
2.5 points per Ult in front of run·
nerup Matt l\faderos of UC San·
ta Barbara. Mederos remained
a t 19.8 per game.
The 6·5 aenlor forward for coach Tim Tilt'• UCI Anleatenf
baa been selected u player ot
the week on two occulona thl.a
season and baa set a sln1le
game inclivldual scoring mark of
37 points. ,_PCAA.__ . '" . ,,.. . ,,.
• m . ,,.
I U4 . ,. . "' • u• • 111 . ,,.
' " ,,.
101 101 1tt , .. .. w
" " .,. .., ..
~ ....
t1.t ,.., , ...
1U .... tu u.1 , ... , .. , ,. ..
1M ,, ..
1U 11.I
1U , .. ,
UA ,, ... •• "'' tu .
Sophomore Kelly Greer and
freshman Mary McClug head
the d iving contingent for OCC.
Golden West
Kelly llamlll set five Qolden
West school records last s'eason
as the Rustlers finished third i&l-
the Southern California Cihals.
She returns this season for
coach Tom Hermstead.
A graduate of Fountain Valley
High, Hamill set the followfflg marks: 50 free. 25.0; 100 free.
56.5; 200--rree, 2:02.s; 500 free,
5:34.5 ; and 100 fly, 1:05.8.
Kall Schneider (backstroke)
and Lenise Lester (ind. medley>
are other sophomores returning.
Erm Cushman and Sue Stiver,
l>oth graduates of Huntington
Beach 11.Jgh. are among the lead-
ing freshmen. Others from this
area include: Karen Bentson.
Robin Wallis a nd Linda
Williams (llunlington Beach);
Colleen Knox, Laurie Lester and
Karen Nelson Cl\tarina of HW\l·
mgton Beach; Rona Nettle and
Carol Phillips <Edison of Hunt·
mgton Beach).
Saddlebarlc
Coach Jo.Anne Graham says
her early concentration at Sad·
dleback will be In helping tho
girls obtain indlvldual goals.
Starting with five eirls this
seuon, Graham bas been busily
r ecruiting other s wimmers from
physical educaUon classes at the
school.
"We've aot two Jood diatance
swimmers in Erin Porter and
Debbie Friedman," Graham
says. "We also have some &ood ·
divers out for the team."
Wllh playoff hopes
still flickering. Mater
Del Hlih Sohool (Santa
Ana) will journey to St.
Paul High in Santa Fe
Springs tonighl (7:30)
for an Angelua Lell&Ue
basketball enoounter.
The Monarc hs of
coach Jerry Tardie are
currently in -. three·way
tie for third place. St.
Paul ·hu yet to win a
league outing, making
Mater Del a favorite
tonight. ~
Estancia
Wrestlers
Favored
The Kiwis of Hunt·
lngton Beach and a club
team from UC Irvine
will be among 16 teams
competing in the liM
annual womeQ'a
aaiateur rugby toum.a·
ment Feb. 18 and 19 at
Hill Junior HiJh School
ln Long Beach. -
The tournament is the
largest since oreanlied
women's amateur com\
petition began ln 197'-
llill Junior High is
located immediately
East of Cal State <Long
Thia year's overall H ·2·2 record wu acbl~
against tough compeUUon. Tho Chargers faced
seven of the top 10 Cll' teams in a f.2-2 ~leaJtQe
schedule and are roWnc unbeaten six •••• ln~ the Sunset League c.mpalp, wblch )loLetab.
labels as the second tou&belt ln al'. ·. ·
M cLeish stresses condition and a well·roanc1ed
8DPl'OJCh to the Pmt Ill t.ra!Dlq. •-We trr .. tMeb all aapeetas r,t.occwr,• •. •QL ... And wttbJI~ each8011ttnuta, ,.,....,..eomata.ur.t.MT .. lllt at the endoftboseasoe... ·
Edlaoll bas played well tn tile· two J.N"rioa
years it made the ClP pla,offl, ~I tlMt
semlrtnals ln 1975 befOl'e loaiDI a ~IOil laa4 to •
eventual champion Santa Barbara. and ·retcbinl
the quarterfinals last year before penal~ klcb b)'
finalist Palos Verdes d ld tbe Cbargen ln.
This year. McLeish hopoa ttie lh1rd time la the
charm.
Beach) University at s Cal dar l~a".t~i~~ a k er and ports en
· The Kiwis are among ~ the favorites in the ,....., n aocur-OoH Miii• •• 11111
Estancia High School tWnrney a long with ea•..,......,_.• ••st.Pwt. ~CS;1)>.
<Costa Mesa). winner of mpe CAri·z.), Omb"•h uwwaw1111i-°"'"'.,.· a ..... .n~ ,,.... at~
h d l t b ...., letllel Cllrt.. -Velle-t Ollltomte CIDll• Q:30),
l e ua mee c am· <San Diego) UCLA and 0r1s11en c.tM •\711111: Ooft a.woe vs e.1no~ °"""*"'c:wte plonshlp ln the Century Bel"'ont c-1...!..... Cotl411ro111v111.,Hltlllot011noH!t" ~ .. °""" ... ,,. .. ~"" ... T -ill ...._ f ••• .;>11\111: Clll Mer~ ¥1 tfllMINlon Vell.., ~1 VI , _ _.. •-· .. L"Vague, '!" uv one o A total of 20 ellml.Pa· or11t1•11 at lwtMf" eotuoni•• ~~~=-"..., .~1~1al;;,--~ the favorites to capture Uon aames wlll be eo11 .. m. a1NewportHerticw."-•a111veu.., the league meet Wr .. • • WrHtllflt Olnlfll dtl Ma,. at et Hu111ff114ol! l!IMCfl, Merlea Ol ti in g champion s hi P played on Satarday with OKt• M .... 1o11 ~·et D-e .1 .. 11 ,1,111c1o ••seat.I A11 .. Thursday at Foothill 12 more on Sunday lead· Hiiis, •• T_ .. ..,_.,..va.10 Cllllat ~-"•·t~nc. c.11au1u1.
High School<Santa Ana). li;ig to the championship ''~.11r .. ':!~:= !! Tusttll, Col~·~...,...-' St,. _.
Preliminaries are at 3 Ult at 2: . un1venlt'f at CMN • INf'.C:-IAI TrKll-rOAlll9 Cl9ll ~ •
and the finals start at ,Prehm_inary &ames ~!'J-=.11:..1r .. ·~~';t.,!"' ~"~~-................. -..
7 :30. will consist of two 15-MIM1eo1~ac11 ... a•H...,.1""°" .. o11,.._ • ..__. ...... ........_ ....
Coach Jl·m War-n's m inute halves, increas· ''""· we.tlNMMf' at Foume111 u. va11rr 0 1•>1 ~· .,.,,._,... ~" I t 20 d .,. ln v.i1w, ,...,... ...,_ .. MerlM at uc irv1111 cr1•1o Esta ncia Eagles will ng 0 an ~m ute \111 •• 111 Gm.a-' at 0r ... ee 0,,.,.......,.........-.. Le,...
have two l·ndividual halves for s~mls. The ti· cw•• co111191, u :a111; Seddle!Mdt •• <a:m 1 Oeldt!t west°"'• at
tie g me will have tw c.ot1• at IM 1:>1199 Ott 0!41• """° AM CJ """>i 1m. Htlll .a favorites and two others a . 0 «a>: CNlllMtl C.1111_. at~ M•1141tl• 1211 0Ue11 v.i-w •' wm have a good chance r egulation 40-minute rCol~IM'lll~~·Cllf""9~~.,~·;..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio..;~'*iiill~ ... -~Q)ii,m;;-~~ to capture victories halves .. Thursday. Adm1ssf?n to t~e BJNORwaTT ~~~ vu Tham at 98 poundl tournament ~ Cree Wlth Tra.weI Bag
Go•den W.a.at F1·ve is 7-0 in lea""•e action actlon getting u!lder . ....ncx~ T""~ l'DtK'rt ~ ~ and ...... --!:.1. Kovln way at 8 each mommg. ,_ 5•~· VWIW".__ •.• ~..-.. V'l'Vlll.I • f!llOW,COASTHWV .. H~I Att-W1' •
T'-•-On C Sloan, a beavywelaht. ts
11Ae8 ypre18 also 7-0 tn lHIUO and "WT men'• Goff 24·4 overall. W 0 "'
Golden West College returns .. We feel that Gart H••POn1uo .. cM.11c:ou .. • to Southern California Con· Sheehan (115, 6-1) and -.1111 Hol• n.-,_., ,_,,_u
ference bekelball plaft ton1 .. ht d Lo (l30 c.11) A '" .... ' , w..... T,..,.., u 1 a. .. E wery I or • K•tlly G-;.t.._ .. 16; a.'VlftllHt
(7 : 30), tanauna w t h host also bave a aood chance •"'\."' ,,, CyC~~.~~~~~iera enter the of advanctns to "'8 CIF ~=•/~~~:.::a. same wtth a'"" SoC•l mark and p,eumtnarles nex.t c 'l'11t11t-1 • ..,., ,,...,, rmi: a.
a fourth place standing while weolt-''' Warren aaya, 1 J~,:;'1;-.:!;!= 'Z11.~;.~~:_,,
CypreH ta the c-•erence leader Omy . one wres~er n Ka111t o'o'"-"· u : 2. M.t,.. ...,... each welltht divlslon wm wu•-. •: :1. JaMt ""'· •·
with a 'Mrecord. be ellglbfe to par\lclpate ..:...':!~ .. ~~~ Cypreu toi>Dled Golden Wect. in tho ~llmlnary meet ......,. JoclltOI\, aa; .. Metioft 111111.
67 •56, in the flist rneetlnf • C C 11 A IS. Golden Weat, led by 'roc!d· at ypreu 0 ... ae c flllf11t-t. JMn Dion. Je; 1.
Zlrbel and Harold Chambllls, _sai_W'Cl_•_Y_._,._e_b_. a. ___ .....:~---krv--' _..,_a._°"" __ Pr_lllC4._1 ha• an 11·11 aeuon mark while
the Charaen are :Lt-I. Cyprell ll
the defend1n1 state champion.
When })reaaed, he answers
mpJ,y, "It wa1 •ll exciting.'' ;;_~~------~-----
nilsefunds
tor your club,
o_rganlzatton
I
•1
"
·I
11 ,
..
.f
' ,7-
.1
......... -... -~ ...
BASEBALL I BASKETBAL~ I HORSE RACING I BUSINESS
UCI Coach Optimistic
Irvine Nine to Have Banner Year?
!!ddle Allen lsn 't starved for
-ordl w6en talklni about the
[lpteQt{al of tbls season's UC
lnfne baseball team.
valuabl\' player in the Western
Stale Conference. He was also
picked on the all-state Oarae
schools) team. Hirano will play
center field .
Gutierrez and Summers with
Witchger both a starter and a re-
:llever." •
UCl opens Its season Wednes-
day at Southern Californ'ia
College in COsla Mesa.
.. We're very optimistic," says
Allen. ..We look forward to a
very cood season. We had a good
-inter record (24·4 > and we
have an outstanding shot at win-
nln1 the PCAA. We don't have a
weak spot in the lineup."
Allen bas quite a few starters
back from last season's 30·22
team. but he's also recruited
aome top JC and high school
play en.
Other key JC transfers include
infielder Ken Munger (Golden
West>. catcher Dennis Kause
(Santa Ana), first baseman Jim
Dawson <Riverside), outfielders
Jesse Moore (Palomar), Mark
Canavan (Mt. San Antonio),
Mike Miyeaux (Riverside).
shortstop Bob Rucci
(MiraCosta) and pitchers Ken
Gutierrez (Canyons), Rick Sum-
mers <Palomar) and Jim
Wltchger (Palomar).
uctrvlM ._... .. lkhtftltt
Wed., l'eb. a-.t 5ou1Mnl Cal Collt911.
TIMln., P.O. t-<Mll"'an Cllomel. l'rl., Feb. 10-USC ('-'91.
Set., fl.O. 11-ct..ity All4lllt$ (llOmo), I.
MOii., ,..._ l~ ..... 1Hlll11-.el.
Tiie$., P'ttb. I~ Gel Poly (f'OnlOM).
Fri., Fell. 17-Ce! Stele 11,1)•
set., l'tb. 11-uc terktl•Y 01om11.
dOubl .... ~.-MOl'I., Fetl. JO-UC.LA ll1ome1. d0ublt"""9r, -· Fri., Ftt>.2•-1..e'tQle' (tlomel.
The key returnees for the
Anteaters are right fielder Ken
Washington and pitcher Bob
FrlsheUe. Washington led UCl in
htttlng (.35') while Frishette had
alO-Srecord.
Munger figures to be a starter
at short or third while Dawson is
the first baseman. Moore will
also be a starter in the outfield
with Hirano and Washington.
Sel., l'tO. is-.. ,.._rclJne•, 1.
Fri •• Merth ~ SUt• IFlllltnonl'. -· Sel., MMC.II•-Ce! Stete IV.I, 2:30. Wtcl,. JNrc:.11 I-« UCl.A.
S•t., Mere:lt 11-USC. MHlll~r. ""°" T-.. Mef'th 1'-4JCSMl1• e .. w e• ltoomel.
Tllura.,-c.11-..1N.1~l-.I. Fri., ~II 17-5en Dle90St.• 1-1.
Set •• Martlt 11-Wyomlne lllomel,
Others back include shortstop
Greg Adams, catcher J im Wick.
third baseman Doug Chard,
pitchers Steve Borowski and
John Kremer and catcher Vince
Grippi-all o! whom saw limited
play a year ago.
Heading the list or new
players are Infielder Eric
Frolander and outfielder Mike
Hirano.
The top freshman prospects
include pitchers Dan Burns
<Ser vite), Bret Baumann
<Colton), L ee B e lang e r
<Magnolia), Dirk Welseock
<Notre Dame), Larry Moothart
(Crespi), catcher P ete Bethea
(San Diego>, second basemao
Mike Nagel <Lakewood> and
s hortstop Pat Jarnigan (Rancho
Alamitos).
dO..cil--·-· S.tt •• MMCll is-« a..-.-·
MOft., ~ V-« OomltlQwt Hiiis.
Fri., MM'<.11 ll-4JC $Mite 8¥Nre• "*"-'· Set., Aprtl ,_UC SMiie ...,_ ••• -
MOft., ""'II :S-S0UC-.. Cal COii ... <homtl.
Fri., AprH 7-« ~ne·.
S•I .. Aprll 1-Pepptrcllne• lllomtl, doubl--·-Wed., Aorll 12--0ll Poly 1..._.I,_.
Fri., Aprll 1 ........ yota• lhoMtl.
Sel., All'll 15-tl LOyolt•, dOllbletlMcler, ""°"· Fri,. Aprtl 21-..t Ce1 Sltle IL.Al'.
5 41., Aprll 22-Cel Slele ILAI', home,
d0ubltllt6dtf, -· F ri,. Aprll ,._ Cel Sl•te (Lil•.
Frolander earned all-state
(small schools) honors as a
ahortst.op last year at MiraCosta
College, but Allen has shifted
,him to second.
Pitching will be a big key,
says Allen.
·'The pitching is very, very
yo ung wilh a sophomor e
(Fris hette) our No. 1 guy. The
basic rotation should include
Fr1shelle, Burns, Borowski,
Set., Apr II tt-C•I Stale (Lt )'. home.
dOublth•-r, -· Mon., Mfy •-u . of sen Dle90, 3.
W•-.. MeyS-U.OISel'l l>ieOO (l\Ome), 3.
Fri,. Mey I-Sin D._ St.• (hofMI.
Sii., Mey .-.I San DleOO St.•, Jlout>!etlNOet;, rioon.
Fri., May 11-<al Stele IFulltrtonl•, ,,_,
Set .• May M-et Cal Stet• (FUlltrtOll)',-.
'd<tllOln PCM lll'"t•
Hirano, from College of the
Canyons, batted .430 last year
and was selected the most All v•mes llellln •I 1:30, ""'ft' OlhffWIW ;,..
4'Ctled.
Girls'
Athletic
Results
OlllUtASklTM~
V~ty
Nt111t. -..cll l .. I fl1l .. 1tU"9
'Hul\lll\Vl~Ooyte 20, C.tdy 10,
Poflel I, Townwnd M, LOOl>•rl 14,
aurrows •. W<1ttoo1 s.
'H•lfll...-Hutlllnq!Ofl »-6.
M•rlM lMI 1401 LI MllllkM
M•rln•-8ratMy 1, Andtr'on •,
Huller 10, G~htr 2, w .. ton 1',
Wllliems 1, Schluet ... 7, 'H.tv•I• •· tulltirne-MarlNJl•ll.
Cypnu 14111471 fllt1. V•ll•'
• l'ounlaln Ve lley-Blue11 1'.
OllbersOfl 2, L0tt9ftOow S. lk'l9ln It,
Wat'd 2, WY'lnow>kl J, Hevlken 4,
Colem•n 2, Bellw 4.
Helflim.--Fount•ln Velhry 21-20.
Kllette Cn l IMI tnlM t r,..,1,.._..o,.ewn 1. Oudmen 11.
~•ICIMI 6. Htllft~.Wte 20-t. ~Yanity
......... Mil QlllNlf ... """"""~..,. '· Of1eoa "· krom 11, llnoll.s"' trlnlier %, ~tu -.•-lftt. H•tflim.-+4untlnQton 1 S-1',
MMIM '40 C:Jll La MlllllM
MMll'a-llM9fe2.. llefry 12, llotlm
ie, &•"" 4, Olll~ 1, VelM 2. Fllflllo2.
H•"l~N17·11. Pt-...,....., '411 Utl ~u
P:ourtl•lft Vell~rverum 11,
'lllllOn H, OowfNl'I .. """" 2. Mal'<> 2.
Helltl..,._..,_t.in v.11.., 11-11. a •'411e 1411 11tl lf'flM
trwl-Brlgllt •. C-'IAI 2, 01111>$ :I,
'Har,..r 2, Normen • • .._,.J 1.
Helftlmo-«elflla 31·$,
Wrestling
Summaries ......... ~_..........
Vwsltf
CM ......... Np
, .. _ttotl CC.0.--~ Merl plnNd
81elUMy iw..t Covlne) 1:21, """' ..... 11Sr-t4M'lkt '""'°'Y Hiiis) dK Orr (CorON cltt M¥1 M.
12>-ttowllM CMet1'wll dK Ml-
fOll CC:-•tMMI 7.J.
HI-Ella (CW-clef Mer) dK e1e<a (Clleftfttl ISl .... 111-2. 141-Portw (Sllnl\Y Hiiis) MC Cetlfes lc.or-de4 MM I >-1.
Ue-MuM1 CPeremounl) cttc
OtvQNn IC--• Marl 12-5.
Tum ~•. O\Mwlel 111...-s ~; 2. Oltflt'I' 111; 1. IE~
107'h; 4. Wtit CovtN IS; S. Per.· -tn· .. $Inly HIHs 5'; 7. ~
•• .,.,.. SM; .. Seulll Hiii• SA~; o.
••ldWll'I ..... SIVt; 10. Ho9elu
... ~; 11,Mfrln-4.S.
Basketball
Alamitos Race Results
...,-..y
C-. Trecll ~y Pttt'S~ tlACE -440 y.,,,s. 3 YNr
OIO• & UD. Cl.tirnl,._ Pllfse $2,.SOO
Hot 5"ot ~· Bar-(V..,.,,_. I 14 00 UO 4 10
Sol..,,,•n's World CC.trdoU) 4AO 3.60
Husllln 11111 IP.vllnd 7.?0
T' me -22.tt
Also r•n -S.VillnNI> Giii, Ao<llot P•u. Gr•n Son. S...11/t's Chef99,
E19te Dancer, ThornM Alert. Good
COPY
Scr•ltlltd -HurlbrHI( KIO,
Rull•h Rocket, Sol•rsogooo. Olvlde<I( n f:ucU J.Hot SMI Cute ..... a
S-Seltmefl'I Wwtcl, f'•l0~1 .••
SECOND ttACf: -.00 yaros. J vur olds. Cle1m11>9 tor m•lden\, PUrH U,100
Want a Cha~•
Cl(ni9nll s.oo J.40 2.eo
Dondy Tl-s IMv1es1 l.?O 4.00
Mind MetSin (Oelombltl • Ml
Tlme-20.99
AIM> '"" -Young Coul'ltns. '°'" Re•Oy, .Jtll•bo News, Aed M•n
.Slt•J.t. nu U ttl• Wll<ll, Emmo
#••lt. J•ti. -.. Screttll•d -Pego Pey, My
0.11.,.._ .Htl, Bel• Doller, F•tl>er Jonno ..
TNlllO ttACE -UOy.,.,s. l YUi"
Olds & up. Pun. Sl,;JOCI
Most ROY"
1A11l'°ni ".o 1 eo s 40 Klruhy tar IMV~I 4 40 3 00
Audy Tu f~rwrl 300
Tim• -JI.It
Also,.,. -AJvr• T•'t Hine, Wln-
nln' we-n. MIH ~r.-1 Umtt, He's•
Tris, Pelleo's llM. Jeys l•y, Anpect
lhe MMI
S<r•ld .. d -Lucky 7', Sw .. 1 City,
Fly llf Too, GIClcly'~ AoOet u luct• l·Mott ttey•I a •·
ltinclly -· ..... Ult.IO
f'OUllTM ttACIE -310 Y•rct' 3
yur olds. Alt-MIU. Pllr .... ,;JOO
Sii ywlNMr
((Ardon I •.40 3 60 1 40
Oypliutt Ollc (Hlfll • 40 3 ?O
OH•MldnlQl\t Actv•nu IAO..irl 1.10
OH·Ftst Jet Wins IMll<hllll 1 80
Timt -11.48
Abo ran -lme J'ut .Jfl, Styll•ll
O•tw, Cl>llk Hiii Cll•rmtn, Mr T C , •
S•r•bellt
No \C r.11C1tes
DH· ()eedl>HI tor ShOW
l'I f'TH llACE -110 verO• l •U• 040\ & up. Cl•lmlng PllrM .. 100
4'11\le Go FIMI
111-hl 7 00 4 00 l60 Hwl"-' Wll-CTrltM""'I S JO 4 40 ,_UttOIMc»("9rNrl J 60
Tlme -.uo
AIH rel\ -GoOef' Too, Tender
WitHiOf, Poe> H Ao<ltel, V•ln lndten,
()It Cl>•rvo. hit of "-• OoftOy Dan• S<retclle<I -_. Lock
U EH<UI Al·Utlk Go l'leet a J •
N11111er wi.-, "-" m•
StllTit llACI -3SO yllfOt 3 .,..,
old\ a. up. AllOWen<t. PllrM W,000
Tinily Oe<kelle
IV•uqllnl UO 4 40 3 10
Bt Sure Agein lM•lrl 5 to >to
1 'm •Sure Tiiing ICMOOLI) •.•O Tlme-1121
Also ren -Miu Co 11on1111.
Alemltos ~.,. El• Gocty. DICktY•
HUIMr, Tlltnll ..... wn. a.le P•t Go,
Oii Wh41 AllYIM'I
Scr•tcneo -Mh l•oo Moc,
0.ck"tm, flMI N' Fltkle, Smoolll
t<Hty
SEVIEHT"H llACE -3SO yerdt 3
vur olds & up. C•••m1n9, Purt~ •
M,600 RomeoSlrlp
CH tr II 8 00 • 40 3 60
Tra<k Panton ll•uturel •.10 3 tlO
T••• Moon ICMOOH) • 00
Ttme-lt.11
Al•o r.., -~ Oii, U•~ Lora.
1·m• Smootll Jtl, S.-r Surcllel~. T Ur Ablff Tutt
S<r•lmod -R....,ide Somy, Go
V•n Peclllc, Jel c.i>t.i•. Fr•endly $trio, Unolo Joe,...,..,., Aow•t
u 1.-•-S4"-&1·Trec11 ,. .. u... ,. .... , ... 1 ....
f:IGHTH llACl -3.SO rerO' l
ye•r olO• a. "" Attowanc.e. Purw
Ml,000
Vintaoe v ...
Alamitos Entries
CWordl s 00 3 40 3 40
TVlfdo June lion IP•UIUW I s 00 • 00
Swfft Sht CV-llnl 5 80
Tl--ta.ti
Al'° .. n -HK' Wr.c;p.t, L•d•o
l(lnd• M•n, ~•Woy, Went• Go.
L.lml I'S Aet••d•. Mllff Cll••v•.
MOO<' Flyer
f'l ttST llACE -lSO ytrds. :I yur
olds. Clalmlno. PVrw $2400. Cl•lmlno pr1,.~
lotd tteply IBenll
Ao«llM Aoc~tt (twrtl
Sll-s Del~ (Veugltn ~ Jett CClfnfNftd 1My1t1l
IUv..-hit CTr-""91
O\lke Deddy IP9mtrl Pleadya Tru<klf (Went)
Grt0n JHe IC.WU)
Co Holder (Cn<19erl
Cult And V•ln IDoml119uezl
l it
'" 117
112
122
119
119
111
119
117
121
1U
111
111 1U
1U
117
112
122
122
TNltlO ltAU -'1'0 ytrds. :I ...-ff"
olds I. uP. Qelmln9. C.111-bred Pvrse
$2'00. CJalmlttg pr )Q $3000.
COley't TIQW <O-.-r)
First Str'OQ C"°"!lfll
Hen1e•11.ec1 l&itnlul
~Alertll.llCki.I
Htvl Good 0.y !Adair I
1 It
Ill
11• llt 1n
olds. All-.-.ce. Purw UOOO
Silt• Theme 1Her11 Tru Joy Wiison) 111
"' 111
Scret<Md -Vl4ott. .HI Spy, Sllm N Grend.CN~SUcty CN•-VIII• ITr•sur•I Winotd WI"'" IMJICMll I
Fut K•lie IW.arctl Ill NINTH llACIE -l SO YlfdS. 3 ye1r 111 olds a. up. Clllmtng. Pllr .. M,100 Super Sonic-. IVNQMl
Unoblt (Llllf>Oml 112 BIYOU aooo ..
l2l IWtrd I 1l 40 'AO 3.IO 111 Crem• Aodtet IOelomtMI 17.20 18.40 1 '' D•rln'' 01-IAcNirl l 10
AIOft .... l.i.rtl
Hallwe Vil•lllY ICltflswl
Hot SI• (....._.) 111 Time-11.24
SIXTH llACI -U O yerdt. 3 yur A Ito '• n -T •HI Y J • l 1 • olOt a. uP. AllOWanu. Purse MOOG. CornerSlone, Posit, Miu Go Ll91>1,
MIH Tlrty Aoc:utte IWtrdl 111• Glld•bout. Liiiie RePllu
Cllervon uety CPerntrl • 111 Sh~;:!~=-AoKA You Home, MIU
Or. Twlellali\ CL.lplleml 1 It 11 a .. c .. ., •• -. .... It a 2• Mike's Jet 1.i.ro •1 '' •-Aoo Tiie Olllrt 1Aou9nl 1 It Creme 11.cltt, P'elOl,eJl.lt
ao H•lo IV.uoMl 111 AllHtd...Ct-7,SSl .
Llmlll Ell• ITrHWrel t 17
Sun5'11M Jtt CCrtever1 '"
Go Deer Go IC..dotel "' 0•1 Nut B• IAOUOlll 119 Christian
SIVINTM ltACE -.tOO yerdi. >
Y••r olds &. uo. Ctelmlnv. ""'" s.sooo. Clalrnlng prkt '7)00. Fi Pl
Ufl110.ioe 1a.ct1 1
1
1
1•, I VeS a y Go Sc-MM\ (Hert I
Too lulls IC.don) "'
O<Hl'I Armt C0.-.1 1 It FlveClllU (\leugltnl 122
Turf•1 H-IMy!MI llt
Jet Ceotel11 IAdelrl t 1'
GM MM Go 18enhl 122
Twoforllletltow IWtrdl 11• llelgnln9 Stir IMllcllelll 111
t<lft P'otu ICardoul
ttl9'tt Oft Wiiiie IW4fdl 11t llOMTN ttACI -170 y•rds. J
Huntington Valley·
Christian <Newport
Beach) tries to stay in
the running for the
.Academy League cham-
pionship when the Con·
querors meet Old v ......... 18.-fielcll A••Y SM Got$ I,..,,..,,
urt O..roe 1o.iom11e 1
'It Yff• olds a. up, P\lfw W.000.
11t Dicken~ ICerOOl•I
111 Olde Smoolllle Cl¥dl
"' <>ell's Sfltdow !Wero I Kips Son er,..,.,,.,
,OUllTM tt4CI -5.50 Y•~OI. J \'Nf' Olds &. up. AllOWan«, PllrM
IACOC>.
Kltburv•s Intent IOelombel
llQ ledtlOf'..., <Ad.tit)
FIMl CCNWOy CVtuelhrt I ·-·•ot (Cerdoz•l Lot Of Jet,...,.,..,
f'ly By Nltllt II« IR0411ft)
l'Am A KllllY Too ICleoiaM)
,..,, Perlonntf IMllcllell)
I'll l"nlve II <Tr-re)
SMoret .. IWansl
Stffflll119 John C8roolllltld)
tloClll\ SN (9wcll
Mlctwey Rlltr IOelomM)
tn 122
119
"' 1U
121
111 1n
119
IU
P9'TN ltACS -l50 Yards. S yeer
T .. Oii ILi,,...,,,)
Weelltl Af\d Glory lltougll)
Sav•11nell U.11 (H.trtl
:~: Maranatha <Ar cadia)
'" tonight (7) at Southern :~ California College in
iu Costa Mesa.
:: HVC defeated Avalon, n• 44·42, Saturday night to
iu leave both teams · with
one loss in league play.
College Ba8ketball
Capistrano Valley
122 Christian shoots for its
;~ ninth straight victory
m when the EagleS-host
m Brethren Christian ~i! (Garden Grove) tonicht
122 (7: 30). And Liberty :~ Christian <Huntln1ton
Prep Socce r
Beach) travels to Inland
Christian (San.
Bernardino) tonlaht
(7 :30) tn Christian
League action.
;1-luketball
. . . . '
PUnch
..
....
Tuesday, February 7, 1978 DAILY PILOT 83
JtJSI Repert• .Bff.,... ·~~
Record earnings and revenues for the lb
quarter and for the nine months ended Dec.
1977, have been reported by MSI Data Corp.,
Mes'a manufacturer of portable data e~
terminals.
The company earned ~.144, or 47 centc
share, in the three m onths ended Dec. 24, tmt
This represented a 31 percent gain over U..,
$704,172 or 36 cents a ahare, earned in the co!Q.
parable period of the prior llscal year.
In the nlne months ended Dec. 24, 1977, MSl's
earnings increased to $2,665,171, or $1.32 a shatt.
up 29 percent from earnings oC $3,002,815, or $1.0Z a
share, in the same period a year ago. " ..
Revenues in the third quarter increased tQ
$10,111,308, a gain of 18 percent over the $8,595,t•
recorded in the year-earlier period. Revenues for'
the nine months or the current year total~
$28,426,494., up 11 percent from $25.61.S.400 in tba
same period of.the prior year.
.. There's no escaping the ravages of inflatlon-
nowadays I need two for the road I"
Directors of the company have declared
fourth consecutive quarterly cash dividend ot ~
cents a share, payable March 17 to sharebo!den of
record Feb. 17. Dividends of 7 cents also were paid
in June, Sept.ember, and December, 1977.
Refunds
Await
P ayers
Federal income tax
refund checks totaling
Sl,163,410.02 are wailing
to be claimed by 5.165
Southern California tax·
payers.
Many of the checks
were returned to the In·
ternal Revenue Service
as "undeliverable"
because the people to
whom they were sent
have moved and left no
..
CENTURY
ACCEPTANCE
CORPORATION
forwarding address with'===========
the U.S. Postal Service.
TAXPl\YERS WHO
filed their 1976 federal
tax returns on time and
have not received thC'ir
r efunds s hQuld check·
with the IRS. Some re,
fund delays can al!.o be
caused by lost or stolen
checks. In these cases.
the IRS can puttracers on
the m isslng checks •
Other rcfWlds may be·
delayed because of er·
rors or omissions on tax
returns.
In these cases, people
who have received in·
!>tructions from the J RS
should forward the in ·
formation needed in or·
der to speed up issuance
of their checks .
IN REF UN D tn ·
qutries. taxpayer~ mu:>t
provide the name and
address as they ap·
peared on the return,
the Social Secur ity num·
ber cs). and the type of
form filed
Anyone whose name
or address has changed
sin ce the return was
filed should provide the
corrected information.
U nder mo s t circumstances, an un·
delivered refund check
can be reissued to the
new address and r e·
ceived by the taxpayer
within two weeks.
Tax Aid
Appr o ved
LONDON (AP) -Bri·
tain is giving divers in
its booming North Sea
oil fields a tax break to
dissuade them from
leaving lhc country.
About 1.500 divers are
n eed ed for s um me r
work, maintaining the
offshore oil rigs. About
250 are reported to have
left Britain lo escape
taxes ranging up lo 60
percent of their pay.
• ·The government now
says divers will be con·
sidered setr-employed ,
allowing them to deduct
the cost of travel, work
clothes and equipment
and saving them as
much as $9,750 annually.
CAPITOLIZE
WITH
CAPITOL
CAPITOLIZATION MEANS TO
CONVERT CAPITOL TO CASH I
It f011'f\..O St 000 to S~ 000 C•\n 011\d
'+'OU own • ,,",,... Of ilf~r i:,,tOPPlt,
;.\d'\t h t O' ""' hH CA.Ptrt)l HOVE-lOAN •rr•nge 10 C•OlfOlile )'OU' '°"''" '"'., a c..sn k»h .,...,,.. tn1 ano ,,t.nclly ~.
Capitol
Home Loan
Ow or Ctt1f \ ll'O'e'"' .. o.n...8tO't•.,,. f ,. ""' ..
C•" Of\• of Of.JI ......,, Co-t~•"' *""1 located ottleee tOt tN ,,. "
We'd
Really like to help
COST~MESA 31:IOHWbortlMI 714/~412
ANAHEIM
2331 w '-"'°°'" .. 14
714/778-3450
LONG BEACH
.. 74 E_ ()II Amo li.d
213/421-9333 .
Thia announcement 1s neither an offer to setl nor
a sollcitatlOn of an Oltff to buy these secunhes.
The offer 1s made only vy the ProsPectus.
• Interest payable monthly (1f Note 1s $5.000 or
more). Quar1er1y, annually, or at matunly with
interest compounded annually.
• Available in amounts or ssoo or more.
• A pros.pecius and further information on this
issue may be obtained from Ray Chicoine.
Universal Heritage Investments Corp .. 567 San Nicolas Dr., Sutte 102 Newport Beach, 92660.
Phone 7141944-6885 · ,-;0-: ;:;.-,:;0:.-.;;;;--;,:::::;;~-;:;;;;,,~::,.,~1
I M•1I Thi• CIWf'O" Acc.,.telfC!e Corfi. $enhH Not ..
I T od•r tH ,.,,_. I ,. • I ,. ... , '
I •DO•lSS Ji
1 CITV f:
I -S!•H "'-------
: "OMI '"Of<l ;
L~~~~~~~-----~-~---~--~~:J
ATTENTION: Passbook
and Certificate of Deposit
holders at
• American S•vings •nd Loan
• Bank of America
• Callfomln Federal Savings
• Crocker Bank
• Glendale Federal Savings
• Home Saving• C. Loan
• Imperial Savtngs and Loan
•Union Bank
• United California Bank
• Well• Fargo Bank
• Great We"°'ern Saving• and l.o•n
Th' intere'!>l you receive from th!'
abo\e holdings •~. m most cases fully
taxable by both the federal go~ern·
ment and the State of Cahforn1a W11h
increased taxes and inflauon (e~11
mated to be 6 to 7~ in 1978) your nel
tttum 1s substantially reduc,.d.
Now a11a1le.bie IS an
8~
FIX£.D DEFqRED
ANNUrrY
which permllt )'OU
to deftr both federal and $tat~ tAxu.
giving your money an opportunity
to compound at a raster rate. And.
)our tax hdbiltty moves into l~ fulu1I',
when you wtll likely be In a lower
tH bracket!
1 h1~ offering is available to indi-
vu.luah w11h $ f 000 tu $ 250.000 lo
invest
For1nformal.ion telephone Patker
Dale. Senior Vice Pttsldent. el (714)
C>44·4620, or write f'\1tn et Morgari.
OfmSlead, Kenntdy & Gardner. Ir~·
poreled. t>06 South Olive ~ti ct. l.Os
Angeles. C"° 90014.
' .
•
,,
I
·f
~)
••I .. ,
.bl
• .... .. a;: • t # IP • .. r • ._ -• • • • ,_ • • t • • 1•
'Jl4 DAll V PILOT TU..CS.,, FebtUeiY 7, 1978 Busiiaess
Someday Kids Will Thank Hlln ... ~.._-,
By JULES LOH -~~Cllii J nfllt
,OLD TAPPAN, N.J. -
lllchard Wolf Ls not likely to be
appreciated until the next
ceneration, or the next. That's
all rtght by him. It la not for his
own recognltlon that be does
what be does. ••vou don't plant a black·
walnut tree for yourself," he
said.
.. But somebody has to care
about them. There are fewer
and fewer American black.
walnut trees, and the more land
we pave over and buUd on there
will be fewer still. l do what I
can."
1l1CRAllD WOLF .IS this
generation's Johnny
WalnutMed.
A few days ago, for i.n.atance,
he took off from work and went
to tbe achool house and gave hill
annual talk. He told tbe
chUdren, fourth 1radera, about
trees and how they grow and
what the world WQuldl be like
without them.
He gave each pupil a walnut.
This spring, as a clan project,
they will plant them. "Walnuts
planted in lhe fall germinate
better," he said. "but the klds should have fairly good results.
The main thing ls they now
know what a walnut looks like
and bow to remove the husk and
plant IL"
Two IDJll Rem11 to lat Jolldllhal handle
,.-Ntlremld
ilrlhdio:
1 Free Mnlinatlva
ll'vlm fir •t · •n1e11 Plans.
2. Rldlll'll A. Aller.
The Newport Beach ofhce
of Josephthal & Co. Inc. Is open.
And If you're building a retirement plan,
that's good news 10< you. We'U build. revise and
service your qualified pension, profit·sharing and
Keogh plans. Also, we'll manage your portfolio.
All 10< no fee 0< service charge, If your plan quali·
ftes In terms of size. Furthermore, your account
wlU be personally handled by Richard A. Adler, one
of Josephthal's princlpal owners. Mr. Adler is a
broker's broker. He's a CPA with over twenty years'
ekpenence in taxation, retirement plans, and money management. He knows
all the ms and outs of tax-advantaged investments. So If you think your
retirement portfoho can beneht just mail the coupon below. Or call
(800) 432·7218 and ask for Richard Adler. Let our experience work for you.
c AMERIC4 )
BE BAS BEEN doint that
himaelf for years: planting
black walnut tree.a, nurturing
them to aapUngs, givlna them
a way. For miles around, the
lawna ancl dooryards of his
friend.a have become nurseries toe. black walnut trees that his.
chlldr«l'a children's friends will.
climb.
Richard Wolf, a tree surgeon,
hu great respect for all trees.
Hls concern for the American
black walnut, though. is almost
an obsession..
PacTel
Umtion
Sounded
Pacific Telephone bas
reported earnings of
$2.33 per ~mon share
for the calendar year
1977, compared with
$2.06 in 1976, but Gordon
L. Hough, board
chairman, injected a
note of caution in report·
ing the improved results.
l'dore than 56 percent
of the earnings, be said,
are s ubject to refund as
a result of several or-
ders issu ed by the
California Public
UtlUUes Complission.
"It la an example of
regulatory and legal
problems which con·
tlnually push Pacific
Telephone into a posi-
tion of financial uncer-
tainty," Hough said,·
Monday.
-----------------~--------------
He said that, while 1the
company experienced
increases in productivi-ty, earnings fell short of
the level found by the
PUC three years ago to
be fair, reasonable and
necessary to continue
providing good service.
Name------------Tel
Address
Cltv-----------~
Josephlt.l!tfr C0.1ncorpomec1
Member Ptclflc, New Vbft( and other leedlng Exchange•
29 Montectto Drive, Newport Bnc:h. Callfomla 92625
lit 11111111 Y• A llllllP
Net income for 1977
was $405,759,000, com-
pared with $351,816,000
for 1978.. OperatJng ex.
penaes rose trom
$2,538,~.ooo tn 1978 to
$2,805,844,000 in 1977 due
to higher wages, benefit
plan changes and higher
material costs.
Republic is ·good
f6r the economy. ••
Yours
The Ready-Cash Account. Bom>w from· it
at any tlnle without losing Interest.
Our Read)'·C.h Account leta
your mo~ work overtime.
Whether a Puabook or term
Certificate Account. now you can
borrow up to 901 of It et en
effectl~ cost of only 1%.• On term
Certificates you avoid the usual
Interest penalty for early withdrawal.
What's more, you keep on earning
• full Interest on your entire orlQlnal
" .. · . balenc:e.
cost never over l $. For example,
on e 6. 751 ~ertiftcete your Joan
rate would be 7.751. And.
remember -Republic: offers you
this Ready..Qish advantage on
Passbook account.a, toO. In fact,
Republic offers this benefit to
aavera wtth a minimum Interest
charge of only five dollars
regardleu of type of account or
amount on deposit
Now you can 1ave for the long
haul without tying up your funds
completely. 9~ ~f It Is avellable for
emergencies -or for any other
reason -anytime you wish. And
you can get the money at ohce.
. .. ..
• lit
• s.;
i
•ttere's·how lt worke. Example:
With a 6-year Certificate your
seivlngs earn 7%,, the current
annual rate. The annueil percentage
reite of your loan la 8~1. The •
difference between the loan rate
and your. aavtngs,tnterest rate is just
1 ~ -the net cost of your loan.
stmOar loans can be made on
any of our Certificates, with the net
Stop by or call. We're out to
prove "Republic Is ~ood for the
economy -yout'3.
••MAINLY," HE SAID, "It's·
the wood. Dld you ever see more
beautitUl wood?" He cleared the
surface ol the coffee table, a ali·
incb·thick alab of black walnut
the size of a beach umbrella.
Yes, beautiful.
"People want that wood. Who can blame them? l think people
ought to have that wood, but
nobody ls going to have that
wood unless we replace the
black walnut trees we take, and
lJley're going taat."
Fot one whose llveUhood de.'
rives in part ftom cutting down
treea, Richard WoU ls u rare a
species aa the Juglans nlara. the
one be'a trying to aave.
BE WILL NOT remove a tree,
an' tree, for what be considen a
frivolous reason, such aa leaves
cloggin1 the roof gutters. "Get
someone else, .. he tells potential
customers. When a favorite
linden tree ln hLs own yard had
to come down to save nearby
trees, h& got others to do the Job
and couldn't bear to watch.
In a quarter of a century as a
tree sturgoo he baa, perforce,
taken down five black walnuts,·
each replaced tenfold. The wood
from those five ii locked 1n bis
barn out back.
Unlike some others in the tree
b ua inesa, who will pay
handsomely to take an axe to a
valuable black walnut tree,
Richard Wolf's supply is not for
sale nor was it cut for profit.
"I GIVE 80MK of It away.
Mostly, it's ror my own use, if I
ever uae it."
He uses lt, all riabt. Here and
there around h.la house are bowl.a
and candle holders and other
items of black walnut expertly
turned out on his lathe. These he
gives away, by the hundreds.
promoting conservation of his
cherished tree.
"It just doesn't 1Jeem decent to
make money on a black
walnut."
• • 'DID YOU EVER SEE MORE BEAUTIFUL WOOD?'
!Richard Wolf la Thia Generation'• Johnny WalnutaHd
Job Demand Gaim
Demand for business executives in the Western region of the
nation in 1977 increased 60 percent over 1976, the second hiebelt iDo
crease ln the United States.
The largest gains in demand in the region were for pe1ICllUlel
executives, up 147 percent. and financial executives. up 83 percent.
The only decrease in demand by function occurred for englneertng
and science executives, down 62 percent.
Substantial gains among industry group11 were realized. Non.
manufacturing companies' demand for executives during 1977
climbed by .123 percent, as dld financial service companies and
manuraeturing companies at 100 percent and •7 percent. reapec·
lively.
These are among the findings of the latest Executive Demand
lndex released by Arthur Young & Co., Santa Ana . The report cov-
ers the three-month and 12-month periods ending Dec. 31. 1977.
Over 1~he Counter
MASO UltilMJS
MUTUAL FUNDS
. \ ~
l
..
·:
,
·f
STOCKS I BUSINESS
Taeeday'•
CJoaing Pricea NYSE
..
n.cs.y, Februaty 7, 1978 l/N
----------
COMPOSITE
CAIL y PILOT BS
iiiiiiii;;.;;;.=miiiiiiiiii-.--~;:-.-~--:-~~~~~-----~-----:l
TRANSACTIONS
Support Rule .i
Can Be Complex
I!
B1 STLVIA POltTEa ........ ..,.
Parent. who take a dependency deduction in 1m must •
have contributed more th&n ball of the dependent's total
support, except in cue1 where a mulUple support ·~ ment la used.
Thia ae.mlngly simple requirement becomes. impo~
tant ll the child had eamlnCJ or iP lndependont income ift
1.917, or if divorced parent.a queftton 1¥>w much support
each contributed to tho chlld, or if P'&ndparenta or other
people contributed to tho child's 1upport in edd1Uon to the'
parent.a.
WREN ALL THE SUPPORT 18 IN THE form of castt. , tt•1 easy to flgure out •bo eootributed more than half But
W1 not euy wbetl it lnvolves purchase of such .. ca\it.al
items" u a car, TV aet or aimilar products that tbe depen-
dent can use for mON than a year.
The IRS in 1977 finally came up with some slmple l
answers:
(1) It a parent buys a $150 TV set as a Christmas p~
sent for a dependent and it ls kept In the child's room. the
parent thereby contributed $150 to the child's support,
Count it in 1977 even lt it was bo~t on credit and won't be
paid for until some time
in 1978.
(2) If a parent b"'ys
a $5,000 auto tiUed and
registered ln hil or her
name, used equally by
a dependent child, It
--cannot be counted as
Money's
Worth . .
$5,000 of support. The parent did not give the auto to tbp '
dependent, but merely let him or her use It. But parenll
can count as support contributions any of the operating ex-
penses for which they pay while the child ls uslng the auto.
(3) tr parenta furnished all the ordinary support for•
child during the year, for example $4,000, but the cblld also ,
bought a $4,500 auto using personal funds, the parents con·
tributed less than half the $8,500 total support. As of 1977,
the IRS considers the purchase as an item ln total support
of $8,500 ln 1977. But, the IRS saya that If this new rule
hurts parents on lhelr 1977 returns, they can still rely on
the old ruling which does not consider a car purchase aa
support, if it was bought on or before Dec. 31, 1977.
__.-/
(4) UNMARRIED. UNRELATED PERSONS WHO
live .together are subject to a ruling on whether one cats
claim the other as a dependent. The claim can be made if
one pays more than half tbe support of the other and he or
she is a member of the household and makes the household.
the principal place of abode.
The exception is where the relationship is in violation
of the local law.
(5) People who claim dependency or medical expense
deductions for parents who also receive Medicare pay-,
men ls won some tax ·help from a 1977 decision by the · 1
Second Circuit Court of Appeals (agreeinJ: with the Tu
Court).
Despite an IRS rule, they may disregard both Part A•
and Part B Medicare benefits to their parenta in determin: '
ing whet.her they cont.ributed more than ball their support.
Nen: Chance. of bring oMdited
Despite the Snow,
Swcks Push Ahead
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market posted a broad
gain today alter a late opening in New York because of a
snowstorm.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials was up 10.23
points t.o778.8S.
Gainers outpaced losers by close to a 2·1 margin
among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues. •
The NY~1'!-nd the American Stock Exchange, which
closed two hours early Monday after the storm hit New
York City, began trading today, an hour later than usual
Given the delayed opening in New York and the
absence of many lnvestora because of the weather,
analysts aald it wu dlrticult to draw many conclualons
about the market's mood.
But t~y noted some positive corporate developments
tJ\e past two days, including General Motors' report of a 17
percent rise in fourth quarter proflt8 and • dividend In·
crease by Sears, Roebuck & Co.
DowJon~•A r~r•~•
New Yorti<API ~,.., Oow-J_, ewreou ITGelC'
JI Incl °1:',u ~,;J 7~1 f1'm+~ JO Trn 211.41 llU• 111.4111) ... I.JI ~ Uti ?OSA !OS H 1007 IOS SI+ O.JO s111 m.• 11111 110.v tn n + us nctus ............. • • ..•• l,lft,JllO ren • •.....• ..... ... .. Jl1.IOO
"" • • • • • • • • • • .. • • • •• . . . . • l»,700 Sl11 ............. ••••••••• l,7'6.000
Due to late transmission· today's Ustlng will not
appear In the Dally Piiot.
••
l
la
'Y
•'
.. , ...
~)} .,,
.. t
.~
1
. .
\ Television TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS DAILY PILOT TIH!Sday, f'ebruvy 7, 1978
. • , . .
111 . ..,1>\'t
EVENING
t;OO I C8S HEW8 ~ONE
A prolllMJOtlal aecldant
vlc:1lm la 1trklc by the
paramee11cs' 1quad car
wnlla responding lo a call. 0 MOVIE * * "Chato'• Land"
( 111721 Cflerlas BfO!lson,
Jaelt Plllance. A hlll·brNd
Al*)he manllgiMI to •lay
one 1190 at>eed ot a
bloodthlraty posse. {2 hrl.)
G) TH! BMOY BUNCH
Gr.g geta a part·Uma job.
Q) THE ROOKIES
The rootlln go unden:owr
to 111\81/1 o 1yndlcat•·
owned l•lm company.
8i) ELECTRIC COMPANY ~ 8PEC1Al
''Actlotl The October 1970
Cri&Ja" A re-ctHtlOn Of lhe
avon11 10vol11tng IN! 1tld-
napp111g of Jomes R. Croas ano Plafra lapona by the
FLO In October t970: an
update on the 11tuatlon In
French Canada now.
®) ABCNEWS
Hustling
8:30 IJ MOVIE
• *''!-"The Rains Of
Ranch1pur" (Part 1) (1955)
L•n• Turner, Rlchuo
Burton The rich and cor·
•UPI will! Of an Englllh
nobleman falls In love wtth
a btllllant Hindu doctor. (1
hr . 30mln)
Burl Re!-·nolds <:uddles up to Cath<'nnt•
Dencun~ in the mO\ ie "Jlui,tl('. ·· to hl'
atrL•d tonight ;.it 9 on CBS. Channd 2.
G) BEWITCHED
Magtc comus ,,, handy
Wilen S1ma111h0 co11ec1a
IOrUNICEF
(!) ADAM·12
Officer Reed comes up
with a unique plan for hall·
~ daytime burglaries
W MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
CJ) lO TElL THE TRUTH
fl!) OVER EASY
Gunl: orgJn1~1 Aob+frl
Vaughn .
()) UNTAMED WORLD
@) MERV GRIFFIN
G~ls: Jacll Webb. Clori•
Leachman
7:30 0 . C~NOtD CAMERA 0 NEWl YWEO GAME u (!§) HOU. YWOOD
SQUARES
7:00 D NBC NEWS
D ltARSCLUB U ABCNEWS
CD I LOVE lUCY
Lucy 1ues to convince
A.cky lhJI they need a
1a1oer ai.3r1ment.
0) TH! BRADY BUNCH
Marda ls dumped by the
campu1 tleto
(!) ADAM-12
Two kllletw capture Reeo
w1111a he and MaHoy ara
tr&nlpoftlng a prisoner
through Mall bu Csnyon. al LA. INTERCHANGE
• Inside Strelgnt •
Channel L i6t Ing•
tJ KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles u KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles O KlLA (Ind) Los Angeles IJ KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angele~
(I) KFMB (CBS) San Diego 0 KHJ·TV (Ind.) Los Angele~
@) KCST (ABC) San D1eg1:>
G) KTIV (Ind) Los Angeles
Q) KCOP·TV (Ind) Los Angeles ED KCET·TV (PBS) Los Angeles m KOCE·TV(PBS) Huntington Beach
m NEWaa.ECI<
An lnlotmaUve COllecllon
ol Orange Counly newt.
government and con1urner
a1111r1. peopla and apor11.
Cl) THE GONG SHOW
1:00 1J (I) cs..iBMY
CHAu.a.GI OF THE
8fXU
Oon Adame vs Karan
Blade, p1ng-pono. Rot>ett
Guillaume . va. Lynnla
Gr-. traclc and lleld D JUST FOR l.AUGH8
(Premiere) "Whet do you
do JUSI lor llugNI?" wlJI be
.&ns_.ad ~ Martha Ra)l9,
M iiion Sari•. Connie
Stavan1. Tom o,.._,,
Wtll o-. Ro6e Marla. Rad
8u1ton1, LIOyd Nolan, M&r·
eta Wallace. Alison
Arngr1rn and Jackla
Maaon 0 MOVIE
• • "Piranha. Pir.nh1"
( 1972) Peler Brown. W•I·
liam Smllh. A ru1hla11
nunlar schemes to hunt
down • trio of Jungle wild·
Illa pholographera (2 hr1 I
U ®) HAPPY DAYS
"Spunkl111 Spunky"
Fonzie's dog gers tl'la
blahs and ends up on Or
Joyce Brolhors · couch lor
p1ycho1og1ca11herapy
«D CAAO\. IUANETT ~F1UEH06
G-t: Ja KluglMI\.
ti) MOVIE * * * "0.M Brigette"
{ 1965) J-St-1, Billy
MIU'flY. An 91oht~-old
INll\etNlieal genlU9 with a
talent lot plcklllg 1"41 hott-
.. beeoni.t lltlatulled
with a tamoua Fr4111Ch
actr-.(21\ts.)
ti:) HOlLYWOOO
TELE\11$10N THEA TEA
"And The Soul Shall
Dance" Two Japanaae
lamtllea In California'•
Imperial Valley react dllfer·
11nlly to the hwdllhlpa ol
the Oepf-Jon. m TURNABOUT
· Unfit Arnaricll'' Guett•·
tennis auperetar e1111a Jean
King and Or. Joan Ullyot.
author of "Woman's
Running."
1:30 9 (I) IHMW>S AHO
y~
Robwt Shlt6ds. .. 11\a
Cllnlco Kid, ,.._ on a hot·
tampered ~ r.rc.
111e 11ze; lortne v amen
--• tribute to ~ ~ Md ~ Into
tile world u a "beby on
the 1ooaa.··
IJ[t LAVEAHf&
8HIAL.EY
"The Oa11t11t'' LaV«ne
chips 1>41' tooth and c:an 't
aff0td to go to the denllet
IO aha OOH 10 Shlrlay'e
cousin who 11 taklng hie
"nel e.1tam1 at dental
achOOI.
I CONCENTRATION
CRQSS-WITS OV~EASY
Guest: organlet Robert
V~n.
9:00 I) (I) C8S-MOVIE • • * "Hustle" ( t975) Burt
Raynolds. Cetherlne
Oeneuve. A toogn 00p fella
lot a jel•Mt eall girt d<Hing
rhe cnveatlgallon of a
bizarre murder. 0 DEAH MAATIH
CEl.E8Rl'TV AOM1'
Franlc Sinatra le routed by
Miiion 8arte, Ernest Botg·
n1na. a-ga eu,.,., 0om
Oalulte. Redd FolQ, a-
Kelly, Ronald Reagan.
Ja"* Stawa11, Jona!Nn
Wfnlef'I and Othera.
U (!ln.AU'S
COMPANY
"Jacll'a Nall)' Pll" When
Jacf(, Chrissy and Janei
Mt out • gourmet dlnl*'
fOf the Aope<e designed to
stave off an axpec:led rent
h1t<e, the meanest aailot
• from J1tek's navy days
arrrves end .wrec.ka the
evening. 0 IRONSIDE
The death ol a beautiful
TUBE TOPPERS .
:'\BC e 8:00 -Just for L:mghs. A c ome<J~ .. ,·ariely i.perial with ~1ilton
Berle. Connie Stev<'ns. Will Geer. Red
Buttons. :\lartha Raye and Rose Marie.
KOCE l® 9:00 -:\lastcrpiece Theater.
"Anna Karenina .. debuts in the first of a
10-part !>eries.
KCET l~ 9:30 -"Fat Tuesday and All
fhat J azz.·· ~ew Or:lcans and the :\-Jardi
•Grus are celebrated by the Ol~·mpia
Brai.s Band und the At'lhur Hall Afro.
.\mcricrn\ Dance Ensemble.
tollcllngar la thOug/lt to be
murder not the apparent
IUlcid4J «D MERV GRlfflN
Gu.ta: Jade Webb, Ctor11
L.Alachman, Martin Mu.II ~ MMTEAPIECE THEATRE
"Anna l<aranlne" Anna
encotlfltera I.ha Coun1asa
VrO!lslcy white trll\l'Mlng to
Moecow to comtott her
brother Stepan, wllosa
marriage has lailad. {Part 1
ol 101 9:301J Q) SOAP
(EpllOda Nlnetaant Jaalca
T11a'1 lawyer 1n1*"'1awt
rnambete ot the Tata a!ld
Campbell famlllel aeal!lng
Cll&ract~ wflneaM for
Jaaslca'1 ul)COll'\lng mur-
der trial.
&:) IN PERFORMANCE
A f WOU' TAAP
"Fat TUUd1y And All Thal
Jazz!" The Otymp4a 8raaa
Band and the ArthYr Mall
Afro·Amerfcian Danca
EnHmble cialebrate ·tn
muslc and danCle the IPlrll
of N-Orlean1 and lhe
pageantry OI Mardi Gr••.
10:00 D 0 NEWS IJQJ) FAM~Y
"Baby Mikes ThrM" Nan-
cy and Jeff r-.ema their
ralatlonllllp end QOl\tld«
rarTlatrylng but when Nan--
Cy ""°' .,_ Is or-gnant
aha ~ whhdrewn,
ratvtlng to 1all .i.tt ll>Oul
har~illon. a> HONEYMOOHERS
R&IC!fl gives ad...ic. 10 a
l)fospeetlva bridegroom
and atmoet break• up a
honeymoon. ~ IN PERFORMANCE
ATWOLFTAAP
"Fal Tuesday And AH That
Jani" The Olympia B<UI
Band and the "'""" Hall Alro·Amertcan Danca
Ensemble celebrate In
music and done. lhe 1p1rit
01 Nyw Orlenna a11d the
pageantry ol Mardi Gr11.
t0'.30 GJ. NEW$
11:00 0 G Q) NEWS 8 LOVI, AMERICAN
8lYlE
"lo¥9 And The Duel" A
Of'CISS ""'11 le challenged
to • duel. "love And The
Note" Jade brags to Hanry
about hit Ch8trto With
women. 0 MOVIE • * "Chato'a land"'
(19721 Charles Broneon.
Jade Palanc;a. A half.bfead
Apactie manages to •lay
one llap ati.MI ot a
blOOdlhlraty poua. (2 hra.)
G) THE 000 COUPLE ,_Ile.:• new rorna11tlc lnter-
•t le not the tlbrarla.n he
1hlntca, bvt ac1ulily an oft.
Broadway actreaa appear.
i nude In. pjay.
LET'8 MAKE A OEAL
DICK CAVETT
Guest: Art Garfunkel.
11:20 II Cl) NEWS
ll:IO 0 TONIGHT
Hott: Johnny Carson.
Guests: Gartot1 Kanln, Mel
Tllll1, Ed llab«tl\IJ, Aana1
WOii. D LOVE, AMERICAN 8lYl£
"lo-.. And lh41 Sig leap"
Ralph and 8etty are about ·
to be married. "low And
TM ~" Jarry confelMs
to his brida-1!).be that he i.
bald.
IJ 9 ABC t.IOVIE * • "D••th Among Frllnde''-(1975) Kate Reid,
Maron 8alsarn. A car..,.
polioewo01ian inveallgltfl
the bizarre rnurder of an
tntarnatlon•I financier,
aMmingly strangled by
mvislble handa {R) m NEWs , a> OETSMAAT
Smart a.ta out to 111gp
KAOS agent1 from ptacJng
axplOdlng oft palntlnga ln
foreign c011sul11es.
tt) CAPTIONEO ABC NEWS
19 MAa..I'-I LBN1'
""'°"' 11:40 8 Cl) CM LATaMC>Vtf * • * "'ranc11 Gary P~: TM True Story Of
The W Spy lnc:'dant"
(1979) LM Mafc>fa. ~
1111 Penolf. The ~
lmpfltonment, 1rlll apd
a&il)MqUlnt conviction of
ll'le American ~
MN» pilot 11\ot dOWfl °"*"
S~ territory In M*1 ot
t960.(RI
MORNING
12:00 8 TWIUONT ZON~
Old Ban hu the 1trange
poww to ~ hlmaelf
Into enythlrog, or ~
hawanle.
• MOVIE • * * "John"y Coma
Latlly" {ti~) Jamee eag,..y, MarjofMI M81n..
TWo vet4iran ~
publ.._. joltl toroas In a
llghl llQllinlt • local town
boat. ( 1 ht .. 30 min.)
• MOVI£
._. .... "Manhunt In The
Jungle" (19511 Robin
Hugt1M. .,_ Whon. A
aecond expedition ln10 the
lntarlor Of &tail! ~
for an .. S*totlon loolclng
for • Iott d!y. ( 1 hf., 30
min.)
12:80 D MOVIE * •~ "Oealre tn lha
Oull" ( 1960) Joan
Beonett, R.ymond Butt. A
young aharacroppar
retutna-flofM etter hevltlg
~ time for • ctlrnt he
did not commit to find
tiling• 1111ve Changed quite
a bll. ( 1 hr., 55 min.)
1:00 D TOMOA1'0W
~ QOOMy rnak•
• return appe11tenca. 8 ISPY
"No Exe~ On Dam.
~MarcNndiM''
1:06 U NEWS
1:30 . MOVIE **'A ''Chl"a VentUf•"
(1955) Edmond O'Brian,
8aryY Suaivao. A J.,._.
edmlral .. Qlplutad by •
small forea of Mattn. and
b«>ught bad! to U.S. for questioning. (2 bra.) a> MOW: • * "The loot.,." (1955)
Rory Calhoun, Julie
Adame. Five oaso.tate
rnan and a gin -trapped
on a~ mountain
with • torwna In calh.. (1
hr.,30mln)
1:501) NEWS
2:00Q NEWS G MOVIE * * * "C1pl1ln 8oycott"
{1947) Stewart Granger,
~thleen Ryan. A wealthy
lrllh lllld aoen• quarrel•
1t'n11nda11'•
Dautl•e 1110.,ln
AFTERNOON
1t:00 D • * * "The Balle°' New Yorttft (1952) f'fed
A•alre. Vara Ellell. A rtch
playboy tells In ~ wltl'I •
young linger In ....
sldewalk m11a1on. ( 1 hr .. ao
mln,) •• ·~"Tom. Dklk And
Harry,. (1941) 8W9819
Metwllttl, 04nOW ~
A lowly ycuig _.,. ..
~too-~
""-boylrtll• '2 ..... 20"*1.)
:S.-00 9 * * "'11'1 A Bikini !
wortd" (tM7) Dab¥1tt
Walley, TOfMtY Klric. A
c:onciellod --.......
• double ... .. .. ""
brother to find out why a
MW Qltl diltlcee him. (1 Jw',.
30mln.) 3:80. *·~"Whan The~
Meet The Olrtaft ( f9CS)
Connie Francis, H-
Pre111alf. To '9iM mono,, a
rlnc:h la tr-'ormed lit'!•
mulical dude ranQh. ( 1 ~·· 30mln.)
. "'
John-boy 'Passing . Through' Carol·Qu~
Show A/tel: .. I By BOB T llOM \S
HOLLYWOOD <AP > --'It's
nice to be back, and yet il ·s nice
not to be back." said Richard
Thomas of his r<.'lurn to ''The
Waltons." "Do you lo.no w what I
mean?"
Not exactly So he t•xplamcd:
"It's great to be back among my
old friends, ~o are almost literally part o(my family. But r
· also enJOY knowing that I won't
have to stay."
During this sixth season of the
• popular Lorimar·CBS series,
• Thomas has returned for one
. two-hour s how and another hour
:• show. Throughout the season,
the family has explained that
John-boy has been off in New
· York City working (or the As·
~oeiated Press. Now he returns.
• "THE TJ!UE JS 1939·1940, and
• most of the country is emerging
• from the Depression," the actor
·explained. "An exception, or
• course. is Appalachia, and the
.AP sends me back to m y old
• country to find out why.
"l discover that prosperity 1s
obviously not around the comer.
and I try to help the people find
work by reopening a mine in a
neighboring town. It had been
s hut down years before because
of lack of funds. The men go to
work without adequate safety
· precautions. and there is an ac-
. ddent.
"'Now the men are trapped in·
side the mine, and the women ~ are on the outside. I am caught
in the middle. because iL was my'
:}dea." .
• THE snow BEI NG .. The
· Wallons," you can bet that it
will all tum out well Jn the end.
The other Thomas se1ment con·
' -!'\tl~'i '.
·~·....; ~. ~:. . .. :
. ..~ . ....,.....
RICHARD THOMAS GREETS WILL GEER ON 'WALTONS'
'John·boY' Back, Bu1 Only for a Short Visit
cerns John-boy's bringing home
. a fiancee from New York -
"and thatshould be run.''
Richard Thomas was filming
his return to the series in the
daytime while appearing nightly in something tar different -the
play "Streamers'' at the
Westwood Playhouse.
"lt's a strong play,'' said the
26-year-old actor. "We've had
the paramedics at the theater
three limes to take care of peo-
ple who have collapsed. One
night I broke my toe onslage and
after the performance 1 went
across the street lo the UCLA
Medical Center. A man who had
a seizure in the theater was also
being treated the re\ H e
apologized for disturbing the
performance and wanted to
know what happened in the rest
of the play."
''STREAMERS" AND another
local play last spring, "Merton
of the Movies,'' have been the
only professional work f.or
Thomas since departing from
the series. He and his wife and r
year-old son, Richard Thomas
V. i.p1mt the sumnwr 1n :'\e\\
York with his par<.'nt~. Thomas
also complNed his second l)ook
of poems
Some actor~ might fret about
l>Uch inactivity J'ot Thomas
"If you know what you can do
as an actor. then )OU have no
worries." he remarked "Some
·actors don't know what they can
do. and when they leave a
!-.cries. they panic
·Tm a great believer In let-
ting time do its thing. If pro-
ducers see me only in terms of
one role, then J can wait. T)lere
are many things I can do. Do
you realize that I'm coming up
to my 20th year as an actor this
summer? J started in summer
stock when I was six, at seven r
was on Broadway in 'Sunrise at
Campobello'."
DOES HE lL\VE any regrets
about leaving "The Waltons?"
"None whatsoever. Five years
'is a long Ume to spena nine
months or the year in one
character. How lone can you
stay fresh in that character?
Besides, all the other characters
in the show were maturing but
John-boy wasn't. He was at the
age when he should have gone
out into the world. But he was
still up in his room, writing."
TJlomas is also waiting for
Universal to issue his starrini?
film. "September 30, 1955." It
was first released as "9·30·55" to
disappointing results, now is gel-
ling a new campaign.
"Universal doesn't know what
to do with It'' said the actor.
"It's a different kind of story -
how the death oC a media hero
(James Dean) affects a small
town. I think It will find an au-
dience. I hope so. It's an impor-
tant film for me.''
. Al'W,,_....a
CALLING IT QUITS
Carol Burnett
'Advocates'
Returning
ToKOCE-TV
''The Advocates," the award·
winning public affairs debate
program. has returned to KOCE·
TV for a new season.
"The Advocates," presenting
pros and cons of contemporary
issues. will be broadcast every
other Friday at 10 p.m. on Chan-
nel 50. The series began Jan. 27
and will alternate each week
with "World," a new intema·
tional documentary series.
The program's format is a
mock-trial debate, using the
skills of a pair of advocates
us ually representing con·
servative and liberal points of
view. Cases are presented
through the testimony of "wit-
nesses" who support one ad·
vocate•s position and are subject
to cross-examination by the op-
posing advocate.
11 Seaso11$·
~LOS ANGELES (AP
Comedienne Carol Bumeti is
giving up her weekly televljion
show at the end of this seaoo.
Joe Hamilton. her husband ,ind
·producer. has announced. •
''The Carol Burnett Sho•'l is
now in its 11th season on c~
and is the longest·running cur-
rent prime-time show.
Five more Burnett shows re •
main to be taped for the season
and the final show will air
March26.
THE CO MEDY·VARlrtY
show. which has been slippifte in
the ratings. moved from its "g.
ular Saturday night berth to Sbn·
day nightlnJanuary.
Harvey Korman, who ~d
been with the show from ~he
beginning, left the show at' he
end of last season to star in is
own ABC situation comedy
series. Dick Van Dyke Joined.lhe
Burnett show last September'ut
left after about 10 shows.
Miss Burnett said in a state·
ment. "1 am certainly not r~fr
ing Crom television. It's just ~at
after 11 years and 286 shows.in-
cluding those that remain to be
done this season, I want to be
free for awhile from the d e·
mands of a w.eekly show.
''I WILL DEFINITELY oOn·
tinue my aissociatton with CIJS
by doing a number ot speciala
over a period of years.•• 1
Both Miss Bu r n ett a.11d
Hamilton aaid t here was 110
other r eason for en dine .tJie
s how. adding, that CBS ~d
asked them to continue.
.. .. .
G::fNTERTAINMENT /THEATER Tllleday, Pebtuary 7. 111e DAILY PILOT
-'Hatful' Gripping Drama
I ::.Oae and O..ly?
The specter of druc addlcUon which pervades
Michael V. Gazzo'• starkly realistic drama "A
Halful or Raln" remains u ~ttlinc today as
when U\e pl"Y firat appeared more thu 20 years
ago.
Tbis arlm and 1rlppin1 atory or a war hero
turned into a junkle by the medicaUon he received
In the holpltal la given a splendid interpretation by
the South Coaat Acwrs Co-op of Newport Beach_ in
a benefit production for the St. Jude Children's
Research Hospital at the Forum Theater on the
Laguna Beach Festival of Arts JroUOds.
DIBECl'()R GREGORY BACH zeros in on
both the yourig man 's personal hell and the sim-
.... 0'""'""''''" • mering tension spawned by total lack of com-
munlcaUon between hlm al\d his pregnant wife,
and also between bis brother and their hard-
... .. ,..~ TM a C.UT Jol'lil"Y ...,_ ..•••..••••.••••••••. , ......... •• ·•••.,. • .. •·. Clw't. ,re«hlMle Pola l'ell9 ................................................. !N9CM,,,...• Gall•'°* .................................................... J81Mt 0m1o
Jefll\ ~ .. ~ •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••• ............................. Ml. 1 .
• Henry Winkle r kisses has leading lady, Kim #ell'oer • • • • • • ................................... • • • ·" .... ~ ,_,.. 5::::::::::::::·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.~~
Intermission
Tom Titus
He is ably supported by Ralph French and Jim .
Thoms~ u hia enforcint crew, while Debbie Rio!r
makes a brief appearanc. ln a a\lPOf(luoua role as l \\\l,\\\\lM\\\.\l.W"-"
a ban1er-on.
TERRY DUDDY'STECHNJCALertecta are well
fashloned. and the tableau ftn~e ii calculated to
stamp the production indelibly in )'Our mlnd ·for
the trip home. Bach'a curtaln call ia another line
plece of craf\amanshlp as tl\e acton freezt, then
break and embrace on• another 11 they leave the
stage.
F our more perform11nces or "A Hatful of
Rain" wtll be presented ln the Forum, Thursday
throu1b Sunday evenings, with all proceeds going
to St. Jude Hospital. It la a worthwbUe evening for
an equally worthwhile cause.
• CAUBOARD -The Lido lale Pla)'en will
edwards HUNTINGTON
llACM AT If.US. H.1.
148-0318 ., l Darby, ·at a party in 1\lanhattan. T he actor,
more famous as TV 's "Fon,de." s tars w ith
1\Iiss Darby in t ht· movie "The One and
Onlv."
headed father. Charllcterlzation, for the moat part.
is skUlluUy.accompllshed.
Outstanding in the role of Johnn~ Pope, \he ad-
d ict at the end of his rope, ls Chris Fracch1olla,
who delivers a aut·wrenchlnC portrayal brimming
with intensity. He is very nearly matched by Enzo
Chimera, playing the brother, Polo, who warma to
his emotional pitch after an almost comatose first
act. Chimera's flareup wlth hi• father in the final
bold auditions Wedne•da9 and Thursday evenings
;it '1 : 30 for the comedy "All Because of
Agatha" ... director Bill Fuclk will be looklna'ror ~=~~=:;=::==~~~======-(our men and 1ix women for the show. which will:'.:
LRyan Quits Role
• t. LOS ANGELES CAP) role of "The Champ,"
-Ryan O'Neal has which goes into produc·
' withdrawn from the Lille t ion t hi s month.
t
.-i ,
lt~ILMNlll AM ....
"SEM1 TOUGH .. 1a1
DAILY ~ 6!00-1:00.1~ •• ~,~--1.-.,.
SO. COAST PLAZA
O'Neal's de parture
was caused by creative
and arl1stlc differences.
!.aid l\JGM Senior Vice.
P r esident R ic h a rd
Shepherd.
SKIFILM
'"tbe ~lllh coat et•
~, ••. ..
Dl<'K
BA8'RYMOU
~l,'f\t .. ~ ....... '1,f'°':&..o " II'! --,.. ,..,.~ . THURS. FEB. 9 • 7:15 Ml.
/t.\llUl.t.11.\• K C'Ol.U:l•r. nu:.\n:11 Jo, t"'ht'""'•l6Qtl (;~,.. llJ 1166
AMERICAN BAUEf
THFAlRE
8 PERFORMANCES
NOW THAU FEB. 11
TONIGHT 1:301 SWln Lau,
Act 11-EYd~lrnava. Nae;~ \lolunlarles-van ~l Tippel
Menemrt Pas d1 01u1·Mtnhlll.
lite RIYlf' • P1oe10/
Y ,,..,,., "°" H7"C!I Corter
Feb e 2 30 Swan Laa. Act tit Concerto1Gradu11ton Ball
Feb (830 Sw1n Lake, Act II/PH
de Dtu1tJ1rdin aux Lilas/
Omtulllon Bill
Fell. 9. 8.30 ConontPas de
DIUl/The I.laws AR fa4lngt Fancy frtt
~~ ~~ M~~::r:,•JSehiw
Feb. 11,,. 2.30 Les SVlphldea/fancy
free/\lraduaUon llall
scene is a dynamic piece of acUnc.
THE LONE DISAPPOINTMENT of the show
open late in March ... tryouts are at Ute Lido Isle
Clubhouse, 701 Via Lido Soud, Newport Beach •••
Also auditioning tqnight and Wednesday at 7
p.m. is the Golden West Colleae comedy "The
Mind Wlth the Dirty Man" ••. director Robin
Huber ls seeking a cast of lhree men and four
women for the sex farce, which opens March 31 in
the main GWC theater in Huntlngton Beach •••
is J anet GigUo's lifeless lnterpretaUon of the wife, ------------.,.-------Celia. In an atmosphere charged with anxiety, she
appears bla nd, almost tranquilized. Howard
Miller, however, is ,s uperb as the father, a young
actor succeeding m ar velously In his stretch for the
proper age level and gritty interpretation. MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY Director Bach usurps the juicy supporting role
of '"Mother," the ateely-eyed dope puabef, and ~----------------..-. tums it intD a muterpieee of understated menace. ~OSE ENCOUNTERS
OF THE THIRD KIND" (PG}
-n...~r===:Q'.004.iitDfoo.1 OtOtl WI-II · NSf l'IC'IUll
.. ~ ·-UN<aon • lMll U f MACl.llNI
.
131~31,t»G THI TUINING POfNr 1'°1
l1IO·l i I S·S1»710 · IO.OO
Ofoe<ll IUINS e J()ttN DtNYll
OM GOOtfl'OI ~ua
IUNIHINt IOYS <'°I
CMAtu• II°"'°" TILIFON 1~1 MOM.olll. ,, .. ' .. 00
"'· & WM. 11acl • •:ts e .. u e t.eo & IOiOO
f etf4.I ACTION NIU
1, DIATH MACHINH 111
2, ttUITUI SQUAD 111
i. ICU....,U MAMA 111
• C*t • •ONtOH
HLllON1,,.1 . ~Hilt
INICO HOO~j
"WORLD'S _GREATEST LOVER~ (PG}
"MONTY PYTHON"
"JUl.tA" (PG)
"OPENING NIGHT"
"LOOKING FOR MR. GOODBAR"
"HUSTLE" (R)
"SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER:' CR)
--
STRDIUm 5 scR1:en
63Y ·7860 DAIVE·ln
Wl'l.f OISNt."<.
"PETE'S DRAGONS" CG)
"GNOMEMOBILE"
'WHICH WAY IS UP?" (R)
MNORMAN. IS THAT YOU?"
"OH GOO" (PG)
.. GUM BALL RALLY"
"ONE AND ONLY" (PG)
"WN & THE DIXIE DANCE KINGS"
"THE.GAUNTLET" (R)
"FREEBEE & T,HE BEAN''
ALI. OIUVC·IN5 O"CN '1JOP.M ..... tfTlY
Child Uftd•r 1 I "'" U11IHI .. Klddle l'tanrou"d
..
C~IS
KAHN LEACHMAN KORMAN
.... DICK YAN Pl11U • llON rJR£Y · •lao MORRIS
A IL ems FU ·Prr8ad aodlUted bJ ll BfmS
b by IE. Him· IOI f1ARK • IUJY ldA
INllY l£VllS(l • llsi w nl flR
c. llfF· ••a PIOlia
"Beyond and
Back" (G)
wt\"'-'-.,.....,.... .,,.,., "'_,
Henry Winkler In
''TH! ON!
AND
ONLY"
(PG) .
DAILY Pll.OT
\
...
.. DAIL V PILOT Tuesday. February 7, 19)..
-.. .. f ·. 'AT YOUR SERVICE /NATIONAL
"' t-THEFAMILYCIRClS. By Bil Keane
"Here's another good one, Grandma. Betcha
can't answer this one: 'What has four
wheels and fli~s?' "
"Got.a problem? Then wnte to Pat Dunn. Pot will '
cut red tape, getting the answers and OCll<m you nud
to aolve mequ1t1es m government and buslnes.'I. Mail
11our que.'ltwm lo Pot Dunn. Al Your Service, Orange
Coast Doily Prlot. P 0 . Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA
92626. As many letters as possible will be an3Wered.
but phoned mqwnes or letters not mcludnlg the
reader's full name. oddreu and busines$ hours' phone
number cannot be consulered This column appearsdai·
ly except Saturdays "
1..aw Bursts BaUoott r.W-ntt
DEAR PAT· Al what point does a loan's
lar~cr la~t payment become a "balloon pay-
ment? .. I h:ne a loan with a hefty amount due on
the final paymt•nt. but the lender claims this iS not
a balloon payment. Can 1 insist on refinancing
"lw n the large final payment co mes due, or must
the full amount be paid?
P E .. Huntington Beach
,\ny payment In a contract which ls more than
twict' that or the regular Installment payment ls a
"balloon payment.'' U, ror example, you were to
pay 23 Installments or $50 monthly and a final pay·
mcnl or $200, that last payment ls a balloon pay-
ment. U the buyer docs not want to make the $200
payment, the slate attorney general's omc:e says,
he or she has an absolute right to obtain a new
schedule 9r payments in which no ins tallment can
be substantially greater than $50.
'Tteo-•tep Music A 1'aHable>
DEAR PAT: Can you find out where I can
rchase an "old-time" music book -mainly
altzes and two-step tunes like those Lawrence
elk features on hts TV s how? I haven't had any
uck finding one, and I've been looking for two
~·l'a rs! R W • Niland, Calif.
Coast Music Service (1839 Newport Blvd.,
Costa Mesa, Calif. 92627) has two new Lawrence
Welk song books in stock, plus a selection of other
old·Ume waltzes and two-step music In lts'"oldle
but goodJe" sheet music: section. Drop a note to the
store, desc:riblng the Welk books and the other
type or music: books you want. You can buy by
mail. ·
t:
lner Loaded With Bldld11p
' 1 DEAR PAT: I fill my Thermos each day with
()t waler so l can have instant tea with my lunch.
l\'fy problem is the hard water buildup on the glass
liner of the Thermos. How can 1 get rid of this?
Regular washing doesn't do a thing to help.
G.E., Laguna Beach
Switching to demlneratlzed water for your
Thermos would be the easiest solution. Otherwise,
try soaking the Thermos ltner with a balf:and·half
mixture or amonla and water. Soak for several
days for best results. Scrub the Uner wllb a baby
bettle brush after aoaklng to remove all reslaH. If
this doesn't work, half flll the Thermos with de·
netured alcohol or water, and add a cup or clean,
while sand from an aquarium supply shop. Shake
\•(gorously untU mineral deposits dissolve. A quick
treatment ls to swab the Thermos liner wltb
mineral oil and wipe with cotton before washing.
Your Home Could look Great In 781
LEE MINK'S SCHOOL
OF
INTERIOR DESIGN
con ttach you
the PfOf••ltonal approach
Come to ............ Cott..
l.Mrw .... ....
11utclay -ftb. 9th
DAILY PllOf
Children's Books .Turn· to oReality •
CHICAGO (AP> -Children's books are turn·
ing from happily-ever·af(er endings to d,eath,
divorce and the strife of everyday relationships,
supPosedly mirroring the reality o! a child's
world.
"People have tended to feel that children exist
in a piny world," said Diane Farrell, chairman of
the 1977 Newberry-Caldecott Comml~tee or the
American Library Association.
B\IT ADULTS INCREASINGLY "HAVE come
to the realization that children need to be dealt
with honestly, that their intelligence needs to be
respected."
Ms. Farrell. children's services librarian for
the Eastern Massachusetts Regional Library
System. headed a 23 -member committee that
sc reened 2,000 children's books published ln the
United States In 1977 and presented the coveted
:'llewberry and Caldecott Medals at an American
Library Association convenlioo in January.
de n th,' not as something unpleasllnt but as .a
natural phenomenon, she said.
Ms. Farrell clted the Newber~ Medal winner,
Katherine Paterson 's "Bridge to Terabitl\la," as
an example. The book is the story of a boy defeat·
ed in a root race by a new girl in his school. He
s ubsequently forms a fast friend.ship with the girl,
then. must come to grlps with her death after she
opens to him a new world of Imagination.
I
AN l~USTRATION OF THE realism of the
new books and their insight into children is found
In one of two books receiving r;ewberry honor
awards. Be\'erly Cleary's "Remona end. lier
Father," Ms. Farrell s aid. , ...
In that book. the heroine, 7-year-old Jlawnoaa.
wonders, Why do grownups think that cblldren are
only concerned with aames? Don't 1rownup1 J'Oo
alize that children worry about adults!
Also receiving a Newberry honor award was
"An pao: An American Indian Odyssey." by
J amake Highwat~r. an ~ample of a new. em·
phasis on ethnic heritage(Ms. Farrell said.
Also awarded was the 1978 Calclecott Meda'l for
the most distinctive picture book !or children.
Peter Spier won the award for hia "Noah's Ark.'•
Ads Equ.al Warranty
HIBBING, Minn. CAP) -A
MODERN CHILDREN'S BOOKS portray their television commercial showing
young characters relating to real, fully developed pickup trucks dashing over
adults in realisti~ay-to·day situlitlons inatead of . rough terrain and salting
frolicking in an unleal world from which adults throu&h the air is as much a
~is appear alter chapter one, Ms. Farrell said. warranty as the paper an owner
Authors of fiction and nonfiction children's gets when he puts down his
books are looking realistically at death. child money, says a district court jury
abuse, broken homes, single parenthood, divorce, here.
lawyer in Dearborn, Mich ..
argued that the only warranty
·on vehicles is the ''express war-
ranty" given in writing to
buyers at the time of purchase.
He said Ford was ··extremely
disappointed" with the jury's
verdict and is considering an ap-
peal.
Las tovitc:h conte nded the
truck's suspension was .. almost
like a rubber band" and that the
box of the truck slammeCI into
the rear or the cab, dentine it.
alcoholism and irresponsibility among adults, s he Steve Lastovltch, 24, sued
said. · Ford Motor Co. after his four-
' 'Th al correlates with the dreadful wheel-drive truck was dented
statistics., .. Fiction mirrors what is happening in during a rough trip through mud
::.ociety," Ms . Farrell said. and sand. He contended that
Ford should be required to pay
"THE BOOKS THAT ARE successful are ~$500 in repairs.
honest and depict their characters and thelr sltua· lion"5~~nestly ," s he s aid. "People think of
children,'.s books as having happy endings, but
many have honest and open endings. Often it
wouldn't be u fitting conclusion to have the book
end ·happily ever after.'"
Among 80 finalists for the coveted 19F
Newberry Medal we re eight books that dealt with
THE J URY'S RULING in
Las lovitch's favor said that
com meroials showing vehicles
withstanding rough trips are, in
effect, part of the vehicle's war·
ranty.
William Thee, a Ford staff
Thee said Ford has no plans to
chan ge Its television com-
mercials.
LASTOVICH, WHO bought the
tru ck for hunting trips in
northern Minnesota, said. his
driving was mild compared to
the workouts he had seen ~
television.
"ln no way did 1 ever jump it
through the air or race it over
s and or across rocky terrain like
they do in those television ads,"
s aid Lastovitch.
MAN VICTIM
'OF SHAY/NG
BAKERSFIELD (AP) ~ A
Salem, Ore. man was electrocut·
ed while shavihg with an electric
razor on the wet floor of a service
s tation restroom, authorities
said.
J ohn Charles Parrent, 32, was
found slumped on the floor of the
restroom al Holden Truck Center
h e re Monday niaht. city
firefighters said. He was deadoo
arrival ala local hospital.
ucan
17
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UMG.NIC.
..
INSIDE-: •Ann Landers •Horoscope E'eftturing_·._._._·_·· ........ a :-Erma Bombeck •Classified
The
Motors
'You talk to the motors and
they think they're the elite,,
laughs one CHP. 'The car
cops call the motors
''prima donnas ,, and the
motors call the car cops
"kids.,, ,
By DENNIS McLELLAN
-Of IM Dally l"lleC lUtf
California Highway Patrol motorcycle of-
ficer Harry GilJespie was pursuing a speeding
car southbound on the San Diego Freeway last
May when another car pulled into his lane.
Gillespie was gving 105 •• 1iles per hour to
catch up to the speeder who was doing 85-90
mph. The officer, traveling about 150 feet a
second, was barely able to uvoid hitting the car
200 feet away. Ile swerved.
· That sent his Suzuki 750 into a high-
.. speed wobble. The out-<>f·control mach~ne tipped,
strik ang the.pavement. A second later 1t ~unced
back up and, justasqu1ckly, went down again.
Bike and rider then skidded 420 feet through
five lanes of traffic. Gillespie bounced over the
roadside berm that ended the skid. The machine
landed on his leg.
TllE LEG WAS broken in five places: his
leather boot was gound to a pulp; the skin on his.
back, arms and buttocks was torn off; and his.
arm was literally smoking from the friction.
' A man on a motorcycle was the first to slop
and approach the injured officer. As often is the
case at such times, there is little to say but the
obvious: ,,-
•'Are you hurt?" the m an asked.
Despite his s moking arm, despite his
broken leg, and des pite barely being crushed by
oncoming traffic. Gillespie still had his wits-\
and h is wit-about ham .
"No,'' said Gillespie, "we just do this for
, drill." .
After 800,000 miles and 14 years with the
CllP. this was officer Gillespie's first accident.
The 42-year-old patrolman. who r adioed for
his own ambulance, spent three days in the
, hospital, four months in a cast and nearly fi ve
months on light des k duty.
But for Gillespie and most of the other
motorcycle officers who survive such accidents.
~ ther e was no question that he'd be back on the road.
t .. It's part ot the hazards ot the job," says
Gillespie, who plans to be riding bis reoaired
Suzuki this month. "We have to sort of Jive witt.
'the reality that it could happen any tim_e.
•·u·s like a pilot who crashes his airplane:
be has to get back in the air."
Allhou'1t he's nearly mended. Gillespie and
By MARCIA FOJt.SBERG
Of tM Delly f'llCll Staff
A small child is. qule~Y. playing ilone ln hia
bedroom. Unexpectedly, the floor be.Jleath him
begins to tremble slightly, the windows rattle,
hls toddy bear topples off a shelf', the roekins
chair tilt.a.
It's an earthquake, one of those nat\lral dis·
asters that can have a profound effect on a
youn1 child Ir he ls not prepared. Il he doesn't
understand what's happening, he may feel con·
fused, anxious and frigbl.ened. .
Because parents and school teachers are 10
often concerned with physical safety of a child
durlrt& a quake, they frequently nes.lect the
younister'1 emotional reacUooa.
Many S~n Ftmando Va~y chUdre9 were ...
upset and disturbed after the early °'°'=
. earthquake that shook the around •d ca
freeways and bulldinga to collapae almost 1tven
yean -.o on Feb. •·
Tueeday, Februeiy 7, 1878 OAIL Y P1L01'
California. Highway Patrol Motorcycle Officer Jerry King on the 'Newport Freeway.
the other nine motor officers working out of the
Santa Ana CHP station are, admittedly, part of
a "vanishing breed."
When the patrol was formed in 1929. the ma-
jority of its officers rode motorcycles to enforce
the traffic laws on the state's sometimes crude
highway system.
In the ensuing 49 years patrol cars, which.
unlike motorcycles. can be used in all weather
conditions, replaced motorcycles. Today only
some 200 of the two-wheel vehicles are In opera-
tion in four areas: Los Angeles, San Francisco,
Sacramento and Orange County.
ONE OF THE major reasons they have
gradually diminished in number is because of
the expense involved when an officer has an ac-
cident. In addition to the $2.400 price of a motorcy-
cle-a new one is purchased every 40,000
miles-there are the costs of hospital and
medical bills, officer "down lime" and early re·
tirement.
Each year, nya Sgt. Ron Berey. [.ormer
supervisor of the Santa Ana &taW>O'a 'motor
squad," the motorcycles have to be jmtifled.
The justification comes. he says. from the
ability to greatly reduce response time lD highly
oongeated areas. The bumper-to-bumper traffic
jams that may slow down their four-wheel coun·
terparts virtually can be ignored by the
motorcyclea.
'"The motors can get through congested
traffic and get to accident scenes quicker than
cars," says Berry. "And it's easier to get on a
violator. They (motorcycles) have the ability-on
surface streets to make a quick U;turn."
IT IS 'JlWS mobility that explains why the
motor officers prefer using the machines -
des pile the obvious hazards. .. a ·s a risk you take," says Berry. who has
had six -minor accidents a11d no injuries In his
years with the CHP. "E verybody thinks they're
not going to get hurt.
"There's a saying that there are two kinds
of motorcycle officers: those who have been
down and those who are going to go down."
O(ficer Jerry King, who has been riding 18
years , hit a chuckhole in hi s first six months
a nd broke a collarbonl!. He since has hit
tra11smission fluid on the road and "gone down.
bat not.bins serious." He views the possiblllty or accidents this
•ay:
.. The longer I ride the more experienced I
become and the more careful I am rather than
from the standpoint that your number is up and
each day you come close to it".
He adds Uiat .. I just like the convenience ot
a motor and the way you can work traffic. It's •
the ultimate enforcement. tool. And I plain enjoy
being out in the open." '
The officers, who recieve $150 a month ex·
tra in "skill pay," usually say their reason
for volunteerin~ for the duty is becaus'e they
s imply prefer ridmg a motorcycle than driving
a car_ . ·
"I think primarily it's the ChrUI of riding a
motorcycle," says Berry. "That's what most o[
the guys 'ride for: to h'\ve fun."
NOTES TRAFFIC OFFICER Dick Van
COtt, who has been riding 13 years: "We enjoy
the out or doors and the physical aspects of what
we 're doing." •
Notes traffic officer Dick Van Cott. who bas
been ·riding 13 years: "We enjoy the out of doors
and the physical aspects of what we're doing.••
The motor officers w.ere iw>embled into a
team about four years ago. They work 11 a .m.
to 1 p.m~ the time. statiatica abow, wbeA mOGt trame accidents occur. ••working as a team," says Derr)', ~
not only increased their productivity as far as
traffic citations, but it contributed io Ulo esprit
· ake aIP, Pal(e CZ)
...... ~ .. CllHlnlla Hlll!Wllf
. "'
•I
·~ .·
I ,,
. . ,
When the patrol was fonnlJd in 1929, most of the officers rode motorcycles.
kids think they last that lone -some even think
they last two hours,.. said Thyden, who
estimates average earthquake Ume from five to
36 seconds. ,
. j
~ J i
I
-:
•a DAILY PILOT Tuadsy, Februery7, 1178 ERMA BOMBECK I ANN LANDERS
I ~·Earthqliake Kids Raised by Different MomS?
(l'mDhPCl)
der a deak or table, next to an interior wall that
divides two rooma or next to a heavy plece of
furniture-but not a piano, becauae moet are on
wheels. They roll, and lllUe klda can bo crushed
easily," Tbyden said. "Generally, closets are structurally safe,
but it's what we put in them that make them un-
safe." Again, the fallin& objects. If chUdren do
take cover in a closet, caution them to leave the
door open.
• •'KJDS BA VE A tend~cy to hide -in
closets, bathrooms, cablneta. TraJn them not to
bide, especially not under beds -metal frames
can sllde apart,'' he said ..
I ove'rhe·ard my wasted."
children arguing the The baby said, "They
other nl&ht ovel' -ol all were destitute. She told
things -my childhood. ' me they were so poor
The o 1 d eat s a l d , they had to buy parents
"Mama told me they -on time."
weren't rich, but they The ol~t child said,
always had a little food ·•All I know la abe bad to
on the table and a roof walk el1ht blocks to
over their h~ads." school every day, rain
•• The ,middle child said. or shlne."
Thal s f\lnny. She told The middle child said,
me they were dirt poor "It was three miles in a
and would have given winter with 't b ree
thelr eye teeth to have bliuards and a aprlna
half of the food I wltbtwofloods.'•
The baby said,
"Would you believe sbe
walked el&ht rnllea a
day • • . and came home
for lunch. ••. wtth loni
underwear tucked under
her feet for aocka?"
The firstborn said.
.. Once when she told a
lie abe told me Gr andma
took a branch off a tree
and awttcbed her leas
with it." The aecond·bom said, "I heard that story and
it wu.n't a. tr~ limb, 1t
" as a tree trunk." The baby said, "You
got It wrong. She was
tied to the tree trunk for three daya to bleach in
tbe sun."
The oldest said, "How
Iona wu she ln labor
wlth your She told me I
look 12 ho\ll'S to be born."
"She told me t hree
days,'• aalcl the middle
one.
ErMa
B..-beck
cycq, dark-haired girl
who used to read me
~tories. bake cookies.
paste my baby pictures in the album ana &iii.le
a lot?"
Tbe middle cblld sald.
"'The ~omber-looklng
blonde who used to put
me to bed at 6:30 and
bought me a dog to save
on napklns? ..
Tbyden stressed the Importance of teaching
young children "t.o know the safest place to go
where they play, live .. and 10 to school." One
good way is to walk through pre-planned earth·
quake drills, he saald. When havlng discussions
about quakes, frightening stories should not be
told.
What. I Didn't Do·
The baby sald, ''She
told me the other day
ahe atlll gets cramps
when she look.a In my
bedroom."
"AU J know,•• said the
oldest, "ls she wasn't al·
lowed to drive a car un-
tll abe was 21."
"She told me 24."
"You get a~l the
breaks. She wants me to
vulcanize my feet.•·
"This ls weird.'' said
the oldest child. "Arc we
talking about the same
Mom? The thin, bright·
. The baby said, "The
grayish lady who falls
asleep during the six·
o'clock news and is go-
ing to show me my baby
pictures when we finish
s hooting the roll at my
graduation?·'
I knew I should havt•
raised 'em in separate
parts of the house.
Preparing children for earthquakes "is a
matter of calmly, sensibly educating the child
without instilling fear. Calm the fears and teach
respect for what tbe earthquake Ls and what ~
cao do. If you understand something you don't
'have the fear of it," Tbyden said.
AFTER AN earthquake, parents are ad·
vised that lt is or areal importance for the fami·
Jy to remain together. Children should not be
left in a 'safe' place while the parents ·go
elsewhere to inspect possible damage, a~ord-.
ing to the booklet from the San Fernando Valley
Child Guidance Clinic. . Other points the booklet makes include re-
cognizing and understanding the kinds of fear
and anxiety a child experiences, encouraglng
the child to talk ubout his rears, reassuring him:
that it is natural to be afraid, avoiding inactivi-
ty and getting back to the routlne <especially If
the family is evacuated). ·
The Office of Civil Defense. City or Hunt-
'\ngton Beach, has issued the following earth·
quake rules.
l. Keep-calm -do not run or panic.
2. Rem:un where you are -indoors or out·
doors.
3. If indoors. stay indoors. Take cover under
desk, table or bench. or In doorways, halls or
against mside walls. Stay away from glass win-
dows or skyliJ?hlS. Do not run outdoors! You
may be hit by falling debris or live electrical
WU'eS.
4. lf outdoors. get away from buildings. Go
to clear ~1rens and :.tay away from walls. utility
poles and downed wire:. that could.cause serious
injury or death.
5. Do not run throuJ?h, or outside buildings.
The gn•al point of danger 1s just outside
tloorv. ays and close to out~r walls.
6. 1£ at home. turn off the 'utilities as if you
"ere leavin~ the house for the day
7. lf utilities arc damaged:
A. Gas:
(l) Jnspect for leaky pipes -BY SMELL
ONLY. Do not use candles. matches or other
cipon flames.
<2) If you smell gas:
(A) Open all the windows and doors so the
J?as can escape. If you know how. sh~t off the
main valve at your meter. Leave the house im-
mediately and notify authorities of the gas leak.
<B > Remember to give the exact location.
CC) Do not r e-enter the house until a
rcprcscntnla\'e or the gas company arrives and
makes r<.'pa1rl> or ll•lls you 1t is safe
H. Water : If pipes are broken inside the
house, shut off the main valve on the pipe which
brings the water into the house. c: Electricity: lf the house 1s properly
wired, trouble Is very unlikely. If there Is a
short circuit, turn off the electricity at the
meter box.
8. Turn on your radio or TV. Do not use the
tel~phone, except to report emergencies.
9. Do not go sightseeing!
Remember -panic action kills and injures
more people than the direct results of the
quake.
( HoroS(!*:»pe ]
DEAR READERS: A
gentleman in'Oklahoma
came up with the
perfect answer for the
wife whose husband
comes home from work
and aska, "What did you
do all day?"
In a recent column a
worn an wrote to say her
husband asked her that
question and when she
told him she washed
clothes for eight people ·
Ann
Landen.
(they have six kids) he
replled, "What do you (Husband): "What did
mean Y 0 U washed· you do all day?''
clothes? The machine I didn't wash the
did lt." dishes,
Well, here's his snap· And I didn't make the
PY comeback -in bed.
poetry yet -and I love Your clothes are
it! Where you left them
SOMEDAY I 'LL
1 sut all day and read. ANSWEJl ...
••• CDP·
<From P ue CO
de corps and brought their pride up ...
In many ways it seems the motor officers
always have had pride. They are, in effect, up-
holding a colorful trad1t1on of the highway
patrol.
t\ nd. dn•ssNJ m their hii::h leather boots.
breaches and leather or nylon jacketl>, they cut
an imposini:: fi~urc -cspt.icially when viewed in
a renrview mirror.
During Richard Nixon's presidency. they
often served as highway esc.-orts for the Presi·
dent and other visitmc da s;:nitarles.
Because it takes seniority to become a
motor orticcr-the intens ive course in
Sacramento has a hh:h wash-out rate-they
generally have the most seniority.
All lhings considered, do the motor officers
feel they are part or an elite?
"Of course you talk to the motors and they
think they're the elite." says Berry with a
laugh. "Most of the motor officers are all senior
so there is some fraction. The car cops call the
' motors 'prima donnas · and the motors call the
l'Jr cops 'I.ads' "
Because an ofrtccr mu&t know the limits of
his machine, every officer rides his motorcycle
home and keeps It in the garage overnight. "It's
a great safety factor to have your own piece of
equipment." notes Berry.
Often the officers' Jove of riding extends in-
to their personal life. Many own their own
motorcycles and go riding on weekends. Van
Cott and Berry instruct a motorcycle safety
class at Saddleback College.
While the number of motorcycle officers
has dwindled over the years in Orange County-
il's a third or what il was 10 years ago-Capt. L.
M. Short and others don't envision the virtual
extinction of this CHP tradition.
"I don't see any increases." he says, "but I
think ln the heavy congestion areas we'll con-
tinue to have them."
And, of course, there will always be officers
ready to volunteer for the duty. Jerry Klng, who
would like to "ride it out to retirement,•·
describes the most. personal fringe benefit of be·
ing a motorcycle ofClcer.
"You can feel the cold and the warmth very
quickly," he says. "In the springtime you can
smell the fragrance of the flowers and in the fall
lhe odor from llreplaces. It's things that you en·
joy.
"It gives you a good feeling and makes you
say, 'God, they pay me to do this?' So many
people spend money on the w~kend to do this ...
"I'm really amazed
that only one treatment
removed the lines ·1
. hated so much.
I can't wait for my
next treatment!"
WHAT I& YOUR SKIN
PROBLEM?
• ACMI • DRY SKIN
• OIL X SKIN •WRINKLES.
• LINES • BLEMISHES.
6Mnily.
SKIN CARE CENTER .
I overlooked the Iron-
mg, '=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~:::::=:=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::==:=:::::;-The wash and mend-I 1
int too, 8&art ::!'l
As far as J'm con-lllL..o. W-•• OU cerned u11J -
There's not a thing to Wu& to Bet
doYour supper isn't Jobi Robert
~·~ p And the toys are in the 0werB
way, And that, my darling PEASONAI. DEVELOPMENT
husband, & MODel.m SCHOOLS
Iswhatlqidn'tdo a~= All day. -SUBMIT-1 ... , ~1 T E D B Y J A C K l.!!!!~~..,!!-!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~1 WRIGHT . YUKON I
OKLAHOMA ----------------~
DEAR J ACK: A blg
kiss rrom every woman
In America who h·aa
ever been asked the
question!
W tdding and tngage-
menl announcements run
on SU11doy in the Daily
Pilot. Foml$ art cvoll4ble
al all Doily Pilot of /ices or
by colling the Features
Deponmenl. 642·4321.
To o void dl&appoanl·
men!, prospective bndes
are reminded lo have their
wedding stories. with a
black.and·while glos'1" of
the bnde or of the couple.
10· the Featur('s Depart·
menl one week before tht
weddmg
REVOLUTIONARY
VALUES
BIG BARN
CHEDDAR
SAVE SOC
orr reg. lb. price
NEW YORK
CHEDDAR
Colored & white, sharp
SAVE20C
orr rtg. lb. pnrf'
At purticip~1tinl!
:-.tor<><.. 011 ly
BEEFSTIC~·
SWEET-HOT
MUS'FA:RD
SAVE loc 6 cu .• j . .r
Rt>it-1<1<
IMPORTED BULK
CANDY
ISQy one 110UJ1d
at che rtaular prk• of l.89 lb.
GET ONE POUND ·FREE
i .korr1
Summer Sausaj.!•'
( :ut any si.R
20C OFF
Re,:!. poun<l price
Buy the whole stick
with the usuol discount
40C OFF
Rea. pound price
OF OHIO
cosr~· South Coast Plaza °1:~~~11,.~r.·:.:.· ' MESA ....... ~.= M.tll Sllncley f2 to 5 Pm. · , -.-l'fffWIY 1 ,hoM: 5'0.at1
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• IS Backs Billy Beer -'J
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Y•O court. •I /00 (11111 Cf'ntt"' o''"'
W e\I In Ill• ( ty o t \ '"'• A"o.4 C:•lltorlU•
O•t•o ftt>tUdt y t ,_.,ii
WILLIAM ( SI JOHN.
• C.ountyCt• ,.k f'AULM.KOHAPl!iLSK Y JR Att.,.,..v .. uw
17UI lr•IMlle.i .. ••r'd, $v1lt f
Tonlln,CA tl-
HI01l1 ... n
Attor"•Y fOf P•tltion•,
P.ubll\hed OrMtQtt (u.,t"tt ll,111-; Ptlnl
f •b b I, IJ I~/&
. u. '"
PUBLIC NOTICE
HOTICI TO CllEDI ~ORS
SUl'EIUOlt COURT OP' THE
STATE OFCAL.,OllNIA FOR
TH~ COUNTY or OllANGE
HO A tJl~I
""••• 01 tcm" , ~""ll<• n ... <-••,eo
NOTICE IS HfRfllf «IVf N 10 1"'
',.,01tori c,f '""° ..OOV• n.i1,.voo dit.'• 1·,. "IC
•~•t •II Ofr\Ort\. h.aVlnQ l ht•m\ ctq.""''
''-\•10 ~"'°"'"' •'• tM>utt'"1J tu fit•
t .... tn, WtU1 tne nr<.•\\~lfy •uutfWor' 1n
'"-oft•c~ ot tn. ct~o. <rt tf'Mo 1tt>owr .. ,,
titted tourt 01 to prf"tnt ,......," ••If\
t~ neCH"4try vOU<fWr\ 11> tf'Nll un
O..r&1gn•G •t lht' oftl(if Of 01p0f'r1 I\ \.
Fo a,, • l.•w (OfDOrdtfon )1\1\
t•a.wthorn• (tt-..o Sui tf'! 10\• tor
'*"Ut C•ltfO"ntl wtuth I\ Ow pl~, ot
Ou\I"-'' of tne unot-• i•o"f'(J '" •II m.1t
''" ~rt•irwno to In. e!i.11t• of -..eid 0t Cf'CJ.et\t ¥rt\"-" fl1iltr tnOf'lfl\., Ulr• I~·
l •r\I OubhC.•tton of th.' "Ot11 f
D•l•O J'"°'"'°'"" 1'Q ttfl8
\yin. R r '•ho H
( -'9<UIOf ot tn .. W1I ,,
Int ,t(Jt.)v,. ntttt1•"fJ t•• ttl•t\I
OIEOERICH a 1'011
A L..•w <•r...,•tlon
t1M4 NI\ not M"" ,._ ol
A 1 "•'d A. Jur ,, .. "' ••01 Tt\f! ~Alane• Of thl prlncto.-t '"""
l•owortn (1rtff Hunllnqtc..n ft•cttn Of \•.lH 11 w hich bf't•mt due
C•hto,.-"1•.,._ Df><f"mbtor >S. tfn wttf\ tnlHtttl ou.
1 .,, bu,.,...~.,·~ c oirlOut t.-a Loy •n •t'I lhet90f't trom O.C:•mC.r 2. ""
OH11au ti Tna1 c.., ,,,.,°" tn•tf'Of lh• un
q h.ctq:S & Junnr" Ol'r\tQl\f'd P'f'\otf\t bt"rwhc.1•'' 'undt-r
l",, ~t•lf''"""'t Wd' 1.t~ .,_.,," 1nr w<-n Ot'l'd Of l<"6t ti•• t ••t.wt..a 4nd
Counh (lt"•ll of 0rttf\9e' lo..,.,1, "" cff!hvert-O lo '••d ""'' t.tDC>01n\rcJ
J11nu4r., n 1"111 l "ntt• • w rfUett Clf'lc 1~11•t1on ot
Oetc111,;ll MVI Ot~ to, "'-•• •no ... ,
CMpo\tttd with \•td dUI• •op01nl•O TrU\1~. \\l(.h OMd Of lfti1\t •nd .,11
oo<urnttth evJd•nc1no 00119~u,on,
\ortt.1r•O lMf..OV diflO "•i df'<t•rf'<I •no
fUOll
J-•tif1,~·11 ~.u•Jt" r.,..,\, o .• ~ P•lot
J4n Jt .,.a fft> I 14 11. ltll
-""'/Iii
Pl'BUC ~OTU.:E
~\ nt'reby dKl•n 4111 """'' >t(urt"O
tf\f'rtbv 1"""901.-.tty dw •nd P4Y•bl•
dnd "'' •tec:teo •no ~ ,.,,b., t'h.•ct
------------I lo cau•• ,.,. lr\1\1 propttrly lo~ •OIO 10
R·ll-
!>U PE lllOR COURT 01' THE
STATE OF CALll'OllNIA FON
, T"E COUNTY 0' ORANGE No A·'4S71
NOTI CE OF HEARING OF
PETITION l'OR PllOBATE OF WILL
AND FOii LETTEllS TESTAMEN·
TAllY ANO 1'011 AUTHOlllUTION
TO ADMINISTEll IJNOEll THE
IHDI PEHDENT AOMIHIST RATION 0, ESTATES •CT
l •l•l•ol JOF STEELE'.~<••••"
NOTICE 15 MEAEB\I C.llll N lh"I
MARIE L !>TEELE ICURRA10f I
t\ti\ flltO ,._rein /1 O"lfl'10"l ff>T Pr04.;Jlto
,,, Wiii rtnd tor l\'Wilt\C~ n, L,.11,.,,
,.,,,,..m,.ril•'V -trlllj '"' Avlh~>ftl"4f•on lo
&uu ,, .u.r unOic-• ttw lnd~t·•'I Aq 111.11,,,,,.,,(ln of Cr.\at"' /\<t , •• ; .. ,t"nc.tt
ti) w,,,,,.. H m"o~ t o, tu11,,.,r
"-'''" U!M\ •r\O that ,,,, 11mt-t)i"IO
pl,Hf' OI tw•r1nq I,,.. 'f4{Y'll" ho,btt-11 '\t"t
ft-'f F .-bru.try 11 1918 di tO 00 d M. '"
th,. rwrttoom o• ~part"...-nt No J of
41\J <OOrl ell 100 (1¥1( (t;;:ntti-r Ortvf" w,.,, '" tnr Cdy of >·•ntd ""fl C •l1f<Jrn1.t
0• l~d r ebrUft y l 1'18
WILLIAM E. SI JOHN,
(.ounty Clt-rll
BAU'40AGE & ROSEMAN
llOllE llT E 8Al(ER
ltH W Olympt< lllvO., :IOl
LO\ Af'Wl•ln , C...hforfti1
Attorfteys t• Pt-tttiorttt
l-"'1;bl1,hit-a 0 .tnQP Co.t'I tJ.01" ti.iot
ft•f''YH'ftl Ii 19/8
Pl'RUC NOTICE
\ifl\tf tnw OOtlCJ•hOn\ iflUted
thf'rf'b.,.
C>• l•O J.-,Uitt y 1l 1'11
"lmlth t-t1U CorPQr•t1 .. ,,
By RICMro J ~mil~.
4i•cr•tar,
NOTICE Y'Ou~N'lt '"' f•Ohl to rutr U"I
dfl•ult Of'"r•bitrd hflre•n ¥iU r••"'t•t•
'"" n1or1019<1 or d~!'O OI 1111•1. Slo<l-1tttc ot th• C•v11 C.001" P*rrruh. <•rU1ln
(tftaulh to bit" 'urrd upon trw SNV~t
nf '"'" ;Hnoynl\ ''''-'u•rro b'f "'4H i.et ''°" W'lft'toul feQUHlnq P•'l'l"nfl"lt of that
(>Ort1on ol C>'•"' ·~I 1n<J 1nt..,,.\t wn1th
-.o\;!a no1 c..-au. hAO nu dflll•utt uc
curr.-d Wtt.•., ,,,..n\t .. tt n1ttnl ii oout
DIP ii ,,.. oet&ull ,, not (Uf'N "'"'".,,
tru~" montf\\ to11ow1nq Into 'tlOl"Oinq o• 1tw~ noh<ti tl'W" Jt(Jt'tt ot , ,.,,..,,., ..
nwnl .wilt IHm1AJ1.-•no ltw P,roorrty
m•1 Df' tOld
To dPtHM1N' tf rt-tn'\t.-lt·t1\1tf\I I\
Po\\tblt-•no Uu• •mount II •n,
nt"CP\\.try to cut~ lnr Ott•vU <onl.cl
,,,... oe,,.ttir1M y Of' rnott~C)t"e Of t~1r
\Y<ct-s\.Or 1n •nt·tt~t wnov n•m• .ano
.OOr•H ., Of tto.t Git,. Of fh1'\ l'\Ofl(~ IS,
Smltn t1•tl Corpor.-t1ori < o V•riyn N
Jtn\.f'n Atlolf,.. y .)1 l•w C.roc~t-' Na
uon•• 8.-n• But•cllnq S"ottt '00 1100
Nortn M•1n Strrrt c..,,,,, An•
C•htorn1.i .,tO\
T O SEJltVICECOM .. AHY o.n. cuv IW•vuo w .. ·u
S•tl• I Ill
Or•n~~. C•flforttt• ,,...
Put)l1\"ed 0--MW.llf (04,f 0•1ty Pilot
J•n 11...,<IF•D I 14 11 1•11 JI) II
Pl'HLIC' NOTIC'E
~~~:! ~.~~-... 11•4 .. 71 11 llUI
Torr•nu (Alitor1 ... _, FICTITIOUS BUSINESS SIJPElllOlt (.OURT OF TN (
Ttt uni M1 J60 NAME STATEMENT STAlE OF CALIFOllNIA FOii ~U•n•y for IE•et.vtof" Tnfl follow1"Q .,,.,~n\ ,.,r dOlllQ THE COUNTY 0, ORANG[
fllvlllhhff Or~ Col\l 0 .. 11y Pilot bU\•"'i•H .. \ ftrfo A tOSt
J•ft u 11.w>dFU 1 .. 1'11 I \IAlll!ORHf llFCOllO\ ••I NOTI CE 0, HEARING OF
' '· ' Iii lff (n•\t VH'lt Or1v.-., L•tQund HttiU.h CA PfTfTfOM FOR PR08-l£ Of WfLL 1 91&11 ANO FOii LE !TEAS TEHAMEN
------M•rlor (IHf>O'd••on .... ( 1l•IUHH t TAA"r ·~o FOA •UTHORttAnON PUBIJC NOTICE: 11orpo1•11on "°~ Co.>\I Vo•w oro .. TO ADMINIST E ll Uf'IOlll THl
"CTITIOU~ BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
'l h• fOllO•lnQ p .. nOh\ .;rt" OU1f\Q
~,,,.,,.,
PACIFIC Tll[ A W OOO
,.1.oo•rNG. XlO:J H•rDor BlvO. Co•I• Jlrii'•w, G•tifot'fW• ..,.11
Jo"n O.to I: omond· ill'' tt \AA w
l'9h ~trfft Co-.1• /1/11 ,,. C .tllforn1.t ,,.,,
Jonn £,fht r ~ .. •a 1 '*' D,., Mt•
.-vf'nuf" CO\C• ~ ~ ~ C.••••or "'" ~,.,,
'"'' Ou\•ft°'\ t\ , •n•111\h 1 n .. \I.,,,..,., pMt,...., hlO
JnM f t1rnQni(JV'"''
l ht, '\t~tf'ft"tf'nt WI" f IHI ""°tth fl\•
Cl'lu"lt (t1·1\ r 0••• If' <.•1un1,. •>•
,..!AnWfl'' • }O P'A
FlltJI
J•unll\1\ ... 1 ()-.+n..,. (o"''' 0.,.1, V1lot
J '" 14 JI M"1 F"b 11 14 \t1'1,
PUBLIC NOTICE
,.CTITIOUS IUSINIU
HAl\olESlATIMINT
l,,. IOllOWlnQ ,,.,WM'\ I\ Doing bu,.
""'\\ .,
SAIL INN M()l[L, 1't7 Ntwe>orl
lllvd , NeWP01'1 o .. c;h, CA II I Orn" •1"'3
J. Doug Roberl~on, S610 Holl
llfYd., Montclair. C•llforn111911&3
1oqvnd11•..:h CA fl16SI IHOEPEHOCHT ADMIHl\TRATIOH I fht"t bu\1~\\ •\ t.Ot\Ovttt"d by 111 tor 0,. £STATES ACT
l'O••l>On f \l•I• OI Hrl (NI 111\~M ... N •~ri
MllRLORCORPORAllON HELEN BARMAN ••• HrlfN
f\t'nfon R ro~r £LV(RA BARM AN C>tt.fl.1\t-ft
vic•Pr..,..,c;)ro"t NOTICE f~ H(AE-R'V (.,IV('-' 1n~1
Ttu' \l•I.,,..... w_.. t•tad ..,,,., '""" GEfl-"LOtNE 8A.~MAH kt4l.t5.( lf R
County Ct•r" of Or•'19't Covnt, .,.. h·~ fHeO ,_....,." • ort1tion t~ Pr0041f'
Janu,•r..-11• ,.,1 ot Will •M fot .,,,,.,,.~~ of Lt11H,.,.,
l!NTOH • flONNER A.Uy f,.,l•rnt""ntMY And fot A.Vthtl,lt.U10"" IO
U•40 Sa" VkM1t •••d : 100 AdfTttn1e,t,., undif"1 th· lf'd""f•'f\df"Ot Act
L..•' .&~tff"\ C•ltf·ornt.t toon min+• hdt•on ot t .,.,," Act ,.,.,f'•t n ,
,...,..U 10 w"t<" •'\ n'""'" to• furt*'f"' ~'-'b'1\,,.,. t)r,,.,-OC)I"' ("""4~t OA••tt fJ1fOI Pdrt1C ulftr\ .. no ""' IP\• ••mf> 1no
J11n..i•' • ]t )I M'G r .. n, i.u I I• C>IMf' Of ..... tlru·19 I~,_., ... tlill'\ n.. .. •n '\f•t
..,1 f tor f°f'O,..,..,,.. 11 '''' ,,, 10 00"" n t"f" courtroom of ()to-p,tr tnl4 n1 Nf'J l fH
__________ ..;.>.;.w.;;...,:11 "'-t•O tours "' IOO r .v1t C.• "'"' """'
Pl'BLIC.: NOTICE Wf\t tn fht" (th Of ·,.HU.t lt.1'11
( tl1tor"·•
FICTITIOUS BUSfHEU
lfAME STATEMENT
t,,f' totlowlnq p,.r,on' ,., .. dOH\Q
t:MJ'\I™''\\ ...
tJot .. a FftbnJ¥t 1 1111"'
WILLIAM E SI JOHN COUlltY , ... ,.
JOHN W EA .. ELDING
AL•• c ... _.11.,
llMI S4n Vi<mt• 81•d
LH A119elft, Calll.,111• -· Altor110 I• ,_.111.,.,
8E ... CH PEOPl[ I~ Mounl•on
Pwo L•o..,,,. 8e'M.h. C.J11•0..-"'i" •i.s1
EIJO<'M HUC)ll Mc(.ornwll HI Nyts
Plotf', l.lf9\M'\I ~,., Cdllf0f''11d •1'St
R09<1r ~"' w ,,.1, Jiii& S"""'I
Str_.1, Soul" Loguna Cal•lon"~ •1'n
Ttt1s bU\•nt\~ is. coflduct .. d bv A ..
hm iltd e>arlnenhf 1>
Put>llPt<to 0.-C.0.•I 0'111y Ptlol
FtDru•ry •. 1, 13 1'171
''S 11
EU<Jl""H M<Con.,..11 PUBLIC NOTICE
T"'' St&tl'm.nt W,.I f1lrd Wit,, ,,_.
E llooU H I("'"°" Tftl\ ............ wo1 hied wtlh Ow
County Cl.,k or °'•"99 Coooo °''
J•flu••y U. 1911 ,_
Pullh\IW<I °'"'-C0<t1I 0•11~ Piiot
J•n )I """ F~D I l•.11, lfl1
3SO ft
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE 01' INTINTION TO
INGAGI'. IN lHE SALE 0,
ALCOHOLIC llVl.llAGH.
To WllOM I I MIY QwK.e< n s .. 111oct 10 ISS4*\(• ot,,.. 11e.11 ... .,.
PH*<! lo<, noliu h .,...... 9lwn IMI lh• unde,.l9n<eO proPOM• lo Hll
••<ol>OI•< o. .. r_. •t ow prtml"'·
o .. crlbeO .. 1o11_, '" n.. -u pro· V1000 o.IOW
111 M•""" A...-ut 8•1bo41 ISl.tn<I
New-19-.11 PUt\.U~t to tue" ll'll•ntlon tM ""
clotr>1Q""d •• •llPIY•"9 lo lhf 0.P¥1
m•nl 01 Alcol>oll< ~--Control
fOf I"' ..... "'"* of ~ •lt0f'lo1011( blf.,.,.~ tlt•n\~ 'Of" Htf'4"1W'\ IOI th~ OfP
'"''4\ ~o fOllo""'\ •• °" S.,,lp Rflff & W'tnt
tllorw ""'~ l>uDl>C Eatll'Q Pl.eel PINAULT CORPORA 1 tON
...... Ptt!S>Otttt b• G<>r•ro M Ptnoull I
Puot1\hfd ()r41Jn91 CN\I O••IY Plfot,
Ft1>r11.,vl "" .,,.,.
PUBIJC NOTICE
SUPElllOlt COUJltT O'lHE
STATE M CALll'OltNIA l'Olt
TH l COUNTY 0, OllANOE
HO. A·t4SIO
NOTI CE 0' HIAlllHG OF
PETITION 'OR l'ltOllATE 0,. WILL
AND LETTEllS TISTAMINTAllY
l'Olt AUTHORIZATION TO AO·
MINISTER UNDER THE
INOl'.PINDIHl ADMINISTllATION
01' ISTATHACT
ESl•I• 01 (;[ORC.E C:,
RE ·~CHMANH, o..c ..... o
NOltCE I!> HllllllV (;tVloN th•I
LINO.ii. ANNE flf.Mlf"C:, h•• IUeo
"frt1n ct oetlliort tor PrOOl\p ot Will
•f'd l\\U4htt Of L"'ller'\ Tt.~lamt.~n(•'Y
tor •"lhOrUttt~ to ddm'""'•' under
int tndtOf'l'lcMnt ddm1n•,tr•f•on ot
E st•I"' Act rf"f~tn<t-10 ""''"'" ii
m•dt' tor ""'''""' a.n1cv1.,,..., ~ ttwt the ltrnf' •nd P'i9Ct ot ~•11nq tnf' \a.mt
ho\ -w-t for F~~Ufry 21 1•11 •I
tO 00 • m 1n ttw t.O\ortroomot Dep.,rt-
rn,nt No l O'f ~·a ,oUn •l 100 C•vt<
(Mt., o,,,.. W~t &n ..... (•tr OI S.nt1
An• C•hfornta
0 .. 1 .. 0 J.,....,., lO. 1911
WILLIAM E SI JOHN,
Cout>tyCltt•
l(EITH C.WILl'UTT
1lJJMorU11S..1tUO
ltVlftt, 0111-• '1715
T•I• IU..-Z ..
AttorftfY for P901iontr
Publl\tMtd OrcM"t()ir CO.t!iot O•llp Pilot
J•n )I olnd l'<O I I 1•78 :i.1 It
PUBLIC NOTICE
, ICTITIOUS auMNESS
NAME STATEMENT
T '" fo1lo#1n9 P•r\on\ •r~ ooino
bU .. 1!11'\'\ d\
MAklTIM( ~(llVl(f S 11il
C .1n-;on Or Co\ fa Mt-'.d, CA•1"1'
Hfl"nr., t1unt S'"tHI\. 111 ?lll
C•nvonOr Co\1,_\d,CA"1•V
Rocktncli. Fr1t\.flr 1J11 Canyon Or
Co\14 Mr...,, CA "1611 w.11 ... m e .... ,,,.dd, 113t c.nynn
01 (O\t• Ml•w, (JI. •1•>1
t n1 \ OU'-•"f''"" 1\ ( Of'lOut ,..,~ by • I
~nrr4I D•rt"11fr~h1Q
Hvnt~J)rh
Th1\ \flf.,,.,..,t """' f11,_.1 ...,,.,, tht
Covnt., C••r'-cM Or~ Covnc.. on J.tn ,, ,.,.
FtlUI Pubfl\~ ()r.Hw;a. r o,.,, n .... ,. PttOI
)dn 11 1c Jt .=,.o ' tua 1u 71
PL'BLI(' NOTICE
FICTITIOUS 8USIN(U
NAME STAlEM(NT
,.,, .. f f'lf tO••ow•nQ Pf'"'°"' '" OO•nq bus• 1
8Mcll (JI. "211bl Thi\ bv· .... , ... ,, Ot•ACJ conou<t .. o by
•·rom \P Olbpatcbei.
Rutt\. C"arter Stapltlon says Billy ht-er, namt-d
ror h~·r br~lher Billy Carter, ll> delic aou:.. "but
please don't he1ufl111 e me a1> th~ evangell!>l who
promotes beer "
Mrs. Stupl~lon. author and devoteP of "tnnC'r
healing," was ;u,kPd in Olympia, Wash .. about twr
famous brother tht• bct•r guulmg one -and his
new brew.
"It's delicious. \N'Y A<>od if you hke beer.'' s h e
told a church gathe nng of about 3,000 but added
with a chuckle that she dufn 'l want to be seen as <t
promoter, however. •
1 Soul s inger Bobby Womack has been arrei.ted
al the border Cro.<i~lng m the northern New York
village of Rooseveltown. driving what s tate polil'1'
said wa~ a stolen Rolb Rf>vce
The 30-year-old re• •
rordlng a rtist pleaded in (
nocl'nt to a char g1• of J
c riminal po'>sesi.1on M PEOPLf~
stoll'n property and \\J" -----------frN•d nn SI .000 hnncl
1K·nd1ng u he1mnit F'<'h 2:J
'J'he Holts Ho} t'l'. \ allll'd .1t $i0.000. \His 1m·
pounded
Pohc•e l1;1id 1t '' u:-. stolen 1n Los Angele-;.
Wo mack, of Loi-An~cll'll, said he l>ought at in
Phoenix lust St:pll'mbl•r
• Norwc~1.in explorer Thor Heyerdahl s1uh:d 111
to Ka rat hi II arbor after d 10-week "\'OJaAe lo
nowhere'' aboard a replica or
an a ncient Sumerian recd boat
llcyl·rdahl anu h1i-I l ·m(ll\
C'rt•w . mcludm~ two Aml•rtc<ms •
ph1nncd to n•majn 0Y1 tlw lnd11rn
sub('on111wnt tor nhout a Wl·t•k
bl'fore suiting <lt'ro-.. :-. 1111• l111lta11
;11HI Pae1r1L' Ol'l'<llls t<Jw:ird
Soul h Anll'fll';t
Thi• 1;3 Yl'Jr-olu t'X plor1•1
"'hobt' l!Jl7 Kon T1k1 l''<JX·tht1on
~iHOl0d him worldw1clt• rf'l'ngn1 HEYl:llOAHL
lion. 01rn\'ecl in Pak1'>La11 Jboard the Tagn'.>. J liO
fool raft madt• or \\OH'n berda reeds In has hflh
and what he :.ays Is h1:. la:.L expedit1on. H eyerdahl
rs attl·mpuni.: to dctcrmant• how far lhe Sumerian:.
t•ould ha\e traveled on ret•d bo~•L'>
•
\'mlagt• Elvis Prc.,lt'~ records bubbll:' j.!um
t•a rds and nt·wspapt.'f't annourwing his death gr eet
ed hundrt'ds of Jnxious hll\ l'r't ''ho filled the Arb
and Craft'> huilrlmg ,11 till' Oh111 Stalt• Fair~round ...
in Columbw ..
For mer lion tu ml•t t.d Sil\ oq~.tnllt:d tlw l '' 11
da\ "Tnhuh• lo l•;l\'l'· I 11nq•nt11rn ' \\lud1 tw ,;11rl
w;1s tht· 'l'\eflth 111 1h I.nut 111 tlh· nat1rm s11lt'1·
Pn•slt•v':-. th·;ith la .... 1 ~··.11
• Empt·rnr Hirohito 1-. ulldl'!· pn•-.sun· frorn \\\tr
,) Jpancsc gruupi-lo shl«l 111, WC'!'>tt·rn s uit:. for th,
1rudit1or11d l..1mono. tlw hrnad
sashl'd, \I tdt· -.ll'l'Vl:cl rulw \\Of'll
hL· ft' h~ liol II rrwn and "'11nH•I\
Tlw grou11..,, rnl'lud1n).! 11nl'
.. a llt•d "J.1 .. 1).!Ul' to l>n·~~ th1·
l';mpt•rur · n 1mplam llw l'm
rwror 1:-.. m·\ 1·r :-tl'l'll "'1·annl! a
kimono
Kazoo Tamaki, 11 nwmbt-r
ul I hi• .I ap;11w:-.r Otl'l or par Ii a
ml'nl. :.au! tw pl.in;. tc• brmi,: up
lhc ISMll' lll'\l month In ;1 c·om "IROHITO
m1tlt•(• 11( th1· ll11ti...1• nf ('11u11r11l11r' till' ll1t·I ·.., UJI·
1w r h1111,1· •
J'1an1:-.l t'laudlo ,\rrau p1:rforml·d ,11 \\ .. n
1-·1!.lll'r Ila II 111 ~C·~ Y 11rlo. I h1· d.1 \ hc•fort· tu:-i 51 h
b1r thd:I\.
Hut ,1ppl.1u"" .1flt'r 111,
thu;.1iJl>l1C' 1111 th1• sm~m~ of
rer11;tl \\if., too en
11 .ipJ)) H1rthday ·lo
SUN01Al APAPfMEHTS UO•
W H.tlt Rold Antttletm. CA ttl07
CHAPMAN ASSOCIAlES P 0
80• 1•Sl ,,,, t(H1Q\ AOdd Ntt#potl I
• hm1tf"d Pitf'1r.i"r\.h10 -------------P,.lhp L .il.DDoll
Tn;, \t•lttn"Wnt W.w\ fttM W•H' Uw County , ..... of o,.~n~ Count .. Of\
Jtnu•'Y •, 1911. ......
Publo"'•" Oron~ (o.olt O•tly PllOI, J•n JI F•I> I 1' 11 1919
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE TO CR a DI TOllS
SU l'(JltlOlt COURT 01' THE
a.TATE 01' CALIFORNIA 1'011
THE COUNTY 0' OltANOl!i
No. A·t4714
PuBLIC NOTICE
E:U•lt ol CAROL L STRAOl EY
01'<'!<1\fl!
NOTICE IS HEAE8Y GIVEN to IM
be heard us concert hall "mployt!es wheeled a
huge birthdoy cake onstage.
Arrau. it ct11i.en of Cha le. will give 92 concerts
in H counlrte$ this year. Jle first. played in lbe
l 'nited Statt>s an 1923 and has toured In this country
annually since 1941.
It
Muriel But>k Humphrey took the oath of office
••S l ' S senutor and promised lo help pllSS the
I legislative program left behind
a l thl' death of her husband,
Hubert.
"I hope J "an do as well.''
shl' s uid. ··1 hoJ)e l can fill
Hubert's shoes."
She told rePortcrs after the
brh•f ct•rt>mony on Lhe Senate
floor thut s he has not decided
whether to i-eek t'lect100 in her
O\\ n right an a special election
to be held 10 months from now
\l n. llumphn•y wearing a powder blue :.u1t.
,,J,ed to fomil) me mbL•r-. •md friends m thr
Seoul<• \'1s1tors · gallery and rl'phed with a quiet, "I
110. ' \\hen \'tl'l' President Waltl·r t~. :\tondale ad-
n11n1sten•d lht• oath or offlte.
• l'nmt'<lwn Richard Pryor
<l1vorcc by his ~ 1fc of four
1<; being sued for
monthl>. Deborah
Denise.
The Pryors 'Al'rc m<trried
Sept 22 in Burbank. and the
c·omed1an remarked at the t1m~
"this b thl' r1rsL time I 'vc been
marrtl'd 10 my heart "
l'rvor. jfi, has been marn<'d
I\\ ;C'l' hdorl' and d1vorcl'd l'ach
llOH'
lnd1calion:-of prohll·m.., 111
~~w Pry11r hou:-.t•hold surfan•d
,,; .. ..,,. Y1•ur':-.. I>:n when th•· ('om PRVOll
t•d1an allegedly. rorct•d lwu of his wifc's fnends
from th<' Pr\'or home· .ind tht:n rammed their car
\\1th ht!'> :'ttcrcl•de~ Bc•n1 and rm:d !>l'\ era I s hots at
llwm. No charg<:s "'en· t llt>d.
•
('hrislin.-llt>fner. d<rnghll'r o( Playboy
magnate Hugh Hefner, arrived to a nnounce plans
111 Sydn<'y, Australia for a S4 5 million Playboy club
~I iS!\ Hefner. 25. said Australian girls will tw
reC'ru1ted as bunn1<>s for the Sydney club, the f1ri.l
Playboy cluh m the ~outhern hemisphere.
•
Former (;1•<Jr~rn (;m l.eMn Maddox has been
r1·ll'a:-it·d from .t hoio..pat;il <1fll'r tci-t!-. showed ht>
\\could nut 1w~I hl'art surgery to
corn.•1•t blo1.1k:.tJ.!l' or ;rn artery.
.\I arltlo\. Ii~ • .,uff<>r ed a
hl»t rl att:wk St'pl ~:l and Wll'>
hosp1tal11l·d for.,,., l'fiJI weeks.
t 11• n ·turm·rl to tht• hospital
f11r tt'i-b. hut was r eleased after
hi:-. phyi-1t·111n told him bypa:..,
.,urJ.!t•r) In rt•m11ve un arterial
hlot•k;1gt• "'a" unnel'ei.sary as
lnnl! "·' lw followNI rt>stril'lion:-.
MAooox on dit•l and phys1tal attn•al\.
.\I addox l>a1<t l11s cl<H'lor told him. "If I harl
.1n()lhc•r lwart aUad, 1t \\c11ilcl h1 • m~ fault •·
l>:in Oorfman, on~ of lht· lt•adtnf.! "raters in the
l'OUnlry ha!>. n•...i,l?n('(J from :-.:cw \ nrk magazmr
and Joined E:-.tiUtrt• .\I agu11n1• Inc according tn
('lay F.-lkt>r, e1htor and pn·:..1dcnt of E:..tiutr<·
Stnl't' l!ti-1 U11rfm.1n h " .iuthnrt·d "The Bottom
l.1111• · a rt•:1turrd c·nlumn in hoth :'\c"' Yori.. anrl
'\1•\\ Wt·lll mag.t1t111·.,
In .tdd1t1011 t11 l1n:rnr1.1l \H1ling for 1-;~qu1re
l>orfman \\Ill h1• "nlinii .1 r1•i:ular 1·11lumn for thr
Washington f'11 ... t "t11c·h "ell :iri)f·:ir t'\ l'f) oth• 1
\.\ Prlnt•'rlil\
Tttls buitM'\\ " <onduf'-t•d by ,iin In
CIMdual.
County Clerk ol Or8"9" County on
J.anuory 10, ''"· ,,. ... -------------<rtOllOt\ ()l I"" Obov• """'°" 0t<...,«<tl
Student Aid Proposal
Expected From Carter -'· Oouo R-hon
1111\ ···•-n1 .. as flif'd with lh•
C •unty Clef" Of Oran~ (f'>unty on
J •nu•l'V ?O 1'11
Put>livieo Ofaf\qt (OA\t 0Aily PUot,
January '' Jt and ,.,.b,u•r'f J, "· ·~II
l'ICTITIOUS aUSIHESS
NAMI STATEMENT
The followlnQ ""'""'s are doi"O t>v''"'~\\ •l -
CMl PROPERTIES, 140 H~rth
Birch SI • S.nta ..,_., C. 91101
lh•t all~ Mvlnv cl•lm\ ~•ln\I
,,.. MOid --1tr• rf!QVlreO 10 Ill• them, wi1h tM ne<nuwy vouc~tr\, In
Fl .. ,. ~wbil1hed <> '"00' CoA•I O•tly Pilot J•~ l • )I .,.., Foob I I• 1911 PUBLIC NOTICE Jo11 R SluNey, 640 Horth 8•«h s1 ~,,.. ""°· c. .,,en
•M olllte ot lht <ltf'k ol '"" •llO•• '" U11~d court. or to P'•·~t th•m. wutt
the ne(fl'U•'l' VO\.t<PY'f'~. to t~ un dtrs•on~d •• th• olilu of JOHN
GUERIN 1111 A P•t 11ic Cool
Hi9~w •y, HuntlnQton 8f'•fh
Callfornl• t?...e. Wl't<P'I 1\ ti'* pl4tfet ot
l>U\IMU~ ot thO! ~-" In Ail m•I l•r~ prrt•lnln; to tn. •'tat" of -..,,d i1<t•
Cf'llO•nl wU""" tour tnof'fh' •Htr lh•
tint publl<_.•~ ot ttt•\ noli< ..
WA SJIINl.TON (AP I -Presadenl.
artl'r "ill announce a major na-
llonul aid progrnm for coll ege stu
rtcnll> from m1ddle-mcome famiht•..,
on Wednesday. t'<mgre.,sional leadt•1:-.
'>It 1d toda"
( I NSHORT )
PUBLIC NOTI<' t.
0Altll Ftllt\IOry) 1'11
Larry Slr.Olf'Y
Aom.rws1t01or ol tl>e w 111
(Jf ~ -MfTW'd 0.Cf'dMC JOHN OUEJltlN
111t-A P'll<tft< C.sl H19flW•Y
HW"l""i... -..ell, Calitt-lllt •1'"1 Att..-...y for -.1n1.1ra1 ..
wlll\Will-Uf
P-l~Mcl Or-C.0.\I 0.1ly Polol
Fet>ru•rv 1 I• 11 19. 1•11
•fl ,,
The l>t•mol'ratl(' ll'Jdl'rs told n·-
port es about the upcoming an -
nouncement after breakfast with th<'
prc!'l1dcnt at th<' White House. They
declined to disclose deta1b of the pr1J-
l!ram, saying they "ould lt>ave that
to l'arlt•r.
In 11'> hudJ?el for t he upcoming frs-
<"1 I .) car . the admmlstrataon pro-
f)Olled to wt aside $700 m11lion in con
tin gen e~ fundi, for a prom1~<'d
altl'rnatl\ <' tu <lemand, in t 'onJ?r"""
fnr tuition tax credit.
FiglaChtfl Ruwae•
BEIRUT. Lebanon (AP> -Syrian
peace keeping forces clashed with Lcban~sc troops today for the fll'l\t
time since the end of Lcban(m's civrl
war 15 months ago.
, ~o casualties w er e reoorted bv of·
facials. but unofficial reports said
four Syrians and a Lebane~e
policeman were caught m crossfire
and killed in a four-hour clash at
l''ayadfeh barrack~ near hen•.
' ltfllN!n S ttU:111 PIU't
WASlll~GTON CAP J -l'nited
~tine Work«?rs Pres ident Arnold
, M Iller met with regional union
leader today to tr)' to sell them a
propoi.ed contract that could end the
record 64-day-old roal strike. ,,
The bargaining council, comprised ur lbc UMW'K district leaders. WU$
called into $eSSioo &t union head·
q uarteri. to go over tt-rms of the ten-
tative accord, which would boost
wages and frinac benefits for minen-
by nearly 31 ))tr<'~nt. over three
years. --..
s.dai~1t'e•pe1U
WASHINGTON (APl -With an
AdtnlnlSt'fZbon dtciAlion appa~ntJy
i m m fnf'nt . £«YPlfnn Preaident
Anwar Sad t today took his case for
Am raun weapons to Con1Tes ,
which has lht powtr to vt-lo tho deal.
Al .sepuate aes&lons wHh key
mtm of the House and Sena~.
Ute .El19lWJ leader also •·a& outlln·
... v ,
1nj? h1., argumc·nl that 11
hraC'l tu kL'l'J.I pt•ure talks
makmc ront't'""'""'
I' UJ> lo
.<lave by
Porn Co••~rr~ Hit
WASlll:'llC.TON <AP) --It lh 1llc~at
to tranl>port rh1 l<I prostitute!> across
~l ate-hn<'s 01 ust• rh1ldren m porno.
1?raph1l' materi31-. rarned Jn Jn·
ter:-.1 all· rommt'rt'l'
Thl' lt·i.:1sli1t1u11. s1gn<'d llr Pre ... 1
dent Curter on Moncluv. abn h<.tn1>
sale and d1slr1hut1on ofm<1lcr1a l cl<'
p1cting childrl'n in 'l'X ually t''Cpht·1t
1·ondul·t 1f 1t lw!. trav<'lt'ri m 111·
tcr">latL' commcrct•.
Eagle KHler• f'lned
SAN ANTONIO, Texas (APl·
-· A federal judge has fined three
West T<'xas m<'n $6,000 for conspirinl!
lo hunt and kill JlOlden eagles. Thr
.iudgc warned th;it future violatorli
<'ould go to jn1l.
Acknowledging the fines might ~
<'onsidered too ll•ntl'nt, L1 S District
.Judge' John Wood Jr. w11rned Mon
d:t)' or "lhc m t1A1mum conise
c,ucncei-." for other. who v mlnte the
Ju"' protcctmi: the ca~ll'll.
~laroae V rfl#d ·
Mt1NAGl'A. :\11·aq1gua CAP> -
T lw S;1ndani<1ta i:ul'rrallas urged
"1:1ca ra~uon." to take up arm'I against
rres1dont Ana. lJblC) Somoi.a es ht!S
~ovc-rnmcnt ncknowl<'dgt>d that near·
ly two-thll"(lc; or thl' voters boycotte¢
tht• nationwide municlp;,11 elections.
A statement from the guerrillas
<'ailed tor •Uotk.8 oo the N•tlontl
Cuard, Nicaragua'11 army, to Obtain
we.npon~. 1L said guar dsmen who Join
tho r ebellion wUl be 0 pardo11od" and
urged workcini to convert tlwlr took
into wC"uponi..
., ... .. .. ... ,.. -. _,. .. ----...--~
f:4 DM.Y PfLOT
l'tJBUC NOTKB
!Wirt
•on<:aTO ClllOITO•I .... ,..,,.
\UPllttO. COU•T Olt THI
STATI Olt CAUl'O•NIA PO• TMI OJUtfTY 0. C>UftOa
llO tf\• "'4111tr •I IN lhlale et
YIMOTHY FllANGl5 IHEA,
f:Ma•M. Nelle. ,, -..11., ., ... n to CACIJ.
tori ll•vlnt cttlma •0•11u1 Ill•
uld ~I• Ille Mid cltlrn' '"IN
otfkt et ... Ci.ti of 1M elor ... ld
c..i w I• _...... tl1ttn to ,.,. -°'""' ... d Ill h OffiU ot WALTER J. O ESM ONO, •u HEARTWEl.1.
BLOG ., LON G BEACH, CALIFORN14. wtlldl ltlter olll<t I•
the P19Ct of butlMH of lht un· denlll"ff 111 ell mettera pef1iHnlno to
Wle Hlal .. SllCh cl•ltnl •1111 Ills
M< .... ,., _ ..... """' b9 flltd Of'
lllHtllltd 81 •f-IMlld Wltllln fo<I,. .-111s afltr ti. llrU Pllblic:.1loe of tlll s llOtl ce.
OetMJ_.,.,, '"' JolWI F. Slit•
E•ecutoroflheWllf Of Mid 0.C-1
WM.T•A.&.01~0 -~-••• MMf'twel ..... ....... -.Coll._.
,.ut>lliMd Orenoe Coe•• 0•11v ""°'· .lltft. JI -l'tO. 7. 14, ti. 191&
!ltJ.71
!. PUBLIC NOTICE ~ •1u• ·~ •OttaTOC•IDITOftS JI N0.•·"111 \ •• SUH•tott COUllT OP THE t II" STAT& OP CALll'ORMIA ,Olt
'
-t THI CIOUNTY 0, O•ANOC
In tll• Melter of the Est•t• of
J EANNE EVA °"'°ltT, 01Ce1WC1.
, NOlkt I~ "9f'9bV 9lvtn lo Cfedllotl ..... 1119 deitM 9QAIMI I~ wlo OK .. oent lo fl,. Mid dtlrns In I/II oHlte ot
"" Cltrll of II• IKOHWld cooirt or to
DrtMnl IMM lo the 111\detsl~ •I th• offk.e of GEORGE H. OuFORT, Al· tomey 111.aw, P.O. llo• AQ. So. Like
Ttl>ot, Celltoml• U71l15, wl\oth 1•11«
Qfflce IS IN Pl«• of bu'IMU of fht un·
denlgNd In •II mellws perttlnln9 lo .,,,., ett•lt. Such tl•lms wllll th•
ntcHW• y _.,.,. mutt be l lfod or
oreset1led as oloroeld w11111n four
,_.Ill• atllr tN first publo<•l•on ol
11111 notice.
D•t•d Fetwuerr 1. n11 J-llfl J. R. Ollforl
.ina Georo-Oufnrf Co-Executor\ 01 ,,,. W1t1
.,. .. 111 OICtOt"I
Gl"OltGI M. Oul'OllT
An.tMr .... L.aw
... 0.h••9 Se. Le~• T.i\ee, C•fllorn0• t 10l Published Or,.ng,• c.,.,, O••ly P•I~.
Fobn .. ry 7, 14, 21. 2', 1'11
4111>-ll
PUBUC NOTICE
CP.192'
NOTIC1: TO CllEOITOllS
SUPEltlott COUllTOI' THE
STATEOf"CALlfO.NIA 'Olt THC COUNTY 01'0 .. AMGE
N•.A0112
E't.i1e of MILORlD Klf\IC.!>lEY
llROWf\I, Ot< .. W<I. • NOTICC: IS HEREBY C.IVEN to, ...
cr .. dttor\ d ,,. ..oow tWmfrd dtc"'ent
tt1•t .;II per~ twving Cl41tm\ ~·'"''
'hf'. \01d a.o<..ctent 4ttt' nqUtre-d to tll•
Int. m. wftn ff'it M (f"\\4"Y \IOUCh•r ...
10 t~ oH•C~ of thf> rlt!fk ot ,.,. •bove
1·nt1thtO <®rt. or to Pfl'\4rn\ rnem, Wltl'
,,, .. ""<fll~\Jry voucher\ to t~ un
n e rs19ned c /o C.ARRETT
~ OIMlf\10, Attornov• •I L•w, 18011
Irvine 80Ul\tYdrd, ru,tln, C•flforn~,.
•1MIO. wl\lch I\ ,.,. plo<e of bu>•nes\ of
tno \IOdtH,IQnitd in dll Mclthln Hr1d1n
'"9 to tno r\tate of W ICI dttCf<t,.nt,
w1tMn fot,1r monlhS alter' thw flr\t
put>t1col10tt of th" noh<e.
OaloO Frb""''Y 2, 1q79
ROBERT M. BROWN
Adm1"'"1 dtor ol I~@ t>l•I•
Of lht 4boV• ""med clllU<I• "' GA•RETT a DIMINO
ttoSI frv1,.. -ll••rd
T'"''"' Cth..,..,.• tlMD Tel: (7141 S44-1110
~Hffney' tor Acffftffllili"•tor Put>llSl>tG Or•"Cl'I Co.i\I 0 •1ly P•lot,
1'1bru.1y '· ... 11. "· ""
..., ..
iw.dq, F9bnlery 1, 1171
PUBLIC NOTICE
'9CTt110UI a11t1MIW
W.ud ITATSMllfT
Tiie t .. 1 .. 1~ Pt•-••• doing
~1>eu a1· 5..0 .S. A ~SOCt AT£S an4
IHl.IAa1.• EMTaRPIUSU. 7W
Sl•ltr Avt,.ue, Hllf'ltlft9(0ll .. Kil,
C..lllonll• _.,
$1....,.n O. W.ftfe. t1'tt 8.ilfOll
Cir., H1111tl~ .. e<ll, Calll.,nl•
~7 O.~• S. w.,.., 17'11 lkron C•~~
""" ........ 9MCI\ (alltorlQ tlt41 lhll blltlMU It <-1•4 br •
..... ,tlP«'MnNp.
$1 ...... 0.W~ Thi~ "••-t wn llled will\ the
C0<.1111'( c1.,1< ot Orln9e (ountr on
Janutry 211, 1'71 AM4I
Pvbl11Md Qr-CQellt O.lly Piiot.
Ja"" 1 .. )1-0,,.,, 1.1 .. 1t7t as-11
PUBUC NOTICE
PtJBLIC N<Yl'lCE
NOTIC. Olt INT .. fTION TO
IN•AOf IW TNI SALi: Olt
Al.COMOUC eavt•MIS 2 !-t•
T0Wh0m1t~r~11:
... Jtel .. 16wan<ed ... II_ .. pll"9 tor, Mike I•_..., ti..,. 1"81
t~• vnot,.191\td pro"tn ti ••II
•l<-11< --0-• t"9 .,,._._, .crl-• toll-• In Ille _. ,.....
Yl"411ool-:
3073 --•tvct.. Go\la .Mt--. morrn• Pur•11•nt lo well lnlenll.,., tlle un
,.191114 It •PP'vlng to I,,. 0.N•t
nt Of AICOl'<Olk lleve,..99 COlltrol tor '""'nc.e ot an etc-lie _,. ..
license for llCtftfff) tw tlMte pr.,
itH U toll-&: . .... ,,,On S.t•
8Mf'~W11w
(lloMfldt
Publl< E.tlng Pl«t>
ltossGrlmm
JoM M.clA81\
L•rry Y•Je
Publlll.ed OrM191 C.oot O•ll'f Piiot,
Febr11••Y 7, 1'71 '11·1'
PUBUC NOTICE
SU "IAICM COUllT Olt Tlfll
STATI Olt CALll'OltNIA POA
THE COUNTY Of' OAMOE
1110 ..... Jll MOTICI Olt MIAlltltO oirl-------------1 l'ICTITIOUS e\1511111!5'
NAME STATEMENT ,.f. TITIOH POR ,.ltOIATI OP WILL
AMO LITTERS TllTAMllfTARY
PO• AUTMOlllUTION TO AD·
MIHISTE• UlfOllll THI! INDl,.ElfOlllfT AOMINllTltATIOH
01' ISTATUACT.
EU•le ol AOSE E. KRAl<ER •k•
ROSI!: STONICH KRAKER. 0«••..0. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN t,_.I
RUDOLPH MARA?~ tlleo herein•
Ptllllon lor P,-le ot Will Incl ...
'u•"<• of Lette's Tttt..,,...ntt'Y and tor •u1....,11•t1"" lo actmlnUlff unoer th• JndepernSent •CSmlnr\lr•tro" ot
(\'''"' AU r eottr•n<• to '*"''" Is
.....ie tor turtrw Ot<ll<ultrs. -'""' Ille 11m1 ....i plKe ot ,...,."9 llW wm1
11•1 !>Mn ~ lor l'Hl•IH•Y 21. 1'7e. •I
10 • m ' in '"" CO•"'"'°"' of Oep.t<I· mcnl No l ol wlo cO..rl. •• 700 C"ic
C•nler Orlw W...1, In -Clly 01 ~nl•
Ane,Celltomle.
D•ltd J•nu.t•v JO. 1971
WILLIAM ll. St .JOMH.
CCIUMY Clerk
MAOOLEH, WlNKIR & DICKI. '(
ewnktr Hiii To-"
tOO w .. t l'lnl s1reet
l'l•t• Lt .... I
LO> An .. ln, Callf•..,l• 9001? ftl; .. ,., ...
Atlornen tor: l'etill-• PubhsM!d 0r""99 COa•I O••IY P1101,
Jon. 31 •nO Ftb. t, 7, ttr& ](ol·ll
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tne tollowin9 P••M>n• ••• dotnci
tMnintH•t
A08ERT FIELDS COMPANY
Jl3J 8r.s101 S1ru1. Co•U Mou,
C.llfornlt n.l!l
F1e10•1 ~ I"< .. • C•••fO'"'•
corPOr•tton, l3ll 8""°' Slrtll, Ca.I• Mew. c1111or .... .,..
T,,I\ bU)lneil t$ C<M"Ou<ll"d by .. f.Ot•
POr•Uon.
F• .. ~9-s.1nc
R-.tR-sttW'I
P,..10.nt
111" ... ,_, .... , 111.:1 • .,,h '""
County Clerk of Or•noe COllnt't on
enuarr ZA. 197L nan1
Publl•l'wcl Or•~ C.,.U 0<1lly Pilot
Fet>ru<Hr 1, 14, 21, 21, 1911
•10·11
PUBLIC NOTICE
lt·114U
NOTICE TO CRIOITOltS H•· A-'427S SUl'ERlotl C04.lltT 01' THC
STATE ot" CALll'O•HIA ,Olt
TH• COUNTY oir O•AHOI
In Ill• Metler of "" E\l•lt OI
JfSSIE R. JOSLYN, •k• JESSIE
RUSSEl..L .IOSL YN, ~t•WCI.
Nolle• I• hereby 9 iven to Ill•
t rtclllon l\etlln<J clllm• -Inn tnt
>•Id dtcedlnt IO Ille .aid c1•1m• 1n tnt ~111<1 of IM clen ot '"" ••o••••IO
-----------co..rt or to -\a<ll U\lf'n 10 1"9 vn
PICTITICMJS IU51HESS 3-•sloneo •I -olll<• ol Jury Coon\ NAME STATEMENT llOO N. HIV'>f•l'CI Aveni.. Sufi• 10..
l he to1tow1no per~n\ ctre-C101nQ HoHywood, Catltornl• 4'0021 wf'tkl'I ~t
"'""'"'' ~ l•r ofltct os ,,,. piece ot t>utln.ss of Ill• HAIR 1 T IS, t>01..J Souln euct unOer•l9MC1 In •II rn.lleo 111•U1n1nv
BIYOu ~· ~-·· C.lllOrlW• ~I ... •••d nuote. Such clalm\ wlln .... little A....,., inc .. • C.llfo<nl• co•· ...Ct\Sarywucll<'nmllil Delll<Oor pre
poration, tJDl..J Soull\ llH<h 8hrd.. u wnteo •S •lor-•O w1111.n tour monlns Hebr• C.111 tc»lt •lltr 11\e flr>I publl<•I•"" ot lhl$nol1<1.
T111s' busl~ Is conduc1rd by • "°0t•<~ 0 F • l 1,71 Corp0r at-. • • ,.,,...,.l' • BOC>ol-CoolstV Pruiclent F K•"O JO\lyn Jr
TM• \1•1-f Wa\ tried wltl\ the ~f":;~~~~:vlll
Counlr Ctn~ ol °'-"II<! Coun1., on Jotn JE•RY COOftS
l2, Jt18 FlltJI Atttrl .. l'·•t·UW llOO H. Hltf\i.nd .. ,,, , Su11t 106 ......... -. c.11 .......... 2. l .. IAH •.CARTE• AtterMJ
IMS. 1'ro11'fdAW
Tw•l•l\o C•lllwfli•t-T1I: lll·lm
Pubf1'Jht'd Ord~ (O.'I 0oJdY PtlOt
Fobru••'f I, u, 11 11 1~18 . ., ,,
Put>l1\hftd 0-d"9" (O..\t D•••y Pilot.
J•n 11, 2• 31 F•b /, 19/8 U~ 18 PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
ww._, .. ,... Tht lfawt ,.. .... °" tht ~ ............ ,,___.~ . ................. ---............ , .................. --. DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS ........... _...--. ,...., .... ,,____ ...... -...... ........
'-*-' ....... ......
You Can Sell It, And It, ( 842 .. aa.e) One Calf Service
Trodt It With a Wont Ad ...v•u Fast Cndit Approval
.....-...... _-... -·--,.__,_,. __
............ s-. ....... FwS. ....••....•..........•. ··············•••••·•·· ...••••.•............•• ···············••••·••• ...................... . .......
..._..forU• GeMrel 1002 GeMNI 1002 C5tMrtll IOOJO••NI 1001 ............................................................................................. ···········~······ ... ··
Ga11.. 1002 -----------------•••••••••••••••••••••••
GRACIOUS
UHDAISLE
5000 Sq ft + slip. Pool,
·jacw:zi, sawia, 6 BR. •
MANAGER-REAL ESTATE
NEWPORT BEACH
;.'f~
Balboa Island Rutty
A.\.» '''"e°''~"' «W1JL\'l'. 673-8700
A prime opportunity with an
outstanding r eal estate organization + high earnings! Experience is a
m usl. Prestigious l ocation. All
applications held in strictes t
confidence. Please reply to Ad #68.
Dally Pilot, P. 0. Box 1560, Costa
l\lesa. CA 92626
DUPLEX
J bedroom uni l s . G1 ... rol 1002 Ci1Herd I 002
SlOS.000. Pride of ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
ownership. Excellent llACH VILLA
Costa Mesa location $105,000
Owner arunous Unbehe\•11bly low pnce ~'
642-5062 Just blot"ks from the Century 21 Cf-odr..-water. Xlot Newport
Beach location Sprawl· FORMER MODEL lni contemporary home. Wood deck e n try. SUPIR SHARP Spacious living area. SIS 900 with massive flreplace, . • rustle family room. Open Spacious entry hall or beam cealtngs & wet bar
former model home Circular stair leads to le~ds to large luxun~us fantastic sun dt•ck
hvmg_ room !mashed with Hurry on thii; one'~ Cull premium i;:adc wall and today 646·7111
floor rovcnngs. Natural
wood burning fireplace.
professional landscape.
Owner needs fast sale,
h u r r y p I e a s e 1· a I I
962-7788. 4'-KEY
P.€AL'J:OP.Sli
tMVESTOR'S
SPECIAL
$47,500
Guarded gateway pro·
tects lavish grounds w1lh
pool. Secluded entry to
uecutive ltvang room.
Sun s h ine gourmet
kitchen overlook!>
Ol'll~ Ill 9 • H ~ IL'll ro Ill ~II< f I
f e 1m11m1
FORMER MODEL
One year old, 3 bedroom
2 bath in execut1vf.'
neighborhood wtlh a long
ltst ol extras & upgardei..
Unobstruclabte '1ew or rolling hills. Priced for 11
qwck sale ut $134,000
CALL 151·3191
c;:sELECT
T" PROPERTIES
private t"ourtyard •VETS• Sweeping master bdrm
& ch1Jd·,, retreat. Ownt>r Ztr0 Down
VETS
FREE
GlllLLIMFO
UstofHomes
Credff Info
Move in Free
All Prices
All Areas
THE
HOME STORE
(coll 24 hours}
964-2455
19461 Brookhurst
Huntington Beach
BLUFFS
W l:S !.I Y ~
TAYLOR CO
HFt\l.TOl\S .. 111 t' I~• II
llG CYM MIW TOWHHOMI
Community pool. jacuizi & tennls cts.
Lovely upper uoakcre:;t" model. 2
Bedrms, 2 baths, lge living rm, formal
dinini & bright kltcben. Slt0,000.
WESUY M. TAYLOR CO.. 11.ALTOIS
2111 S.J~HllhlNd
MEWPOIT cerra. M.I . , ..... ,I 0
IOOZ GIMf'el IOOZ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
LIDO ISLE
Newly remodeled 4 bdrm .• den, 4
baths. living rm. w cathedral ceiling.
Lge. master bdrm. suite.
llG CAHYOH
4 BR, fam. rm .. 3 baths. Beautifully
decorated Broadmoor P.lan 3 w/patio
views from each room. $!25,000
IAYFROHTS
Several fine bay front homes
with pier & slips
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 8t1y\1dt' 011111• NB blS t.161
100 GIMt'ol 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••
COUHTllY
CARRIAGE HOUSE
41r-2STY-r<>OL
$60.950
• ••••••••••••••••••••••
NEW&eGLAMD
End urut. X Plan. Tenm:.
Valla former model.
Spacious J BR. 2h ba .
tam. rm .. form. din.
Wide i;reenbelt. SlJl.000.
HELEN I . DOWD REALTOR 644-0134
c;.111 6~2-5678
P
ts anxious. Submit any Zff'O Cost~
offer! SH ·60!0 Homes in all areai. all
,.-.p,. ... • J • '·.· ''' ,. SlZC~.Ctjlf .
I [ ® mm:llJ _vete_r5_~ r.oaoCf ,\gt.
Lu!.h approach. Tiled en
try. Huge family sized
laving room. Country
kitchen. Secluded ter·
race m walled rourtyard.
Swee ping stairs to
massh•e h1deawa)
ma~ter swte & separnh'
ch1lrlrcn'~ quart<'r. l''irst
to call get this un1qul•
h11rcain' 963-7881
LUXUIY
Elegant li vlng ! Quiet
prestige area. 4 Bdrma, 3
bath. Cathedral celling
living room w/cozy,
stone fireplace! Formal
dm1ng room! Cocktail
terrace! Spacious family
room w/lav1i.h wet bar'.
Convenient RV access!
:;hown by appt. Call:.
645-0303
FORESTE
OLSON
L .
0
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A
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I
F
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"':· =====l!iWm=====~· Wanl Ad~
TAR GA'ZEK~~ ...
.... ~;;;._:..:.;.-r----8y LL.\ Y It POI.UN
M. Yo.' Oo•lr l"IMly c...fl '1.
V Acc•'"'"9 to '"'• Sre'i Y
To de•~'"" """'MJ9e tor w~,
reod "'°'cl\ <Of•~•"O 10 ........,." ~1 your ZodlOC t.or1h .,gn
., oW uc.1 ... ..... .. V_,."'9 ., ....... .. " ., .... ....... ........ .,.
1'09'.o ''""°" .... •>-l)'Yout
1•0lrplf''
71 °'"' .__
n'f<NM
18'f'nvlt ntw.n '°°"'-., fht
~-c a3l_...,., .. ~ . ... ...,
Ill-.,.~ ·--.,-. 111.......-,,.
C)Ncuttal
CJleatts of ~ove
This Valentine's Day send your love
a greeting an the world can share
with a Dally Pilot Heart of Love
1t ·s easy. com po se your
personalized greeting & we'll set
your messag.e In type to flt the
border of your choice or your own
handwritten thoughts may appear
In the border you select.
Borders come in 3 sizes: S15. $1 o.
& a special child's size for $2. (You
must be under 12 to qOalify for this
one). If you wish to create your
own 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.Just call
642--5878 & !J friendly alentioe 86-vlser wilt be happy to aulat you.
And. If you like, you can charge
your Valentine ad or ~·· yo.ur
Mester Charve Of Bank Am.tioard.
Gitf4 1i~•H \l jJ'' I l~I / fll f
Jbr, tge fncd yd, close to
shopping. etc. S59.500. All
tPrmi. JV 631·0900
..... ( ....... , ...... [ ~ lllll 1;;;..,..:;;__..;;;:._:;;·=--iiii;;-;ii-iiii;;-e-.-r;ii..-...iiii;;---ii;,,-
IRAHDHEW
3 BR-$65,900!
Its true! A brand new
cu. .. tom built home at on·
ly $65,900 full price. Ex·
l'ellent location on tree
lmed street. E6tablished neighborhood. 3 Spacious
bedroom:t + 2 baths .
Family room. Trailer ac-
cei.~. Call rast ;52.1100
IAYAtOHT
Balboa's best location! 2
Bdrms .• 2 bath condo in
adult, all security bid g
Walk to ocean. pier.
village, shopping; boat
slip avail. All this for
$149,500!
lcAoa lay Prop. RHltors
.. &7S.7060 *
IOATSLIP
attached to a single story
condo .• that's only 2
years old. with buill·in
kitchen & ft.replace. Ten·
nis courts, swimming
pools. jacuni & a Jow
price of $109,500 wilt
make this one sell rut!
CALL ~·26e0.
C:SELECT
T'PROPERTIES
CAPICOD
SSJ.000/$2, 150
TOTALDOWH
Wlndlos uadway t o
aoanna 2 story retreat• Privai. arounda p~ed.
aechlded cntr)' to lavtsh
llv1n1 room. Gou.rme
kitchen o•erloob ~un•
ablne cour1,)'atdl Wlnd·
Jnc stairway lead• ttt
hff P\ni rNLIUt bdrm
plus chlld'• retre.\! lfurr7 I Se.Ucr Ji •nxioua.
8'7-41010 Ol'f"4 111t •Ifs1•.tN IO• ~r•
~nu: REAL
~ £STATERS
Real Estate
NO DOWN
MO CLOSING
COSTS
Wltela11
Rf Al IHAH
Opetl Daily I ·5
1526 Highland. HI
4 +Fom. $184,500
I 07 "A" St. lol P•n
3 Stry $265.000
4604 Sff'lhor•, HI
Dplx S 175,000
CdM Home w /Unit
New listing~ Cozy 3 bdrm
or 2 and den. 2 bath home
with open beams. large
living room with fan-
tasUc fireplace. Loaded
with ·'Old Corona del Mar Charm!'' Brand
new 2 bdrm unit in rear with beamed ceilings,
fircplat"e & all buill·ins •
LJundry. stora11e room &
4 t"ar perking. Super
South or h1gh'4ay Joca·
tJnn ~os.ooo .
PETE BARRETT
-REALTY-
642-5200
S&S BEAUTY
OWNER MUST SELL
Lovely 2 bdrm., 2 bath
-
WATERFRONT condo; FP, A/C, lge.
tiOMI S patio. ground floor.
REAL ESTATE $51),~IO OCEAH;~~:; '""ai.,.-•1•1IP-'l~"",1·~~U~JJ,.I•
REDUCED .
Don't drop the ball! Get a $15,000 Owner anlllous tow job with a low.cost Daily
down. malre offeT.'Princ Pt lot ClassiCled Ad.
only. 548-7219 or 559-021 ,!hone 6'2·5678.
SllK&flND. SAUCES
C S A R E S 1 E M M P E l E L Q K A R
TWSUSPTONJSBEUMHEHE
01MET£RT IHDOlCASKS
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CN AEOAHKE JL AAONXHRO HAIA L NGU EVkRRGNMIN
EPGLQT"MMJMOAEOtOLf MQORATLAOAEENYTY RPA
AHO~NWM EI LIVARYQ ££H
LUTAMCRSASEMYENROMP
ITNIEP£l£AEDALUOMER
EIEIONSASCRTHI2GJ1T
LTSC A[lOUOQIRR EPGNM
'"'""'ttoM. HK*\,.,.... ..... ....,~ .....
'W!Wd, •· OoMI • ~. find' ..-. .,.. ._ ""'-F
Creal• .... niatH Mi10f\n&fH "
MDrMt Ailloulade Holl ... tM ~
l'a"tu& ltcM91il lo1'dl11fH e
T1rt1N tspelftll• rertfC*Nt11t.
'Tomrrw: Qfdto1111
I
•
' HoutHforS• OUHI For$dlt DAILY PILOT CS . ...................................................................... ···•··········•········ ··•••········••········ •...•••.•.•....•.......
'G•-el 1002 GeMHI 1002 GeMr., 1002 o....-.. 1002 1002 ~tMr., 1002 HousesForS. HoaesFo..S• HoMs.sForScM •
Tuesday. i;ebruary 7. 1978
.............................................. ·············•·•·•····· •.•.......•...•............................... ·····················~· ................................................................... .
Coro... .. Mer I Oll 0..0 PoW I 02' 0.. PoW 1026
LARGE TRIPLEX-$145,500
2 Bdrrns. each. + den m one unit; 2
apts, have hvmg area & 1n bath down.
with 2 bdrm.s. & f uU bath up. ,Enclosed
garage for each apt. Entire property
is in very good cond. ~-will help
finance.
759-0811
'1~0 NfWf'<lfll <.:ENl 1:11 l>lllVE l&!) <lal 1
1002 GtMral 1002 ..............................................
IEACOH IA Y IS UHIQUI
• . And Unique is big in Beacon Bay.
Corumunity specialist Marilyn Hodges
has just listed a classic! Beam
ceilings, pine doors, brick patios, 2
bedrooms, family room and, get this,
a 1 bedroom income Wtit over the 3
car garage. It's all located just 4
doors from the private beach and
docks and about 2 deep lobs from the
tennis courts. The Beacon Bay way of
hfe is worth $millions. This listing is INVESTMENT
••. or starter home: ~harp
& ruce 3 bdrm., l l"r bath
Jiome; xlnt Gardon
(:rove nt:1ghborhood.
:Helter hurry! $S2.7SO
HARBOR VIEW j ust $195,000, (substantial down
WITH A payment required).
HARBORVIEW U,_.l()Uf: li{)M~§
Jn the ongmaJ sectaon ol REAL TORS'. 675 6000
C. F. Colesworthv
REALTORS 640.0010
Harbor View Jhlls. On 2443 East Coast H1ghwo.1v. Corond dol M .. r
the view :;1de of Whitt-dl!.O in Mesa Vrrd~. <Jt ~46-5990
Stuls Way. excepliooa~· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ sharp 4 Bdrm, 2~2 ba, :: ---------•ram rm home with
IOOZ u.a.f! EViutYTHIH~ formal d11ung. lovely ~ ~ ..., pool & J·acuz.z1 Low earn •••••••••••••••• .. ••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
FOR $87,900 )ard . . ~ -----------------that the family needs AND-
Cbarming 4 bedrm, 2 spec:tacular ocean, bay,
hath, formal dmmi:: + island and night lit?hl
kitchen brt•uk!a:..t arcu. view. $269,500.
Great noor plan. lovely Cdl 644-7211
backyard & patio. I-;ye FOR DETAlLS
<.1ppeahng. Sl'l' 1l r111w.
400LU•fr fOR1~,i,\ ~ CM, .. ~
FAMILY HOME MAGNIFICENT
AXER
UPPER
HARBOR VIEW LUSK
PRJVA.CY-IRIVACY-IRIVACY
This 4 bedroom haven is an executive
reward -s::reen hills, blue Pacific, a
home to make it all worthwhile.
Corona dC'I Mar at it's best! 1436
Keyvicw. Open daily till sold. $259,000.
675·3411
LUSK~ REALTY
cJ J oh n /J. /.1n/... & .\1111 Co.
2S IS E. Coo\t Hwy. Corona d('l Mar
tn a i:real neighborhood
::i Big bdrms, duuug rm.,
lh baths, big yard,
fenced front & back.. Cov·
ered patio. See quick.
asking $69,500. Call
S.W.llSl
On full acre. hJgh Up in
t h c T us t i n Hi 11 s . Gt'Mf'OI I 002 GeMrol I 002
~>HERITAGE
·•· REALTORS
Beautiful view, room for ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
horses and tennis.
Between tYoo mansions,
hard work, ideas &
money tan make it
fabulous! S225,000.
IESTIUY SHHHHHHHH!
HOIODY KNOWS ---------1T rad<':. o k . in Newport leach
for ttus completely rt'
modeled. upgraded
home m the new, nt'w.
nt'w-pa1nt '"'out. l'Pb.
drps, 11lumb111i:. k1lC'hl'll
. this pnme estale-s11:e
lot 1n San Juan
Capistrano hus ne\'er
bei.>n for sale before now
th al you know. you l>C'ttcr
atl qutl'kly. 5 + Acre~.
\\1th JO Ol·~an \ ll'W . VA
TERMS
:1 Bdrm.'.• Corner Loi '
•;rl'at Arl'a ! Call No~ ?
HEDCAHPET754 1202
Ownl'r/Hrok1•r, Rick
\ldl•n•ttc. 731 511:.
-& larn.hc;1p111~. 3 Udrm'>,
ln\'estmt·nl Propert~
Sale:.
..,pel'lllilll'd :..mall firm
nl'eds I 1censl!d assoc.
Some rollege & sales l"X·
J>('r pref. 838·•l921
BRUMFIELD & ASSOC
Olick-Easy!
custom brick f1n·plal'•'
,\ better bu\ \ uu \\ un t ~ct Only Sll 01.!KxJ
PRICED TO SELL
Th 1 s c cnt u u r 1. E :-.
Each unit remodeled
with new 11alnt rn/out.
Cpts & drps, buill·an
kJtchen. 2 Udrms. frplcs.
Owner wul carry 2nd. No
payment for bl year
Detter hurry! $171,500.
644-7270
I' rt \ .1 e' S ,. l' I u-; 111 n S.'lso.mo ..
67).4400
HARBOR
A Oivtsion of
l11Jrbor lnve:.tmenl Co.
$54,950
"4(CAt S""d HEAi OCEAN! tJ~"l1#41(. Pillared porch entry to
REALTORS gracious h\'mg at af-
1 .:=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!I fordable prices!! Rich Ill wood decor. Step saver
•---------• kitchen w/walk-1n pan·
HEW LISTINGS!!
Steps to ocean; two 1
bdrm. umti. on 30x85 ft
lot. which you O'>' n'
Sl.25.000
2 Bdrm. bou~e -+-
bachelor unit; on corner
lot, priced lo sell ul
$139.500
673-3663 &12·2253 Eves
associated
BROKfRS-REl\l TORS
101', W 8olbvo •I I J66 J
try.!r Enclosed pat 10
room. Spacious family
townhome ofCenng FHA
& GI termlt' Won·l last
(.'.all
645-0303
FORESTE
OLSON
''"'( Hfl~l. .. t>fl•
··--~
FIXER UPPER
~COATS & WALLACE
'::::J::P REAL ESTATE, INC .
A LOCAll¥ OWHlO COMPAPO Sf RVING
T Hl SOUJtl COA!il AREA SIN Cl 191> I
MESA VERDE CHilMa Big, beautiful 3
bdrm, 3 bath home, with formal
dining, comfortable f am Uy room has
open beamed ceiling and massive
fireplace. Prestige location.
1 mmaculate in every d etail. Call
546·4141 .
IE MY VALENTINE Enjoy my 4 bdrm,
deluxe built-ins all year round. You'll
love the price too! I'm only 97K Call
640·6161
....................... ··········•··•·•••••··• ...................... .
COROMA DB. MAil
CMMMllt
2 Bdrm.; 1 bath bouse
with 2 jE&lH~ UQh¥.
$175,000.
NORIMS RW.TY * 494-1057 * .
1024 .......................
New Condos, 2 Br, 214 Ba,
2 frplc's,. ceramic tile kitchens & bath. Pool &
spa. 615-4912 8.roker
VACANT-MOVE IN
Seller has moved. Thls
home is ready for im·
Lingo
Rul&wt
FINE DAMA POINT FAMILY HOME
-L-wge lot ontiooklR9 rolfht9 111111 •
spoctc.a 4 bedrOCIMe 21/2 bath, wfti bolMll
rooa-SI 19,900
LAGUNA
NIGUEL
495·172Q
49J..881Z
SOUTR LAGUNA
499-4551
LAGUNA BEACH
497·8331
Serving Costa M esa-Irvine
Huntington 8 J<ac h -N ewport B each
mediate occupancy. New .
~Tn: ~!!ivio~a~::1; Cosio Mesa • I 024 I r.t .... oe leoch I 040 ~
and 2 of. its 3 'bedrooms. •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••-••••••••• ~~~lr"'"rouM<t• . SAYE SSS BEACH COTTAGE
G........ 1002 G1Mrol IOOZ r· 1 > I Pa.int & carpel lo your Warm & cozy 2 Br 2 Ba. .............................................. w~1f~lil1~·~ taste.Owners allowance bome w/Crcsh ocean TURTLEROCK ~--·-:-•·-~ -oilers rare bareain. for 4 breeze. for ooJy $2,080 6 CORNER DUPLEX · • BR. 3 BA. formal dirung, down.631-t560Agent. .. $169 000 BEAUTY famJly, near Mesa Verde -;..,~
Uri\'t! by •620 6201.<lt Lovely & i.puc:1ous I CUSTOM CountryClub.67S-4392. HEWFHAPROGRAM ~
Acacia and cht!ck lhu. bdrm wnh large family EASTSIDE HAL PIMCHIM .-,
i.pecial duplex now oc rm plus huge boo us 3 b 2 b N . k·t h REALTOR UNDER S% down, only : t
cupLed by tb..-tenants. room. 3 car gdarage. Stafngla:~ o!k~ cFe:. • ... u.a1a. .. u ::~o~:OC:f:'C:in~: ~ Front WlJt is 2 bdrms; Largest Broa moor Su 1 Tr 0' k & ~""'
back urut IS 2 bdrms. den m 0 de1 • Dec 0 rat 0 r hor;u:· Q=t ~~zy HIGHLANDS = Jtk~~ fa~·~
and private patio. Shown wallpape~ & drapes. Xlnt $99 500 Owner&U-1730 ' Now. C o m p l et e detalls ~1·5800 Open byappt. condition .. Seller ' • landscapl·ncr, redwood E transferred. His loss • 53• 975 • ves
-
SAUSBllRV your gain! 646-7711. 61 decking & wood fencing lnt1 IE Network REAL ESTATE PEA HOUSE enhances this sparkling
-&lboa 1s1ana (~1Wl'1 foijjfji§!j For these 3 2 BR homes new 2 story bome with 31e~~~~~~~~
673·6900 · -.. ·-·-·--· that need a liltle TLC & bedrooms (2 with ocean $100,000 ·~~~~~~~~~j.--!Re~al~Es~ta~l~c __
1
lotwilltakeanaddit.ionaJ view), 3 baths, Y.aUltcd HBGHIORHOOD 1_ wiit. ceilings, rugged stone ONLY $69,tOO In Ht. hautlful BcAoa llland I 006 fireplace & formal dllling
S ... ...-.a. Y .... EZ •••••••••• •••••••• • ••• • room! Only $91.900. Large 4S&SBr ~mSao. ndt.>stled "'"•.... "" umong .,. n castle
VA.LLEYbyownu CANALFRONT euAic.m s 1.\.111!1.Quall ~ Developments. A truly Ttm. lon~ly 4300 sq fl Currently us~d as a oP£NHousuuLtY Iii Plac• , good investment for
home is on .a :J acre du11lex but could b~ con· #> i1&J0t•"ll•.C0tt•Meo.a Prap1P1"ti1ta tho!icwhocare. hilltop O\'erlook1n~ the ve~ed to single Jamaly ::r\ 645·9161 752_,920 754-7800
A Ii~ a I Han c: h 'Go If residcnc<'. llas t•anal --_ _., ---1400 OUAllst NIW~T HACH
<:ourse. mountains & live dock. front yard wit.re-es READY POR OCCP¥ 438 ---
oak-filled hllls1dei. l2 &a great \lew Princeton, 4 Br 2 Ba llOOICVIEW m~·.s from Solva~g. 2~ JIAYWA~tE.WATSUN pool, redecor'd. $89,900. COHDO
m1 s north ol Santa 731.sss1 Ownr.557-3344eves. Cle&n&btfl3bdrmurut"
Barbara>. Woodpanelle<.I --Atrium patio. Pool & ten·
llv'g rm, d1n10g rm. lcAoaPeninwta 1007 --------111 ois.Upgradedthruout.lf , .. ,....,.
Sunken f1replc & ....................... BACK BAY )'OU're ruaa1 "demand ~-I
secluded loft, all wilh 7 Units 6 • 2Br & 1 the beat. don't wait? HatDow 042
vaulted beamed ceilings. Bacbelo~. pool. steps to Mo'fe la COftdition Pbooet.oday! ~L .... ·---•• .. ••••••••
There are 3 lrg Bdrms. bch, $4SO.OOO. 20% down. Spacious 4br, 3ba JUSTUSTB>
also has sitting rm. area OwnerS45-072l twnhme. Din rm, frplc, Harbour Laiie 3 Br, 2~
& frplc. 2 add1t1onal modern bltns, F /H, pvt ba end unit w/24' boat.
frplc's m II\'. rm & loft. 4 Peninsula Point Cixer. By patio, aucb dbl gl\r.1850 Real Estate slip . Super sharp:
full baths. Centrally owner. J brm, H• ba. sq ft. Comm pool. ---------1 $155.000Callnow •
heated & air cond1t1oned b'73-8W8 jacuzzi. sauna. tennis ROOM PURc&LREALTY
w / 2 s e p . u n 1 ts & crts. clbhse. $89,500. Agt TO BUILD (114) 846-2828 lhermoslal. Professional Corona chi Mar I 022 63J.l.266 or 549-1438
Jndsci>'i: including auto •••••••• •••••• • ••••• •• • ~~~~~~~~~ R-2 · lnine I 044
!>pnnkler S)'Slem. fruit South of Hwy Retcntly remodeled :! ••••••••••••••••••••••• tr~. oak tree), & shuf 7,000 SQ.FT. LOT bedroom home on R 2
flcboard t·ourt. An·c,,s to S 139,500 +LOVE IUG lot. Greut income polt•n TURTLEROCK
the complete fac1htic:.. of An abt.olutely ch&rmmg 2 Br, !pie. hardwood uul for the ::.mart huy,'r ' By Owner 3br, 2ba, fam
Altsal ·s Gue~t Hunch l lx.-droom on Pomscttlu floors. only $72,5011. OnlyS87,500. rm, 11ror lndscpd. elect
Golf Club, horscbut'k rnl Yo llh beuuliful hardwood Easts Ide CM. Won 'llast. . :;pnnklers. lrg cvrd patio
ing,sw1m'gpool&tcn111s floors owner occupied IP.Quail ~ w/vuofUCI&vaUey. Nr
courts, ct<'. Spcctucular forc\'cr and in xlnl cond Iii Plac• pool, tennis & prks, itlnt
'liews from each llntt•d thru-out. 2 t'ull double Prap91'tl•• , schools. $122,500. 833·1948
glass wrndow & from garages<Not tandem). A 752-1920 REEHT1tEE each of lhe. S complelel~ real doll house offered MOO ou.1ut, H~W101T HACH G ·
pnvate patios 13 open, 2 for the nrsttime m over BEST BUY· BEST encl). Pnce; S300.000 (90 l2yean. YA. Buyers LOCATlO~
yr leasehold land> Shown c• 644-721 I CHECK TIUS Otrr Hampton 5 brm 3 ba. -
by appl phone 644-2:113 Ll.KEClllCKENSOUP 376 Broadway S74,900 oversized lot. upgraded. -(o""""'r)· for detolls p B k 90 ....... . . Jt couldn't hurt to call Agt S86-48S6 rice-ro er Sl09 .• o.
REHT A.L MA.HA.GER Chuck Nash about a re-MESA VERDE OwnerSlOS,ooo. s.s9-664o
Rentals pro\·ide guar. in-warding career in real POOL HOME A Gorgeous
come. ;-.;eeds sharp, estate. f'ree training jf BU1 2story, 4 bdrm, fml>
classy, cnerget1 c,1 _________ youqualify.540-5101. rm home w/fant .. stu• Pool
11 c ens e d • R · E · ~~~~~~~~~ grounds & pool area. is just on(." or. thr
Salespepople desmng PANORAMIC MESA JIU,l(e comer lot !or max customized features of stab11iz.E'd mcom<', great 1mum privacy. M1n1 this lovely Turllnock
potrntial OCEAN Ir ISL.A.HD VERDE eslale. Phone today for sl.,lc family home. • 0 VIEW appltoins~t.S4S-~91,,. Bdrms .• 2 1 ~ ba. font. ~~~~s~:~i~g~::~~ Top !!0ti'o!~?n top (~twni~aaarn!j ntJsf~r;;:;t ~~~~~o'::;
View Hills with lovely well worth Sl27,900 -~~P._,,"tffe courtyard entry and 3 ~~~t~~i0!;t~ ;~;dr~~ ___ nea_J_Es_ta_te ___ , ·~ car garage on lree-lined spare. 3 bedrooms, 2 By owner, 3 BR, 2 Ba, E Balboa Island Really low traffic stree.t. baths. Hurry & call side. Ll'g lot. Quiet. pvt. ..Xo•~-'r>OL't""""""" $279,500. 645-. 7221 $89,500. 645-2333 673-1100 c• 644-7211
· FORDETA!LS DanoPoiltt '
CLOSETOIEACH ~ 1026
Two yr. old duplex. . Clean 3 & 1 BR, cpfg &
drps, bltns. 4 car etc.
$149,500. WestdffRHlty
JACOBS REAL TY~~~~~~·-------=:.-..
•••••••••••••••••••••••
OCEAN VIEW DUPLEX
Uve in 1 let your tenant
pay the taxes. Fireplaces
& balconies. 33866 Diana.
$135,000.
GARAGE SALE ads in 675-6670 OZY 3br, 2ba + guest
the Daily Pilot bring hap· house. Frpl. 2 patios, R-2
Bargain hunters, see this
disaster. 4 Bedrm, H•
bath, needs paint and
TI£. It's 11 money maker
at$60.900. Call 540·11~1
CUSTOM IUILT THEWORKIS
Sundrm or Jum'*i wfllclt. ew way, ,ou'll IM ts cool,
cr19p llartl Stripe it lrwdy.
PICk • dainty flower ptint or
Sllll:GJ sohd tottOll, 9'tfWClwf.
P11nttd Pattern 9263' Mmes
Sizes 8, 10. 12. 1•. 16. II. 20
Sue 12 (bust 34) 1.1._es 2 1/8
py results. To place your lot. Prin. only. $157,000.
draw1ne card, phone Classified Ads 642-5678 Owner. 640-7030 1---------S42-SG7S loday. I~~~~~~~~ Getterel 1002 G1Mral 1002 1002~ 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
BLUFFS EASE OF LIVING
Hard to find End Unit "W" Plan in
the BltJf's Plaza. four bedroom.
family room, fireplace. Walking
distance to everything. Low
leasehold & assoc. dues. $122,000.
, A CO&.DWB.L UHKa co.
,44-1766
2111 IAN\IOAOUIN Hlll.l .. O. .~~ ................. '.".NIWPO...,...,ltt __ Cl __ NT! __ A ____ _,~
S@\\.4'llA-~£trs ·
Tliat lntri911in9 Wora Game witlt a Chuckle
-----~ 1'y tu¥ l "0Ut.H-----
·~-=:S-'!::
16.. IO '°'"' '--oe. -dt
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
~II. mecnab /Irvine ?-reeltg
STEA.LS THE SHOW ...
Prof. landscaping & beautiful
brick-like patio that is! Inside,
beautiful upgraded cpt. decorator
drps & immaculate condition!
Secluded cul-de-sac location +
comm. pools & parks. $94,500.
Marion Frizzell 752-1414. (H-109)
PETER"S TOWMHOME-UHIV. PAIK
Beautiful 4 BR, family rm, formal
dining rm home w /exquisite master suite. Loaded w /extra s like
microwave, covered patio +·view
of· Mason Park & Turtlerock.
$138.950. Forl'('st Powers 752·1414.
CH·llO>
GU OUT YOUI PAtNT •USH
Just a little soap & water + paint
and this .Forr t Hills model in the
Racquet Club will be a super buY !
$109,900. Good floor plan
w /2·storie.1, 'BRa, formal dining + fa mily rm. BURRYI Natalle
Benjamin 752-1'14. Ol·lll)
tlUOOI IC you haven't seen this deliChtful
condominium in Irvine you are
lnlnlng 'omethinatl 2 BRs, air
cond. wooden deck & across Crom
pool! L<iil Miller 642·823$. <H·112)
4 Bdrm, ! bath. wood noors. new water heater,
water sortner. copper
plumbing. Beautiful pool with beater & filter.1 ________ _
Many xtru. $89,500.
RoyMcCorch
1110 Mewpoti IN•d.
Costa Mna 541-7729
MESA VERDE
Shake roofed beauty 3-4
bdrm home with plenty
aC versatility. Lge fam
rm. Uv rm, & service
porch. &U-1103 Agt ..
DAHAUGHTS
Lovely 2 Bdrm, 2 bath
condominium with mini
ocean view. ~ mile from
Dana Marina. $76,800.
<:411644-7211
FORDETAI~
~NIGEL
llAILEY &
ASS!:lCIATES
ELEGANT!
The place is t.he ul -
IJmale' The upgrades in·
elude Karastan carpet·
ing, microwave oven,
butcher block eounleC'
tops, central air.
VanLuit wallpap..-r.
custom drapes, prof.
landscaped with MaJibu
Utes. Major greenbelt
local1on. It's the Mar-
quette Model with 3 BR.
21.-!a BA and d wonderful
FR With fireplace. or.
rered al $122,500
red hill ~,.'.
552·7500 * 16 UNITS* 6MONTHSNEW:! 'FULLYOCCUPIED Beautiful new home,1 ________ _
U-..1--•~ ·t Coastline ~w, 3 br, 2~ ---------_. .. i.ooo per um ..... P>'ll\ 000 831 ""•9 STUART FtHE .... -· · ... Vol THI COLOMY
IW.TOa 6ll·S4S4 lluA ... •leocll 1040 $14,900
••••••••••••••••••••••• &per s'barp Plan 100. CUSTOMCHALm aut 2 BR townhouse Italian We entry. Thick OHL Y $79,tOOH w/a 1uper view, tennis, plush carpeting. Warm &
Lodce like Ji.tog under pool, clubhouse. Vacant COi)' living room hosts
bold 6 rugged beams! &readytogo. $87,900. crack ll n g brick
Cozy flreplace accents KATB.U ltlALTY fireplace. Sunkist. COUD· :e waJI of. brick! 96a-l30I 54.,_9132 try kitchen. 3 Spacious
y room & worltshop ---------bdrm s Back ya r c(
too' Beunioo Sid cov-CHAllMIHG CONDO enhanced by bnck patio
ered patio overlooks OHL y $62,000 & lu.sh landscaping. Calli
family orcbnd ! ! Ju~ll 752-1700 listed' Won't laal .. t this BtlllY llP&raded w loads .,, • · < • • 1u .. ,.. 1 • ori<tl ~~~JOJ e·;~;·~~~ ~'11fflll
FO~CST E
OLSON
11'8 old. 75-1.SOJ.
-\\'atlkm r. lt:c
.. . . • . -.. . -' .. -,--.....
.
·CW OAILYfl'lt.OT Tuetd19Y.l'lbrurf1.1t7' HOUMtFors•-Ho.HFo..S. Offwrle.l&tofe ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••• •••• .._.. ,.,. s. .... rt leach ••• • • • • • • • • .. • .. • • • • • • .. • • .. • • • ... • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• •• • • •••••• •• • • • • • •••••• •••• • •••••••••• ······-···· ~•ealEstot• ...... u .......... ._..,u..--.w ··
••••••••••••• .. ••••••••••t111••Ml•,..••"•!°:!'.•5:!:_••u••• ~.~~ .......... ~ ......... !~.~! s.hlAna 1010 t-co-P'toperly 2000 Molla.holM/ C--.. M.-3222 MtMI 3224 ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••• •••• ••• •• Trtr Ml 2300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••·
t..,..Hlpet IOU .,....., 1012 ......_Ylelo 1067 $15,000DOWN FIXER-UPPER, 2 Br 1 NEW,ORT ••••••••••••••••••••••• z Br. l bat.tr on nice 11t. Detwcerarollyrondonrs
--·············· ••• ....................... •••••••••••••••••••• •• • SIA VIEW Ba. R-2 lot· s. of Wlll"Der. Frplc " pool. SS7~. No Voast Plau a be' a ... ba. $6.000 lkand nu ibr ~er lot EZ terma, 52',900. HEIGHTS 635 AC-5 Lal&es peta.C.ll&U 7119 uPl"aded iiJ appl A/C.
Lingo
Ra.J&rAn
BEAUTIFUL MOUNTAIN VIEW
-folao-bedrooms, two bath "-wiffa
d inlftCJ room and fonlll~room with
fl.-.plac•. Cuttom f.ahret .... : Yauthd
b•om•d cellln9s, drama c 1w•eph•9
stolrcas•, Spanhh tll~ ••hrlor
ntry-SI 59,900.
J.AGVN \
NIGllF.L
495-1720
499-4551
DANA
POINT
403-ll812
LAGUNA
BEACH
.jlf7.J331
T "'.,E OVER home. Owner y.rfU urry 642-4759 DUPLEX REDLANDS. Exlst loa .,.__._LL...-3224 End uni~ pool ~ "'°" b.i of szao 800 at $1850 "'-h RV P ll r k • l ll co m ~ _... _.. ~.-•
P "'YMENTS · • fJI OOO """tra s arp 2 BR units, S330 000 1 ti 8 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ JnO. ,,_ per mo. No quallfylna 4""' both w tprvt patios. • · n OJ>t!ra on 640-*'29
On larae z 1tory corner nee:. vac, move right In. ' Owner will h1•lp finlltlce. yrs. $1,llOO,OOO full Pnte' AT LAST lot moa m home. P ay-Guardedgates.7S9·°'48 Stc:rter-For :.ul~ ur trade Creative lnveslrnen\s 3 BR. 1~ ba. patio. menta Sl.032. no qualify. ___ ....;;;_ _____ , $139 500 644-9613. I adult.a/no pets, SZ7S. Nr
Ing necessary. Vacant. IALIOACONDO 3 Bdrm! CAU.640-5112 Desert, A entalSenlce 17tbStshops.6'o-7317
S42..a&780wner/agent. Eleaant. large lbr coodo Great for the first home lnort 2400 You C• FHt o..r-.. 322'
oo bay front. Pool, boat Buyer! 3 BedTms or den, ••••••••••••••••••••••• At Hon.~· u... rt •--h U I i d ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... wpor__. 10'9 s pavaU.Fulsec.bldg, eat ng area, woo At Snow Summit, Big WIGUARAMTIE
••••••••••••••••••••••• $81MOO.Owner/Agt. cabinets,newly carpeted Bear, furn. townhouse •Wldestaelectionposs. Panoramic b•rbor &
G
nll!& 075.7520 & painted. Central air, ( In G 1 h white water view! 3 ~TIST IUY h t lk 1 l 0 .... LOT ac g ski slopes. real • n . ousecomputersys. bdrm. den. 2~ ba. 1 ... 1•
I W 0 s or wa to poo . * " * rental record. Partners •Da""tele~i.....neserv1c.e bl•i .... ~.eoanav' .. l·s-n Newport Crest. . ceanfront 4 UR. $48000BKR ~1720 ...., ....... v...., -• Spucloua 3 Bdrm .• Z\A.a beach house. $335,000 ' • Good C.M. Loe 182,SOO. s plHtlng. mus t sell. •Vacanciesverlfleddaey t.a."8$mo 2131112-8659
b11tb. Kltc h i:n wHh Marshall Rlty 675-4000 TARDEU. Princonb'. Bkr.631-1234. $59,500. or trade for local •Fullstaffolcounaelors · t dinl --o• "'.._.G• property. 6'2·9666 •Free to a1ed 6Hc over Tennla condo. 3 Br 2 Ba.
separa e ng areti, up WESTCLIFF ftA""' ., •Free rental counseling tptc, uUl~, pool. su.·. gradedcarpeta&dropea. OutofC-_... Jlowo .. 7d 8 """' oo 2 car g.,. at: c w Ith Exclwilvc, c1111t.o~1ied 3 '"#I .. Calfonio" COUNTY r,..;ti''' 2550 ~ aya ;...,....: 1453
automatic opener F.x br, den, personality plua. PRIDE OF ••••••••••••••••••••••• RENJIMES Lr& 4 BR 3 Ba new bse cellent location & coodl Country kltchen. oak p-·uiY• F\all ,,.;. & yard ~ tJon. TeMls courtA, pool noon. bay window. fern MINI HORSE RANCH. 2 OWNERSHIP vwr '""'-Prof 1 al"-i 8'7 7851.K: •-..t-Jacuzzl, etc. l'lcnty 0j Sarden. Adult occupied. Br l Ba, lighted arl"na, CASH FLOW &... esa 00 i.XJrv ce • eep u, ... ,.
.:uest partUna. Sll!l,SOO Auppt.12 ~~-07er.580wner/Agt. tac000t rm, p58ony run. PCOO~DOl~5L New coostruction •-plex. PAii 898 077) Duplex. 2 brm 2 ba. ve17
By owner. Leavlni toi """' S72. · &l2-47 " 2Br. 2ba, roomy. cpt'd & '"8I .,, wee.. Pbone UpCJ'..sed.
lrtiM 1044 Logilllaleoch 1048 F.urope.Call6'2-1888. 30.4-yeorold,2bedroom, draped rent.als. WubJng ORSTOPBY 4.93-17615
....................... -····•••••••••••••···· •--..&.LL-'H-SOlllllL.ogma 1086 t ...,bathtownhouseun1ts. 1ac11 in 2 car gar. 8401 W....._.ter lmREMENT WEST ~ ...,,,.._ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Excellent area. Garden Sl.25,000. Call Geo. Frey (2 block:sE.olBeach) BToro 3232 SPARKLING HAVEN NEWPORTDUrLIX for IREATHTAICIHG Grove. Beautifully at542·MS6. AC.lit.Corp. SsnF~ ••••••••••••••••••••• ..
BEAUTY
2 Bdrm., 2 bath C.Ondo·a Beautiful p--.1 Ocean view; delightful 2 1 ands caped• pro . BEN HINKLE R. E. EASTSJDE .,, 3 B 2 We have all ai.ze9 homes &
:Jiort walk to beach. re on a corner lot w Ol't•an ._,...e BR, H4 ba. apt. <you'll fessionally managed. """ .. -... S"....A-. ' ne r, Coodoa from $350. Call
urcment & downtown. 'iews from both unit,. 4 ~est,cli£f "ruoi.ka from love the storage space). Refinance OT contract. """rr=..;:'s 2600 ba,
2
·car 3ar.J.ool/· today. Cua Pacifica Rl·
A fabulous Plan 106 in nR upstairs, 2 13H urtlt llr nerit tt r 3Br • 4'e. pool. Near beach. Will exchan,e. An ex--r-n'f jaCUUJ. Fnc ya 'tnil, t:y ~ $19,950. downstairs. Unlb 11how country kitchen All new elusive offer ing or ••••••••••••••••••••••• $450/mo.K.uia&pet.solt. ---· --------
the California Horne:> NORINS RE.ALTY pride of owneri.hlp decorutor cpt, wood OOnlyWN$89ER.500 QUA I L PL AC E TEXAS RANCH 644-0461 fff5-66'70 Super beautiful 3 bdrm, 2 featurei. include 3 Own . h 000f'K, New pumt in & •99·2094 PROPERT ES NW It )) ba, w/fam-rm. frplc. bedrooms, added fllmily * 494-8057 * er will elp llnanc· out. bltlos In c lude 1 • INC. · · area-1.ivestoc • v. DW. A!C. super area. room and central uir 1---------1 Ing. Ask1ni$189.000. ITU 0 & tr h w~"--1098 tn4) 752-1920, 1400 Quail oil & m ineral rig hts. 5450 ..., .. ~CD't &d t. N Unbelievable pnccG at 180decJl'eeYIEW VALLEY 640·9900 er wuve ·as com-inmwn>nn-Street, Suite 135, Over&,OOOacres.StOOper ·_.._,,,..en °
nl
. Pllctor,dblfrplc. .. ..................... Newport Beach. Ca. acre. Some terms, ask 1-ree_. ______ _ ~~~ by
8
.Uf''o" ~'':: ~"'.m~_ you'I w..t lo 1hoy. dbl d ot\ g><. Shnw• Uke a -• -~.~~ .... !~!.~ 0 Y $83,500. Catalina sunsets. & city 1-l Once you IH It 3br Condo. 2~ba, frplc, 92660 ror Wells.
elll!n!I. SP"CIOUS LIVl.._.G -S 149.500 898-~ owner. • • nus Is a hot one! Sharp COSTA MESA ba, across from Mlle Sq ~ St34,soo/ofr. 499-4685~~ llZ7Marinen ~-Bright o~~~· SEVEMUNITS EASTSIDE S425/mo.Lrg.ctn,4Br.2
" " 642·0953 54~524 3 investment with grealin· Lower 2 bedroom unit Park. CaU 751·2060.
CAMELOT !~':· ~b:~~~n1 ri~. OtherReol &tat. ~.'ix:.-RrJitC:y~f!ht at (714) 645-9950 with large patio & Lovely 2br,1~·ba condo. Ah~nlutt•ly sensational IFormall ~mlry open tho UDO IY OWNER ••••••••••••••••••••••• 540.3666 Red Estah ~~teroS~.J~dm •• Lwaoodr1e !~f~:,.. dbl aar. S32S.
R "HCH RE "LTY '11•ws of canyon waUs arge vin" room t ~~-LH-H ....... .,.;\Uvu _..,..,.,., "" "" 1 .. wi Open l2 ~daily. 20s Via --~ omu Ex~ 2800 but'ning fire place. ---------
551-2000 tt:t. i,:~r7Pe l~~e~x~•::~e brick fireplace, fully up· Jucar. Deluxe" lg brm 3 For Sale 1100 ....................... $385/mo. yearly. Hui1tliRC)I• hocll 3240
--· ------Ar 3 d c d k 1 l <' he n • ba, hune hv rm, 1 ' .. to•~. ••••••••••••••••••••••• w·u t d 2 B C,... "'OF .._.111:""90RT • ust-of tile: very fine landscaped yurd, fenced, . .... n ..., 1 ra e r, 2 Ba. ~ " ........ ,. •••• ••••••••••••••••••
WOODBRIDGE carpetmi: $2l5,000 (648) fruit trees, veActable patio, nr lcruus & beach. Huntington Beach home on Udo+ cash for REALTORS ENJOY
2PRESCO'ITS ~Ian garden, 2 car garage. _S249,500 675-6259 Blfl 2Br. 1969 Artcrafl TRJPL"'v,. ..... Sbrmbo!!!~onl.202Lldo. 675-551 I ..._1."CHLI"'"'
Largest Woodbridge $l40 000 o A 12x60. (HP4092). Just -. --.,,.., 1n1> -rs; homes. 2600sq ft.+3 car • . . wner/ gent. 3BR, 2'-!IEastblutrTrina. listed highly desirable Great Eastside Joe, MESA WOODS New 2 Star)' 3 Br. fam·
gar.Sor4br+den.3Ba, 673-7460 Bay \'U . $164.WO. 2165 park. See it today! newtt3br,Zba,fn>lc,yd. R.ealWEatote 2900 3 BR .. BA b' f ed rm 3Ba ~le lawtdry
tri d f II SEAVIEW BEST V•L,·w Vista Entrada, 673-3359 (2) 2br, lba, patio&, encl. ..tecl • ' • 1g enc • • ·• a um. air con • u y ,.., PAC I Fl C C 0 AST yard. 4 yrs old. ~/mo. book-up, d . l. garage.
lndsc, hiJ(hly upgr. l\lr't· New, upgr~dcd 3Br + S.Clemtnte 1076 RESALES,INC.963-0991 &~·::;,~tr,84.2·l603 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CALL75l..Jl9l SS!5/mo. Cbild/pet.s OK. ~:J.~:~~~~~~: ;l~.1~ ~ ~ ~~~~s price ••••••••••••••••••••••• 20' KENSKILL. Treasure ~!"gt~w~~ ~~~~or~: .SELECT Agenl. l4&·Ul1 or
& $196.000 U.e Sfl2ti/mn LAGUNA CHARMER. ' . IEACH DOLL HOUSE Island. South Laguna. Wider doi..out or So. Bay area? PROPERTIES -~--81-· -----
Hkr/Ownr 552-412l or JU.>duced $20,000. 4 Br. HVH ~fonaco 3Br, 2Ba, Walk to Riviera Beach. S3300. Taylor Made Rlty. 2DUPLEXESLEFT WIUPAY CASH!! LOVELY 3 BR, 2 Ba wkdays 8J5.Js35 ba. den, sep dln'g rm, xlnt cond, else to schl & On natural canyon with 499-2986&496-4486 Near S.C. P laza Bier Ph. Tom D'Allesundro ua s c .. ..... ... wtrrpl, DW. crpt. kid/pet
f I b t pool $136 500 640 1440 ·• B 2 b ss7 -9710 ~ ' ' ,. _..._ OK. S.UO. ll63-4'i61 "den.L rp <", asemcn •rec rm. • · · ocean view . ., r, a. 2Br, 2Ba, lge patio. ocean T.D. PROPERTIES 2 St.oli' Executive pool No fee. ... ;.o
pool, jacu:m, sundeck. 4 Pl lOOft r with extra '1'1 l?t. Never view. So. Laguna OCEANVJEW Duplex, (213)674·6907 or (714> home. 2600 ·sq. ft. 4 ---------!'iomc ocn vu. $215.000. · ex, · ro:n ocean; again at only $125,000. 499-4710, 67S·l606 sw""' from beach. Upper 546-6201 a efyti me or Bedrrn. 3 bath, includes 2br, 2ba, gar.•· -••A bcb I~ m•r will 11cll on con-SUS.000 W /land· ,.., 'Q uu""
11 ,
11
.l or Cdrry 20c1. MarshallRltr. 675-•600 PRICED RIGHT SE.ASIDEBEAUTYMB 3 bedroom. lower 2 (714)846-522laft.6pm pool service. $650. mo. $395 lffi
1
.,
07
bedroom. 6 Car garage, Pri t . t <Dave) S45·7SOG e\·es . .,.., 1---------•I San Clt!mente"s foremost Sea cups & sunsets, a btrl huge fenced yard. Ask-ve e investor w ants o 3br, fam rm, lrg mast.er
Walk to heh. Sharp
2
Br. UDO SANDS value. "Canta mar" 4 Br, family paradise. 2Br + mg $180,000. Make nn of. deal dt~ctly with thl' New 3 Br 21h Ba, 2 car bdrm,pool,$-175 family home on cul-de bonusrmtnEIMorroRy fer! Wor ld Wid e seller whowantstosell gar, fplc, (•pt~. d rps,
hllns, frµlc, gJr. pat. lblocktobcach JBdrm h t l f · • Secluded. $ll
9
,:rno. · · SjC rorm~r. high above t.he Sea, your own pvt Brokers 6734545 ,.is proper Ya n air E/Sidc. $550. 631-0303 & 4br,pool,"°"mitooeean. 499.~138 2 ba, 2 patios. dbl .iur · the city. C.:all for long hst bt•h, park rent only $160 . ' --price. 1 am interested in 646-7~ $625
we h~l\f' :! !'Ian
3
·s in ~.-fnctJyard. Privacyatthc of outstanchng features. CALL TOD A Y 1 •2Triplexe1• .any type or real estate. --714-8'6-5666,BobGraf Orangl'lrrl' LOCATED LCICJUIMI Hills I 050 beach and we rent tor Tran.'ifern>d, asking only (PK.1096 > Near Lake Parlt. Mm. to ie., homes, apts. com'l or l Br. cpts, drps, 2 enc. __ ......;_..;._.....:.......;........:... __
ONTllEWATf<:lt.TotJI •••••••••••••••••••1••• ~1Sdhurou1s~Agh~•hseAuwr1tn1tacpr. $154.500. CALJFORl'IIAPA<.:IFIC bch.l-4DR,3ba;1·3 BR industrial, so long as it Wporcpdhes. fn58cd yd. $300. SU PER 4 Bdrm. 2 ba
CHAMPAGNE
TASTE
BEER
POCKETBOOK!
ly upgraded with many LESURE WORLD "' " u , U~ftTllA tl~NH y Mobile Home Realty 21,; ba; 1·3 BR, 2 "a. S makes economic sense. tr . fff5-10; 642·0393 w/frplc. DW, crpt. fed
additional featur1~. Ten Jo'inally, a chance to get peal. Asking SlJ9,000 REALTORS 2706 Harbor, St.e 208 earages, frplcs. $185,000 Ralph L. Hansen days. MESA VERDE 3 Br Fam yrd. $425. 963-4561 ,\ient. nL~. gym, pool, spa and in!
3
Bdrm.,
2
bath & Newport Pier RJty 215 Del Mar 492-4121 540-5937 each. 1'09-1713 Alabama, 83.S-6665oreve673-9995 Rm. 2 fplc's, nu' cust _no_f_ee_. ______ _
!'iaunas. Both locations brand new hilllop unit. 673·2058 FtXER.UP·S ... VE Hunt. B ch. 536-1718 drps. $475 a;rdnr &nc. 2 Story Condo. New
are pnced under $55,000. Fipans1ve views of the " Mobile Home Llvin9 Owner· Rtntal• 839-4945 beigetone cpts. drps . Located on the Bluffs, At lh Finest ----••••••••••••••••••••••• N · valley. $85,900. BY OWNER rantasllc ocean view 2 We have numerous & 7 Units. 6 -2Br & 1 HoMlel Fwnlshed deal 3 br. 2 ba new 2 ew pamL 8 Br. 1 ... ba. .
R.A ... CH REALTY
551-2000
.....,,,Rl .... S RE "'LTY Br fpl tbar o... ~t ••'-·' Bllcbel-pool 1t.eP1 to .. -. • .-c/mo. WW •-e pool, &eonla. reo lla1L f"llV "" A Charming Npt Hts. 3 Br, , C, we • ..,...., e beau ...... mobile homes bch ... ~·000 m d ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0"-pt". ~IJi·S~aT .... ,.ea #TS. Pb557.asz:t -* 494-8057 * FR. 2 ba. 2 blks to Npt s1l1e Needs work, you for sale ln establish"' • --· · owQ, ..... lalollkl 3106 ° • y - - -Bay Trop ~a rdcni. <"an~avcSSS parks in C:\I, Nwpt Bch. Owner 64S-072l ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673-8484 3br. cpt.s, drps, f'rple. dbl
1.ml'lv 4br. lrg Cam rm j(az.ebo. Ask for Dan or VlewRealty Huntin gton Bch . 7UHITSC.M. Luxunous 3Br, 4Ba, N. BestMESAVERDEarea. gar.pa~io.fncd yd.$t00..
"'lrpk L1vrm.dinrm Frank, agt, 751·8189 770-0555 4967722 L<1guna, El Toro, Ftn Beauufulbrandncw'4·l Bayfront home Deluxe4Br,2ba,famrm, STh-5810,642·0393
Bltn chtna closet Pro( days. C\ c; li -1 5 2549. San.Juan V I Y. An ah e 1 rn & br, lofl. f/p. 3.2 br, H"'l ba w/Jacu.ni. yrly or sh_ort blt.ru, frplc. nc"A pamt & Sharp 3 Bdrm. 2 ba. DW.
ch'lo. 3 c:ir i:Jr. Yr old S129,000 eapitrano 1078 Westmmsler. In price townhouse. all bltns. term, $1500 mo. A\a1I carpet, J:ardcnl'r S5-tS <"rpls. fed yrd. s395•
O\.\nl'r.7SS·511l1 Ba f 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ranges lo f1L most crpts, drps. Hurry. buy now. Lora Vance Rllr 515-~ ___ 96J-4567""cnt-No(ee y root. uxunous con people's pocketbooks. now . lst user dcprec. 673-4062 , d 1 ___ "«>-"------do. open dJ1ly 12.30 lo 3. $10,000 lo S.t0.000. We are Tom Lee. Rltr, 1142.1603. •.-a......--·-' New con o w, lranqu1 :?:!!Xbq ft. 4 brm, 3 ba. tri· VIEW LOT L>ccrf1cld, i\:.1w11. 3 BH. :!• ~ ba , l!ilS BOQ end of :l Bdrm Townhome. Up·
1·ul dl' "ar orwn Sot. Rradcd .re!lales al
Sun 12 5 Jh <l\\IH'r S113.000 .. sacnftt-c ror
633 Lido Park Dr . A I CAPISTitAHO as near as your phone _.. renln-a 3107 p a no r a m a v 1 l' w . lex 1 r old 2 car ar
S219.500 Agl 675-5.200 HACIEHD... CALffORNIA PACI flC 4 PL"'..,·I"' "CH ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fl replace. 3 master size Pl : d Y d ·, I ~~~" • ,.. M b' H R I .:;;A '"" ··o E ... OD ' bdrm 3 b h . en(l' yr • rp. '"'"·
H .1.a•oRVUHOMES Perfectforlargerarn1I.>' 0 tie ome eutv $185000 "' V 1,, T A'i . s, al i.,ceramic l!:ves536-3964.or960-4648 ~ 2706 llarbor. Ste 208 • Quatnt 2 br oce.anrroot ule entry, beautifully
2br, +den or3 brm. 2 ba, Ctrculnr driveway leads 540-5937 Xtra sba.rp Covington collage. Quiet. Xtra carpeted &draped, trai>h 4 Br 2 Ba, nr Golden West
parquet entrance. all up· to this very large 5 · 4-plex. Pnme H.B. loca parking Fully furn $4IS compactor. Balcony & & Slater. Lse at $52.'i. 1st
SJS.500 · !'>52 3811 $75,000. with 30 day
----.escrow. SS1-l234
COLLEGE PARK
SPECIAL
Fantastically b('aut 1ful
PURDUE. Adult lived in
only. Entirely upgraded
and Ideally located on
large corner lot with a
beautiful entry. Central
air and profess1onally
landscaped
SUPER VIEW grades. By owner. Prin. ~~~~P~~~l~r~~f':~I BEACH PEOPLE llon. lmmal:! Need fast per m~. 552-774.9 or 2"2 car garage w/elect & last. call 536-3145 or
HO c;>UALIFYIMG only. St39•750. 644"7463• ly room & country See us for yoor Mobile sale. $185,000. 752-1700 or 675-9267. opener. Kids OK, no pets. 847-0293 Ml 3/1.
Five year new home, or~1440 kltchen.$325.000 Home. We specialize In 7~,~},'!f'9·11S11JNro"'""''' ..............,._ h sssomo.96.1·9784. totally upgraded pricedSeaview, by owner. Ex· beach area h omes .I ....., ... ,....,_.ac 3169 4 BR. pool, Spa, frplc,
PA.
C 1 F I C C 0 '
A ." T , .• ,.. ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• KIDS/PETS OK Kld.'1. pet OK. Nr shops.
to sell Ill a hurry a t otic vu, ocean, Fashion ·~ ·~ $72.500.Sellertocurryall Isl. mnt. Nu 3br Broad· RESALES, INC. 21036 ~ 353VIALIOOSOUD East.slde. 2 Br, gar, $325. schools,$450 mo.S48·5669
fmunclnl!. moor. Hampton mod 3 ?.fooarcbBayPlaia Br oo kbu rst, H .B . ·~ . • DRIVE BY. 2 bdrm. 64&-4848or675-8258 COZY 3 bdr 2 ba
U aded 1 ed
963-0991 eleganUy furnished, col· m • k d • 754·7800 pgr . mm . poss. La,unaNiguel or TV. deck, view of Shan> 3 Br 1.,.. Ra, btl! w/cpt, fed yrd, I 11 &
S'259,000. 644-8M9 496-7222 831.0836 Ulness, must sell. 3 brm 2 MANSION & INCOME water. S'700/mo. family rm. w/fplc. 674 pet s ok. $385. 963-4.567
WESTCLIFF ba. 24'x60'. Finest CM Eastside hugeold redone WATERFRONTHOMES CoveSt.S4~mo.673·6.'l36 Agent.Nofee.
dll k P I 3 br, den, 2 ba. Bach. a pt Spacious 3 BR. den.s.ta.Ano 1080 3 pr · 00 · Jae . overb1ggarage.Lugsof 6lt-l400forappl. 3 br,2ba,2cari:arage,2brmcondo,l\.-!aba.frpl.
family rm. home wiU1 3\o'J ••••••••••••••••••••••• $34,500. Owner. S4S·5G8l avocados ready to pick. (rplc. Kids ok. No dogs patlo, pool, S340. 532-4015,
baths, lge. laundry rm BeCAPTIVATEDbytb1s Loads of character. HouMsUnfuml.a..d S4l5.mo.G45-2274 cve:..768-3266or497·3976
with walk-in pantry. $6400 price reduction. A.creogeforSale 1200 Sll5.000. OwnrfAll ••••••••••••••••••••••• b lacJMOHICJ'MI IOS2 brick frplc . & w /w Comtempor arlly de·••••••••••••••••••••••• 642.-0282 General 3202 2 BR duplex. Cplc. i:ar, 3Br,lba.1nrbch,sc Is&
••••••••••••••••••••••• carpets O\'er hdwd. Ors. cor'd, central air, ~· Cst INVESTORS ••••••••••••••••••••••• cpts, drps. stove. lndry. shops968: ~918Y med yd. $350
6A~ ~ aealhlalt' Inc
PASTO•"'LVIEW Tastefully de{'orated Plaza area. Sacrifice al Five acres South of 14UNITS·E-SIOE IESTREMTALS grdnr&wtrpd.S290per mo. -o I· ~ with shutters, paneling & $19.500 flurry & call: ,.._ ed d BY OWNER mo. 494 5349· 581-4179 · Monarch Summit 11 Plan wallpa"""· Lge. patio & VERN JOHNSON RLTR ..,.,..,.,a on pa11 roa · Eves· t>.'Jl 1810 Laguna Beach · · 3 Br. Country kitchen.
R
"....,.HR"'"LTY u 3 Br 2 ba prof ..-~.n•a•" GoodforlolsplJt.BKR. DanaP0111t; '"e"--.. -JBr ai·r mJ·r crackling frplc.$395/ml'I.
"'""' l>A 0 • • • • 2-sty. playhouse for the .,...,..,....., 1n4> Sil!-5'717 La ""' VUlllUU, 551-2000 Ind s c pd & dee r t 'd. Jmls $170000 OR522·2080 494-1ofS'Naig3uleJf41 I appl .• tennis. ~ts.'S475. _!16 4288 _____ _
____ , Sll&.900. Owner bought a MEwPORT IE.ACH • 64&-2143:~97 IEACH HOUS&-3 Ir.
-~:
WOODBRJOOE PLACE 49~0lt;t. ~1.;~ri RW.TY 675-1642 For Ad Act.ion TROPICAl:ISLE bdlllln ~ll Nice 2 BR. 1 ba. fncd S450 mo 53~Hl952 Special offering. 3·5 Wiii sell interest in Large 3 br owner·s unit yard, encl gar, $280 mo --•LOOK•
bdrm. Contemporary de· 3 Br Trina plan end unit in C UNlQUE ISLAND with Anaheim. Pvt cul-de.sac 2544 Orange 548·2778 tached family homes In ThelJluffs. $149,750flrm all 3 miles of b eautiful St. r " ·t Short or long term ren·
d P l l A
...,.rge. spac. uni s. ""-Bd open. woodsy eslgn. rinc p es only. gent beaches in WORLD Must see to apprec rASt.aide, new crpls & tat. lmmac 3 rm +
Just short walk to lake & 8JS.0'139 after Spm. Daily Pilot FAMOtJS ARE". Neat Priced lo sell fut! Call •VE1'S* drps, remodeled 2 br Fo.m. rm. +Din. rm. Nu
parks in VlllaAc of Wood· IWFFS SPECI "L Jet Port & city. Now be· Broker now ! 558-3327. You fought for it, own a w/stove, refrig, patio & {'pl.'i & fresh paml. Avail.
bridge. From $115,000. ....IGUEL SHORES " AnVISOR ing MASTER PLANNED piece of It now, no down. fncd yd. No pets. $325. immed. $425 mo. Call 552-4101 " Just listed, stunning 3 U-by INTERNATlON· VeteranHou.slngAgt. mo.646-8300 Mike,847-f.010
IUILDER'S h~~'f!\~:sv!~r:;.~, !~ ~~e:~~~I~:~~~ 642-5678 ~~ ~8~R~*1LJ'~n~ INVESTORS S4 l.OIOO IACK IAY Clean 2 b-r-m--r e_a_r-of CLOSEOUT bath medlt. style home, home, fantasUc view & wit.b beach frontage Have to sell within one HOMEF1NDERS Spacious 3 br 2YI b a duplex, l ba, 2 car gar. with extras you won't manyxtraa. For details WITH VAST POTEN· wtc.tor45 dayescrow.l 2 ThousandsofRentals t ownh ome. 'Frple , nu crpt .. adults. $285.
IM llYIHE believe. Aslung $350,000 call: A.gt. 552-4414 Don't give up the ship! TlAL! $5.000 required. uniltJ, all 2 bdrm. Land All areas all prices modem blt.ns, W ID hook· 1016~ Cahf. St. S34·2S90
Only 2 patio homea left. . "List" lt in cluslfied. 673-1314 Prin only. can fOl' 8 more. W/side CM. Sarftple: up, F /beatlng, dbl gar, Luxury living by the sea
One2Br+deo,&cone3Br m···1 ftwbn>& Fj._~1"wPilhatCylou want In Ship to shore r esults! todayforappt. ....,... ti SllOBacbcottage freeut fncd yd. com m. pool, inR F ' plan, both w/2 baths, nn--~~ ~ ot aulfleda. 842•5678• =.·~·.,Ownr000d~1 cParrriny $1502brwon'tlast! jacunJ. tennis & clbhse. ~xcc 5
Br, D +mg. dnamr f-' frig t d l ~u.., E ...,.. .... _,, wu. • .,.,o3brv.d I S42S mo Atn 631 l268or Rm. immac r • ~~u:;!tnl(.er!t~ror~ 499·2eoo .._...,....leodt 1069 t•.,..-ilNdl 106' OH ACRE Clftly.Agl.642·5M4 ... urmlt1s4k~~CE MS-i43S;..k~d· · S650. Avl Marc h 1.
wardrobe doors. z ea •••-• .. •••.•••••••••• ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• Beaut. count.ry Uvin1 in 557-0822 .;;.962:.:=...~.:..:.:.5=------gar w/auto opener ... plwi <llarmlog new 3 Bedrm + this 1reat home. 3500 14. Loft.for Scih 2200 Eastside • br, 1\.11 ba, fncd b co~OO alnt
full 1"fJCreatioo facihUes den, 2 bath. tam-rm, rt .. 3 car garage. lots of •••••••••••••••••••··~· -..oa hi.cl 3206 yd. 226 Sierks St. $365.
2 v::; sh;rp. ·.;:;_P Nie~
indd·a 8 h tbted tennis A/C, French dr~ pvt CE trees, fenced. bam. Xlnt. IUILDBS ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo.~ area ~ 1st & lruit -+
cow1.I 2 poola and a palr front courtyard. $123,900 terms SKll. South of~ 3 Br ' --b of ja"i'.i.nUI.. All this and ~r 1131-7098 'tn •> 6'1i·561U . v••nee County. ' c.....,_.. to »Y. yrly 3br. wall to wall crpts, secur 963·5705 ... OR ., .... _nun {'h01Ce lot • acreaae IAe. $495/mo. dn>e. sml fned yrd, car --------
lrvmo too' On lrvlne BIB IL · I .,.. _...., Many to cbooM from m S56-3900orM6-2633 avail. 962·5050 HIMtlncJtOft
Center Dr. (ldoulloll ~nsive!~ 110 Ml llQ CotmMtclal beaut arHa. L•"t of ...,_,...._ 1207 -• ...._,. 324% Prttway) JU'\teast ofJef. Five t>edroom111 on pool 11iJ U 1 p ..t'I 1600 speculall v~ market. Cl EASTSIDE 3 Br, 1 ba, •••••• .. •••••••••••••••
frey. sized lot with mature OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE •• ::.1.~a.•••••••••••• BKR. ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• avail 2/10. S400. 1st, SGOO. Ellec: art level 0,.. fTL•t.o'7S.~ IMClscaplng; gaze upon (114) 6'1i ~1 3 Br Z Ba. ftr Paviboll, laat+dep. Kids. pets. bch ts t.cnnis 3 + 3 + c.Jl15l·UISd•~• mount.&m.1 & valleys; all HEW LISTING MEDICAL ILDG. 01\522-0580 $460 mo Yrlf. Will ~ O.K. Call 546-5880 A.Ill tOl' Fo.m Rm +' grdnr ht~ orl5H14le~. ~!~C:,:· :efil:.111tt ~~ SAUotlLIASI RudJtobQildonlot,lan ~=:.~1 Leslie aar. ownr. aft 4PM
J>n1119UcElceobm•,IBB IW,500W • 21101qft.NttportBlvd. t.uUcocea.Dvtew•wal.k ' 3Br, lBe, eara1e, renud ~ 2 Ba. Dinlnl Rm I& > Immaculate 4 Bedrm .• "C .. Plan eo.taMeaa. tobeacb.LQ\ma. Cllfhll-lffdl 3218 yd. view. pet, kid.I OK.
1
• .,.,....;.;;.;...;....;;:__. ___ 3_2_4_4
Ubl'art.cC: tadtcpd Townhouse. '84!autlrully Decorated Irvtn.~tn. Owner/al*St171-1'298 ....................... S3SOmo.~10 • ...................... .
w/JiPta. toaoatn ln Yellows & Greens. Gracious 'IWo . bncbhoUle. Ltrae IEMTA&.S ~~1trtf, ~ Entry With Separate Guest tnc:o...~ 2000 ~~~ ::J18'i'J~1493"4353 or
41c1~;i!t.ba~~n>~ ~ 1BR,2a. ....... $52atm
l6:M'14 Suite. Witl(llng Stairway Leads To ....................... i...testat.elot,locat.edln 55e-6045or9'71>-lM)'79 a»a.a~ba ......... ss:tS .
High Ceilinged Jtviog Room & DuPlex. N~. adi' 3 & 2 the Beverly Hllla of C.-.cW M9r 3222 'BR, 21" ba .••• tas/850 WOOOlltOGI S U Mod• • l . Mrma al<M by aide, 800 Oranse Co., known as ....................... New 2 br condo. Pool, apa. d \R, 3 Bo ....... $6ZSl'l'5
Broeidmoorb0me.4BR •• ..._Va.to • 1047 C~e'::ful ~~o~~cr~iwr:•eea. blk6tW.BalboaBlvd.t BananaBolt. BR 1 ba ~1 beam ~m~.A~so2br h~t •
ram. rm , •trfum, poof, ••••••••••••••••••••••• O blk toocn & bay on Peno, Tom t"'itterer Ct!IJ.: pv( 9~Uo. "2,s. Aat 6'T5-4iJ e: pet is
0
• 11>11. d kn .. Ind cpd., "--v verlooking Spadoull Sun·Deck. Prtoooly,tu20CM Btltlnv tmcnt." 49'7-3388.87W3$4 12 r ·'
ftftt.cl "Th• work1•• AWN ma Hallway I.end8 To Masttr Suite * E lit t 1'11 tm •COLLP.:GE PARK. Bfoaut ~~toS.125.~ ~~n~~l~hb7'&~':.~~ Plus Two Extra Bedroom . Hurry 13WMOfll30~ 91naerb:•&~ 1}~:c• f~~ 3 Br. 2 Ba. focd. chldr11
18U00.213roe9-2363 -CoU ow SJ43.SOO C·2 ZON.£. Do•nlo•n pado. ao of tout Uw)'. dk."45/mo M0-_7_~ __ 1
WOCDlllMI ---CM.lOhJ•.'80..000 No pet.a '400. Dan, VEB:YPIUYc\TElBRal
vt tOCnethlnt yoa want eu.Gm 6 t4.S U ..._mi 4....,..... toMllT CJ.Mall•ed adl do 6311• ll&ll pd. IZ50. New cpta. Q D • 0\ WW.-• tt well -Call MOW, • D COSTA ~A Idle Ima ,,Illa • .._. ad~t.1. DO Poll· DY1
Oftlr/*'ID'l.,. MNITI. 8"tG ......... -.-1 lllDiPDotOllllliitfieidAd =·~·---
' ...... u~ HcMn.sU1tfwtlhM.d • "' ..... ,..*4 ..,. ...... u.mn. Atwwt............... tROo.w 4000 Tlle9dav.February7 1973 t>AllVPtt.OT C1 ........................................................................................................................................
...._ l244 1eoce. 32'9 M.w,.,.leoc.111 J'Hf c.t.MeM 3124 ,.......,_._. 3140 Boomw/kltcbenetto Of&.R...tal 440 ....... plt"IOftClh U SO
....................... ••••••••••••• ••••••• ••. •••••••••••••••• .. ••••• ••••••••••• ••• ••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• S5C> week &: up. •••••••••••••••••••••• O,p 1 twty SOOS ••••• •••••••• ... •• • • ••• • t•---------1COSTA M!:SA-2140 UAMDHEW 54&-8755 . IXPAH.DIHG787 ••••••••••••••••••••••• RELAXINGMASSAGt-;
ADULT COMOO Tburln Street. Brand 3 Br apt/condos, conve-Temftc ratH start at llO" new deluxe 2 bedroom nientloc,SunitaavL$400 ba.sl.ador Inn lll Co.ta in the draiuruc N.B. Sandwich Dt'liv ery BobJames-Lu~M:useur
2BR,.Zba.7"lt·$425 unit.. Lovely apaclous '$.9&&-1.507 640-1751 Mt.>sa, 2277 Harbor. Cen· A1rport bus 8"a. SP9ce Ser'vlc.. S..-.inK s c&Ue& , __ Out __ c_all~•....;9';...4_M_·_SU_l_
STEPSTOIE.ACH townbome type with --'----''-----trallylocated,23Srooms.1 a\•BJl:U33to2241t.q.rt. Short br11. $5000 m o U&SS"'GE
TurtJeroclc C br. bm rm. i:JtecullveSbdnn.
dm rm. 2 ba, view of UCJ Sl 100/mo. lease
Lee. Grdnr, waler, H • 752-1700A;t.
llOO. cNe:s pd by owner. ~s. Ul971 AotJocb. Ail-Back Bay.Qarouna 88r.
50-5002 big Yd. pet5, ern ba"' AC. Bach. Wlll. yearly S23S cau Carol at 89M013. Case .. Sol phone .& TV. Swimming Clartc. 83M813 ors top by terms. Pvt pty. ~ FICiURI WODELS 3BR,2ba,yearq$47S pool, J»Cuu1, and rec. Commerce Park 4100 or847-9420eves. ESCORTS
3BR,2ba,unf.$475 family rooms. $350/mo UVENearTbeBeach! MANY wllb. kitchen., Call Prop. Mar Judy aross. Trade for! or EZ ~ A
2BR.lba,wtnterl32S NEW2BE.DROOM BeauUfulAdult Apla room. Daily & weekly BirchSt ' twwport Shores IA.YFROMT COHDO 2 Br, garage. AJC. $315. ..~~ ~.:!_~t~!.~. HBd. rates st&J'Uni from S48 a . ..._... W-.d SO I 0 OUTCAU. ONLY
$425 mo. 646-llSS Woodbrid&e, New 4 br.1---------1
3ba, fam rm., A/C, nr
park " pool $550/ruo. 6"G-1°'4 bid
1.. ._... .,_.,,. ..,,cc: .u.-.. D&VVa.U.., a.. week. AIRPORT OFFICES ••••••••••••••••••,•••• Ont.be water. lge 2 stry.. Sec. C. Z BR. 'Yfy $800 ....... ............... , ___ 9_6_U_6_S_l ___ ,, ___ 64S__;_-4&_;._4.;..0 __ -1 1 & 2 room suites, all .. ANY'" bualneas/real 1 ___ ,_l_l_·3_8_l_I __ _
~k den,d3 :a, ~ f'?lcs • Ylla Vista A.pta services. No leaae req·d. eataw proje<.'t w /poteo· DANCE OF FUN Ternce Twnhm 3 BR, 2 ea woo ec , oa • 20'TBTburio 2Br, cblldreo welcome, no lBr, M/F, share batb & From $14$. mo. 2a82 S.E. lial that needs rmancing,
Ba, frplc, wel-bar Pvt d 0 c k • $ 8 5 o I m 0 • Brand new, larce 2 br, pets, start.lo& at SUS mo. tit. hOD•llmoker S125 mo. Bristol, Suite 200. NJI. accounting, etc. Cal~ Mr. BUl nude girls dance &. ~~=~~~014 days, ~~~~ep. '27 l~ be tDwnhoose w/fam 84oMllY1 l:::-+_u_UL_83Ml __ 7i_a_rt_&_P_M--:-;-.!.:(7~U!:>::SS::'.:7:..:.·7:,::M:!:O~----l·-=P.1Ml'l=.:.=303=.:../~=::::::..._-1 ~~ sM:;~i. 1~~~ ~~
Rent./lease. Big Canyon,~~~~~~~~~~~ ~M~~a.reL =i603 NEW I & 2 Ill Sleepln1 room w /bath. Neat oflice in Laguna a..nt.ftt ~~!· .~ N. Eucla~ OranpTree, 2 BR. new. BR, 2 b S795 8 • I Xlnt loc. child ok, bltn. Over 50. $120 mn, $50 area, DIOlllh to moeth °'" ()pportwllty SO 15 _....
$425Monlh Tennis. apool & ra~~-·1---------1112 Br, l"' Ba townhouse, gar,fplc.$270+.962-7787 cleaning dep. 548-5337, sut.-lae.~117& ••••••••••••••••••••••• FREESESSIONW/A L>
-
_ _:..Ag::..:.c;.;.nt:..;644:...::..:..·..:.ll::.:.33 __ , """1..ft281,0'>'>J231 BACHELOR APT. aaraae. patio, pool , aslc for Mac ·-~--------· Excellent dlatrtbutor L1 ... o•&Vl"v1 .,,, .,...... • • Ad l I cos. TA MESA .... ~ine•s. Great po•an· " ,,. -New !Br, 2Ba, 2 car ,acuu:a. " u ta 00 y . New deluxe s Br front Beaut rm, p vt beth. "-'-olJ .,..., " """ -.--..... _ .. ~ 3 BR. 2~ ba Eastbluff ALL',_.'~PD' 2010 pJd Id u """ ice9Wte.428sq.ft. ti-'.~ a"ent:I. Call for ~""-gara_ge, pool, jacuzzi, condo. Vil.. Poo· l. •D">< mo u .i.u.;> • owner's uolt. Ground em mature ll y. te .....,,,. .• 1 ... "" • ~ .......... ir..-of .• itA"" ......, 1""' f th l L B h .,.,.,., OOVI avau. nclds ~-~or 41111·2010 .._...._.._
t.enms,.......,mo.SS9..SOSO 2165 Vlata E o trad ~ml f~b~o~:a~i MESAPIHES level, no apt above. Fplc, ~~e •· •I c • u&il., 8.U", music, ample ;. ServtnaaliOran1eCo.
4brm2 ba. lv rm, dm rm, 673-3359 nnw! ~1 E. Balboa Blvd 1 BrS285.2Br S350.Some blw, W/Dbkkp,earage. ~~ 179 E. 17th St.•·u.-_;.___.._-. ------50_2_5_, m.m3
tam rm $400 w/saraces. Pool, $4.1.5,MS.3&04,963-42l8 Mature8a{'hw/nice furn __,,, .._..,.v_.. • mo. S-a.-nte Yrly $2SO per mo. NO j -·-' .. "ul nd N B h ••••••• •••••••••••••••• •SANDY'S* 6"·1480.~lt22 F EE. Call: Sue a a ... -....w.a."" ts, no pets. Exclmift2Br condo,1at· co 0 • as room sqft,5olcsonamonth • ·-·· • ·--•••• •••• •• 556-T707 anytime Open daily. 26SO H aria ed area, pool tennis ~ w /own beth for same. '° IUllth f , I st. W Ir 3rd T J) .'• Woodbridge4 bdrm, Magnificent ocean view. Ave. CM. (Mesa Verde mllo to bcb. 'Adlts C:.Uy W/gar., pool & k:lt prtv. 2 or .... oacer LOA.NS AVAILABLE
sharp. S750/mo.lse. eaeoutlve home; L rg Dr E. olf Harbor Blvd). Kr. or Mrs. H atch bUta oa:a. $188. Mi-te94 Ulul~o CreditJ10problem.
Agt152·1700 faro rm, trlr accesel pre· Bach Apt. Attract. Sm 549-2447 847.2543; (21.3)s92•1ssi alUPM .....,, 752·5903
Or etree P ti h
.. s tige location, ~S50. yard. 620.,., Clubbou~. .,.__ 1----------"No "-.ta Mesa s rm'"""'•----------• ang a o ome, " 496-l'T72 See weekeNh or call late LA.JlGE 2 IR ic..Ya. Vocatioft lantah 4250 · """' ' ....,
•SHERJLEE•
Cenlfaed Masuu.se
Ht!Ule~Us ·By appl.
l3M&38 BR, 2 ba, Dbl gar, A/C, weekeves2l3/S:W·36'15. $13 ••••••••••••••••••••••• sq. ft. $321 mo. All Money Available, many Temois, pools. clubbse. New 3Br, 2ba Condo with 5 MO BEAUTIFUL BIG BEAR CABlN, 2 Br. &r..-d noor, front prkg. sour<'es, all pr ojects.
Never occupied. 552·8493 many amenities. cbt.ld OCEANFRONT ~~.1d!v!"cf'>.:':r~tgl~~l. HUMTIMGTOM (pie. alps 8. week or ~~c.:...:£.ror. atlllc, etc . $SOK aia. 752"'°52 i--f-O_X_Y_L_A_D_Y __
•-leodl 3249 OK, no pets. $450/mo AVl now lil 6/1/78. Dix 4 adult;'," 00 pets. Ideal for PACIFIC wknd. 754-&'Wl -~ .._.,, W..ted 5030 :=;::::••••••••••'••••• 831-0191 Br 2 Ba, 2 car gar, sun-adulltl 35 or older. 300Sq.fl.w/pvtbat.h. ••••••••••••••••••••••• o.tcalMcnsage
Dow
...,,.
0
W... San L-de<:k, W/D, D/W, Family LEEWARD APTS. 2020 Bacbelor from S27~ R_.to SIMre 4300 S145/mo. Private Party needs lster 731-3561 "' " ,..-=:"' 32 8 only. $600 mo. incl ut1l. Fullerton Ave, 1 blk E. or ~~ J!d~o!:! •••••••••••••••••••••• • Aet. 548·7729 2nd TD Private loan. ----------LA GU MA _.,..strano 1 2910 w. Oceanfront. Newport Ave, 1 bJk s. of BESELECTIVE 5000sq.r.t . beach front Phys ical Massage by
Deluxe 2 bdrm .• 2 bath ••••••••••••••••••••••• 774-1973or 53S-6017 <71•> Ba 631-0397 BEACH LIVING Gain a reliable lulimns l...tal 4450 Estate 00 sand. Sold for Tberapi&t. My stud au.
duplex rental. Ou~t11nd · 3 Br Condo, 2 ba, gar • y, • 7110cean 536-1487 roommate. •••••••••-• .. ••••••••• S8SO.OOO. Please send N.B. Lea;1t ma1>sage. llv
ing ocean & villa~e vu-w, w/opeoer, pool. $350 mo. 3 Br. 2 ba, spacious dlx. ew 2 Br 2 Ba, blt.ns, cpts, 418 22nd St. Apt C 2 Br 2 Call Share A Home/ Apt 4 DB.UIE OFC'S replies to P.O. Box 533, Appt. only 9·7, Sle\'e
yet.ooly a few ahort blks. Call 493-9796 Ste P s t 0 w a t e r • 631drp!;,,,,Sor352;a 7E,!!lside. Ba, fplc, ne~ ~pts & 64l>-746Sor 644-5658 Conr. rm., seat as. all PaS9deoa, CA 91J01 548-2817 to town & bcac" llu"e .,__._ ""--.. 280 Furnished. Pref s~ort """"" .,..... ....., . t $'"'0 $'75 ~ft-'ed sm _ ... ~e 1· ---------
J
·v •-dtrun· g'"81 .
0
.., .-...u-~ lse. $49S/mo. 209 41.st. pain •. gar, ov • • Fem t.oshare2br2ba apt. ~ • • w un n n~ Mort T t PREGNANT? Carini:.
1 ·rm:.,. c .ve. ....................... ('>l.J)S69.s985 944-6914 ge 3 Br Townhouse move m. Avl now. Open Rec facil & pool, C.M. ar. l.ot 2 yr. lease. Lake ~ rus 5035 confidf!nliaJ counse.tinR & ~~~·1 .ki~~:h7~b:l~-~n::2 Bedrm,2 balb.$300.mo. _,;(7J4)673·J(V,)~r · with patio, garage+ wknds. or call a.ft. 5:30 55&2940G«le 1''orest. area. Kent ••~-............. referral.Abortioo,adop·
Separate 2 t':tr garage !!k for Keith, Bkr. pool. Quiet com pix. 847·3241 Har~4 SIU~ uon&k!'epmg
An outst.andin~ ofrcrini: ~J.317or962-4471 ""--~-'-1776 Adults, no pets. $400: Newl&t,yHuntingt.ooCon Fem. t.oshareNbeau\. 2Br. • LOWEST APCARE • 547.251,3
$
500 1\1 R r _.. ._.....".... 645-3381oc67~9 . do, 2 Br H \ Ba, adlts,· opt. Laguna •&:ue $152. Approx. ..00 liq. ft. C ·2, 1-"----" Rat•t at o. <· • re $360. 4 BR 2 Ba. 1m· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... "+ .......... .,.,.._17.,., 49>1955 AJC. al 130 E. l7lh St., ............. ... Artist look.m~ for an en· qui red. Ca 11: maculate, good location :?Br 1 ~Ba near beach SUPER MICE ... ..., _, ..,_ "' Sl 1 I t T D • _. lhusiutic fem to go t .. MISSION REALTY 362l. Huard. 839-6623 z:.ri'w. ~·colones. sc: •Lockedgar.w/lgslor.-Fem 44 w /1>hare ll~x SO/mo.Doye54ll·ll68 • • ·•·-.o En!llandw/hun.771-144~
PhoM494-0731 (7ll} $285 mo. 492·5557 ; •D/W,paUo.lnd .... rm 2 Bdrm apt near Hunt· twnhse w/resp workmg SHOPIEKTA.LS 2-dT.D.t.oa.s. llite1. -~:is •Special cabmei.s'pace ingtoo Harbour. $320 per F I M . u n r e a I p v t Fairest Terms slac:e 19'9 ----------~/mo. On the ocean at Wntmiaster 3298 •Gas heat, gas cooking, mo.989--5187 quarte r s . $250. CM Artastacatmospbere SattterMtcJ.Co.
Blue Lagoon Villa. 2Br. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ga.s hot.wateraUpd. Deluxe poolside xtra lge !H9-072S CANNERY VILLA.GE 642·2171 545-0611
:?l>a. pvt bch. pooli1. ten $375 MO. Apa lna'!h •Adults, no pets. 2br, 2ba, bltns, dshwhr. New 2 Br 2 Ba condo. Nr Several Available from
$100HWA.RD
Go&d watch (J ules> "'fl>
Carla. Happy Landini:··.
No questions asked.
°"2959
nas. (213)703-0230 o r Jbr Iba. Oshwshr 2 car u...fwNshed l br S2S.S.2brS290 Nr. beach. Adlts,oopets. bch . Pool. Jae:. Nll. ·sostoS430permo.
<714)327·67il; 4!19·30M4 gar'. i.n +last +sioo. re·••••••••••••••••••••••• Monlhtomonlh $250.53&-8362.. 714-631·1098; 213-703-0381
aft 3 fundable. Kids/pets OK. GeMrd 3802 2323 Elden Ave, C.M. l.8eOK 631-2246 ••••••••••··~··•••••••• 642·7605 Jog t.o beach. Avail. now. Bspb. pt,y 11br 2 br, 2 ba 0ce:R.nfroo~ Woods Cove. 1374.2 Newland St. (Garden 1 br $235. 2 br S28S. 219 Prlc Nwprl w /fem. 44.
Burr Whit e »ealt~r
290 I Nc,.,potl Bl 1d N B.
(714) 675-4630
3 3 a., comp. re-Great 3 Bdrm, 2 ba Grove) Beautiful 2 bdrm lraftdM.w I.SICS. 1.SthSt,22012tbSt. 640-0629wes&wk.nds
done; lease. Turner As· w/famlly room. frplc. apt s in x In t Deluxe2br.2baloft&2& Stareo! N P O
Retired couple has money
to lend. 1st le 2nd T.D.'s
Aeenl. 83'1·3744
Pri pty wants $60,000 2nd """_.W__.._,. if TD. well 11ecunMI by near ....... UI .... • )'oa were
new income pt"operty. 3 8t the c...nery Sunday,
t.oS yrs.10%. 642~~ call OallJS~-4.215
soc. dsbW!!lbr, kids & pet O.K. neighborhood. Pravalc d Oa.uxE21R·21A. Female seeks same for I c, nr. pt. .. Call Donnie 499 45!11 $435/mo. 963-4567 Agt·No patio view from lovely en split-level. Frplc. Nr . Beach. new w/frplc hse in CdM. $163.50 mo. 450Sq.ft. $200Per mo.
r skylights. deck. Country Agent aA• "•14 , _ __. c.~1 5360 LOCJlllMI Hl--i 3252 ee. kitchens ; e n c Is d selling. No children or & patio, encl gar, D/W; + utal. 673 528-& .,........,... ~Rh/ ~ __ ... Cff .,.... 1 smoke alarm, laundry . , lndwstrial R...tal 4500 P---'s/ •••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••• Townh.;.use g ar a g cs ; Po o · pets. 180 E. 21st. &l5·9543 r 11 Id 1 f Wanted Female r oom .--R t 1 i · New 2br, 2ba. Dbl nt u..fwftlshed 3525 clubhouse: no pets SJ15 eve11,646"'262days ac . ea or room· . h f . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lolt&Fotlnd oya ty ' mousan,•
tachedgar,pool.jacuua ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo.Ca11 Carol636 7343 ~':s9Adlts. $32S. Ph r;;::emto:o::ir:~1a'Wo~'c.1~ COSTA.MESA •••••••••••••••••••••••Service. Daily. Hrly. Ad~t. comm. s-1:!5 ~1•1_ llunlangt on Bch JBr. -----1 br $240. Refrag, patio. bndge. Pvt rm & bath. M-G ZONE ~.,,.nh 5100 Weekly ratei1. Al so.
i\vatl nn b<'. 55!1·5 dl1 1''28a IS( tiv rm & drn /\dulls, no pets. 731 W. 1.G9unaleach 3848 spa. clo1>e lo lake & Build to sull 5.000 to ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~i:~a~~ 1:-.a~ V~8':{1~~
Own 11\J, rm bl lns refng pool Balboa Pfttin""'a 3807 18lh. 673-7?87 ••••••••••••••••••••••• parks . $200 /mo incl ulll. ~.000 Sq . .Ft. Placenlla "Anyone wilh a sufficient f'or A Day." Luxury + 111 · --btfl cond.' $350 ~o. N~ •••••••••••••••~••••••• Bdrm Collcs:c l'a rk. 2 BR, $400. Beam clits. C<lll640.577lor552·t793 Avenue desirefora real1zallon of our new custom built
lakeFonst 3255 pcts,963--0525 $375. yrly. 2lr, 2 ba, 2 garai:e.upslainapt.No view, nr beach. town, -WesleYN.TaylorCo. Godcanach.ievelhatre· Linco l n town c ai·
••••••••••••••••••••••• story, 2 car cl. gar. do"". 5280. + de p. H e i s 1 e r P ·k • n o Resp. F w<intt'd lo share Realtors 644-4910 ahzaliOn·lhe Grace of 11 71•1 ..... , 83Jl • , 3 HR. 2\'2 ba. t'rplc, Balcony.No . ~saaoask for U!shc pets/chlldren.497·3109 aptw/Molher &l2yrold God wilJ auarantee it." mouaane.i •""" ·
L1\l'C 5 Br home. \\oods Dshwi.r, $350 mo. TSL Mgmt 642·1603 daugh. prl bth 143 & ''~ M-1 Deluxe 700" w/offiC'e Twitchell. Call ~-4910. Trani 5450
AIC. Beach tennis <'lub 4"" """'7 EWE E Walk to beach 1 Br apt ulll aft 4 642-8848 J820 S G d SA O h y Immcd occup. $700. Cau ~ 2 BR, 1ba.·1 ~lk. to bay & H -SID $300 + util. Avail now. • . ran . . wnCt' T e K E T 0 •••••••-••••••••••••••
PaciflcaRJt,y770.0882 ~•nUnfura 1600 beach.$335Yrl)'. 3br, 2ba, 2 alory. Up· 494-3672 AVOlDINCOMPATIBLE G7J.T37554S-4.234 EC1'ANKAR By PaulL()()KJNGCoraweekenrl ....................... MarshaH Rlty 8754800 graded. Lie patio. ROOMMATES~ Stcww 4550 TwitcbelJ.C.11"94-4910. mountain retreat? Tr~· 3~.2ba detachedtnhse, vely duplex.3BR,2Ba. Children ok. From $390. Bachelor apt, m ode rn House-M01es832-4134 ••••~••••••••••••••• Lott&FowMI 5100 California's Oldest 'fo1~~prt& frplc, A/C, club fireplace. 645.2111 or 1 Br condo. Bayfront, 645·9543 eves, 646-4262 bath, no kitchen, util pd. Takes The Guesswork toracre '\JJ\its from SlS •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• Nudist camp. Coup!~ & .,. .. ..e vgs.871·3889 64&-3303 view,pool,securitybtdg. days. Sl70mo.494-41.S4 OutorFandang mo.indoor&out.doorRV LostotFoundapet?Call families enly. Write.
• Boet slip avail. 5450 mo. e 2br, 2ba twnhowe. ntATRIGHTPERSON & boat storage. Mgr on Animal Assistan ce McConville, PO Box 47i. ••..-rt leach 3269 Unfurrusbed Duplex 64.S-4203; 645-1103 2 BR. 2 ba apt,.:.-Diver's San SS by SL--'ng .,. h . Le f Lake Elsinore. Ca. 92330 -r---2Bdrm, l _'hBa, brand ,.~ ~ ...,._ 3822 New drps. pamt, bltns. Cove. Garage; deck, mm pre1J1Jse ...... rs security. ague537-2273, no ee.
••••••••••••••••••••••• l d .,._-.,_. _. -cpts & patio. No pets. l 1~··..,,-· ..,Cl\ 4QA7.....,, 1be Stora~ Place. 18305 NO FEE'.H""--.cond~. new crp ang, rapes, ........... ,..--.,.....JU<-Cal to s hare Park Mt.'--gley,No.ofEll!", Lost : Blk & ~ht cat. & ..,_.., "" refng. Electric 2. door ••••••••••••••••••••••• s m I c h 11 d o k . N r. ....,.. ~ .. d uplea es . Re n tal S Fa1·r v 1e w •-Bake r .,_ ...... _..., 3852 Newportapl.2br,i;wam · FountamValley. shortha1r.fem .• wht frnt otiOfl garal(e. moke alarm. 1 "' ~-"'..,_... pool I V A d I Pavilion,87~12Bkr. 1 54S-lS82 ••••••••••••••••••••••• nung • tennis court:. Phone964·l607 egs .. 1c : vo<'a o ••••••••••••••••••••••• Boc k rrom Laguna _, •-h c ti A F l '"° R d Beach. $495 pe r mo. " N1ce l&2BRS26S&up. ...muc more. a nala -----3.lJ"VleW •""'· ewar •JobfWCMhd. 707S
l " ., Br unfurn. Adults. no Quiet area. Pool dayi1 644 0040 or eves 4600 631 1330 ••••••••••••••••••••••. WES TC LIFF
4 BR, 2 BA, fplc, fenced
y3rd, fruit trees, 2 car
gar., spacious, $600/mo.
1st & last. 673-4545.
.References required. No '[),., ll!!'"~-pct.II Close to shopping. 831.7766 644·7295aft 6pm ....................... 1\11 Around Houseman
children or pets. No lease 645-8939 orking woman desires SCRAU '£TS M Do F ctot reqwred. Available Feb. Ne....-M hoCh 3869 Sh are B e e u l furn to relocate residence ftr1. AJOI" mo. a um
1 c: Ask lo r Sa I G.ARDEN APTS 2 Br 1 •-Ba. cp•u, drps, r---townhou u e w / 1 d h" I Tap refs, local, Bev. Hilb
"'· ... "'' ••••••••••••••••••••••• " "
0 neart!r to her work. Hun· ANSWERS ~rnardine at842-7781 CORONA DEL MAR stove. ~arbage d1sp. PA.Ilk NEWPORT lr~·lne loc. r oot. etc. Pref tingt.on Beach lo Costa & ~. 54IHSl9.
SPECIAL 2 Dr Townhouse, frplc. Wate r p1ud. Child & middle-age cpl or single. Mesa area. Trailer or Damask -Befit -p Wcmhd 7100
3 Br2V.Bacondo,newly A.paihwllhfur1Mslwd Pool,tennis.Someocean sm all pet. OK. $275. Bachelors. 1 or 2 Ca117~Tues.5..Sor bacbelorapt.upto$1SO .Belch -Behold-..................... ..
decor'd. Opt avail. Near ••••••••••••••••••••••• & Catahna views. Close 545-6169 BedrooFrmsom&'f.:'_50houses Wedi-Noon. prelerred. Nttd by April THE ADS ~
Hoag Hosp. $4!JS mo. lcAoa I.a.cl 3706 to Fashion Island & fine .., • ., Do li ' 1· 64().2981 ••••••••••••••••••••••• beach. Also 1 Br.644·2611 Spectacular spa, total Young careef' girl, non· 1· \21.3) S!J&.9966 you rea ze we re iv-Ac<'nt/Constr Sl~h. I LAC.SA.BLANCA re~reation program . smoker wanted to share Apt. on Ea st side. mg in a tlme where ynu M E./Mamt toS2.aK
NEWSEAVIEW D~~:~~~~~!r: $4.50. Bach, 1 lr-A•I How llOCl~l program. 7pool~,8 2 BR, 2 -ba ap! wt,v.ur. $l90·$22S. Sml dog & cal. s:et a newspaper and the C<>n Mgr/R.F:. SlOK ~
3 Br 2 Ba, pool, tennis. 67S.3063eves/wknd5 Spotless. Walk t.o bch. All utils pd .• cpts, drps. tenrus courts. Al Faah1on Steps to bch. l:all f uf', Nd by 2-14640·8179 eves. :!>'T~~~oJ'ou believe S.ec1 ·r1ctaries 1 Alo SI:.!~
J·ac ..,""yrly 67"""a" 4Br3BaFmnn2100sqft pool. lndry fac's. Adulls Island, Jamboree &San Wed or Thur eves, · rvnePersonne gent';; ,_..., · ~ •....&....-p.-•--· ... a 3707 4811E17thCosta Me!I· -mn-Yrly,509Acacia645·7()48 over as. no pels or JoaquioHillsRoad. 6'13-42SS 4br 2 ba.NewportMesa Fn<J:Smlpup.app4mo,. ~· '''-
Newport Shor•s ••••••••••••••••••••••• children . Call Sue: l714J 644.1900 Garoqe School Dist. 642-2239 or beige, looks like ··een11··. ~1~ ~ ~ ~·l~
3Br2 Ba, newlydecor'd, IALIOA. IHH r:xJ:?'/~~=f.~~~ °:t~~ 556·7707 or Henry ; fof"lt,1 t 4350 ~2(MO Fra mte 5 Poant.i,, H.B.~-ssso. 640-2981 W1.nter rental $125-$275 642·9137 Ocean & harbor view. con· ftl -Ruth 64().. TT39 7S9-1501 to China Cove. $425/mo. do. 2Br, n~ ba, brick ••-••••••••••••••••••• 1or 2brmonB.t. • •
Big Caoyon Townhome. 3 mo. l05MainSt,675-874o 67S.~or751·4117 patio, 2 car gar., all kit. Call 892-0663 or 846-3465 Reasonable rental. 2 LOST· Yng male r at. Blk Acct.ng Bkkpni:
Br, pool. Convenlent loc. Costa Mesa 3724 Newport Hgts. new 2 Br 2 conveo. pool, sauna, & S30 mo. Westmmster/HB mature women. 673 2877 w whl feet. nose & neck. TEMPORARY
By owner. 644-5187 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ba, all elec. Bltns. pkng. jacuzzi. Wshr/dryr. Yr area. 2/ 1 Vt c. J ai1m1 n e & Register Tod:iy to wnrl..
•
•YCREST PRIME LOCATION children OK. Walk lo lse. Avail immed. Offi R....-Aal 4 .. 00 tus.iness/lnvut/ Se av lew. Reward' onvanou'tacrountini:& ,,. E OOM r I ...,Cl\ 17lhSt.64.Z.2164: 673-0782 973-l2SSor497·2180 ce nn "' ~ 673-3308 bookkel'p1ni: as~1g11
3 BR, 2 ba., form. dining $50 W!EK & UP 2 B DR • P c • ....,., •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----------1 ments. Work clo<>e '"
rm., frplc; lge. cov'd Studlo,lbedroom per mo. 675-2311days,2Brdeluxestudao.utilpd. OFRCESPA.CE BusiMSS Found Female Lab, var your home. F1gurt
pado, entry court. Beaut. M&Jd aervu:e. pool agent., no fee. Bltns, crpts. pool. $27~. BACHELOR APT Prof Bwldlng 1 Sly ~..=.., 5005 El Toro Rd & Rockfaeld, Clerk;; lo Sr. AcC'ou n decor. 2 Car gar w/door 2376 Newport Bl, C.M. ~~ ~ ~. 1978 Maple. 5.i8-el 18. • l-J..8 Room Suitci1 ._..,..... ·-·1 E.T. 830-4i87S lJnh n<'edcd thru11111 o-.Ahorticulturist•s ~-9755or845·3967 -"'----~ eves645-S647 AJ..LtmLSPD' ........... -.......... Or.m1ot~Co. d;"-I cl nho $lSO Sharp 2 BR pool · · W/U-g. Parking Lot. MUST SE.LL! Oceanfront FOUND· Small Terner. Kol>ertllalf"s W/eg~erri.;~~~dnrus:n· SUSCA.SITA.S adits. no pel~. 462366E20THST.Huge2br, ~~m·t.frfuormni·slbheed.0cAe•~ani .I JayW. Yeats Co. Market. Net $35,000 yr. fem.Bnmhead,blk/t11n Account<'m~ one~ NC:~Bea~h-11 Nicely furn Jge & s ml Seaward No fee, agt utilpd,open beams, $295. ~! 201 E. Balboa Blvd. (7141499-2237 A&ef\L&C2-47SS body S pr1 ogda Ito & 500S. Maan.St;·5'i1
finest areas! $800 Per lbr.CI08edgar.$230.up. 833-3307 mo.646-4387 Yrly $250 per mo. NO T "-1 pt N C t Lampgon,GG,.892-3434 NoTower,UmonBanl...
1 u H l Adulta, oo pets. 2110 Ex____... R I a...,.. sup Y • 11 - -lnTheCrtyofOran"c mo. on se .... r. ea er Newport Blvd. 2 Br, cpt/drps & frplc 1 Bl', cpts, drps, stove, F EE. Call: Sue at · ino1n1ff ow ltC· Hwy location adjacentto Found · Xtra larce male ..
833-9781 $425/mo. Incl. uUI. No kjds ok. no pets. $225. S56-77cr7 anytime ore space In Newport· laundry, cleaning agen· tn-colored Colh<'. Well i·--7•1•4•'~--lO•J--•
•LIDOISLE• Two .2 BR. furn'. l w/out pets. 703 J aamlne 645-2274 AlrportArea.Reception. cy. Not a coin opp. in Lrained. Beach/Bolsa nr
3 BR, 2ba, newly decor .. :r•· Res:i:~e adlts 785-6737 . Vl EW OF OCEAN & LUXURYBAYFftONT ~:lt~~~ec~o:e~e:.e~fc ~.~~u~:ee~e;~~· s~;;lty HB 8!n-~------
access to tennis, bch &r y, $250. Costa w.ta 3824 CITY. 2 br, 2 ba, Crplc, 2 br, l ba. frplc, sep. elec. tating & copy machine. eqwp, expertise, we spht Lost: Female Blk/wht
club. S7SOyrly. 673-8443 tt.l;tlngton leach 3740 ....................... beam c ell., jacuul. garail~ge• .. ~wer boat dock F'rom$290. (714>752·7170 gross, 80%·20'h-. Contact IJllX cocker Harbor view
----------1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LA MANCHA Ans aarnge. $385. 64s-8256 or ::z.--mo. 673•6336; Joe 494-7018. 24 hrs. hms area. Reward 2·3·78
ON WATER. 2 Bdrm STUDIO Lar ge 2&3 bedroom 979-3376 TME EFFICIENT _644_·659_1 ____ _
Cobdo w/view. Side tie ''W..WVR.tea.. garden apt•. Dahwhr, 2 °Br. 2 Ba. $295 mo. 988 Lwturyadult 2br.Sleps to ·ALTERNATIVE A.KT1QUESTORE Found: Dalmatian. fem.
avall.S6SO/mo. Fullkitcheo&c TV bltns,end.gar,aHbbq. Minton Drive. see bcb, ocean view. $425. Mo. to mo. rent Incl : ~~~;.oc;!0~:~t'C:~ 1\lltinarea.ldentlfy.Arl
OOVER SHORES area. Unens&Ulilltiea PoolGa.spd.'178ScoltPI. Manager,Aptl. up. 5Sl5 R iver Ave R ece p t. serv ., 6?S.-0326 4pm:'131-0548
Larie S Bdrm, den, din· M.ll.ETOOCEAN 642..so73 E/Slde z Br l Ba, newly 642-2:566 penonali%ed phone cov· . FOUND S l bel tq nn&pool.$1200/mo R~WhsMotel Adult 2 bedl'OO'll"I, super decor'd,$250.lat.,last+ CLOSE T O BEACR, erage, cont. rot, maHBeer&wmet.a,·ern.$6000 : ro.mae, 1~ 1". nfYorittownBlvd Joca l \oo. No p et.a SlOO.Nopet.s.41M"'534 alogle, $275. 1510 W • .erv., underp"OUnd prkg down. Terms. Call J im 00.it weano~ flea collar.
CORONA DEL MAR. BeachBlvdatYorktown $2SO/m o ntb. 588 W. BaJboa,67S-nOl &moreinNewport. M7-7490 V tc. Fairview & ,.... _ ___. 2B f 2 53"-"411 ·--'--a Bl TH.EEX.ECU'J'lVE Mac Ar l h u r on .........-uun.lt r, am rm,
1
___________ ,_Wl_il_son.:._:._ln_q:..w_r_e_a;..:p~t_. E_. _12 Br www. ...... $300. tns. Owner's wilt Sacrifice SUJTE.640-5"TO Stooewime Manuf. eqwp· 2/5/78~
ba house. Walk to be.ach SMALL B CH HOTEL 1ar, lndry facil. 1919 Lge 2 br, h ighly up· ment. Under capitalized. ~~·o..,n. Bes'l""'a· ROOM~.SO Week W di d Viii Anah eim St. Mar. graded,SO't.obestbeach. 2SDaq.ft.delwreoffice,W. must sell lmmed. Busi· : Golden ~tnever. ~ ,. AW ~ v .. ..RA 00 an ne 845-Sl08 $395. winter. t7•·20S8 l90l St., C.M. $150 mo ness bas good fllture. male, Reddish in color ·•--.ec 3 Bdrm, din· AJ>t-/mo. 538-1056 •t. 0 3 ..... .,... old No -liar uon.. -MSPaularino ••2 Br, encl. yd & gar. Patty: oc eves & wk~ Tom,540-Zl:00 QS,000.SSl·l714 ·~ J•~ • -.v • ins rm. New In /out, a.o,..hD l74t Beautiful, new, adult Adult.I & small pet ok 67547"9 SaHBnta. 2/Anl/a78RJvR~wtarradll,
AccountilMJ Clerk
Sharp person w/aC{'tl'l l!
barkground. Man 2 yr~
E'xper. Addinl( mach lt
some t y ping rcq 'd .
1-.:n111neerin1i. plannin~ &.
ronLrolllng farm w/xfnt
benefits. Cont.act Person
nel 1141751·2510.
A.DMIH'ISTR.A. TIVE
.SSISTAMT
desiring career op·
portunaty. Routine e\·
ecutive 11 k1ll s. en·
thu11asm & 1ntegr1h
Call Sherrie 640-2500 S()j,
Newport Center Dr. N B.
S700/mo. •••••••• .. ••• •••••••• •• .... Gr•at 1-atlon 2 ,.,,,. _...,, " .,_. • .... • SZ75 • .,..,.._... OC &a.--....... -& GI .... ,..... 714-1183 1ooe ON LIDO. Special 2 LAGUNA BEACH MTR. poolt,2Jacuuis. OcMnview,yev lt,2br,1 ,,_,....., ~ ~ n , ___ ....;_ ____ ~~~~~~~~
8clrm+den. Olamornu.t INN. '6$/Wk 41 up. Matd MovelnlnunCldiate.ly l.GE owner type apt In 'ba du p lex. 1450. m o. on MacArtbur Bl•d . Vf!TY profit.able bwlineas 0 s t : M A L F. I~ . hJd9.away '850/mo. MN. edor TV, heated trlpln:. adUlt.. no pets. "'4'11Qor MZ-31131 Pr.ttlC• ofClce apace, opportunity Including 2 MAL AM u TE . v 1 c Admlnbtrauv~ Ass11ot. W•a ft ... HcM9t1 pool. mo 4M·S21M. 985 Bacbelcr 122$-$245 Nrahopl. $430. 611.fm p ..... ~ aub-let, dlx GOO IQ .. ft. Altractlve Im· Br hom~. A~o tnplex Cordoba & So. Ola Vlata. lnvestrMnt to .. desires ,._,II llOO N c.o.stHwy 1 Bd.rm _.S21S -• , ....... ,...... Pf0'¥emeftt.a, pri.Dc cmly. avail. next to buslaesa San Clemente. weartn• woman ..-1th man. s yr:. -• • . 2 .Bdrm ~~. 3llr, 1\'a t>., patlo, kids 1 8~1 .pri ate loc. 'IJA.5158.1101. for addlt.1onal income. cboter cham, no ta ... olc. CXl>ft". 4' pref. col· ....,_.,_. 3712 OK. t.mlmo. &t~. BeaWDllftiew.-.W7 Callforctetalls a.ward.4fl2.'n11'6 lepfrad. Pa.rt time lo ~2 Oata~l'n1M a Br, Fam ....... ;;~t;;-.......... Bal.alOmce il:UcenterBl.OI .a. ha .. ,.,,. tsd ~DIC SUITl:S time I« aeoeral ofc. ad
Rm-beecb....., Pool, cenlc •'"''• l11aUl'7 OMDl>e111M Nwp:t ff&tl, ct\de&. 2 bt1n 41:~..:• ltOO Pailooal llUVloee tor all .AEDCAAPCr m l n 1 at rat i v c -.M-Un adult ~turn It unf. TSL.Mu~ement l~ blt~tlo, edlta, 00 --•• .. ••••••••••• lr&:• of bualn e•aea: uLu.,4 ttsporu1ib1llte1'. Attrac· NMr Jla&1at.al Sbopplnf '15iMOliCll'IG-lG .-. ~~ • ~•· t i..a Hlary le •orirlng Colar. HHt•d pool, ...... --------•...,_. • • 111BUcrn:.NO p o ne co•e raa e,~~~~~~~~~ ccmd. New1>0rt Beach
1aeaa.1.Nr.oanier1Jfcta PALWMISAArfS.. .....na1 ..-vices, re.a: m.acm ~ a.Pueo d•Val WISTIAYftlPUXIS D9m...... lllNtn'P.STONPT ~ i»~h moR. OWd )'OQ llba!K*n•t--------1..;..:.:;...:.:..;;.:._. ___ _
ciL 'I OD· dOSTAMF,SA ....................... BCH. Ext.dlmt locaUoo near ol your owl'IT Bea1n •t o at: l /30/71, ll . Nobit.lousCouple ,WantAld
AUCIA'PLAZA BRA.ND NEW Duptn, o utuu lar 'Baeb,lldBR. So. O.t Plue Ir Ft-w11. home. full :,J)llrnc. oc:uts'tid. labby ln color, to maoaac A small bust·
4VJLLAGE 2 BTbom'9QI. ~-.... N.., lM014. tro1uiza6up.1 Cl.llfJN:ltlt.oday. ldeal for bua le wlf• ~!-~tl~~ B\Ubard, neu p/Ume. Will not In ·
111"151 5'l -61JO J Bl',tlehomAtS. ft.t br ~•.deft,!~ .Ad\alta,NoPeta teams. 494·5161 no ob-n.o.-Utftte w/your preacnt
Sany, uo peU. t.. M.'iO. mo. 75-0108. 1511 Ve .. °"· 3oVU' =::;'· UptionL!tn;<> .:•"~°' ortu 1310 ~m~:~ H~n~~~~f~o -----------11~ _ _. (SBIU ":rJ.~NCWll'(llt Did ,_ 1tJIOW J'OU ~an ~: ave co ee •tt•••••••••••• .. •••••• --'-----·~-....;;..;;-·~ ~ a cJuaUkd ad Jo -J>rinldllfJRbiem! A P A R T lt E N l
1 !!~~!!!:::....::...=::._: ;;:...;;.;;..:._..;..;..;~.;;.;.....;=~ U.. Dilly PUal Stnke uquotluc:IMSIS C.U ~Rtlplln ~ACE.R·bt.lred ('OU•
• I
1-DlnftOr7 for • whole Onnau1tuJjO:adtaUa iilV.a4-111WD) pie to mnaic Costa ... u. f(lll' u UW. u 1».00t K•H 19 unlL butldlni a.a,_ tQ? For Om11u«..aef7'l.ODO -"*~* .. Miil' •11 coannlm . We• ...... ~, Act(IU>m aet Ot*aDX.U. No dLlldr••~ J\O P'f'U. ..... OIDltd JMIHAI( ~~ . .:.:u1~ ,._'!!........,.,·
I
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\
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Q DAILY PILOT TuHday Fet>rUilly I 1~/8
Add it ... Bu1ld 1L.Diaper 1t .. Hammer it. Carpet SERVICE it... Cement it ... Wire it. .Hoe 1t...Clean 1t...Move
it ... Prcss 1t. .. Paint 1t...Nail 1t .. Plaster it .. Fix it. DIRECTORY
~lcff ~.~!~~~ ........ ~~.: .......... ~ ................. ~ ................ ~~!'.':~~ ........... ~!':!~:¥.~~!'! ..... ~~~~!'! ..... ~!'! .............. .
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5
·.·.;:,•y•:;A•TI'•••E•:R•••• Stusmpoo .& ateam dellll \lAHKSlLERCONT. Floor & window ~over-OCCStudent ~4 T truck Kenvy work & cleanup EPt.wr.t:d'RSRPAINT!NG LelUbhghtupyourhomc ROOFS in"lli.111~ rutory
E
-"" •0 Color bnghtencni, whl N • ln&s. cork wall ttles. h · · · Sta. wgn a\a1I. $3 75 br .xpr eas u.itel\ PalnlJnit done rea~. Call direct; eslab s:; )1'5 Call vc&wlmdsbya~pt. cn'-10 mlnblea•·h Clean WCOMt.Res/comm I. turkett etc 27 yra. Tras. tree tnm, Rand) lhrdwrkr 642·5449 Free Ebl. Call Gene art 5pm tor trcu ei.t Ha.roldGunnS49-Z91S1 Del u1 0 ..... ~ Rm add. remodel, patio • • 6'&2·5703, S49·3666 _ 552~58 .. ... . · • ---8 t / ivorce 175"* llv, d!n rm. h111l sis. Avg U c contr. Call 9794'11 l~~~~~s~~~ Cameo . McnoNy ~:--Roofs l''or Less. All lYPt!IJ.
=ons .30"4 • rm $7.SO, c:ooeh $10, chr __ CHEAPEST hauhn~ ~~ •••••••••••••••••••••••All . PROFESSIONAL PaticK • Lic/bond'd. JUMur Fr~
driving S30< $S. Guar. eJlm pet odor ~. contraetor. new, ad· Gcrdl•MJ '°""?· Fr ests CHEA!:. anck"ork. Small Jobs Pamt1na. Joler/Exler ....................... estimate. 894 O.S21 or
lJnlwfl dotal~~r~~:~u~' Cpt repair. 15 ) rs expr d1t1oni;, Fremod .• rces1'1' ••••••••••••••••••••••• l>U·2995or64.5·l390 -Newport, Coi.ta .Me!o a & Reas. work euar642 ()JgS CU.tom Redwood ratio 537-4133 Do work m yself Refs comm. rec t::.t. " n-1 J 1 675 Co & n~ k .... ~. ------------$150.00 (uJl price S3l-OIOl · Spiro547 0204 .-.... apanese Landsc~p· Housec.I _. f"\,ne. ·3175 eve~. Paintini:. Extr/lntr. E'\· vei:s u.::c s. t.i..ung.,. nr. Simple wills ..,., "' • ing & gardening. Matnt •um'"J -----'d ho t panchng. ~2333 • ....., ..... Carpo•~ & uphols tery ,.. ___ ...,z-. I t . . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Br I ck b Io <' k s pr . nes. nea~ rea11. -••••••••••••••••••••••• •Courtcostsextra .... "-'-·~ inc · mowmg, rimming, ' • Lic'd9641~50ave pt ter/R_,,J Timothy Lashlee, Ally. i.team cleaned. 3 rm~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• :.praying weeding Free Want a Kt:ALLY CL~AN slumpstone. plnnters. · OS ...-r Ceram1t" Tllo-Spec. in
fl14)636.7200/olt 7P~1 Sl4.95 1400 sq ft>. Chair., PSYCHIC MEDIUM e:.umat~. 5-l!'i-7012. HOUSE~ Call Gingham walls. expertly ms talled, YOU:\G MAN. s yrs ex pr ••••••••••••••••••••••• ealriet &noors. ~)rs u-
call (213) 43.a-89l 5 $10. Ll c, insrd, guar. L 1 Readings 527.3400 J · . Gari. Free est &l.S-5123 \'ery re:is. Also repairs. 10 wallco\•ering Free VERY NEAT PATCH per. 962·1883
F·E Systems. 031.5350 apanesegardener, 15yri:. BALBOA ISLAND Lie. & Bonded. Bob. esls.°"'5~76J\ndy JOBS&TEXTURE C"'n•u C I N -labysitffng &a.S-3939 • Drapft'ies t•xp. Maintenance & 673-0llH; 963-5339 Freeest. 893-1439 """"""I tJ e. ewor~c·
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• i.ome clean.up.646.4871 & vic1n1ty. Empty'l> PaintYourCastte model.Freeest.SmlJbs ~I other to watch ~ ou. c.t...t/Cofteret• ---welcome, Reliable, re as ARTISTIC l\IASO!IJRY PATCH PLASTERING welcome. 536-2426 a(t 5 ~ .. Dr:ipery Fabrir Sale <:LEA.'11-UPS,HAULING 673-0969 Walk-wa}s, planters & AverageExtrlStry$39S All type s . Free r....s.r.k -'-·ld 1n c.•t. Fenced ~ ~d' ••••• ••••• •• •• •• • • • ••• • •7 000 d t"•· k I 2 s• U .. IC. l l ••5 • uu " ,, • " , Y s in ~ v.' mui. Prumna·Plunung walls. Lmtd landscape. ~ory _.,.,, n r .... rm estimates. Call 540-682S
hot lunches. Custom Concrete & Block be sold! 70';, :-oa\ an gs in Fret> est. sa2.9907 CLEAHIHG t>l2 8006, ask ror Carl. Prices incl mntrl/labo"r •••••••••••••••••••• ... •
CallKarcn.6'15-6748 Work. Patao covers & H!nt.ory reduction guar PaihUng&repairs. -Guar/lnsr·Freeest. PLASTERING Removals. trimmin)l . -._i......_. Ser • brick. Llc & Bonded J:it quality. Kt'n Butcher si5•7918 Custom masonry -t Lic32088l, Ted 636·7085 Homes. additions, re· pruning. 1''ree est. Lic'rl, -vie• 642.ti894 Drapery 1510 E. Edinger GeMrc:ill Services Urick-Block stucco, free ests. low !Nrd.642·2624
••••••••••••••••••••••• Santa Ana 541-020J ••••••••••••••••••••••• XJnt hou.beclcanmg done 639-7239 Bob CUSTO~t PAJNTINC. rates.ss.64892 Calculator·typo-serv Concrete, Masonry,slahs, !Ml :!OflO llA.~DY:'tl AN Carpentry, by lady w/exp Ot!pendn ----Extenor Specialist. 15 Tutorinc)
Irvine Coast Husines~ foundation~. hu:h" alls, . C'lcclrlt'al. plumbing & ble, own tram .. 847.363'i Mo•ltMJ yrs local refs. Llc/bon· PluntbiftcJ •••••••••••••••••••••••
Mach1nes.ti73·6007 patios. L1cen1>ed E\'c" custom drapes, s preads, noors.847 2787.557·450.a ••••••••••••••••••••••• ded/msrd, g11a1:-work.••••••••••••••••••••••• Pl.AHO
-_556-8241 shutters & all window -----TMSunstiineGirt5 "Two Men Will Move Free csts. Won't be un· HOMESAVERS. Plumb· IHSTRUC:TIOH Ccrpenttt ---· • <'O\'erln~s at d1.,.C'ount NEWPORT residential & office You" We handle lrg & derbld6-12-60j)5 ing & Heating. Free est.
••••••••••••••••••••••• Pacahc Concrete. Low '' pnces. Shadv Deal, 743 HOMESITIING cleaning i.pecaalts ts s ml moves-offic<' & ---· SlO hr. Honest & reUablc Xlnt Cr edentials • In
Lou's Home Repairs. 3l ~}1Y.,.~ ful~15da325y 7ratt•:. nakerSt. C \I ~19 3325 When travel calls don't Bonded, Insured. Free household. Di stance & Painuns:. Homes lntr & service. BofA. &l/C OK. your home • Call Terry
yrsexp.Doors.panehng "" .,....,,or ... · ---------leave your home un t'.6tS 54().95ZS local, also packing. Exterior. Spec~ulty: 7Sl·3150or847·0383 1_SJS.._7005 _______ _
windo~·s, patios , etc. ---aectncal protected. Call Newport ' Lowes t legal ra te. Apts Lorates.631·2508 a.........111!.:..._I R~ ~ ,,.._-i
.551·2054 C e ~ e ,11 t W ~ I". k · •••••••••••••••• ••••••• llome Sitting, pet t'are, HOUSEKEEPER-Exprd. Li · d Cal T r-_..,,. c•, ..,....rs n-W-ltCJ ----------1 Orl\~".a}s, p.a taos, ELECI'RICAL SERVICE plant tna1nt. Bondable. MonthruSat. p~~~~~8 lll·S44. Fine Ext.er. Pamtang by ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
.Mas te r Crarts man . ~alk"a)s, Rens. Free CALLSSlShr,&SMALL Member of Nwpt Brh eausis.73.16 R.Sinor.St.lic.,ios.Try Paragon Pool Service. SPARKUNGCLEAN
Specialty: Remodelmg E&ts 556·0757 JOBS842-8233 Chamber of Co mmerce Will do lite m ovln g me.836-SSSS24 hrs. Comple te &wimming Wmdows & houseclean·
fimsh&repair.499·3105 Quaality Cement work Refs. avail. 24 Ur I T w/van. Reas. Ric k . . pool mainte11a1lce. ing.960'5844.S36-7nt
C
_..11!_
1
done the raght way. 18 HubbardE:t.ctric 640-7066 .~ •• ~!•••••••••••• 832-SS68,aft3:JOwkdys. Quality Pall\Ung. Lowest1_fil_S-_9796 ________ ,. ________ _ -r"'· _-y u Yri. exper. Call J eff Uc327L36 645·6'97.t . 11 rates in town. Free esl. 1• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 586-44~ --_ IL\NDYMA:-.1. ~tomes & income Tax Service wt l Huning S..-vfc:H Jack67S·8336/675·7280 Remodel & Repair
Qirpel Ma.n will lay yours ELE:CTRlCl.\N !'raced a.pts. Col)~C14:n t1ou:. a Smile. For evening ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• or mine. Repairi. & CGntroctor right-free l"illmate on Craftsman <.:all645-0J02 appt in your home. Nurse consultant 30 yrs Prof paint'g & paper Carpentry, cabinet. elec. OPPORTUNIT1
knocks on.en when you
use result-getting Daily
Pilot Classified Ads to
reach the Orange Coast.
market.
clearung too! Guar work ••••••••••••••••••••••• larJ(eor :.mall Job~ --9tJll.tll82 exp. Pnv. d11ty w/fam1ly h,angans:. work guar. & plumbing repairs.
at bigger savings. t'rec R J .Tluffman & Son, Gen Licensed fi73 ·0359 Grodincj orie nted care. Call I' r ee c:.t. 5 36 •43 83•, Alurrunated ceilings Ill·
ei.t. 645-3646 Cootr. custom Alt & Add, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Landscapht9 213/867·6776 for informu· SJ&.47110 stalled also. Exp. lJl all.
.-;__de ~·ou~ old ~tuff for patios, oab1nets , Sell.mg anything with o S KIPLOADEH Dump ••••••••••••••••••••••• lion&appt. Painting Interior J .Wallard.631·2251 Phone 6(2..5678 ••ii .., • d torm1ra Ne"• ~on:,t Ht!~ V~oly PJIOt Cla~s1Ju~d Ad trul·k H.\tJ Ll~G. tr~e LANDSCAPING. --For Free E s t .. Ca 1 l
new goodies with a & t'omm'l 615 16-11 or 1s a sample matter . "ork. grading d<'mo etc Reasonable pnces. SELL idle items with a GREG-day or eve. l''ind what you want in
_Classified ad. 6-12·56711__ ~ .. ts.t 1. Lac & bonded JIL'>t C"all 642-5678 831-1257 968-878..1or547 ·58-16 Datly Pilot Classified Ad ~-0589 Dally Pilot Classifieds. 1----------
ASSEMBLERS :-Al Trainee Ass('mblcrs
N1•eded Immediately
Long & Short Term
A.,.;ignml'nL'i
:!Shifts Ava1lnble.
;\lust have own lransp.
CaU Today 556-8520
Fn'I.' Top Pay. Var Pay
Victor Temporary
S«YicH
£11\' Walter Kidde & Co
2082 S. E. Bristol
'>le 10 Newport Beach
<Comer or Bn&lol &
Campus behl.lld
Carl's Jr)
----
Banking
We ha ve immediatE'
upenini;s in our San Juan
C'ap1Mrano offirc for
thCbc pos1t1on!>.
Please apply in person:
DISHWASHER
Ope rate an established office in a
prime Costa Mesa area with profit
rewards and without any major cash
investment. Creative advertising &
sales 'training provided . ExciUng
opportunity if you yearn for greater
income through sales management
and an office o f your own. If
interested phone J im Wood at 675-6000
He4p Want~ 7 I 00 Help W..ted 7 I 00 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
: --..., --_ 1 ti--. ----"'T ~=-=-· .. -~-•
LVHPjTm.
AM. !''/lime PM. Park
Lido Conv. Hosp .. 466
Lfyou'renot.takinghome Flags hip Rd. N .B.
$200 pu wee.It Call Me. &U.-W. W e h a v e e s t a b • _;:_..;..;...;.__.;.._. _____ _
NStomers waiting to be UACHINISJ served. Rout.es avail. in fff
H.B. Fuller Brush Co. 4Day/40HourWeek
_7_!><1_-64_7_1_. ------• General m achine work
lnstall Alarms xw opp·ty For
MEH WOMEN
USED TO EARHIHG
*$8.50
HR.
->
on quality aerospace
compo ne nts & as-
semblies. Must be able to
work from detailf'd plan-
ning sheets & blucpnnt:..
Apply ln Person
Monday-Thursday
Ecler Industries Inc.
2101 l>ove St. N .B
..
I ~~.~ ..... ~!.~~ ~~~~ ..... ~!~~ ~.~~ .•... !!.~~ ~~~ ..... !!~~ ~~~ ..... !!~~ HelpW-.d 7 100 _T_u.c:1 __ ar._._F_•_1>_ruary___...._1_1_9_1• _______ ...;.o.;..A.;.;IL:..V_P....;l.;;.L.;;.O.;.T_.;.;C9:;..::.
MUISE.S A.IDES ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....a.c" 10 I 0
11-7 F/limt' 3 11 P tJmc RH FfTlMl S•USl ADY SICUTAJlY/~ vr •truc:k J)r1vcr11 c-x .~ ................... rwwturw 8050 IOIO
Wlll train . Lido Conv PRODUCTION <?'" kt!he! Metia \'crdu for rllllterM.Y boutique. ... -rt le.di per'd. Top p11y. Appl). w-1.-. Dryer ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••
Center. lSSS Sup~rtor Stl:onCvM Hoe~;o~\ Center )lust be exper'd. Sal Far ~"'°'le cou.nsel r G&WTowlnc. 1000 Jrvlne ~ -STORt:Wll>llSAl.F. WANTED
•
Ave. NB_64&_?7&4___ • !148-.wcw +comm. 8111-433leict31S -·'-YS"" ..,.pp. be··~. An, NB542·1m Lille nu delux multi· New It used furn. appl "·
TYPIST
.. """""" ""..,_ .... cycle modt'h only. rrusc Wilson'• Barl(w\11 TOP CASH DOLLAR
MURSES A.IDES
7 3 & J..11. Expt:r. prd'd
Will lr<1.1n. Mes4 erdt'
Conv Hotp, 661 ~nler
St.CM
NURSES AIDIS
Xlnt benefit¥ tncludlni;
sick leave. Bayview
C.OOv., 20M Tbunn A,c ,
CM642·~
, NURSES AIDES
F/lime AM & F /l1me
PM. Park Lido Conv.
Hosp., 466 Flagsltip JlaJ ..
N 8. 64,2,S(M4
NURSES AIDES
lmmed. Operungs. Acute
care fa cility exper
helpful. All sluns avail
Apply in person, to Dir.
of Nurs1n1;, Sa n
IHl.U•f SAL S PERSON·Glft quart"red 1n Faabion TraiDec/<>PtrVltamlnen· Complel~ly rcbll -re· Nook.S.Uls8l4W. lttt.b, PAID FOR YOUR IBM 73"ll7ort.VN Hohc! Shop.G1Ctahop.Exper'd l!land.Xlntworkinicoa-capsulatlon machine finished. y~a CM.&42-1930&548-3262 JE'Wt:LRV. WATCHISS.
11·7. <Mini.I')' Club Conv full & part-time Apply in d& & frlnae benefits. Days. F/llme. En1ll11h llU&J'anlff. 1 pnce only, S\.\n.lonacustompadded ART OBJt}C'J'S, GOLD. SELECTRIC II HomeS49-3001 person at Oraf\oo St.reel. l...ook1ni for xlnt skills ""Wpea.klng. apply 8·1MM. )our cbolc• Sl:tO c1tch. porla biv bar w llh SIL V F.tt S ERV 1C E •~perieoced accurate So.Coast Plaza. 1·3 Ynl le&al exper. cor M F.LmwUeoLab9 21411 FreedeUvery. Sllle e~di multl...iex tuner. 8 track FINE f'URN. & AN
Typist needed • m SAW A.GENT Seamer toaewoylon& an· :::~~i:~~~~e !i~~';r Newport Blvd. CM.' Feb. u. ~l~o flew & Ille & t~abl~1lll are bwlt· nQUF.S'.&&S-2200
mediately. 70 wpm WANTED dtordacronsads.Exp'd. Please call Carolyn trainees to mnke oppt'~ new retngs, Creez.ers & ins·plua two custom LUGGA&ITA&S
(must> We need a uJes or1·ent··• f'/T . Marshall S ails, Eadie for lrC indUJlrial co. No &!!~ at "'-'the ~tat wrouabt lron bar &tools. from your bu.linen card VACATIONRELJEI'' lt"U ........,,,,,..,. I .a.u,..o•""tMC exper. ner. !!:xcellenl " ........ ~t Appliances, Shnrp!S81-7'48. MUST 8~ ABLE TO man or woman to sell our '"""""""• v smsg. """"--boo " d 11 ..... ~ Send one cun1 for each
WOHKOAYORNIGIIT exclUJ1ivu .calendari1 and Seamstress wanted tor 640.1900 cashb:n~~~Y~ll ;J *..&..I BUY..&....&.. tag plw; one spar .. Wt: SHIJo"T'S an extensive hne or ad srulma.ker. W f l 540-M8 Frigid 1 19 f 1ll 1ll 1ll return perm•o•oU~ Y.xcellent w~rklng ' l' r t 1 :. t n J: Qlll5'8·:ubi SICY/IOOIC.ICEIPH ynn orapp · 1 t t; rt>, r .cu. t .. Good used Fumhure & ~ au.ranlve iaa ~ ·
1
s pec1alt1es/hu:.1ness -Permpois :ap~rox30brs ros · ree re rig, xlnt Appllances--OR I will uU'ap. meeu ng kirlln" Com 1t1ons w ... Flexib"t ..... a .... ,......... 5t.'<>mnd SUS. 546·1753 aft U S"''L...._..,. l.D ··•-· p
/\l>
ft•y 1 rorso gi.It.s. IC you have a past SECRET RY ... ., ... ., "'"" se or .:.w ,..,. .ou. • requu..,aneJlla. re .,. n n history of sales auccesb A sclentlous, mature gel JRAVEL p ' MASTERS AUCTION vent lou & lhef'\! For 11
otlA.NGE COAST or wish to begin a career Out.standing opportunity exper'd in all facets of licydn 1020 646-8686 & 133-9625 personali1Ald tag enclo.;<.•
DAILY PILOT in s1tle:i, you can benefit for at peoplt1 oriented ofc duties. Ute typing, AGENT ••••••••••••••••••••••• wallpaper • fabrie or
330W. Bay St. from one or the moat pet"son w1tb erflclent payroll. A/Rec. A/Pay, USED BIKES Comrort able blghbac "Day Glo" paper •wt'
Costa Mesa lucrallv"' commission &eerelarial skills. Sb pre· Receptiooi&t. P leasant Recood. Buy. sell. trade. chair: needs recover-wU1 back • \rim 1our
Ask For Paul Ward ~ trurtu res 111 our 1 n· fenoed. Ea joy excellent atmotphere ln small de-Cycle Ir Co. 2488 Newport lnt-$25.00. Clll M2-0l38. Up. Or l.ry two cardt.
EqualOpportunlly dustry. What we nt.•ed ,., t.'Ompaoybeoeflt11. sign oriented m fg co. laptri~ Blvd.C..M.8'2·79}0 bocktob~ll..
Employer .m mdM dunl who cun tle Apply 9»m·nooo caU for appt. (lO&m· ~mployee Denefl~ CASltlPAID PR.ICES: al directly with IJu:.1· Muu ·Frl,PcrsoMel 3Pm>64S-6m93(W.17lb BeauUfulLocatJon C..,...& For gd us~ furn. anti· $:?eaor3/$.S
Clem ente General Production Workers.
llo5p1tal, 654 Camino de Flbcrgla5$ Ullembly &
los Mares, San Clem. "''OOdworking, no ex per
ne:.:.mt-n who use calt:'ll MARRIOTT HOTEL St..C.M. Start Now Eqili,.... 8030 ques&clrTV's, 957-8133 4/St.a&sS1.60ea.
dars and :.~c1alty 1h~m!> 900 Nt'wport Center Dr ••••••••••••••••••• • ••• Din G/9t.a&S $1.50 ea
lo l th b 675-7944 V1v1tar 13'"uM FJ s Antq. · rm set w/& 1oor~Sl ..... e11 promo e cir u!,I Ne..,.,,,,... Beach ..... · cbrs 1 1-.. W lu L Gd .• ...,.... ....,
Th
. · 11 ~...-· • tclep ...... A lens For P . • _. • u "'-1-TaxlnAI·· ... ......
ness. is IS an exce enl Equol Opp Emplyr mlf "--...,.., . en cood.. ISSO 8'6-G2»l ~ "" ....... .,.. opportunity for you to as-..,.,,,,·y·Recept .. immed. la~ or any screw-in type · NOCA.RD? OCfice, general help. prt
lime IH, student ok. Call
for appl, 548·5544 CM
necessary but must be
1ndustnous & have some
tools. Montgom e r y
Manne. 935 W. J8lh St.
soc1ate >ourself with the ~~for experienced Travel, Credlt Is Collec· mount. S50. 646-8S3S aft Fadcl'y Dlrect Pine Llv· Draw your own or send
Tbos. U .\lurphy c.;u., a iec Y . exp.aodlnl ~· tJOn, oon smoker. ?.lust 6PM 1ng Rm Funuture. See 11 name, tlddttss, pbooe &.
pioneer an the advert is SECRETARIES sttucUon co .. Front !>trice have SltOOI backsxound -made. Call 979-31211 we1J maJte one canl pe1 1ng f1dtl-since 1888 & good typuig s kills a lo CJ'edlt & collection. DoCJI 8040 tac. Add~eacll.
ORDERLIES Plume E\•es & Sats. Earn Your initiative and plun must. Must be :sble.to U · Oood typin1 required. ••••••••••••••••••••••• LIKE NEW, 34 .. x66·· Sc.ad cbeclc or money or·
XJnt benefits including ~-S7 per hr. t11km11 or-rung wall determine your & TYPISTS aume respoosibl:llUea & We ¥fill train u travel DOG TnAINlNG wooden desk. nee clllllr, derto:
sick leave. Bnyv1e-w deri./d ellvery . .Must growth and success with Seek temporary employ· handle • variety or acen t. Full travel YourPl.aceorMane 2 mutchio1 cualomer ,lLOTPaJMTINGo
t'oi.la Mes ..
Conv., 2055 Tburin Ave, h1ne dependable car & our established rum · ment where we make st dutlea. Cas u a l a t -benefits. Call 840-6671 .. John Maron 548-0059 arm chain. leatherette p O Bo 1560 _CMOO~. phone. i!\.aUer Brush Co. pany. Your account:> are D106phere. Salary ~m· M·F.9-5 top lamp table, & table Coata·.u•"ea.92626 Part . k" I 7~'·&171. protected ood repeat or wurt.hyourwhUe. menaurate w /exp. Send Female Red Dober man. lamp. All for only tame, wor mg w1l 1 --------ders make money for TOP JOI. resume ~o Box 158, % AKC. l 7 W ks, e ar., s 2 5 o -I ; Jc e 0 e w Newport Beach Tenni1-
the mailroom inscrt1n,,: l"ubllr Relations, Part or you. Wnte Richard I!:. TOP PAY Dally P ilot, P .O. Box TYPISTS ~rapped. 644-71<2 after Frig1dalre elec clot.bes club rnemberahlp •. best
machine for the Daily F/tune, i.l'ir slarter for Fisher, Sales Manager . You'reYourOwnDoau• 1560. CQlta Mesa. pa. 6PM dryer(Aqua)onlySti0-2 olr.640-1793
Pilot. J'H w/womens groups. Th Th D M I Q 92625 •·'-•-•~ Contoct~G.KArnur. xlnlincome.675·7196 e os. · urply ~~o ffi c e • WhitoAKCToyPoodles ....... isu.euv ... sprtngs.$20Golf 't benhi f,.2~.32J,extl"" ---__ -·-· t"o .. 110 S. 2nd.Street, ServiAe Sta Atte d Didi: .. /Stot d b' •1 1 "-F ea. M. M. LaBorde. equi Y mem p • ... -.. "" lted0ak,lown51566 0 Ove rlo ad .. . n; . :iora~e ... ae.,. em. 5411-3404 l'tiesa VerdeCntryClub.
Equal Opporturuty PURCHASING CLK F /time. Lite me ch I llM ec. 751·5588 714-642-2876
__ ~ployl'r Expcr'd for busy ofr m 557~006 1 knowledge nee. ~eat ap. R.pro & T.ct.lcal Yorlde. M .• 12 wks. good WATERliED .--------•I mt·cl. i,14t.·d <'V-lfoavy ---------1 pear.&bandwriUng.Ap· Kina -4 Poster Npt Bch Tennis Cluh phonl'S & t y ping & SALES AGENT 3723BirchSt.NlJ ply, 2590 Newport. BL Worktemporary&make lin':a~e . AICC. S200. $22S.Cal1646-2601 mem~shlp .. 5upc!r dc-
PART·TIME cll'rical. Type man uf 5:; __ CM ' xtra money. Long & 675-roSS ~ aJ. Call 644-6800 wlulys hl
From Your Ho~ \\pm. M:u.tt!r Speciall 1t·~ W AHTB> Secretary Servi·ce Sta. Attendanl, short term assignments. S1berianhuskles. A KC G.w Sale 1055 6'&4·
7326
evs. ~'1"ahts •· W•eke nda. •·u, 1•~•0 Monrovia, 1 ·•1 :'itANOR WOMAN Hol1doy •-va a h . lln ;.;-.;~.-, ., .. O< "' ·• '-..... "" sa I "'DVERTISl ... G ADVERTISl ..... G ex"'"''d. Full or p/Ume. .,. c p y. c amp100 es. 9 wks .•••••••••••••••••••••• Orangewood, delivered 01 :'11u~tberesp. &reliable. t-:OE ...,,.,. " 1""111 A) Att S(aU 7th Ho~pltallutlon plan copper/w ht. $150. N"vaJo r \l g sale. youplck up.EYeis.aftertt
Jn1taal1\'I' & mature --SPECIALTY GIFTS DEPT PP Y 0 on. 1 avail. 831-749"' Soulbwestem Antiques PM.~17
Judgement ci.!>e nliJl. Heal 1-);tate Sales Peoplt• Businessmen 1n )vur • &lrvine,C.lll. Gallery. 3UI08 Camlno•---------
Medical terminology & wanted. Up lo 90/lO<:'c area like lo advertise b> Exper'd. Im med. open· Se · St t • Fneto Y• 8045 Capistrano, San Juan Boob & recorda to teacll'
puhllr cont.irt valuable comm. spht. Nwpt Bch giving calendars nnd tnli( for a bright. cheerful rvice a !0n Atten· ••••••••••••••••••••••• capo,493-1023 readiDC by vowels C08l \:~1aspa1oru.· bl.e or making de 631-0'.W ------·• specialty items to their irldiv. Good typing skills. dant, exper d. Day & 21.arie t.ractort.ruck tires. . overSlOO.M.S,&42-3379 . · U1cta..i.one ex ....... S/11 Evet. Full & p/tlme. Ap. u--• f u ...,.; ... ., Sal ... , ________ _
1rnCEP'l' l'ffl:'it E, 9-38:\1 customers. This is a rt'al ht·lp(~ Must ~-~ble lo ply, SbeJI Statloo..17th le 3148 C 4 lll Dri•• ........ or icbool or pla)'· _, • ._ e come qwca
Homemakers Upiohn Mon-Fri. attractive. opportunity for you. The meet deadllnes. XJnt lrvUle,NB. 546-4741 ifOW>d.$48-1161 tdi':'llvan~. r..: .. ~!!''..tcchalrs. 330 tnthe,';._C._.M40blrshp. 752-0992 Thos D. Murphy Co. 1~ a _...... ...... ... .,_ •~~~~~~~~~I heavy phone!!, lite t yp-piooeer 111 tho advertil· working coods & co Service Sta. Night Attend (Across From Beaut friendly yellow Mayflower, NB 1ng. call btwn 2 & 4 mK rield. H you can or· bent>f1t.s. You may c~LI 2 Or 5 nltes a wk. Apply, Orange Co. Alrport> LAB fem. 2 yrs nds gd ......___ 1060 Earth worms for aah?
"kdys 675-2318 ganue your tame :.nd (or an appL oc opply 10 Shell ,17lb&clrvlne,NB EqualOpporEmployer home. Gall 545-6996, ~ Cheap. Three bins.
work with a minimum of person. interviews 9am· 9'79·5340 ••··--··--•••••• HurTyl-.'1217492·7147
h b
..... m. Nauonal Systems Service Sta. Attend. 3928 2 Horse Dix Stidham bUperv1s1on. l is can c (!;, ..... , 4Xl Birch St, N. ll. E. Coast Hwy, Corona TYPIST Fwi ;rllwe • 8050 Trailer. Gd cood. $1500, Camper, tmr bar, bar a.n<f an excellent part tame or •"' p/ · H h ba ..... bar l,._,,. uUJ.il (:cxxl l'O. benc(1ts. Sal (ull timl' l>usaness for <Near OC Airport) EOE. ckl Mar. t ime. 4 r!I ~ac ••••••••••-••••••••••• must sell. 837-3298. ui.. • v..u.v Y
\dulls wllh oul,tnndin~. ~ltHt." al s_r,50 pt'r mu. 5'11>-iJOO morning. Prefer: 8·12. MOVING ENTIRE 2 831-31177 aMd. 5.sl-1531
PART TIME
EVENINGS
RECIEPTIOMIST
CLERIC TYPIST
11lrad1vc-pl'rsonaht1•· CJll&lll:!<ll you. Excell ent l'Om· ------ServStaHelpneededim Mln 60 wpm Som
\
',ho dnJ·oy wor.kin•: ..... ~lhs m1::.s1ons pu1cl Jl ulll'l' . -ed. ""·11 /l A I • •p . rlbl W.-11 I e BDRM HOUSEHOLD . .........._ 1070 Klni si:ie mattress SlOO " ' nl SECRETARY m . cu or p . PP y, .. nnsc ng. I lra n. PA'tlO PLANTS MISC _ .. _, Elec .. $100 ·-
kid!.. St;irt at S3 50 per llEC EfYl'IONIST P /time. Your accounts "'ill lw !IOO E. Cst Hwy, Nwpl S3.50itr. Mr. McGonigal. i;.16.5980 ' · •••••••••••-•••••••••• · ran.e ·
hr Pho1w Gi\2 •13'.!I, :t25U, noun lll 5PM. Light typ. prutectt'tl. repeat urdcr~ Bch. ~7:100. i!:OE. WAlllJTED 557-5228 ud\\Cl'n :1:00 5.00 l'M. 1111(, tt'lcphorws, Santa make money for ~ou Ex full lime position uvalla· -.-. Moving: din set w/6 chrs. " University Athletic Cluh Alkfor J lm Ana Ulc. call David l'llinl{ ul lt!r Write lo hle.mlnlmum2yr~basic S~OESALESMAN Waller. experienced, Fri· lrg coffee tbl 2 casual TOP CASH DOLLAR m embership s400
Eq u u I op P
0
rt uni l y Smith. ~!l41ll71._!0·5P:\1 H1chard K Fisher, Sale:. :oiklll" cXJ>t!r, type 60·65 Loolung for aggressive Sun. t•ves. for private clu's xlnl. cood 67$-0432 PA I D FOR Y 0 Un 5'9·9923 Mlk • . i:;
1
Manager. The Thus I> WPM. mu l>t be self individual for h igh club.G73-3S15 uft.5~ ' JEWELRY. WATCHES, • e.
s; s;r-1 • u P Y o.. . starll'r and wurk or· as on s oe sa on oca · OBJECTS GOLD Hospital bed. rails mat·
-
mp oyer R"'Cr..-rlOHIST M r h C 11 o s f hi h I I l ART PBX ANSw1-;n.1N<.; Youni.taltral'1.1vupersun SecondStreet,Hed011k, g11nl.,ed. Xlnt p 11y & ed in Fashion bland. ~ltress .o{ Bumper pool tnble. S ILVER SERVICE: tress. good cond.'$250.
SER v. op t·: HAT o H for rccepllom:.t, Dana Iowa 51566. employee benefit~. App-Good pay. & pc>tenUal for artf(ull time. over 18 Steven Edwards bdrm F l NE FURN & AN. 673·7471
Openlnit tor rnuturc Point.496-6442 I~~~~~~~~~! Iv an person 9AM-4PM advancement. For in· w111tram--M8·7948 youth furn & twin bed. TJQUES 64.5-2200 1---------
iinswer1nK service ----Sales-Delivery 1~urns lnl'lsecuraty .. 111s terview call '759-0885 Waltreu/Comblnatlon 458 Vis ta Truc:hn. NB.~ S'couch,needaupbolstery
trained opr. Must be ~ptionhisl . If rt
1 1
1-•• Center St. Anaheim. between 9:30AM-12Noon SmaU coffee shop tn NB. 759-l595 1075 but good sturdY Cr:ame
alert.. sharp & reliable. ,..,..vy p onei;, wuling. to you are "e ous y n· -5 Da 9-3 ,..._11 f • ••••••••••••••••••••••• $75 548-9050 Must be available for learn vaned secretarial terested in xtra 111come SOLDEt.tE R'S ys · • ~ ;i l Spm, For sale aec. Mortan mare. broke --·--------
various shifts. 833-D7S3
0
dpuptues. ,,~S~710l Linda for call us now! P /lime eve,; Sect. G.0 ., L•• Requires min~ 2 yrs 548-470'?. Couch Hide-a·bed S:SO. lo r ide & drl ve. blk Bumper pool table, 3'x5 • ....,,.,.. 5·9pm. $4·S6 per hr Accnt,A/l'Coaatr sol~erlng & wlrin:i e?'P· WaitrHSH.CodctolJs 642-089'l(Greg> paredo M organ &eldlnc w /c u ea, balls $35. _ ~~~VI~~ 50~~:~.ro~ ~taurant, p1na in Cd?.!. 53l-0842. ToS18,000 ~~~~~cb~~N~ Cooks. Hostesses Sofas. 2 matching 6. E ng, West ern <114) 546-t7S3afUpm. -
witrain Need mature needs help. for gen I ES Employer.; Pay All Fees l>CB. Some cabling exp. Experienced Only. Hlebertsofa~. ruslfabric 338-lOll MalC411
I
·. bl · '
1
V . · work. pt time eves Hcmp lness-Care•r J.11 Retnders Agency helpful. Cole Instrument Coun''"" Club 831-lSSO w/Walnut trim, orig cost ~..._ 8078 lftSlla•lifs I083
rei.i e pcop l'. anous bi3112l 613-'1647 ...,.. ,.. 40200 h" 04 ' ~" ~"'" 11 00 ,..._.......,, shlfls ll\ allohlc. lndW. - -. --& Fiftanclal Minded arc ... te I Corp. 642-8080. E.0 .E. over~ ea .• se S1 ea. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
'omc wknds.833!1793 Opportun1lles avail Nt>wportlieoch 8J3-8l90 Woman wanted to do Motif corner laW.e, Salt bend 13"x4 0 .. Beginn ers guitar. Rcstau.ranl w mt ·1 co. Sales back· Call for Appll i'Atab '6S STEMO I was~ at ironlnit in her Wa.1.aut tram. w/c~us ll)· w/taper $1900. Wilson absolutely like NEW'
The R.citstry Hotri ground pref'd. Top mg mt SECaET A.RY I home, ror family of 2. aert, sso. ~b lhppine 17x24 .. $1500. Cincinnati Only $30.00. cau 842-0138
POX Ans"'l'r. Ser\'. Opl.'ralor~. lmmC'd open in~" to work ":1r1t•d hr<. &
wknd<1. E~per. prcl 'd
but \\ 111 lr111n. ,\pply 111
P.'rson. J5S Rochc·~lcr Sl.
CM
pos1llons avail durin" Secrelaryto$10.000 Job has variety including ~5160 ---Mahogany D~lng. Table Prod milling Sl800. (213) -----------ls now looking for ,
1
... lite personnel work " & Hutch, 4 x6 rec· 9Gl-3434 Leitba.Ddl'banezl.a.Paul
quali(iedpeoplein our nal & 1nt'l ex AdminAut handling or insurance M.rchandiM tangular shape w/2 3 mos. old ~9. Gibson
the following areas : pansion. Send resume to J\nimnl Jlosp1tal pcr'\On· clai·ms Sh 80 typing a11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• leoves & pad .. Sl50. 5 MlscellaMou 8080 S.G. $129. Gibson amp.
COOK PO Box 3, An1.1hc1m. Ca I & t · • "'· ... _ D I 92:80C. • ll
778
iQ.IO ( Ill' mana~emcn • Call ror appt. 540.-639 Anti... 8005 ... awer evon f1 e. letter ••••••••••••••••••••••• SS9.645-1537
Graveyard. Able to han-inter or <'·1 • or Nwpt Bch. 644·~60 E.O.E. ' . ••••••••••••••••••••••• sue,S7S.646-853Saft6PM DOLL HOUSE ----.----.-
<.1.le complete coHee shop ---· ----~et ar Ex er 1 an l\cfedlt Rea Wood Lov One room doll house with 5pC. LudWll Vista-Lite,
menu. Sales lady exper Ill in· sec'v .~· ban'lc1,;g ~or S~K OR Qom' non MUSIC IOJCES et>eat. co~er tbl w/8: light and rurolture. ~::, c1mboa 2002.
CASHIER/HOSTESS !~ts & childrens wear. llmoit lndependent bank !I er. '.Ppor to adv. CLOC«S so(a. $200. Call646-2887. $30.00.Cell6'2-0138. PBX O~ERATORS Afternoon shll't avail. for f/tlme. Oppty for adv an with cxcell bene!lls Good pay. Boat Builders,
per.son with cashier· cement. Apply In person, Typmg ¥0, shorthand 60: 697 Randolph. Costa ~:~n~.ac;~~e:~:..1~:~~: All Jlonrds
Long & shorl term as
:.1gnments. lloilday &
vac pay. llospitallznlion
plan avoil.
rcgtslcr & hostess exper Xoungland Harbor Shop· Salary commensurate Mesa.. World's largest s clec·
1.n o u r G a " e b o pmg Center. CM. with exper. Call Suzi for TECHNICIAN ti on. A 1 so gifts,
RPU1Rc H1°slMGA.GT S~espe~on. l"/~1me for ~pt.640-5100 Audio Exper , apply furniture, antiq ues.
l"ood & beveraAe exper. 1.1 g ht I n I? r Ix. l u r (' Secretary for Me\h<>dist Atlantic Music Sale• & American Jnternallonal;
req'd with background in s~wroom. Woodhi:htlnF Oiurch pre-school. 9AM· Services C.M. 64&-8895 ~:21Jr0petenngw:_Jrvslne, VOLT
Tti N'f"<lf"u'v 1...,u vtt.l H
Inventory control Day Fix~ure Co • 203l S. E · 3PM Mon·f'ri. 641-0740 · · n .,..,. nt.
hours. · Mam St, Irvine. 546-2901 -Telephone Sales STEWART ROTH
ANTIQUES
Amehcan Oak Deniers
750 E. Dyer Rd. S.A.
t11t Newport Fwy>
7Sl -19'l2
3848 Campus Drfn
546-4741
CAcrosi. From
Orange Co. Airport)
Equal Oppor Emplo) t•r
We oHt•rfullbenefils ~Ac~o)liS from OC SECRETARY
packacc & competitive rpo For pel'9onnel director.
sa.lary range~ Sales We are looking for lyptng60 WPM and SH 00
Apply In Person enthusiastic m e n & WPM required. Salary
To Personnel Of!1ce women w1lh experience $862-$1,092 mo. Apply
9am-12pm or lpm-4pm in retail sales to join our llunt1ngton ~ach Caty
Personnel Monday lhru Friday rapidly growing com· School District 735 14th
Admle Asst 11100 MocArthur pany. May start lmmed. SL JI. B. 536-8851.
1\njmal Hospital pen1on· lrfiM 7S2.a777 Salary + commission.
nl'I & man:i~cment, F,qulllOpporEmployer Inquire at Casual Living
Nwpt Bch. 644·5460 I~~~~~~~~~ F\Jm1ture. please call for I· appt., (714)846·6616 or
(21.3)592·3306 Marlene or
Gail. ·----------PEST CONTROL Resta t
Steady job for right .... ~ .,_11 1-------1 person. 110 exper. nee. _,_., s ,......,...
Profit shnrinl( &c group Nowports mst exciting SALES
health. Apply Thurs. nu rest. & discotheque is
1H2. Lloyd PPst Control lnter viewinl for the YOU DON'T
566E. Dyer Rel.SI\. lollowina position s: HA.VETO cooks, dishwashers, pan· ST AND OM
s.a al• 't /TvJHat
Strong typan1i & sh. App-
1 y in person to •tr .
f'uente11, Robert Bein,
William Froc;t & Aaaoc.,
1401 Quell St, N.B.
s.c...tary/leeept.
Exper. pref d. Sh nee.
Good benefits. Contact
Holiday Inn, Laguna
IWls. 586-5000 extl42. PIZZA try mao oyster bar man, YOUR HEAD
F.lcper.inm:ikingpiua& Ja oltors, bus boys, TOFIMD Secretary/O{fic:e bartenders . hos tess. Manager. Land planninl
litecooking. ND. cashier, doormen, A GOOD JOB firm needs sec'y w/ e~· ____ 548_·7863 _____ 1 cocktail waitress's, Time-Life Libraries hu1 per. in all phases ot of.
Pre..Scbool T eachers waiters/waitresses.Full absolutely t he f inest f ice pr 0 c •du re .
needed Banbury Cross Ir part lime avail. Apply p/Ume sales jobs avalla· Knowledl• or JBM Ex·
Pre..scbool. 11741 View la penon Feb. 8, 9, 10, 10 hie ln 0-ranae Co. Ne ecutive typewriter. Call
.Point Ln. Holl Bcll. Ex• a m • 2 pm at 102 N. door to door & no pre· Shelley. 640-49ll 841 S28C Bayside Dr. NB (former-asun tactics. We use a --..:.-------yer. necessary. • ly Duffys) We are locat· nice friaendly approach & Secretary Id/sh typ
Pre-School Teacher. '4!X· ed4/10of a mi frm corof ourrtputntion ls numbe1 Pleuant. office. FT/PT.
per'd &/or certified. Co~t Hwy. & Bayside linlhebuslness. Salaryopen..~2681
11:4Snm-3:\5pm da\1y Dr. opp. Rubens. Look Weorfer a base salary -t·
t=.M.5'0-0010 _fi..;..~;...An...;;..lbon;.....;....:.:Y:...'.:..•.:..s1:::1D:;;..:..· __ 1 a commission & a great
----·-----• lxftas plan. There 1s ex·
Pressman, AB Dick. :f:ic.
per'd only. Good In·
dependent 1hop w/pay
Jnoenllves. '4'·8233. e2010 eves.
RETAIL
CLERKS ..
seUenl moo~y On the JOb
+ the atmosphere 1s CJtSual & fun. Try a job
yoo'll enJOY fo~ a chanae.
We have (3) Pert-Um•
sblf\s & F\lll-Ume IS, ol
course, 'available. Our et.I.fr people eQJ01 ex·
cellent btneftta lncJadlnl
health & Ule ln.au.r an.ce.
TryltY•'I
Ubltl
GM!>US ACAt..L
For a P«IOn•l tntervw
133-1091
TIME-1,JFR t..mtwUES Equa.l Opp F.rQplJr M/ t•
A FUNNY
THING
HAPPENED
ON TIE WAY
TO ~ORK
I DIDN1
WANT TO GO
If you•,.. not
hcl'flngM
worilJllt or -"Int
WHOLESALE
TO THE TRADE
NOW OPEN
TO PUBLIC
OPEN7DAYS
AWEEKt".
Suftdown Anti ... Ltd
1 5292 lolsa Chica
H.I. C7I4t193-7509
rAaLt~~ For Sale: lrg tablej 6 chairs, butret & eh n
AN lRI'ER VIEW cabinet. K.nlc·ltnae shelf.
IASI! PAY + Dn!:aer. Ma-205S
COMM+ IC»4USIS Roll-•--_.L_._ ...-1_ Long DlstanceUnes -.. u.A • .,. ... w "-·
Casual Fun AtmOIPflere Roll, Oak, reflo. Fin NM.TIMI cond. •1100/best ofr .
PAa'f·TIME -~~~~~~~~
U you. read well, like to Anllq"e oak partne rs
talk on the pboM •want deak, '330. Needs re
to C!njoyyour Job ... Call finishing 815-4722
TIME-LIFE
LIBRARIES INC
83U095
Eq\111 Opp Empbr ro /t
For aale: Antique
Brunswlclc Pool Table.
Sl200, 2 antique 1lde
d\alra. '75 ea. All re·
finialMld. 64f.$382
.. ..... " 1010 ....................... r= l>AMAOE D .n:LEPBONE• INT SALE. 8309
111.+ExttaOcl&oaus w. w....,.. nr ~. ~ -..,. 8a.aAnL t'ft..ml
CJ!eatt§ of C£o'J/e
This Valentine's Day send your love
a greeting all the world can share
w ith a Daily Pilot Heart of Love.
It's easy . compose you r
personalized greeting & we'll set
your message in type to ftl the
bOrder of your choice or your own
handwritten thoughts may appear
In the border you select.
Borders come in 3 sizes: $15. $10,
& a special child's size for $2. (You
must be under 12 to qualify for this
one). If you wish to create your
own greeting, use a black pen &
wlite your message in the heart
below or draw your .own Valentine
of this size.
#12
Tnla Size $10
For help with your ad, iuat call
&t2-5678 & a friendly ValenUne
acklser will be happy to ... 1st you.
And. If you llko, you can charge
ycur Valentine ad or uae your
Master Charge or Bank Amerlcard.
DAILY PILOT
&12-5818
Malt to Cally Pilot Classified
Department. Sox 1660
CoS1a MM8 92626
SAX TENOR. SELMER.
Mark VI. Xlnt cond 1895.
613-7379
Offlcefwwltw••
.......... IOIS •••••••••••••••••••••••
ClnelnnaU time c lock
w/card r acks $275. 2 & -1
drawer Illes $35·S85
~alllnl tbls. wood &.
metal tbls. folding ch.rs.
plaatic floor ;nat1. x
drawer•l6 tray check rue. g.l.us front dlaplav
case, elec. lype-.nit.ers k
cal culat o r s. c.E
SURPLUS OFFICI-~
FUR NlTUR E . 2044
Placentia • CM. ~o
or631·27T7
8087 .......................
Parakeet. food & c.age in·
eluded, finger t rained.
good pet $5. 962-76S7
....... OnJaas 1090 •••••••••••••••••••••••
New Brand Name Plan~
10% over cost.
Beach Music Center
174CM Beach Blvd. H.B.
847-8536
ANTIQUE ORO AN
Good condition
P>O/ofr. 846-029t
Wholenlo to the public,•
upright. grlnds. player.-.
973-J80ll, 9-&dally.
Spwtlllg Goods 10'4 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Girl's ice skates. s ix"
SN·SlS.00; Flsber
Superglass snowsk11>.
l i5cm with Salomnn
••f e t y b 1odln C•·
hC'W·S2.a. now 1125. C.ll
'42-01311.
.......................
2 lllbtod tho•caHS. 18'
loaa, Mlnwedt loct1ni 4oatl • draw t'I. 4 DM>'M •
Gkl aoo ea. -...1100
tt .....
tlR.S....O IOtl •••••••••••••••••••••••
l
f
C'J8 DA.It. V PIL01" ...... l•,...+td AMtos. ••port.cl · .... 1Mp0f'tecl ....... u.ec1 ..,..,, u.e<1 Mto•. u .. d ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
TV, Recio, C m .. ra. s.H/ Tn&lu 9HO C.-f 9716 Mere ... 8"1 9 740 Volltw99" 9 770 AMC: 9905 ChnroNt 9920 Ford 9940
.. ~.':; •~•• • .!~~.! ••~•~••• ••• ••••• ~ ! .~~ ~~::~;·:;·~··:~1:~··1:~:· ~7~·;;;;~~·:;; •;;~~~·;I~ ••••i•;;~·~~i·i~o ••• • j ;;;~·;~;~~~·;:;;··~~~: ~;;·;~·;;;;;~~·;·;·~~~· •••••• •••• ••• •• •• •••••• ~;;~;~;~·;;·;:~,~·;~-
Stand rd R d 2 0Jt6un Camver Shell Dlbc>\er l'Um~r S2m power. auto.air, AM FM SEDAN. Tobacco brown 15,000 ml on new l'n.:. Stereo. roof rack air • it upholstery. recent ent
h : t lk a. io~ h mNe.~ S100 or it.~t offer Ttlr or bbl ofr. ~·(M.19 aft 3 CbS. ~ & in Immaculate condl· new patnt, bed. •·M 8 trk. C<lf\d. P/S, l'/B $2,495. • ov ... maul, "Int nm. cond. ant I ah le , c-h oinnc axll'Complete 548 t>i!IO --;:::-tion' (229MFW) Must rad1al:o.. $11000. Andy gu.337~ • • 631_~_3 ______ _ w ouc tonl'. ol er ac --.76 f' rd p li , lon 197~ ..... pn VS. auto. 28 000 · • · su~ • 9950 cess Also ~.freq Pro& AC Shell for Che\.) Trul·k b> 0 · • mt, A:\!IFM Ii trk, 1mrl. see toapFt'Ciate IWck 9910 1• • Mere.., ~
race 9ti2·1960 Stot·klJnd. 3 "'k:. olrl "' l>hell A~t to'll SOOOO new brks. great cond. MowOnty $9995 1974 YW Dasher a dr w&n. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • it •••••••••••••••••••••••
--d W 00 r 9t>3·8Z74 -.nn 96-I t rl /\ t '72 LeSab R OR.ANGECOUN'TY'S t: mer s 0 n r e c e 1 \ "' r l'ai ~ .int S4 o -~-_:!_ ~ x n con uto, mue. re Convt. art it ... ~or.~T
"' cae.settt.' de phono fe~ !>45·53.t_7_ Va111 9 570 1975 MII.280 i.ell tw0-0791 car ln mlnl cond. Cult Jt """"~
graph & 2 Emerson 0 ~···••••••••••••••••••• ·~u<;;afo~('6·x~cto ~~o~g: COUPE. _Sunroof. stereo 16 AM /FM st •reo Nt'w RaJpborSallyW.774' • UNCOLN·MERCURY
speakers. Good cuod Motorized l lkH fl 4 7t .Ch~•\')' 20 Hed1camp ....,_,.. 645 1953eves. tape. crwse conlrol. pwr. , c . ,. Ot•Jtl~1pls now OPEN
S200 ~l-067S •••••••••••••••••••••• • l{V . Sip 4. ,int mech, ~ w i n d 0 "' :. . A ( 1 n t: brakes & Batt. Perf11cl 62 Bwck Special Convert. RA y FLAO!IOE
. MOPt:O lilui: :.ilver ne"' pnt, 1 ownr. 76K m1. ft..&..-9720 automoblle! (OSSMff). cond Bestofr 640·526:? Needs work. $300. Pb: It UNCOLN·"!E RCURY '
.._.-._ • --1 A.k ..,.."" "' · 1803 ----640-1816eves. " --..M.-.n• to'oxl GT. 6 mos n(.'w. ""101:"""""'"0 · ••••••••••••••••••••••• '00 \'W,sunroof,/\M·FM, 16·18AuloCenter Dr.
lquiptMnt Scats 2. Xlnt cond. s..too Autos Want~ 9590 *DRIVE A * 1972 MIZ 220D reblteng. $900 1970 2 dr Skylark. $1300. SDFwy·Lake Forestexlt
••••••••••••••••••••••• 75"9-li99 Automatic & air cond. •615-1447• Orlgowner. IRVINE Gefterd 90 I 0 ------••••••••••••••••••••••• 4f LIULE * For the luxury of a 830-7000
•••••••• •• •• •• •• • ••• •• • Motorcycles/ WIE WILL IUY '\ ••• ~lercedes & the efficien· '74 YW •112. Xlnt cond &I0-4388
SIX MAN r ubber rart Scoot.n 91 50 YOURDATSUH SAVE A LOT cy0Cad1esel. (834EIE ). $2,900/be:.t ofr. Handy i6 liulck Estate Wagon
make offer. Xlnt conrl. ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• PAJD FOR OR NO'f SHOP &COMPAR t: Osborn, cvs 546-8872, dys Loaded 20,000 Mi $6895.
831 9287 MUST SELL! TOP DOLLAR We have other diesels at 979.4-122 Flrm. 963·33M P /P
loak.--,-o-w-er 9040 1974 250 Yamoiha ~IX F<>RTOPCARS ?~:;: MBZs to choose WEBUY&SELL CoclAoc 9915
··~•••••••••••••••••••• ~1th exlra:.. Good c·ond1· VOU<SW -"GE1o..15 ••••••••••••••••••••••• » MUST S"'IE lion $-ISO or hcst ofh:r. ~ 5"
BARWICK DATSUN
:--.111 .lu.111 C.1p1~11 a1111 MISSION VlfJO INIPOllfS
'75 Monarch Ghia. V8.
auto, Utr, alJ pwr, stereo
1.ll ver/r e d l eat h . .: TO A,,RE~IA TIE t'all 9t\2 ~ a~t~r i P m_ 831 -1175 493.3375 &.st f• '. t I··~,
i••u• "'-'i • • .-.... .,., l n The Area! ! '
:! 8 f l • U n 1 f 1 1 t l' Sl.,Z\;1\1 ft:\l 370:-0IX -Less -----
Sportsfi!.her with padded than 5 hr!> running time WE BUY
TM '711 An He-re
All models & colors
1 ..... diate
D_.l•ertToday!
831·1748 49!. 1704
-~ --
Largest St!lc<:t aon s
WEST GERMAN
, _____ .._ ___ ,.. $3-IOOPP • .Ph 4&.t-7765 or
4in·2113
cockpit, CU!llom interior. lnd udani.: l !>Cl of tac CLUM CARS
AC DC natural gas tor down;,, J ramp & a b1k,•
'71 .j~LC. 5 pa:.s. s port:. IMPORTS \. ·sa Corva1r Sp~der e<>n· ~taft(J 9952 •
<·oupt! lmmJC. Fully • \Crt .. 4·Spd good cond. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ~?:?~~n~,~~1f, f:~~~~~ 1~ :~/~4:~\tl ~~t. ' e>ranq. c.,_ty•1 SL~ ~~ 2333 197Htuslang n Ghia, sun· , cooking & rdr1gerat1on .. t.md SK50 Call ;.ill I P~I & TRUCkS Last chance for fa11tasllc
i>a11mgs on all remammg
'77 modeli. in i.t()(.'k
cassett~. leather in •----'-------S.vlll. Center 16 Camaro. po11.cr items, roof, PS. PB. air. lo ml. ADFt VJIF \lth1td1nC' rt' i~l ~7-l
l'O rdcr & encloi.cd --. --.. -~flybndge "One of a 1978 Kawai>ak1 K/.650, :AA!
kind'" CaJI D<1le al liH I ma,$1700. 498-2709. ___ 5 1~ ~('\cs
26 ft. Thunderbird '7S Indian 1:!5 d art. e'
Formula (offshore). 351 tellenl l'Ond111on s.ioo
V8s. all navis:auonul Call84().~3after5pm_
gear & groun~ tackll• 1974 llondJ SS/kc. 4·<') I
Sleeps four. 1.Jndl•r 50 w/wand i.er(•cn & wind
hours u!>ed !>tn<'c new. 6 JUft\mer. Xlnl cond Lo wheel trailer lncluclcd rru S900 642·0i62 also full c anvas ('all · · ----
John Felkr at 1).12·0010 or 71 tlONOA 750, t•uMom
540-8211. puant. pull back bars. 110
• , --, . rear tire. etc'. Like 11e\\
74 28 Cab C'r!-.r. r ~'· l2.000ma.Sl200.673·032-I FIB, T 'S, \H'll l'lfllll>d. --------
S~ al Hlg I lar k-lfi-:1U:S:1 YZl:?S lJ '77, only trail rHI·
tlcn. SiOO or b(.'i.l ollcr 35• ClllUS C'HAl·-r 1:1:13 lll Hi
Aft c:ib1n cl11.1l i.tat1011
TwinChry:. \'IS !o :? ht•atl'\ l\<1wasuk1 '7 1 K2400 2 into
llaul<·d,i.ur\'l'Y Al. pnt1I 1 exhaust DID rims s.1;;o
sf5.0UO 1\ \ Ii-lit !.1000 I' P 642 6226
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
2828 Harbor Blvrl.
COSTA MESA
546-12 00
~-~------WE PAY TOP DOLLAR
1''0R TOP USED CARS
FOREIGN. DOMESTIC
~ or CLASSICS
If your car 1i. extra clean
sec us first.
8AUIER BUICK
29'l5 Harbor Hlvd
COsta Mesa !179 2500
COSTA MESA
DATSUN
tenor PP t>W-9323 '68 Fru.tbnck. good cond1 • air cond, Alt·F\1 s lereo AM/FM 8 trk, a uto.
tion. S1000. 768·4114 or OVER I 00 tape, $4500. Pvl ply 968-3089af\6Pi\t
MGI 9744 s&i-2-131 aft6 ~7800 Mom's '69. 6 cyl, auto
••••••••••••••••••••••• -'1 CADILL •cs P is 1 " d. 1967 hlGB·new engrne. '71 v'W conve rt. 'Xlnt A 1970 Chevy Mall bu trans, , x n con •
2845 HARBOR BLVD pamt, top. interior & bc>dy. Great eng, nu brk~. TO CHOOSE FROM Wagon, PS, PB, air, a ir ~. 675-3063 ~
540.6410 540-0213 stereo. In cherry conda· S2J0067J.747S AT ALL TIMES shocks & trlr hitch, runs '68 Fstbk 289, m ech.
uon. <983HDEl. Pn ply. '70 VW Bug. very clean. good. $850. 49S·Sl27 sound. needs minor bdy
Call 631-5767 after 6 pm. must see. Sl 700. Call 1'ii..T-1~rs '76 Monte ca rlo. l\f int WT'k. S600. Dan, 6'2·8560.
Porsche 9750 . 833·0145 1 ~ cond. 19.000 mi. All '71 Mustang. &g. xlnl, ~
""' YW BUG Bod ood Cad J) xtras. $4800. 640·SS63 just serva· "ed. 49,000 mi. • •••••••••••••••••••••••"" • Y&. • c ~ Demo & executln• sale . . I runs xlnl. SllOO In t'ng & I a Cofttfnental 9930 Body ne e ds paint ••
now gorni: on-hurry! 77 9ns Targa, ti,OOO m • trans. Must sell $1300. Ph ••••••••••••••• ••••••• • $1100/bst ofr. 642-7387 • 881! DOVf;STREET En;ierald .~reen met~lh.c 96.'.l·~ ~(iOO H.trh•n Blvd. • (~l'llr MacArthur Blvd. paint. 7 All?Y "'his. -c .. ,1.1 ~h'-.1 5-IO·'J IOO 5 Mark JV, all power • 7 l Mus t a o g . 3 S 1 '
&Jamboree Road ) :;terco. lealh~r inl. 5 spd, '77 Sirol'CO. !>l\I'. ;\I C'. :t.ems, cruise, AM·FM Cleveland eng, pwr s teer
Nt-:WJ>ORT REACH lowered. M!~l co~d. 1 ,\~I I Fl\I stt.•r('o. xlnl . stereo, s7soo. P vt ply & brks. air, nu paint.•
NEWPORT DATSUN
'77 Clearance
833-13 00 °"".'"e:. 911KS~. ~0.9QO. cond. Stll·lli23 l'Vl'~ '7•1 Cad Eldorado Conv. ~7800 gold, wht vinyl l~p. P b TOP 51S6·76ti6 or 7oll·4 ll9 Iv ·---All xtras. Rcj(. gai;. Good C:O.-.ette 9932 biS-1201
DOLLAR 'i2 2-IOZ, dean, A :\I ~·:\I. ~'.~ Volito 9 772 cond. ss7oo. 759-1676· •••••••••••••• •• ••• • ••• •-,-6-8_A_u_t_o_2__,8_9_._N_e_w
P "'ID aar c·o nd. ma.:s. Kon• ·n 911T Tar"a, t-;.l\ltr. 5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• I f •CORVETTES b "~tu . to '"' hk $4000 831 074 t ~ '75 t.:ldo. Lo m , snr , r~ res. vm ~p. air. FOR CLE.\~ :; s . spd. 63.000 mi. l3.ooo ma BEFORE YOU IUY loaded. Gd cond. Silver I 978s Beaut iful co nd. Pb• o n complt'te rcbll, bl 86 f 4991477 963-&W2 IMPORT CARS ·7~ Datsun Pit·kup, A!\l · i.tcrco. rccaros, spoiler. A USB> VOLVO, ue. t or. · NICE SELECTION! ---------
1977 SEARA Y Homu. Sole/ ALL MODELS ~~h~\~~eo~ad.!fs, "'~~1~: etc. Best O\l!r SI0,000. ~e us Couat S~u t~t-1r n '77 Cad t.:1 Dorado, r~tired HOWARD Chevrolet '67 v-8, $1200. Dy 549-9923. ·
240 Se<lan lmd~t·. i''ull Rent/Storoge 9160 neau cover. :.tint cond, 499-1237 v • ange nty s o vo GM exec. I get new car DOVE & QUAIL STS. eve. 731·0969 Ask for
dual e\erythmi;:. Stall on ••••••••••••••••••••••• $JOO(). 640 6337 afl Gpm Headquarters every year under special !Near MacArthur, Jam · Mike.
"Tnty, Volrn 25S hp I 0 ent a 1977 E X-Cu live ... BUY OR LUSE MARQUIS VOLVO purchase plan. Nu car is bc>ree&Bn stoll ,...-...... --L-n_-----
Too many 'lra:. to lt~t Molorhome or J\J ini· 71260Z. many xtras '77-911 ·S·Targa. fully MISSION VIEJO here. must sell, $9450 or NEWPORT BEACH -RD-9955
Slap 1n ~ n. C.1 11 ufl motorhomc from Herb ~1!1.'dmoncy $1850. loaded. under iOOO ma 's. 831·2880495-1210 oHer.493-7893 , ••••••••••• .. ••••••••••
ti JOP)J. 71 1 :;.10 :;t;J8 rr ~'r1edJander. Call any of 494.4761 full warranty. Copper Super s harp Dr s red/· '77 CuUass. Brougham..
these numbers brown w fawn inter. OR.ANGE COUNTY orange Corvette.. T ·top. loaded.
898-6777 --------Newly rcbll Dati.un Askmg $20,000 or be al VOLVO Coupe DeVille 1976. sun· loaded. M4-7S66 aft( 4 552-7749aft6pm
GREAT FOR 537 .777 7 WE BUY l'ngine for '66 Dat:.un. S33K mo. 675·91 ll or EXCLUSIV~LY VOLVO roof. fully loaded, xlnl. PM. P'lnto 9957 FISHING!! USl:.ft C .o.Rti. s..w Will :.ell rei.t of c.ir 675·1337 Sbi9S 646-6665 " .60 d I 828-8888 ..., "" • tor .. .,, .,.,,,·0078 Largest Volvo Dealer Ye.I-Le ' restore n ex· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 28Ft. CHAMPION w · h Ch 1 ~ """ 11 d th h t ere I e new evro et '61 Super 1600 ... By owncr tn Orange County! ce ·con · roug ou · ·74 Ptnto Wagon. Luggage
C'r S-IJ iAB. l-'l ybr1dge. !9ft Appollo motorhome. dealership an the lr\lnc 78 2+:! 280Z. onl~ 2300 Complell'ly restorcd. nu BIJYorLf:,\!>1': Carnaro 9917 675-9899 rack, mag w h eels
:-.1nglt• ,,.r,·\lt i.:alll'y, Must sec lo appn•c1ule' Auto c~·nll·r Wt• need oni.: ma·:. :l~r "'Jrranlv. urcs Classil' ssooo DIRE(.,'T .••••••••••••••••••••••• 9933 (wide). 8 ·l r ack tape h1'ad .ba1Llank.Slt•l'Ps5. Call J ohn F 1•ltcr at your ust•d l'.ir' wrar l,ow rlh· 1 I• till Ch c maro 350 Cougar d k/ d Lo hl
L ' 1 1 • 2 00 0 0 ., nc (.' .11 t t 64ti·7613 ~·,·~· .... [~-,,~~~ evy a . ••••••••••••••••••••••• cc ra 10, au .. w 1 e r.ngincromp,•tC} re· 64 · J or54 ·o211 JOE .ill•r'3 prat·t• !lti:l7lil . ---":'.-----~-Eng blttolhemax.. exterior.blue interior. hwlt. Ell•llror11ci.:e.1rtn --!Jt~123331•\l'~ i''.! !li t, aar. nu nni:s. Custom body. Nds so· 14 XR7. Loadl.'d, xlnl SOKm11cs.$1795.&12·3379 d . dl'pth llmil'r & hr~md ~lOTOR llO~IES MAC PHERSON ----val\'t'l'. el t r h. brks. meone to fimsh. $2500. cond. PP. Must s~ll
new. unu,cd 2·wa y F;\I FOR RENT CHEVROLET l!liO SW Wagon. nt.>eds We~r carh 49;\I mi. S:lf J.S!ll Ml 1 52975/ot r . 71 1·846·3278 iS Wagon, 4 spd. AM/FM.
ra1ho & IlDF. Sir100 or From SlSO. wk. 770·0022 work, SHOO be ... t offer. S.l!>Oll 194.2130 2025 S. Manchester ,. · pm cvs. 213·SS.1-0.&24 dyN aar, mng radials. xln t.
best off(.'r C':ill l'\'l.'S & "'OR R E'"T ~.0-.~1-l -21 AuloCcntcr Ori\'l' Mu si sC'll 6Jt·0913 Anahe'tm 750-2011 '67 New 396 with ever· ~ 9935 rond. S2GOO. 1·496·7332 wknds.6459376 r i•~ ~ "0 or IHVINI': 'G·l C'abrolt'l <.:onv . ..........,.... ---------• II om c com P 1 el e l Y 768-7222 'i5 2f!OZ. whl. xlnt conn. • '1 'L·'t " t k d --ythtnl!. Posa rear, 4 speed ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pl-adl. 9960
1978 · 'd I 6 3 33 "" ~" " rac . · ~oo Swedish Volvo Mechanit· AM/l''M Casseue Stereo '., .. _.,,, equip • very c n 7 ·SI • -------&-s t oflcr. 673·57115 n1te d t II ... 995,b l S 500• .. ., f f •74 Dod"c rear end Wlll ••••••••••••••••••••••• afl 6 con ·~mu~ se ·..,.. · :. now at Ivans i''oreai;n 2 . or o s t o er " · ·
SEA RAY
30' Rybridge
Loaded
Owner's Demo
SAVE! SSS
HARRISON'S
SEA RAY
l pm Autos, lmport~d or day. ofr. 615·962fl Car repairs. 1995 Harbor Ss.&·Til3 fit Darts & Dusters $125. 1974 Ply. Satellite Sta.
Auto SerYlc~. Parts ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·75 Datsun 280Z. "1lv<'rl R--..1t 9755 Blvrl. CM 645 1982 W ·6100 Wag. 9 pass .• PIS. P/B. & A • 9400 ~ ---------O..vrol.t 9920 Air,. Gd. tires. t rans. CC~SIOM~S Audi 9 707 hl:1t·k ,Low m1 lcai.:c •••••••••••••••••••••••• '75 164~. Lots or Xlras .••••••••••••••••••••••• Ford 9940 Coole r . a i r s hocks .
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••··~··• m<ii:::.. s tereo. i.lic k TESTDRIVIEOUR Very clean, Xlnt cond. ••••••••••••••••••••··~ trailer hit.ch. CB Rad10 '6.t.'77 Used !\I us tang •73 ... UDI I OOLS S6:l00 1orfer 49.t 0476 For Sale. 1960 Chevy St.t. .--PHIL 1 1 Good Co d Sl 900 p k "" "LE CAR s.isoo or best offer. Must w · nc . n . • •• ~~ge.~llN~7.ioc':o_r __ e_r_. Automata<." trans. with 9 725 OFTHEYE"'R" ~II 5484&83 w~~·c ~uenJ. e~rla~1~.0ng~ LONG ,_834_..0fl99 __ . _____ _
-on Iv 17. non 11ni:1 n a I Rot 19A 6-16 1110 afl erfl\ e. FORD 19Ell Plvmouth Satellite. Pair l·rager!> W1lh llSOXl.'.> miles ltiJOGWX 1 '\ow ••••••••••••••••••••••• Good mventory m s tot·k Autos. Used Runs (i:ood ssso or best.
tu es SJS. OML y $2 I 50 i~ F1Jl Sedan. \'<'rY l'll•an Hurry whale they lust! ....................... 75 )Ionia. mu!.t l>ell im oCCer. &IG-4!l87
3101 C.oast llwy N 8 . •
64::? 3379 *' rt 11 Mtn I 1ns1dc & out J::ni:anc rl' MIRACLE Gefteral 9901 med 2+:?. 17,000 orig mt. wpoPer rl.'nll\' O\erhaul cd M ... ZD ... /R.,....'"ULT hkc nl'w 5-19.9923 d•:.. '7:l Pl.~mouth, P IS. Aar. • -0 bor Co l .. esa · " " r;n• ••••••••••••••••••••••• J ...... oar · ftMm 1HS :ns.1AlorJ1m 2150 HarborBlvd. 6756'l:t.!nile?> l\u tares, 6·ryl $1900.
642-0795 T 'IE:SA ~tu,uwll &15·17:12 6 3 1-2547 AutotforSal• ------...................... . 1976 l:?.l Sp1dl•r, A ;\J F\I COS A ;, PROPERTY ·;s Chevettc. beige brn
76 13ft. Whalc-r tvpe ulll RKnaffonal ·--ud-. --S 1 1 r<1d10. l' antenna. lul( rk 645-5700 tweed ml. air. /\M f/'~1 .
h,oal. 2511 P ~t.inual Vehicles 9530 •JA a ioou;, 1 51\.~'\ :It xlnl rond , JO K m1. rad. ~K ma. mobile 1.
9965
f,\'anrudc $1400. Day~••••••••••••••••••••••• cond. lo m1·s. ll oranl(t! "'iblk inl. SSt;OO Rolls Royce 97 56 RmUCTIQN S3SOO 67J·i94.t s;J.98-JO 894-!>:lSl_!'~es s.&0·-1~ Cof\\'l 4 :.cal street lei::al ~.~g. nu urc~ 551 SJ!ill I rm ~52·7179 dys or •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• ..... , ........ .,.~o....,., ••••• , ., .. .,_._,_.. , .. .-'76Grand Prix W . all pwr
:!4' ·74 MARAUDER. com· dune buggy. ssoo. Call ---------• 1k-1~e\•ts . . "l DEALER IN U.S.A. SALE
mand brdg, twn 16S, dual 529 8486 _______ 1 '74 lOOLS. I door •73 Flat 128 SL ~ ROY
--------ttem~. cruise. AM ·F'M ·71 Vega F.6lale. Wgn. 4 l96& Ford Waaon R/H stereo lape, $5200. Pv\
speed. delux interior, air PS PR runs' great' ptyS.1()..7800
sla . Loaded, lo hrs. 4 WMef DrivH 9550 Mar .. stk, st<'rco cass CARVER
si2.soo ofr. PP.s.&0..4836 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $2300 G-I0·23S!lcvt•s. S13SO. Aft6.&11>_ .. _199_._s -ROLLS·RO\'tE
F1eel repla~menls r e·
quire the Dally Pilot to II·
quldat.e 12 Plymouth Sia·
tion Wngons from ex.1st·
ing inventory .
carpe ted, wood grain. • · · · -~--------vinyl exterior. factory $450. 968·3037 '74 F1rebird t-•ormula 400
..,... I i I I 3 COST"'MES"' BMW 9 712 t'IATS l-'ORS,\LE 1lo'OJ•mbotfe ..., g ai;s n oul, s ps . "' A 72 12-l Spyder. 5 !>pd. air ,...,pon &.•t11
tr a 1Ierab1 l'. S·l 250 "'MC & JEEP ••••••••••••••••••••••• rond. I.le 7 l·IG:'>IJ. $2295. ,..__ _____ .,...
aar, luggage rack. lock-'64 Ranchero. new cngint>. Air, PIS. P/B. tilt, rallye
ing s ka r~l'k 1i:icluded. rr onl end. brakes & whls S3800642-00ti2 .
Steel radial tar e s .. lo shocks. $1500/b~t ofr. y 9974
R.'\5-:\.l3i day, 67:l·ll484 evl.' II' S -----#I In Collfontia ClOSEO suNDAY
miles. Xlnt cond. mam· 536·2990 ecJCI I ~7 6 ll'nnnce & mileage re· •••••••••••••••••••••••
1977 Skif'lock 24 FREE Open crui s er with tandem trailer. O)IC 100 Aallons of gas wilh
with only ss houri. VllF' <':&Ch new car sold·wilh
radio, l'Ompns~. teak thas adonly.
s wim platform. bait 549-8023
i.ystem, dual bnuer1es. 252-1 llARBOR BLVD.
81mm1 top with rull cur· COSTA MESA
tams and moonnit cover.----
And more. Mint cond1· TNCks 9560
lion. $13,300 or best ofrcr ••••••••••••••••• ••••••
838-~139 FEIRUARY
•73 Skipjack 24'. trlr. en1:
elec ok, cqu1p'd Cas hing
S9500. S.l9·29i6 Monffra
9.5
18' Whaler hull. hhcrgla-;11
over marine ply\ltOOd
$100.Aft. 6 ~.m . h7J 01~
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Cll/\RTER Plush go·
Yacht, reasonable. hour·
CLliliNCE
on nil G MC trucks &
vans' We're over·
stocked••• All models
are
PRJCED TO SELL
Jy or doily. 61S·2 I 72 orl .!!!!!!!!!~~~~~!!!!
_67_,_s-_5585 ________ ,Bcfore you buy or lease
loah. SoH 9060 yourln9e7w8 TRUCK •••••••••••••••••••••••
FUJI· YAMAHA
DEALERS
Yacht Brokerage
Llstlnas Wanted I
Soutttwnhnt
Yec:ht Sain
2616 Newport Blvd.
Newpe>rt Beach
(714) 673·921 l
CALLUS!
646-0226
UNIVERSAL
2026 HarbQr, Costa Mes:i
'63 lntem'I PU. Short box.
wht spoke whls. lrg knob-
b1es, 4·CYI eni:. Ofr.
9T9-0l83 or 754-0146
1978 BMW's
HERE NOW!
COMPLETE
IODYSHOP
HOWOPEH
EXCELLIEMT
SELIECTIOM OF
BMW RESALES
We may have your next
rar in our anvcnlory Call
us today!
831-2040 495-4949
CREVIER
& I $T 6 lllOAOWA'r
SANTA ANA
835·3171
lHt: ULflMAftil>All/l"C MACHllll
•USB> IMW's*
'74 2002 Auto. S!ISL PO
'7-l2002Th Air023LJR
'75 2002A Ser. 2236
'76 2002 45pd SIR 94SN LF
·77 320IA S IR 177RSK
Closed 0. Sundays
H 124 Sport. ~ 'Pd.
AM 11-'M stereo tape Li t•
3311K\'C. S27 !1~. t.1c
Wholesall'r al the Costa
Mesa C;ir Wash .
752·068i. 645-291>3
9 727 •••••••••••••••••••••••
lrmdMew'77
HONDA Cars
MAHY
To Chooff From!
UNIVERSITY
Olcls9'0bil•
HOftda C•s • GMC
Trucks
2850 Harbor Oln1
Costa Mesa ~\0·9640
'77 Honda Accord. 6000
mi's. all xtr3s, SS900.
••837-4149•
J,.,,.... 9730
•••••••••••••••••••••••
'64 XKE Con ver tible,
needs tender Jovlng
moohanl~ to make me
s par kle a1taln. s.2500
fir m . o r trade older
model t ruck & cash
646.(Wl2
I(.,...... Ghia 9735 •••••••••••••••••••••••
1958 Ghia O>upe. Xtra cln.
no rust.. nu cltch /pnt.
$1200 hn n. 4~4-2130
........ 9738 •••••••••••••••••••••••
miracle
mazda
~ Y1fl"I' -
XLNT BUY ' VOL~RES cords, $2450. 962·7028 8·5. 67 Ford Fairlanc, good 'i4 Hutchbutk, A/C, A l\t 1
f All h eond .. S5SO or bes t o lr . FM, i''rnl disc bk, 5J;\I. Sharp '116 Silver Sharlow.
"hlle. R.R.-Rlght hand
dr. Xlnl cond. $15,900.
Qill Patrick. ~2·4414
3 to chOQle rom. wit You don't need a gun to 955-:1619 afl tOAM xlnl cond . $1400. 8 .0 . factory "'ftir conditioning. "draw fast." when you p p 546·2022
Toyota 9765 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Jlll e n gine. lu~stai::c place an ad in the Daily '73 Ford Mavenck, V-8, -·-·-----
racks, trailer t owing Pilot Want Ads! Call now aulo. air. & more.I ownr. Have sornething to sc>ll?
package, AM I FM stereo. -642·5678. Super clean 846 9265 Classified ads do It w~ 2 equipped wilh power ----------1----------~indows. Priced from: Autos, Mew 9100Auto1, Hew 9100 Autos, Mew : ?100
19'<>REYOU
SB.L YOUR
TOYOTA,
$2175""' •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
(Lie. n8SllPCW)
SEE US! · 1976
GRAM FURY MARQUtS TOYOTA Station Wagon . 2 to Ml~ION VIEJO choose from. 440 4 bbl. _8_3_1_-2_8_8_0_4_9_5_·_1 _t_I0~1 engine. AM •F M s tereo.
'76 Celica ST. Loaded.
Custom paint. $4200tbst
ofr. 75-1· 1810
·n Corolla. gold . stirk.
must seU. $795. Kalhy
640..5217
'73 CELICA. air. vinyl
top. chrm whls. radials.
xlnt.$26..'i0.492-1020
power windows. root
racks and factory aar
conditioning. Priced
from:
$2150
(Lie. J600PCY)
1975 FURY
Cust o m S u bur ban
Wagons. S to choose
from. All with factory
'00 Corona nu mufOer. '25 air, roof racks, 360 4 bbl.
mpit nu br akes, runs engine . Dltrerent choice
..-g_ood_SGS0 __ ._6_75_·8_5_24 ___ 1 of extras on each car.
Tri....,._ 97 6 7 Priced from : ••••••••••••••••••••••• $1975
<Lie. #223MCG I 1975 T r i u mph Spit·
fire ·20.000 males,
AWF'M stereo ta~ & m 197 6
excellent condition G.,"' ... ••RY
mechanic all)', inside & """'"" rv
$3 300 call 548 5163 Custom Suburban. Pac· out. · · · tory air , 36l> 4 bbl. aller6pm. ----=---...----•engine. lug g age Tack,
TR 7 1976. AM·FM heavy duty shocks, lint·
caMette, red. 3000 ~l's. ed &lass, &old metallic "'°°· 631·~ nntsh.
'72 TR6. xlnt cood Over SI tsO
driv.t, roll bor, new pnl & CLlc. nDGNCF>
rag tOp. Must 'ell f t !
Best offer. 559.5923
Vc6swegt1t 9770 •••••••••••••••••••••••
lf\JGESEl..ECTION NEW 4t USED CARS -ToP c.,t\ S$ Cor your VW.
P&ld for ot not. Cati
Keith or JtrfY. • eoe wmtAM vw
'1600 Westminster Ave.
1975
SPOITSFUIY
Wqon, AM/FM 1tereo .
alr condlUontnc, 360 4
bbl. ft\ISne, t1nled «lau.
power window•. Sliver
Cloud mti..UJc (Int.sh. snu
(Uc. •M«Ml'Ql
All can MAY be lMpect·
ed ln aau~e area Atk roe Rlckor<>scar.
Olt.t..MGI COAST
OAJLYptLOT
W•t Bay Slt'Mt C.talfesa rot J.at«•Uoa: 6C&-4321
DATSUN 810
THE FUEL-INJECTED
FAMILY CAR WITH THE ·
PERFORMANCE OF
A 240-Z ENGINE
THE 810 FEATURES:
• 6 WAY ADJUST AILI DRIVM'S Sli T
• AM.JM STBtlO MULTIPLIX RADIO
• TIHTID GLASS
• POWIA STEBIHG •
• THI 6 CYL FUll IMJECTIO 84GUU
,. • PWS MUCH. MUCH MORltll
BuDtiogton Beach e
Fountain Valley
ED ITION
A ftern oon
N.Y. Stoeks
. .
VOL. 71, NO. 38, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFOR NIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1978 TEN CENTS
'OUtside' Lawyers
Legal expenses paid lo outside ~awyers by the city of Hunt-
ington Beach have skyrocketed ~eyond authorized s pendin~
hmits. City Councilman Ri chard
Siebert chari:cd Monday night.
Siebert i.a1d that city rl'sidcnts
ha \'e paid SI 75,000 to outsi<Jc
lc i;:al consull ~mts from 1975 to
Ja n. 31 of this Yl·ar in addition to
costs paid to the city's staff or
five full-ti ml' allornt·) s
Most of the outside legal ex
pcnses occurred 1n 197(> and 1977
The lion's shure or the ex-
penses $76.525 --went to
N1cholus Counter of the firm
!\1 itl'lll'll. Stll)(:rbt•r~ und Knupp.
Counll'r was hirt·d for $25,000 in
June of 19711 tu hundlc labor
negotiations \\1th l'1ty employee
USSOl'IUltuns
r oun((or's fh·s lor lht• first
Yl'i.lr l"11mbcd lo S58..t88 arter the
coun c il aulhur1 l cd him to
part1c1patt• 111 gricnmce cases at
$75 per hour.
Siebert s aid that it was wrong
for the city not to be informed of
the bills as they mounted in ex·
ct·ss of the S25,000 limit.
• · 1 wu::. shockl•d al the total
und l t111nk that the rest of the ci·
ly council wu!>. too." he said
today
Sil•bt>rl S4lid that Counter
performed nt-cc::.s:.ary "ork. but
lhat thl' council should have
been kt-pt abreast of the cxpen-
,.,..,.....,. ..
WHO'LL TAKE MANHATTAN? THIS IS NEW YORK'S 33RD STREET AFTER BLIZZARD
New Storm Paralyzes Northeastern U.S. From Pennsylvania to New Hampshire
• I
1Raindrops
1Will Fall
lOn County
l It's ~oing to ruin.
l That"s the forecast of the Na
tional Weather Service. They're
not enn hedgmi< their bets this
timl'. The t'hancc nf s hower-.
tonight is h:-.lt•tJ al close to 100
pcrt'cnt, dl'l'rt•al-.in g to 70 per-
cent Wcclncsd.1y.
!\I cteorolog1s t .John Henderson
1nott'd thut tonight's storm was
lorig1n ally rxpcctcd to arrive a
day l:ll<'r but 1s movini:; at an un-
1 usually fast 50 knots .
· Ami. he sa1cl , more storms are
'in sight, with periods of r ain
possible the rest of the ~clc.
Lows tonight will be in the low
to m 1d 50s, with higps Wednes-
day n<'ar 60.
Southern Orange County re-
ceived the heaviest rainfall in
the 24-hour period ending this
morning, with the Moulton
Niguel Treatment Plant in
Lujtuna Niguel measuring .19 of
an inch.
Santiago Peak on Soddleback
Mountain received .30 of an
inch, while Santa Ana received
less than a tenth of an inch.
Newport Beach measured only
. 02 inches and Costa Mesa .04.
J . Sherman Denny of Hunt-
ington Beach said no measura-
ble rain fell there at all Monday.
* * *
Blizzard Paralyzes
Most of Northeast
By The Associatt-d Press
The Northeas t from Penn
5y\\"ania lo New llamp.-.h1rc was
p:ira l y1<'d t oday by a
blizza rd that brought trom om•
lo l' 2 feet or snow to lhl' n•gion.
knocked OUt f)(>\\er in parts Clf
Boston und d1srupkd '1rtually
every facet' of hft• for mil lions.
While the snow -Sll.'arly, but
IC'ss severe than on Monda y -
continued throu.c:h the morning
in lhe Ea s t. cr1ppl1n 14
transportation and business for
a second day, people in the'rcsl
or the nation faced their own pro-
blems from a \'arietyof storms.
The rush hour in Chicago was
complicated by an unexpected'
snowfall that left nine inches oo
the ground by lltis m orning.
Parts of Montana and North
Dakota were st ruck by a
bli zza rd whi c h s trande d
travelers and made it feel like it
was 45 below zero. Oklahoma re-
ported six inches of snow ;
lakeside areas of Wisconsin got
from six lo 12 inches; there were
record low temperatures in
other parts of the Midwest. and
cold and a forecas t of possible
snow in Georgia .
l\tore than t\\o dozen weather·
related deaths were reported
around U1e nation. Thousnnds of
people in the Eust' remained in
hotels, hospitals. schools and
emergency shelters where they
took rduAe Monday trom the
\\ 111d·driv1.:n snow which dnrted
to ~1x fl•et and more.
Th1.·y wt•re Joined by hundreds
of other f:Jmilies evacuated from
lo" -lyan~ coaslal areas nooded
clurin,,: the morning by high
11dcs. All roads along 18 mile~ of
1-t'a coasl in Nl'W Ila m pshire
we re clo~cd.
Th<" hhrznrd tn the Northeast
''a~ the sccon1l in little more
than two weeks. the Mid west is
:-.till r cco,·<"nni: from heavy
~nows that i.trut•k less than two
week:-. a,::o
Atrports in lhC' Northeast were
clos'ed. and officials 'Said they
would stay shut through the day.
The New York and American
stock exchanges, which closed
early Monday, opened late to-
day. Four or the five commodity
exchanges in Ne.w York were .
closed today.
The storm 4.n New York City
was the worst since Dec. 26,
1948, wh~ 19.6 inches of sno~
fell. At 7 a.rrt., there were 17 .7
inches of snow in mid-Manhattan.
2 1 inches in some s~ctlons of
Queens and 23 inches iri some
sections or Nassau County on
Long bland .
Like other of(jcial.s, Gov . Ella
Gras110 or Cc»~nectJ~ut declared
(See BUZZARD. Pa,e A2)
Another Rain Stonn
Hits Northern State
lly The Assoda&ed hesa
Northern Callfornla com·
muters were socked again today
by heavy morning rains a~ thP latest In a parade or S\orm
fronts marched into the state.
Rains beginning in pre-dawn
hours caused a rash or rush-hour
traffic accidents, minor floodlnJC
and a mudslide or two in Marin.
County that caused hundreds or
commuters to pUnch in late.
Pacific Oas and Electric Corn-
l>&ny Jaid power lines were
wlthstandini the rain and gusty
winds for the mo•t part.
although ~ bomt• ln Soquel
wert r eported wltbout,»ower .
The National Weather Service
said today's ra.\n had dropped
• 75 Inches In the San Francisco
Bay are. In four hours, and
most areu north or Fresno were
expected to set at least an inch.
Wlnd• were pstin& \IP to .O
milts per hour.
··storms are naekt«I tlP 1mu
tl'le Paclfk and beadff tbla.
way," saJa foneUtef JUebard J.;ay of tbe .H._... WntMr
Service .. Th~ tron~ were expected to
hit the state at. 24-hour intervals
throughout the week.
Lashing rains and winds Sun-
day and Monday knocked out
power lo 44,000 homes and busi·
neases, topple<! trees and tipped
over mobi l e hom es in a
Sacramento area trailer park.
On the ocean today, winds (){
50.55 knots and 10-foot seas
forced the 57-foot Sue Belle with
four people aboard to radio the
Coast Guard tor help.
A Cout Gu.ard dispatcher ntd
the craft reported engine trouble
and wa1 suffering ••a terrific
beatln8" cit the Big Sur coast. PJan• were to tow thto stricken craft into Monterey.
Gusty winds early Monday
yanked uboul a third of tho
screen away al th~ Kay·Von
Drive-In theat.r. tn Napa. TM
Hl'ffn toppled onto the roadwa1
aad temporarily hocked out
power at KVON radiO.
She Rhoola in Se11lde. nur
tee. MIN, ••Al>
• Sea water driven bJ. stx-foot
waves and a ~.Uoot hi~h tide
sloshed onto portions of Hunt-
ington State Beach. Sunset
Beach and Surlside Colony to·
day. temp0raf\ly forclng the
closure of Pacific Coas t
Highway from Wa111er Avenue
to Surlstde.
Colitomia TI11hw1y Patrol of-
ficers and Seal Beach .,oUce still
had lhe blgbway barricaded and
motorists were forced lo llke
alternate routes al mJdmominc
as the waters gradually drain~.
Armando Perea. postmaster at Surfside Colony, said water
nooded aome cara1es of homes
toward the south end of the strip
of horn• on the l>Hch front .
He saJd Seal kath Public
Works Department crews Wttt
standln11 by with a truckload ol
sandb111s to bealn prep•rln&
•11ln1t another bllb Ude oa·
tlHCbL ,
Futher downcoHt wHes
pushed w~ ••:1..~ be1cb-Ud !made Andilraaa ~l i.nto a nvtr.
CoSt lltl $17 5,000
ditures anct should have given
a pproval as tbtt,Y accrued.
Siebert uld it was the
responsl&ility of City Ad·
ministrator Bud Belsito to keep
the city posted.
The annual budget for the city
attorney's office. not counting
the outside legul consultant.II, is
SJ07.000. Four attorneys are now
"ork ing in the department after
the firing last month of Deputy
City Attorney John O'Connor.
According lo Siebert, the
following fees were paid by the
city to outside lawyer s from
Jan. 1, 1975, to Jan. 31, 1978:
MacKenzie Brown, auess-
ment district, $3,521; Joseph
Coo mbs, r e devel o pm e nt,
$14.918: Counter. $76,525; Dennis
Brown, O'Connor grievance
case, $11,073; William Sage,
police adviser, $32,963; R.L.
Kautz, workers compensation
administrator, $14,~; Charles
Pollyea, Huntington Beach lnn
bankruptcy case. $9,325 and Pal
Coughlan, charter revision con-
sultant, $12,203.
The above totals will go even
higher with the appro\'al Mon-
day night by the city council of
an additional $12,147 for Pollyea
and $4,000 more for Coughlan.
Siebert and Harriett Wieder
bolh said Monday night that the
city could cut down on expenses
(See FEES, Page A2)
Gunfire Exchange
Transient, 17, Held
InHBCop$hooting
A 17-yecr -old transient has
been charged with attempted
m urder ofter he allegedly shot a
lluntmgton Beach police oCClcer
in the hand Monday night.
The unidentified youlh was
later a rrested after he was
:-.tru(·k by shotgun pellets in the
(•hin and both shoulders from a
weapon fired by another police
officer.
Police say the youlh 1s in·
volved in a bur~lary ring in
which 13 other su.'>pccts were ar-
rested l\Ionday night.
The wounded officer,
Patrolman Jerry Fuhrman, con-
fronted th~ youth ih a backyard
on Carnaby Strc<'l, after being
ca ll ed lo investigate reported
buri:larit•s in that area a l about
9 p.m . police said
The youth allegedly fired one
shot from ~ stolen .9mm Smith
and Wesson pistol. The slug
i.truc k Fuhrrnan's left hand.
Other iplice officers chased
the youth lhrough snerat yards
a nd into a lum beryard on
Talbert Avenue where the s~
~ct wus shot before his arrest
al 9:45 p.m.
Panel Votes
Webster Pick
WASHINGTON (AP) -
The Senate Judicia ry
Committee recommended
by a 10·0 vote today that
the full Senate confirm
President Ca rter's
nomination of U.S. Circuit
Judge William JI. Webster
as FBI director.
Webster, a member or
the 8th U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals in St. Louis,
would succeed Clarence
M. Kelley, who planB lo
retire this month.
Webster, 53, r eturned to
St. Louis after confirma-
tion hearings last week.
He said he had a number
of opinions slill to write.
The youth Is reported In good
condition al ttle UC Irvine
Medical Center jail ward.
Officer Fuhrman is also re·
ported in good condition al llWlt-
i n gt on 'lnterc o mmunity
Hospital.
Police Sgt: Berl Chadwick
snld the youth was Initially
sought In connection with at
least two burglaries on Cam aby
Street in which a shotgun and
four pistols were stolen from two
police officers' homes.
Chadwick s aid the youlh is
<See OFFICER, Page AZ)
Ford to Appeal
Damages A.warded
Of $128 Million
By TOM BA1lLEY OI .. C»lff. ,.._. .\Mt
Damages tolallng rno~ \han
$128 niilUott w~ ... awaf.4ed tQ
two Ora,nge County Camllies
Monday in a Soperlor Cour\
verdict that sets a new record
for that t~pe of civil lawsuit. Th~ huge judgment against
the rord Motor Company ended
more than three days of jury de-
liberations In the courtroom of
Judge Leonard Goldstein. The
trial began last August.
The principal beneficiary in
the judgment Is Richard
Grimshaw, 18. or Anaheim. who
was severely burned over 90 per·
cent of his body six years aio
when a Ford Pinto In which he
was a passenger exploded and
burned.
Grimshaw we~ awarded $125
million in punili~e damages and
$2,841,000 in compensatory
damages by a jury which was
told during the trial that he has
undergone more than :;o opera-
tions in the past five years with
medical buts totaling more than
$125,000.
The Jury agreed with a team
or lawyers headed by Art Hews
of Santa Ana that negligent con-
struction or the Pinto by the
Ford Company was the primary
cause of the accident on May 28,
1972.
It was testified thut a poorly
designed gas lank In the Pinto
owned by Mrs. Lilliebcll Gray. •
62, of Orange, was installed in
such a WJY that it would rupture
in almost any type of collision.
Mrs. Oray died in the burning
c !::f. .._. it ,.. .. Jn volved
in i skin bn Interstate JS
noar an Bernardin o .
Grimshaw, then 13, was rushed
to a "earby hospital in critical
condltkm.
It was testified in the trial that
burns caused the deuth of Mrs.
Gray and the serious injuries
s uHered by her passenger.
There were no other injuries
from any other cause, the jury
was told.
· Hews said the Ford C-Ompany
knew then and has always
known that Pintos arc defective
and dangerous cars with a pro·
pensity to catch fire in a rearend
· collision.
Mrs. Gray's husband and two
daughters, none of whom were
involved in the accident,' re-
ceived $659,680 in compensator'
damages plus $6,600 for medici..;
costs. Again, the judgment went
against the Ford Motor Co mpany.
.. UFOs Sighted?
Lawyers explained that the
award lo the Gray family might
have been on the lines of that
awarded lo Grimshaw if Mrs.
Gray's survivors had soughl.
punitive da mages in addition to
their successful wrongful death
action.
Ford Motor Co mpany orticials
today ref~cd to comment on the
record verdict. A spokesman in
Detroit.would only confirm that
.
County Center W anti Witneaea
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of t11e o .. ty Pli.t S\ttt
R eported sightings of two
Unidentified Flying Objects over
the weekend has prompted Dr.
Al Lawson, head of the UFO
Report Center of Orange Coun-
ty, to issue an .appeal today for
any other witness information.
He said that the 1igbtines oc-
curred Friday and Saturday ln
the F ullerton and Orange area.
but did Q9t. come lo his attention
until Monday, when be besan
checking lntotbem.
One incident was reportedly
witnessed by Mrs. Claire
Se~aa and her entire famUy,
who say they were awakened ln
their ~o'°' In Orange about 3:~ a.m. Sl\turday by• loud. bl,zarre
bumtntng noise.
"l can't explain it. Jt •• an
extremely loud humtl'>ifll· All of
a s udden cnar dot Sual began to
set up a howl. l wa• klnd of
afraid to look out the wlndow,"
Mn. Stmu.a said tMay. Th~ ramlly 1athered and
lookH -~at'd. ctalpsJDi •. thef
1potted 8IM:I wattWcl • ro'mid: dlah-ll~e UFO wblch tiovei'M at.
hJ1h aki&Ude. emllUD• ,.volVlnl beam,olllabl.
A nelpbOi ibo hf&rd ttie
l\OlM.
·~t lilDUd Ila • O.ti rOiDl dwaidl•--~..-WJ &
(See FORD, Page AZ)
Coast
Weathe r
Rain tnoderato at times
tonight and Wednesday.
Lows tonight SO lo 55.
Cooler on Wednesday with
highs 58 to 63. Chance o(
rain 80 percent tonight, 50
percent Wednesday.
INSIDE TOD" Y
Tlaa11're called "The
Afotora" ond t111111're member1
of .a txmiahing breed -t~
• llighlDaJI Patrol motoreycl8 of·
tic tr. But tlknr position ff
vlfwed bu man11 a• an elite
OM. Ste Ftaturtng. Page Cl.
·-
il-DAIL V PILOT H/F
Reason
For Fire
Studied
Studies of the charred rubble
of a Wc:.tmin:.ter electroni cs
plant gutted in a $2 million blaze ·
-worst in the city's history -
continued today in an effort to
pin down the precise cause.
Fire Inspector Dave Merz said
spec-ulat1on ts that either a de-
fecl1 ve oven or electrical c1rcu1l
triggered the ftre at Silicon
General lnc. The fire had ap·
puently smoldered for some
time.
The firm. which manufactures
radio and other electronic com·
ponents at 7382 Bolsa Ave., was
largely gutted except for com·
pJny offices and its computer
room .
A task force of 45 firemen
from four firefighting agencies
required more than one hour to
linng the bla1e under control. a
l11ghly ha1ardous ta:-.k 111 this
C"aSl'
Sl'V(•nteen of the men n·qu1rc·d
hos pital treatmt·nt or c--:amma·
tson for :-.moke mhalalion and as·
l>Urance that potent chemical
fumc·s from blazing ac.·ids
wercn 'L absorbt!d through l heir
~kin.
Hydrochloric, sulfuric and
nitric acids are used in produc-
tion of the clt·l"lron1cs gear the
•firm mnnufadun•<I.
Invc•sl1galors saul due to the
intl•n-.uy of lht' :H·nd :,moke and
fumei. produced hy the inferno
when 1t l'rupled about 7:30 a.m.
Sundav could cause hnrmful ef·
feels ia!L-r if ahsorhcd through
tlw skin
1'' 1 r l' J n s p e do r 1\1 e r:i: e m ·
pha~11.1:d today that no cau:.e has
been determined and lhe oven
and t•lcclrical circuit origins are
only a lheory, based on pro·
ks~111n.el ... xperiencc.
lit· ~:ii d it is believed the·
Sil11·nn CenC'ral fire !>tarted
!-.oml· hours liefor(• 1t was report·
1·d and -.ltm ly spn·ad
F111•m1·n arr" mg on lhl' :.<·c·nc
l11und the 111ll•r111r ablaze :ind
wlwn llll'y hrokl' m lo batlll' the
ll:.11n1•s, tht· rush of fresh air and
"' Yf.!<'n prohably intcns1f1ed
lhl·rn
In' t•s11~1ftors not.-: they had no
<'horc·,. hut to attack the flames,
"h 1 di then boiled up when
1annt•rl '' ith fn·~h <iir and e>.· plodcd through the roof within
moments.
New Zealand,
·Trip P.l~d .
,\ tuur of ::-.Jew Zealand is
:-.ch<·dulNI m April in connection
with llunt1ngton Beach's
participation 111 the sister city
progr:1m
The tour. costini,! $1.495 for 14
clay:. and night!>, will begin in
i\ucklancl April 14. A visit lo
Waitl•mnta. Huntington Beach's
:-.1!-lt'r tily. is on the schedule.
Hc~cn at ions can be made by
c·ulhnf.! (213) 592·2123. Addil1onol
information can be obtained by
<'ailing Mlljl!Or Ron Pattinson at
.536·5553.
OFFICER .. ;
hC'l 1evcd lo be involved with a
ring of 13 other burglary SUS·
P<'Cls who we're arrested in the
\·1cin1ty ~1onduy night.
Police said the alleged
hurglary ring included two other
jt1v<'niles believed lo be· Crom
C'ost:t Mesa.
Tlw adults arrested ranging In
a~e from 18 to 26 years are
bl'lievcd lo be Crom Huntington
Reach, Costa Mesa. Anaheim,
Sunlu Ana and Fountain Valley.
They ha\·e bc<'n chari:ied with
b11rillary, possession of stolen
property and possession or
dangerous druj:(s.
Police refused lo Identify the
youth char ged with murder
because or his age.
OAANOI! COAST Htl'
DAILY PILOT
, .. o...,.. C:..n Otllf l'lltl wltto-dl kc~· -d"" No ... ,..,.,,..,.~-"'"'°°' .... ""''-1"'1 ... C.-•••.\tNroltt<l<t-.... _H,,,... "'4MH lftt°""' kldtt !Of Qtle ~ .... N••DOtt h-'tflt .... ~U~ IM<"fll .....
''"' YAll•Y, lr'411\t, '•ddl•NClll Vtll•Y lftf L._.atoch So..lhCAl••f .. ...,. .. ....,._,_.,
'"'" '' pullll•M<I ltlvr<l•o °"" 'Wide¥\ lllt ~:::o~:t~~t.~·.~~~~,~--WM• I•~
"•Mt1N WtM Ptts•1it"I •""' f'Vtltol'll•f" ,.d •. C. .....
• l/t<tl'Ntl-••MJ~__..
Tll..,.HIC-11•'-<
,,,,,..,....,.....
BERT LANCE BEGINS CAREER AS TV NEWSMAN
Promising to Speak for 'Mainstream America'
De's 'Media'
Lance TV Commeniator
ATLANTA (AP) -Bert Lance said he liked his second taste
of television a lot more than he did his first because now he's the
commenlatol"instead of the commented upon.
'.'I .~ess that makes me a fuJJ.fledged m ember of the
media, th~ former federal budget director told reporters after h~ made his ~ebut as a ~elevision news commentator Monday
night by calling for an immediate tax cut and promising to
s peak for "mainstream America."
LOOKJN(i CALM AND AT case. Lance told WXIA-TV
viewers that a pecmanent $25 billion tax cut ls needed to offset ri:.ing Social Security taxes.
Wearin~ a blue three-piece .. banker's suit" and using a
tcleprompt.cr, Lance said he though he did •·au right" in his de-
but.
He said ~c wasn't nervous because he "already was used to
the .wo~t o~ lele"'.isi~n," ~efcrrin!' to news coverage of in-yesta~ations t~to his financial affairs which preceded his res-
1gnat1on as director of the Office of Management and Budget. last year.
LANCE SAID HE PLANNED TO do at least three commen-
taries a week, discu:.sm~ national and international events and
'"snmc hum?ln intere~t things."
He said he took the job as a news analyst -with a reported
:.alary or $50,000 to S60.000 -bccaw.e he wanted to speak for the
t\mc.•rican people'. -
. "I not only listen lo \\hat they say. I hear what they say," .~aid Lance. a milliona1re who started out as a S90·a-month teller
at a north Georgia bank owned by his wife's family.
Fro•PageAI
BLIZZARD STRIKES. • •
a slate of emergency, closing
stale highways. schools. courts
and slate offices. She and Rhode
Island Gov. J . Joseph Garrahy
asked President Carter lo
declare the region a federal dis·
aster area.
. A slate of emergency also ex-
isted in l\lassachusetts where
10.000 National Guardsmen were
ca lied lo <le11l with the storm
that was cxpccted to le;:ivc l' :-
feel of snow before it ended. All
state highways in the approx-
imately one-third of the slate
cast or Worcester were closed.
The 27 weather-related deaths
included those of three Rhode
Island heart attack victims who
could not be Teached by rescue
vehicles and those of two men
who suffocated from carbon
monoxide while marooned in a
di!;abled snow plow truck out-~iclc Philadelphia.
Hundreds of families were
evacuated from their homes by
amphibious vehicles m New
Jersey, Massachusetts, New
Hampshire and New York when
wind ·driven surf vaulted
seawalls.
Airports shut down from
Philadelphia into New England.
Air traffic controllers at
Roston's Logan International
left their. posLc; ·in the 2R5·foot
control tower. the tallest in the
HBRules Ont
world, when winds were clocked
at 79mph.
"The high winds are causing
tremendous problems ,"
:\I assachusetts slate police dis-
pa lcher William Chase said.
"The snow plows clear the roads
and the winds blow it back on.
There are snow drifts of five to
six feet.''
In New York, one official said
of lhe blowing snow. "Jt's like
trying to shovel feathers."
Hundreds of stranded people
n wakened today in movie
houses. sports a renas and
hospitals used for shelters.
Hotels ·were mobbed in Boston
and New York when commuters
could not get home.
Some 500 motorists were
evacuated from Massachusetts
128 al Dedham , 20 miles
southwest of Boston, put nboard
buses creeping behind
s nowplows and taken to a
Dedham movie house for coffee
and all·ni~ht movies.
Some 12.000 fans who attended
a college hockey tournament at ·
Bbston Garden were told to
spend the night there. Cols and
food were brought tn, but of-
ficials said only 150 chose to stay overni,qht.
Fro•'M-9fleAl
RAIN •••
Monterey, were closed Monda)'
. Cyclists Usm· g . arter a lightning bolt hlt two power transformers, and some
1,500 homes ln the Santa Cruz Crosswalks, ~~e~t~~~d:;,~re stm without
Riding bicycles in Huntington The California Hi"hway Beach crosswalks can be • h d lo Patrol reported flooding in some azar ous your health -and areas nortb of San Francisco. pocketbook.
The Huntington »eaoh City •· llighway 37 through Vallejo
Council voted unanimously Mon -and State Route 1 between
·day night to approve rirst read-Highway 101 a nd Shoreline
ing of an ordinance th't would Drive in Marin County. were
prohibll the use ot pedal power . both closed Monday morning.
in pedestrian crosswalks. Highway 1 was opened by after ..
Capt. Mike Burkenfleld or the noon.
Huntington Beach Police Ocpart-· ment said that complaints have Most S\erra, 1ki reaorta were
mounted in recent months. He open for buslrieas but Mt. Shasta
said there have be~n a number of Ski Bowl. to the north~ .. closed .
•C8Se& Whete fast-moviDi blJces by Q raginJ lnowttOrtn.
have plowed lnto pedestrians. He One of two men reported tDill·
·sald also tl\at bike riders· ing 1n the Mt. Shasta. area over
themselves can be in danger of the weekend aki~d to aaC•lY
automobllo tramc when... they· Monday after 1pendln1 th,o nlibt
mnketut'D5intothtctos1walk1. in an lco cave. A ~cue te.an-i
Biko rldert have already bffn waa 1eerchln1 for th• other l>ttotitblt.ed by ordinance trom man, Ran SOva, a., or Alblny,
r dlna on a\dewalks •• Thl& but tbeywer•hatnpe~b~hleh
re11trlctlon is enforced only on ·winds and huvY anow. bu.y commerclal atrtet.a. accord· · · · • • • h>J &o l5utkenlieJd. · 'Gale ••rnln&J remain~ m tt·
Jf cited. violators are Uable for feet for much or lh• Northern
• $10 nne for encroachlnt on, caUrornla coast. "'Ith wlftda ,....
aldewalb lnd c"()Nwalka. • Po~ up to '5 mllt1 an bour.
·A a~oond i:!adliil on th• °"" J\atntall tbuals for the 34 Muri dU\&11~ it a~uled Feb. ai. 1t. ending at -4 a.m. today aho-..1
ca" tab effect 30 d&)'l later, l UkJlh had 1.4' lnebea,Jl~ ll1ltt
• It will be okay tot bl.kt tldt~ . .8t of•an lncf.l, Sacnmtftto .IO,
. to walk thiti' "Whfc.1-thrOulh San Frandl:;~. OUlanct .St. the.crouwalki, / • ·, ' StocktQl'l .-F:N8Qo ~.
Oil Talk
Squelched
Off Coast
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Spe~ula
tion about rich oil and na•ural
gas deposits in the ocean off
Southern California is being
minimized by authorities. •·we don't know what's out
there and I doubt that tbe 01!
companies know what 's out
there," said geologist Henry
Cullins of the U.S. Geological
Survey.
The federal agency released
an estimate last May of 285
mill ion barrels of undiscovered
oil deposits at the Tanner-Corte~
Banks along with natural gas de-
posits or 427 billion cubic feet.
But Paul Zucker. who heads th~
San Diego County Integrated
Planning Office, said Monday
that those estimates are "sur-
pr1singly high."
In a memo to county
supervisors, Zucker said the
estimates were higher than for
unleased portions of Santa
Barbara Channel and San Pedro
bay, both of which are beside
proven reserves.
Twenty.nine tracts have been
leased off San Diego by the
federal eovemment to private
oil companies and others are 00.
ing .considered.
The memo from Zucker also
said there is nearly as much oil
and gas within the unleased
parts of Tanner-Cortez Baok.
located about 100 miles west of
San Diego, as remains to be dis-
covered in the Santa Barbara
Channel. Several oil companies
have drilled on the leased tracts
but no discoveries have been an.
nounced.
Although the oil companies
aren't bound to disclose any
findings publicly, Zucker
warned against assuming "that
oil doe$ not exist in producible
quantJtles" there.
F.roaPageAJ
UFO •••
ported seemg UFOs and is con-
vinced there is something to the
phenomena, based on his find-
ings and studies.
He points out there were two
particularly significant inci·
dents last year involving sight-
ings over the Qran,qe Coast and
simultaneously around Southern
Calirornia.
One in\'olved two fiery-bri$(hl
llFOs sct.•n by five llunlington
Beach policemen and scores of
other witnesses. streaking over
the Orange Coast and Southern
California area.
Military personnel and
aerospace scientists also report·
·ed collectively spollinc a typic::it
UFO hovering over th~ US.
Naval Weapons Station in Seal
Beach last September.
-..........
. ..
Funds Sought
HB Group to Help Boy
A 7-year-old Tijuana boy
horribly disfigured when a can
of paint thinner exploded in
front of him may eet a new race,
thanks to a Huntington Beach
benefactor and a nonprofit
group called lnterplast.
However. Mrs. Virginia
Cast1ll, of 6811 Defiance Drive,
Huntington Beach. notes that,
while surgery costs will be paid
by lnterplast. hospital exp('nses
must be met through donations.
F,....PageAl
FORD •••
the verdict would immediately
be appealed with the Fourth Dis·
trict Court of Appeals in San
Bernardino.
Jt was testified during the six
month trial that the carburetor
in Mrs. Gray's Pinto malfunc-
tioned on May 28, 1972, Corcmg
t he vehicle to stall on the
freeway near San Bernardino.
It was testified that the car
was struck in the rear by
another auto and that almost im-
m ediately Mrs. Gray's car was
enveloped in flames.
The jury was told by lawyers
for the two families that both
victims would have walked
away from the crash without in·
jury if it had not been for the
badly designed and defecllve
gas tank.
The jury )Vas told that the
death and injuries could have
been avoided if the Ford Com-
pany had taken the trouble to in·
:;tall a $9.98 part in the rear end of
the car which would have pre·
vented any contact with the gas
tank in a collision.
It was unsuccessfully argued
by the defense that the Pinto and
its gas tank had met all federal
and state laws and inspections
and the Ford Company could not
be held responsible for the
leakage of gasoline in a col·
lision.
The original lawsuit filed by
both fam1hes named both the
Ford Company and Will.on Ford
Sules of llWtlinglon Beach as de-
fendants.
But the verdict returned by
the jury Monday named only the
Ford Company in assessing
res ponsiblity and damagci. us
claimed by the plaintiffs.
The jury was told during the
trial of a recent nationwide
study in which it was claimed
that more than 500 persons had
died since 19iO as a direct result
of rearcnd collisions in which a
Pinto automobile caught fire .
The Orange County case Is the
fourth such legal action in the
U.S. in which the fiery explosion
of a Pinto has led to death
and /or injuries.
She said Tomas Dominguez'
parents. who live in a shan·
tytown of shacks above Tijuana
can't arrord the expense~
themselves.
Ta'C·deduclible contributions
cnn be sent to tnterplnst, P.O.
Box 9330. Stanford, Calif., with
the specification that they are
for Tomas Dominguez of Ti-
juana. 1\lrs. Castillo said. In-
terplast is a non-profit organiza-
tion :.ct up to aid disfigured
persons, especiaJly children.
Fifth Mesa
Bank Jfit
In2Weeks
By MIC'ilAEL PASKEVICR
Ol IM o.11, l"llotSt.tl
An unarmed bandit with a
droopy handlebar mustache
pulled off his fourth bank robbery
in Costa Mesa since Jan. 24
Monday, escaping with $:1'.,900
even though police were on the
scene in Jess than a minute.
The 1:10 p.m. heist at the Im·
perial Bank al the comer of
Harbor Boulevard and Fair
Drive raises the bandit's total
take lo about $4,500 from the
series or robberies, police said.
This bandit is believed to be r~sp6nsible for four of the five
bank robberies that have oc-
curred in the city since Jan. 23.. pol ice said.
As with the previous bank
jobs, all in the early afternoon,
tb~ slim bandit in his late 20s ap--
proached a female teller, pre.
sented her with a note and a
paper bag, and told her to be
quick in loading the bag with
cash.
The bandit h as never dis·
played a weapon. police said.
Bank teller Patty Goodren. 20.
or Fountain Valley, said a
customer had just made a large
deposit when the suspect ap-
pro::iched her and handed over
his rohbcrv notl'
Unlike previous robberies, the
man's sandy blond hair wus CO\'·
cn.!d by a blue baseball cup that
matched his blue windbreaker,
police said.
A bank alarm went out within
seconds after the bandit fled, ap--
parenlly on foot, and the nearest
polic<' unit was Jess than three blocks away.
fi'ro.Pa~A1
FEES ..•
if the city"s legal department
had specialists in redevelopment.
and labor relations.
Thl' council directed City At·
torney Don Bonra and City Ad-
ministrator Helslto to explore
wciyi. to cut outside lega I fres
..
..
VOL. 71, NO. 38, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A
Today's Closing
N.Y. Stoeks
t
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1978 TEN CENTS l
Poliee Study 'Strangler's Letter'
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A let·
ter from a person claiming to
be the Hillside · Strangler says
the letter writer killed "those
evil ladies" at the behest or his
mother and says he Is a very
sick man who needs help.
Assistant Police Chief Daryl
F. Gates told a news conference
today that the letter. mailed to
Mayor Tom Bradley, may or
may not be authentic.
"There's nothing in the letter
that authenticates lt," Gates
said. "There are some things in
it that give it an air of urgency
••. some things pique the in·
terest of myself and ln·
vestigators."
Gates read the first pace or
the pencll·printed six·page letter
to newsmen at police head·
quarters. It reads:
"Dear Mr. Mayor.
"Please listen to me. 1 am
very sick, but I do not want to go
back to that place. I hate that
place. My mother told me lo kill
those evil ladies. It's not my
fault. . . . Mother makes my
head hurt. That's why I kill her.
But I can't get her out of my
head. She keeps coming back.
That's why I hate her."
Gates said the letter writer
gave police "another week or
:so'· to meet his call for help.
"He suggested something
serious would occur if we did not
respond," Gates said.
Gates said the letter writer
claimed to have a particular
item lhal would prove he was
the Hillside Strangl~r and tf he
did irMeed have that item, police
would be inclined to belie"1e him.
Police attribute 12 killings
s ince early September to the
Hillside Strangler The nude
bodies, all young women, were
found in hill'lide areas of the
northern suburbs.
Mayor Tom Bradley said at a
news conference Monday that
whoever wrote the letter
postmarked Jan. 19 "indicates he
is the strangler and wishes lo sur~
render himself and a frlepd to the
mayor's office. He also indicated
he would forward a certain item
after he received assurances for
his safety from the mayor."
The mayor responded that he
''will take all the necessafy pre·
cautions to insure the complete
sarety or the actually lnvol'Ved
individuals."
Bradley, who read the state-
ment and then declined ques·
Uons, asked the letter writer to
mail the undisclosed item to his
office and "to address the en-
velope exactly as the original
env,lope was addressed."
He said the letter 's postmark
was dated the same day that
Gates made a public appeal for
the strangler to surrender.
New Blizz.ard Buries Northeast ·
. Total '4,500
Another Mesa
Bank Held Up
By MICHAEL PASKEVICH
OI tlle O•lly 1"1191 Slaff An unarmed bandit with a
droopy handlebar mustache
pulled off his fourth bank robbery
in Co~ta Mesa since Jan. 24
1
1\fonduy. escaping with $1,900
even though police were on the
1scene in less than a minute.
1 The l : 10 p. m. heist at the Jm.
1 perial Bunk at the corner of
tllarbor Boulevard and Fair
JDrivc raises the bandit's total
ltake to ab<>Ut $4,500 from the
t
series of robberies, police said.
This bandit is believed to be 17 ,responsible for four of the live
,bank robberies that have oc·
1curred in the city since Jan. 23,
I police said.
As with the previous bank
'jobs, nil in the early afternoon, 1the slim bandit in his late 20s ap-~roached a female teller, pre·
ented her with a note and a
paper bag, and told her to be
quack in loading the bag with
cash.
Capo Beach
I
Crash Kills
iejo Woman
A 21-ycar·old Mission Viejo
1 woman was killed and the driver
of a second car injured early lo·
, day in a head.'on crash in
Capistrano Beach, California
Highway Patrolmen reported.
Lucinda Suzanne Ponder ·or
23946 Lindley St. was pro·
nounced dead at the scene of the
12:35 a .m. collision on Pacific
":oast lh~ltway south of Beach
'.clad ; officers said.
Miss Ponder, who was travel·
ing alone in her car, allegedly
was driving on the wrong side or
the highway and struck a second
car, officers said.
The driver of the other car,
Alan Bloemberg, 39, of 220
Canada St., San Clemente, was
reported in stable condition to-
1 day at San Clemente General
Hospital with what officers
1 described as major injuries.
Coast
·Weather
Rain moderate at times
tonight and Wednesday.
Lowa toniaht so to SS.
Cooler on Wednesday with
highs 58 to 63. Chance or
rain 80 percent. t.onJ&bt, $0
percentWedneeday.
INSIDE TeD" Y
Th~ll t'C-ccaU•d "Tll•
Afotora" anJ lfwVre mcmbtr• O/ ,G tianUhing f>T'ffd -t11f l~iglttoo1/ PoJrol motofCJIC .. Of•
flc~'I'. But thffT J)Oltticm v
vitt.Ofd bit mo:nr. °' Cfll tUU ont, Su 1'eaturi1'g.pog. CJ.
••••••
The bandit has never dis-
played a weapon, police said.
Bank teller Pally Goodren, 20,
of Fountain Valfey, said a
customer had just made a large
deposit when the suspect ap·
proached her and handed over
his robbery note.
Unlike previous robberies, the
(See BANDIT, Page A2)
North .State
·Drenched
By Storm
By The Associated Presa
Northern California com-
muters were socked again today
by heavy morning rains as the
·latest in a parade of .storm
fronts marched into the state.
Rains beginning in pre-dawn
hours caused a rash of rush·hour
trafCic accidents, minor floodin~
and a mudslide or two in Marin.
County that caused hundreds or
commuters to punch in late.
Paciric Gas and Electric Com·
pany said power llne:i were
withstanding the rain and gusty
winds for the most part,
although 500 homes . in Soquel
were reported without power.
The National Weather Service
said today's rain had dropped
• 75 inches in the San Francisco
Bay area In four hours, and
most areas north of Fresno were expected to get at least an Inch.
Winds were gusting up to 40
miles per hour.
"Storms are stacked up across
the Pacific and headed this
way," said forecaster Richard
Lay of the National Weather
Service ..
(See RAIN. Pa1e AU
* * * Forget Bets
Againsi Rain
For Tonight
lt's going to rain.
That's the forecast of the Na-
tlonal Weather Service. They're
not even hedeiue thelr beta this tlme. The chance of showers
toni&ht ts listed at close to 100 per«nt. decreaslng to '70 per·
cent Wedne$day. ·
Meteotologist John Hendenon
tH>t.d that toniibt'a atorm was
ortilnally expected to arrive a
day later but la movini at an m-
utually rut $0 knoti.
And, be 1ald, more atonal are
ID aitht, with periods of rain
)IOlllbte .. ft9t of the week.
Lowa tonieflt wlll be in the low
to mtd ~~ with bl&ba Wednes..1
daJ riear eo. SoUUma Onnee COUnt7 ,.. cel'fta the heaviest ftlnf.U lri
tbe 24-lloat 1*tocl ..a1n1 this
Morabi1, wJtb tb• Moulton
Nt1uel . Treatment Plant la x;a,._. ~ ..... u,_. U ot
an Inch.
Santiaao ~ik on S1ddlebact
Mountain retelnd .30 or an
~~--...... nctl .. ........ ::e'.;:.-.. ., -.a.:
Mftll#t ...... "li•;::t• ·:.==1: ..... 1. .. ... ...... ••••11a; ~~ ............... ,.
.,...,.......
Storm
Disrupts
Millions
By The Associated Press
The Northeast from Penn-·
sylvania to New Hampshire was
p4!ralyzed today by a
bhzzard that brought rrom one
to t 1h reet or snow to the region,
knocked out power in parts of
Boston and disrupted virtually
every facet or life for millions.
While the snow -steady, but
less severe than on Monday -
continued through the morning
in the East, crippling
transportation and business for
a second day, people In the rest
of the nation faced their own pro-
blems from a variety of storms.
WHO'LL TAKE MANHATTAN? THIS IS NEW YORK'~ 33RD STREET AFTER BLIZZARD
New Storm Paral~zes Northeastern U.S. From Pennsylvania to New Hampshire
The rush hour in Chicago was
compllcated by an unexpected
snowfall that left nine inches on
the ground by this morning .•
Parts of Montana and North
Dakota were s truck by a
blizzard which stranded ..i
travelers apd made it feel like it
was 45 below zero. Oklahoma r.,.
ported six Inches of s now;
lakeside areas of Wisconsin got
from six to 12 inches; there were
record low tempe ratures in
other parts or the Midwest, and
cold and a forecast oC possible
Waddill Accused
Doctor Testifies
In Baby's Death
ByTOIU BARLEY
OI a-. OIHIY 1"11 .. Sl•ff
A doctor whose statement.:; to
police led to the filing of murder
charges against Dr. William
Baxter Waddill of Huntington
Harbour told a jury today that
Waddill had his hand clamped
around a newborn baby's
windpipe when he met him in
the Westminster Community
Hospital last March 2.
Dr. Ronald Cornelsen of
Orange testified in Orange Coun·
ty Superior Court that Waddill.·
who had summoned him to the
hospital, told hlm: "I can't find
the God damn tr achea
(windpipe). This baby just won 't
quit breathing."
Comet.sen te.sllfied that he im·
mediately examined the three·
pound baby which Waddill had
ea,rlier tried to abort with a
saline injection into the mother
and noted that it bad a discerni·
ble heartbeat.
The pediatrician testified that
he also noted that the baby wa s
breathing and was. in many
respects, in an identical cond1-
tion to that of a newly born pre·
mature baby.
It is contended by the defense
that the infant did not show ac-
ceptable signs of life when de·
livered last March 2 and that
Waddill cnnl'\Ot be legally
charged with murder .
Cornelsen, 42. testified today
that he ur~cd Waddill to leave
the baby alone after seein~ the
defendant agaarr place his hand
around the baby's neck and
squeeze.
He testified that while he was
· examining the infant he noticed
extensive d1scoloralion around
the neck. The coroner's ofnce
later ruled that the infant was a
victim or manual strangulation.
Cornelsen said Waddill, 44,
told him: "This baby can't live.
It will be a big mess if it does."
And the witness testified that
<See DOCTOR, Page AZ)
o.jtyf>lltltSt." .......
TAKES WITNESS STANO
Dr. Ronald Cornelsen
BLIZZARD DISRUPTS
BOSTON'S POWER-A3 • i
snow in Georgia.
More than two dozen weather-
related deaths were reported
around the nation. Thousands of
people in the East remained in
hotels, hospitals, schools and
emergency shelters where they
took refuge Monday from the
wind·driven snow which drifted
. to six feet and more.
They were joined by hundreds
of other families evacuated from
low-lying coastal areas flooded
during the morning by high
tides. All roads along 18 miles of
seacoast in New Ha mpshire
were closed.
The blizzard in the Northeast
was the second in little more
than two weeks; tye Midwest is
still recovering from heavy
snows that struck less than two
weeks ago.
Airports in the Northeast were
closed, and officials said they
would stay shut through the day.
The New York and American
(See BLIZZARD, Page A2)
Irvine Candidates Woo Voters
Midway through their cam·
patgna tor the Irvtne City Coun-
cil eleclloo March 7, candidates ..
are focming their pllch to voters
on the benefit.I of a planned com·
munlty.
Differences are emerging
about what the plan •bould be -
one of CCGtl.ftued steady 1rowth,
or one bi which that 1rowth is
alowed down.
The lei.at bid for voter sup-
port wu Monday at the
Meadows mobUehome park, a
communlty or mo1tl1 senior
clth:ena.
Seven of the nine candidates
Who WW appear on the ballot ol·
fend ftft·mlntite .resumes of
their vtews. ' . Candldatea were attornef Larry AIJl'IB. cit1. Commun.ily
hrvlces Commlslloner Robert
Moon, Planninl Commlssloaa'
t;arry Hoffman. private in·
vHU1ator Carol EtfuHrstr, ....... CDiD•*.., Ellen ~ H*ltiacMt Vivian a.a" aiil ..... ..,.r Arthur .. ,.... .
W ,,..,....._attorney
1•rrr Sbaw. .... lritbdrawn
fl'OtD •eftft ~llbtnJ. cl~.
business connicts.
The nlnth candidate, attorney
David Warren, did not appear
because or a misunderstanding
at the security entrance to the
private commwtity, where his
wife was refused entry.
Following ls a summary ot the
candidate!' comments:
* * *
-A1ran: The city general
plan, which calls for accelerated
population increase, is "no
longer consistent" with the kind
of community people want.
Re seeks to re-establish what he says is the intent of the
oricinal plan-a planned com·
munity with zones of privacy, * * * .
' low density. open apace and t
green space; "A sanctuary for f
people, where the promise of
planning is fulfilled."
-Moore: In contrast to
Agran's proposal to llmlt
.growth, he said there is "very
JitUe" that can be done about
<See VOO'ERS. Pan A!> * * * Otto Does .ms· Job·
l"'ine Security GUiud Foll.mm Orders
By PHllJPROSMAIUN CM ... Ollll,,....ltaff
Nobody can say Otto the
security omcer doesn't do his
job.
Among his responsibilities ia
to ,ec that no one 1eta Into the
Meadows mobllehome park In
tnlne wittiout authorirAtion
from a resident.
Al Monday'a commanlt,J as·
1ocl1tlori forum there to Mar
cancUdatef f«>l' the lrviae Cit.y
Council, Otto's lnatruetkJi>• Wtft
to allow the clrididatu lnalde.
obOdv Hid tnythlDI abo11t
anybody else. no amount or political pressure.
So Otto did ttis Job. He: ordered a Yoll'\B woman, first ,
-ReCused to admit Pete name Julie, out of her car, bbt
Walker into the private com· allowed her escort through •
plcx. Walker •s candidate Seems the escort, flrst name
'Robert Moore'• campaign Robert, was on Otto's list. ac>
manager. Julie Mooro waved a .reluctant.
-WOuldn't let Donna Wein-aoodbyo to her husband the can~
at.ein in. Sbe'• candidate Ellen didate.
Frtund'1campalpmanager. SUcldn1 to the rulel was even
-Barred the waf acalnlt two >-arder on candidate Davld War-
men and a woman. Tamed oat ren, who Mlded not tQ au.end •
two were cam~ worten fOI' tho fonam at. all WMI\ be was •
candld•te Lan:y Acran; lbe told hli wife COUidn't come tn
third worteed for Moo~ wllb him. .
-Jn hil ftnest:bOGr, btDatqto <leilUCUUTY,P~AI)
A2 DAILY PILOT
Ex-whaler Changes Sides •
B7 WIU.IAM JIODGE
OI-.,..ly l"ltM IUff
Charles Harris woke up one
morning 10 years ago. ~haking
off the fuzzmess of a night's
slumber under the gaze of a
giant, glas~-encased whale's
eye.
At that moment, his life
changed.
"I just wondered how 1 would
feel if someone had one of mv
eyes sillin~ m a glass jar on his
shelf." the £ormer whalin~
vessel worker recalled. "I de-
cided something had to be dont..
to preserve whales for the
future.''
So the San Juan Capistrano res-
ident set out on a one-man
crusade to educate children
about whales and their im-
portance Lo the ocean. lie has
talked to more than 12,000 school
children.
.. I lell lhe lcids what a while ls
all about." Hanis explains ... lf
1 teU them how c:rut whales art
then maybe tlMy'll help aave
them. "The point, is I don't know
who I'm talking to -one of
these kids might someday be In
a position to do something
before it's too late.•·
Harris believes the whales are
in great danger or extinction -
particularly because or Russian
and Japanese whale hunting ex-
peditions. • •
"It's getting to the point where
something's going to happen,"
he says. "With the power of the
boats they're using today
there's no way the whale can get
away.
"And the whales they're tak·
ing are smaller and smaller -
they're killing of( the little
guys," he continues. "There are
Fro.-Page A l
VOTERS' SUPPORT. • •
population increases. Also in
c·ontrast to Agran's anti-road
position, l\Joore s aid. •·we need
lo plan to have the roads" to ac-
com modalc rx·oplt>
fi e is for rx•oplt•·Ofil•nlt•cl com-
m c rc 1a l attractions movie
thcatc•rs, l.Jowl1ng al leys-
"placcs fo1~ people to go. things
lor people lo do. My i:iooaness.
we don't c·,·cn have a really good
rcst:iunint."'
-Hoffman: There needs to be
a b;1lance or commer<'1al, in-
dustrial and rcsidt•nt1al develop·
mcnt. each romponcnt of which
supJ>-OrlS the others.
• • J\s soon :1s you stop one part
of lhl· sysll'rn, lht· whole syi.tem
dnt•sn ·1 "ork ...
-Mrs. Efreoberger: She rc-
l 1 ed on her image as an
··a,·l·ragt•, ordin a ry c1t1zen
"hose snn makes me save
C':irn phrll"s soup labels," in·
lt•n•stcd 1n costs of providing Ci·
ty st·n 1tt·s. and ''hat sacrifices
ha' 1• to he made to provide·
I ht' Ill .
The n •x9 · ru1'>l'd woman com·
menlC'd -ttfat c•'s new to the ci-
ty, and li\cs · 1 the Willows
tract. ··not the best tract, I un-
clers t:.rnd . we're in the lower-
rl'nl district." (C urrent realty
li-.tings in the tract range from
St;S,900 to Sili,000.)
-~lrs. 1-'r<'und : "There's
no longl'r a question of will we
~row. hut how arc we grow mg."
.\ ppc:.ihni:! to s ubjects of in·
tt-rcst to l\leaclows residl•nL'>, she
said she would s upport the
lowerin~ beneath road grade of
the nearby Santa Fe railroad
t racks. anct solutions to prob-
lems of traffic on nearby Walnut
/\,·e nue. She al so would
01>pose any plan to route com-
mc r c1 a I a1rpl:.irw fli~hl~ into El
Toro marine baM'.
-:\1rs. Ha ll : Expe rience
1'011nts ,\t 55. she's the oldest
<'and 1datc running, she em·
ph;1s1zN1 She's also the self·
* * * Fro• Page AJ
SECURITY. •
Mrs. Warren is pregnant;·
Warren said he preferred not to
kavc her to have his first baby
alone in the car.
La menled Mrs. Weinstein,
''I've never been kickl'd out of any
place before."
But Otto. of an age when most
men arc retiree!, was courteous.
friendly-and firm. Nobody gets
m . he repeated cheerily, without
a pass.
MeSTitime. the candidates In·
:.ide the complex were doing
some of their own friendly
negotiating. and at last, after
the line of rf'jectcd candidates'
wives, s upp()rters and friends
had grown considerabl e,
Meadows man Nick Alles ar-
rived at the security entrance.
"Otto," Alles was mildly
reproachful. "A man can'\4>ring
his wife in?"
~o on Alles' responsibility,
everybody wus let in . Inside the
community clubhouse. residents
upplauded the action, and by ac-
claim agreed that Otto was the
best security officer they ever
had.
OR ANOS OOAIT
DAILY PILOT
styled "Library Lady," having
worked to bring a prospective
regional county library lo
Heritage Park. She'll assure it
gets county funding.
She said, "Some of the can·
didates are obsessed with plan-
ning. I'm a people person" who
believes plarls can be amended.
She would vote against a pro·
posed commercial s kateboard
park in Heritage Park, which "I
don't want to see turned into a
carnival."
-Anthony: "Irvine is a heck
of a good place to live." He
pointed lo accomplishments
when he was on the council for
two years, serving one as
mayor.
There's plenty of land area in
Irvine to accommodate growth,
he said. He, too, favored a balance
of commerce and industry to help
keep the city tax rate lo.w.
The candidates' remarks were
received by about 200 Meadows
residents.
F,....PllfleAl
RAIN ••.
The fronts were expected to
hit the state at 24-hour intervals
throughout the week.
Lashing rains and winds Sun-
day <ind Monday knocked out
power to 44.000 home!i and busi·
nesses, toppled trees and lipped
over mobile homes in a
Sacramento area trailer park.
On the ocean today. winds or
50·55 knots~ and lO·foot seas
forced the 57-foot Sue Belle with
four people aboiird to radio the
Coast Guard for help.
c
J\ Coast Guard dis patcher said
the craft reported engine trouble
a nd was suffering "a terrific
beating'" off the Big Sur coast.
Plans were to tow the stricken
craft into Monterey.
Gusty winds early Monday
yanked about a third of the
screen away at the Kay-Von
Drive-In theater in Napa. The
screen toppled onto the roadway
a nd temporarily knocked out
power at KVON radio.
Six schools in Seaside. near
Monterey, were closed Monday
after a lightning bolt hit two
p()Wer transformers, and some
1.500 homes in the Santa Cruz
mountains were still without
Power Monday.
The California Highway
Patrol reported flooding in some
areas north of San Francisco.
Highway 37 through Vallejo
a nd State Route 1 between
Highway 101 and Shoreline
Drive in Marin County were
both closed Monday morning .. Highway 1 was opened by after ...
noon.
Most Sierra ski resorts were
open for business but Mt. Shasta
Ski Bowl to the north was closed
by a raging snowstorm.
One-of two men reported miss-
ing in the Mt. Shasta area over
the weekend skied to safety
Monday after spending the night
in an ice cave. A rescue team
was searching for the other
man, Ron Sova, 34, of Albany,
but they were hampered by )}igh
winds and heavy snow.
Gale warnings remained In cr-
rect for much of the Northern
Callrom ia coast, with winds re·
ported up to 45 miles an hour.. .
Rainfall totals for the 24 hours
ending at 4 a.m. today showed
Ukiah bad 1.44 inches, Red Bluff
.89 of an inch, Sacramento .-
San Francisco .52. Oakland .~.
Stockton .39 and F~sno .38.
Patient, Leapa
To .Hu Death
SAN FMNCISCO (AP) -A
19-year-old patient-. at Mt. Zion
Hoapltal jumped throuab a
closed Window and fell to his
death on a lodao ftvo floor•
below, hospital offlclala bavo
report.ed.
A coroner'• •Poktaman t~·
Ufied the dead youth •• DaJ\lel
Tabo. ol San Francia~. who had
bMft a .--i at ML ZIOD for
more tun four bMmths. ·'
llo11da1'1 au1c:id• wa1 the
tblrd. ln wldcb ~)chlatrlc Pl: ..
lfentt haM f•mP" from tM
•11rt-tftOl'7 hoiplLiJ ln the J*l
elJh\ffn mont.hl .
•
oo more bi• whales left."
The CenLrall• Unified School
l)lJtrict meeha.nlc 1' reluctant to
talk about his years work.lni in
the whaling buslness.
He does, however, recall a
whaling expedition seven years
ago on which he was an ob-
ser ver.
"In 1971, I was on the last
whaling hunt out of Callfomia," .
he relates. "That really opened
rby eyes up when l saw what my
old friends were still doing.
"They were going out and
catching dozens of whales," he
s ays. "They would tow · them
back lnto the shore for process·
ing.
"There were dozens of whale
carcasses strewn around the
faclory waiting lo be cut up and
processed as dog food.''
But the legendary leviathans'
climmauon is not Harris' only
concern.
grey whale, but there's more
wbale-wat.ehers than whales,"
he conUnues.•
Harris is also disturbed about
a lack ot concern about whales.
"Everybody forgets about the
whale except for the three
months the California Gray
Whale migrates south." he says.
"The only time we ever pay any
attention to them is when people
alarl advertis ing ff)r whale
watching."
Harris sees the continued ex-
ploitation of the giant sea mam·
mal as somewhut ironic since
their use to m311 is questionable.
"We really don't nee.d whales
anymore," he says. "Oil and the
other by-products they offer are
available in abundance in other
places.
"But we bad to get greedy."
F,....PageAJ
"We're messing up the whole
cycle of life in the ocean." he
claims. '"Each kind of whale
eats d1fforent types of food and
killing them ts messing up the
food cham.
BUZZARD. •
"We're going to wake up one
day and rind nothing but red
tides all over the place.
In his presentations to school
children. llarr1s discusses a
•·red tide" of another sort: the
so-called "Texas Rose."
"When the boats fire a 90MM
s hell into the whales, they just
begin floating on the water," he
explains. "When the whale is
finally dead. most of its blood
comes gushing out into the
water.
"That's what whaling people
call a Texas Rose."
A collection of whale and
whaling artifacts -including
the whale eye -will be on dis-
t>lay through February at the
Dana Nigue l county library
branch at Niguel Road and
Coast Jlighway.
Harris cooperated with the
library because he believes peo-
ple can learn more about whales
at libraries than going out o•
whale-watching expeditions in
the ocean.
"If they pul glasses out on Lhe
Dana Point bluffs, people could
see just as much of the whales " he pays. "People can learn more
about whales in the library than
goi ng out and disturbing them in.
the ocean.
'"I want people to enjoy the
s tock exchanges. which closed
early Monday, opened late to-
day. Four of the five commodity
exchanges in New York were
closed today.
The storm in New York City
was the wors t since Dec. 26.
1948, when 19.6 inches of sno}Y
fell. Al 7 a.m., there were 17.7
inches of snow in mld·M'anhattah,
21 inches in some sections of
Queens and 23 inches In some
sections of Nassau County on
Long bland.
Like other officials, Gov. Ella
Grasso of Connecticut declared
a state of emergency, closing
state highways, schools, courts
and state offices. She and Rhod~
Island Gov. J . Joseph Garrahy
asked President Carter to
declare the region a federal dis·
aster area.
A state or emergency ulso ex-
isted in l\J assachusetts where
10,000 National Guardsmen were
called to deal with the s torm
that was expected to leave 112
feel or snow before il ended. All
state highways in the approx-
imately one-third of the stale
east of Worcester were closed.
The 27 weather-related deaths
included those of three Rhode
Island heart attack victims who
could not be reached by rescue
vehicles and those or two men
who s uffocated from carbon
monoxide while marooned in a
disabled snow plow truck out-
side Philaliclphw
Summer BU3 ·Setup
Vieivedfor Irvine
Irvine city councilmen will be
asked tonight to reinstate the
mun1c1pal s ummer bus pro-
~r;im, and r eview the city's
spending plans.
T~c meeting is at 7: 30 at the
civic center, 17200 Jamboree
Dlvd.
A municipal transportation
system has been considered by
some city planners as a good
way t9 reduce the numbers of
car jamming Irvine's streets.
While Public Works Director
Brent Muchow is recommending
a no-fare summer bus servJce,
he does not SUPPort a prop()sed
yea r -roWld service.
Muchow says that without ma-
jor regional attractions, such as
shopping centers. commercial
recreation or a community col-
lege. supp()rt is lacking for a
year-round bus system.
The council's review of the
city's spending plan is a mid-
year look at revenues and spend·
1ng.
It is a chance for the council to
revise the budget to include any
revenues or expenditures that
were not anticipated when the
budget was adopted for fiscal·
year 1977-78.
M Id-year adjustments recom·
DOCTOR ••.
Waddill talked of the infant suf·
ferlng brain dama1e and or sub·.
sequent lawsuits that could cost
him many lhouaands of dollars If
the child that had survived an
abortion attempt contlnued lo
live.
Cornelsen said that at one
po\ot Waddill called for
potasslum cl\JOride and waa 1m-
me<1tat.eJy asked by the witness,
why he wanted the chemical. He aald Waddill told him: "It
wlll atop the baby's beart."
Prosecutor Robert Chatterton
said ln his opening statement
that Comtlsen will also testi!y
that Waddlll also suggested
other methods of murder while
the two pbyalclans discussed the
infant in thenunery. Among them, Chatterton said,
was drownlng the child ln a
bucket of wat.er, droWl'llna lt In
the nursery alnk or by an inJec·
Uon of insulin.
Chatterton aaked Cornelsen to-
day lt the placttne,.t of Wad·
dllt'• hand around the baby'•
neck and the ))Nlluni t.tiat WU
apparenU,y beina · ex.rt.ff cOu1d
M comt.Ned u anr form ol aiMd~al1r11 ....... "No. cOtdcln'l ind ao. lt
WHft'l," O>mtllMI\ riplled.
mended by City Manager
William Woollclt .Jr . .ire to in-
crease revenue projections by
·$221,782. and reducl' total ap
propriations by $285.492.
The total budgl'l is Sl0.9
million.
Oal.ly l'lleC IUft l'Mlo
THE BOTTLED EYE OF A WHALE AWAKENED HIM
Charles Harris, Who Argues Leviathan's Cause
Cop Shot in Hand;
Youth, I 7, Seized
A 17 -year-old transient has
been charged with attempted
murder after he allegedly shot a
Huntington Beach Police officer
in the hand Monday night.
The unidentified youth was
later arrested after he was
struck by shotgun pellets in the
chin and both s houlders from a
weaPon fired by another police
officer.
Police say the youth is in-
\'Olved in a burglary· ring in
which 13 other suspects were ar·
rested Monday night.
The wounded o~ficer,
P:itrolman Je rry F~an, con·
fronted the youth in a backyard
on Camaby Street after being
ca lied lo investigate rep()rted
burglaries in that area at abouL
9 p. m .. Police said.
The youth allegedly fired one
shol from a stolen .9mm Smith
and Wes~on pistol. The s lug
~truck Fuhrman's le(l hand.
Other police officers chased
the youU1 through several yards
and into a lumberyard on
Talbert Avenue where the sus-
pect was shot before his arrest
at9:45 pm.
The youth is rep()rted in good
rondition at the UC Irvine
Medical Center jail ward.
Officer Fuhrman is also re-
ported m good condition at Hunt.
1n1?lon lnlercommunily
llosoital.
Poli ce Sgt. Bert Chadwick
·s aid the youth was initially
sought in connection with at
least two burglaries on Carnaby
Street in which a shotgun and
four pistols were stolen from two
police officers' homes.
Chadwick said the youth is
believed to be involved with a
ring of 13 other burglary sus-
pects who were arrested in the
vicinity Monday night.
Froni Page A J
BANDIT .••
man's sandy blond hair was cov-
ered by a blue baseball cap that
matc hed his blue windbreaker, ~
police said.
A bank alarm went out within
seconds after the bandit fled, ap-
parently on foot, and the nearest
police unit was less than three
blocks away . Police head ·
quarters ls about a mile away.
His escape was so quick that
pol ice conducted a search of-
cars In the bank's park.inc Jot to make sure the bandit had indeed
left the area.
All four of the robbenes have
taken place at what Det. Sgt.
Sam Cordeiro called "easy ac-
cess" banks with both front and
rear exists
Each robbery has occurred at
:i different financial rnstitullon.
With the latest robbery, the ban-
dit has robbed five of the city's
17 banks.
. .
~aguna/South Coast·
VOL. 71, NO. 38, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES
I
3 LB
Two Laguna Beach police in·
v estigator s and a police
ser geant have received dis·
ciplinary action following an in·
ternal investigation into a shoot·
ing incident in South Laguna
Nov. 8 in which an off-duty
sheriff's deputy was shot.
R eser ve officer Herbert
William Kanne, 50, was shot in
the shoulder and lower back as
he went to answer the door at a
_Cops
South Laguna home. ~
Investigators Mike Slus her
and Don Barney fired five shoes
into the home at 21799 Ocean
Vista, with several or the rounds
hitting Kanne.
The two im·est1 gators were
sent to the home by Newport
Beach police who believed
former Hare Krishna leader Roy
Christopher Richard was on the
premises.
Richard was .one of a number
of murder suspects SO\l«ht in
connection with the killing of
Stephen Bovan Oct. 22.
lL was later learn ed that
Richard was not at the Ocean
Vista home and was man·y miles
a way at the Ume of the raid.
Jfe has subsequently been ar·
rested and arraigned in Superior
Court on the murder charges.
An investigation into the
s hooti~g by the District At·
tomey s office last Dec. 15 ended
with a ruli°' that the shooting was accldent111.
But the Laguna Beach internal
affairs probe looked irttQ the
areas ot departmental rules and
regulations governing the con-
duct of police personnel.
The findin gs of that investiga-
tion, according to Police Lt. Al
Olson, revealed that "Sgt. Victor
Afternoon
.Y. Stocks
TUESDAY, FE8RUABY 7, 1978 TEN CENTS
S~ooting . '. 1n.
. .
Sagan, the on-duty watc.-1> COl'll4
mander, and invesltf.alors
Barney and Slusher. vtolated certain procedures, rules apd
regulations of the Laguna Beach
Police Department.
Olson would not reveal what
those violations of the rules
were.
Police Chief Jon Sparks said
the three officers received dis·
cipllnary action ranging frorn a
written reprimand for Sergeant
Sagan and suspension without
. pay for the two investigators.
Police officials would not
specify the number or days the
two officers were suspended.
Reserve officer Kanne has
since filed a lawsuit naming the
City or Laguna Beach as
responsible for his injuries. The
amount or that suit has not been
s pecified.
..
Northeast U.S. Buried
Under New Snowstorm -,~
SOUTH LAGUNA MAN WANTS TO BUILD HIS HOME UPON A ROCK, ALISO A k
Planners Aren't Sure If 3,600-Square-Foot Structure Should Go On Outcropping at Lett
t
'Homebuilding ne18yed
WWlly May Instead Purchase Aliso Rock
A ppro\'a I of a use permit
eeded to build a house on a
ndmark rock near the throat
f Aliso Creek in South Laguna
as delayed Monday by Orange
ounty planning commissioners.
They s aid the Board of
upervisors should decide if
o unty i;:ov<>rnment will buy
irhat is called Aliso Rock before
fhe commiss ion rules on the
merits or lhe use permit applica-
~on.
±
If approved. the use permit
ould pav<> the way for con·
truction of a 3,600-square-foot
house on the huge rock outcrop-
ping adjacent to Pacific Coast
Highway just north or Aliso
Creek.
P la ns for the house drew
favorable comment from the
county Environmental Manage.
ment Agency (EMA) stare.
"The proposed structure is def·
initely unique and worthy of ad·
miration," a staff report re-
v~ewed by the commission s aid.
''Tbe architectural treatment
has demonstrated sensitivity to
the natural landform by its Ir·
r egular shape, natural building
materials anct low profile," lhe
Rain .JQOderate at times
tonight and Wednesday.
Lowa ton11bt SO to SS.
Cooler on Wednesday with
h\gbs S to 83. Chance of
rain 80 percent tonlcbt~ so
percent ,Wecn~day.
report continued.
It noted that the drawings sub·
milted by applicant Thomas
Cutkomp s howed a partial ex·
cavalion of the rock as a means
to obtain the desired low profile
building. .
Having sa1d those kind things
about Culkomp's house plan and
noting the site ls designated ror
single family residential use, the
EMA staff report hit on studies
that recommended Aliso Rock
be retained in its natural state.
"The Aliso Creek Corridor
Planning Task Group has unan·
imously endorsed the plan (re·
commending public purchase of
. the rock)." said a staff memo.
Viejo Physician Sues . ,. -.
Clemente Hospital
A Mission Vfejo physician who
claims he is unfairly being
barred from practicing in the
e m e r gen cy room at San
Clemente General Hospital sued
the hospital and nine members
of its staff Monday for $455,000
in damages.
Dr. William L. Playfair, 24792
Spadra Drive, claims in his
Oran ee County Superior Court
lawsuit j.Aat he was barred from
the emergency room ln
February, 1977, arter individuals
named as defendants made com·
m ents about'lilm.
He claims the defamatory re·
marks included the allegations
that he instilled the "fear or
physi~at violence" ln two nurses
was responsible for the resigna·
tlons of Six otbets and allowed his
rellglouS beliefs·to interfere with
bi.s duties in the emergency room.
Named as defendants in the
lawsuit are the oo..r.::::,r. hospital
adm inistrator .ll. an Jones,
Dr. Gary D.~Ketton .aqd seven
individuals klenUfied as mem·
'bers of the nursing staff,
an Inch~
Santiaio Nat on Siddltback
Mountain received .30 of an
lncb, while Smata Ana received
lris than a tenth Of an inch.
Newport ~ac:h rpeaecl only
.02 inch49 and Costa a .04.
J . Sherman Denny or H"1t•
lneton Beach said no meuun-
ble rain fell t.bete al all Mond417.
Blizzard
Disrupts
Millions
By The Associated Press
The Northeust from Penn·
sylvan'a to New Hampshire was
paralyzed today by a
bliz.tard that brought from one
to 1 •2 feet of snow to the region.
knocked out power in parts or
]Joston and disrupted virtually
every fa~t of Ufe for millions.
While the snow -steady, but
less severe than on Monday -
continued through the morning
in ~he Ea:st, crippling
tranaportaUon and business for -···ran the st oT tll n n ed r own pro·
blems from a variety of lf_torms..
The rush hour in Chfcago was
compUea"4 • .aA un-expectad.. snowfall that left nine inches on ·
the ground by this morning.
Parts of Montana and North
Dakota were s truck by a
blizzard which str a nded
travelers and made it feel like 1t
was 45 below zero. Oklahoma re-
· por ted six Inches of snow :
lakeside areas or Wisconsin got
from s ix to 12 inches; there were
record low temperatures in
other partS of the Midwest, and
cold and a forecast of possible
snow in Georgia.
More than two dozen weather-
related deaths were repqrted
around the nation. Thousands or
people in the East remained in
hotels, hospitals, schools and
emer gency shelters where they
took refuge Monday from the
wind-driven snow which drifted
to six feet and more.
They were joined by hundreds
of other famines evacuated from
low-lying coastal areas Oooded
during the morning by high
tides. All roads along 18 miles or
seacoast in New Hampshire
were closed.
The blizzard in the Northeast
was the second in little more
than two weeks; the Midwest is
still recovetiog from heavy
·snows that struck less than two
weeks ago.
Alrl>Orts In th" Northeast were-
closed, al'ld offrcials said they
would stay' shut through the day.
The New York and American
stock exchanges, which ~os~
early Monday, opened late lo·
day. Four of the five ~ommodlty
exchanges In New York were
closed todJl.Y.
<See BLIZZARD, Page AU
capo Beach
Cr88h Kills
Viejo Woman
• • D¥1y ""' ...........
fltftl.IE'T •Y SUNUGHT FOCUSED THROUGH BOTTLE
Neighbora' Quick Action Saved the Day In South Laguna
Sun's Rays Blamed
For S. Laguna Fire
Sun rays, magnified as they
passed U1rough fi ve-gallon water
bottles stored on a balcony, were
bla m ed for a fire Monday which
caused $1,000 structural damage
to a South Laguna hillside home.
The house at 31285 Holly Drive
is owned by Pauline Snyder of
Fort Ord and occupied by Janice
Pope, who was not h,omc when
the fire. started just before 3
p.m .• said Capt. Jerry ,.Alex-
ander of the county fire depart·
ment.
A next door neighbor told
firemen she heard glass break·
ing a nd cheeked the balcony
where she knew the bottles were
s tored.
"l had read in tne paper that
water bottles act as magnifiers
in sunlight and can start fires.''
said the neighbor.
When she saw smoke curling
up from the shingled wall over
two broken water bottles. the
neighbor called the fire depart-
. ment and then directed her
garden hose on the smoking
s hingles.
More than 30 county fire
fig hters responded to t he fire
Alexander said.
Damal(e to the house was
restricted to s hingles and studs,
he said.
Capo Sclwol Tax.
Vote Due in June
By ANNE COOPER OftlleOMl't' .. ,..S...,
A $27.! million lea11e·purcbase
agreement was unanimously ap.
proved Monday bl! Capistrano
Unified School District trustees
for the June 6 ballot.
The &Jreemenl would require
s imple majority approval for a
tax increase not to exceed 36
cents ror new school construe·
lion. The district's current 82·
cent ta" rate per $100 assessed
valuation is expected to.climb to
abo ut 90 cents beca~4e
Capistrano Unified has been on.
a state aid program, .said 51.Q>t.
J erome Tbomsley.
District votu.s will decide a
$49.3 million school construction
bond election and a $15 milliOll
state apportionment election on ,
Ma{ch 7. Jr the two March elec·
Uons receive the required two.
thirds majority t.o pass, the l\me
6 lease-purchase elecUon wUl be
canceled, the superintendent
Hid.
Passage or the bond measure
would not affect the 90-cent tax
rate, s aid Tt\bmslu. Because
the Cuplstr~o d istrict ls QA
state aid, the it.ale establishes a
tax rate limit.
Jf the bond measure \a ap.
proved, ttte Ctebt would be petd
nver a longer wtoci or llriw,
Thorn 1ey said. State law pro-
'\'idta that school district t>Ond
el)ll am ··tlX'ISVt:R10 after 2$
7ean OC amor\iZ.aUM• ho wcL
p
The lease.purchlse election
was proposed at the first elec-
tion following the March bond .
election in an attempt to win
voter approval for some form of
building funds as soon as possi·
ble.
"It is the administration's
posltlon that since revenue Is so
crHically needed within the
school district to meet future
school construction needs. the
district should continuously pre-
sent to the voters a ballot
measure <or measures ) which
would •uthorlze the district t.o
acquire au c l\ revenues."
Tbomsley wrote in a memo to
, (See llAUhl', Page A2)
Capo Bowling Plan
Gets Chamber Ey~
l
. ;12 0•1t v PILOl use
Families, . ,
Awarded ..
Damages
By TO~! BARLEY
Ol Uf' o .. lly Piiot IW•tl
Damaf.(<'S totaling more than
$128 m1ll1on WNc awarded to
two Orange County families
Monday in a Superior Court
\crdict that !>cts a new record
lur that type of <·1vil luwsuit.
The huge Judgrm•nt against
t.lll' Ford Motor Company ended
more• than tlm.'l' days of Jury de·
ILbc.>ral1oru. in the courtroom of
Judge Leonard Goldstein. The
trial began last August.
T hl' principal beneficiary in
lht> j udgml'nt 1s Ri c h a rd
(;nml>haw, 18. of Anahe!im, who
\\as !.cvercly burned over 90 per·
CC'nl Of his body Sil\. years ago
when a Ford Pinto m which he
\\as a pas!.cngcr exploded and
burned.
Grimshaw \I.as awarded $125
m11l1on m pun1t1vc damages and
S2,84 1,000 in compensatory
dumagcs by a jury which was
lold during lhc lrwl that he has
undcr~onc more than 50 opera-
lrons m the past fi ve years with
mediral bills totaling more than
Sl25,000.
The jury agrl1l'd with a team
of lawyers hcadt>d by /\rt Hews
t1f Santa /\na that M gli gcnt con-
~truction of the Pinto by the
l''ord Compuny wus the primary
<·ause of the accident on May 28,
J!l72.
ll was testified that a poorly
designed gns tank in the Pinto
owned by Mrs. Lillicbell Gray,
52, of Orange, was installed in
::.uch a way thut It would rupture
Jn a lmost any type of collision.
Mrs. Gray died in the burning
t.rr !.hortly a fter it was Involved
Ill ~ collJsron on Interstate 15
nr:.ir San H<'rna rdtn o.
1;rrmshnw, then 13, was rushed
to a nearby hospital in critical
tund1t1on.
It was tt•slified in the trial that
hurns cattst:'d the death of Mrs.
Cr.1y <incl the !>Crious inj uries
.'-ti ff<'rC'd hy her passenger.
Fro• Page Al
BLIZZARD. •
The storm in New York City
was the worst since Dec. 26.
1948, when 19.6 inches or ano)V
f<.>11. At 7 a.m., there were 17.7
inches of snow in mid-Manhattan.
:ll inches in :-.ome sections of
Queens and 23 inches in some
~cctions of N;1ssau County on
Long h land.
Like olh<.'r offki.ils. Gov. Ella
c;rasso of Connecltcut declar<.'d
·' s lJtl' of <'meritency, closing
-.1 a lt' hr gfrn ays. !>Chools, courts
.ind slat<' oCC.ccs. She and Rhode
bland Gov. J. Joseph Garrahy
,1s ked Presid en t Carter to
dc•<'lart> tlw rc•grori a federal dis-
.isler area.
\ slate or <'mcrgcncy 1llso ex-
isted in Massachusetts where
10,000 National Guardsmen were
called to deal with the storm
that was <'xpcctcd to leave 111;,
fret of s now before it ended. All ~talc highways in the approx.
1matcly one-third of the state
(•ast of Worcester were closed.
The 27 weather-relate<! deaths
included those of three Rhode
b land h<>art :.rllack victims who
cbu~d not be rc•ached by rescue
\"Chicles and those of two men
\\ho ~uffoca lcd from carbon
monoxide while marooned in a
clrsabled snow plow truck out-~1dc Ph1locklphia.
San Juan Attorney
Speaks on Reform
San Juan Capistrano City At·
torney J a m es Okaza)d will
s(>Ca k on the cit y's new cam·
paign reform ordinance at a
hreakfast meeting Wednesday.
• The meeting, spon~ored by tho
t ap1 s trano B us iness and
Property Owners Association
will lake place at 8 a.m. at
Harry's Family Restaurant.
32082 Camino Capistrano.
OAANOI COAST
DAILY PILOT
o.tly ...... , .......... VOLKSWAGEN GLANCED OFF ONCOMING MUSTANG IN CANYON ROAD CRASH
Three People Slightly Hurt In Two Creahea on Two-lane Roadway
FroaPageAJ
ALISO •••
s taff memo.
Also noted in the staff report
was a 1974 UCl s tudy that rec-
om m cndcd ''acquisition and
preservation" of the rock out-
cropping in its natural stale.
2 Canyon Crashes
Leave 3 Injured
So did the framers of the
general development plan for
the Aliso Beach inJfind area,
the staff report said.
.. However, as or this d~te .the
county has not initiated acUoa to
achieve this goal (ot purchasing
Aliso Rock)," according to the
EMA sta!freport.
To give county s upervisors
time to consider buying the
rock, planning commissioners
-delayed takln g a~tion on
Cutkomp's use permit a pplica·
tion until March 11.
Jn the interim, commis1ioners
agreed to study a n environmen-
tal r eport on t-he proposed build-
ing ;iven them by area resident
Dolores Milhouse.
That stand came after senior
county planner Irwin Schatzman
told the commission that EMA
. pla nners would prefer that Aliso
Rock be maintained ln its
hatural state.
But Cutltomp has alreed to
buy the rock as the site for a
family home. And, so far, county
officials haven 't seen enough
merit in the rock's acquisition to
make a purchase or commit lo a
purchase.
Two traffic accifients within a
quarter mile of each other on
L:1guna Canyon Road Monday
h•ft three people slightly injured
anrl t hree c ars nearly de-
molished.
The crashes. bolh on Laguna
Canyon Road just west of El
Toro Road, we re the result of
Jane changes on the winding can-
Y!)n roadway, police said today.
The first collision occ urred
shortly before 2 p.m. when a
Volkswagen sedan driven by
Santa Ana motorist Mary Anne
Hoffer. 26, allegedly drifted into
· the oncoming lanes.
The car collided nearly head-
Dana CofC .
Sets Dinner
The Dana Point Chamber of
Com m<.'rcc will hold its annual
insta llation buffet dinner Feb. 15
at the Estrella Country Club in
San Clemente.
Incoming chamber president
Alex McGeary has invited As-
semblyman Ron Cordova, Fifth
District Supervisor 'thomas
Riiey and developer Chuck
Smyth of Smyth Bros. to discuss
problems relating to· the Dana
Point a rea.
Tickets for the dinner are SIO
and m ay be reserved by calling
the chamber offices at 496·1555.
Raps Newsletter
Sweeney Def ends
Vote on Proposal
By WILLl-'M HODGE
Of-. Oatly Pli.t &l•ff
Incumbent Sa n Juan
Capistrano Councilman John
Sweeney lashed out Monday at a
newsletter being distr i buted
which he claims quotes him out
of context on the community's
growth manage ment r estric-tions.
"I support the gene ral plan,"
Sweeney told a gathering at the
second City Council candidates'
forum. "My judgment of the i~
s ue has been based on principle.
not expediency."
The Town Hall Association
ttews letter J>oin t s out that
Sweeney voted against an or-
dinance restricting residential
development to 400 bomt.11 per
year. The ordinance i'a part of
San Juan's general plan.
Sweeney defended hia no vote
com plaining that he was not
given enough time to study the
ordinance before the council ap.
proved it. He called Ill approval
a "kangaroo court.'' .
"Councilman Sweeney would
lead us to believe he only had
several hours to review the or-
d ln an ce," ex-planning com-
missioner Phillip Schwartze shot
back.
Sweeney bristled.
"Let's tie honeat. PbiL I ••ld s evetal days. no t several
hours,•• he coltntered.
"The residential growth
management system bad bten
discussed ror months,"
Scbwarb.e maintained. "Eacb
new home that comes U,to the cl-
ty lncteases our taxes... ·
Schwartze lauded tile geneNl
plan. calltng for more com-
merd•I fl'Owth to balance tM
nsldentJ'l growth alloT11blo un·
eter lhe plan.
Former Meyor James Tborpo
defended the trowth restrtctfons at ~ Capistrano Bualness and
Prolferty Owners AaaoolaUon·
aponaored forum.
"Many candidate& nem to ff·
nore °'° (act that thtse numbers
(41JG) ..-. plckH an.tr extensive
rtltarcb;" ho ~~ "Thc1 , tenect • level ot we can support ana becin to Joftr the
tax rai..
"We have one or the most
beautiful g~eral plans I've ever
read," retired businesswoman
Marilyn Williams agreed . "But
m over three years no one has
been able to tell me what it will
cost."
She c riUcized the general plan
for setting aside 30 percent of
the land in San Juan for open
:.pace.
"I don't think it's a question of
whether or not we want to see
more or less houses built in the
city," Mrs. Willlams told a
packed clubhouse at Rancho del
A vion Mobile Home Park. "I
thillk the question is what can
we a fford."
Businessman Gary
Hausdorfer defended the general
plan, citing tax .savings over the
past few years.
"During tile last four years,
we have decreased dur city tax
rate," he said. ''Jt is important
that the current poUcy under the
Reneral plan continue to be im-
plemented."
Hausdorfer claimed increases
in propert.:r: taxe1 we re a result
of developqien\ on county Jand
11u1Toundlng San Juan -not the
city itself.
R etired achoo) teacher Al
Arps complained about rumors
circulating in San Juan tbat he
is tn f 1vor of buJldlnr homes on
all the hJllsldes and rldgeUnes.
.. It I would be elected as one
man on a council of nve, I can't
aeo how lbese people think that I
~utd brb\i about those plans,"
be complained. "Those are not my plans.··
Newport Beach traffic e n glneer Jlmmy Larsen
crlUclzcd the City Oouncll (or, a
Jack of comrnuolcatlon witll ttsi·
dent.a.
·'There ls a big lack of com·
munic1tlon with the people who
live Jn this city,'' ho claimed. ''I wlll ask people (or their Input."
He clted a downtown mall
study -which tllo City Council
ap)rovtd ovon \hou1h tho
merchontl were OJ>POSed to lt -n an example or. Ute sovsntnc bOard'a mWlllthlMA to Uaten.
on with a Ford driven by Jed-'
drey James Jarek, 24, o r 2666
Orange Ave., Costa Mesa, forc-
ing both vehicles off the ro-ad
with Jarek's car s lamming into
a dirt embankment
Jarek and his passenger. Lisa
Ann Davis, of 18096 Yosemite
St.. Fountain Valley, received
minor cuts a nd scratches, police
said.
Five hours l atef', Mareen
Grace Marconi, 32, o ( 20
TanRlewood Drive, Irvine was
forced off the road u she drove
·into town. .
Her station waaon flipped off
the roadway and ended upside
down in a ditch: police said.
Neither she nor her son, Michael
Murphy, 11, were seriously hurt.
Witnesses to the s~cond inci-
dent chased a 1976 Mercury sta-
tion wagon onto the San Diego
Freeway, netting a li cense plate
for Laguna Beach police.
They told officers the s us pect
driver passed the Marconi car
"at a s uicide passing distance.''
before speec:Ung up to 75 end 80
m Cles an hour a(ter the crash.
Police declined to identify the
witnesses who gave chase lo the
s tation wngon.
Four Surrender
TOKYO <AP)-Four dem-
ons trators :-.urrendl.'r ed to
police today after they spent 40
hours atop a 6.5-foot steel tower
erected to block the opening of
Tokyo's new int ernational
airport next month. They were
c harged with po ss essing
weapons and using firebombs.
• ··ControUW ~JI tb9 OD.lY
"'" ....,..,_ IOtllr.'to"be able to t.rlm t.be tai riW•
Council bopetull Saan CWn·
mJap ErWtn I. '•Jerry .. Drake
and CbMlel Ward were a._ent. n.e eJeetloa Will be Mld Jbtcll 1.
-
TOtDtt Center
Laguna Eyes
Lease of Hall
Laguna Beaeh city coun·
<'ilme n will consider a lease
agreement Wednesday with
American Legion Post 222 tor
use of that group's hall as u
t>omm unity center.
The city has been negotiating
with Legion orficials for the past
few months and a proposed
lense agreement will be studied
by council memb ers at
Wednesday's meeting in council
chambers which begins al S p.m.
Planning d irector Doug
Schmitz said the lease agree-
ment could mean a "break·
even" proposition for the ~ltY
which has b een seekinlt •4
permanent community center
for many years.
The Legion hall, located at the
corner of Legion and Catalina
Streets, was built in the early
1920, according to Legion Com·
m andcr John Healy.
It was formerly the city's
schoolhouse and was built on
land owned by the c1ly on Park
Av<.'nuc. Healy said.
have (int priority ln use for th4t
facillUes, which include meet-
ings on alternate Thursday and
F riday evenings and one
Wednesday morning a month. ·
Another stipulation in the pro-
posed lease uareem ent would
l>ee the missile and cannon locat-
ed on the property remain on the
property. Schmitz said.
The building, which would
oocome the Veteran's Memorial
Community Center if the lease
agreement ls approved by coun·
cllmen, currently takes in about
$950 a month in rental, excluding
s peel al events.
That would put the enterprise
in the break-even category as
far as clty costs go, Scbmiu
said.
The building, contalnini Jess
than 6,000 square feet~ includes a
kitchen area, large meeting ball
and other rooms.
Fro111 Page Al
The building was subsequently BALLOT moved to its current location • • •
and bas served as the American • •
Legion post for many yen rs. trus~eel>_. . . ' The proj'.¥>sed lease agret'ment·-District growth proJ~cti~ns wo~ld see the city paying S.'iOO a ~ho~ school ~nrollmcnt chmbing
month rent on the building in five year!i from the. current
beginning las t week. The cit9 16,000 students to 24,000 m 1983.
would pay all taxes, utilities, in· Capis trano Unified is the
s qrance, and maintenance costs l argest school district in Orange
for the building. County in area. Much of its 154
And the Legion post would square miles is yet to be de·
Two Youths
Arrested in
Burglary Try
An 18-year ·Old South Lagunan
and a juvenile companion were
arrested on residential burglary
charges Monday after a foiled
burglary attempt in Laguna
Niguel.
Orange County S heriff's
Deputies arrested Stephen Fred
Johnson of 29622 Vista Plaza and
an unidentllled 17-year-old on
suspicion of burglary in the 4
p:m . Incident.
De puties claim they found
valuables in the su.spect's car
f r o m at least two other
burglaries that occurred Mon-
day.
1\ sheriff's spokesman said the
pair were caught after a woman
Irving al 23272 Palawan Circle
reported two boys trying to
brea~ into her Laguna Niguel
homo
Johnson is being held in
Orange County Jail and the 17·
year-old is ooing held in Orange
County Juvenile Hall.
veloped. Communities within
Capistrano Unified boundaries
are Dana Point, Capistrano
Beach, San Clemente, San Juan
Capistrano, Laguna Niguel and
east Mission Viejo.
New &cho91s may not be built
using general Cunds which must
be used to PfY teachers and
other school ~nnel, s upport
athletic and mu~roJ:rams,
provide bus transpo?i~L--carry on other school functions.
said trustee William Thompson or Mission Viejo.
' If the March bond election
fails, the school district will be
forced to put schools on double
sesslons, lease additional porta-
ble • clMSrooms, purchaae tents and take other steps to acci>m-
modate the rapidly expanding
s tudent enrollment, Thompson
said.
"Our growth rate means that
if this bond mt>asure does not
pass, we a re going to have to
make som<' ver y ha rd d e-cision~." said Thom.pson.
"We may have to eliminate all
~c hool busing, a thletic pro-
gram s, music progr ams and
school lunch programs. Tents
a r e a V<'ry viable housing
alternative -they're cheap."
.. .. -~
Orange Coast
EDITION
T oday's Clos ing
N.Y. S toeks
V OL. 71, NO. 38, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANG~ COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1978 N TEN CENTS ~
NB Groups Seek Buildin_g Moratoriulll
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Ol Ille o.11, ..... tlatf
Members of a coalition that
wants to limit the amount of
future development in Newport
lieach arc once again asking ci·
ty councilmen to impose a build·
ing moratorium.
In a lt!llL•r to the council, Jean
Watt. prc~ident of S PON IStop
l'ollut in#: Our Newport J and or.
g:in11.er or LEl\F <Le~al En ·
vironmental Analysis Fund),
sa id the building halt is
necessary to assure her group
that there will be some signlfi-
c an l changes made in the
forthcoming review of the city's
general plan
And IC those significant
changes aren't made. ~he said.
L £AF will launch a petition
drive lo qualify a ballot measure
which will impose the changes
sought by the group.
Mrs. Watt described her group
as consisting of about 60 finan-
cial backers of whom about 20
have been active in putting
together the iniUaUve. All are
members ofSPON.
The general plan review. or-
dered by councilmen last fall to
head off a similar moratorium.
was ori~inally slated for comple·
lion this month.
The first hearing will ~ held
Feb. 16. The conclusion bf the
hearing process Is likely to be
delayed until the end of March
while work is being done on the
city's coniputeriied traHic
model, city officials said.
That work was requested by
the Planning Commission. so
U}at commissioners could have
some data which will indicate
what some of the proposed
changes in the city's future
building and road system will do
to traffic patterns
TrafCic rongestion has been
at the root or the long.running
debate over buildin g
moratoriums. The debate sur·
faced about a year ago when
Councilman Paul Ryckoff a:,ke<i
for a hall to building.
That r('qucst and two others
like il were turned down by
coundlmcn.
Last fall. all of the city's major
landowners and developers
agreed to delay tlwir major proj-
ects to gave tlw caty time to do the
general plan review.
In an inll'r\'iew today. Mrs
Watt said her letter to the Caty
Council wa:. wrallt>n to keep
councalmcn up to date on what
her group 1s plannani.:.
.J •
Misery Piles Up • m Northeast
Attempt
At Death
Claimed
ByT0:\1 B.\RLEV
01 U.. O•lly Pilot ~1•11
,\ doctor wno~c statements to
p<>licl' led \o the filin)i! of murder
l'har).!c:-a\!;11nsl Dr. William
Ha\lt•r Wa\)d11l or llunlington
I la rhour tul~ a jury today that
Waddill had his hand d;imped
around a ~cwborn baby's
''and pi ix• ~htln he met him in
~hl' Wt'slmin~tcr Community
Uosp1tal last Marl'h 2 ~Dr . Honalc\ Co rnc lscn of
r:m1.:c ll':-.l1fa•cl Ill Oran~l' Coun-
v Surwrwr Court that Waddill,
•ho hacl .!.ummoned him to the
osp1tal. told him: "( can't find
the God ctamn tr achea
(windpipc).1'his baby just won't
quit breathinn."
Cornclsen testified that he im-
mcdi:ltcly examined the three-
pound baby which Waddll~ had
a rlil·r tried to abort with a
alint• injection into the mother
nd nokd that 1t had a dascemi·
le heartbeat
The pediatrician testified that
c abo noted that the baby was
realhing anct was. in many
(•spect~. in ;m identical condi-~on to that of a newly born pre-
ature haby
ll is C'onkncled by the defense
al lh<' mfont did not show ac-
eptn blc signs or life when de·
''<'r<'d l;ist March 2 and that
Waddill cannot be legally
iharged with murder.
I . I
(
;'Very Si~k Man'
, O•Hr Pllet S .. ff .......
TAKES WITNESS STANO
Or. Ronald Cornelsen
Cornelsen, 42, testified today
that he urged Waddill lo leave
the baby alone after seeing the
defendant again place his hand
around the baby's neck and
~quceze.
lie testified that while he was
examining the infant he noticed
<See DOCTOR, Page A2)
LA Police Probe
'Strangler Letter'
LOS ANGELES CAP) -A let-
ter from a person claiming to
be the Hillside Strangler says
the letter writer killed "those
evil ladies" al the behest of his
mother and says be is a very
sick man who needs help.
Assistant Police Chief Daryl
F. Gates told a news conference
today that the letter, mailed to
Mayor Tom Bradley, may or
may not be authentic.
"There's nothing In the letter
that authenticate• it.'' Gates
said. "There are some thlngs in
it that give ll an air of urgency
. . . some things pique the in-
terest of myself and in-
vestigatons."
Gates read the first page of
Panel Votes
Webster Plek
the pencil-printed six-page letter
to newsmen at police head-
quarters. It reads:
"Dear Mr. Mayor.
''Please listen to me. I am
very sick, but I do not want to go
back to that place. I bate that
p lace. My mother told me to kill
those evil ladies. It's not my
fault ...• Mother m akes my
head hurt. That's why I kill her.
But I can't get her out of my
head. She keeps coming back.
T hat's Why I hate her."
Blizzard
Plagues
Midwest
By The Associated Press
Snow, winds and floodwaters
brought a second day of misery
lo millions in the blizzard-
plagucd Northeast today, and
residents of some Midwest areas
also faced hardship from bitter
cold and new storms.
Trouble spots ranged from
Bo~on -where a power
blackout compounded the
blizzard problems -to Billings.
i\lont., which was struck by
l-.now Monday and faced con· •
tmucd blizzard warnings today.
Anchorag<', Alaska, had lo
close 1t.s schools, for the first
time sincc 19<H . because of snow
'' hu:h started Saturday and was
still fallinghea\'ily.
More th11n two do~n s~orm.
rl'lated deaths. some n-om over.
exertion shoveling snow or
struggling through drift.I, were
reported across the nation.
The snow in the Northeast
b<.'gan Sunday ni ght-barely two
weeks after the last blizzard -
BLIZZARD DISRUPTS
. BOSTON'S POWER-A3
and was still falling in some p.irts
al midday today, although it was
less severe than earlier and was
expected to taper during the day.
Accumulations ranged from one
totwofect.
Transp()rtation was at a near
stands till. Airports in the
Northeast were closed, and
alrpor.ts in other parts of the
country were jammed with
passengers unable to reach
snowboWld destinations.
"We're the only thing that's
open." said Fred Wilder, a Civil
Defense dispatcher In the
Pocono Mounta}ns town of
Stroudsburg, Pa ... We're trying.
to get everybody in God's crea-
tion to help plow these people
out."
Chicago, stiU recovering from
a blizzard 12 days ago, was hit
by an unexpected storm that
began Monday afternoon and
left nine inches of snow.
Near-zero temperatures were
recorded in northern Georgia,
a nd the National Weather
Service forecast fnow by
Wednesday. Oklahoma got its six-
th snowtaU in 22 days with ac-
cumulations of up to six inches.
South Bend, Jnd., ghivered in
morning tem_peratures ot 14
below zerQ -«· recqrc!. Parts of
Kansas ioe up to U\ree ln~be.s of
snow overflight •Gd predictions
or two more inches today.
sections ot Wisc:onain border-
ing on Lake Mlchlgan were hit
by 1 'At feet of anow o.ernight;
(8" BUZZAaD, P•te AZ)
It'a going to raln. '
That's the forecast or the Na•
tional Weather Service. They're
not even hedlln• their bets Ulla
time. Tbe chanee ot showers
tont1ht • ljjted at doce to tot
:percent, _...In. to 10 pel'-
cent W .... y.
AP Wl ....... '4> WHO'~ TAKE MANHATTAN? THIS IS NEW YORK'e 33RO STREET AFTER BLIZZARD
• • New Storm Paral~• Northeastern U.S. From Pennaytvanla to New Hampshire
Storm Socks Bay Area
Flnoding, Accidents Slowing Commuters
By The Associated Press
Northern California com-
muters were socked again today
by heavy morning rains as the latest in a parade of storm
fronts marched into the slate.
Rains beginning in pre-dawn •
hours caused a rash o! rush-hour
traffic accidents. mlnor floodin~
and a mudslide or two In Marin.
County that caused hundreds of
commuters to punch in late.
Pacific Gas and Electric Com-
pany said power lines were
withstanding the rain and gusty
winds for the most part.
although 500 homes in Soquel
were rep()rted without power.
The National Weather Service
said today·s rain had dropped
.75 Inches in the San Francisco
Bay area in four hours, and
most areas north of Fres no were
expected to get at least an inch.
Winds were gusting up to 4a
miles per hour.
"Storms are stacked up across
the Pacific and headed this
way," said forecaster Richard
Lay of the National Weather
Service ..
The fronts were expected to
hit the state at 24·hour intervals
throughout the week.
Lashing ralns and winds Sun·
day and Monday knocked out
power to 44,000 homes and busi-
nesses, toppled trees and lipped
over mobile h o m es in a
Sacramento area trailer park.
On the ocean today, winds of
50-55 knots tlnd lO·foot seas.
* *
forced the 57-foot Sue Belle with
four people aboard to radio the
Coast Guard for help.
A Coa.!.t Guard dispatcher said
the craft.reported engine trouble
and was suffering "a terrific
heatin~" off the Big Sur coast.
Plans were to tow the stricken
crafl into Monterey.
Gusty winds early Monday
Newport Raee
y~nhd about a third or the
screen away at the Kay-Von
Drive·ln theater in Napa. The
screen toppled onto the roadw:.ty
and temporarily knocked out
power at KVON radiu.
The California Highway
Patrol reported floodi11g jn some
areas north of San Francisco.
Council Filing
Ends; 15 Running
Filing for the April 11 NewPort
Beach City Council elections
closed at noon today with a total
of 15 candidates listed for the
four seats that are up for elec-
tion:
Candidates in Newport Beach
run from districts. although they
are elected at large. Thi~ year's election wiJJ bring
a minimum of three new faces to
the city council because Mayor
Milan Dostal, Mayor Pro Tero
Pete Barrell and Councilwoman
Trudi Rogers have announced
their retirement from the coun-
cil.
The only incumbent to seek re.
election is Lucille Kuehn. She
will be going for her second four·
year term as the representative
of the sixth district which covers
old Corona del Mar and Irvine
Terrace.
Here's a dlstrlct-by·district
look al the council hopefuls:
-First District (Peninsula
and Lido Isle): Peg Forgit.
22051.!i W. B1lboa Blvd.; Donald
Strauss, 101 Via Venezia: John
Tucker, 813 W. Bay St.: La
Verne del la Cierva, 310 Vla Ltdo
Soud; ism Von Esch, uo Via
Or vleto, and S. K ... Jfap" Byers,
410 Via Udo Soud. ·
-Third Dlatrlct (Newport
}{eights, outf Haven, Westcllfr.
:Bayahores and Linda Isle);
Frank Ivens, 121S Sussex Lane;
Evelyn Hart. 435 Redlands A 1re .•
and Paul Caldwell, 12J( Rutland
Road. and Mlke Oeranc, USO
Su.Her. Line.
-Fourth Dlalrlct ( D<> ve r
Shortt, Marinen. Baycreat, Up-
~r Bay and The Bluff a>; Jackie u .. tM.r. uoo Dorothy woe and
Charles D. Larson, 2312 Holiday
Road.
-Sixth District COid Corona
del Mar and Irvine Terrace):
Lucille Kuehn, 1831 Seadrift
Drive; Paul Humme l , 416
Heliotrope Ave. and William
Dohr, 205 Carnation l\ve.
Co ast
Weathe r
Rain moderate at times
tonight and Wednesday.
Lows tonight SO to SS.
Cooler on Wednesday with
highs 58 to 63. Chance or
rain 80 percent tonight, 50
percent Wednesday.
I NSIDE TODAY
The11're called "The
Motors" and they're mem~r.t
of. a oonishlng breed -t~
Highway PaJrol motorcvcle of·
f icer. Baa their position is
viewed by many cu an elite
one. See Featuring, Page CJ.
,
DAILY PILOT T
Canine Survivor
Of Pearl Harbor
By CHARLES JI. LOOS
Of .. Delly ...... ~
YOU DOG LOVERS who watc hed the movie
''Midway" durinJ: its two-night rerun on television Sunday
and Monday might be interested in this footnote to history.
Portions of the film, which dealt with an earl.Y turning
point in World War II in the Pacific, recounted the sinkin g
or the aircraft carrier Lexington during the BatUe of the
Coral Sea.
Not too many folks recall -and the
filmmakers may have m issed a bet
here -that there was a dog aboard the
Lcxini:ton ul the time.
His name was "Admiral Wags" and
he almost went down with the s hip.
HE W.\S A BLACK cocker spaniel
b('longini:! to the s kipper of the Lex-
ington , then-Capt. Ted Sherman.
Thl• !>tory or Admiral Wags was told
t.00s 111 a 19-13 book written for children by
his mistress, Fanny J essop Sherman.
Admiral Wags was the She rman family pet. He often
w<.'nt to ~t·a with his ma),tt•r . who later became an admiral
h1m~<.'lf
THE DOG WAS A BOARD the Lexington. on
m aneuvers at the time, when the Japanese attacked Pearl
Harbor. Ile stayed abourd whE:n the Lexington was or-
dered to the South Pacific. Sherman and his wife didn't
like the Idea of leaving the dog alone in quarantine for
several weeks in Honolulu.
So, when the Lexington came under attack by
Japanese planes during that first big naval battle or the
Pacific war in the Coral Sc-a off New Guinea, Wags was
there. Hts battle station was under Captain Sherman's
bed.
i\lthnug h a wars hip, the Lexington had m ade
headlint'.'> 1n (X'ac<.'lime. In 1929, its electric turbines sup-
plt<.'d Tarnma. Wai.h., with power when a spell of extreme-
ly eold Wl'ather s hut down the city's hydroelectric power
:.y:>lcm. And, in 1931, when Managua, Nicaragua, was
leveled by an earthquake, the Lexington. then sailing out
of Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, was one of the first ships or
mercy on lhe scene. While the carrier steamed toward
Nicaragua , its planes flew a head, carrying doctors.
medical s upplies and food to the stricken capital city.
IN THAT BltTTLE OF the Coral Sea in early 19~ the
Lexington was hit by al least four torpedoes dropped by
Japant:•sc planes. •
The ship bt<'amcd on, chasing the Japanese fleet. but
i!<lSOlinc from damaged storage tanks below decks caught
fire. Explos ions rocked the ship as the flames spread to
:immunition stor:il!e ar eas.
f'mally, with the power and steering knocked out and
the fin•s ragini.! out of control, the order came from Cap·
ta111 Shnman to abandon ship.
AFTER SEEING TO IT that the cr ew was getting off
the s hip safely. Sherma n returned to the bridge for his
dog. Wags was th<.'rc, wailing. He had li ved through it all.
'fhc dog \\US outfitted with a life jacket and lowered
over th<.' s ide J\s he neared the water, the ship lurched and
he landed on the armor shelf. a narrow ledge at the water
line Th<'rc he Mood, s tranded. until a lifeboat came
.il'>ll /.!:-.1dt• ancl ~ome s.11lors. us mg a boat hook, rescued
him ln1m 111), 1x·rc-h
Latc.>r. Wags. his war adventures over. was reunited
'' 11 h his f.1mdy lie r<'lurned to the Sherman home in San
l>u•go lci l1 n• out the rest of his days in re lative peace and
q u1l'l
Winds, Confusion
Scramble Racers
Chang ing w<>ather patterns
a long thl' IJ1qa C'ahrornia ~oust.
o r m as), l'OmputC'r confusion
a boa rd tlw l'sl'ort vessels, or er·
ron<'OUS reporting from the Oeet,
or a c-oml>inat1on of all three has
J ~am scrambled the Manzanillo
fleet plar mR the Class A yachts
lar in the lead on elapsed and
l'orrected timt>s.
In l\londay's report the Class
B and C yachts had sailed
through the Cla:>s A fl<'el.
Today's position r<'port in-
dicated Merlin had a 250-mile
day's run placing he r far out
front. 469 miles from San Diego
with 649 miles to go. Drifter was
17 miles astern and Christine
was 10 miki; behind Drifter.
Merlin's position placed it 85
miles northwest o f Cape San
Lazaro.
Weather re ports from the
<'Scort ves sels indicated the
OftANQI! COAST N
DAILY PILOT
• .._,,N_
lltNtiOrf'll •ftd "-'.,,,,.,,,
winds had improved to 12 to 15
knots out of the northwest over
the five knots reported Monday.
Handicap standings as report·
ed from the official escort vessel
Ranjamar:
Overall, 1. Me rlin 2. Drifter 3.
Freewheeler.
Class A 1. Merlin 2. Drifter 3. Freewh~lcr
Class B 1. Mirage 2. Mamie 3. Terral III.
Class C 1. Tinsley Light 2.'
Whlmsey Tres 3. Audacious
Patient Leaps
To His Death
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A
19-ye ar-old patient at Mt. Zion
Hos pital jumped through a
closed window a nd fell to his
d eath on a Jedge five floors
below. hospital officials have
reported.
A coroner's spokesman iden·
lifled the dead youth as Daniel
Tabo, of San Francisco, who had
been a patient at Mt. Zion for
more than four months.
;
Newport Rain Da•age
:\l ike Schuster, 12. peers dO\m hole can'(•d
inlo side of San ~Iiguel Drive by recenl
rainstorms. The lanes near the un
dc:t·mined portion have been closed to traf-
f 1c :incl C'ily of"fi°cinls say it·i s likely to n'-
m:i Ill that way until dry weather return~.
The erosion got started in last month's
s torms. City officials say wc('kend s torm
rlicln 'l clo much mon.' damagl'. ,
Girl Hurt
In Mesa
Bike Crash
Newport Harbor High School
coed Laurie Jean Fallon. 16 was
mjured today when her bi~ycle
struck the side of a car on Irvine
Avenue near 17th Street, Costa
Mesa police said.
Miss Fallon, 1612 Anita Lane,
Newport Beach. was on he r way
to school al the time of the acci-
dent, according to police ac·
counts.
The driver of the car, Toichi
Ishihara. 780 Baker St., Costa
Mesa, was not cited.
Miss 1''allon was taken to Hoag
Memor ial Hospital for treat·
ment of her injuries, but was not
hospitalized, pol ice-said.
Traffic investigators said the
accident occurred when the girl
allem1>tcd to pas s four other
bicyclists who were ridin g
abreast in a bike lane along
trvine Avenue. The car was go-
ing the same direcfion as the
bicyclei..
Fro•PageAJ
DOCTOR ...
cxtcnsi\'c discoloration around
tht• neck. The coroner's office
later ruled that the infa nt was a
vi ctl m of manual slr angulation.
Cornelsen said Waddill, 44
told him: "This baby can 't live:
It will be a big mess if it does."
And the witness testified that
Waddill talked of the infant suf.
fering brain damage and of s ub-
seque nt lawsuits that could cost
him many thousands of dollars if
the child tha t had s urvived an
abortion attempt continued to
live.
Corne lsen said that at one
point Waddill call ed for
potassium chloride and was 1m·
mediately asked by the witness
why he wanted the chemical.
lie said Waddill told him: "lt
will stop the baby's heart."
Prosecutor Robert Chatterton
said in his opening statement
t hat Comelsen will also testify
that Waddi ll also s u ggested
other methods of murde r while
the two physicians discussed the
infant in the nursery .
Among them, Chatterton said.
was dro wning the c hild in a
bucket of water, drowning it in
the nursery s ink or by an injec·
tion of insulin.
Cha tterton asked Cornelsen to·
day if the placement of Wad·
dill's hand around the baby's
neck and the pressure that was
apparently being exerted could
be construed as any form of
medical procedure.
"No, it couldn't and no, it
wasn 't," Cornelsen replied.
layoffs Ordered
BERKELE~ (AP> -Layoff
notices are being sent starting
this week to about 80 teachers
and c lassified employees In the
Berkeley school district.
Fro• Page AJ
BU~ARD STRIKES •••
the weather ser vice fo recast
another two to four inches
tonight.
A freight train was stuck for
four hours in a J2·foot snowdrin
in North Dakota. Winds up to 40
mph m<lde it feel like 45 below in
:\Jon ta n<.i .
From Pennsylninia through
Mesan Struck
With Bottle
In Newport
Newport Beach police are
s eeking the uniclentif1C'rl as-
s:iilant who hurled ;.i beer hottlc
into the face 9f a Co!-ta Mesa
man a:. he was walking along
the Newport Pier early Monday
morning.
Douglas Jay Moore, 20. suf.
fered lacerat1011i. to h is eyelid
a nd around his left <'Ye in the tn·
cident reported s hortly a fter
midnight.
Moore told officers he and a
companion. Michael Evens, 21.
of Reno. were walking along the
pier . when the bottle hit him m
the face.
Evans chas <.'d thl.' m an he
thought thr('w 1t. but was unahh·
to l'atch him
:\1oore was takPn to Ho<J~
:\lemorial Jlos p1tal for tr<.'al-
ment and trans ferrt>d to l'C
Irvine Medical C('nter where he
was treated and released
New Hampshire, businesses,
many of which closed early
Monday as the snow mounted,
kept their doors s liut today.
Ba nks in some areas were
closed. So were schools and
public highways.
Some commuters who made it
to work Monday morning were
unable to get home and jammed
c ity hotels; others struggled
home, only to find conditions
even worse in the suburbs.
One after another, governors
and mayors d.eclared states or
emer ge"llcy. banning no n -
essentia l traffic. National
Guardsmen were called out to
help dear s now and rescue
s tranded m otorists. Several of-
ficials asked President Carter to
d<'clar<' the Northeast a federal
disaster area.
Drifts in some areas of the
:'\ortheast -still recovering
from the Jan. 20 storm -were
up to 10 feet. Floodwaters swept
low-lying t'oastal parts of New
.Jersey, New York, Connecticut.
Massachusetts and New
Hampshire, forcing the e vacua-
tion of thousands.
T he New York and American
~lock exchanges , which closed
l'arly rm Monday, opened late to-
dJy Four of the fi\e commodity
t''<'C'hanges in the city wen·
c-losed a:. was the Bostnn Stock
E'change. -·
The !<ilorm dissipated m Penn
~yl va nia during the morning to-
day. but trailing squalls whipped
up s now dr ifts that kept roilds
and airport runways blocked.
Vl<•l'Y .. ..::.~:.t:r .. ._
~ .. ·-'""" ~ .............. ........... _ FUnds Sought
~"·""" .-........ .......... -....,... .. '"" HB Croup to Help lJoy
A 7•year·old TlJuana boy
horribly disfigured when a can
of patnt thinner eJCploded In
front of him may get a.new taco,
thanks to a Huntlnston Beach
benefactor and a nonprofit
group c:alled lnterplut.
However, Mrs. Vlr1lnl1 CHtill, of 6811 Defiance Drive,
Huntlnaton. Bea~h. notea that. whlle,,~ry COits wlll M pald by liatuplast, hOl;tt.l eic.,....
must a». met ~h donaik>ni.
She aald Tomas Domingue&'
parent.I, who live fn a sf\an·
tytown or ahacka above Tijuana
can't afford the exptnaei themaelvu.
Tax·deductlble contrJbutfon• .
can be sent to tnterpJHt, l>.O.
Box 9D>, &antord,.·Cell{., wl\h
the 1pectncatlon that \h•y are ;
Cor Toma• Domlnauea of Ti-
Juan11 Mn. CuUUo nld. ln·
terpla9' a non-prof\t C>r&anlaa·
Uon set up to •ld dllll~ 1 peraonJ, especlatb' cblldftn.
••
Oil Talk
Stilled
Off Coast ·
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Specula.
tlon about rich oil and natural
gas deposits in the ocean off
Southern Callfornia is being
minimiied by autlforilies.
I "We don't know what's out
there and I doubt that the oil
companies know what's out
the re." suid geologist Henry
Cullins of the U:S. Geological
Survey.
The federal agency released
an estim ate last May of 285
million barrels or undiscovered
oil deposits at the Tanner-Cortez
Banks along with natural gas de-
posits of 427 billion cubic feet.
But PauJ Zucker. who heads the
San Diego County Integrated
Planning Office, said MondJy
that those estimates arc "sur-
pnsingly high."
In a memo to cou nty
i.uperv1sors , Zucker said the
estim ates were Wgher than for
unleased portions or Santa
Barbara Channel a nd San Pedro
bay, both of which are beside
proven reserves.
Twenty.rune tracts have been
le~1scd off San Diego by the
feder al government to private
oil companies and others are be-
ing considered.
The memo from Zucker also
s aid there is nearly as much oil
and gas within the unleased
pu rts of Tanner-Cortez Bank.
located about 100 miles west or
Sun Diego. as remains to be dis-
covered in the Sanla Barbara
Channel $('\·eral oil companies
ha vc drilled on the leased tracts
but no discoveries have been an-
nounn •cl
Police Probe
Overdose in
Man's Death
Orange County Coroner's of-
ficers called s heriff's deputies to
:1 Sanlu Ann Heights homl1 Mon·
day when they found marijuana
and a two bugs of cash near the
body or a young man.
p eputies said they found more
than JO pounds of packagecl
marijuana and a total of $8,100
1n cash in the tfomc of victim
Christopher Alan Jackson, 22. of •
351 E . 22nd St.
Coroner's officers said they
have issued ~' tentative verdict of
death r<'sulting from an over-
dos!' of drugs. They said they
will conduct ,.in autop~y
Deputies conf1:.catcd the drugs
and ca:;h found in I he home
pendini? furthl'r im·t'st1galion of
Jackson'.i. death
" ,
---
Saddlebaek .. EDITION
l
VOL. 71, NO. 38, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES~ ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESOAY,FEBRUARY7~1W8
Afternoon
N.Y. Stocks
TEN CENTS l
Another Rainstorm Drenches Bay Area
By The Associated Press
Northern California com·
mulcrs were socked ai,:ain today
by hcu\'y morning rains as the
latest in a parade of storm
front!> marched into the slate.
Rams bt>ginning in pre-dawn
hours caused a rash of rush-hour
traffic accidents. minor floodin~
and a mudslide or two in Marin.
County that caused hundreds of
commuters to punch in late.
Pacific Gas and Electric Com -
pany said power lin ~s were
withstanding the rain and gusty
winds for the most part ,
although 500 homes in Soquel
were reported without power
The National Weather Service
said today's rain had dropped
.75 inches in the San Francisco
Bay area in four hours, and
mosl areas north of Fresno were
expected to get al least an inch.
Winds were gusting up to 40
miles per hour
"Storms arc slacked up across
the Pacific and headed this
way." s:ud forecaster Richard
Lay of the Nutional Weather
Ser\' ice.
The fronts wePe expected to
hit the state at 24-hour intervals
throughout the week.
Lashing rains and winds Sun-
day and Monday knocked out
power to 44.000 homes and bus1·
nesses, toppled trees and tipped
over m obi l e h omes in a
Sacramento area trailer park.
On the ocean today. winds or
50·55 knots and 10-foot seas
forced the 57-foot Sue Belle with
four people aboard to radio the
Coast Guard for help.
A Coast Guard dispatcher said
the craft reported engine trouble
and was suffering "a terrific
Northeast U.S. Buried
·.Under New Snowstorm
,
Al'WI .........
WHO'LL TAKE MANHATI'AN? THtS tS NEW YORK'S 33RD STREET AFTER BLtZZAAD
New Storm Paralyze• Northeaatern U.S. From Rennsylvanla to New Hampshire
apo Beach
Crash Kills
~iejo Woman
I A 21 -yenr -old Mission Viejo ~·om an wn:. killed and the driver bf a second car injured early to-
f! a y in a head-on crash in
(,'apis trano Beach, California
f llghway Patrolmen reported.
Lucinda Suzanne Ponder of
23946 Lindley St. was pro·
nounced dead at the scene of the
12 : 35 a m. collision on Pacific
Coai,t Highway south of Beach
Road. oHicers said.
:\I 1si, Ponder, who was travel·
ing alone in her car, allegedly
was driving on the wrong side of
the highway and struck a second
car. officers said.
The driver or the other car.
Ala n Bloem berg, 39, or 220
Canada St., San Clemente, was
reported in stable condition to-.
day at San Clemente General
Hospital with what officers
described as major Jnjuries.
Coast
Viejo Physician Sues
Clemente Hospital
A Mission Viejo physician who
claims he is unfairly being
barred from practicine in the
e m e,r gen cy roont at San
Clemente General Hospital sued
the hospital and nine' members
of its staff Monday for $455,000
in damages.
Dr. William L. Play/air, 24792
Spadra Drive, claims in his
Orange "County Superior Court
lawsuit that he was barred from
th e emergency room In
February, 1977, after individuals
named as defendants made com-
ments about him.
He claims the defamatory re-
marks Included the allegations
that he Instilled the "fear of
physical violence" in two nurses
was responsible for the resi~u
tions of six others and allowed his
religious beliefs to interfere with
his duties In the emergency room.
Named as defendants in the
lawsuit are lhe hospital, hospital .
administrator R. Hanll.an Jones,
Dr. Gary D. Ketron and seven
individuals identified as mem-
bers of the nun1ing staff.
Fifth Mesa. Bank . . ...
Heist Nets $1,~00
By )(JcRAEL PASKEVICH Oi .. -Dally l'llet Staff
An unarmed bandit wlth a
droopy handlebar mustache
pulled oCt his fourth banJc robbery
in Costa Mesa since. Jan. 24
Monday, escaping with $1,900'
even thoUih police were oo SH
:;cene iD Jess than a minute.
The 1:10 p.m. heist at the lm·
perlal Bank at the corner of
Harbor Boulevard a nd Fah·
Drlve raises the bafldll'a total
The b•nttn has never dis-
played a weapon, l)Oltce aald.
Bank teller Patty Goodren. 20.
of Fountain Valley. said a
.customer had just made a large
deposit when the s uspect ap.
proached her and handed over
tits robbery note.
Rain moderate at Umes
tonight and Wednesday.
Lows tonlaht so to SS.
Cooler on Wednesday with
highs 58 to 63. Chance or
rain 80 percent tonight, SO
percent Wednesday.
' take to about $4,500 from the serlea of robberies, police said.
UnUke preTIOUJ robberies, the
man's sandy blond hair was cov·.
er ed by a blue baseball cap that
matched his blue windbreaker.
police nld. ·
A bank alarm went out within
seconds alter. (he bandit ned, ap·
parentJy on r~. and the nearest
police unlt was less than three
INSl•BTeDAY
Tht11'r~ called ••Tta•
Motor•" Oiijf tMJl're m.mbtt• of c '**hbtg brttd -the • Hloluoav Potf'Ol motorcJICle o/·.
/icrr. B..i th-fir poftlion 18
vitlHd bJ1 menu °' a eltu one. kt F'fOllll'inQ,PdftCJ.
Tbis bandit ts believed to be •
re1ponall)le for tour or 'he five
bank robberJes that have oc·
curred ln the city 1ln~ Jan_ 23,
· poltoe ••\d. •
Al wtth the l)t"eVlOUt bank
Job$, Jlll 1n the eaTly ·afternoon,
lbe alfm bandlt in hls latt 20ll ap-
proached a remale tcUer, ~
tented lier wltb 1 note Ud a
pa"' bi1. Md told W lo be q-.iclC In ~ Uie Ml with eub.
• bloe\1 away. PoUce head-
q\larters ls about a mile away.
Hia escape wa .o q'*lck that
police conducted a aeareb of
cars In lbe bank's parkfn1 lot to
make sure the bandit had indeed
lert the area.
All four ol the robberies have taken~ at wMt DeL SJ\.
5am cordielro OllJed ••easy 8C·
c.ws'' beftki WttJa ~b front and rear exiats.
Each ~ hU occurred
a different llnanelal wtlt~.
With 1be lawtl robt>.ry Ulf _lliaii·
dtt -,j.fhe ef l db'~. 1Tb
Blizzard
Disrupts
Millions
Ry The .\ssocialed Pres$
The Northeast from Penn·
sylvania to New Hampshire was
paralyzed today by a
blizzard that brought from one
to 11-z feet of snow to the re~ion.
knocked out power in parts of
Iloston and disrupted · virtually
every facet of life for millions.
While the !>now -steady, but
less SC\ l're than on Monday -
cnntinu,cd through the morning
1n tht:' East. c ripplin g
transportation and business for
a second day, people in the rest of~· l)atloo ~ thei.J' own p ro-btem s from a varietyohtorms.
The rush hour in Chicago Wits
compUcated by an unexpeded
snowfall that left nine inches on
the ground by this morning.
Parts of Montana and North
Dakota were struck by a
blizzard which stranded
travelers and made it feel like it
was 45 below zero. Oklahoma re·
'ported six inches of s now;
lakes1de areas of Wisconsin got
from six to 12 inches: there were
record low temperatures in
other parts of the Midwest, and
cold and a forecast of possible
snow in Georgia.
More than two do7.en wealher-
rela ted deaths were reported
a round the nation. Thousands or
people in the East remained in
hotels, hospitals.. schools and
emergency shelters where they
took refuge Monday from the
wind-driven snow which drifted
to six feet and more.
They were joined by hundreds
or other families evacuated from
low-lying coastal areas flooded
during the morning by high
tides. All roads along 18 miles of
seacoast in New Hampshire
were closed.
The blizzard in~ the Northeast
was the second in little more
than two weeks; the Midwest is
still recovering from heavy
snows that struck less than two
weeks ago.
Airports in the Northeast were
closed, and officials said they
would stay shut through the day.
The New York and American
stock exchanges, which closed
early Monday, opened late to-
dav. Four of the five commodity
<See BUZZARD, Page A2)
Glen Yermo
School E8r118
Brime Rating
beating" off the Big Sur coast.
Plans were lo tow the stricken
craft into Monterey
Gusty winds early Monday
yanked about a third of the
screen away at the Kay· Von
Drive-In theater in Napa. The
screen toppled onto the ro"dway
and temporarily knocked out
power at KVON radio.
Six schools in Seaside, near Monterey, were closed Monday
after a lightning bolt hit two
power transformers. and some
1,500 homes in the Santa Cruz
mountains were still without
power Monday
The Californiu Highway
Patrol reported flooding In some
areas north of San Francisco.
Highway 37 through ValleJo
a nd State Route 1 between
llighway 101 and Shoreline
(See RAIN, Page AZ)
Farrah Weather in NY
'.Xl'ltlll'r r am nor !,now keeps Farrah Fawcl'tl-'.\foiors
from arriving <ll a party at New fork's Studio 54 d1~
cothcque. The actress is sporting another n('w hairdo
and. despill' more tlwn a foot of !:>now. i~ wt•nnnJ! only
~andals.
Cop Shot in Hand;
Youth, I 7, Seized
A 17-year-old transient has
been charged with attempted
murder after he allegedly shot a
Huntington Beach police officer
in the hand Monday night.
The unidentified youth was
later arrested after he was
struck by shotgun pellet.s in the
chin and both shoulders from a
weapon fired by another police
officer.
Police say the youth is in·
volved in a burglary ring in
which 13 other suspects were ar-
rested Monday night.
The wounded officer,
Patrolman Jerry Fuhrman, con·
fronted the youth in a backyard
on Cam aby Street after being
called lo investigate reported
burglaries in that area at about
9 p.m .. police said.
The youth allegedly fired one
shot from a stolen .9mm Smith
and Wesson pistol. The slug
struck Fuhrman 's left hand.
Other police officers chast>cf
the youth through several yards
and into a lumberyard on
Talbert Avenue where the sus·
peel was shot before his arre!>l
at 9 ·45 p.m.
The youth 1s reported in J!ood
condition al the UC Irvine
.Medical Center jail ward.
Officer Fuhrman is also re·
ported in good condition at Hunt·
in~ton Intcr community
(See BANDIT, Page A2>
Capo School Tax
·vote Due in June
By ANNE COOPER said. °' .. ~,P'lltltsutt Passage of the bond measure
A $21.2 million lease·purchase would not affect the 00-cent. tax
agreement was unanimoualy ap-rate. said Thornsley. Because
proved Monday by Capistrano the Capistrano district is on
Unified School District trustees state aid, the state establishes a
tor the June 6 ballot. tax rate Umit.
Tbe agreement would require ' If the bond measure is ap-
simple majority approval lor a proved, the debt wol.lld be paid
tax 1.ncrease not lo exceed 36 over a longer period of time,
cents for new 11chooJ CcmUruC· Thornsley said. State law pro.
lion. The district's current 82· vldes that school district bond
cent tax tale per $100 assesaed debts are "forgiven" after 2S
valuatioe 11 expected to climb to years of amortization. he said.
about 90 cent a b•ca use The lease-purchase elecUon
Capistrano Unified has l>ffn.oo was proposed at tho first elec-
a state aid ptogram. said Supt. tlon followtna the March bood
JeroroeTbomaley. 1 u tn tt t t ··"-Dl1Uict vOten wUl decide I e ec on an a emp o wm
$49.J mllUon achiool constnacUon voter approval for some form of
bond eltttian and 8 W lllilllon buUdlna f\lndl as soon as possl· -~.......... CO.I......._ b14!, • state a,.,...,..~ .. ·~~t ~~..-Oft "ll la tbe administration's Mar~b 1. Uthe two March elee-po!flliot\ that since revenue b so
tlou i-ecli'9 tM nqvJi'ed two-critically needed wlthJn the
lblrda majority to ~the Jee acttool ·dlatrict lo meet future
• lease-~ •lection will bC 1Clloot ClOnlti'uction needs. tho canct&ed, tti• 1upetbltead.tnt <ae. JSALLOI', Pap AU
.t\2 DAIL V PILOT SB
Blizzard Blaei:en Boston
BOSTON CAP> -Much or
B~ston and its !.uburbs lost -elec-
trtcal pcm cr for M~\-cral hours
today after a bhuard blew a
section of J roof into Boston
Edison Com pa ny 's largest
generatmg station, scllini,! orr a
chain reaction that knocked out
above-ground transformers.
ThC' pow<'r f~ulure occurred at
3 a.m . and cut of! electricity for
~ome 75,000 or the utility's
220,000 Bosten customers.
A !.pokes man for the company
said power had been restored by
Raindrops
Will Fall
On County
ll 's going lo rain.
That's the forecast of the Na-
t ional Weather Service. They're
not even hedging their bets this
time. The chance of s howers
tonight is listed at close to 100
percent, decreasing to 70 per-
cent Wednesday.
Meteorologist John Henderson
110led that tonight's storm was
originally expected to arrive a
(lay later but is moving al an un-
. usually fast 50 knots.
And. he said, more s torms arc
1n sight, with periods of rain
possible the rest or the week.
Lows tonight will be in the low
to mid 50s. with highs Wednes-
day near 00.
Southern Orange County re-
<·eived the heaviest rainfall in
the 24-hour period <'nding this
morning. with the Moulton
J\ iguel Tr<'atmenl P l ant in
J.aguna Nii:ucl meas uring .19 of
;111 inch.
Sanllai:o Peak on Saddleback
Mountain received .30 of an
inch, while S:inta Ana received
ll'ss th:in a tc·nth or an inch.
:\rwport Il<'ach mca!.Url'd only
.O:! inches and Co!.la J\IC'sa .04.
.J Slwrm:m Dc·nny of I lunt·
in14ton Beach 1.aid no mC':isura-
hll· rain fl'll lhl•rc <ll <Ill Monday.
* * *
Fro•PageAJ
RAIN ..•
Drive in Marin County were
both closed Monday mornin~.
Jiighway 1 was opened by after,
J'IOOn .
Mos t Sierra ski resorts were
open for business but Mt. Shasta
Ski Bowl toitlle nOftlf -..U .Holed.
by a raging snowstorm.
One of two men reported miss·
in~ m the Mt. Shasta <1rea over
the wct•kend !.kied to snfoty
Monday aflC'r spending the night
in an ice c:n c. A rescue team
"a!> sl'arching for the other
man. Ron So\'a, 34, of Albany,
hut they were hampered by high
"mds and heavy snow.
(;ate warnings remained m cf·
fret for much of the Northern.
California coast, with winds re-
portt•d up to 45 miles an hour.
Rainfall tolnls for the 24 hours
cllding at 4 a.m. today showed
l"kiah had 1.44 inches, Red Bluff
.R9 of an inch, Sacramento .80,
San Francisco .52, Oa kland .54,
Stockton .39 and Fresno .38.
Neff Chosen
Rec Leader
Ste,·e Neff, who was once a
rrcrealionul director with the
Emerald B\lY Community As·
:-iociation. h<ls been named as
supe rvisor of the Saddlcback
Va lley Unified School District's
recreation program.
I
For the past three years, Neff,
who has a bachelor's degree
from Califomla State Universl·
ty, Long Be ach. w orked as
recreation supervisor ln Paw•
Jin~.N.Y.
Il l' r<'placcs David Evers, who
resigned to work for a private
business.
0"AHOE COAST n
DAILY PILOT
==~~~:r.::1::::.:&:;
CM\f-1\111"' '-•"' ~ ....... ,...,,.,. OVbll'"" Moftd•' 1""fWctf' ,rt .. , Mir c..te
... .., Now~I ....... -.un1 ........... ~1-J
'•'" VtU•~r, lo1ftfo, $•ttdtft«k YMtrt .... ~=" u~.'.:voA::r"s.:.J:,.*;e ~ .. '"' ~ ..... , ,, •t llt Wttl .. y ~re.t.C..t.,...Ml.C..•-·---........ -----'"~· e--. "'" ......... , .... _ .. ___ ,_.._ ,.,. ,._._,,....,....
......... &<II ...
Gltttttf'..... ,....,.,. ......
••tl<il ... """'·"'---~-ValeWOMee Ultlw '-• 11•• .. IM°""9,......., omc.. CM•Mitu ................. -....... .. -·)mt~--. "-..... ,.,, ... ~ ..... -
~(114) ..... a .. ..,.. Mt•,.....'°""'
S--llVtlN, ... Olld 111~0
..... s....~ .......
s a .m . lo all bu~ 10.000
ctUtomen. leavtnc a two.mile
stretch blacked out from the
Public Gardens downtown west
to Kenmore Square.
"This is probably the worst we
have had it since 1965." the year
of the Northeast blackout, said
Boston Edison s pok esm an
James M. Lydon.
Lydon said the damage caused
by the roor from a building near
the generating plant combined
with snow a nd ocean s pray
driven by 79 mph gusts to knock
out a number of 11bove-ground
transformers.
City officials told commuters
to s tay home.
All automobile lrafric except
e mergency vehicles was banned
froru the city's streets, which
were covered by ut least a foot
of snow.
Buses we re not running and
the city subway system that
transports 500,000 commuters
da il y was reported operating un-
der an eme rgency power supply
but officials said there were
"very prolonged" delays.
Above-ground electric trolley
cars were reported out of
ser vice and being replaced by
buses. ·
"We have every s ingle car
deployed through the city with
their blue li ghts on." said Boston
Police Sgt. J ohn McLain, but he
said there were no crime prob·
Funds Sought
For Youth's
Facial Surgery
A 7-year-old Tijuana boy
horribly disfigured when a can
or paint thinne r exploded tn
front oC him may get a new face.
tha nks to a Huntington Beach
benefactor and a nonprofit
group caUed lnterplast.
Ho wever, Mrs. Vi r g in in
Cast11l. oC 6811 Defiance Dri\'C,
Hu~lington Beach, notes that,
while s urgery costs will be paid
by lnterplast. hospital expenses
must be met through donations.
She said Tomas DommguN'
parents. who live in a s han-
tytown of shacks above Tijuana.
can't afford the expenses
themselves.
Tax-deductible conlributions
<'an be sent to lnterplast, P.O.'
Box 9330, Stanford, Calif., with
the specification that they are
Cor Tomas Dominguez of Ti·
juana, J\Jr~. Castillo said. Jn-
terplast is a non.profit organiza-
tion set up to aid dis figured
persons. especially children.
$128 Million
Aunrded in
Damage Suit
By TOI\I BARLEY
Of the IHlly l'llol Slatt ,
Damages totaling more than
$128 million were awarded to
two Orange County families
Monday in a Superior Court
verdict that sets a new record
for that type of civil lawsuit.
The huge judgment against
the Ford Motor Company ended
more than three days of jury de·
liberations in the courtroom or
Judge Leonard Goldstein. The
trial began last August.
The principal beneficiary in
th e judgment is Richard
Grimshaw. 18, of Anaheim, who
"as severely burned over 90 per-
cent of his body six years ago
when a Ford Pinto in which he
was a passenger exploded and
burned.
Grimshaw was awarded $125
million in punitive damages and
$2 ;841,000 ln compensatory
da mages by a jury which was
told during the trial that he has
undergone more than 50 opera·
tlons in the past five years with
medical bills totaling more than
$125,000.
F,....PageAJ
BANDIT •••
lloS'pital.
Police Sgt. Bert Chadwick
said the youth was jnltlall>t
souaht in connection wltb at
least two burglaries on Camaby
Street la which a shotgun a~
fo\ij' pistols were stolen from two
police olticers' homes.
Chadwick said the 1outh 1$
bcUoved to be involved with a
rln1 of 11 other bur1Jary au.•· J)ect.e who were arrested ln the
vJclnlt,y Monday oitht.
Polle• said tht aH•1ed
bur1lary ring included two other
juvenUts b6ll vcd to be trom
Cotta Meea.
Th• adults arreated ran,ui; ln
age lrom 18 lo 28 yelt't an.
belleved to be trorn llunUnft,on
8tach, Ooista M•a, Anahl1m. '
Santa Au Md Fountain Vallty •
TlleJ ban been cha~ l'tUl
burdU"J, posHUlon of itoltn
properlt aod po1H11lo11 of
dan••row diQo. ·
Police refilHd t6 ldentlf1 the ~h d1ar1ed with murder UIOolhlaap.
lctma and police wen. looldnC EcUson ~ oul-ofser v1ce
pr mully for ln)'Ofte at.randed in Amtrak service in and out or
the bliuard. the city was hailed bccau!.t' tht'
State and Metropolitan Dis-power fuilure knocked out elec
trict Commission police said tricity req uired fo r track
thousands or motorists were switching, a s pokesman s:.i1d ~trandcd on major arteries and Gov. Mich a e I Ouk ak is
s ide roads in and around Boston. declared a slate of emergency
Many major office buildings Monday night. and four National
were reported to have no heat Guard units totaling 1,000 men
because the s team heating were activated to assist in plow-
system aJso operated by Boston ing and emer1encies.
* * .* * * *
F,....PflfleAI
BUZZARD STRIKES. • •
exchanjles in New York were
closed today.
The storm in New York City
was the worst since Dee. 26,
1948, when 19.6 inches o( sno~
fell. Al 7 a .m., there were 17.7
inches of snow m mid·M an~lltm,
:!l inches m some sections of
(Jueens and 23 inches in some
:-ect1ons of Nassau County on
Long Is land.
Like other officials, Go.v. Ella
Grasso of Connecticul declared
a slate of emergency, closing
1.tate highways, sehools, courts
and s tale offices She and Rhode
!!.land Gov. J Joseph Garrahy
;i:-.ked Pres ident Carter to
declare the region a federal dis-
aster arcµ.
A s tate of emergency also ex-
1strd in Massachusetts where
10,000 National Guardsmen were
called to dral with the storm
that wa!> expected to leave ·11 2
fl·t•t of snow before it ended. All
:-.tall.' highways in the approx-
1 mately one-third of the state
C'<l'•l of Worcester were closed.
Th<' 'l7 weather·related deaths
induded those of three Rhode
Island heart attack victims who
could not be reached by rescue
Hh1clcs and those or two men
who !.uffocatcd from carbon
monoxide wbile marooned in a
cl1sablcd snow plow truck out-
!t 1de Philadelphia
Hundreds of families were
<'vacuated from their homes by
:.imph1 b1o us vehicles in New
.Jer:-C'y, Massachusetts , New_
ll:imp:-.lmc und New York when
w ind-driven s urf vaulle d
Front Page A J
BALLOT ••.
district should continuously pre·
:-.e nt to the voters a ballot
measure (or measures) which
would authorize the district to
:icquire s u c h reve nues,"
Thornsley wrote in a memo tb
trustees.
District growth projections
1.how school enrollment climbing
in fi\'e years from the current
16,000 students to 24,000 in 1983.
Capis trnno Unified is the
largest school distr ict in Orange
County in area. Much of its 154
:-.q uarc miles is yet to be de·
velopcd. Communities within
Capistrano Unified boundarit!s
a r e Dana Point, Capistrano
Reach. San Clemente. San Juan
Capistrano, Laguna Niguel and
east Mission Viejo.
New schools may not be built
usinc general funds which must
be used to pay teachers and
other school personnel, support
athletic and music programs,
provide bus transportation and
carry on other school functions,
said trustee Wiiiiam Thompson
of Miss ion Viejo.
JC the March bond election
fails, the school district will be
forced to put schools on double·
1.cssions. lease additional porta·
ble classrooms, purchase tents
and take other steps to accom-
modate the rapidly expanding
Mudent enrollment, Thompson
!.aid.
"Our growth rate means that
if this bond measure does not
pass. we are going to have to
m ake som e very hard de-
cisions," said Thompson.
"We may have to ellmlnate all
school busing, athletic pro·
grams , music programs and
school lunch programs. Tents
a re a very viable housing
alternative -they're cheap!'
Stop Smoking
Clinic Opem
. ID Saddleback
A atop-smoking clinic will
. becln tn Mlalon Viejo tonilht
tbrouch Ole Saddleback Valley
Unllled Stbool Dlslrlct'I Adull
EducaUon Department ln
cooperation with the Oranae
County lnteragency Council on
Smoklna and Health.
Claase1 wlll b• bald on
Tuctda)'I and Thundays, from 7
to 9 p.m., tor tour weeks in tbe
academic study area of
Sllver•do l«lah School. . Two follow µp cl111 mfftlnp
will be stMduJed in March.
Tho proiram la detiped to
help people ourcome tbe •
ctaarette amokln• habit thfOQlb
dlscu11lon, demonatralion and ar09p lnteracti0tt. FUm1 and
tueat 1puk«1 wllt be featund. '
a.IM&raUon for Ult 11" elua.
•ill '"M ~taken ctunn1 u... f\l'K clau.
Furilwi' lnrMm1Uon ma1 bt obtaifted?J7~931«10.
seawalls.
Airports s hut down from
Philadelphia into New England.
Air traffic contr ollers at
Boston's Logan Internationa l
left their posts in the 285-foot
control tower. the tallest In the
world, when winds were clocked
at'79 mph.
"The high winds are causing
tremendous prob lems,"
l\t assachusctts state police dis·
patcher Willia m Chase said.
"The snow plows clear the roads
and the winds blow it back on.
There are snow drifts oC five to
six feet."
In New York, one official said
of the blowing snow. "lt 's like
trying to s twvel feathers."
HundredJ" of stranded people
awa kene d today in movie
hl)uses. s ports a r e nas and
hos pitals used for s helters.
Hotels were mobbed in Boston
and New York when commuters
could not get home.
Some 500 motoris ts were
evacuated Crom Massachusetts
128 at Dedham, 20 miles
southwest of Boston, put aboard
buses creeping behind
s nowplows and taken to a
Dedham movie house for coUee
and all-nig ht movies.
Some 12.000 fans who attended
a college hockey tournament at
Boston Garden were told to
!.pend the night there. Cots and
food were brought in, but of·
f1cials said only 150 chose to stay
overnight.·
Los Alisos
Offers Class
A beginning class in the study
o f current unid en tified
phenomena, Psychology of Cur-
rent Events, Is beinf \l!Cerod
Tuesdays, beginoln1 tonight,
from 7 to 10 p.m. in Room B·l at
Los Alisos Intermediate School.
Students will s tudy scientific
data about unidentified flying
o bje cts, exper ien ces o C
astronauL'> with both UFOs and
telepathy during moon flights
and NASA's information .
Further information may be·
·obtained by calling the Sad·
dleback Valley Unified School
Dis trict's Adult Education
Department at 837-6270
( Pilot Logbook J
Canine Survivor
Of Pearl Harbor
By CHARLF.S IL LOOS Of ... o.ll'f ...... ,..,.
YOU DOG LOVERS who watched the movie
"Midway" during its two-night rerun on television Sunday
and Monday might be interested in this footnote to history.
Portions of the film, which dealt with an early turning
point in World War II in the Pacific, recounted the sinking
of the aircraft carrier Lexington during the BalUe of the
Coral Sea.
Nol too m any folks recall -and the
film makers may have m issed a bet
here -that there was a dog aboard the
Lexington at the time.
His name was .. .Admiral Wags" and
he almost went down with the ship.
HE W.\S A BLACK cocker spaniel
belonging w the Skipper or the Lex-
ington, then-Capt. Ted Shcrqlan.
The story of Admiral W'dgs was told
LOOS in a 1943 book written for children by
his mistress, Fanny Jessop Sherman.
Admiral Wags was the Sherman family pet. He often
went to sea with his master, who later became an admiral
himself.
THE DOG WAS ABOARD the L exington. ~n
maneuvers at the time, when the J apanese attacked Pearl
Harbor. He stayed aboard when the ~x ington was or-
dered to the South Pacific. Sherman and hls wife didn't
like the idea of leaving the dog alone In quarantine for
several weeks in Honolulu.
So, when the Lexington came under attack. by
Japanese planes during that first big naval battle of the
Pacific war in the Coral Sea off New Guinea, Wags was
there. His battle station was under Captain Sherman's
bed.
Although a warship , the Lexington had made
headlines in peacetime. Jn 1929, its electric turbines sup-
plied Tacoma, Wash., with power when a spell o( extreme·
ly cold weather shut down the city's hydroelectric power
syste m. And, in 1931, when Managua, Nicaragua. was
leveled by an earthquake, the Lexingtqn, then sailin~ out
of Guantanamo Bay: Cuba, was one of the first s hips of
mercy on the scene. While the carrier steamed toward
Nicaragua, its planes flew ahead, carrying doctors,
medical supplies and food to the stricken capital city.
IN THAT BATl'LE OF the Coral Sea in early 1942. the
Lexington was hit by at least four torpedoes dropped by
Japanese planes.
The ship steamed on. chasing the Japanese fleet, but
~asoline from damaged storage tanks below decks caught
fire. Explosions rocked the ship as the fl ames spread to
;immunition stora~e areas.
Finally, with the power and steering knocked out and
the fires raging out of control, the order came from Cap·
tain Sherman to abandon s hip.
AFTER SEEING TO IT that the crew was geWng ott
the ship safely. S.berO'•n returned to the bridge for hla
dog. Wags wu lhere, waiting. He hod Jived through it all.
The dog was outfitted with a life jacket and lowered
over the side. As he neared the water. the s hip lurched and
he landed on the armor shelf, a narrow ledge at the water
line. There he stood, stranded, unlit a lifeboat came
alongside and some sailors. using a boat hook, r escued
him from his perch.
Later. Wags. his war adventurt>s O\'er. was reunited
with his ramily. He returned to the Sherman home in San
Diego t.o li\'e out the rest of his days 1n relative peace and
quiet.
..
Dally li'llet Stafl -
THE BOTTLED EYE OF A WHALE AWAKENED HIM
Charles Harris, Who Argues Leviathan's Cause
Man's Goal: Whale
Of a Difference
I\\ WI LI.I\ ~I llOl>G t-: Of ,,_ O•ilY P1lol Sl•ll
( 'hJ rlt•:-. llarr1:-. \Hike: UIJ on1·
mor ning llJ yt.·<1rs <ego, ~hukmi.:
off the fua 1nt..'l'>'> of u night"'
~lum ber under lhl' gaw of J
~1unl, glal>i.-cnc.ised w hal<.··~
(_•vc
·At t hat m oment. h1 \ llfi-
changed
"I j u:-.l wond,•n •cl h<>w J would
ft•1·I 11 "-Ol11t'<m<' hail 1ml' of mv
t•\'t.•:-.,,ltllH! 111 a i.:lal'>' 1<1r on hi.,
.,·h<•ll. ·· th1• lurm1·r \I h.ilini.: ', . .,.,,.J \\111 J..1•r 11•1·;Jllt·d ·I cl1·
1·1d<.•d :-.11nt1·tl11ni: li;11I 10 h1• <lrnw
to pn•..i•n 1• \\h,1k ~ for lh1
fut un· ··
So Liii' S;m .J 11.111 t ';q 11 .. 11 .11v1 n ·:-.
1dl•nt :-.1•t out 011 a 11n1• man
<' r us a cl 1 • to 1•d11<«1 l t· c· h ti <I r 1• n
:1 ho u t w ha 1,., a 11 r1 I Ill' 1 r 1 m
rxirtan('l' to tlw Ol'l'Olll Ill' has '
talked to tnurc· than 12.00Q :-.('hoot
childn•n
.. J tl'll Uw kid:. \\hat •I wlwh· 1s
all a bout." llarris l'Xplainh "tr
l tell them how gr<'at whalt:s an•
then mayhC' tlwy'll h<'IP sa\'<'
t hem.
.. The pomt 1:-I dorn know
who 1 ·m talkinJ! to -one o r
these kids n11ght :-.omeday be in
.i poi.1t1on to do so m eth rn g
before it's ton lall' "
II a rn~ h<'hen•s Ill<' \\hales arc
in g reat dang<.'r of l''linctton -
part1c-ularly hcc-au:-.C' of Russia n
and J apanPM' "lwle hunting ex-
peditions.
"[l's gcllinl? lo lhl' point where
somethmg's going to happen."·
he s ays. "With thr pow<'r or thl'
bo a u. llH"y 're using tod ay.
lbere's no w~1y the'' hll ll" can ~l'l
away
"Ancl tlw \\ha les lhl':>''r<' t ak -
ing arP :-.mailer uncl s ma lll"r
they're k illing orr l hl· h llll•
l?U)'h." h<' continuch "Then · un :
no more bi~ whnlC'!> l<'fl.''
Th1: Cl•nlralia lJnified School
District mechanic 1s reluctant to
t alk a bout his years working in
the whaling husiness.
He dot•s, however, recall a
whaling c'CpediUon seven years
a go on \\hich. he was a n ob-
server. • .
''In · 1971. I was on the last
whaling hunt oul of California."
he relates "That reall y opened
my eyes up when I saw what m;.
old friends were still doing
"Tht>y w~re going out a nd
ratchm{! dozens of whales.·· h<'
say!-. ·'They would tow t hem
back inlo the shore for prorcs~·
ing
"There were dozen!> or whole
caroasses strewn atound the
factory waiting to be cut up and
processed as dog food."
t 11\1 -.. .111 m l'r the plu n·
111 l11s pn·:o.l'Olallom. \o ::.dmol
1 hild rcn. Ha r ri:-. d 1scusst•:-. ''
·· rc•d tide" of a not her sort t lw
MH'allcd "Texas Rol>l'. ·
"When Ute boats fire a 90~Dt
:.hell into t he whall's, they JW>t ,,
bl' gm floating on the water,'' he
<'Xplaini.. "Whrn th<> \\hale I!>
finalh• dead. most of its blood l'Om~s ~us hin~ out into the
'' nll'r "That's ''hat "ha I mg p<.•oµk
t all <t 1°l•,as Rose "
\ eolll·1·L111n 11 1 "halt> and
"haling artllat t:-. lll l'ludmi.:
till' \d!.elP l'\C 11111 hi' (In d1~
play thrf/u~h Fl•hnwry .ii Lill'
l>an;1 '\;1gul'I eounty l1brar~
hr ;in l'll at i\ I}: Ul· I Houd ,ind
t '11,ti.t I hgll\rny
llar n :-. cooper ated with Lht•
l1lirury because he believes JX'<I
pit• cai1 lt•arn more aJ;>out whales
.11 l1bran es than going out on
"h:.ill··wakhing expl•dition:-. 111
1he ocean.
·'If they put glasl'.>e:. out on the.•
Dana Point bluffs. people could
"iee j ust as much of the whaleb,"
he says. "People can learn more
Jbout whales in the library than
~oing out and distur birtg tl~m in
the ocean
"I v. ant pcoplc to enJOY the
J!rcy whale, but there's more
wha le -watchers than whales."
he continues.
Harris is also disturbed about
a lack of concern about whales
.. Everybody forgets about the
whale except for the three
m onths the California Gray
Wha le m igrates south.'' he l>ay!>
"The only time we ever pay any
att('ntion to U\em is when people
:.tart ad vertis ing for whale
wu tchinA ...
llarrii; secs the contmued ex-
ploitation of the giant sea mam-
mal as somewhat ironic since
their use to man is questionable.
"We really don't ne ed whales
anymore," he says. "Oil .and the
other by-prodµcts they offer are
available in abundance in other
places.
"But we had to get greedy.••
Needs Unit Meets
T he Laguna Beach Human
~eeds committee will meet
Thurs day at 7 · :ro p.m. in the
police library. 501 Forest Ave.
Tl*d•y, February 7 1978 s DAIL y PILOT Al,
De~it~ Plan Endorsed -
County Pact lnclu<ks Low, Mo<krate Cost Ho11Sing
By GARY GRANVILLE
ot .. o.11, "'"' '~"
Orani;:e County planning com-
missioners endorsed a plan Mon-
du y that would give home
builders greater housing density
in re turn for an a greement to in-
clude low and modeiale cost
housing units in their" develop-
m ents.
The housing density bonus
plan endors ed on a 3-0 com-
m is s I on vote is aimed at
stimulating construction of low
und m oderate cost housing.
ho u ~i n g "affo rda ble" b y
fo mllies with incomes or $20,160
NoTll%Boost
or less a year
However. \l county Environ
mental Manage ment Agency
<EM A) ~taff report warned that
by ilsel! the density bonus •·will
not result in any significant in
crease .. in the construction of
such housing.
The report noted that m any
development plans approved by
county agencies in the pas t
several years have included
density bonus Incentives in re·
turn for building low and
moderate cost housing units
"But these provisions havl•
never hee n ut ililed," the EMA
Higher Fares
Seen on Buses
Directors of lbe Orange Coun-
ty Tranl!it District indicated
!\J onduy that, it" needed, they'll
look lo higher bus fa res rather
1 h&n im-reused property tax rev-
l·rwt• to SUpJ>:Ort future transit
d1!-.lri<.•t OJ)l!rutions
.\s a ma tter or fact. Dirt!ctor::s
.\I llollmdt'n and Ralph Clark
:-.a id. over the next few yeari..
they'll be se~king a r eduction m
OCTD 's existing properly tax
rate of 3.71 cents for each $100
wo rth of assessed value.
Directo rs • remarks were
d1r~cled at a staff five -year
budget projection caUing for an
m cre ase in the tax rate to 4.5
cents. a n increase projected to
nl'l OCTD $.5.7 m1lhon in rev-
enue by 1983.
llolhndcn and Clark pointed
oul t hat the existing tax r~te
"ht•n touplcd with th<' l'Urrcnt
l'Ollnly ai.scssml·nt roll yields
S:l ti million wor th of n•venue to
OCTL>
\ progrc:-.s1vely lower proper·
t v tax rat~ will generate the .. :a me· amount of mcome as infla-
tion of property values continues
.ind new construction is added to
the asscssmenl roll, the two
directors said.
Clark estimated that, because
or the anticipated J?ain in the as·
sessment ~pU, OCTD might be
able lo slice its tax rate 10 per·
cent a year over the next few y~ars and still r ece1\'e the same
SJ t; million in pro pe rty t ax
revenue.
But if added loral rc\·enue 1s
needed to s upport expanded
OCTD operations. Jlollinden in·
Exec Found
Slain in SF
SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -The
body of a construction company
executive who had been sta bbed
In the chest and clubbed over the
head with a medieval weapon
hn been found in his San Fran-
cis co apartment.
A friend discovered Thomas
Eugene Kenny, 38, Insurance
m~nager tor McGuire and
Hester ot Oakland, dead in the
bedroom of the Twin Peaks area
residence Monday.
Found nearb7 was the
'medieval weapon tht killer used
Jo llosh t.1-e victim on the head.
Calle9 a "morning star," it is
made of a short length of hea\'y
chain with a.spiked metal ball at
1>oe end and a handle at the
other.
dicated it might be necessary
for OCTD to increase its i.tan
dard 25-rent bus tar.e to 35 Ct'nt!>
IO 1980
And m 1983 hu:. furt•h t•ould br
hiked another f l\'l' l'<!nl!-., he
:-.aid
Both H61hnden und Clark abo
noted that other sourrc:-. of
OCTD income m1 J!hl help takl·
up any revenue slack. including
mcre as mg passenger loadi.
They pointed to adYertis1ng in-
come from the sale of ad SP8C£'
on district buses as another ex-
ample.
It is logicll to expect that a!-.
additional buses are pressed into
service the amount of income
gained will increase, the two
directors agreed.
In any e vent, Holhnd~n and
Clark agreed witho ut any
noticeable d i!>sent fro m" t ht-
other two OCTD directors at the
m eelinsi. bus fares will go up
before thC' district's property tax
rate
The d1scu!>s10n of bus fare:-.
and the tax rate cume as OCTD
directors adopted a five-ye ar.
so-ca lled s hort· r an ge transit
pl.an.
Centerpiece in the five-year
plan is the acquisition of 375 ne\\
large buses at the rate of about
75 buses o year.
Such an acquis1t1on schedule
foresees a total OC'l'D large bw.
n eet or 63:! by fiscal year 1983
Simultaneously. the adopted
plan seeks to add 88 s mall blL<>ei.
to OCTO'!ii e xisting s mall bus
fleet by 1983. a boost tha t would
bring the dis trict's smaJI bus in-
\'e ntory to 155 plus 81 vehir leio;
owned by contractors
Those additions "will permit
the operation of dial-a·ride and
other commumty oriented bus
systems in about half the cities
m the county by 1986." a staff rC'·
port said
When coupled with other
capital projects envisioned In
the plan, the bus acquis ition
s chedule would s et dis trict
capital spending at S98.4 million
in the next five years. according
to staff figures.
Total OCTD -:pending. opera-
tions and capital projects, would
total $313.6 million, according to
the five-year plan spendimg
budget.
Of the needM $313.6 million.
only about $52.5 million would
come from local sources, includ-
if'lg . passenger fares. property
tax revenue. interest income
and advertlsing revenue
rt>POrl noted
It went on lo say no housing
den~ it) bonu); plan "can s ue
cced" when "it 1i. more profita·
ble to build low del}sity single-
fu mily dc,·elopml:!nts ··
Therefore. the E'.\IA i.taff' re
port concluded . the de ns ity
bonus plan will be effective onJy
when lt is combined wtth zoning
01·dinances that ma~e it man-
datory for builders to Include
some low and moderate cos t
hous ing in their residential de-
\'elopmenti..
Those forebodmgs in mind.
Commissioners Willia m Mac-
SPEAKS IN LAGUN A
Tax. Crttlc Jarvis
Jarvis ~peaks
In Laguna on
Tax Initiative
lloward J arvis. co-author of
the controversial Ja rv 1~-Gann
property tax initiative, will ad·
dress Laguna Beach taxpayers
S unday at Laguna Beach Hi.Rh
S rhool.
Jarvis, u newspaper columnist
a nd stale chairman of the Unit-
~·d Organizations of Taxpayers
Inc. m Los Angeles. will outline
his property tax plan (Prop. 131
which would cut the taxes paid
by homeowners to one percent of
the 1975-76 market value if ap
proved
Slate voters will g~ to the polls
.June 6 on the measure.
J a n •is is being brought to
Laguna by the Laguna Beach
Taxpayers Association and will
s peak al 2:30 p.m . Sunday in the
school audiloriwn.
While not endorsing the J arvi:.
initiative, Taxpayers · Associa-
tion president Trevor Cusllmah
said the address will a llow tax-
payer s "to hea r what this
meu!>urc 1s all about so we can
vote intelligently at the polls "
/\ $2 donation is requested.
Cushman said.
Killer s Execute d
B RAZZAVlLLE, Cong o
Republic <AP> -Ten men were
executed by firing squad today
for ass ass inating Congolese
President Marien Ngouabi Jast
March 18, the government an-
nounced. The men were con·
demned Monday and President
Joaquim Yombi Opango reject·
ed their plea for mercy
Doug aJI. Pegg) Cranston and
Gus Lena in \'Oled to send the
density bonus pJan on to Uw
Board of Super\llsoN..
Supervisor. will inspect lM
rommlsslon's hnndlwork, seek
comment! from those who mlibt.
be affected by the volunteer plAA
und then return it to the COlll·
miss ion Cor offlciaJ action.
Among other thinp, the hous-
ing density bonus plan would·
establish guidelines that: ·
Defirte low and moder at.
in come famllles as those wt\Os
annual incomes are no more
than 120 percent o f Orange
County's median family lncomqr
of $16.800 annually, or $20.160 •
\~<ir
· Defml• lo\\ <ir moderate m·
c·o m t> hou m& as 'hat priced n
i;reater thnu 21 :> times the targt-t,,
income ($41 .000) or housing that
rents for no more than 25 per-
cent of the target income. roughl)"
$340 a month.
-Seek to discourage develop~
ment of housing tracts that are
wholly low or moderate incomt>
projects and aim to integrate
s uch developments with those
containina higher priced housing
units .
Provide for variation in the
amount of density bonus given to
builders who voluntarily agree
to Include low and moderate
priced housinJ: in their projects
Emphasize dens ity bonuses
tor fomJly dwelJings rather than
lor smgl<• and bac helor dwelling
unit~.
As an allded thought. EMA
s taff suggeste d lhat builders
might be given a density bonus
1n exchange for waiving a re-
quirement that. their develop-·
ment include park and recrea-
tion facilities or fees.
But the commissioners de-
cide d that such an incentive
more rightfully belonged in a
program aimed at pro\•iding
economic incentives for building
low and moderate cost housing
Wh ile non e of the c om -
m issioners argued with the .staff
t onc lul>ion that. dens;(y incen·
lives are not likely to induce a
rush of Jow and moderate cost
hous ing cons truction. Mac -
DougaU sald:
"This plan brings the.
pltl)osophy of density bonus to'-
C' o u n ty government. I don'C-
believe anyone can foresee the
e ventual impact or density
bonuses." '1
1
County Man
Succumbs to
Blast Injury
A 49-year-old Santa Ana man
died early today of burns suf-
fered during an explosion at an
egg ranch near El Toro Marine
Corps Air Station Wednesdaf. OrangE' County Coroner s
deputie!> s aid.
Leslie K . "C-0rky" Busey. who
h ved on the grounds of Dairy
Fresh Products. 7973 Irvint"
Blvd .. died at 4 :34 a.m. in the
burn unit al UCI .M e dical
Center, deputies said.
He had suffered· burns over SO
pe rcent or his body. deputies
sa id . ~
Busey and a eO·Worker,
William .. Scotty.. McCubbings.
39, were attemptlng to connect a
butane cooking tank at a bous~
trailer when the explosion oc-
curred . McCubbings also suf-
fered bums in the blast, official$
!>aid
But the le gendary teV1athans'
elimination ls not Harris ' only
concern. It's Mardi Gras in New l1HBmu
"We're mes.sin( up the whole
cycle of life ln the ocean," he
c:laims. ..Each kind ol whale
eats different types of food and
killing thein ls m<!sslng up lhe
food chain.
"We're going to woko up one
day and find nothiil but red
> •
'.
•
.j DAILY PILOT NATION /WORLD
Ethiopia Says Desert Victory Near
MIGRATORY WORKERS:
ll's really too bad that the tax-
paying citizerut of our region
aren't as well organized as the
owners of professional sporting
clubs. Such dictatorial power
would surely give the taxpayers
· a lot more clout.
Just look at what is happening
since the conclusion of the last
professional football season. All
the owners or the losing. dubs
are mad. Even some owners of
the winners arc steamed up.
So what do the owners of the:.e
pro teams do? Well, they don't
really take it out on the players.
They certainly don't blame
themselves.
INSTEAD, THEY give the
boot to the coach. They can the
leader and go find a new one.
Within the National Football
League, the great coaching shuf-
fle is currently under way.
Coaching jobs are changing at a
dizzying pace.
For example. Coach Georgl'
Allen departed company of the
·was hington Redskins J aek
Pardee breezed out of Chicago.
Coach Hank Stram got the quick
kick out of New Orleans. Chuck
Kno>e turned in his whistle to the
LA Rams' front office.
Then Allen :.urfaced in LA to
get the coaching post Knox de-
parted. Pardee, meanwhile gets
the job Allen vacated. Dick
Nolan, who was head man at
San Francisco :.ome time back.
gets Stram's job. And Knox sur-
faces in Buffalo.
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP)
-Ethiopian troops are· routing
Somali rebels in the Ogaden des-
ert, . the Ethiopian government
claimed today, butitindicatedthe
Jong-e xpected counteroffensive
to recapture the eastern part or
the coWltry had not started yet.
Capt. Flkre Selassie
Wogderess, the secretary of the
ruling Military Provisional Coun-
cil, told reporters the Somalis are
''being routed in all directions."
"IT WILL NOT BE long before
the invading Somalis are thrown
back reeling with shame and
humiliation." he asserted. Asked
about the claims by the govern·
ment or Somalia that the Ethio-
pians plan to invade its territory.
he replied:
"If the invading troops hand
themselves over to the revolu-
tionary forces of Ethiopia, the
necessary care and attention will
be paid them, but otherwise this
country will not be responsible for
the consequences that will
follow."
Despite denials by the Somali
government, foreign observers
generally believe that Somalia's
regular troops are fiihting
alongside the rebels of the
Western Somali Liberalion Front
in the Ogaden. The rebeb are
ethnic Somalla and their goal is to
annex the territory to Somalia. its
eastern neighbor.
A REBEL COMMANDER ad-
milted to Associated Press cor-
respondent Richard Tompkins
and other foreign reporters visit-
ing an msureent camp in eastern
Ethfopia that some or the rebel
forces IJl the Harar area retreated
J3 days ago under Elhiophtn air
and a rtillery bombardments
which he charged were "directed
by Soviet and CUban military
personnel"
But Jama Ali, the commander
Lethal Reacwr Still
Evades Searchers
EDMONTON, Alberta (AP)-Dtibris from the maverick Soviet spy
s-atelllte has been located in al leust a dozen spots in the wilds of
northern Canada, but searchers have not determined wheth~r"the
salellite's nuclear reactor survived the fiery plunge into the earth's
atmosphere.
"It's too soon to say," Dr. whose Namao Base is head·
quarlers for lhe search, said the
core "could be buried in ice or
tundra and shielded by the ter-
r a in" somewhere in the
Switzerland-size search area.
He s aid low·level, close·
formation aerial searches wlll
at Madaweln, six miles from the
border wilh Somalia, said the
Somalis made only "tacllcal
withdrawals here and there" and
"wUl reslst and figbL to the bitter end."
Fikre refused to answer when
asked iflhe cowiteroffensive had
:!tarted. Western diplomats in Ad-
dis Ababa say it has not, although
tbe Ethiopians have been step-
ping up air strikes against the
forces of the Western Somali
Liberation Front.
FIKRE SAID WFSl'ERN m-
lelligence reports or some 3,000
Cuban troops and 1,500 Soviel
miJHary advisors being in Ethiopia .. are baseless." But the
U.S. State Depurtment said Mon-
day at least 1,000 more CUban
troops have been sent to Ethiopia.
raising the estimated number of
Cubans in the contUct to ,,500.
AU reported Ethiopia's Soviet-
suppliedjets and field guns began
to pound Somali forces on the ap.
proaches to the key clty of Harar,
in the northern Oeaden, on J'an.
22. Re said the rebels were forced
to retreat three days later from
positions on the road between
Harar and Diredawa, the other
major town still held by the Ethio-
pian armyintheOgaden.
Flu Patrol
Cadets use a wagon to deliver sack lunches to classmates
on bed rest at the Air Force Academy in Colorado. where
classes have been canceled and athletic events
pos tponed. About' 1.000 lined up for s ick caU Monday and
more than 800 were ordered to bed in their dorms over
• the weekend with symptoms of Russian flu.
TOWN DECL.4.RES 'WAR
• KINNEY, Minn. (AP) -The town council of
Kinney, population 325, has voted to secede fl'om
the United states -and threatens war.
''It would be a war or words,•• adds Mayor
Mary Anderson. .. We're a peaceful people.''
Jn a tongue-in-cheek,,resolution forwarded to
Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, the council said it
is easier to eet foreign aid than domestic aid, so
OF WORDS' ON U.S.
they propose becoming an indepeodent country.
Ms. Anderson said the letter expresses the
frustration of the small village in wading tbnJuab
the federal ftd tape in grant applicatlom.
She admitted that Kinney reeelved a $35,000
grant for new water lines from the federal Depart..
ment of Hou.sing and Urban Development last
year. But she said that grant .. wasn't nearly
enough."
EVERYBODY SHUFFLES
cv<'rywhere. The ho~ of each
professional footba ll titilt owner
1s that the nl'w fa ce, which was
an old far<' i.omeplace else, will
hnni: ,, "'inning season next
''ear
Roger Eaton, a scientific ad·
vis e r to Canada's Atomic
Energy Control Board, told a
news conference Monday when
asked if the pieces of metal col-
lected so far provided any cl~
to the fate of the reactor's core
or about 100 pounds or uranlum
235. be made with navigational ---------------------------------------eq u i pmcnt that will allow
The search for the core, which
would be lethally radioactive,
has been in progress since thl'
sat e llite re-entered the at-
"deadly accurate" pinpointing of
sources of radioactivity.
· Now 1f lhc taxpayers and
voters had this kind of latitude
in hiring, firing. and swapping,
who knows how much it might
improve local ~ovemment.
• mosphere Jan. 24 and disinte-
grated in names over Ca nada's
Northwest Territories.
THE DEBRIS recovered has
been s hipped to an atomic
laboratory in Pinawa, Manitoba,
for analysis that the government
hopes will provide some clues to
what may have happened to the
core.
Just <.'Onsider two or our our ci·
ty councils, one in Costa Mesa
and one in Irvine.
lo Costa Mesa, for example,
the citizens are most pleased
,,..ith their council because, alter
three decades, the city finally
got Fairview Road fi.pj5bed so
that it doesn't flood tny more
every time a citizen e xpec-
torates upon the sidewalk.
On the othe r ha nd. the
citizenry sometimes isn 't too
pkased wilh brief Costa Mesa
council meetings where it might
he s uspected lhc script was
hatched in advance.
Meanwhile, out m lr\'ine, the
citizenry is delighted that its
council meets all night long in
.open session which is even aired
on cable television. There's no
l>Cripl here. It's just an all-night
talkathon
The lrvme couhcll, however.
has a shabby record in tho road
department. In the recent rains.
Culver Drive washed right out
from under them.
NOW NEVER MIND all the ex-
cuses. Never mind who is
really to blame. You just do like
the pro club owners. Fire the
wlfole council in both cities.
So the Mesa council switches
out to.Irvine lo teach them how
to hold short sessions and fix
roads in ~ years and the Irvine
council .gets jobs in Costa Mesa
where they can meet all night
and give the citizenry a few gig·
gles on late television.
You cannot conclude all this
trading will make things any
better. But at least Jt would be
different for a while.
CANADIAN AND American
detectors mounted on Canadian
military C-130 Hercules planes
have found no radioactivity high
enough to be coming from the
core.
But Col. David Garland,
Eaton said one difficulty fac4
fng scientific investigators is
that they have little idea of the
design of the satellite or its
nuclear power plant.
Honesty Pays
Whistle-blmVer Rewarded
WASHINGTON CAP) -The amount was $10,000 instead or St
million, but other aspects of the check given to Dale M. Kuehn were
reminiscent of the old television show, ''The Millionaire.,.
In the show, lawyer Michael Anthony handed out $1 million checks
to people on behalf or a philanthropist who never was seen.
In real life, Kuehn, a former -.------------
federal auditor who b'l'ew the for the donor the head of a fami·
whistle on his s uperiors, was Jy foundation~
given his Sl0,000 check Monday
on behalf of an anonymous "THE DONOR lS a close
donor from California. personal friend." Ashmore told
KUEHN, 30. SAID he resigned
under pressure last August from
the Federal Energy Administra-
tion. He accused his bosses o(
suppressing an investigation into
shady practices of oil and
natural gas to a Florida utility.
· The charges spurred
news paper articles and national
television coverage that told or
kickbacks and charges bf
fraudulent middlemen that added
as much as $8.5 million to utility
bills of Florida electric con-
sumers.
Harry S. Ashmore, who won a
Pulitzer prize as editor of the
Arkansas Gazette and now is
with the Center for the Study of
Democratic Institutions at Santa
Barbara. acted as intermediary
.
reporters.
.. He called me after he
watched Kuehn's appearance on
'60 Minutes' and said he had
been much Impressed.''
D., Piiot D•YWY . ......... ....
Monday-Friday. If you oo not tiave
yoor paper by 5:30 p m. call before 1 om. allld your copy will be delivered.
Slturday •nd Sunday: If VOi.i do not
receive yoor CODY by 8 a.rn.. call
before I 0 a m. ano your copy wUI be
delivered.
CS.ctMHCM1Ttl1pir 1
Moel Orange County Areas 641'021
Nortl>weS1 Huntington Beach
andWestmlnster ••..•••• 5~1220 san Oomente, C8platrano Beach.
San Juan C8p1strano
Dana POinl. Soulh Laguna
Laguna Niguel .••..•... 4'Mlot
Storm Ct1pples . Chicago
Surprise Swrm~Cl,o1ea Schoola, Highuays
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.
In
YoarBesl
Interest
Higher interest than commercial banks pay plus the assurance that your ~av
ings are safe, insured by a Federal Agency. A deposit of $1000 or mor~ in a
6 year Investment Certificate yields 8.06% annually. Or, a $1000 Certificate
of Deposit Account for only one year yie~ds 6.72%. It's.in your ~est ~nterest
to start your savings account today. One mrnute and one signature 1s all it takes.
INCOME TAX PREPARATION
Join the thousands of Los Angeles Federal Savers who have their personal
Federal and California tax returns prepared without charge.
All you need to do is deposit $5,000 in a Los Angeles Federal Savings.Pass-
book or $10,000 in a higher rate Investment Certificate.
If your savings are now in a commercial bank or another institution, Los
Angeles Federal Savings will make your tax appointment now and handle
the details of transfer. ..._
Make your appointment early. The sooner you file, the faster your refund can
be malled.
PLUS 20 MORE SERVICES
When you qualify for income tax preparation, there's a Jong list of additional
services you don't have to pay for: a safe deposit box, checking account at a
cooperating statewide commercial bank, Travelers Checks, money orders,
document duplication, even trust deed and note collection.
What you save each month on all these services can be earning additio!"'al
interest for you. Isn't It worth a minute of your time to start :/our money rolling
up more profit in a Los Angeles Federal Savings account.
Annual JNVESTMEHT CB1tTIFICATES Current
Yl•ld $1000 OR llORE Annual Rate
8.06% ~to 10years 7o/• o/o
7.790/ri 4yeara 7Ya%
CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT
$1000 OR MORE
6.98%
6.72%
.5.92%
30 months 6~ %
12 months 6Y2 %
3 months 5.75o/o
5.39~
PASSBOOK SAVINGS ACCOUNTS
ANY AMOUNT
Day in to day out
ALL INl}:REST COMPOUNDED DAILY
51/& O/o
Funds prematutely withdrawn from Certifloete Accounts earn
intel'Mt et the Paeeboolc rate, •• provfded by Federal regula-
tion, fot the fuJI term of Investment. lass nlnefy daya.
LOS ANGELES
EEDERAL SA~INGS
NeY'port Beach
3201 Newport Blvd. -acron ftom City Hall• 87~4500
ONN M llON.-1"UM. • ... PM.
HNd Office: Lot~ ~ SlvinQt llnd loan AttoelMlon
One Wilehlre. Loe MQ(lloa 90017 • Ottw Oll!Ota tnrou~ tht ar ..
STOCKS I BUSINESS
Tuesday ts NYSE
2 p.Dt. (ED1) Priees COMPOSI'fE
-
TRANSACTIONS
Satelllte Food
LOS ANGE!LES CAP) -A satellit~
designed to provide dctalled informa-
tion on food supplies. untapped
energy resources and global environ-
ment will be launched by March 5,
th~ N aUonal Aeronautics and Space
Administration says.
Tho 2,163·pound Landsat-C satellite
will be senl into polar orbit from
Vandenberg Alr Force Base, about uo mllu north of here, NASA
spokesman Ronald N. Brownlnas:iid.
8rownln1's comments weN! re-
leased throuath Hughes Aircral\ Co.
here . Hushes' Santa Ba.rbora
Reeearch Center developed the
u tellltc's mulll1poctra1 1c.nncr,
whlch wtU scour the euth ror un·
l•pped resoun:ea uainl a thermal ln·
rrared M:DSOr.
T'Utlday, Februaty 7, 1978 s OAJLYPILOT
... Support Rule
C~n Be Complex
81 SYLVIA PORTER ................
Parents who take a dependency deduction ln 1977 mw.t
have eoctributed more than half or the dependent's total
1upport, except in cases where a multiple support agree·
ment ls used.
This seemlngly almple requirement becomes lmpor·
tant lf the child had earnings or an independent income ln
1977, or lf divorced parents question how much support
each contrlbutcd to the child. Qr lf rrandparents or other
people contributed to the child's support in addition to the·
parents.
WHEN AU mE SUPPORT IS IN THE form of cash,
it's easy to figure out who contributed more than half. But
It's not easy when It involves purchase of such "capital
items" as a car, TV set or similar products that the depen-
dent can use for more than a year.
The IRS in 1917 finally came up wllh some slmpl~
answers:
< 1) If a parent buys a $150 TV set as a Christmas pre·
sent for a dependenl and it is kept in the child's room, the
parent thereby contributed $150 to the child's support.
Count It in 1977 even tr it was bought on credlt and won't be
paid for until some time
In 1978.
(2) If a parent buys
a $5.000 auto tilled and
registered in his or her
name, used equal\y by
a dependent child, 1t
cannot be counted as
Money's
Worth
$5,000 of support. The parent did not give the auto to Lhe
dependent, but merely let him or her use it. But parents
can coWlt as support contributions any of the operating ex -
penses for which they pay while the child is usirtg the auto.
(3) 1f parents furnished all the ordinary support for a
child during the year, tor example $4,000, but the child also
bought a $4,,SOO auto uslng personal funds, the parents con·
tributed less than half the $8,500 total support. As of 1977,
the IRS considers the purchase as an item in total support
of $8,500 In 1977. But, the IRS says that il this new rule
hurts parents on their 1977 returns, they can still rely on
the old ruling which does not consider a car purchase as
support, if it was bought on or before Dec. 31.1977.
(~) UNMARRIED, UNRELATED PERSONS WHO
live together arc sub1ect to a ruling on whether one can
claim the other as a dependent. The claim can be made If
one pays more than half the support of the other and he or
~he is a member of the how;ehold and makes the household
the principal place of abode.
The exception is where the relationship is in violation
of the local law.
CS) People who claim dependency or medical expense
deductions for parents who also receive Medicare puy-
menls won some tax help from a 1977 decision by the
Second CircuiL Court of Appeals (agreeing with the TalC
Court).
Despite an 1 RS rule, they may disregard both Part A·
and Part B Medicare benefils to their parents in determin:
111g whether they contributed more than half their support.
Nert: Cha.ncea of being Clt.ldtted
. • • Blizzard Blamed ~
For Low Sales
DETROIT CAP) -Hamstrung by a crippling blizzard.
U.S. auto s ales continued their downward slide in late
January, with major domestic carmakers posting a 7.1
percent sales decline.
It was the eighth straight 1~ay span in which U.S.
automakers delivered fewer cars than a year earlier.
FOR THE ENTlllE MONTH OF January, domestic
s ales fell 9.4 percent to 544,896 cars. Sales or imported cars
appeared to hold about even with last year's J anuary
pace, although sales reports were incomplete.
1 General Motors Corp. dropped 7.2 percent in l3tt>
January. with s ales totaling 1.22,027. For the month, GM
was down 11 .7 percent to 294,360 autos and saw its markeL
share slip two percentage points from December.
Ford Motor Co .•
hurl the least by the
( )
sales slump that began
IN HIGH GE'~D In mid-November, was
· ~ 'up 0.5 percent for the
.Jon. 21-31 period with
s ales of 63,665 cars. For
the month, Ford was
down 1.6 percent to 167 ,271 cars and gained nearly three
percentage points from Its December market share.
Chrysler Corp. fell 14.6 percent to 27 ,961 cars in late
January. For the month, Chrysler was down 12.5 percent·
lo 71,43". I
American Mot.ors Corp. wu down 39 percent for late
January lo 4,262 cars and down 27.6 percent for the month
to 11,331 cars.
BUT ON THE BIUGllTEa SIDE for the beleaguered
small-car specialist, AM C's market share was 2.2 percent.
up trom 2 percent In December.
Late January sales last year also suffered from severe
weather, but analysts said blizzard disruptions this year
were extreme and accounted for much ol the sales decline.
An ea11ler &nowstorm in the East was blamed for a 15
percent drop In mid·January sales.
GM spokeswoman Colleen &!lli said vehicle shipments
and showroom traffic were slowed by the weather and
depressed GM u les.
CHRYSLER SALES IN JtEGIONS unaffected by
anow1torm1 nearly matched year"•iO levels, and it.I\ new
Plymouth Horizon and D~e Om~l small ca111 "main·
lalne4 tbclr poslUon as the best•selllna caN fntroducod by
ChrYtlert'' and R. K. Brown, Chrysler executive vice
preslden 'nwt modds were lolroduced Jan. U. .
Jncofl\J)leto a.al tlcures from rorelgn car Smporten
indicated Janu.~ salts wW total 120,000 to 12S,OOO. about
thuame • lut.)'eu. • An~ aay f wor Import urs are 1otd In the
MichtMl, Where the late January blizzard hit h•rdcst.
Tbua, tbelr •al• .utttffd 1MI from the Hffre weather.
Ulro.TS• MAUft SllAaE WAS estimated 1t lt.S
percent. up r.,,11117 pe~t ayear •'°but about the aamo u the owrell im llture. ·
'
Telenisian ' .. -
Jl8 OA!L V PILOT
. .. -.. . '
11 t.~ll:\ 'I
EVENING
1..'00 fl ().) C8S NEWS Ge NEWS 8 EMEAGENOY O..eJ
A PfOfaational acdcMnt
victim Is atruck by I/WI
p.,enledoc:s' aquad cw
..nde rMC>Ondlng toe call.
D MOVIE
• • "Chato'1 L.1nd"
( 1972) Cl\etlea Btoneon,
JIC:k Palal\Ce A hllf·b<Md
~ manao-s 10 111y
one llep ahead ol •
bloodthirsty posse (2 hrs )
CD THE BRADY BUNCH
Greg gala a pat M ime 1ob.
Q) THE AOOKIE8
The tookleS go un<!etc:over
to arnash a 1ynaica1e-ownecs lllm company tn ELECTRIC COMPANY ml SPECIAL
"Action· The October 1970
C111is" A re-creotton of the
evenll tnVolVlng the kiO-
nepplng ot James R Cross
Ind P1¥r11 lapot'IB by the
!'LO In Octobe< 1970; an
upd11to on the altuallon in
Frll<leh Canada now
~ ABCNEWS
Hustling
8:30 tJ MOVIE '* • '"' "Tt>e Raina Of Ranch1pur" (Part 1) ( 1955)
Lana Turner. Richard
Sutton The nch and cor.
ruot wtle ol an Engll$h
not>i.m•n falls in love With
a b<Utlant Hindu dOC1or. ( 1
hr ,30mln)
Burl Reynold:, cuddll's up to Catherine
l>l'l1Nl\e in the mo\'lc ··11u~tl<·.'· to be
<lll'l'd tonight at 9 on CBS. Channel l.
Q) BEWITCHED
Magic comet> 1n handy
when Samantha c0Uac1s
tor UNICEF.
(!) ADAM·12
Oll1ce< Reed eomes up
with a un1Que plan tor hall·
1~ day11rrn1 burglarlos.
W MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT
(8) TO TELL THE TRUTH
Eli) OVEREASV
Guest· organist Robert
Vaughn.
(J) UNTAMED V(ORL.D
@) MERV GRJFFIN
GUMls: Jack Webb. Cloris
Leachman
7 30 0 CANDID CAMERA 0 MEWL YWED OAME 0 @l HOLL VWOOD
SQUARES
7:00 D NBC NEWS 0 LIAASCLUB 0 ABCNEWS
Q) ILOVELUCY
lucy trttt5 to convince
Ricky IMI they need .. 1.,ga. apartment
Q) THE 8.RAOY BUNCH
Marcia la dumped by the
campusheto
(!) ADAM-12
Two ldllera ceplur8 Reed
wi.tte ha end Malloy are
1ran1por11ng a prlsone,.
through Maltbu Canyon. fD LA INTERCHANGE
"Inside Str1lghl"
Channel Listings
tJ KNXT ICBSI Los Angeles D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles O KTLA (Ind) Los Angeles
0 KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angeles
(f) 1<.FMB (CBS) SJn Otego D KH..I· TV (Ind) Los Angeles
@) KCST (ABCI San Otego
G) K11V (Ind ) Los Angeles
Cl) KCOP· TV (Ind) Los Ange loo;
ED KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angcli:s
CD KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach
ml NEWSCHECK
An lolormellve COllaCllOn
of Orange County newt.
government Ind consumer
11ta11a. people and 1pon1.
I]) THE OOHG SHOW
8:00 tJ Cl) CELEBRITY
CHAUEHOE OFTliE se:xea
Don Ad1m1 vs. Katen
Black, plng·pong; Ro~
Gulll1um• • va. Lynnle Gr-. trldc and fleld D JUST FOA LAUGHS
(Preml«•) "What do you
do Jull tor laughs?" will be
enswe<a<I by Martha Raye.
Miiion Berle, Connie
s1.,,_,.1, Tom Oreasen.
v.1J1 o-. ROM Matte. A.cs
But1on1. Lloyd Nolan. Mat-
c1a Wall1ce. Alison
Arngrlm and Jackie
Muon 0 MOVIE
• • "P11anha. P11anha"
( 1972) P•ter Brown, Wtl·
flam Sm11h. A ruthleaa
hunter &chames lo hunt
down a trio ot jungle wild-
hlo photographefs (2 hrs.)
0 ®J HAPPY DAYS
"Spunkleas Spunky"
F'ontle'a dOQ gels the
blahs and ends up on Or
Joyco Bro1hors' couch tor
psychologtcal thetapy
G) CARO\. 9URHITT
~f'AIENOI
au..i~~. .U MOVIE * * * "Deel 9tlgette''
(INS) Jamtl9 Sl41war1, Billy
Mumy. Al'I eigtil·YMt..old
melhemallcal 9llfllue with e
lelenl tor pldclng the~ n becomes lnfetuated
with e tamoua French
ecu-(2 hrs I fD HOU.YWOOD
TELEV181()ff THEA TEA
' Al'ld The Soul Shall
Oene41" Two J1pal'lese
tem111.. 11'1 Callfotnl•'•
1mper1a1 Valley rMCt dill«·
\
ently to tt>e llatdlhlpa of
the Oepreealon
ml TUAAA80UT
"Unn1 America" G~IS:
tennis IUpetallt Btlli. Jun
Ktng and Or .14-n Ullyol.
IUlhOt Of "Women'•
Running."
8.30 8 (J) IHllEU>S ANO
YAllHllJ.
Roti.rt 8Nelcl8, .. the ~o Kid, l¥M on a hol-
t~ OOWboy twkle
hi. W; l~ VIII'!\"'
~ 1 tribute to cn.ille
~ Ind vent~ Into
lhe worid u a "baby on
the ioo..."
Q Q'J LAVERNE t.
SHIRLEY
"The Denllat" l1verne
chip• het tooth and cen't
afford to go to the denllfl
ao aha goes 10 Shltley'a
couain 'WtlO la 11klng his
l1n1I eic.ama at dental
achoo! 0 CONCENTRATION
41) CROSS-WITS
a;) Ova\ EASY
Guell organ111 Robert
Va1>9!'_n
9:00 8 ()J CBS MOVIE
• • • "Husue" ( 1975) Butt
Raynolds. Catharine
OaMuve A tough cop '111~
lor a iet·set call girt duong
lhe ll'lvest1gatlon ot a
bizarre motel«. D DEAN MARTIN
CELEBRITY ROAST
Fr.,.ai Sinatra la ·~•led by
M~lon Berle. Emaat Botg·
nlntt, Georci-Butna, Dom
DeLulM, Redd Foic.x, G-
K1lly, Ronald Reagan,
Jaf'n415 St-arl. Jonathan
W1nt1ta 8lld 01i-.
Q ®l THREFS
COMPAHY
··Jec11'1 Nevy Pel" wnen
Jack. Chrissy 1111d Janet
H I out a gourmet dinner
lor Iha AoPll<• datlgned to
s11v1 Oil an expected rent
hike, Iha ~SI Hllor
from Jlek's navy days
arrives and .wreck• the
evening.
0 IRONSIDE
The dealh of a b11au111u1
TUBE TOPPERS
~BC (!) 8:00 -Just for Laughs. A cotnedy.,·ar iet~· ::ipccial with Milton
Berle. Connie Stevens. Will Geer. Red
Buttons. :\lartha Raye and Rose Marie.
KOCE ® 9:00 -'.\fasterpiece Theater.
··Anna Karenina .. dt•buts in the first of a
10-part :,<>rirs.
KCI!.I' ~8 9:30 -"Fat Tuesduy and All
fh<lt Jau ·· :'.\"ew Orleans e1nd the '.\Iar<h
C ra:, an: celebralt•d by the Olympia Bra~s Band and the Arthur 11<111 Afro-
.\merican Dance Ens<•mblc.
lolk~ .. thoYghl to ba
IT!Uld« not 1M apparent
sulelda.
41) MERV ORIFflN
Gunte: Jack Webb. C•or11
Leachman, Martin Mull.
~MASTERPIECE
THEATRE
"Anna Keranlne" Anna
ancwnttra Iha Count ...
Vronsky whlla trevellng to
Mosoow to comfort her
brother Stepan. whoa•
merrlaQe hU tallad. (Part 1
of 10)
t:30Q @ SOAP
(E.pltode Nineteen) Jaaalc:a
Tete'a la~ lntervlawt
member• ot the Tete and
Cempbalt lamlllae ..-Clng
character witnMaes lor
JaNlc:a'• uf)COQIJng mut-
det trial. flII I~ PERFOAMAHCE
AT WOLF TRAP
"Fat T\Hlldey And All That
JIZIJ" The Oiyynpla B1asa
Band anes the Arthur Hall
Alro-Am.,1c:an Dance
En•emble c:11labra111 m
(! music and dance the eplrll
ot New Orlaan• and the
pageantry of Mardi Gnit.
10:00 0 0 NEWS
0 \lJ8 FAMILY
"Baby Mekee Th<ee" Nan-cv and Jett resume lhelr
telatlonatilp and oonsldef
temanylng but wtla!'I Nan-
cy find• she Is l)l'ag1'ant
She baComn w.th<ll"ewn,
1efuslng 10 tall Jeff al>out
lief condition.
Q) HONEYMOONERS
Relph gives advice to a
proapactlva brldegtoom
and etmoat l?fnka up a
honeymoon. ml IN PERFORMANCE
ATWOLFTAAP
"Fat Tuesday And 'All Thll
JUZJ" The Oiyynpla Btua
Band lltld 1"9 ArthUr Halt
Afro-American Danco
Ensemble celebrate In
music and d11nca Iha apml
ol N-Orlean1 end the
antryol Mardi Gras
......_/
10:30 .. .., N£W8
11:00 GD tm HEWS IJ LOVE, AMERICAN
8TYU!
"Love And The Duel" A
pr-agatot Is ~
toe dual. "love And Tha
Note" Jfld( brag. to H-V
allOUI 1111 Charm with women.
G MOVI! 'It* "Ch1to'a land''
(1972) Chll'IM Btonaon,
Jee/It Paienc._ A helf ·l><aad
Apache managaa to 11ay
Ont! l\ep 8heed OI e
l>loodthlraty ~. (2 hB.) CD THE 000 COUPt.£
FelOl'a MW romenUc Inter-
.. , la not the Nbrlrian ha
ltlinkl, but IClually an oft.
Broedway ac1r-appaar-
iJ nucse In a play.
LET'S MAKE A DEAL
DICK CAVETT
GUMt. Art Garfunltal.
11:20 tJ Cl) NEWS
11:300 TONIOHT
Holt: Johnny Car1on. G~t1: Gataon K1nln, Mal
Tflljs. £d Utber1hal, Aend1
Woll.
0 LOVE. AMERICAH
STY\.e
• 't.ov. And The Big Laap,.
Relph Ind Betty are about •
to l>a married. "LCMI And
'Tha Ruo" .Jarry conf-
to hls~ll'lllha1$
bald.
Q ®' ABC MOVIE '* * "Deeth Amono
Friend•" (1975) Kele Raid.
M1rtln Balaam. A c:atMr
pollcnoman lnvMbget•
the biz.arr• murder ot lin
1ntarn1tlonal financier,
s.emlngly strangled by
lnvlslble hands. (R)
CD NEWS
QI GETSMAAT
Smart aat1 out 10 1top
KAOS agen11 from placlng
expl091ng oil painting• In
foreign consuletea.
til) CAPTIONED ABC
NEWS
0 MACNett./~
~ '':80 8 Cl) C98 &ATI MCMe '* • * ''Franc;la Olty
Powfltt! Tiie True Story 0t
TM U-2 Spy tnc:ldttlt"
(187t)l .. M.IJ« .. ~
lal\~.Tha~ ~trial Ml
eubMquent CIOIWl(;1b1 °'
Ille Amet1can f'900nNlla.
.. ,_ pllot IMt do-'1VW
SOYlet latrllOty tr, Mty ol
1HO.(R)
MORNING
12l00. 1WIUOHT ZONI
Old 8en fies ttla llrange
power to dlenge 1111'1\Mtt
Into enything. °' anyone,
haWWlb. m ~ * • * "Joh My Coma
Letaly'• ( 1943) JamH
Cagney, Marjorie Main.
TWo Y9C«an naWWl)IC)er
pubiahera jolt\ ~ In a
l'lgflt aow.t • loc.i 10Wf\ bots. ( 1hr .• 30 min.) CD M<>VI£ ••'At "'-'81lf!unt Ill The
Junola" (1951) Rol>tl'I
HughM. J-Wllilon. A
~ expedition Into the
Interior of Brull -a-
tor an axpedltlorl loOklng
for a Iott ctty, (t hr,. 30
mfn.)
12'.30" MOW! **'At "0.11ta In The
Dull" (1980) Joen
8annatt, ~ Burr. A
young 1haracropper
return• honte anw hevlng
~ tkne kif • crime he
did not oommlt 10 find
thing• h-Ghenoad quite
a b4t. (I hf .. 55 mhl.)
1:00 II TOMOAAOW
~ Ctooney makas
a return app.w~. G 18PY
"No Exchanga On Oani-
f: Merc:ll-..dlM"
1:0S NEW8
1:30 MOVIE **"' "China Vat1ture'' (1955) Edmond O'Brien,
awry Sultvan. ·~ edmlrel Is ~ by •
lft\d toroa Of ... .,.,. and
t>fought l>ack lo U.S. fol'
CIUMtlontng. (2 In.) 4IJ MOVll!
• • -rM Loot.,. .. (1gss)
Rory C•lhoun, Julia
Adami. Five dalparata
man Ind a girt era tr~
on a gale-lashed mountaln
With e lortUntt In calh. ( 1
hr.,30mln)
1:501) NEWS
2:00 8 NEWS G MOVIE * •• "Captain Boycott ..
(1847) St"'*art Gr8flgaf,
Kathleen Ryan. A -'thy
lriSh land agent QUamiil
Wftl11 .. •da•'• Da11tl•~ Me.,1 ...
AFTERNOON
12:00 G • • • ··Tua Bella ot
New Yoric" (1952) FM
~ ..... Vara Elleft. A rich
~t811811\~1lllllll•
~ 111"'9' "' • am.II aldawallt Dllsaloft. ( 1 hr. 30
min.)
• ··~"Ton!,Dk*And
Harry" (194 I) B1lf0"9
Maradf1tl. Ginger Aofara,
-·~ ~ W'O"'IQ --.. fof'Old to mOOM bantiaan
\hf9a boytfM!lda. (2 .....
20mln.)
3:00 9 * * ""'• A Bikini worlcr' (tH7) Paborall
Wt/lwf. lommy Klr11. A
concettad ----• double Ill• .. hit fllYf
l>rOllW to find out why a
,_gift dllllli• tir'I'-( 1 br,.
30mln.)
3!30 0 • * ... "Whan The 9oya
Meet The Glrll" .'965)
Conni• Francis, Ha"'•
Ptetnel. To ralM nlC>ntl)I, a
renc:tl II ttenatonnact Into e
'""*al dude rendl. (1 aw ..
30 min..)
John-boy 'Passing Through' Carol· 'Quits
SlwwA.fter
11 Seasons
Ry BOB Tll0~1.\S
HOLLYWOOD (l\P) -"ll'i.
nice to be back, and yC'l it's ntcl'
not lo he back." ~a id Rich<ird
Thomas of his n •turn to "Tht·
Waltons." "J)o you lo.now what I
mean?"
Xot C'<actly. So he <'Xplamcd:
"Jl's i::n•:it lo be back among my
old fri<'nds, who arc almost
literally part of my family. But I
ubo cnJOY knowing th:.it I won't
have to May."
Dunne this sixth Sl'ason of the
popular Lorimar-CllS series.
Thomus hns returned fo r one
two-hour show and another hour
s how. Throul!hout t he season.
the family has explained that
John-boy has been off in NC'w
York City working for the As·
sociatcd Press. Now he returns.
''THE TDIE JS 1919-1940. and
mos t of the country is emerging
from the Depression." the actor
ex:p la ined. "An <•xception. of
course. is Appalnchia, and the
: AP sends me back to my old
country to find out why.
"l discover that prosperity ts
obviously not around the cornl'r.
• • ;1nd l try to help the people find
work by reopening a mine tn u
neighboring town. It had been
shut down years bcrore because
of lack of funds. The men go to
work without adequ~te safely
precautions. and there is an ac-
cident.
"Now the men arc trapped in·
side the mine, and the women
•• nre on the outside. I am caught
: ·in the middle, because it was my
: .idea."
,. THE SHOW BEING "The
· • Wallons." you can bet that it
will a ll turn out well in the end.
: The other Thomas segment con·
=· .. . . . ~ !l\a'i~·f '
'••....j ~ .. • .
• • • . I • •'
----'
HB.D.0•11 "DERSU
UZALA~'
• AP Wl"""9te
RICHARD THOMAS GREETS WILL GEER ON 'WALTONS'
'John-boy' Back, But Only for a Short Visit
Cl'rns John-boy·s bringmi:t home
a f1ancee from New York
"and that should be run."
Richard Thomas was filming
his retum to the series in the
daytime while appearing nlghUy
in something far difrerent -the
play "Streamers" at the
Westwood Playhouse.
''It's a strong play," said the
26·year-old actor. "We've had
the paramedics at the theater
three times to lake care of peo-
ple who have collapsed. One
night I broke my toe onstage and
after the performance l wel')t
;icross the street to the UCLA
1\t<'dic<il Center. A man who had
<1 seizure in the theater was also
being lrcated there. He
apolo~ized for disturbing the
performance and wanted to
know what happened in the rest
of the play."
"STREAMERS" AND another
local play last spring, "Merton
of the Movies." have been the
only profession al work for
Thomas since departing from
the series. He and his wire and
year-old son, Richard Thomas
..
V. spent. the summer in N~w
York with his parents. Thomu~
jJso completed his i.econd book
of poems
Some actors might fret about
:.uch inactivity. Not Thomas.
"If yo u know what you can do
a~ an actor. then you ha~·e no
worries." he re marked. "Some
·actors don't know what they can
do. and when they leave a
!>Cries. they panic.
"I'm a great bel1e\'cr m let·
ting lime do its thing. If pro-
ducers see me only in terms of
one role, then I can wait. There
are many things I can do. Do
you realize that f'm com ing up
to my 20th year as an actor this
s ummer? I started in summer
stock when 1 was she, at seven I
was on Broadway in 'Sunrise at
CampoJ>ello'."
DOES HE UAVE any regrets
about leavmg "The Waltons?"
"None whatsoever . Five years
is a long time to spend nine
months of the year in one
character How long can you
stay fresh in that character ?
Bes ides. all the ottrer characters
in the show were maturing but
John-boy wasn't. He was at the
age when he s houl<Lhave gone
out into the world. llut he was
!>Lill up in his room. writing."
Thomas is also wailing for
Universal to issue his slarrinll
film, "Septe mber 30, 1955." It
was first released as "9·30·55" lo
disappointing results. now is get-
ting a new campaign.
''Universal doesn't know what
to do with it" said the actor.
"It's a different kind of story -
how the death or a media hero
(James Dean) affects a small
town. I think it will find an au·
dience. l hope so. It's an impor-
tant film for me.''
. AP WlnfMto
CALLING IT QUITS
Carol Burnett
'Advocates'
Returning
ToKOCE-TV
"The Advocates," the award·
winning public affairs debate
program. has returned to KOCE-
TV for a new season.
"The Advocates ... presenting
pros and cons of contemporary
issues, will be broadcast every
other Friday at 10 p.m.,on Chan·
net 50. The series began Jan. 27
and will alternate each week
with "World," a new interna•
tional documentary series.
The program's format is a
mock -trial debate, using the
skills or a pair of advocates
us ually r epr esenting con·
ser vative and liberal points of
view. Cases are presented
through the testimony of "wit-
nesses" who supp6rt one ad-
vocate's position and are subject
to cross-examination by the op-
posing advocate.
~LOS A.NGELES CAPJ -
Comedienne Carol Burnett is
giving up her weekly television
show al the end of this season,
J oe Hamilton, her husband and
·producer. has announced.
"The Carol Burnell Show ' ls
now in its 11th &eason on CBS
and is the longest-running cur·
rent prime·lime show.
Five more Burnett· shows re·
main to be taped for the season
and the final show will air
March 26.
THE CO~IEDY·VAIUETY
show. which has been slippiqg ln
the r atings, moved from its reg~
ular Saturday night be.rtb to Sun•
day nightinJanuary.
Harvey Korman. who tiad
been with the show from the
beginnlng. left the show at the
end of last season to star in bis
own ABC situation comedy
series. Dick Van Dyke Joined the
Burnell show last Septembet"but
left after about 10 shows.
Miss Burnett said In a stat~
ment, "I am certainly not ~Ur·
ing from television. It's Just ~at
after 11 years and 286 shows. ln-
cluding those that remain lo bo
done this season, I want to' be
free for awhile from the de-
mands ot a weekly show.
"( WILL DEnNJTELY ~n·
tinue my association with CBS
by doing a number ot specials
over a period of years."
Both Miss Burnett and
Hamilton said tber~ wu no
other reason for endlni ,the
s how. sddlng. that CBS t ad
asked them to continue.
B l, l ,m MU. Sandy in"ili"I all e/ ,.o.. 10 call me attd npur /t>r
our cla.• l~,.. nose. •
u11oru U. ell l.wZ. end oil
poup• /OmWt6 NOW'.
JOrN mE FUN -LEARN
TO ICE SKATE AT TWO
BEAUTIFUL CRALETS IN
COSTA MES~
•