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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-02-13 - Orange Coast PilotPenicillin· laeed 'Minor Damage' . .. ... -. .. . A~ Orange ~oast ·-... ~ .. . To LA Markets Drenehed'· Again ·Another _to rm Ai MONDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 13, 1978 VOL. 11, HO. 44,, SECTIONS, a PAG•s . 8Lost • In.Rescue At~em.pts . • for ,. . . :"\ PhiUp Diu!ks TV AppeartuJ£e LONDON (AP) -Buckingham Palace says Prince Philip backed out of a television talk show on religion for "personal reasons." The palace spokesman. in making the announce- m'ent' Sunday, -said ·the decision to withdraw had ·•nothing to do with either Princess Margaret or Prince Charles." British newspapers speculated that Philip, husband of Queen Elizabeth II, did not want to dis- cuss reports that his son and heir to the throne, Charles, may be planning to marry Princess Marie- Astrid of Luxembourg, a Roman Catholic, and that Princess Margaret. the queen's sister. may get a divorce. British successlon laws ban the marriage of a. British monarch as bead of the Protestant Anglican church to a Catholic. and Buckingham Palace has denied that Charles will marry the Luxembourg princess. Mar(aret amt her husband, Lord Snowdon, may divorce When their two-year separation is com- plete. I :Noneinoct Penicil1in-laced ·Milk-Sent-fit·.-LA ---· I By KATHY CLANCY I I Gf-Olilfrri...IMlf . Orang• County Health Depart· ~t officials aaid today there The taller said a shipment of milk headed for Adohr had been contaminated with penicillin, Stone said. As a reault, county health crews tested milk at ·Adohr's Santa Ada plaot tbel1 impounded 3,500 gallons ot cream, l,UO quarts and 1,873 pints ofmilk. But another 1.600 quam 'and 1;027 ~ already bCld left the plant fcir..distrilMltioo in stores ud ..alona delivery routes. he •aid. CSee JllLIC. Pace AZ> oast May Hit Co11nty ' Tuesday By 'l'1le Assodated Press Another stonn is brewing fn the Pacific Ocean, and it could • h it rain-weary Southern California as early as Tuesday night, say forecasters at the Na- tional Weather Service. "U it continues on its present ! course. it could bit the West Coast on Tuesday night or Wednesday, .. said Roger Hill. a 'i weather service teclmlcian in Los Angeles. · Such news can only bring sighs of fatigue to residents In the mud-soaked Pinecrest l SIERRA SNOW NEARING RECORD: MORE DUE-AS Estates area of La Creseenta. The residents bad been braced for the worst when a storm caught them Sunday afternoon as they were still cleaning up from the waist-deep mud and debris left by Friday's torrents. • About 100 families ln the well· to-do residential area w.ere ad· vised by the ~ Angeles County StreTiff's De-partment to evacuate their homes ·Sunday. But only about half heeded the warning, with the.rest stayinl to ' try to lessen the lmpact of ex· pected floods and mud.slides. "Flood control officials ad· vised that the Shields debris <See MOllE, Pa1e AZ) coast Weather Showers e.ndinl toni•ht. becoming fair and a little warmer Tuesday. Hichs Tuesday 60·65. Lows tonteht 44 to 50. INSaETeDAY Au.cmttc CUJI'• Beanltoalk, old .and tired, fl ,..,...., tu brfoth ln.~bt Of the U/•·flohag Jore• ol legoJ tomf>IJllf. lt mar '*'-• '°"" toait. ,8ft POQe a. ·11a.rex·· ; WORKERS LEAVE BUSES IN BOSTON AND WALK TO THEIR DESTINATIONS AH Private Cars Banned Since Brluerd of LHt Week Covered City ,., .......... ~lenty of Roana' Dams Still Down In Orange County By JERRY CLAUSEN Ot tM Dally ,.., .. Stall Despite saturated ground. heavy runoff and continued rains. flood control d a ms throughout Orange. County have plenty of room for more water. officials reported early today. The county flood control Villa Park Dam is less than half full, said Kurt Britain, county En· vironmental Management /\gen· cy•s oper ations m aintenance supervisor. Agency operators have been releasin~ about as much water daily as flows into the f:lciU ty. he said. The U .S. Army Corps or Engineers. whi ch maintains Prado, Brea, Carbon Canyon and Fullerton dams, reports that none of its fac1hties 1s close to Cipacity. The only major flood control r'roblem reported today was with a Santa Ana River drop :,truclure (check dam ) designed to e limin ate scourin g and t'rosion along the river in central a nd southern Orange County. Britain said Santa Ana River water is eating below the struc- ture which lies across the n ver's width between Anaheim a nd Orange near Katella Avenue. IC. the cheek dam collapses, he said, the only problem would be with r iver bank erosion. L ee Jaum an, Co rps of Engineers reservoir regulation unit chief, said in Los Angeles that Fullerton Dam contams on· ly 34 acre feet of water. "a very s mall percentage of what it can handle." Brea Dam contains only 1.5 acre feel, he said, and Carbon Canyon Dam is nearly empty. Prado Dam. the Corps' major facility straddling the Santa Ana River in southern Riverside County, is considered less than half full, he said. At the dam itself, water is 47 feet deep and would have to raise more than 53 reet to crest the facility. Fro. Page A 1 MILK ••. Stone said county officials checked with local markets late Friday and Saturday but turned up none of the suspected milk. It was late Saturday. he said, that Adohr spokesmen told coun· ty ofrtclals the milk had gone to Los Angeles County instead. Stone said county health crews are continuing to test all new milk shipments coming into the Adohr plant but no other con- taminated milk has been found. He said county officials do not yet know how the milk became contaminated other than what the anonymous caller told them. ORANGE COAST s DAILY PILOT Water is being released from Prado at a rate or 1,500 cubic feet per second, Jauman said. During the last major storm in this area, 1969, the Corps re· Jeased up to.6,000 cubic feet per second into the Santa Ana River, he said . While large capacities remain in county·area flood control dams, agricultural water collec· tor reservoirs such as lr\line Lake arc reported overflowing. An I rvine Co mpan y spokes man said water began ~pilling over Irvine Lake dam Saturday morning for the first time since 1969. * * * Front Page A J MORE ••• basin has not been cleared of mud and debris from the pre· vious storm." said Sheriff's Deputy Carl Ricgert. The basin overnowed Friday, and when the rain fell Sunday · residents were faced with th~ same danger. Although heavy rains con· tinued through Sunday night, the weather service said the worst of the storm had passed -with less than half the rainfall that drenched the area two days before. Hiegert said Sunday that ris· ing waters washed out hillside roads and cut off residents in the hard.hit Tujunga Canyon area just a few miles northwest of La Crescenta, but because the area is so sparsely populated, no one was evacuated. Mayor Tom Bradley declared a state of emergency in Los Angeles on Sunday. noting that Friday's storm had caused an estimated $22.6 million damage, destroyed five homes and severely damaged 120 others, making it one of the worst storms in Southern California history. He said the city would apply for "appropriate state and feder al assistance ... Gov. Edmund G. Brown also mus t decl a r e a s t ate of em ergency to m ake private property owners and the city cligi hie for recovery funds. Meanwhile, the search con· tinued today for about 30 corpses unearthed when a seelion of the Verdugo Hills Cemetery in Tu· junga collapsed during Friday's storm. Coroner's officials re· portedly recovered about half or the bodies by Sunday, including one found in a supermarket pa rkjng Jot. Police officer Don Zerillo said the remaining bodies were buried under the mud. The cor- oner's office, fearing a heatth hazard, was supervising re- covery of the bodies for iden· ttfication and reburial. In the Delta Flats area or Big Tujunga Canyon a woman'.s body was found two miles from where she reportedly had been pulled Into a wash current while attempting to cross it. Foot of Snow Hi~ Midwest, Moves to E~t By The Associated Presa A snowstorm from the Rocky Mountains moved acrt>Ss lh6 na· ti on· s rpidsection today. leaving a'foot or more of •now in part.• of Kansas. Nebraska and Mis· souri and threatening p6lnts east. ' "By ntghttall, 1>ortlons or southern Ohio were to be under four to six inches of new snow Freezing rain was forecast for the remainder of Ohio, and por- tions of lllinois, Indiana Ken· lucky and Pennsylvania. A liaht dusting of snow was forecast for New York City and other sections of the Northeast hit by a record s nowfall last week A meeting of six New England ~over nors set for today in Bos ton was canceled because of difficulty traveling to and from the city. ' Allhoufth lar~er accumula- tions were expected in the s now belt states south of the Great Lakes, forecasters gave no indication that the latest s torm's effect there would be anything to compare with the blizzards and near blizzards of the past few weeks. Rah> showers were expected in the Southeast and light snow in the Rockies and higher eleva. tions in Oregon and Washington. Elsewhere, partly cloudy skies were predicted. Fro..PageAJ RAIN ••• r i pped out undergro und telephone cables, cutting t e lephone service lo some Newport Center offices. P acific Telephone Company workers today were checking out damage from the mudslide, which closed part of Big Canyon Drive. Electrical problems caused by wind damage were evident in Laguna Beach, where a power pole on Coast Highway across from Emerald Bay ignited at about 9 p.m. and another at 450 Glenn re also burned, forcing . the e acuation of three rooms or the aguna Nursing Home. · nds were measured at up to 45 Hes per hour in Newport Har r, where harbor patrol crews continued to mop up debris and damage caused by last week's hiab w:inds. Sunday's winds also brew out a plate glass window at Arby's Restaurant on Brookburst Street in Huntington Beach. The National Weather Service today forecast overnight clear- ing and fair weather Tuesday, with another storm moving In on Wednesday. However. a spokesman said the new storm ls expected to be weaker than Sunday's. The ,countf Harbor Patrol measured 1.02 inches of rain in Newport Harbor during the U- boUI' period endin1 th.ls momlllg. ltaln watcher J . Sherman Den· ny measured .98 inches in Hunt- ington Beaob. brlntUnc the season's total to 17.76 lncbu, compared to 8.00 lncbea last year to date. , Janis Backs Plan Laguna Audience Hears Support By SfEVE MITCHELL 0t111eo.11 ............. Soundjng more like a Midwest preacht!r than a retlred busl· nessman, tax reform lnitlative author Howard Jarvis assailed state leaislators and a Sl.lJ)erior Court judge opposed to Prop. 13 on tbe June 6 ballot. Jarvis peppered his hour·long spe4!ch before taxpayers at Lacuna Beach High School Sun- day with anecdotes and humor. but would not aiv~ one inch to opponents tJI the tax reform measure. "They Oeplat.ora) are tell· ing us up ii) Sacramento that there won't be any tax refortn cn.e••"fre thi4 year." the e n e r g e.t h ! Lo s A n g e 1 e s homeowner said. "Leo McCarthy (Assembly speaker> says they can't because lobbyists won't allow them to do it," he said. today prevents young people from being able ta buy a home at all." he said . And it bas forced the closures on 7 ,500 homes a year in California -most of them owned by older folks on Uxed incomes." He defends the estimated $1 billion that would be cut from the state's budget.should the bill pass by aaying, "It's.not taking $7 blllloo from lbe 1overnment. It's putting lt back into the hands or the people, and they are the go\lentment." "The.Je will still be $33 billion. for tbe state to conduct its operations," he said. ''It's a 15 percent cut and they call that a cli1a1ter." ·'The real disaster comes when thousands of people in this tate who have worked aJI their ives for the homes can't afford own them " 1o1t it'a \he benefits that J a i likes to point out. Newport Man "SUre, this bill will knock out downtown redevelopment proJ· ecu. lt will also put an end '° joint power a,8reemenls and force politicians to trim thelr sails -cut out the fat." But, he said, ir the measure passes. ·'there will be the bit· gest boom of remodelina Oft homes in the history of this s tate. because people tear higher asse smeols after obt• ing a building permit for an ad· dltlon to their homes." Tha t alone would mean employment for thousands of state residents, he said. The lax reform crusader told Lagunans to .. get on the phone, write Uke hell to tl\& newapapen here, and pass out Jlteratu~ i.o gel this thing passed." "What really bothers the politicians," he said, gleefully, "is that the people are fl~ally going to have a say in the opera. lion of this state.·· The 75.year·old Jarvis also charged public employee unions with holding up tax bills favora- ble to property owners, claim ing that the majority of state legislators r~c~ive contribuUoP5 from the ~ons. "In other words, this is;t a government of, by and for the people. It's a government of the goverment, by the government and for the government." Officers Identify Niguel Park Body Jarvis caUed a lawsui~ by Orange County Superior ~ourt Judge Bruce S umn e r "frivolous" and claimed the jud&t! is caU,8ht in a CGQfUct of interest. Orange County coroner's of· ficers have identified a body found in Niguel Beach Park over the weekend as that of Kiirl Chill>· celJor, 20, or 1848 Park Sheffield· Place, Newport Beach. Sumner recently filed a suit. The certificate issued tod~y by· claiming the J arvis initiative the cotoner'a off\ce determines deals with more than one subject. the caµae ot dtatb U.·ln~rder by ·'The attorney general de· a person or persotlt.unknown. termined that it covered only ·' Sherllf's Lt. Rfc)( Dtak~ con· one subject," Jarvis said. He firmed th.at hts offi~e \s dealing als~ said Judge Sumner is is ~ With a murder case. , e mployee of the stale, "and as, He said Chancellor. wbo.tsf such receives his salary from tax· ·• bddy Wu'· found SattJ!day near a sources. He is directly involved in aback bar in tbe Nitllel Beach a conflict of interest when he ac· · Park, wu.Wt~ by a series of cepts tax money and fi ghts a tax blows to Uie head. N~~WflJ>OP reduction proposal." · h~~f~were undoubted.'. Regarding his tax measure Jy the cauu or death," DrUe J a rvis assailed current property said. ''There was no sign of a tax limits, saying they a~ well struggle at. the death scene but above the taxpayers' ability to we a.~e still checking out the pay • area. "The property tax structure Drake said his investigators · are satisfi ed that Chancellor Progress Told UNITED NA'flONS <AP) -Secretary of State Cyrus Vance r eported some progress in weekend talks on plans for the independence of South-Weist Atrtca. But South African Foreign Minister R. F. Botha left the talks early, saying his gov· e rnment wouJd not yield the dis· puled territory to the nationalist movement recognll,ed by the United Nations. was killed at the spot where hls fully clothed body was found. Investigators said the victim attended Orange Coast College, Costa Mesa, until recently when he decided to temporarily end his studies so that he could travel in Australia. They said the victim's family and friends have been unable to enlighten them on the reason for his presence in Niguel Beach park. "We believe he was taken there by someone who plaMed lo kill him but we don't know A police officer keeps bis distance from the overturned car of Cheryl Sambuco in Waterbury, Conn., as her dog keeps rescuers at bay. F)nally Mrs. Sambuco, who suf· fered only minor injuries, was released a(ter her husband arrived to calm the large animal. why at tbis point," an in· vestigator said. The last time Chancellor was seen aUve by members or hla family was at about 7 p.m. Frt· day when he Jen home to go to• party, an invesUeator q.id. • I Somali Ctdla For More A.id " NAIROBI, K~ya <AP) - Somali President Mohammed Sia~ BJ.tte has called on tvfty SomaU who can thouldet • rme to battle advano)ns Soviel· backed Ethiopian forces ln Ethiopia's Ogaden region, of, fi cial Somali radio reported to• day. Siad made the mobilization call at a mass rally in the Somali capital Mogadishu, te11· ing the 200,000 crowd: ''Death ls sometimes preferable to life," the broadcast monitored here said. Siad said last week Somali troops were being rushed to the Ogaden to fight alongside ethnic Somali rebels battling to wrest the area from Ethiopia. Actress Held On Drug Rap LOS ANGELES <AP) -Judy Carne, who became a star as the "Sock It to Me" girl in the original "Laugh·in" television series, h~ been arrested and booked for investigation or possessing narcotics for sale. Sheriff's Lt. Gene Hayes sald · Misi:; Carne. 38, was arrested Sunday night by deputies who answered her call at her West Hollywood home tor assistance in a domestic disturbance. Hayes said the deputies found a plastic. bag in the house con- taining what they believed to be a quantity ot amphetamine sul· fate in excess or what would be considered acceptable for personal use. India Leopard· Kills Girl, 5 NEW DELJll, India CAP> -A rogue leopard kilted a 5-year-old· girl in the northwest Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, the Times of India reported. She was said to be lhe beast's 15th vicUm in 13 months. The newspaper said the child was maule<l to death in tbo Garwhal Hill region, south of the Chinese border. The state government hu ol· fered a $375 teward for the heed or the leopard, believed to haw been wounded by poachers Jiit year. Jl first struck in January 1977, killing an 8-year·old gtrL The victim. Bonnie Koploy of Sunland. bad reportedly been visiting a friend m the area Fri- day when the incident occurred. The California Hishway Patrol closed down bi1bw•ya acrou the southern s.ttUon ol the state, especially in mount.tin and canYon rulont wh~o t'.he clan1er of mud' and rock aUdes waa ever-present. aald ofncer Chuck r.feredJt.h. ~wo Held iii ,·Armed NB Heist By Smlday nllht, the National W•ather Servteoe had reCorded nearlf an mtb °' ratn fall en . tn .the Loa Ansel• area brlftlltll tM 1euon total to JO.ii lncbet - al1noat tb?ee times u mucb aa tbe 7.21 me• that had fall•.,., tlM Htne t1JDe IMtyear. Nonnat rilnfatl for U.ll WH of 7ear 11 t .11 hacJiH, f~Mlifi 1ilc);~"-r--- about lO J>.tn. s.mday. Accordlnl' to poUce, two rob- ber• took $400 trom the Dovv House Liquor Store, at Dover Drive and Pacific Coast H11bw•1. by 1imulatlnt WNpoal lit tbelJ' JacUts. boree Road and began to follow n . Riley dJd_ pot try to pull the car over unW a second unit had arrhred to as.mt him. When a HCOnd officer, Mike McEveny, was in position to heJp wttb the arrest, Riiey said he tried to pUll the suspects O\ler, but he said they sped away from bhn. 'l'he chut led U,e police, Who were Joined by unJta from tho OrMI• CoUnty Sbtrlft'& Office and the California HlcMuy Pat.to~. u .Jamboree and onto the San rretwu. head.Ing toutll T!)e chrise continued onto the southbowid Santa Ana Freeway tbrol.lgb the Saddleback Valley to Crown Valley Parkway wbeN the suspects sot off the mew., and then .,_ck on in the norUh bound JaMS. The car wu fin.ally eorraW on the freeway north ol Cl'OWh Valley Parkway and tbe twO men arrested. Police •aid that. durtn1 \b9 pursuit. two sherlfrt unlll,... rammed by the fleeJnr 1ua~ Johnson waa idenUl\ecl at 1 driver otUlo11eeiq c:ar. I 7 NEW ORLEANS (AP> -The Americaa Bar A'Ssoclation backed down today from whiat one dele,ate to ita national con- vention called a .. snarling cat fight with the chief j1.&Sliee ol the United States'' over his charces that many trial lawyus are in· competent. By an overwhelmlne voice vote, the ABA 's Ho~se of Delegates voted down a resolu- tion from the Illinois Bar As· soc1ation demandi:U& that Chief Justice Warren E. Jlurger either .. publicly repud111&8'1 comments made last July or invide proof of their accurac~. Jn teltil~ before an English legal ~y. Burger eslimat- .ed that balf the U.S. trial lawyers al'e unqualified to represent their cllents. "sponsors of tbb resolution lack a sense of humor and a sense of propriety," said del· Whose Best Friend? A police officer keeps his distance from the overturned car of Cheryl Sambuco in Waterbury, Conn 1 as her dog keeps rescuers at bay Finally Mrs Sambuco, who suf • f ered only minor injuries was released after ber hus band arrived to calm the large animal. More Rain Due ht County Tuesday By The Assodated Presa Another storm is brewing In the Pacific Ocean, and it could hit r ain -weary Southern California as early as Tuesday night, say forecasters al the Na· lion al Weather Service. .. Jf it continues on its present course, It could bit the West Coas t on Tuesday night or Wednesday," said Roger Hill, a weather service technician in Los Angeles. Such news can only bring sighs or laUgue to residents in the mud·soaked Pinecrest Estates area or La Cr.escenta. The r esidetrts had been braced for the worst when a storm * * * Lat.est Srorm Adds Little to I OCDamages caught them Sunday . afternoon as they were still cleaning up from the waist-deep mud and debris left by Friday's torrents About 100 families in the well SIERRA SNOW NEARING RECORD;MOREOUE-A5 to·do residential area were ad· vise<t by the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department to evacuate their homes Suo<l~. But only about half lieeded the warning, with the rest stayi~g to try to lessen the impact of ex-~ted floods and mudslides. "Flood control officials ad- vised that tne ,Shields debris basin has opt been cleared of mud aod debris . .fro~ t.he pre· vio'us storm,'·' sald Sheriff's Deputy Carl Riegert. The basln overflowed Friday, and when the rain felt Sunday, rest dents were faced wltb the same dM\ger. Althougb heavy rains con· tin1,1~d throuJt\ Sunday ni1ht, the weatber service s.Ud the wont of the ~bad passed -with less th~ hate the rainfall that drenched the area two days before. Riesen ~d Sul)dey that ris· ing waters washed out hillside roads and cut off residents in the bard·bat TuJunia Caft100 area Just a few mOts DGIUIWest ol Li <See _,.E, Pl/UM> eg ale Lee Loevinger of Washlngtm. -. ' Delega._ Cuole Bellows, pres· ideQt of ~ llllnoia Bar Assocla· lion, bad urpd paaage of the re- sol u t lo n be~ause of a .. deep concern by lawyers of. our association." She referred to Burger's com- ment 1 a& "s tressing the negative" tnd added that the com menta bad subjected all lawyers to rldlcule and dJa· repute. Whlle the ABA's bierarch~o.has kept a low public profile Jn the controveny, ~nt WlWam B, SpaM bu called Burier's statistics "1rosaly dlspropor· tionaie" and ·~icagcerated. '" Spann sald ABA studies showed the fil(\ire to about 20 percent. In an obvious answer to Spann, Burger said in bls &Ill· day t~b that "even if only 20 tralntns and stills a~ not aim· percent· ••• we oqbt to be de>-plJ desirable, they are lm" in1. more about it... perat1ve lJl the public interest..'' · Biit lurser added, .. 1 stand he aaJcl. ftrmfr CIJll the poaltloo I ex· 1 • Burier said in~mpeteqt trial preHedu -the 50 percent lawyers cost .. coo1qmers ot esUaalte. Justice" mOGey llDd more ... , ath Aboae. me lo every 10 U.S. persuaded that one of the major. lawyen spends any time ln the reasons for congestion and del-.y courtroom, and Burcer• em-in the courta ••• is the lnade- pbulnd that his remarks were quate performance of many not aimll at lawyera in ceneral. lawyers who come into the "In ~acb aituatloo special courts." be said. Ex~mafors Join Fray \ . Wilson, Pinkley Take Stands on ~l By MICHAEL PASKEVJCH Cll -OellY ...... ..,. Two former Costa Mesa mayors are playing roles in the controversy over an initiative measure that could decide the .zoning rate of 83.8 acres in north Costa Mesa. The initiative generated by the North CcJsta Mesa Homeowners Association goes berore voters in a citywide election March 7. Former mayor Robert Wilson reCused to comment today on a series or recent meetings be tween himself and Arnel 2Suspects Captured in NB CU3 e Two suspects wbo led police on a 25-mile la1gb' speed chase alone wet Orange Countr freeways we~ finally stopped SWlday,nl8ht. wbu a sberUf'a deputy, firing hls Tevolver left· handed, shot out one of thei.t tlrtt. · Police said tbe risky maneuver by the unidentified deputy came after the suspec:ta in a Newport Beach liquor store holdup bad rammed two dep- uties autos when they tried to force the suspects ear off the road The shots were fired after California Highway Patrol of· ficers set uP a roadblock to keep motorists from inadvertently straying mto the path of the sus- pects and therr pursuers The two men were booked into Newport Beach city jail on char1tes or armed robbery and assault w\\b a deadly weapop. They were identified as Der- rick Johnson, 19, of Los Angeles and Calvln Burnett Graves, 20, address. unknown. According to police, two ban· dlts h~d taken $400 (Tom the Dover House Liquor Store, at Dover Drive and Pacific Coast High way, by slm ulating weapons in their jackets. Their victim, clerk Roy Wilson., 40, immediately telephoned police and gave them a description or the bandits' car which was last seen beading eastbound on the highway. omcer Tim Riley spotted a car matching the description a few minutes later at about 8:30 p.m ., beading northbound on Jamboree Road. With two fellow oflicers for backup, Rttey said he trled to pull the car over, only to have lt accelerate away from him. According to Riley, the aus- pecta ~ aPeeds of 70 m.p.h. on Jamboree. zoollMtl tbrou•h tr.me anct. l.l'OWMI ralD pUddl•. (lee CllA.SE, Pap A!) Development Company officials. The meetings resulted from a compromise proposal by Wilson that was formally accepted by members ot the bomeownen as· sociation Jan. 23 • But Arnel partner George Argyros said today that Wilson's plan to eUmm.te nearly 12 acres of Arnel's proposed office com- plex ln favor of sl.Jigle-famlly home• on a portion of the prop- erty in quest.loo ~Jd be '"im· possible to deal with.'' Meanwhile, former mayor AJvin Pinkley bas ~rmed re· potts that be will bead a group opposing' passa,e ot the bome0wnets1 initiative. Plnfcley said bis group would be ~a{lmg computerized letters to residents telling them not to vote in favor ot the initiative. "I'm not pro.Arnet, but I don't believe tn running a city by in- iUaUve, ... said Pinkley. · Homeowners association Pres1Aent ~ Paradis said be is awaitlag word from de· velopen as to·wben they m!gbt be pl'epared to bring a com· promite proposal before the Qty Couocil He predicted that tbe homeowners croup would reaf. flrm lts backing of the lll1Uative ti a compromise ls not brought before th.t council before Feb. 24. Passage of the initiative wodld force the rezoning of three p~rcels near SOutb Cout Plaza for •iAO•f-111 bomes oa1y, thus cancelin' City ~ll ap-proval of apartments on the lareest parcel. Aroel'• 46 acres. • cSee MA YOBS, Pa1e AZ) . l:ictirn's NB Jlauk R.otibed: Body That Sillliliarltles Told €M. Heists ~~pi~d? .Of NB Man N•~ ~ llwestl_.,. rem,iaed uacertala tM•1 whether the man wbo r8bbecl tbe Weatcllff braDdl ol tM ~ fl America Frida,, afterllOOQ brtbe same man who bu pulled four similar robberies tn Costa.Mesa. or is merel1 a "copycat." Detectives 1taid there -are some definite simtlariUes between lbe f~ ~oat.a Mesa robberiea and the Newport Beach case, However, tbe:r n2!-e that a com~te drawm,. ol the aU&- pect in the $1,200 Newport Beaclt robbery is slightly different from photos of the Costa Mesa suspect. Those photo•. wbicb were taken by bank cameru dunnc holdups, were shown witnesse6 in the Newport Beach case and police said the witnesses failed to idenUfy Ute Costa M~ sa- pect as the man wbo pulled Friday's heist. ''R COUid be a cue of someome picklnl upon the publicity aboat the Coeta Mesa cues to copycat that suspeet," said Dcec;tive Sgt. Ken Thom.,,on.-. Lite the Costa Mesa bandit. OM man kl the Newport Beach cas.e "!•re a.. dark blue •lndbreuer and Ught·colored pants. . He baded a note to the teller and urged her to hurry in filling a 'paper .bag with cash while simulatlAg a weapon in his ja~ •• Last of 40 Yiichts ": End Mexico Race By ALMON LOCKABKY • Ollilf Piiie ...... WPMlf MANZANlU.O -The last of 40 yachts wh.lcb •tarted the San Die10 to aaniumo race Feb. 4 dragged into. pon at the Lu Hadu Matina at 1:-30 this mom.. ing~ writtoc finis to the ~ biannual run to tJm Medean seaport. . A ravenal ol weMIMr ccndt. tioal bl the Gulf ~ CaHfornla. Sattlrder ..,...,...., tile fleet and Hbt lite Cl .. "\: i»Oats blll' Oran.ire Oomtty eoroner•1 of. fieen bave Identified a body • I~ In NlaueI Beach Park wer tb• wesiunt as that ol Karl Quan. Cellor. 20, of 1848 Port Sheffield Place.. Newport Beach. Tbe certificate issutd today by the eoroner's omce determines the caWMS of death as murder by a per100 or persons unknown. Sberlfrs Lt. Rick Drake CU'\· firmed that bis orrace ls dealing with a murder case. He said Chancellor, wbose body was found Saturday near a snack bar in the Niguel Beach Park, was killed by a seriea or blows to the head. No weapon bas been found. •'Those blows were undoubted· ly the cause of death," Drake said. "There was no sign of a struggle at the death scene but we are still checking out ,the area." Drake said his investltators ate satisfied that Chancellor was killed at the-spot where bis fully clothed body was round. Investigators said the victim attended Oranae Coast CoUege, Costa Mesa. until reeenUy wbel) be ·decided to temporarily end.tr his studies so that be could travel ln Auatralla. They said the victim"s family and friends have been unable to enlighten them on Ute tealOIJ for his presence in Niguel Beach park. "We believe he was taken there by someone who planned to kill him but we don't ltnow wby at thi1 point," an in· ve.tJgator said. The last time Cbanc~llor was s~ alive by members of. his family was at about 1 p . .m. Fri· day when he left home to go to 1 party, an lnvestiptor aald. Showtrs ending tonight, becomlna raif and a Utt.le ~rmer Tuesday. Hi&b• Tuesday 10-IS. Lows tonlihl .. to 50. INSIDB ~eBA~. Allalfc ~·· ~ old .a.ad tmd. Ct ~ U• breotll ii.:~ of llw Ul•·tloUig /orcc oj J1gaJ fll"'Wiilf • .ft --"°"' Q lOftfl ....... ~CJ. llltlex I [ l .. A"Wlr•.,...10 It's Here Someplace ~Iotorists in Kalamazoo. Mich., have to climb some mini-mountains to feed parking meters these days. Ron Harvey found it easier to attack the job from the rear. .\t present, the city has 34 inches of snow on the ground. Teen Charged The/ t Victim Hospitalized A 16-ycar-old boy from Monrovia has been charged wilh :irmed robbery in connection with a S3 purse snatching last month in Corona del Mar that left his 80-year·o ld victlm hospitalized with a broken hip. Detective Ken Smith or the .Newport Beach Police Depart- ment said the s us pect was booked into Orange County .Juvenile Hall Friday. Ironically, Smith noted the youth had been picked up by Newport Beach police about two weeks before the attack. Smith said that because the youth was picked up for being a runaway, he could not be de- tained. Because the boy ',; parents did Grove from which he fled almost Immediately. The detective said the youth apparently returned to the Corona del Mar area and on Jan. 27 a llegedly cornmltteed the purse theft for which he was booked. The victim. Helen Clark. was injured when she was thrown to the gtound by the suspect who accosted her near her home on Marguerite Avenue. Smith said s he is li ke l y to remain hospitalized for another two months. The detective said the youth's identity was elven to hlm by an anonymous lntormant and the department's' patrolmen were told to be on the lookout for him not want him returned home, i Smith said he was taken lo a i home for runaways in Garden Patrolman George Coe said he spotted the teen-ager Friday ar ternoon near the Irvine-Coast Country Club and arrested him ' I • Fro• Page Al CHASE •.. The officers said the car turned onto the southbound San Diego Freeway and reached ~peeds of more than 85 m.p.h. w hil e allegedly running motorists off the road. As the cars sped down the rreeway, the chase was joined by CHP and Orange County :sheriff's units. The chase continued onto the southbound Santa Ana Freeway through the Saddleback Valley lo Crown Valley Parkway where the s uspects got of( the freeway 1 und then back on in the north- bound Janes. It was at Crown Valley that highway patrolmen set up a roadblock to keep northbound cars away from the pursuit. The attempt by deputies to :;queeze the car orr the road ended when the suspects swerved into the l wo patrol cars. Shortly after that, lbe un· named deputy pulled alongside the fleeing vehi~le and fJred several ebots which blew ou.t the car's right rear Ure, finally lore· jng tbe suspects to pull over. c DAILY PILOT • Six Missing Ski Patrol People Found BULLETIN MOUNT WATERMAN <AP) -Six mlsslng members of a volunteer ski par pa&rol were loca~d today ln a rugged area on Mowat Walerman to lbe Angeles Natlo1tal Forest, bu& two others were stlll missing, a sheriff's spokesman said. MOUNT WATERMAN <AP> Eight mernbers ol a volunteer ski patrol were reported missing i~ this area of the Angeles Na· llonal Forest, and a sheriff's rescue crew began se•rchina for. them today. ~ Los Angeles County sheriff's deputy Ron Malneck said moun- tain rescue personnel from the Crescenta Valley sheriff's sub- stattqn, aided by a helicopter, were seeking the missina U.S. Forest Service volunteers in the rugged and snowcovered hills. "Two ski patrol people were missing since Sunday," Milne<:k said. "Six people went out Swi· day afternoon to go find them and now they're missing." M alneek said It bad been snowlnf all night in the Mount Waterman area. about a SO.mile drive from Hidden Springs which was devastate d b.y Friday's detuae and flasb flood. <Related story, pboto;A5) He sald the two peopl ~ ortainally missing were on a routine patrol, but carded baCkpacta ~ch would enablf them to survive for severa dayit. He aald the Jlx uarohera bad been expefted back by SWlday nJ1ht, and the SberJtt'1 Depart. ment ,,earth team was sent out thla momtnc when the~ talltd to return. · ·•The .oluntMn are ptetty well t.ra1Md fbr 01Un1 with snow c:Ondltlom arid ftnt ald, ln UH \M.>' Wtre to pt. lo.l fOI" a fttllat cw lwo-l''~Hli P''"'' ~. c.w • ttM Oill =----«~U.S . .. ~ .... • _._..... ...... ,. ,. .. -.. ~YOBS ••• Arnet Ml agreed to replace ' the ptanned .ap~enta wlt.b a proresaionAI office complex in r turn Cot np\ldi&Uon of the lb· ltf aU\#e bJ the bomeownen U• soclatk>o. Tbe developers and homeowners held a series of meetings and came up with a compromise that would mean 127 homes on halt ol the Amel parcel, plus a professional office complex that would extend a long Bear Street between the Corona de1 Mar Freeway and Sunflower Avenue. The office complex would in· elude about half of the Amel parcel, plus all of the land to the north to be developed by Henry Roberts and Henry Segerstrom. The compromise meetings ran smoothly and lt appeared that the homeowners association would reverse its stand and come out agalnstthe initiative. However, when Paradis brought the 14-poinl compromise before the rank and file ot the association, Wilson was there to offer a new suggestion. W1l~on. a resident of the adja· ('l'nt Greenbrook tract, said the back wall of the area which faces Bear Street should be con- tinued south as an lmaflnary border for the office complex. While this would have no iD'l· pa c t on the Rob ert s or Scgers trom parcels, it sliced A rnel 's office space in half. Argyros said the company would be unable to handle lh}s ar· rangement became or leasing agreements with landonwer t;l'ne Kawamura. Homeowners Association President Paradis said the ensu· ing meetings between Amel and Wilson may lead to Wilson's ·withdrawal of his added pro- vision. Wilson, who attended none of the initial meetings, said he wouldn't comment "for the good of the community." If Wilson withdraws his plan. Paradis said, the change would req u1 re another vote or the homeowners association. Fro11t Pflfle A J YACHTS ••. wheel lashed on d~ck. Her crew had slee'red the last 24 hours with an emergency tiller . Last boat to finish was Tenaci- ty, a Cal-39 skippered by Mike Abraham of the Wlodjammer Yacht Club. She had been re· porting herself about 12 miles from1 the finish for the previous 24 hours. · Race officials here at the Las Hadas Hotel spent a sleepless night with computers to come up with the following orttcial han- dicap standings. Overall, 1. Reisende 2. Bones V. William Chapman, San Fran- cisco Yacht Club. 3. Audacious, Mike Kennedy, Dana Point Yacht Club. Class A. l. Merlin, Blll Lee. Santa Cruz Yacht Club 2. Drlrter, Harry Moloscho, Long Beach Yacht Club 3. Ragtime, Jim Phelps, LBYC. Class·B. 1. Re~ardless, Robert Cole, St. FYC 2. Free Spirit, Richard Ettinger, Newport Harbor Yacht Club 3. Mirage, Les Harlander, Richmond Yacht Club. Class C. 1. Relsende 2. Bones V 3. Audacious. , India Leopard Kills Girl, 5 NEW DELHI, India CAP) -A rogue leopard killed a S-year-old· girl ln the northwest. Indian state of Uttar Prlldesh, the Times or India reported. She was said lo be the beasrs lSth victim in 13 months. The newspaper said the child was mauled to death in the Garwbal Hill re1ion, south ol the Chinese border. The state government has or- fcred a $375 reward for the head of the leopard, believed to have been wounded by poachers lut year. It first struck ID January 19'71, killing an 8-year-old 1trl. Deify ........ ., ...... ._. SLOPE SLIPPAGE IN NB ENDANGERS PHONE CAILE8 Problems for Big Canyon •net Newport Center Crops Periled? Rains Slow WoPk In Irvine Fields Wind and rain continue to hamper harvesting on Orange County ranches and are delay· ing the preparation of ground for new crops, an Jrvlne Company spokesman reported today, but be said the 18.4 inches of water tailing on fields this season is doing more ~ood than harm . · Dean Buchinger. Irvine Com· pany orchard manager, said field workers still can't get into broccoli and celery fields or lemon and avocado orchards. Continued r ain is also result· ing in fungus on strawberry plants and mold on lemons, he said. But the water ls great for leaching salts from plant and tree roots and for greening up Three Thugs Hold Up Bank Three bandits escaped with an undetermined amount of ca.sh this morning from a Westminster bank; police re· ported The two men and one woman wa lke d int o the Bank or America, 6911 Westminster Ave ., about 10:20 a .m The wom an handed a teller a note demanding cash and saying everyone inside the bank was being covered, police said. The trio fled in a car, omcers reported. Where Tall UJmGrows SHELBY, Iowa CAP) - The Community Club In this southwest Iowa town of 868 people is planning to erect a 76-foot-high steel com stalk beside Interstate 80. ''Iowa's the Tall Corn Statet. isn't it?" saJd club memoer Dwight Eckel. "Well, wewanttobeableto snow visitors some talJ corn." The cornstalk which wut be equivalent in height to a six-story bulldblg, wlll also have eight leaves, a tassel-top and an eieht·loot ear ot com. Hal! a hog and half a cow wut also grace \he atru~ture. • pasture lands h)t hard J>Y dro11gbt. Last week's winds knocked an esUrdated 500 to 1,000 field-baxes of avocados CrQm trees and top. pied approximateb' 100 eucaiy~ U.1s wlnd·break trees across roads and onto producln1 or· chard trees, be added. . Buchinger eald~ planting schedules are belng puahed back because ol continued rain total· Ing :ie.s inches so far this season com pared to only six Inches last year at this time. Scheduled for planting are tomatoes and corn. he said, and delays with those crops will re- sult in additional delays in get· ting other rotation crops Into the ground next fall. Buchlnger is optimistic about ranch grazing conditions as a re- s u It of the season 's rain. however. Earlier, this year, an Irvine Ranch spokesman said his company would have to buy large quantities o( hay to feed the 900·h~ad cow herd and 1,000 range cattle expected to feed off ranch grasses. Front Page Al MILK ••• Stone said. Stone said county officials re· ceived an anonymous call Fri- day from someone claiming to be on strike against a Los Angeles dairy. As a result, county health crews tested milk at Adohr's Santa Ana plant then imrounded 3,soo gallwis or cream, 1,410 quarts and 1,81a pintl ofroilk. But &m)thet t ,800 quarts and 1,027 pints already bad left the plant for distribution in s.tores and along d'livery routes, he said. ! • Stone said county o(llclals checked with local markets late Friday and Saturday but turned up none Of the suspected mllk. ll was late Saturday, he sald, that Adohr spokesmen told coun· ty officials the milk had gone to Los Angeles County lnstead. Slone said county health crews are continuing to test all new mllk shipments coming into Uie Adohr plant but no other COO· laminated mtllc has been found. He •aid county officials do not yet know how the milt became contaminated other than what the anonymous caller told them. ~We're &Ost Elne :Now' . . F.-..PageAJ DIN.• . • A weekend mudsUde on 8l,... ,_ Draw · •port a.ch 1 rlpp~d out under•ro.aad telephone C'l bles, cutt\nt te le phone servlee to som,t? Newport Center offices . Pacific Telephone Comparty worker• today were cbeckln~ out damage from the mudslldef which closed part of Blf GaJlYOIW Drive. i. Electrical problems caused by wind dama1e were evident In Laguna Beach, where a power pole on Coast Highway acroa from Emerald Bay ignited at aboul 9 p.m. and another al 4SO Glenneyre also bumed, for<:lng the evacuation ot three rooms of thtt Laguna Nurslng Home. Winds were measured at up to 45 miles Aer hour in Newport Harbor, wb.ere harbor patrol crews conllnued to mop up debris and damage caused by last week's high winds. Sunday's winds a1Jo blew out a plate glasa 'WJndow at Arby's Restaurant on Brookhurst Street in Huntington Beach. • • The National Weather Service today forecast overnight clear· ing and fair weather Tuesday,• with another storm moving in on Wednesday. However, a•· s pokesman said the new storm ·•· is expeded to be weaker than Sunday's. The countf Harbor Patrol. measured 1.02 inches of rain bt & Newport Harbor dwinl the 1t> " hour oeriod ending this morning. Rain wat.cller J. Sherman Deft. !JY measured .98 inches in Hunt· ington Beach, bringing the \ season's total to 17.76 inches compared to 8.90 inches Jut; year to date. The Laguna Moulton Treat-· ment plant in Laguna Niguel tallied 1.48 inches overoiaht, bringing the season tolaJ there to 19. 77 inches. Las t year the Laguna Niguel area had S.89 in-. ches. * * * Fro• Page AJ MORE ••• ,, .. . .. Crescenta, but because lhe area is so spatlely populated, no oae'' was evacuated. Mayor Tpm Bradley declared' a •t1lte ot e.rner1ency In 1..os;' Angeles on Sunday, notln1 tha~ · Fridiy's storm had caused an estimated $22.6 million damage.,_ destroyed five homes and 1 severely damaged 120 others making it one or the worst ' storms in Southern California bistory. He said the city would apply for "appropriate state and federal assistance." Gov. Edmund G. Brown today declared much of Southern 1 California a disaster area to make .. private property owners and tbe city or Los Angeles eligible Corre.-. covery funds. Orange County is. included Ill lhe action. Meanwhile, the search con-, tinued today for about 30 corpses unearthed when a section of th~ Verdugo Hills Cemetery in Tu- junga collapsed during Friday's storm . Coroner's oCCicials re. portedly recovered about half Qf the bodies by Sunday, including one found in a supermarke~ parking lot. Police officer Don Zerillo $aid t he remaining bodies wer; buried under the mud. · L!J.Pageant ·'} Tic~ts Set -,1 ti By Mail Onl,y ._., Public ticket sales to the 1978 Pageant or the Mastera go en• ' sale Wednesday, but Festival et Arts offieials will only be accept· ing orders by mail. • Pageant spokeswoman Sally Reeve said ticket order fOl'll)S may be picked up at the fesUv•l office weekdays between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Those who wis h to have forms mailed to them should send a self.addressed stamped en" veJope to the FesUval ol Artt1 • 650 Laguna Canyon Road. Laguna Beach, Calif. 92651. No telephone orders will be-. I cepted due to the large numbU ' of requesta for pageant tickets. Mrs. Reeve said. • l The •ummer fesUval wtU t. 1 held thia year from July 11 to Aug.27. ry • • 6 f Mpnc!ay. February 13, 1978 A~ -.-,. . Sto~m D~inaMe at 83 Millio~ , f ~ :Pam Capacity I Not Reached ·. By JERaY CLAUSEN °'"'..., ........... 0 Hplte aaturated around, heavy runoff and cionlinued raln1, flood control dam1 throu1hout Oranae. County have plenty ol room tor more water, otactai. reported early today. The county flood control VIiia Park Dam is less than half full , ~ai d Kurt Britain, county En- vironmentaJ Mana1ement Agen- cy's ope rations maintenance supervisor. Agency operator» have been rele11lng about as much water dally aJJ flows into tho facility, he said. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, wblcb maintains· Prado, Brt1, Carbon Canyon and Fullerton damt, teporb that none of lta "cWUet la cJON to capaclty. The only major nood control problem reported toda1 was with a Santa Ana River drop structure (check dam) dulsned lo e liminate scouring and erosion along the river in central and eouthern Orange County. Houses, Trailers' R11ined By &OBERT BAJtKEa Ol .. Delt, ......... Damages in Huntlneton Beach are expected to hit S3 mlllion as a result of last Friday's early morning windstorm. CivH Defense Oirector George 'rhyden re- Porled today. Thyden said that structural damage to the HwtUnaton·By- the-Sea·Traller Villa1e bu been estimated at $1.2 million alone. Fourteen moblle homes were destroyed, 24 sustained major damage and 40 more had minor damage. Britain said Santa Ana River water ls eating below the slruc- ture which Ues across the river's wldth between Anahelm and Orange near Katella Aveni.le. It the check dam collapses, he said, the only problem would be with river bank erosion. . . .... ,..,. WORKERS L!AVE BUSES IN BOSTON AND WALK TO THl!IR DESTINATIONS All Private Car• Banned Since lrtutrd of Liit Week Covered City T hyden also reported thaL damages to residences in the southern part of the city have In- itially been set at $100,000 "but will ao up." Widow 6th Victim of Murderer CQLUMBUS, Ga. <AP> -An elde1'ly widow who attempted to flaht ort her assoilanl before be- ing choked to death apparently ls the six th victim of a killer who has tarJ?l•ltod ;.1 fashionable 15· block area and women "'ho li\'e alone and arc over 60 The ussullant who killed Mrl<ln·d Dismukes Borom, 78, eluded heavy pulice patrols spurred by an unsuccessful at- tack on a neijlhbor woman the day before" Mts. Borom struguled before her duth -a broken lamp was found on the hallway floor near h e r nightclothes-clad body, authorities !aid. She was the fifth widow In the Wynnton ncl$thborhood to be murdered since mid-September. Coroner J Donald Kilgore ~aid Mrs. Borom was strangled with a venetian blind cord. She probably was klll~ Saturday, he 'said. but was (ound Sunday by pollce who were called when r elatives were unable to get Mrs. Borom to answer her doorbell. "It was a venetian blind type cord," said Kll~ore. "Ile got his toot inside the home that was the venC't1an bhnd cord. He cut it insick the house." Kil gore declined to say whelhC'r Mrs. Borom was sex- ually assaulted, as were four of the victims. The bocly was found only a day nrt~r another widow, who lived only t wo blocks from Mrs. liorom, successfully fought off a ma'!lkcd mun. "lie nC'vt•r uttered a sound," sai\'.f Huth Schwob, 70, of the man who attacked her before dawn Saturday in her stately brick homt' L ee Jauman. Corps or En1lneers reser\tolr re1ulaUon unit chief, said in Los Angeles that Fullerton Dam contains on· ly 34 '\ere feet of water , "a very 1mall percentage of what tt can handle." Brea Dam contains only 1.5 acre feel, he said, and Carbon Canyon Dam ls nearly empty. Prado Dam, the Corpe' major facility atraddllne the Santa Ana River In southern Rlver•lde County. is considered Je11 than half full, he al.id. At the dam itself, water ls 47 feet deep and wo1.1ld have to raise more than ~ feet Lo crest the facility. Waler Is being released from Prado at a rate of 1.:IOO cubic feet per second, Jauman said During the last major storm In this area, 1969, the Corps re- leased up to 5,000 cubic feet per 11ccond Into lhe Santa Ana River. he s aid. While large capacU.ies remain In county-area flood control dams, agricultural water collec- tor reservoirs 1tucb as Irvine Luke ure reported ovarnowin&- An Irvine Company spokesman sald water began s pilltni over Irvine Lake darn Saturday morning for the lint Ume since 1969. Somali Calls For More Aid NA lROBI, Kenya <AP) - Somali President Mohammed Siad Barre has called on every Som ali whO can tliou!der 1 rtne to battle advanc ln1 Sov!et- backed Ethiopian forces Jo Ethiopia's Oaadtn region, of- ficial Somali radio repo~ to-day. S{ad Barre made the rnoblU1a· tlon c•U at a mua raJly in the Somali capital Moa-acUshu, teUin1 the 200,000 crowd: ••Death is aomtthnes preferabletollfe, "the broadcast monitored here 1ajd. Commuter Train's • Debut Run Readied L.ocal and !ttate dt1nttarlea wi,11 hl'lp we lcome the E l Ce~ino, the new San Diego to Los Angeles commuter train, when it takes it.a ina\la•ual run Tua11day morning, making three OrAnge County stops. Tfle new Amtrak-operated tr~ was purch~sed und re· furbished with Los Artgeles COJ.1,Qty funds and will be operat- ed J the next six months with a s\Jb-idy from CalTrans and Los Ani.eles County, l Judge Delays ~ Celia's ~rial •J To March 14 S~N DlEOO ~AP)-The trial ol anta Ana hos pital ad-mJ lstrator LouJs J, Cella Jr., ch r,ged wltb td'lbt11H1• ti ml ~n. baa beeD del~ed -M~hlt. •e ont month cleJay wa1 •p;. ~d by Superior Col.tt'l Judie E•'urd T. ButMr. A del~''·~t~ torn.y nld •11tmbUn1 bl.llMlrtdl Of wttndHI aftd thoalanda ,,, a- bJhtwwtUtaile extn lime. -u~Uornty Micheal Capplaal ,..,.. he elretat hes 1ubp<>enaed m wtt.n-... lncludln1 many oUbide Calilamt1. ,_ Jarvis Backs Plan Before LB·Audience By STEVE MITCHELL Or, .. ._,, ...... Slaff Soundin1 more like a Midwest preacher than a retired buai- nenman. tax reform llaltiative author Howard Jarvis aasaJled stato lcgislatora and a Superior Court judge oppc>aed to Prop. 13 on tho June 6 ballot. Jarvis peppered hta hour·long apeech before taxpayers at Laguna Beach Hilb School Sun- day with anecdotes and humor, but would not give one Inch to opponents oC the lax relorm rn easure. "They <legislators l are tell· tflg us up In Sacramento that thero won't be any tax reform m easure this year ," the e n e qtetic Los Anaeles homeowner said. · "Leo MeCarthy (Aa;embly speakeT) says the y ca1)'t because lobbrials won't allow them to doll,· he sajd, Tho 75-year-old J atv)» also chareed publlc employee unions wlth holding up tax bills tavora- ble to property owners, claim ing that the majority of state legislators receive contributions from the unions. ''ln other words, this isn·t a government of, by and for the people. ll"s a government of the goverment. by the government and for the government." J a r vis call ed a lawsuit by Orange County Superior Court Judge Bru ce Sumner "frivolous" and claimed the judge is caught in a conflict of interest. Sumner recently filed a suit claiming the Jarvis initiative deals with more than one subject. "The attorney general de· termined that ll covered only one subject." Jarvis said. He also said Judge Sumner is is an employee or the state, "and as such receives his salary from ta>t sources. Ile is directly involved in a conflict Qf interest when he aC· · cepts tal money and fights a tax reduction proposal." Regarcting his tax measure. Jarvis asaailed current propert)' lax limits, saylfli they are weJl abo•e the taxpayers• ability to ASSAILS OPPONENTS t.x Flgher Jer~I• But it's the beneflls that J ar vls likes lo point out. •·sure, this bill will. knock out .downtown redevelopment proj eels. Jt wHJ alao put an end lo joint power agr eements and force pollllcians to trim their s11lls -cut out the fat.'' But. he snld, If the measur~ passe&, "there will be the blg- ges t boom or remodeling on homes In the history of this slate, becau•e people fear hil(her assetsments afler obtaln- lnl a buJldlng permit fo r on ad- dition lO their homes." That alone wou ld m ean employment for thousands or stale tetldenu, he aald. The ta x reform crusader told Lagunaru to "aet on the phone. wrJte JUce h~U to the newspapers hereL and pass out literature to get tots thliig passed." "What really bothers the politicians," he said, ateefUlly. "is that the people arf! finally going to have a say in the opera· lion or this state ... Foot of Snow Hits Midwest, Moves to East 8 y Tbe As~lated Preu A snowstorm from the Rocky Mountains moved auoss the na- llon'5 midsection loduy, leaving ;i foot or more or snow in parts or Kun11a~. Nebraska and Mis souri and threatening points t•ast Ry nightfall , po rtions of southern Ohio were to be under four to six inch<'s of new snov.. Free:lmg rnin was forecast for the remainder 61 Ohio, and por \ions of llHnois, Jndlana, Ken tucky and Pennsylvania. A light dusting or anow was forecast for New York City and other sections or the Northeast hit by a record snowfall last \\eek. A meeting of six New E ngland s.:ov e rnors set for today in Boston was canceled because of diffi cully traveling to and from the city, AlthouJ(h larger acc:urnula lions wer e expected Jn the imow belt states south of the Great Lakes. forecasters gave no Indication that the late~t storm's effect there would be unyth1ng to compare "1th tht: bhuards and near blizzards of tht• past rew weeks. llain showers were expt:Ncd in the Southeast and light snow in the Rockies and higher eleva lions in Oregon and Washington Elsewhere, partly cloudy skies were predicted. Woman Slain; Mate Injured A Buena Park woman was shot to death early today by her husband who then turned his shotgun on hlmi;clC, police re· ported. Otrlcers said the woman was killed at 7:15 a .m . al t he couple's home. 6421 Cerritos Ave. Her husband was being treated for gunshot wounds al West Anaheim Community Hospital, according to police, who were withholdin g tho Jn · addition, a travel trailer park adjacent to the devastated m obtlo home park a utfered $~0.000 ln damages and com- m er c lal bulldlngs l~\lrred anoth~r $100,000 in loe1e1. Thydcn said the n1ure will go up to $3 million when con ten ta of home1, dama1e lo cars. out- t.hed1, landscapln1 and falling trees Is totaled. lie said that 500 to 1,000 trees were uprooted in the city. Fountain Valley also suffered i.ome major residential damaie. Hundreds of trees were reported toppled. No offlclnl estimates or damaae were available today. Thydcn said the stale and rccterol dl!'luster teama were tallying up the damage tn Hunt- ington Beach Saturday. lie said that if a dlaaater ls declared. vlctimt1 could receiv1; federal usslalance In the rorm Of Mrants and low-Interest loans to repair homes. T.hyden also said that he ex- pects victims would be ell&lble ror loans from the Small Busi- ness AdmtN.atratlon. He said thut loarn1 generally oni one per- cent for the first $10,000 and a · percent for anything over that a mount Thyden i,md about 200 people "'NI! 1n1tially made homeless when tho OO·mph tornado-like wind,; rumpuize<f through the park shortly before 2 a m . He t.:iid that mosl vict1mt. found placC's to btay with rel· alivci. and friends or were placed in hotels nnd motels by in1wroncc companies and by lbe Rc.·d CrO!'ili Thy<lcn ~aid that city crews. who worked uround the clock at the scene, repaired some of the homes ond a number of the vic- tims, mostly elderly, were able to move back In Friday night. 0 n ly sl x porsons sutfered minor Injuries "and it was " mir~1clc," 'fhyden said. lie said that ~as mains were ripped and m11ny hot electrical wires were downed. pay. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ''The property tax structure today prevents young people from bttng •ble to buy a home at au." he Hid. And it has couple's names. No fires \I.ere reported. Thyden asks thal any res1· dents who !lurfered damage in the s torm to contact him at 536·5470. He said victims wlll be flven cOWlHling assl1tance. forced theelosurt! on 7,SOO homes a year In Calirornla -most of Lhem OWMd bf older tolks Oii rlxed lncomei.1 He ttetet\da U\e estimated fl bllllon that_~ould be cut lroJll the 1iaie·1 woa.i abould the bill pass by saying. •'It's not ta)tin& 87 billion from ~o govemmen&. It's puttfng lt back into tht hands ot tilt people, and thet art tho 1ovtmment. '' "Thtte wtJI atHI be S83 billion. tor 'b• state to tonducl tta operaUQPS," tM did. "It's 4 1$ ~rcenl cut e.nd thty tall \hat a dl•Hter.'' "Th e real dlautet comea •hen ~ ol "°:ft• la th1I state who have work all their lives tor the homes un•t aff«cl to own them." J I , B81Htia. Rob ... tbe a1ligator ... LKft1 fbr~rs hie ihvorite shirt, mtide. 1n flne all cotton witn 1~ t.atla.eolid colors of red, whlte.;navy, lt.blue.,~usta, melon ,bu.:r.gund.Y~ ye.lrow, dartmoulll > e.nd. brown. eylt@ !. ' . • • • Ir .. .. • • " ... " Ir Ir " ll IJC • " " tr • .. tr , .. ~ • • .. "' • • • « • ,. • ~ • • • tt • • • • t " • • ~ ~ It .... .. ·"' .. ( . t , . . ... • • . ..,. .... r ! I ~ ... ( I A4 DAIL y PtLOT . Just •• I ('." ·. ,,. h .. · .. }~ wit T om arphiae THE llETURNING ~ When you exit our region for a brief weekend these dayi.. you come borne shaking your head. You begin wonder where reality is located. Our coastal sector has .iust been whipped by the fourth storm in less than two weeks. Gale warnings were posted again. Damage reports continue to pour in from places ltke the Laguna and Silverado canypns. And yet across Southern CaJifornia, many locations have had it worse. Like the Hidden Springs retirement village, where an entire community was wiped out by flash flooding. The death toll may go to nearly two dozen persons before the searching ends. AGAINST THIS KIND of u backdrop, it could be suggested that only two kinds of people would take to the mountains over this past weekend· skiing fanatics or crazies. Well, I was among them. And I don't ski. The tiny community of Big Bear, nestled high in our Southern California mountains, had its problems with the big storm fronts. too. But here. it was more like a winter won· de.rland than a story of horror in mudslides and flooding. Snow made the place appear to. have been bleached in a sanitary laundry. By nightfall Friday, it was just a question or whether you had the right of way or if it belonged to the s nowplows. The s nowplows always won. ll was no contest. The plows continued on with their mechanical shoveling. You could hear them groaning and huffing through the night. By Saturday morning, even the side streets were cleared. The skiers, the other fanatics of the mountain, were loading up ~ear. scraping off windshields and with clanking lire chains. heading off for the slopes. M EANWIULE DOWN at the town Safeway store, the local lady civic leader was complain· ing to the manager that few citiiens had showed up for the Heart Fund benefit at the Elks Club. lie sympathized. 1t must have bff,n the storm that kept them away. The local paper had noted lhey were giving away a bunny rabbit, complete with hutch and feed, as one or the main door prizes. Maybe that's what kept ~he citizens away. A clerk approached the store manager lo ask how they should prepare for the day. ''Not too 'Tl any made it up the mountain," ie suggested. "The storm re- ;>orls will keep them away." Sunday dawned clear and sun· 1y bright. Everything was a ·enection of clean white. Mother 1ature's laundry was still hang- ng out. MORE SKJERS were hitting .he slopes. More vehicles poured nto town from the ClaUands. By Sunday afternoon, the ~loud cover had come again and l few snowflakes drifted in the :air. You load up and start back >ff the mountain. Into the rain. And more rain \nd by the time you reach home tt Balboa-by-the-Bay, it's com· ng down in sheets and blowing a {ale. And you really do wonder Nhere r eality is. -----..... -~- Monday, F•btuaty 13. 1978 Miier Assailed "Union Council Rejects Pact By The Associated Press Coal stockpiles continue to dwindle and the United Mine "1orkers union appears divided, but the 70-day oationwtde coal strike aoes on. By a J0.6 vote Sunday the UMW bargalnlng council turned down a tentative pact. This means an end to the strike ls apparenUy weelcs away. Negotiations will have to start again and emergency power preparations have beJWln in several hard-hit states. Interviewed today on the CBS Morning News, United Mine Workers President Arnold Miller said the vote was not the way the rank-and-file would have g.one. ''f TJDNK 90 percent of our workers want to work and they would have accepted this con· tract," he said. ''If the mem- bership had been given an op· portunity to accept or reject the contract, I would have felt bet· ter about it." · M iUer said he wanted a quick resumption of the talks aimed at settling the longest nationwide strike in UMW history. But there was no word when they would resume. Meanwhile, as Miller claimed rank·and·file support for the contract he negotiated, a union leader said the UMW president was losing support in the coal fields. "Telegram after tele· gram" is arriving in Washington urging Miller to quit, according to a me111ber of the bargaining council. "I WOULD SAY -without go- ing through lhem -lhat there have been telegrams from every district asking his resignation," said Donald Lawley. One miner from Walker Coun- ty, Ala., said of Miller, "He's disgraced us and we don't feel he's capable of representing us anymore." In Charleston, headquarters of Miller's home district, a spokesman for a group seeking his ouster said enough signatures have ,.been collected to begin the union's t"ecall process. BUT MILLER denied today that the bargaining councU1vote was a major defeat for bim or that he was losing control of the union. "They've been saying that for about the last rive years and there's nothing unusual about that," he said. Wichita WI CHITA, Kan. (AP) Des pite several hundred telephone calls offering possible clues over the weekend, police are still in the dark about the idenUty of a man who ha!J writ· ten letters claiming responslbili· ty for seven murtlers since 1974. "We have so much informa- tion now that it will take days to run down," said Police Chief Richard LaMunyon, who has placed a JO.man detective task force on the case. ''But there's been nothing ·new that could point to any one person." ' LaMUNYON WARNED Fri· day night that a man calling Cmnposer~s Pen Stolen Key Relics Recovered in Van BAY VlEW, Md. (AP) -Valuable memorabilia of Francis Scott Key, including the pen and inkwell he used to write the "Star Spangled Banner," that were apparenUy taken from a museum have been recovered from a stolen van, Maryland State PolJce said today . Also among the 56 recovered items were engraved silver. jewlery • Key's personal books a nd papers, his sword and a pair of blue ceramic vases decorated with lacquered cranes, accord- ing to William Clark, a police spokesman. AUT H O RIT I ES H AVE estimated the value of the goods al "$150,000, probably much more, and histor ians tell us some of the items are price- less," Clark said. Clark said troopers found the historic items as they were searching the rear of a van, al· legedly stolen from Baltimore, that had been stopped after it was spotted weaving near here on Sunday. "When we reallied the items were of historic importance, we started to call around to see if any museums ha d reported similar items missing or stolen," Clark said. ••AT F IRST WE got no response. but then Frederick Ci· ty Police contacted officials at the Roger Brook Taney Museum. They checked and found the museum had been broken into and the Items taken." The items had not been report. ed missing before their dis· covery in the van. They were ap. parently taken over t he weekend. Officials of the museum were at the st.ate police barracks near here checking on the recovered valuables, the spokesman added. He said authorities had been told the recovered items were "unquestionably" those, taken fr<>m the museum. Two New York City men who were in the van have been charged with auto theft, Clark said. He identified them as John Bermejo, 25, the driver, and Robert Addison, 39, the passenger. Snow Blankets Kansas "Wll'f "l>V'que ,,,.,.,1110 '~""'• , ..... ,. Beltll'l\Ofe alsm•r<k 804 .. ~o~ton 3,_,,.,,111. )llfNlo ::llMlllll WV :rilt-.O :tftC'-11 :towtlelld )tl.,t,Wlll ,..,..r ,..,...,_ ,.,,.., )Ulvtfl =.H .... h •em.rel ....... ._.. ... " ~ '"' . ....,,. '"""" ~e11•1 CllY M Y'9d • 111 .. l'O<ll ... ~,. Al.-t Ml.._ .. ~Jlt<&t. ,., ... 0r1- 12 Inches Clase Schooh, Clog Highuxiys HI Le PfC JI 2' .ot ,, 26 ~ 2t •• 51 2' M 45 .II '° 11 u •. 02 JS 21 u n .. 4 n 22 m 37 t2 S1 J:I :: ~ . » n ,_., tt ' .• "'ll .I) Jt 10 u ,. lt t ... tt ,, ·• .. ,.. Al ., .... .M • .of Jt .. J1 ft ,14 JS • ·" ..... 77 )I 4' UI .. " it " t1 t7 ., ... JS • 0 11 u s ,, 11 .S4 k IA .. ,, lo! ,, ,. ' tl I' .ti ,, . ,,. IO tt ta tt ... ..... ., ,, "' ,. ..... u •• • ft d f ,. f HomeatHd, Fla., lo 14 belOW It Cut ..,.,._. ---............ .. NATION /WEATHER Luggage dots tf\e snow-covered runway where 41 died when a Pacific Western Airlines 737 touched down, then jerked back into the air to avoid a snowplow at the airport i'1 Cranbrook. British Colum· bia. The plane hit· a snowbank and ex· ploded. Six passengers and a crew member survived Saturday night's crash. An investigation was under way. Fears Killer of Seven 'BTK ·Strangler' Writes; Re~idents Buy Arms himself the "B.T.K. Strangler" has threatened to klll again. The killer has indicated that "B.T.K." st ands for "Bind , Torture, Kill." Police said the letters con- tained information about the slayings that only the killer or someone present at the time of the killings could know. The six victims nam ed in three separate letters to local news media were strangled in their homes. The killer did not disclose the iden tity of the seventh victim and challenged police tD do so. LaMUNYON SAID detectives have reviewed each of the city's unresolved homicides since the January 1974 s laying of four members or the Joseph Otero family, the Initial victims or the B.T.K. Strangler. "We've come up with four possible ones," said LaMunyon. One of the four, he said, was 20-year-old Kathryn Bright, killed in her home in April 1974. Het-brother was shot twice in the head by the intruder but sur- vived. The description he gave o( the kiJler was widely dis· tributed but the man was never located. . LaMunyon said the initials · "B.T.K." were used In letters received by the Wichita Eagle- Beacon in 1974 and on Jan. 31 of this year and, most rec.e.nUy, by KA KE·TV last fridtU'· POLICE HA VE c:ont.acled de- tecti ves in New York and Los Angeles for Information on their investigative methods in the "Son or S~m .. and, "Hillside Strangler" cases and have warned Wichita citizens to re· main cautious and aleTt. "Yes. people are scared and we cert.ainly don't blame them ror being scared," said Bill Cornwell, deputy police chief. ·Hardware stores and re~U gun dealen on the city's east side reported increased weekend sales as a res'Ult of Friday's ~ nouncement of receipt of the KAKE letter. .JIM WILLIAMS OF WiUlams Hardware Store said "a slgnU't· cant" number of locks, bolls and chai-n locks were sold. An employee of David 's Parklane store said more customers were asking about firearms. "The man plans what be ls planning to do," LaMunyoA said. "He is quite organized." The S>Olice chief noted that in each of the six ldenlified slayii-.. the killer was allowed or forced bis way into the victim's home or ~ broke in "hile nobody was at home. DRY IUJl7Ml B41TLES FIRE }JONQLULU <AP> -Drought· stricken Hawaii ls falllng to benefit from the rains that have swept across the .Pacific Ocean and created havoc on the U.S. m ainland. Hawaii ls not &et.tin& the raln beca'1se the islands are located in the 20-degree laUtude range, while the storms march along in the 30· to 40-degree range, St ate officials launched an air assault Sunday to halt • fire tha~ • b as· black~ned 6,000 acres ot grazing land In the drought· stricken area of North Kona on the island ot Hawaii. ••• a Course By Newspaper Ever since the very first course by newspaper was --0ffered five years ago by UC San Diego Extension, Daily .Pilot r eaders have been able to participate. Hundre<ls have earned college credit and thousands hav..e enjoyed the authoritative essays by leading s cholars. On Saturday, Feb. 11, a 15-week Course by Ne~spaper focusing on POPULAR CULTURE began in the Daily Pilot. Three Community Colleges grant credit for Course By Newspaper Residents of Coast, Rancho Santiago a nd Saddleback Community College Districts may register by requesting registration Jnaterials from colleges serving their area. Register at Coastline Community College by 'phoning 963-0824 ; Santa Ana College by calling the admissions office rt 835-3000, and Saddleback College by calling 831·9700 or 495-4950, Ext. 291. ', c ">I I' tJll.' 111 l<1 I" ' .. 111 "'"' I hi ., .... '• tll I J~(I · 1(1 , ... I \ I ' I I ' I ' i I ~ I I I l By The Auoclated Press Nort.bem California will have about a day to recoup fl'OD;l Jts late$t lubing from a Pacific storm which lei\ a ttail ot JDUdslides and accidents and ' brought the Sierra s.oowpack to near record levels. With almQSt two feet oC fresh snow in the 24 hours ending at 6 a.ro. today, snow depth in the Sierra Nevada was reported to be deeper than at any time since the record winter of 1969. AT nlE N2'tional Weather Service station at Nor<len, 170 inchei were reported on the ground, travelets' advtsories remained in errect and chains were requJted otl all cars. The CeplraJ Sierra Snow Lab at Soda Springs, west oC Norden. measuted water content of the snow aetheequivaJento/ 4SinchesoCrain-mean1ng runofflhisspring and sum mer should be excellent. BUT SUNDA Y's· snows also caused some headaches. Poor visibility on highways resulted in long traffic tieups for hordes of skiers leaving the Reno· Ta.hoe recreation ar'eas. Avalance warnings were posted along the eastern slope of the central Sierra by the U.S. Forest Service. Three persons were presumed to have died in an avalanche Friday when wall or snow swept two men in a truck and another on root into Twin Lakes, in Mono County. SUNDAY'S wind·blown rains started a mudslide on San Francisco's Telegraph Hill and • caused numer04SAutomobile accidents on the Bay an4 Golden Gdte Bridges. One woman was hospltallJed with "moderate to major" injuries sustulned from a crash caused when her car was blown into oncoming traffic. Today, occasionally heavy snows howers were expected in the mountains with rain throughout the rest or Northern California ending tonight and another storm expected by Tuesday night. -... t - .-............. CAL DRAKE PICKS UR PIECES OF HIS HOME IN HIDDEN SPRINGS His Wife, Mary, C8'rled Away By a Giant Wave, Ja Still Ml11lng Two Who Lost Wives View Storm Tragedy LOS ANGELES CA P ) -€al Drake and his friend, Jim Nixon, surveyed the scallered remains of what, several days earlier, had been their home. Both men lost their wives in the storm that literally wrped the tiny re· sort community of Hidden Sprin~s orr the map. on the noors. The thlrd unit of the triplex -&he one closest to the creek -was car· ried oCC with the wave, along with its foundation and four feet of earth, and pres umably, its occupants, Drake said. Mom Jaile'il;.u • TreatellSOn 'Wgh Cost' Town Refuses To· Use Power "MY WJFE AND I were standing near the front window when the water came down." Drake recalled J Sunday, staring at the spot where he and his wife Mary last stood together early Friday morning. ELSEWH E R E throughout the ravaged town, sheriff's deputies and county road workers sifted through mud-caked debris, expecting lo un· C!O\'er bodies of some or the missing 13 persons from the area . 01 that number, only one. J4.year· old Bonnie Koploy of ~unland, was found before Sunday's onslaught of more rain halted the search. WESTWOOD (AP) -More than 90 pen:ent of t his tiny mile·high mountain town, fed up with the stratospheric rise of electricity. went into their second dny today or a planned week's refusal to use power. Most of Westwood's 1,800 population turned off the juice at Sunday noon, denying t hemselves lights, heaters and everything else electrical -a11 experiment in moving partially back to the 19th century. "IT'S STILL too early lo tell how we're doing because it hasn't gotten dark yet, but so far it seems to be going quite well. We're making our adjustments," said Paul Asmus, a craft shop owner and occupant ot one of the town's 720 houses. As he spoke, a new winter storm dumped more snow on top of the. eight inches that was already on t.he ground Sunday. ••REFRIGERATION won't be any problem." he lau(thed, "and most or us heat with wood anyway, so the snow is n't going lo cause any serious problems. We're ready for this." He said the items people are going to miss the most are their hot water heaters and their television sets, the only source or entertainment in the community. T HU'OWN, instead or flipping switches, is re- lying for comfort and cooking on camp stoves and lanterns, wood, and Jots of candles. .. It popped the rear wall up. We got outside somehow. I just got away. She was trying to follow me. Evident· I)', her feet slipped out from under lwr. She slid right down into the main channel "NOW, IT'S A matter of what you can make of it." he said, speaking in a monotone. "Just keep breathing, keep working, lPy not to thlnlc about it .. Drake and Nix9n, who also lost a 1 ~,.year·old daughter in the flood, had li ved side by side in two units or a triplex. situated just feet away from the normally placid Mill Creek. ALTHOUGH THEIR homes were not bit with the full force of the wave that swept away their loved ones, the wall or water had enough power to push the interior walls up to the ceil· ing and spread a two.fool layer of .silt DRAKE, STILL standing on the land where he and his wife ~pent the last two years or their lives together. said he moved to Hidden Springs to have a "quiet lire." There was no reason to fear the raging waters. he said, because the town had survived earlier floods. "THESE BUILDINGS were here in the 1969 flood,'' said Drake. "There was no reason to think there was go. ing to be anything different. unless the Forest Service sent some kind of waroing." Apparently, the Forest Service did not see the waters as a threat. The chief ranger for the Monte Cristo Sta· tion, about a half mile frorn Hidden Springs, was among the 13 persons washed away. Two Retired Couples ~o Srwold•fl' to ~ocer• SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -Backers of an in- itiative that would place limits on smoking in variety of buildings think they have enoµgh voter signatures to put the measure on the November ballot. The California Clean Air Indoor Committee said it would file petitions (500,000 signatures) with county clerks throughout the state. T he initiative requires 312,404 valid voter signatures to win a place on tbe Nov. 7 ballot. Norm alJy about a quarter of the signatures collect. ed in petition drives are disqualified. Mansion BecomeS Home SACRAMENTO <AP ) -The Governor's Mansion, built for the great, the famous and the poweG(ul, is now the home of two folksy retired couples providing housekeeping and 24·hour sur· veUlance. But don't drop in for a tour of 2300 California Ave. in suburban Carmichael. There isn't even a doorbell at ihe gate. . asked them not to. The kids going by. you know, we'd be up all night long," said Mrs. Bryner dur· ing a press showing Sunday. "I don't blame the people for wanting to see it -it's theirs. But we're the securit y forces. General Secvlces is the boss. AJI tours have to be arra nged through them," she said. Asmus said the 10 percent whQ are not participating in the protest week are the ill or THERE'S A JDGH chain·link fence around the older people for whom denlal or electric power $1 .3 million hou!le that bachelor Gov. Edmund could be hazardous. · Brown Jr. eschews as a "Taj Mahal." The single The law-enforcement backgrounds or Bryner and Eastmade were factors in their selection over numerous other appllcafllS, said Jim Knibb of the Department of General Services. Brvner. 46. is ~ 'former Ai r Force security _poli ceman, and Eastmade, 61, is a former Sacramento County de· tectiv6'. DAIL y PtLOT AS a Let Roger's Aorist • help vou show •: • your sweetbe.rt! tha.t you really • ca.re by aendJng an elegant • . T HE P ROTEST week was orglmized .over claims that electric bills from the Calilornia- Pacific UUllUes Co. have tripled over last year, and in some cases exceeded house payments. ''I wish there was some way 1 could make things better ovemJgbt,'' aaid an lD'lhappf Bradley Bunnln, execuUve vice' president of the utility. gate can be opened only by employees of the Department of General Services and Lonnie and Mildred Easlmade and Jim and Ruth Bryner. Their friends telephone in advance, and som eone has to walk or drive about SO yards with a key. SIGlfl'SEERS HAVE worn a path up a steep • 1 Al £NDNE'S embankment for a slimpse through the fence of the Wn · tile-roofed. Spanish·influenced "early CaUfom1a" BOUQUrT ' "TUEY WANTED to put in a buuer but we I Industr.ial Pollution Jury Roling VISALIA (AP) - A grand jury Investigation here bas foun d no evidence of misconduct on the part of two justice colirt judges in releasing Cia ·bail a mat\ WtH> killed four people and himself the next day. structure. The style seems low·keyed and simple. A ~ •• Even the jeep and the camper parked there look 64 0- 6 .,.., .. right at home. 1 1 ._ Knibb said it had been costing more than Rotttt'•WnNft& $90,000 just to guard and maintain the mansion. ~~~~s~ ... !!Jo.q~n~lft!•J~M~.ad\~rt~h~w~·~k~-~"°'~"~~~~"~'~·'"~~~m~· ~~ But with the Eastmades and Bryners each receiv- ing $800 a month for their services, that figure should drop 60 percent, ht said. j Cleanup Role Urged . LOS ANGELES (AP) -The South Coast All: .Quality Mana1ement Dis· trict Is pustilng a plan that would saddlo rn~jor industrial establish· m entf wtth the cost of cleaning up smaller air wth4~g plants 1n slx Southern California counttes. contribution to an AQMD - administered clean air fund. · AN. INDMDUAL lndUStrY's' con· tributlon would be assessed on the basis of its "l>roJeet benefit raUo," com puted' in accordance w~th volume of pollution disct)arged by the new facility. Sobio, (or example, was assessed a project benefit. ratio ol two to one, requirlng the oU company lo pay the cost of cleaning up tWice the volume o£ lts own emissions. THE AQMD • adailnbtered runct would be used to pay in.stallaUan of Pollution clean1.1p equipment at amaller planla, such as dry clea.o.J.n1 eatabllahrdents and low volume gu .. •tat!ona, t,hat -.re exemp\ now tri>m AQMD district regulations because Of blgb COit.i. Both couples are delighted with the arrange· men ts. Eastmade gazed out the window through trees and over hilts. "You're kind or out in the country here - peaceful and quiet," be said. When you order three ume-slze enlargemenll from any cornblnetlon of color slides. prints. or Kodak color negauv ... we 'll only charge you for 1w0. Vo.u get one FREE. Good for any size KoOak cotor enlargem.nt• up to and Including 16 IC 20 · jnchn. Nit ua for details. Offers ends March 15. Orange c.oasr Dally Pilot .. • 4-Very Qouhtful . €ampaign 'F«ctic .. . : .\ t1liit.•n J'l'l'l'I\ 1ng u «om111unlt::1t1on on ~mt~ l~gbla\Ul'e lt'llerhcud und :-.1gned uy John v Brig.:~. Senator, State of <..:ultf'urnia. might well u~sumt-the ln- rqrmatlon contaiiwd therein ls more 01· lt::ss official :.ind at h!;Adl "urth i;tudy in~. • All the more Ml 11' the leth.or b accompanied by a pfh\led pt!tltion stamped in rcu. over u reproduction or tl..v stole seul. OFFICJAL DOCUME~T RETURN IM· :\fEDIATELY • Thot of <.'Our~l' 1s " hat Sl'll. Briggi, intended when he mallt!d out 100.000 ll'lkr:, i.llld pt•tit11111s a<:companted by n ~nfo~om<! µhotogra ph of u youth who hud been Shot in the fucc. . The killer of the lw pll'ss youth. says the letter, t:an be ·.;ct f~cc to kill ugai11 ·• bN:ausl' C..:~1lifornia doesn't ha,· ... fl t•ffechvt! deat h Pl'lla lly luw. Jt ll goL·::, on tu usk for support, in the form of cush and rFtition !>ignatun·~. tor a new death J>t:nalty initiative pro- ~st>d by Bl'igg~ · Citizens !or un Eltcctlve Death Penalty <Iommitlcc. :-Thi~ 11ul\\'ithsta11d 111g the tact that the luw pusst>d I~· the Lci::blaturc o\'l'r (;o,·. Brown's \'t'to lui;t ycnr pro- \~dl.':> 101· tlw c.lculh l>l'nalty in 1li dlffen:nt ty~s of kill· lt);g:,. ~ \ ~l't'Ollcl m:11h11~. m111u::.. thl· photo \Jut ah.o :l<;com ~n 1cd \Jy u IL•tlt•r on :-.tall' LL·g1slaturc letterht:!ad. ~c:ks sup1x1rt f(ll· both till' l·~µ .. ndcd death pennlty In· 1t.'ulivc :.111d Briggs' other ~ubt:rnatoriul campaign f .tnt t u r e . a 11 ro po s l' cl I n it a t I v e t o c o m p e 1 fl 1· - itag of ·•openly humost·:rnul"' tcuchcrs. This one 1s :-.pon::iorcd by the l:.l.'1Wl01"s Cahfurnia Save Our Children t~mmlllct•. ) The u11ti·homobl'~ual c:a mpa1gn was launched last ~ur with " mailing to ~.S million voters and has rai!>ed '.'POUl $'.l00.000 l'l\Oll ).!h to 1:0\'cr the cost of the mailing L\rt lht• Hul<'lwr ;rncl Forde firm which is managint.: l}rig~s· but for tlw gon :rnor:-.hip Tlw poml ol all lhe:-.l' mad111wt10ns 1s to help gl\·t:! the Vullt:l'ton 1w1wLor statewide ncrnw r~cognition prior to the dcction. Presumably. sufficiently sensational and eye· <.'\.Itching mailings will ~1ttract the necessary attention untl It.ii·~ l'nough cusl1 contributions to make the mailings self· ~upporting. · Thb is not a nt•w politit'al g11nmu:k. Hut usmg official 'tatwncrr fur :.uch ;111 ohriou:-.ly :-.df·s<.·rvlng political mHtll'll\'t•1· rai'll'S :1 'l'I'~ lat·~~ question mark U\'t'I' llw Brigg:, l'iJntpn1irn ~ostly Trend · ln the spuc~ of just three days la!>t week, juries voted multi·millimi cldllar da mage nw:irds in suits charging thut c.kuth and J.!l'<t\'C' injury had resulted from unsafr .1utomob1ll• ~a .. "I lank ln:-.tallalions. . Jn Ornn~l' County. ;1 record $128.5 million in damage:-. was uwurclt'd lh<.• fumily of a woman killed m the 19i2 crash of 11 Ford Pinto and u tcl!n-11gc boy who was grave ly burntid In the sum<: ac.·cident. Dt1ys lutcr, in D~troit. dam•1gcs totol111g S2 5 million were awarded to lht! parents of tt mun killed when the.• fuel tank of his 1972 Che\'rolet Chevclle exploded after :1 rear-end colllsion. Both the Ford Motor Co. and t;cneral Motors plan to ~P'PE.'(1 1. \\'hl•lhl'I' or not the appeals are succc!:>s ful. and whether or not the <Hnirds were fully jttstified, one needs no l'rystal ball to forcs~e the inevitable lmpaC't of thb trend on nutomohllt• insur:mce. :--:o ,iury t'illl fail lo be moved l>y the tragedy of cleat\1 or lifrtime in1ury to a mother or a youthful accident 'ictim. r'\or could s uch a jury be persuaded lo look with too much ~ymputhy on a huge cur manufacturer. Thb fact of 11fc will. in due course, be felt by all of U6 when the bills for our insurance premiums roll in. And tl'lcre's prcciou1; little we can do about it. Business Show Biz ll lukes more than a wny with figures and solid or- ganizational skills lo make a successful buslneti&man in this electronic age. Conaider the fuel that the Nalionel Chamber of Com mcrce once more ts off erlna two-day Communicator Workshops to help bwtincssmen confront the hazards of television. 'r.c)pics will include: -Handlin& hosttle repo1·ters. talk $how appearances and news conferences. -Plalfotm speaking techniques lncludlng eye con. ta~t. gesturing and atyle. -Physical appearance Including clothing, hair and TV make-up. -Exerctses to Improve voice quality and arttcula· lion . With that sort of training, the student who tires or the business world might well be in line to move into&how biz. • • Opinion• wxpr .. std In the apao& •bOv. .,.. tho,. ct the Dally Pllo&. Other v1ewa &icpressed on thl• page art tlo-. Of their aothora end artists. Reader comment '' Invited. Addrtet The Oelly Piiot. P.O. Boie 1560, Costa Meaa. CA 12826. Phone (71•) 642-43~1 . /J(Jyd/Binb B1 L.M, 80'YD . Why do birds nod with each step wh~n they, walk? Th.at'• Gloon1y Gm what t asked. RepU11 a klnd· ly cllent: "Becau11 th•tr· •YO are fixed la U1tlr totketa. Their nexlblt neekl compensate. So tb•r aod With each step to "' Wbll't in tile deuce lhet'rt I~. dummy!" ------... ._____. .. . .. -.... ' Jack Anderson I Can~r Plans to Pl~y Pelitics W .\SHl~GTON -Prceldtnt Cur~l·r. crillclHd for b<slna too uloof rrom smrty poJttlca, h"• do· rided lo Wle hl11 pollllcul clou~ to rt!wurd eonere111nwn who sup. port him In th• JeatlsJuUvu wltrfare on Cupllol 11111. Uc will campultn personally ror thu rc·ele~tJon or Democrat.I who ~Ide wllh him on llH· kl'Y i!ll!UllK . S l' \" l' r u I Cau1nct mcmlH!f'~ hu\'e olrenc1y begun mok 111g UP · pt!Ufi.11\CCS in the home tits lril·t ::.. of ravorl'd •1lhcs. Thos1.• Demot'ruts who rl'- pcalccll) rcruse to back Carter In Coni.:rl·ss 1."an 1.·xpcct httll' help from his Administn.ttiQn in their rc·clcctlon battles. "We're mort' likely lo help our friends Earl Waters <>n thu IUll thun lhObt who aren't h~lplna UA, '' onl' top presidential uld• pqllltcdl,)' told \ll, Tbt1 ~le~llon ·ytur 1trate~)' will be coordlnutcd by Caruir • con1ru1lonul llulaon ottlce. which ta headed by follow Geor11lun Funk Moor•. Vice Prcaldenl Woller Mondule will 11110 gtvo hehlnd•thc·lictnea guldunc4> AT A CABINET mectlni lu11t month, for cxumplt>, lleullh. E d u c a t I o n a n d W e I f o rt· Secretary Joi."ph Cultfuno llMld ho had r"cclvcd a numbl'r oC rt!· tjUe!>ts (or polltlcdl trips and asked for gu1uum·c on how to rei.pond. Thl' president replied. accordina to the confidttnUul minutes. thui "such requests 11hould bo deared through the Vice President and ~lr. Moore." Moore has :.ilrc·udy rccdvt'CI dozeni. uf rl•quests for pollllcal uasistunco from worried con- "ressmen The r<.•quesls will Ill' Judied uecordlni: lO tho polltlcol doctrine Of )'OU•bCl'Ull'h·nl)' b•ck·und·l'll·t.Cratch yours. An undercurrenL ot petulanc~. meanwhile. h atlll running u1uln11t Presldent Carter on Cupllol Hill. He has tried t&rne11tJy lo reduce the un· Upathy. Ho makes un extra ef- fort to r eturn congressional telephone caHs and respond to conite~ttlonal lnqulr1e11 . lie huR lnvlted ke y mt:mbt.'rs of Conarc111 to brlef him on impor. tant le1lsh1ti\'6 ·b suc::.. He takes tlme to listen to the chulrmen or crucial congreb:.lonul commit.. t l'l'i:>. \ ct his best lnttintlon» s"m to go <1wry. lie re»ponded lo a. re· quest from Rep. Jos hua Eilbcrg. D·Pa .. to expedite the remov1tl of Republican Duvld Manton 1u1 U.S. Attorney in PhlludelphJu. Our WIULe Hou11e 11ource11 Insist that Carter regurded the Ellt>erg telephone call ul> a routine politlc<il requt!:.t and that ht• rhpondcd out of u df.', Ir~ tu 1m· rrave hl~ relnti<>r\shiPll on the llll. But th~ move bucktlrcd into u mujor White Houiso trnbar- ros11m~t. Con1reulonal Jeader1 at.- tribute this Ineptness to int!x· perlence. not lnslncerlty. But there is slUI tt residue or resent· ment on Capitol Hill over Carter's 1978 campaign 1peeches. itttncklnt the \\'uishlngton Institutions. · Vice President Mondale hus ~et three lmm~dlate Senate prloritles, which the president hn!' adopted: <1) pass the energy bill; (2) confirm William r.t111er as chairman of th• Federal Reserve liourd: and (3) ratify the Pannmn Canal treaties. The White HoU!le'WIJI be keep· Ing book on how the senators vote . Similar poJltttal scorecards will be carefully checked on the Kouae side. Thts currot·und-stlck up· proach to t•tmgrcssional politics tb nothing new. Richard NlxM used federul agencies from the f' HI to the Internal Rt'Venue Service to reword his friends and punish his eMmle1. Su~ Carter hasn't yet used the pow~r to his lncumbency to push his program• through Congress. !UANY ME~IBEllS ran ahtud of Carter in their 1976 races and. lhcreforl'. don't reel thl!y owe him anythrng But many of these congressmen could \tae Carter's aid this year. "A pl'tltdent and an administration can always help in an t'leclion:" one prt!· sldeotittl ttdvlser pointed out. Most of Carter's top advisers , -press secretary Jody Powell, political aide Hamilton Jord<1n, µollster Pal Caddell and media <Jdvli;~r Jerr)' Rallhoon -have urged the president privately to Luke . to the airwa\'es in this cf. tort. They wunt him to conduct more fire1.idc chuls, radio call·ln shows and town meetings, whi~h were so ~ucce111ful early in his term . Jimmy Curter ls learning to play the incumbency game. He obviously hopes that his power to deliver political favors will enable him to get hia atalled le~islath-e programs moving. Freshman Mangers Finds Winning Issue JC.. us m sports. there was :1 "pl&) er of the year" lype ttWllU'd for legislators, freshman As· semblymlln 0('nnis MoT\gers or Huntington Beach would be a sure winner. Almoi.L M an1:ers, a former school teacher and school oUlclal, has hit upon u long overdue brainstorm . He ls propos- J n g' a two year moru· torlum on school legls- 1 a tl on . ltis Ins p I ration has prompt- ed n tidal wave of mail and phone calls . from school boards all over the atate. The cnthuslaam 111 undoratand· able. With the advent or .the ••full-tlm• proroulonal Ltalslature" has come the no-tion that thoae tn omce muat prove they are nttded all year tong . Their id,ea or dotng Art Hoppe i.omethlng 1s lo pass more and more laws. On the theory th:it s chool ll'g.l is la~lon ia "motherhood 1rnd applt• pit>" t l'lcy huve dcvotetl inortlinutc cl· Corl in tltut direction. Everybody wnnts to do &omcthing for the schools. The trouble is they pnss :.o much 10 fn!it nobody knows whats going on. No aooner la one piece of legislation signed inlo law than aloni: comes another to nmend it. Thls ii eapeclnlly true of the so·callod major bills which, at Ume of passage. arc represented to be the perfect einswer. JUST LAST 1ear. after montha of blcketini and cottl· promising, the sorons enacted what they te rmed was the anawer to lhe Serrano case. r esfructurlne school financing. IL provided substantial increases in allocatlons by the state to achool dJall;ieta. Vet, even before the governor had 1lgned it, amendment• were being readied alto told ble IO"*'nmtnt. ... HE aVUIAN &ovtrl)menl. Mr. Bl'lftMI .. eeted Ln ''O nrJ cooperitlve QJtnnet'" by lrzi11tecliiUl:r MUN -..umvo\.Li othu ~mellii" loctudlng Canada •IM oud'} That nNlt laaw rmlM•d Mr. Bntalnild '° wa.:.Ute Penta on, tht CJA, NASA and to torth. He iJalct he tot around to that on Jam1ary 17, : A week lit«, \he thlna fell down~ B~ at all lidtd happUy bt••81• ~trbod~ eoncerncd nmt*"*'I •to tell everybody tODeilnld 1D ID'ok out tor 100 PoQllM ot fllkNletli• uranham lalllniN ot .... ••Y. &Yetfbod)' t0lc{ •Yerybody. \11at ta, aftSlt UI, • tor lnlroduct1on this 'ussion Staggering from the mHs Qf new lc~ul provi!>inns which huvc been piled on during the p1u;t i;cvcrul ye:irs, the school of. riclals are waving white flags for n cerise fire. They want some time to fil(Ute th1n~s out before the next tl85aull. 80 ~IANGERS nenrly cap· turos the trophy with h1& m o ratorium proposal but he blows It by natrowlng it to ''new -.ub11lohtlv• law" 01>enlng the door to "Cleanup legislation. 1w r11onnol rnatters and other 1lt>mS " Ilo should think back lo lhe not too 10!\g ago days wlten the Le~lslature met tor just a few short months evel'l' o\hcr year. Whatever laws were paued then slood tor al least· two ' years. Often. ofter that period, it was found no changes were needed. But. even tr Mangera held out ror an obsohtte moratorium on school legislation h e doesn't earn the gold plated, diamond A.O. ''Who's afraid or a bunch or barbarians?" to quote the la11i Roman emperor four cthtur10i Jator. Or, as tho captaiO of the 1'1tanlc put it. 10 weU. "Don't. worry. ladles and 1entlomen, we're ~erely 1topptn1to take on ice.·• Nothlng worries mo more than thl!J soJlcitousneu on the part or our leaders fQr rny peace of mrnd. tn fact, J hutn't had n moment'• peace 10t mlnd sinct! that satellite ml11ed me. Whal worl'les Fnf' ts wbat tbe heh el'le is beading my way from up th4lr• ~t. tbey uao ba-en't told me 1boui. :!>ludded award. That's becnuse his vision lti confined to the tun ncl or the schools. JC he think those. offlcinls, with au or lb ' staff assistance, at thelr tom- mand, nre bewildered by mountains of new laws, wha l'lbout the reisl of the clt.izens? TYPICAL of wha~ hal take place in a relatJvel)' ?ew years · \Ile Buslnen and Protes~ion Code. In 19~. after 100 )'ean a at.ate. \his wu contained just one volume. In 1975, Qfll.y short years later, it hact e" panded to elght run volumes an still growini. It. isn't tho ~hool peo~e alone who want rupli.. from what ha become a m•• UMmbly Jin 1latnpin1 ou~ an "*nendJn1 belt o laws, ita all Ca.Utornlana. The grand prize should go t the guy who prop(>Se6 not just a moratorium on aJl 11ew laws btl an aetlvt C)ffort to npe1J a .t man~ ot Lhl exlatin.g laws. Until then, Mangers gets the awn for a good try. object heading our way from th Andromeda Guloxs;. Jnlth1lly. the)' lnformod mt that lt would mtu OU{ planet by uveral million m1k!S. I wlll not bore Ye>u at. Uua point with a ddlailod ex- planation of their mathematlcnl mi11calculaUon. Suffice It to say lM)' aoolatt. "Bl.It I'm hoppy to uy that the object hat now been ldenliCitd 111 nothing but. If common, or· dlnary pepperoni pina. And 4' know l s peak for evtr)h Athttkan whon I UY I Jove: plm and JICtpperonl II on of m,_. favorttet. Slie 'Turns People On' ,. X-Rated Actress Retunu to TJ1 'Gong Show' By JA. \' SBARBlJTJ' HOLLYWOOD (AP> There b a bastion of talent on NBC culled "The Gong Show." The host. Chuck Barris. alwayb ii. introduced by lovely ladies. One ls Carol Connors. She is no ordinary in· troducer. She was the nuri.c in "Deep Throat", the noted film that was extremely X-rated as ll showed grunting and groaning ladles and gentlemen doing that which ca~;cs a rating of X. A SPOKESMAN FOR BARRIS i.ays she made her 'Gong' debut lust yeur as a singer-dancer. She didn't wln, but often returns as a guest lntropucer and will return Feb. 22, 23, 24 and 27. Ms. Connors blonde, blue-eyed. clad ln a low· cul red jump suit. sp<>ke in a soft Jow voice at her office here about her career and her debut on the Barris show. Of the lutter. she said: "I was awarded nine p<>rnts by the two men judees and two points b y Ja y e P . Morgan. one for each • . . bo1>om .. Ms. Connor:.. 23, :.u1d she's from an Army family, was born in New J ersey and raised in Fort Worth. Tu . und Fort Dix, N.J . She was asked how she got lnto a Cilm such as "Deep Throat." SHE SAID IT BEGAN WHEN she was 18, vacationing in Miam i. Fla. A photographer s aw her on the beach and told her he could gel her work as s model.Andhedid.shesa1d Then she continued. ··one day he called and said, 'L have :.omc friends down from New York who are putting to~ethcr a movie and what do you think?' Andi s~ud. 'Wow. me in the movies.'" Did he explain the nature of the epic? "I found out during the interview," she said. 'And one of the men involved In the picture said. 'Oh, honey, don't worry, you're going lo look ter· rifle In tha t nurse's uniform.' I was awfully nervous "I JUST WANTED TO BE m tt)e movies. I -.",,..,...,•J,l"·l'.!tiiliiiftiil THE GOAL IS to pro- vide some 25,000 jobs for men and women aged 16 through 23 who are out of s chool a nd un- e mployed. The work will be an national parks , fis h hatcheries, recreation areas, wildlife refuges and r anges. Pay will be $2.65 an hour with selected crew leaders receiving more. officials said. And the jobs will Jast up lo 12 months. I 'I I'•· • , ROBBER'S TOO UTE S EATTLE (AP > Masked gunman No. 2 was two hours loo late. "He couldn't believe that the st.ore had been robbed two hours before a nd that what he was asking for was gone," police said. When pharmacist Frank Roe convinced the second robber that AMMOUMCE.MEMT: II you ere 1 rnai. °' .. mei.. hew en lntertlt In .ne !paramedleal or ..,..,"4, fields. Ind 1f yOU 11• unemployed, on W91fate or • veteten. you may IM ellgtble to treln for ont ol th• followlng programa; * IM•a•teY MIDtCil TICHMICIA.M * Ol'laA~ IOOM TICH. (Accredlt9d by the A.M.A ) * llSNATC>aY ntlaAf'Y. TICH. I * LA WYBtS ASSIST AMT CALI.HOWi 1714) 547-0305 AwmucAH COUMI OJ rA~A\. 1.m...isc.-.cn ltoOM. •OADWA'f , • UMTA AMA. CA tl706 Let Roger'• florist help you ebow your .weetheart that you really care by aendlng an elegant PROSPECTIVE can· the drugs he was de· didates for the ;obs manding had already s hould \iPPIY through been taken he settled for ~M.ENTINE'S their state employment substitutes and Oed . offices and department ·---;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-• officials ~aid preference A.nOINIY A.Ta.AW BOUQU.,._. will be given to persons IA &;, A• who live in areas whe re BANKRUPTCY $95 ~he unemployment rate DIVORCE sgs 640-6774 is 6.5 percent or more. ,.09.,.,G\ltr..,• Bes ides the Interior uncontested S<NIJC>.quln •• M1KA111t11 .. N~ Bt..ch9•m·flP"' didn't even know what kind of movie it was. As a matter of fact, I didn't even know they had those Department. the depart· 640.2507 ments or Labor and l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!:~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!L--=:=:=:=:==:=::=:::::::=:=::::=:=:::::::::.._; types of mov1ei., I was so na1\c ... "I guess the hardt.•s t thing for me to do was to take off my clothes m front of people I didn't know. But once I got pa:.t that. the rest was easy. And the r est is history " What's 1t hkc makin~ an X-rated movie? "W<.'11. •l's JUSI hk<' makm~ any other kind of film , only the action b !-tCX," she .,aid with a shy smile "That's the only d1ffrrcm:l'. It's hard work. it's acting and \\hat can 1 say?" "DEEP THROAT" PREMIERED IN late 1972 to mixed reviews from patrons and Police. Carol said she then began an act of song and dance, and played various clubs and theaters around the coun- try. She still does that. in addition to "The Gong Show." But she 11ays she 'i; stall 11n adult film thespi~n. A,.w~ A g r 1 c u I l u r e a r e 'DEEP THROAT' ACTRESS ON TV cooperating in the pro-r---:::======-----------.,,. Carol Connora on Gong Show gram providing both re- s i den tia J camps and pptical OPTICAL OUTLET (Formerly Rose Optical) and just finished "The AH-New Erotic Adventures of Candy" and ''Sweet Savage," cast in the latter as a Southern madam name of Llly Lovetree. She was asked about her future plans in the pe rforming arts. X-rated or otherwise "WELL l 'M A VERY VERSATILE pt>rformer." s he said. "I like to entertain in all areas or show busmess. My goal Is to turn people on whether through my s inging, dancing, acting or the ·Gong Show.'" Carol was asked if she considers herself notorious. She thought aboul It a minute, then fl ashed a saucy grin. "Sure.•· she explained. non-res idential work projects. ALCOHOUC BIAS NIXED NEW YORK <AP) New York has become the first city in the nation lo outlaw discrimination agajnst "recovered" alcoholics in such areas .cts employment, educa· lion and housing. M ayor Abraham Beame signed the measure into law. Outlet 420 I CAMPUS, llVINE llVIHE TOWH CENTER (Across From U.C.I.) •We Fill All Optical Prescriptions •Ha rd & Soft Contacts •Hundreds of Frames on Display Including Designer Frames. If YMI'••..... :? Ml11koHJ Qwtlty Stnke, 1• H011•1ty. L.ow Mc" (,:.1) / PIH1e ~ ... , ••• , •••••• , ••••••••••••• 8 3 3•2 8 8 7 '--I _;_,..~----.:....· ..;_· ...;.;;1· .. BlMINlPark . . . 510 South Beach Blvd. South of Linooln Avenue (714) 826·0381 1r&sssmc= Orange 622 F.ast Karella Ave. Co.aMea 2300 Hirbar Blvd. Harbor Cenmr (714) 549-3368 F.nall10 17031 Ventura Blvd. Weit Of Billboa (213)~ Main St at Beach Blvd. (714) 842·1451 4101iA'N.m~a~vd. Comer of Carson (213) 426-8874 North & W911t Valley 9143 Desoto Ave. atNontmff <213> 882-5912 West of Tustin A~ (714) 639·2441 w~ 6757 Westminster Ave. Westminster Center (714)~3387 Hollpood 7080 Holl~ Blvd. Comer L8Brea A<re. Slfa Mectil <:enter (213)~6307 •, •' '. ~ ··: t '. • ... A• OAJL y PILOT Deaths Ehewhere COLUMBUS. Ohio <AP) -Retired Anny Gen. R•bert S. BelgllUer, as. tbe only National Guard officer to command an army division during World War II, died Sunday at Riverside Me thodist Hospital. CAMBRIDGE, Mass. I <AP> -James Bryant Conant, 84, a former president of Harvard and the first U.S. am· Mondey, ,ebruaty 13, 19T8 bassador to the popular-HE'LL SPEAK OUT ly elected goverrnment or the Federal Republic __ c_a_n_d_ld_a_t_e_B_r_lg_,,g_s __ of Germany, dled Satur- day at a Hanover. N.H .• nursing home. SM~TVT'HILL..LAMI WISTC&.Jff CHAr&. '427 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa • 6'46-4888 Santa Ana Chapel 518 N. Broadway Santa Ana• 547-4131 -rtlEiCI llOTHHS SMITHS' MOlTUAH 627 Main St Huntington Beach 536-6539 '8KFAMILY CCM.OMAL FUMIUL HOMI 7801 Bolsa Ave WltS!minsler 893-3525 PACJ'4C VllW MIMOalAL PAH Cemet~ Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pacific Vtew Drive NewPor1 Cahlorn1a 644-2700 McCOIMICIC MOttTUAlllS Laguna Beach '494·941 5 Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Capistrano 495-1776 IALtz.alGHOM NBALHOMI Corona del Mar 873-9450 Cost• Mesa 648-2'424 _ •i:=oWAY .UY 110 Broadway Cost•Mesa 6'2-9150 PUBUC NOTICE 16 Draw. Academy ... .... . .............................. .. • ORANGE COUNTY I POLITICS I OBITUARU~C) BriggS EseheW~ 'fll"l th' ·" PUBUC NOTICE By O.C. HUSTINGS show her ~-' STOCKS I BUSINESS Monday~• CIOtdng Prices NYSE COMPOSI1'E . . • TRANSACTIONS Mondly. ~ ts, 1111 l/N OM.Y~OT A• U.t Pro1'1ded Not All lncoiiie May Be-Taxed Not ehrythlnu clusmes as i..xable lncome, aecordlni to Commerce Clearlnc Kc>woe, national reportln• authority on tox and business Jaw. M&n)' taxpayera rttelv• lncomu that is not taxable. CCH llsts some or these items: -ACCIDENT AND HEALTH INSURANCE proceeds .attributable t.o employee oontribUtioruJ. -AMuitles (t.o ex· tent of investment). -Bequests and de· vises. -Oama1,tes re· covered for personal in· juries or sickness · ( TAX DPS -Di s ability payments, but not for losa of wa,es. , , -Dividends on \an matured life insurance policies. -Dividends (up to $100). -Employee's death benefita (up to $S,000). -Gifts and inheritances. J -Interest on bonds of a state, city o.r other political subdivision Cexcludlng certain municipal bond issues. -Valueoflessee's improve~tstolessor. -UFE INSURANCE PROCEEDS paid on death ol insured. 1 • -Meals and lodging on the business premises and for the ~¥eoience or the employet'. For the value of the Jodg· Ing lO tie tax-free, the lodging must be accepted as a CCNJdl· lion of employment. -Old-age and survivon benfh\ payments under the Social Security Act or Rallroad Retiremen\ Act. -Scholarships and fellowships <limited where p{ent ~snot a candidate for a degree). reel· -Sick pay for persons under age 6.5 who have retired on disability and are permanently and totally disabled <limit~d to $100 per week). -STOCK DIVIDENDS O'R STOCK Tights, unless dis· proportionate, or in lieu of money, or on preferred s tock -Tax refunds (state or federal) of taxes not previous .. Jy deducted . , -Unemployment benefits under Railroad \Jnemploy·J ment Insurance Act or stale unemployment compensaUo~ laws. • -Veteran's disability pensions. -Workmen's Compensation payments. Ne:ct: Check deductl011' . Pressure on Dollar Drags Stocks DoUJn . . . • ·' ·' NEW YORK· CAP) -The stock market dttlinecf moderately today, faced with the news of renewed pre: ssure on the U.S. dollar's in foreign exchange tradlni. • The Dow Jones average ol 30 industrials was down l .S6 pointsto774.43. : ., Losers outnumbered tainers by about a 3·2 mW'gm among New York Stock Exeb&ftle·listed issues. : . Analysts noted that the market's mood was 1dso aub; dued by a new decline in the dollar. The American currency's weakness was blamed on ~ncertaint! .over a weekend meeting in Paris of the finance m1rusters of the United States, Britain, West: Germany, France and Japan. : News accounts noted concern among European finan; cial observers that the ministers concluded the meeting without issuing any statement designed to reassure cur. rency traders. SAUS NEW YORIC CAPI ·HY StO<ll Miff AllP<O• llMI .... ... ... ....... 1•.tl0,000 ,.,_•lovt dey ................ , lt,410,0DO w .... ..,., . ... .. .... ...... ..... 11,._,oao, Monlfl •90 • .. .. .. .. .. . .. .. .. • • 11,1~,0DO t::' ,~ ..... ·::::::::::::::: ... ~··!,.= "I" 1 io <Mi. .... .. .. .. .. • •• ~.no.o 1 77 lo .S.te .... ...... ....... 707,110,000 1'1• lo dele ........... , ..... etl,8'1 .. 1• W"AT AllUX 010 NIW VOIUC (API l I I . I AJOOAILY PILOT Chevrolet Monte Carlo .. Pontiac ' I • ~_____::_.JI : Olds~obile ese .. • • I I i t I car names mvaue. New car names crop up all the time. And quite often they disappear just as fast. rear-seat knee room. There's als_p more efficient use of trunk space this year. . . ... Third, as a group these ~-new 1978 mOdels show ; t an impressive 34% fuel-economy improvement over ~ 1975 models, based on EPA figures. And that's the kind of value you can easily appreciate. .. JI f ' -' , Finally, there's resale value. And while it's impossible ~ to predict what these cars will bring iri years to come·, 11 we believe that in engineering, styfmg, roominess and a I efficiency, these cars are designed to <?ff er resale value people traditionally look for in General Motors cars. . So, l<X?k. lfyou want value in your next car~ you owe it to yourself to test-drive some of the most popular names ~n automotive history. You'll also be following the lead of so many W>.Ple Who tfiink they~re the way tO go for 'v8. l INSIDE: •Television •Movies JESSE VASSALLO •Comics •Entertainment Monday, Febr~ 13. 1979 DAILY PILOT Vassallo SWims to ~ PARIS-Mission Viejo High student Jesse Vassallo, a 16- year·old student originally from Puerto Rico, set a world best in the 400-meter individual medley. Sunday in a 25-meter s hort course pool at an internatiooal swim meet. The mark does not stand as a world record because il was not done in a SO-meter tank. The flying Vassallo was trail· ing Hungary's Zoltan Verraszto on the first two legs of bis race, but moved up steadily lo win easily in 4:22.67. The Hungarian was timed in 4:26.07 and Alex- ander Sldorenko of the Soviet Union was third in 4:29.38. Also cl aimin~ a victory was Jack Babashorr: a former Foun· taln Valley High atar who went on to the University of Alabama. Babasboff stroked the 100· meter freestyle in 50.67, to edge Italy's Maure llo Guardici <S0.79) and Joe Bottom, the but· terfiy specialist from Danville (50.82). It was the American men's only victory in the freestyles. Babashoff, who was suffering from the nu earlier this week, cut more than a tenth or a second off his morning heat time to win the race. Two other Orange Coast area s tars sparkled in Sunday's venue-Mission Viejo's Ed Ryder and Margaret Browne of Corona del Mar. Ryder, a senior at Mission Viejo High, placed sixth in two events-the 400-meter individual medley and the 400 free. He clocked a 4:31.71 in the in- do, then came back with a 3:56.09 in the 400 free. Browne, who competes for the Mission Viejo Nadadores AAU team, as does Vassallo and Ryder, finished fourth in the 100-mel~r NrkstroJte at 1:06.lS. Cynthia Woodhead, 14, of Riverside, scored her third vie· tory of the three-day meet, set-ting a new U.S. short course rec- ord of 1:58.68 in the women's 200 m e t er freest y ~ e .. S ~ c s>Jl d World place went to Jill Sterkel of Ha· cleoda Heights, with 2:01.69, and thtrd Karen Diblaaio of Colum- bus, Ohio, in 2:03.54. Kaile Chun, Diana Kutsunai and Steve Tallman snatched three more wins to give the U.S. squad a total of six victories Sunday. M•N 100-MET&R FREI! -1 .......... M ......... •Nell) SU7; 2 Guardu<cl Cllelrl 50.7'; I. J. Bot· lOn CCen<o"'l JD.12. .00 INOO -I. Ve....,_ 1Mlu4ee Vie .. ) t:IUJ cwo.-ld ~c. old metli. 4:n .... Rob screclWN\ CFullerlon) 191tl; 2. Verreuko CH1U1940ryl 4,U .07; 3, Slclorfllk• (USSRI 4:tt.JI. Ottoen ln-<1'*41; 6 .• .,_.. CMl•lell Vletel 4:)1.71. -FRIE -1. ICrylov CUSSRI J:S1..U ewo.id betl, otel m.trk, J·Sl.S., Goodell, Mission Vlelol; t. R~lll CU&SRI SJSl.'2; a S.lnll!OV CUSSAI >.n..11. OtN1"5 llld-: ._ .. .._ CMIU!ee vi. tel''"'"· Best Desert Golf Leader Rogers Prefers · Isolation Role PALM SPRINGS CAP) -Bill Rogers and Peter Oosterbuis, two non-wi nners in their four years on the pro golf tour, have spent the week al the Desert Classic in virtual isolation. While most or the crowd and the television cameras have followed the so"-called "heavies," such as Tom Watson, Lee Trevino and Arnold Palmer and celebrities like former President Gerald R . Ford, House Speaker Tip O'Neill, com- edtan Flip Wilson and actor Tel- 1 y Sava la s, Rogers and Oosterhuis have been going about their business at other courses with empty galleries. Things changed today. They were the center of attraction for the gallery and the television cameras. NOSE TO NOSE-Denver's Dan Issel <left) applies tne pressure to Portland's Bill " Walton Sunday. in NBA action at Al'~ Portland. Denver snapped Portland's 45· game winning streak at home, 103-101. T he 26-year·old Rogers shot a 67 Sunday at Eldorado, one of four courses used in this 00-hole, S225,000 t9urnament, to give him an 18-under par 270 and a 2· stroke lead over Oosterhuis. ... ' ,Sports in Brief • Solomon Shocked By SwiSs Teen,.ager SPRINGFIELD, Mass. - Teen-age sensation Heniz Gunt· hardt of Switzerland, an un· seeded alternate when the Springfield International Tennis Classic began, won the $15,000 first prize Sunday by shocking top-seeded Harold Solomon, 6·2, 3·6, 6·2 in the windup of the $75,000 tournament. In the doubles final, the top- :;eeded team of Stan Smith and San Clemente's Bob Lutz won the $4,500 first prize by beating Marty Riessen and Jan Kodes, 8-3, 6·3. Mager Top• B i bb• ST. LOUIS -Resurgent San- dy Mayer capped a week of up· sets by toppling arch nemesis Eddie Dibbs, 7-6, 6-4 for the $30,000 top prize Sunday in the St. Louis Classic for his first World Championship Tennis tour event title. The 25-year-old Mayer, who had never beaten Dibbs in ll pro event, captured the cham- pionship with sharp placements. which kept his stocky opponent off balance. Na.,ratHov a RalUe• SEATTLE -Martina Navratilova rallied to defeat Betty Stove, 6-1, 1·8, 6·1, in the championship Sunday of the $100,000 Seattle stop on the women's pro tennis tour. JtfeE•ree rrt-plu MADISON, Wis. -John McE-nroe led Stanford to the ln· tercolleglate Coaches Associa· tion tennis team championship here Sunday. Mc En roe defeated Eric lskersky of Trinity 6·3, 6·3 in.the No. 1 singles match as Stanford nipped second place Trinity, 5-4 for the title. McEnroe teamed with Bill Maze to score a 6·1, 7-5 decision over Trinity's Larry Gottfried and Ben McKown in doubles. Sl\fU beat USC, 6-3, for third nlace. Streak a t23 NEW YORK -Guy Lafleur, Rejean Houle and Steve Shutt scored in a 3:01 span of a fbur. goal second period Sunday night, carrying Montreal to a 5-3 victory over the New York Rangers and extendina the Canad.iens~ unbeaten streak to a National Hockey League record- tying 2~ games. The Canadiens, who have won 18 and tied 5 since their last loss on Dec. 17, tied the mark shared by the 1940-41 Boston Bruins and the 1975-76 Philadelphia Flyers. .Provldenre, 8 1·5 9 PROVIDENCE, R .I. Forward Bill Eason dropped in a short jumper with 15 seconds Jell Sunday, giving Providence CoUege a 61·59 basketball vie· tory over seventh-ranked North Carolina. Tat.e.: Vow lt'ln• ARCADIA -Odds-on favorite Talsei Vous led all the way in wlnnin1 the $110,000 La Canada Stakes by four len1ths before a ralnsoaked crowd of 36,171 at Santa Anita Sunday. DePaol Stuns Irish, 69-68 SOUTH BEND, ind. CAP) Consecutive steals by quick· banded guards Clyde Bradshaw and Randy Ramsey and a l>asket by Gary Garland with three seconds left in overtime lifted 11th-ranked DePaul to a 69·68 upset of No. 5 Notre Dame Sunday and snapped the Irish's 22.game winning string at home. Notre Dame, which le<t by no more than one point until the overtime session, built a seem· iogly safe 68-63 lead on a spurt of 'seven straight points. A basket by Garland cut the lead to three, then Bradshaw, a 6·0 freshman, stole the ball and scored on a layup and was fouled with 58 seconds to go. He missed the free throw and Notre Dame rebounded the ball, but Ramsey stole the ball with 42 seconds remaining. Tile Irish got the ball back with 10 seconds left on a foul, but former Mari na High (Hunt· ington Beach> star Rich Bran- ning missed a free throw. Oosterhuis played at Indian Wells and went so unnoticed that he surprised everyone with a 6-under par 66, Including a b£u- mg 31 on his back nine, to go into the final round with a 16-under oar 272. Rogers, whose best effort last year as a second in the Kemper Open, said he preferred playing out of the limelight. "Personally, I used it to my advantage this week," he said. "Last year, I was paired at the course with President Ford and the rest of the celebriUe~. There are a lot or people, there ls a lot of noise, a lot of things going on, and if you don't catch yourself. it can certainly bother you. "This year, I didn't have to wo rry about it. It's atmost like a relief, really. There just wasn't as much pressure playing at the various courses this week." ( The 29-year -old Oosterbui , who had a second in the Cana· dian Open last year, agreed with Rogers. "We had about SO peo- ple today," be said. "On one day, we had onJy two -my wife and the wife of one or my amateur partners -and I was in fourth place. "I've taken advantage of play. · USF Star to Quit? SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -Junior forward James Hardy of the University of San Francisco says be is giving strong consideration to entering the National Basket~l Association's hardship draft .. Hardy, who suffered a broken thumb Friday and will be out of action about four weeks, told the San Francrsco Euminer 'in a copyrighted interview Sunday that he ls ~red with college basket· ball. "I want to move on to the pros if I can," Hardy said. "I want to play with the best whtte I can run more and do the thin1s that are meant to be done With a basketball. .. College basketball just bores me, with four·corner offenses, zone defenses and so many slpw players. I want to play against the 24-second clock, not four-corner offenses, iones and lousy officials who stop the game all the time. "I've filled out all hardstllp letters," the 6·foat·8 pleyer added. "I'•~ done everythlng but mail them in.'' Hardy, an all-West CoastAtblet.lc Conference player Jut year, bad averaged 18 points and nine rebounds a game prior lo his In- jury and has been a crowd-pleaser with a wide variety of slam dunks. Patt;mtDo May. Fight Main ing in the relaxed atmosphere with the amateurs, just keeping cool about everything," he said. "In fact, l almost lost a ball lo· day. He hit a tree and bounced out into the middle of the fairway. We were looking all over for it. That won't happen tomoi:row, with 20,000 people watching." Fourtll -IHCleU of Ille tO.flol• o.--t Cl•UIC: BlllRooers Ptltr Oolltr""'S Jtrry McO.. Tom Wal\Oll Denny Edwerel' TlmSlmpsott O.tvld Gr.i.eno C.neLllll.,. LOii Hlllklt Fenett Ferle<> Rn Cal-I ICtlttt Ferqus Aod FunHlll Gary GrOll _8obC)yWelret Rlk MIS~le Lee Trevino Aod Curl Fuuy Zoell.,. JC. SM.tel Sieve Vtrlalo Howarct Twllly Larry Nelton MlktMorley Bob MurPfly 1.tOllUd Tnom- lllll IC retrer1 WOo<IY 81eckbUrtl .JellnM........, MlkeMcCul~ l(tkllOArel l(ffll'lllZWI..,. Jey HaM I.ff Elcter Don Bies GrlerJOll~ Ol<k SIOCklon Jlll\W1'1t• 8111Calf .. PeCM JecobMn Tommy Aero11 Miiier 8arbH Jot Inman Hubert Green Paul Mor.,. 6t.41•1•1--VO 61-11....._tn 11*"4S--11' ,,..,_...n.-.n 1H1-6Mt-41~ 11•........-2n .... ~,,. 71........._,,. '1•7·10-11-27' 11-12 .... -11' 71 .... 71..,._27' ... n .1....-11' 73-JW,..._., 11.11 .... 10-no 70 .... 11·71-llO ... n.11..,._llO 1J•1·1'l..,_ll0 1'·1M1•t-2IO 61· 1"1 t-7~111 JO.JO.tt.12-111 ~::.-:~:~==· ... n .1we-m 74-lHS-73-211 ... 7 ... __ 212 10-71......,-211 1"1•1~ 1o.*1•1~ 11.n.n-m 10-1 ............ 10-11 .... , ....... 10-~J ........ , ... 1'W, ........ 11.,-.n_.. 73-71-71~ .... ,.,.,._21:S 'l·71-~2'S ... , ... ~ n.6M ... 12-aS 7'·71·10.70-tlS ,., .. ~ ~M•1~ 11·7Hl·71-u. 71-7 ...... 1'-1116 n .11.10-n-• .... DrelV Does It All; Hawks Cool Laken INGLEWOOD CAP) -John Drew said he felt especially good. The '6.foot-6 forward for the Atlanta Hawks made the Los Angeles Lakers feel especially bad. . Drew, a third-year National Basketball Assoc iation performer from Gardner-Webb, scored a career-high 48 poin~ Sunday night as the Hawks SW" prised the Lakers 116-103 at the Forum. Drew also grabbed 12 re· bounds, had three assists and three steals as the Hawks cooled off the Lakers. Los Angeles bad won four games in a row, 10 of ill last 12 and nlne straight at home. "I didn't ~ali&e I bad 48 points," said Drew ... I thought I ~ad more like 24 or 26. But I felt especially good, tonight. I got the ball a lot. When a player's hav· ing a good eame nobody can stop him." Drew made 21 of 33 field goal attempta. His 21 PQints in the first half led the Jtawki> to a 62·45 lead at the intermission. And when the Lakers drew to within six points at 94-88 with some seven minutes remaining, Drew heated up again as Atlanta put the game out of reach. March .. Thal was a super~t performance, one of the all~ ·greats," said Atlanta Cdll~ Hubie Brown. "He did it at·~ ends. He was absolutely ~ tacular, and the good thint111115 that be gave up the baJl. :·:: ATLANTA 11161 -Drew 41 M<MIBM.t( H-n 13. Hiii 2, £. JOllMOll 11, hiss t, T4'()I RelllM 10,0 .JollnsOnJ. l"'-11SJM711 .. --.• I.OS ANGELES CllXll -Oenllty 21, F~~ CIUl•J-"OM ~. Huelson t, NlaOll 2, Salft-1_1. AberMllly •• A-II 4, CMr 2 Tot•IS --~ 103. ·;;.-. Allente 77 31, U -.:.ii I.OS A"felft 1j JO 2t ,.... .. F<>11l..S 0111 -Rollins. T~ lout• -Al ........ l.OS An991fl io. Tecllnlc.tls -Allafll• ~ Brown. A -12 .. IS. :' * * * ~ West Denies ·~ He Suggested . .· Jabbar Quit ~~ ,. INGLEWOOD CAP> - Angeles Lakers• coach J~ West denied reports Sun night that he suggested, l Kareem Abdul-Jabbar that W consider qu.itling profesaioa'IJ basketball. • West slrongly criticized 1* Vegas oddsmaker Jimmy • Greek" Snyder, who said 50- day afternoon that West told A1>- dul-J abbar to either "play 91' • quit.I' .• Following the Lakers• llft.llS loss to the Atlanta Jfawb ~ day night W~st nifu ted Sny~ 1 statement. • • ' "He is a very Jau1bOJ• fll(ure,'1 West said of SGyd~ ' ''He bas no business beJn1 OI\~. air as part of the halfllat• ~· ·feature. •• ~ ''He hu lowered the credliU:: · ty of this lea11ue," added w-. "Ho runs around all the &n!llae t.rylng to Jet inlormaUon. If bit would bother to ask sources itJ· stead of relyillg on hearsay, it mJ1bt ~i•o blm •ome credlbWt,y-'' Snjdtr WCM"ka for CBS H~ Of Its liaJft.ime tum durtnt. tM wukly NBA teltc:Hll in addl· Uon to bls ilmUar role tor ..- nehttork during the Natl~ Football Lea uo acuon. .., , • .,. . ~... . .... .,.._ .................... , . . .... ----.... ' .. , ... ,. .. , ..... -IJ% DAil V PILOT ~. F9bruery 13, 1171 . -1 l Coast Area Teams .~Gain CIF Cage Playoffs Eleven Orange Coast area 1 high school basketball teams ·_\viii open action in the CJ F · .. playoffs Friday night in a far· reaching setup that finds only one (maybe two) playing other Orange County teams. Fountain Valley lligh 's Barons. two-li me undefeated Sunset League champions, must wait until Wednesday night to learn of their opponent-the wild card game survivor between Loar a (Anaheim) and host Dos Pueblos <Goleta). South Coast League champ Corona del Mar plays host to Sierra League representative West Covina. while Century · Le.llgue runnerup Estancia . '{Costa Mesa) hosts Los Altos, ;Waclenda Heights) High. ... , Xhree other area quintets, No. ~ t~ams In their leagues, drew -home assignments for Friday's ~tiff.a, all tentatively scheduled ~for-7:30. · "' Sunset League toughie Hunt· . bigton Beach hosts Citrus Belt 1'eague representative Corona ; Ca.Pyon (Anaheim ) High's bigbly respected Comanches are "at S.n Clemente and Mater Dei , fSaola Ana) gets a home tiff witb Buena High <Ventura). On the .road are Edison <Hunt· ington Beach) High at Long Beach's St. Anthony; Mission Viejo at No. l 'seed Ganesha High or Pomona in 3·A; and Capistrano Valley High's Cougars. Th~ Cougars. a free lance team assigned 1-A duty, are at Eagle Mountain High. Eagle ORANGE COAST ARIA'S ENTlltES ~Int 11-(Fr!Ny IM"'ll ._A UI-CM a> et St. Anl,_y Coron• 11 M~ INoKll I.Hr•~ Dos Puebto.11 f'OIHll•I• Vallo Bu•ne et_..,. Del • J.A West Cov1111 al c:.r-Ml Mar C•nyon 11 S.. C-Mlu1 ... Yleil 11 o-i>a Los All.,. •• EIUMll IC.ta IMM I 1·A Ca,htre•YalltY at E<19le Mou<lt•ln s .... 111<-• C11v1ry lllptl.t 11 HIHlllft9'0ft Y1llt'( Owl..._, C1pl1tr1M Yall•Y Cltrl•ll•ft II RIW•••O. CN1\- Mountain is located approx· 1mately 55 miles east of Indio. orr 1 nterstate 10 . In thl' small schools division. 1977 CIF runnerup Huntington Valley Christian (Newport Beach), the Academy League co-champion, will tangle with ns1ling Calvary Baptist (La Verne) at Southern California College; and Capistrano Valley Christian, in lhe playoffs for the first time, is al Riverside Ch,ris- tian. Among the 11 games involving Orange Coast area teams, not one is a rematch. The general scene at the CIF ocrice in 67-9 Loop Mark Awesome Record For FV Dynasty I• • · · The Orange Coast area has teen some impressive basket· ball dynasties. such as the Hunt· ington Beach High teams which .went 90-15 in the early 50's and the Marina High <Huntington .Beach> teams which won 20 or •more games for six straight years in the early 70's. customed to winning, it should welcome the coming or pro volleyball's Orange County Stars in the coming season. The defending IVA champion Stars will play home games al Fountain Valley High and have arranged to train at Los Caballeros Racquet and Sports Club on Newhopc Street in Foun- tain Valley. ..... Bot the latest dynasty belongs t.o Fountain Valley. which -has a Sunset League record of 67·9 ·over the past six seasons. MOR E FROM THE STA RS - By winning Friday, Fountain Wnt Chamberlain has been re· Valley notched its second leased from the remaining straight 10-0 league season. This season on his two-year contract record is surpassed only by Hun-and ls expected to sign with the ~ expansloa Seattle Smashers on Monday. The Smashers have also signed Gus Mee as a player and assistant coach. Mee played ror tbe San Diego Breakers last season, alternating as a hJtter and setter. FORMER BARON INJURED J -Ex -Fountain Valley High quarterback Gary Coleman, a ·:iing(on Beach, which went 14-0 back-up to Golden West QB Bill iwo years straight in 68-69. Holst last season for the 9·2 Rustlers. is recovering from sur· gery on his rii?hl shoulder. Norwalk Sunday was one of bewilderment as coaches searched out each other trying to get a line on their opponents. For the most part, previous scouting work was useless with such a wide scope used. There are three wild card games set for Wednesday night at 7 : 30; The 4-A issue is the Loara-Dos Pueblos duel; the 3-A tiff involves Santa Monica at Troy (Fullerton ) and Duarte is at Arroyo <El Monte) in 2-A. Top seeds include Verbum Dei <Los Angeles) in 4-A; Ganesha in 3-A; Rowland in 2·A; Banning in l·A; and Orange Lutheran in small schools. ._A Notre Oeme CIUI It Vet1)um Del Ill II Coron• 117-41 at H""41.....,. aeecll 114-71 B..el\I Ul-41 at MAI ... Del (17-71 l Otrlrl<t 111-71 11 ComPlon (II 0 E1>•r1l>owfr l14-91111(1tella 121 II 81\hOp A,.,.I 114·101 •I Ntwt>ury Perl< 11).11 EdltOft Cl4--9111 St. Anthony CIJ.91 1n111ew-f1MI et ere.. Valley 121·~1 Oar11rd ( .. ltl It LB Poly 09-•I Mutr (ti II e1 AflCll1nclS 117·11 S.rr1 CU •I •I Slr"'t• (tt-31 Cvprou (u.71 e1 Venl&lr• llJ.11 Lur1 114-tOl or ~ Pueblos (11·131 al ~-t1lft Yeller llMI Miiiikan It). IOI 11 Mornt1>9slde 113 JI l.oyol• Ct•-ll et.Simi V1llty (U-tl MurPflv (IJ.tl M ,.,_,,. 121..:11 S.A MIHllll Vlelo OS.let et G•n<Khll nJ.JI Riv. Poly 11•s1 at Burn>uvM (11·~1 Domingue• 112·101 at So, Torr. 11HI S.nt1190 11 ... 1 et El Moden• (16-SI S1nte MoNta lt~IOI O< Troy 116-71 et Downey (JO.JI Cenvon 117-41 at $lft ~ 11J.•> RubldOua 112·tl •I Sunnv Hiiis llS.71 Ger•., 11s.•1 et eo .. 1,,. 119-41 Santa Ana 116-71 •I LM Aml90t UO·JI West Co.nn1 lt:Ml at UM llMI Burbank 111-101 at BrM 11•11 Upland 11 ... 1.-8..-. Perk (1411 LOI AltCK 121~1 at EttallCll 117·11 Val•ntl• <tt.-Sl oll Blair 111·111 Culvtr Clly 116-71 et Lynw-IU·•I BolW Gr-(14-tl at lllv. North IU·11 l•A Morono VetllY 114-tl et Rawlend (74-01 Meytelr ttHI at Coe<Mll• V•llo 111 .• 21 Ou•r1e 19-121"' Arrovo (IS.101 •t Ont•rlo (16-71 Arroyo Grande 117·SI II $8119US 117·S) Centrel tt).61 •t S... -•no 11.._.I Sanle Oera llUI el Whlttl« 111 10) El Mont• It-IOI et k tltl-(19-31 WorkmMI 114-7) 1t Vl<ICK' Velloy n1.2I A11our1 1•131 at CAii High 121-21 Appl• Vell•'f Its.ti et Ati. Loft>• Cl4•11 Indio (l"'I at Schurr ltHI • C1t>rlllo (17 SI et CMlvon (19-31 s1err1 Vim (1'-71 at Peremount 11a.s1 Ant~ V1fl•Y (IJ .. et AIGfltl!I (11 .. ) N.,.,.las 115-1) at Temple City 11 .. SI Sl•rr• CIMI at a...nnet Islands t "·JI 1·A Doart 117-41 at 8-lnlnQ t1•0 Cetl1>1lrl1 (1-111 et LA Lu!Mrlll (tS.61 Hawthorne t•lll •t Mlf'shell 117-1) Bos<o Tech (16-71 tt lllg Bear (16-JI AqulNs (11·101 •t l.-IUl"ll., (Jl-10) Brethren 114-71 at lmcoeri.I 110.101 St JOH!lll CIJ"'I 11 C.rplnltrl• 11 ... 1 Ttllach-.>I (IS.1111 C.t-et (:t<MI BrentwO«t (10-111 at ValleyQlr. IJ0-.11 •1 .. udera 114·11 •t l'IUmore (II·" C1•ltlra• YlllltY (17 .. I at 1!99le Mountain 111·11 Eis1nore t•11I at Notro Oerne (Aly.) 117~1 Perris ( .. 111 et ~le tlt>-111 Cal• l,_4) It $ente YMl (14-11 SI. Monica (IS..I •• Mont<l•lr Prep 114-•) SI llorwivenlurt. (f.tJ>et BllllOp (20-IJ Small SchM!t South Bay lllCIC. (~21 •I L"t~ln (Or""1191 11·4. LH VlnlnQ (1-9111 Amer. Ow. 114-71 ,Et P .. o de Rotllet (4-S) •I Cuyam1 (1~1 St. Mlchlels !Ml •I CllectWkll 1•121 Tri COUftly No. Jet Pl"ovldence (17 .. 1 OonLU9Q IWlat0.k-11 .... 1 P1tlllc Ov. (1MI et Big Pine llMI Calvuy BaclCI~ (11·11 II M-11111* Yelloy Cllrlttla• UHi ca11111r-Yen.., aw. 11s.s111 Rlwrlfde Olr. 12~!!,, 8am 'r"'e OHi et Serrano 11Wl IS.I.I Maraf\..,,_ (11,..1 et Vfll-v• llMI Luth L1V..-.. 110.101 el He191115 L"UI (t.,I Har1>0r Ov. (12 .. l •t Avaton ll:M) Twin PtftH !1·Jl 11 5.tn J.c:lnto (" .. ) CrouroadS (11.7) et Owens Vellev 18·7 I Tri County No. 2 at P1Sld&M Poly ( 17~1 JiE DOESN'T LOSE -Foun· Oln Valley forward Roger tllolmes hasn't lost a league 1'aske tb'a ll gam e since the •el'enlh grade. Holmes rtnisb ed bis blgb 1cbool Sunsel League career wUh a <t'l·O record. The only teatn with Holmes on Us rost.er tbat lost a league game was the Ut$ JV unit, but Holmes was ln· Jared for that game and didn't ault up. Drags Washed Out Wlits Owted: Mesan Beaten Mike lsraelsky Is the only athlete who played on every team with Holmes, so his career record Is a nashy 47-1. RECORD SETI'ER -Holmes went into hi s last league game Friday with a total of 508 points on tbe season, a school record. On Wednesday he passed the 482 milrk set by Dan Malane in 1973. Ma lane, by the way, is start· inf ,or the Untversity of Santa Clara now. CUAJWPIONS -E.e17 player ·on the Fountain VaUey vanity bH played ror a league cbam- ..... buketball team every 1ear of_ Na lalgll sdtool career. ~ 'bey ••t bow what ll'• like to flnlab anywhere but first place. ~alltala Valley bas won 11 of 2t possible leape Ullet on four lla11 levels daring the past Rve -~··· ..... 6P VOLLEYBALL -Sinoe f.qU,Ptaln Valley ls s o ac-.... . , ' POMONA (AP) -The Na· tional Hot Rod Association's 18th annual Wlnternationals drag races were scheduled to be com- pleted at the Los Angeles County FairgroundJS today but officials weren't optimistic. The final eliminations of the $326,000 event were postponed by rain for the second time Sun- day a nd immediately rescheduled Cor today. NHRA officials baited the pro- ceedings after t.be first round of competition bad been com- pleted. There are eight categories of competition. Race officials were hopeful that the eleht cham- pionships at stake could be de- cided tod~, but the weather forecast was for more rain. The Winternatlonala' final ellmtnatlons were ortelnally scheduled Feb. 5 but inclement weather at that time forced them tp be resche_duled for Sun· d ay. Pre-race favorite Don Garlits was defeated in hls bid tor an unprecedented ft.tth Wlnterna· tionals Top Fuel title when be Llost to Richard Tharp in Sun- day's opening round. Tharp's elapsed time was 6.05. seconds. His finishing s peed was 243.24 miles per hour. Garlits' elapsed time was 6.17 seconds. Lo~ elapsed time in Sunday's elimfuations was recorded by Kelly Bl'own. He clocked 5.94 seconds in defeating Jeb Allen in another first-round heaL Shirley Muldowney, the NHRA Winston World Champion in 1977, aereated Larry Sutton of Cypress, 1n bet first round heat. Her e lapsed tlmli was 6.0a seconds with a finishine speed of 240.84mpb. Don Prudbomm~ r ecorded the best elapsed Ume in the Fun· ny Car divlslon Swiday in de- featlnc former Wintematlonala thampion Ed .McCulloch. Prudhomme's time wa. 6.30 seconds with a finishing speed of 234.3'7 mph. Bob Glidden d efeated Lee Hunter of Costa Meaa in llrst beat competition In the Pro Stocks division. Glidden'• elap$ed Ume was 8.56 secon<f:;. BASKETBALL/ /MISCELLANY . JOHN CARSON Player of the Year Katella Tops Poll South Coast San Clemente High's John Carson, who had the size (6-6) to rebound with the best and had the quickness and agility to play guard on offense. was selected as the South Coast League basketball player or the year by the Daily Pilot. Coach or the year honor~ go to San Clemente's Richard Skelton, who guided the Tritons into the CIF playoffs in hls first year at the helm. Carson, who capped a briWant two.year varsi- ty career with a league-high and school record '2 points in Friday night's finale against El Toro, also captured the scoring crown with 281 points in 14 games. a 20.1 average. He was a master or con- sistency, scoring in double figures every game. Skelton guided the Trilons to an 11·3 league mark after an 0-2 start. San Clemente finished second in the standings by winning 11 of its last 12 Katella (Anaheim) games. High 's Knights, un-League champion Corona del Mar landed a def ea led Em Pi re total ol three players on the two five-man units. Le a g u e basket b a 11 The first team selection was junior euard Dave champion& and possess· Koehler, who scored 165 points In the fint 10 ing a 22·1 overall record, 1ames before being sidelined with an injury. captured all of the first Two other underclassmen graced the first place votes again as team, El Toro's 6-4 sophomore forward Ron Orange County's No. 1 Holmes and Mission Viejo's 6-1 junior a uard Pete prep quintet following Decasas. Roger Poirier of University Jlilh the last set of regular <Irvine) rounds out the squad. season games. Poirier, who s•t out one game, scored 267 The Knlgbts, on their points for a scorinf average of 20.S. way to the No. l spot, Holmes scored 258 points, had just one tame were victorious over No. under 10 points and scored more thaq 20 points a 2 Fountain Valley half a dozen times. ( 8 9. 7 5 >, No. 4 Los DeCasas, who missed two of the Diablos' first Amigos (Garden Grove) four games, was instrumental 1n lejldlng the (71-58), No. 5 El Modena. balanced Mission Viejo team into the CIF playoffs <Orange) (80-53) and .as Ute No. 3 entry. He bad a 15.4 scoring averaee, twice defeated No. 9 Including 25 in the· season finale victory over Cypress 1n league play. Laguna Beach that clinched the playoff berth. * * * ORANGE COUNTY TOP 10 BASKETBALL POLL Poa. Team Points l. Katella <~·l) 60 2. Fountain vty (19-4)52 3. Servile (19-3) 49 •·Los Amigos (20-3) 40 5. El Modena (16-5) 33 6. Canyon (17-6) 17 FlntTea• John Carson, San Clemente Roger PoiJier, University Dave Koehle'r, Corona del Mar Ron Holmes. El Toro Pete DeCasas, Mission Viejo SeeoadTeam Chris Goller, :qana Hills . J eff Burden, COrona del Mar Shawn Ahearn, Corona del Mar Randy Smith, Laguna B~ach Rick ReidL El Toro 6-6 6·S 6·0 6-4 6·1 6-3 6·1 6-3 6·1 6-2 Sr. Sr. Jr. So. Jr. Sr. Sr. So. Sr. Sr, 20.1 20.5 16.5 18.S 15.4 17.5 10.3 12.8 17.9 15.3 Tars Host Net Event Up and coming high school players. Pilired with veterans 35 and ove): is the setup at Newport Harbor Hlah where the first Newport Harbor High Tennis Boosters tourtuu:hent is slated March 11-12. The tourney ls open lo au interested partres, male and female, wlth .each doubles team con- sistlni of an adult (35 and over) and a Junior. Separate tournaments wil1 be held for juniors ·age 14. 16 and ~8. · The · entry tee is $12 per team and entr,y blanks are llVa1'able at the 'student stote on the Newport campus or at various tennis clubs.• Further information can be obtained by con- tacting tourname nt director Ray DeMott (675·2871). Entries close F~b. 28. Yogi Berra played in H World Serles for tbe New York Yankees. 7. Estancia (17-7) 16 The Cincionatl·Mlami, E:UW"JR !VtGGETT MARI. 't'N GUST 8. Brea OS-7) 14 0 h I o a n d U C L A • 9. Cypress (13-8) IO Southern California foot· 10. (tie) Mater Del (17-'l) "ball rivalries are over a Valencia C16·5) 7 Vic~ry Bell. Tra-veIBag Ml. TlO(ETS • T~ .. CRUISES Ha Birthda Ev Gust : February 13-19. For seven days and two nights. one of th e richest. most exciting tennis tournaments in the"woofit-the American Airlines Tennis Games~will be held at • Mission Hills Country Club. L .t Brian Gottfried will be defend- ing his titie aga1nst stars like Bjorn Borg, Arthur Ashe, Roscoe Tanner, Harold Solomon. Raul Ramirez. Terrific tennis, serving a worthy cause. All proceeds go to Desert Hospital Foundation. Get your tickets at any Mutuaf Ticket Agency (call 213-627-1248). Orea/I CHAR~IT toll free 800-223-1814. And you can use your American Express card. The American Airlines T,ennis Games. Don't miss it for love or money. I~ ti A!ll~rican . ~ Airlines Tennis Ganes BASKETBALL I MISCELLANY Sports Calendar ......,l,.tJI G•fl• -u~ T-n• -t (Miu ... Vlei. ¥S H_I,....., lltl<ll I. JI p m ; O.r0t11 GroYe *'fftO (...._, H .. -.r v• AUier Oel ' IS P111'1., Corona clel -v• lll•llop Am.I or South P•Wde"41, 1:30. '-*•(-'41 SwlmmlftQ-Mluton c-1.,.....:e •tllyi 11 ~ .. NWOrtlllO VtllO co11999 m Ttllllh -otMIOe CoHI •t S.d· df.0.Ck ColltOt, F111i.n011 411 Golden Wiii ColltQe (llOlll1111. ll••••ttMlll-<lcllclefl w .. 1 Coll-.. , LA So</l"-t' 11:301; Ctl B•Pllll el ~Iller" CJlllfoml• Gont0t Ill lluebe11-Souther11 C•l llornl• Coll• •• Oii 5t• (l.Dnl lle1c111 ft•JOl· UC Irvine At Cat Poly Pomon• (2 lOI. Tr•cl<-S.ddl ... <~ Coll"9• at ColltQO Of llW Otwrt 111v1i.u-1 12 p.m1) Glrls tteld '-k•Y-CIF pt1yoll• lflr\I rounlll. Glrh wsuti..11~ Buell at San Ci.rnonte, Mlulon Viejo •t 0•1\f Hllll, l!I Toro 81 Unl .. nlly, Coron. dtt Mar •I 0.,ta Nttw, Lii WllloOfl at Edi.on, Ctolit•-Vallty at Ocean View 1111 •I J UI; --1 H.,l>Or •I S.nll-(• 301; lleillel OwlillMl 11 Liberty Chrl•lilln, Htrlt~• at Huntlntton Vollt'f OWlsll.,. Cbotll \' 3 301, Glrh tennis-UC lrvlno 11 C•I P<>ty Pom011• UI, l'ttr<e 11 GotdOll Wt>t CotltOtlU W......,ylF ... UI 8Hkllbf41-()rM>Oe C.0.il ColltQO • , Sin Olt90 MeH (1 30). Sad· dleb.c k Golt-•t Citrus Cao-Ill. Swlmm1119-Costa MIU al Vnlve,.lly, YOUN 8t<Kh al (.orON dtl M•r. o-Hiii• •• Mliilon v1e10. £1 Toro al ~ Clt...,.,,lt, EdllOn •l Hew00<t HarllOr, HunUnqlon 8 .. <11 at WtUmlr1tlM, E•tan<.11 et Santa An• Vl lltY. M1r1n1 II FounC•tn v111ev. Ocean v-•• u Quint• C1p11Crano v.11.., ,,. cr vlM Hl9h at ~Ila to bo dtlarmlned Call at 3 UI; Oran9a CM•I Co0191, Colrus •I S.nl• Monlt• Golleot ()!. Tennl$ EHi LOS A119et11 cc al Sad<ll tl>I< k Gol 1 tOt l2l. Area Girls In Playof!s U n ive r s ity High <Irvine) has drawn the No. 2 seed and a bye in the first round or the girls CIF field hockey playorrs. which begin Tuesday. Other Orange Coast are a l ea rns in th e e liminations include Edison <Huntington Beach), Missioo Viejo a nd e ither Newport lla rbor or Huntington ·Beach. Kennedy (La Palma) High is at Edison 'l'ues- day. while Mission Vl~jo will host either Hunt· 1ngton Beach or Newport Harbor, de- pending on the outcome or today's Sunset League galJ)e between Marina <Huntington Beach) and host Hunt· ington Beach. The second round i~ Friday and the finals, a~ Lowell High (Whittler) are slated for Mar. 4. fllrstll- Sonofa bY• .A1u\a a& ~ Park l(tnMdy .C , .. _. SA Valltv •I O.'dtn Grow Cotton~ Balc!wl" Park at OnlMIO Hu•th,ttu Bt.cft or Newport "•rl>or •I Mb1i... Viejo Footlloll bye La 11abr• bff 8onll• at Tustin C1artmonc ti L-t Chultr O.M bye GlldSIOM at Kotallt WMlmiMttr bve Clltlfty at 5anU- U11tnnlty •ve Steve Trum~ who e 23.4 scoring average l~ the El Modena Wch COrange) Vanguards to the Century Leacue b .. ketball e~am­ pionship, has b een Pro Cage, Hockey Standings NalloHl BMUIMll A•-l•tlotl •UTallN CONf'UUENCa AttMU<OhlllMlo W L Pct. GB Pllllacletpllla ,. 16 .. ,, NtW York .. ,. .Sit ,.., 80SIOft Cf JI .:167 16' t 8uflalo 11 J2 .J.17 17'• NI• JtrllllY 11 42 .m 2S c.Mra!OI~ <;an Antonio J.I 19 W••hln9ton 17 U New Orl .. M 26 2t Clt~eland H V ~llanC• U 2t tlou•ton 20 l3 ... , .Sit 6') ... 1 ••• .... •.. .... , ,,,, .l77 .. WUTlllN COHFllllNCI MiNot4 Olvbleft Denver Chl<ll<JO Mllw•uk .. 011 .... 11 K•MH City Clldoln• a. 20 29 21 ,. 11 24 1' 21 ,. 20 J,.I f'a<lllC Olvl6iea Porll•nd 0 t PllOtnl• 36 16 Sa•llll 2t H Los AnttlH 27 27 Golden Stalt 27 2B S4Mrt'•Sc- .uo .Sit 6 .soo 7 .tll ''" ,., !lit) .no 1• .12• .m '"' .531 1'\1 .500 "'" . '91 17 Mllw ... kat .. llcKIJO<I, POd. \now New Jen.rt 112, New Y-110 Pllll-Cpl\la 10t, S.atllt" lndl•na 111,Clll~'14 K1nw1 Cltv 101, Cl•vtlaitd • Denver !OJ. PofUand 101 Pl>olnl• m. WHhlftQlon IOt Houston lit, NIW Orleant 112 Atlanta 116, LOS Angetes 103 TMitlM'tO- New Jtrwv al Otlroll T ...... I~ Saatlle at Wlalo New YOtk el Cltvtl-Phlladttpltia at lnOIAN New Ort._ al Chi~ HOullOll ti Kansai City Washlnt1on a1 Otnver Boston at Gotdtf\ Slate 5an AnlOlllo .t Los Angelu PllOl•lw at Por'tt- 8oit ..... 811ff1Co Toronto Cltvtland 211 130 m 1:n IM 1•1 Ut 110 CAMPlaU C0H'llllNC(l f'oltli<k OMfllll NY l1l.nolnl3 12 ' 75 Pllll-IP"ia J2 11 10 1• Atlanta n 21 IJ S1 l'IY Aaf\te" II 21 10 .. SmylMOIYb* no us 21• ™ 1n 1eo MO "' Chlu90 V•n<ouver Colorado Ml-ta St. Louis ,, 11 " ,. '" 1n I• 11 13 •t UI 215 11 2t lJ l7 161 201 12 35 • 30 ,,. 211 11 " 7 2t '" ,.. ._......_. c°""-.o>..-al 111e1 Naw Y-1.....,..1. C-1-2 (tit) Allantt 2, Ollc.evo t (111) Oetroll 1, VllKouvtr J Phllodetpl\la 4, Wosllllt(llon I Moll1rtll 5, New Yorti: A4"'0ifi) 51. LOUii al ~Ion, POd· tllOW TlftltM'• 0.-1 Toronto at 8uffalo T-y'10-S v •ncouwr al Watftll>Qlon C11lt•to at PfltillwGll LOii Al'9fltS •I NY CM~ Basketball Porlllftd 12, SMllll 71 C2 OTI 01P..,I ... ._,.. O.me 61 COT) Provldon<• '1, _,,,Carolina~ Pr lnctton IO, llr-n 65 Cotumbl• 11, Harvard •2 CCNY 122, e.tucll Sol A colorful plant for bedding or pots and a great gift item-all 4• pots, assorted colors reduced 403. LimJti!d to atodc on hand through 2/19/78. selected player of the the El Modena squad on year in lbtlt rittuil u.nd the first unit is Jell York bis coach, Bill Ervin, ia while Steve Loni g~ned the coach or the year. a place on the sttond Estancia's Eagles team. <Cowta Mesa). second Santa Ana's Herman place finishers ill the Brown joins the two league. placed Jim from El Modena and Price and Doug Jardine Estancia on the first on the first team com-unit with teammate Jim piled by the Daily Pilot. Galla a second t.eam sele Joining Trumbo from Uon . All·Ceotury League Basketball First Team Player,Scbool Steve Trumbo, ~I Modena Jim Price, Estancia Herman I3rown, Santa Ana Doug J ardine, E stancia J eff York, El Modena Second Team Ht. Yr. 6-8 Sr. 6·3 Sr. 6-7 Sr. 6-7 Sr. 5-11 Sr. Jim Galla, Santa Ana . 6·8 Sr. Sr . Sr. Sr . Sr. Joe Edwards, SA Valley 6-3 Jerry Larson, Tus tin 6-4 l\I ark Garvin, Villa Park 6-3 Steve Long, El Modena 6-1 1,2 Let Avg. 19.5 18.7 16.5 19.5 16.2 16.7 19.2 13.6 14 .0 10.5 • Roger'e Florist help you ehow your sweetheart that you re.ally care by sending an elegant WE LEASE ANYTHING ON WHEELS AU. POflULAI MAU AM> MOO& CARS Gnd UCIS 24/38 Month Maintenance Plans Available Free loon cars to lease customers. THEODOR~ ROBINS LEASING CO. 2096 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa, 540·8211 or 642·0010 ORCHIDS For a unique and gorgeous gift we suggut an orchid from our spectacu1ar collection of com· mon and rare varieties including Cymbldlum. PhalaenopUs and CattJeya. .. PICTtnous lllSINass MAM• STAT9MIN'f Ttw IOllowlft9 I*'-ll 1110i11t bull ...... t ""A WHT "CAl.'f9"S, 504 N, Newport Blvd., N•w•or1 8uc11, C.fl~nl• Jolln LaMo•t1011e, lOI Onya Strfft, 9•1-Ill-, Colllornl1 t»tt Thll llV\1-It c~i. by an lfl- .. .-kl\Mll. JolMLa~ TM• 1111-1 was Iii.cl wctft tllt Cou11ty Cl•l'I< Of Oren91 County on J enuary :No, 1'11. f'N* Pulltlahecl Cr11191 Goait 0.lly Piiot, J111. JO 1n0 l'eo • n 10. 1t1t )06.7! PVBUC NOTICE NO"r1ca ro c11eonoas SUf'ElllOR COUT 01' TN• nu• Of' CAL ... OltNIA FOii T" • COUN'fY O' OtlANGl NO.A ... IQ E1lalo ol GEOllG• CLARK llAMSAY au CLARK RAMSAY, Df<Hsocl. NOTICE IS HEllEllY GIYl!N to Ille c.-ldltors al,,,. -.o Ml'Md dKedlf\t IMI all .-rsons 11a111119 clllms aeolnst Ille .. Id de<ldtftl ... ,..quired lo lilt lllem, wllll .,,. nKtUllty VOUCllttl, In Ille otllce Of IN ctorti of Ille abO .. 111- tlt ltd court, °' to prtwnt tllem. •II~ Ille neouary -hors, to lite un dt,.l9nld •I Ille Offlu of GEORGE C. ZACHARY, 11-ltld, ~yer and Su•man, _, Wllllllre 8ou1tvard, e.111rty Hiiia. Qtllloml•. wlllcll Is Ille ptau ot ~,_,Of Ille undlr1'11M4 In •Ct melltf'S PH'tllnlng to , ... estate Of uld d•~040ftt, within tour months aller the llnt publlUtlOll of thl• ~. Eebawy t:J_. 1078 DAILY PILOT aJ PUBIJC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUS iUSINISS N~a lTA'f•MaNT Tiit fOll-11111 ,.,_ Is dDlftO busl· ...... ., TltANSNATIO.. llEALTY, 111S SMtlM TWl'aco, ~ clol MM, CA mas Sut.,_ llToughttfl, 1t1S Seifq Terrace, eor-c1o1 ~. CAt2tlS Thll ~· Is conducwet 11\1 M lfto Clhfldual. Sui-BtOUQhlen Tltll slat-wn 1119" with Ille county Clttll of Oranee Gowtt" on Ftb. t, lt1'. f'VLOP,~ON, BUllNS a Mt1Cln1uc. 41 .. Mec.Artllw .._ New..-. leNI\. CA "'6a Publ 1"1od Oraneo coest 0111, Pllol, Feb.•. u, 20, 11, tm PtJBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC N&rlCE IM1'U$ C"""' SUPEltl~ COUltT Of' Tiii fltffll IT A Ya Of'<M.l~ltNIA f'Oll PICT11l0US IUStNan THI alUNTY OP o ... o •. nollu. ------------ NAMll S'fAT9MaMT fM. ~ Tiie fotlow1"9 ,,.,_,ere clolnt NOTIC• 0' "&AltllfO Of' OateclJWtuerv?S, 1'71 OONA~OT.RO$£NFELO Jl'IGELLtOnwcn C..-uton Of Ille Wiii of Ille -Nmed 0.Cldent Ol:OllGE C. ZACHAllY llOS•Nf'ILO, MaYall a SUSMAN -1 Wlltlll,.. .......,.,.. .. .,.rly Mills, CA •1t Ttl: (ltJIUt_.,.. A ..... ,.~ Pubt11Mc1 o. ... eoeu oauy Pttot, J•n. 30 and FA 6, tJ, ». 1m J».71 PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE 45~1'1 builnus •· f'ITITIOfll f'Oll PltOeA'fa 01' Wlt.'-AMElli'"*e PAINT CENTEll· ANO f'Olt t.eTTEl'5 TUTloM&N· COSTA ME:Sit.. JM f°'t t7Ut Street. TAllY ANO ..Ott AUntOltlt.t(Mp.t Uftltto.~#oew.(.allfornlat»Z7 TO AOMINISTaR UNOllt ., ... Kelt1' l.. JOftH, t.>t ShlllllOll INOlf'INOCMT it.DMINIS'f«ATIOll Avtn"' Garden Grovt Cflllor111a 01' lSTATaJAC"r, ~I • • E'l•lt Of HELEN E. DAAMAlf, •II• Mute Jonll tU1 ShenftOll Hl!lEN BARMAN, .... Hf;~iN Av 0 -G. c Ill I &:LVfllA &ARMAN, Otcoe.O. ·, .,.:~u•. .,._n rolll, • wn. NOTICE cs "4EA1!8Y GIVE~ \llAf Tiii• ~s It conduelld .-, 111.,,.. GEA ALOI NE BARMAN IC.NEIStllER IM .. porAted -lallon Olllff -a hH llled -eln a .-.uioft tor er-tt portnonlllll. Of Wiit -tor lu..tAne• tf ""••• l(eltlt l.. JaftK THl-H>l.trY Md !llr AutllofiHlljln lo MarWJonel Adf'lltnlstar -• t~l M • This , .. ,_ •• tlltd wJlll ttw mltllstr•n°" ol 611.C• ~ct. ~· county Cltfk ol Or-county on to wl\1<11 I• m•d• for fultl\tr crtbruary 7 1911 p1rtlcu11rs, end tl\41 Ille ti,,.._, ..... PllOl'ISSto...M.asc:1tow • • pta<• ot .... rll'IQ , ... ,_ ~-. ... se1tv1cas cor F•b"*'" 21, ,.,._ ot 10:• e.ftt., 111 1ttt NwtlltwahlA-..,. courc,_..ol ~.,_,. ""· 3 ot se11u a.u, CltHwtll.t tl1tl said cour1, .. IOO Clvk Cent.r Qri.,. IMrew .... ~f' Wnt, In Ille Coty of San,te Ana, ~111Mllfled er.,.. 0WKt Dally Pltot CJllltornla. ttll ' Oa\td ~ t, 1t71 ""· n.20.v-MM... ,,.,.,.. WILUAME.ltJO+tN, ~ -------------1 CollntY Cletll JOHN W. EllPl!lOING AUwCM9oer_..., ' PUBUC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE ------------·1-------------tll66J .... Yk-9'¥&. •..1 f'ICTITIOUS IUSINIU NOTICE TO C1'eOITOltS t.et ......... ~ -• • , N~IUTATIMaN'f SUf'llllOR C:OUll'fOflTNa Atl«M' "'; flWtllhNr • ' Tllo tollowlng ,..,_, Is dOlft9 llvsJ. STATI Of' CAUFOllNIA FOR PlllHKMd Cr-C:O.st OMl'l'-fl'ilet. ""' as: TH I COUNTY Of' OAAMOa February 6. 7, 11, 1971 THEMIOCTULLYC0., .. 12Poft ........ >* ,465-78 Clyde Or., Hunting loll 8t•<h,.. Estato ol SARAH llEltNSTEIN., -------------Callt0tnl1 Oe<teHCI. •· Mi(11a11 A. T11lly, •12 Port Clyde NOTICE IS Hl!AEBY GIVEN to Ille Or., Huntcneten ••ech. C•lllornla <redltoo ol t .. -named~ ~ 1"-t .tll Ptrtonl 11.tvlllQ 'lalmt 19tlMt T1'1s bvJlfteu 11 ~.., an ,.,. Ille selcl -.,. required to fllo dlvlclUAI • tllem. with .. N<Hwrt -"'"-In Mkl!Mt A. TUii" Ille office of ... Cler1I ol ""ecio.. .... Tltll Ital....,.. WM 111«1 with -tlti.ct ~. • ID,,_ tllef'lt. wltll County ccertt of O.•net county °" tll• no<Mwrt ..-hen, to llW u,.. Febr ... ry t, 1'71 111"l9ntd ot h office of Ja<ll E. 8ral• 1'"61f' ter, •4111 Wlbhl,. 81\'cl,, lle .. rly Hiiis, Publl"*I Oranve Col$I O.Uy Pltot. Calll0tnl1, wNCll IS Ille pit<• Of bvSl· Fob. ll, IO, V and Mer.•, tt7t MIS Of Ille Ullderlitned In .tll INIMt'I 565-1'1 pertalnlne to Wit ~· Of 814 ._ -------------ftftt. wltllin...,, montlll Alttr the tint PUBIJC NOTICE SU Pl lllOlt COUllT Of' THe STATE Of' CALll'OllNIA FOii TH a alUNTY OF OllANG• .....__," NOTICE o" MeAltlNO 01' f'aYITIOH FOii PllO•ATa Of' Wtl,~ AND LITTaltS THTAMIMfA•'I, 'Oft AUfMOltlZATIO .. TO •O• MINllT•• UND•• '1'•• INOePl:NOllN1' ADMINtST••'l-OM 01' llTATUACT. • ._,. put11lcallellallftl11Wlko. ___________ ..., PUBLIC NOTICE O•tldUNl-11---'!:..''" • E "•Hof JOSE~ .. liiE KA THI! AINI! HAU:, DotoMod. • PUBUC NOTICE ~-v C'°'"'' Admlftlllr .. rlxt>f Ille f1t.te0f 11·11496 SU ... ltlOll COUll'f O' THe STATE Of' CAUl'OllNIA FOii THl CIOUN'fY CW OllAlfGI .... A-9'S1'l NOTICI Of' MeARINO 01' P•YITIOM ~-~re OF WIU. ANO f'Olt L.anau tll'TAMIN· 'fAllY AMO f'Olt AVTtlOlllZATION TO it.OMIMtSTell UNOall THI INOaPINO«lff AOMIMIST~TION Of' llTATESACT. '""' 11'H410WNmld0oc141ftt f'ICTl110USIUSINHS ACK a .aMnalt . NAMaSTATaMENT A uw ~ The fol-Int peti<>nt are dol1111 Mtl WltsMfe ...... Wto lllt buslnHI n: ..-...ny Mllll. CA..,. HAllT'S Sl'OllTINO GOOOS, DI Tel: (ltJ),... Clfttw Sttwe. Galle Mele,. c.llWNe it...,_y tw ....... L _,. '2611 PUllll .... o .... Coelt Dally Pilot, AntltOny M. FrWt.k, nt $. Fartltft .... ,,. IQ, 21 end NW ... '911 0t1 ... Olamofld aw, Colltornl• Marearwt l.. FrMa, n1 $. Fel'tlell Drive, Ollll'IOnd lier, Colllornl• PlJBUC NOTICE Thl1 buSlt.-Is ~led 41'( o111 l~t--------------I 4MOll.tl. SUNlllCMI alUllT Antl'IWI>/ M. ~ STATE Oto CAU l"CMIMIA Tiiis ~ -llled wttlt .. CGUMn Of' OllAHO& Ceunty Ctn of 0rllf'l9A ~y Oft .... ,,..... , '•b<ueryl. ~---" None• Of' MlfMllfolf>NTtT10N ellOYElllSC-ClOltPOIUITIOM PO• 01toe11 APP6'MTIMe tit s.wt111...... TllUSTl:e 01' TeSTA ... MTARY A-.1111, ~ .-S HUIT lO ll'IU. VACit.NC't CAUHD NOTICE IS WEAEBY GIVEM·k GAAY KEHOE HAU. Nit lll«t ~ • '"""°" for PnlMI• ol Wiii • "'" '"'"'° o1 utton tos'-'l.wy IJt lttlle ,..tltloner -for --lot~ ''Id· minister undef" tne 1~ - rnlnlSlr .. lon of Ell.ti.ti Aet, "$• towhkll b ...... larlunhw 11111'11< .... -111•1 "" time ...., --cl lfto .,. .. ___ Mtfor~ll. 1'11, •• 10:00 a.m., In tftf ~ ... DIP9f'\IMflt No. 3 of said '41•111.'• }00 Civic! Ctnter Drive West, I" 1lle Clft of Santa Ana.cat~. Dated Fetinary 1. tf1'1 WILLIAM._ IM JOMIC.' c-tyClertl DOUGLAS l.. HAMILTON 11Ul I ...... eho&, So11tt M 'flKl~Ctt...,.af .. ....... tw: flWtl'- .· f'l;bl ltlltf Or ... Coos! Dellt Piiot. l"ellruary '-71 13, 1978 .411 E1t.ttaof.JOESTEELE,Otcenld. NOTICE IS "ellEeV GIVl!N IMI MAlllE L. '>TEEll! l(UllllATO" NS lllOd herein e petition I« Prdtlel Of Wiii onO I« l~M• of letters ta.ttamontary and l0t AutllOtitaClon to AdMillitllf UftCler the lno.pendlnl Ad- ml11lstralfon Of Etlatn it.<t. relereftCe to wlllCll I• m ade tor '"•lhtr ... rt1cular1, and th.IC Ille time and PIK• of Natl119 tllt umt hlS been M1 tor Fetin.ary 21, ttll, al •O 00 • m • In the court,._.. Of ~tnwnt No l Of Mid court .. •t 100 O v1c ~f'lttr 0 f1VJ1> Wo t, In I~ City ol Sdnld An• C<tlllornia UCllOW "°' mtt ...... w .... o•CUMATIOM Of" TltUSTEI. PulllltMdCr .. """'' Dallr PllOt, NAMED IM WU.L TO ACT •s•--------------Feb. U, 10, 21-MM .. 1971 TltUITae. PlJBUC NOTICE O•lld February 3, "" WILLIAM I!. St JOHii, CountyCltflt BllUNOAG! I llOStlMAN llOIEllT I.. BA.Kl!ll 1'UW.Ot~BIWC.,-.J '--' A_, .. CJllMwlll• Alt_.,.. tor: ""ltleooor Publlsllld eranoe c.o.11 O.hy Piiot, Ftbruarv•. 7, tl, 1971 PUBUC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUS IU51NEU NAME STATl_MINT Tfte toll-lllQ .-rson• aro dol1111 butlMHft. 8AINOER50N·Oit.ON COM· PANY, 1400 Quell Slreel, Suite JU, NIW-1 BolCll, CA '1'60 oao.. Cotw•llOfl, • Oelawere 'orl)Of'atton. l«)O Quell 51,..1, Suitt W, N-pOft .. .,.. CA,_ Gary llrlndenon, ttS Elfltr•lcl Say. L.tgUN1 a-11. CA ms1 Mtrte llrlnclenon, 1~ l!merold llay, 1.J19UM llMCll, CA m5 I This business ls <encludecl by • QtMtal pertMnhlp. OAON C:OA POltA TIC>f'I JMnHO Sloul,Vl<•·PtH. G#V erc-.on Thia st~ w• filed wllfl Ille Count\' Ci..1t ftl er.nee County Oft JM, tt, 1'71. 11 ...... ~.o.n.tt a1t111111c. Ott MKA,,.., ltfll, N-PM"t loadl, CA•-PubHSllod OraflQe to.st Oall" Ptlot, -----------""57'"'1.-·ZI £STATE 01F MAY OIEWEV SMITH •110 •nown es MAY O. SM(TH, Ooca•-· PUBUC NOTICE THIS NOTICE 11 rorwlNd lly 1-. ll'ICTl110USBUSINIU Vou ••• not '""'rod to._ ... Ill NAME STATEMIN'f court unless JO'l dftlre. The foll-1119 penon Is dOl"9 bull-NOTICE IS HEllE.BV GIVEN tMI neu 1l : OONA LO COAlllGAN hes llltd hlrelft CRONIN llOUTT ENOUAANCE" e Pellll°" For Order APPOlnlln9 HORSES, 4ff l!t llosque, La9une Tru'1• ol T~ Trust to Fiii BH<h, Collfornl• '2ol.SI Vecancy C..UWcl 1t1 Oo<llrtatlOfl ot Al'Qlly Cronin Routt. 4t.\Et flojquo, Tr use" Na,...._Jn Wiii to Act as uounaBt«ll,CAmjl Trvstot, ,.,..-.nll tt Whlcll ls i.-.tiy w1111 .... W.ldOfl Aoun. 4'5 a eo.. m-tor turtt. ~ut ...... -Nt qu41, uo-11oa<11. c.r11orn1a 91651 t,,. time..., pteo ot 11Hr1ft0 Vie wme T1tl1 b1.t1lMn 11 '°"ducted by • h111 been Mt'°" ~II•. 1m, .i t:oo tlAMf •I pot111trsltl11. •·I'll· In IN cour'I-al Otpertment 3 Wm. !bill, "40 of said <_,, • 100 CM< C.ftttr Orlw ""''' •Wt-WAI flled •Ith Ille WUI, '" lllO City •I 5•"'• Ana. County Cl-ol Or-Goulll'f on CallfomlL February 2 tm Oattcl ~'• 1'11 ' Af12' WILUAME ST.JO+fN. • Pvblls!lod Craneo c.o.ist Dally Piiot, C:OW.V OtR February'· ll, 20, v . 1971 *-1I Jaut1 '!:r~ L. l!Mt1on _____________ ,.," ..... ...-........... ,,. PUBIJC NOTICE ............ Cllltonlf•.... • Tel: mu .... ue. -------------1Att..Mrt. ..... ._.. Pvbllllltd er.,. t.Mst Dally Pllo4. hit. 13, ~ .. ,,,. Ft1t.•. 13,20, 11, 1t79 1-------------....,.._ PUBUC NOTICE fll·1141t IUPl•lbft CDUllT OP •• IT A Tl Of' CALI FOllNIA l'Olt Tl4E C:OUN'fY 01' O"Al'IO& ""-"· -·-.. MOTIC• ~ "IAltlNO 01" f'eTtTION FOA PllOBATI 01' WILL ANO CODICILS ANO .. 011 u.nall$ 'flSTAM!NTAllY ANO f'~R AUTHOlllZA110H TO AOMlllNSU!R Ul'IOlll THE tlfOtlf'IND.tfT AOMINIS'frtATtON OP EITATes ACT. Elt•le of THOMAS G. MY,ltS, oec: .. 1ed. • NOTCt£ IS HEREBY GIVE,. ljlet BEATR IZ GARCIA SOTO -.ijd EDWARD A. L.ANORY, hallo ··~ 11treln • p111itlon for Problll• Of.Wiii and lor Codlctts a"o for l•llil,. Tuca"'anl¥Y.,., for Auth«lutlon lo Aclml.W1ltf .-r"" lndlpe"""'...., ministration Of Elleta ACt rof~• to whlcll Is made tor lu~UI•• perllculars, and thll the tlllHI fM pl1<e ot -1119 Ille,_ Ms Dtt9I tie• IOf' February 21, 1'1'1, at IOtOO t.~,C In tlle court,.._,, Of OolMtrt......c No. l .. said <OWi, at 100 Clvk tantac: ~,. Wiii, In Ille City or Sante Ml, Callfornl•. • • Oatad Ftf>NarV2, 1m. . WI LU AM tl. It JOMN, • Collfl(y Oerlt • MllllCIC. HELall a OAltlllT, it.tt.,.MyotLaW OMWlblllreatW.,2ltltl'1-r l.0$ ANGEL.ES, CA. W11 . . ... Ttf: •n-Nl All-YI lllr: """'-'* P1111111Mc1 er-. eo.st Dallf l'iloc, Feo. •. 7, 11. 1'71 ~{I PUBUC NOTlcE ... ... • • • • if • • • -.. • , ' . .. ... OM.YPR.OT Mondar. ~ 13, 1971 , Tele1'ision TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS "'" . \I• 1'.I' \ \ ~- D iS «!O Dandg Bob Hope plays "Tony Revolta0 in a disco spoof scene with Raquel Welch on his n ew TV special from Palm Springs, airing tonight at 8 on NBC, Channel 4. Lucy trlea to eugment • C..ban runbs ~ by Ricky. m ADAM-12 8andllt uling ... gas and a unique eecape route rob an armot9d In"* et a sav- l~s and loan bank. tiD MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT '1i) COUECTM! BAABAIHIHO GOl5S10 SCHOOL Oaa1111el Lbdngs 8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles e KTLA (Ind.) Loa Angeles 8 KABC-TV (ABC) Los Angeles Cll KFM8 (CBS) San Diego D KHJ. TV (Ind.) Los Angeles QI KCST (ABC) San Diego • KTTV (Ind.) Loa Angeles e KCOP·TV (Ind.) Los Angeles • KCET·TV (PBS) Los Angeles ID KOCE·lV (PBS) Huntington Beach (J) TO TEU. THE TAUTM '7!30 IJ 00NSUM£R BUYUHE D NEWLVWEDOAMe D~OF TUTAM<HAMON Olclc Van Patten 11oat1 lhla loolc at the lr1lfact1 from the tomb of the Egyptian king dlaccMred In 1922 and OUll'lnlly on axhlbll loll al the LOI AngeMI County M-ofArt. G) TiiE 8AAD't' BUNCH Both Greg end Marcia want tn. attic for u.w own room1. m ADAM-12 Reed goal UlldalOOWI' and ge11 help from a dop9- ~ U., to M'Uh a drug ring. ID LA. wr£ACHANGE "Popcorn" G~c aw.ctor Pet1tW-. ~ FRENCH CHEF "BroehettN, Kabebe And Slt--"(R) Cf) I 100.000 NAME THAT TVHE HaPPJI Valentine's Dag, Folks 9 WllD, WILD WORLD OftANMALI I:«». (I) 00001*U wr.n J.J. 1e111 1n kMI with • maMad-. tn. palll he .... ,_,,_ .., ITIOl'9 than hie haat1. D 808HOH The DeNri a..ic Bd from the .... Hotel In Palm Spnnga. ~ Mtll guaata pttyllll Ollar. Telly 8•valH, A•quel w .... Ind May Wllllllrrw. D MOVIE • *\to "Coll()., Country'' (1871) Doou!'Mntary. The growth of • ~ from cub to mature c;:at In hla natwll llablht .. traoad. (2 hra.) D al SIXMIWOH oot.iN'MAH •·Dead Rlnger'' A llnlst« ~..gatbed "eplrtt" that look• •xac:lly .,.. St- Au.iln M«na lnlent on kJI.. Ing him. Uod• Deno guwt .,.,. . 0 J0t<ER'8 W1LD G) CAAOt. BUAHETT ANOFN£HOS ~Madeline K.IM. e MOVIE *** "The FM'lly WW(" (1967} Heytey Milla, John Ml.._ A 1-'V married COU- Pie have • great deal of trouble when they ere '°'* to ll11e wllh the ~·· perenta. (2 In.) Kl THa PfU8CHIR .. The Schizoid M•11" Enon. -made to ~ lhe Priloner'• ~ and !Nik• him bele"9 that tie's_...._ fli) OW PASA, U.8.A.? Antonio !Mk• • birthday 'Jri8h: lhllt only SpanlWI be ~en around the hOuM.. ~. C1J 8A8Y, rM IACK OIMa llMI• Ray to fix • dripping faucet In her apertment. but tie -the time end the opportulllty to pUnl> 11'9 eetrenged wife'• emotloll1. I OOHCENTMTION 1128,000 QIJESTION OVER EASY GuMI: •Inger Frankie Ulna. t:oOIJCIJ M'A'S'H Hew1teye'1 ~ on temporary duty with 1noth4W MASH unit IOUllds like • happy reprleYe to CherlM, unth he .. es his I TIIBE TOPPERS A BC fJ 7 : 30 -Treasures of Tutankhamun. A look at Los Angeles' most popular attraction, the artifacts from the tomb of the Egyptian king. Kcor &l s:oo -"The Family Way." This 1967 comedy focuses on newlyweds who have to live with the groom's parents. Hayley Mills and John Mills head the cast. NBC S 9:00 -.,King." The second 'Of three episodes in this TV drama about life of Martin Luther King. Tonight, ,. King's Nobel Prl.ie and the Selqia to ' Montgomery march are featured. r-wo:L "King" Manin Luther Kll'lg .k. II etiawn continuing 1111 tiglJt ao-lnet aegr.gellon, but thll time the demOn- llraloni .,e met with ~ Prelldent Jofln F. K""*'Y .... a pubic eland; King .... Iha 1964 Nol* ,._ Prtw, and embatb on the Slllna-t~ MonteomwY rMrOI\. (Part 2 of !l DQITHE HONEYMOOHER9 "Valenllne Spec:W' Aalptl (Jackie GIMean) and Ed CM~« ... u nioet. lftd dt&lgtlW to trap the otooto ~ .,...... II l9fllptlng Na wife (~ Mladowl) to end lier Ntrtage. 0 IAONllOI! m MERV GAlff'IN fB THE OUTTUINCI PRIZES "An Acedemlc Ufe" An lnlerr1clel couple and -of their~­..,..,. -Engllltl unlvlr· lityln 1970. Cl!) DAVID 8UISKJND 9:308(1) ~DAY/I.TA TIMI. Whan • flu.ltrlcken Ann let• "' eager ~­(SMiiy Fabarel) lake a '1ab al helping with a pr.- enllllon, ltl9 ha no Idea hlr Q.lflnlng CICllllpetJtor .. aiming tor hat**· 10:00 tJ Cll LOU GRANT RONI 1U199Cll a new report• (Gall Strlctdand) on the Tlib OM1 hit lnfor· matlon from powerful polltloal oonnactJone.. II ::IOAT "Valentlne Speclll" Frank- ie AVllon, Caroll Ila White, Denny Evan1, Shetley Lano. I.any c-y, Oeor- gerw. IAl'ler9, Al Anton, 8atbl Benton, ~ Siio, Jamil Fan, Danny Oeylon, Patty Ouk• Mtln, Rick NlllOl'I.~ • HON8YMOONIAS Bo.Ming tnat ha " hNd of 1119 houaehold. Rllph bits ..... lie OW\ bflng • dtnn. Olllltllc!IMlll~. 10'.JO •• NEWS THE OAIGINA1.8: WOMENINAAT "Lout•• Nevel1on '" ~" Thi wor1I ~ dally llf• ot tculptor ,...... IOll, 'lnclludlng a loolc ., the ''fculd Junk" that II the bMll of lier lnnovalNI envtronmentll an .. 11::00 8 8. Cll QI NEWS • LOVE, MtENCAH lmE "\.AM And The ColleOe ~Pr-..or~ acift trlla to handle M '"'°"'°"' atudtnt. ' G MOVIE ••• ~Friendly "--- lion" ( 1118) Gary Cooper, DofolhY McGuire. A fMlily of Ouak .. .,. drewn lntO ttle llOltll11ee of the Cflf ~.(2IWI.) ID THaOOOCOUPLE Olcar'I nleoa WMlt 'P. NM lw ba&ly bf netlll'W chldblrtll. I LIT'I MAKE A DEAL DOtCAWTT 6'leet: OOc1or -~ • ~aicpert. ·~ILl.Hf'M ~. 11:$0 9 (I) CM \.Al1 MOVll • • .. ''The Ugeftd Of Valendno" (1176) "1IMo Naro,._ ......... A tol'Nll'ltlc, ftctionall:zed •ccount of t!Mt 11i.nt ..,..,_., ..._io-. CR> • T°"'°"1' Guiel "°91; Roy Clllttc. Gueetc at.I CM!pbell, Fotttr 8foott1, 8endy Dullelft, Allen ,..... Donna Fargo. • LDW.AMIEJICAN STYUE "L-Ntd The Bowing' 8111" A bCJw1no addict pt'ClfnlMI to gl¥9 up the h POUCE STOftY "low tolabel" T'tllO ~ men hunt tor • killer of --"""" vndet the"-" ~of-~ PfObMrn&. Wiiiem ~. o-i 81odl'Mll"""' ... i) NEWS OETSMAAT A gAnglancMtyle kktnap- plftg IC>tM 1tvt1 until KA08 afMI COHTROL heve •xhal.mled Mdl other'• !ill"lt· • CAPTIONED A80 NIWI MORNING 12:00 9 TWIUOHT ZatW Tiie Earth l.itl out of !ti Ofblt and • ..,.. mewing t-m Iha eun. l=r"8 • * 1lt "The Con1t1n1 Hu1ba11d" (1854) Aax Hemeon. Kay Kendal. An amnellao regain• hi• metnOfy and dlacoYer9 that "" Ila tie.t nwrlld --· Umla. ( 1 lw ~ 30 min.) 1NO e OENI M/ffff "Oki Bam Oenol" G) ALFRED Hl'Tac>CK ''The c.. Of Ml'. P9llw'l'I'. 12:'37 D STARTIME "The ........ "°""' c- velM, Cheater Morris. When In arnblttered IX- lnlllntryman joln8 "' ei1• Ollfpl of World Wtl I .vt .. Varied Program T11nflart• Da9tl•e fto.,f~• · AFTERNOON t2l00 D * • • .. .-.. Thet Heev. an Allowt" ( 1958) """ Wyman, Aide Hudaon. Crltlcllm from otll.,.. almolt lofcm a -.. 'i'le up a man Illa IN)' io-.. (1 tw .. 30 min.) ••• "The Flllllr 8rUltl Olrf' ( 1950) L.uc111e 8111, EdcfMt Albert. A tomw awflc:hboard operalor Ila a run-In with I group of ll'llUgglen. (2 llrl., 20 min.) 3:00 QI *.~"Don't RalM Tiie Mdge. ~ The .._.. (1MI) ..,., '--" T1try-Thofnu.. An ~ can contin16111y altemAta rldic:Ulow 09\·ltc~uk* ac:lllma, Nlntually IOllng 1111 Britlltl wlle. (1 hr~ 30 mtn.) l:IO • * ~ "Or. Ooldfoot And The Bikini M4ldllne" ( IN6) Vincent Price, Franllha Av»on. An M aclenlllt ~ 8n lngellloul '*" tor mcquWtng • veat tor1une by~. dean°' the world'• WHftllle1t man. ( 1lw.,30 min.) CoCistline 'Offers . Gourses on KOCE Sabjecls varying from the growing years of children to growing plants will be televised for college credit as KOCE·TV, Ch a nne l SO, offers eight telecourscs starting this week. Those interested may call Coastline Community College. which offers the courses, at 963-0824. amincd, along with the role of the anthropologist in studying them. Selected topics include: - Primitive cultures, primate behavior, civilization, ethnology, languages, subsistence pattems, magic, a'nd r <'ligio n . The tclecoursc was filmed all over th e world and produced by Channel 50. Valentine•s Day is no festival of love for Cfrom left) Jane Kean, Art Carney, Jackie Gleason and Audrey M eadows on the Honeymooners• Valentine Special tonight at 9 on ABC, Channel 7. Telecourses are nol only an educational experience, where students may earn college credil in their own home, but many are enjoyable family programming, according to professionals who work lo preparing them. "The Growing Years" talces te l evis ion viewer s on a cinematic journey through the world or ~rowin g ·children, portraying the pain and the de· lights of growing from infancy through the turbulent adoles(!ent years. TV's Movie Revie Upgraded By JAY SRARBUTI' LOS ANGELES (AP) - A movie review on TV often is but a ·two-minute sJice of a local evening newscast providing either critical sneers or the words "One of the year's 10 best•• . .But now, public TV station WTTW lo Chicago hu a half-bour series o! movie reviews. It features critiques an" clips of not one, but six new films the re- .views by two professional mm. grumblers. It's "Sneak Prevlews,0 which the atatIOn now is offering the nation'• public TV stations for a total of $226 000. That buys 18 isbows, 1.s.9;:;(1 at the rate of two a month starting next October. TBE CO-ll08TS OF the ven-ture are Gene Siakel, for· eight years the film critic of the Cblcaifo Tribune and Roger E1bert of tbe .~blcago Sun· Times, the only film critic ever to win a PullturPrize. The series now ls ln its second season locally, having begun . wltb three pilot shows ta.peel dut· ing the 1975-76 season, accord· ing to lts producer, WTTW's :.t'hea naum. She says about OS perceut of the ahow bas clips of six new ntcks. The rest is lalk about the films, plus two 30-second as· aaults on what Egbert and Slskel conalder 1"&ba dol ol the month.'' OF LATE, SBE adds, th-e two also 'have begun itvlne reviews theatrical films about to strike for the first Ume on network television, such as "Midway,,. ·aired by NBC earlier this week. The series, is offered Public· Broadcasting Service statlom under PBS• procram coo»enltlve plan, ln which sta- tions an Uked to pay l~r a _share of shows offered them by he na· tional COOP!'!rative. However, says producer Flaum, "Sneak Previews" already has been inspected by· 180 stations nationally. They got it free this season as an Induce- ment to fmanclally back another round, she says. ··n•s DIFFICULT to describe an idea like this on paper," she explained by phone from Chicago. "It sounds like two critics 'discussing the cinema' and what could be more deadl)'? "So the idea of giving it to the various regional networks was a pump-priming device, to give them the opportunity to really see how good it is.'' Initially, the movie studios ju.st provided their ael~ clips of their new •ares for tbe abow, abe said, but now fort over specific scenes sought by the proaram's critics· in ·residence. NEVER RAD any difif iculty · g t dios to give us somethiiig, • she said. "What's different now is that they give us what we want." Some critics orate from cbairs on a bare stage. Eiebert and SJakel do it from a theater balcony set in WTl'W's studios, sbe sald. And they don't use obscure rum Jaraon or such critical blather phrases as "profoundly mo•lng" or ''tour de force," she added. .. No, tbere~s none of.that." she lau1hed. "And no technical 'dis· cuaalons of the cinema .... What tbey do is tell you something about the movie, wbat•1 eooct.or bad about it, and whether it's worth ~I -and all 1D very strat,abtforward languap. •• DON GERDTS, assistant sta- tion manager and executive pro· ducer of telecourses for KOCE, says lhat there is no longer any a r g ume nt about whe the r t e levision can teach or not. Rather. the question is. "How do we 10 about using it effec- tively!" At Channel 50, the combina-, Uon of enjoyment and the validi- ty or a learning experience is achieved by st.lmulatini curiosl- . ty within an academic framework. "People are motivated by curiosity. We love findlni out about a f asclnating individual or exploring a eontroversy or a country or a custom. By weav- ing these threads of curiosity in- to our telecourses, we invite, en- tice discovery," said Gerdts. A GOOD EXAMPLE is ''Dimension.9 in Culture,., alrlng Mondays and Wed,nesdays at .6 :30 p.m., Tuesdays and Thursdays at 8 a.m. and Sun-days at 2 p.m. The program presents an in- de pth s tudy of the various culf\lres and people or the world. The processes of cultural and pe.rsooality development are ex- THE TELECOUR~ is shown ,on Monday and Wednesday at ;8:30 a .m . and Tuesday and Thursday at 6:30 p.m. and on Sunday at 3 p.m. This program utilizes existinJt award-winning CRM/McGraw- Hill filrvs and those produced by KOCE·TV film crews at re· sear ch facilities, homes and schools across the nation, and in Canada. It is a KOCE-TV pro- duction. ''The Home Gardener" is a l oc ally pl"oduce d KOCE t elecourse. John Le nnnton. ho rticuHure instru c t or at Orange Coast College, explains fundamentals of growing both edible and ornamental plants In lbe year-round s unshine of Southern California. THIS TELECOURSE alra Mondays and Wednesdays at 8 • a.m. and Tues days and Thursdays at 7 p.m. and Sw· days at4 p.m. Instructor Bruce M clntyre shows how to sharpen existing skills while emphasizing how to com municat-e vis ually b~ sketching in three dimensions. Monday. F«»r1.1ary 13, 1178 DAILY PILOT 85 • avmg Hollywood's Henry Higgins ollywood ... By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (AP) -One of the town's besl known film makt:rs, Stanley Kramer, i!I pulling up stakes to start his own movie colony in SeatUe. Born in New York City, Kramer has been an Angeleno fo'r over 40 years. After he filmed "Home of the Bruve" on a .sltoestring in 1948, he became fl\'lt)Ous for producing sound, economically made filmi, often on social themes: ·'Cham piOA," •'j'he Men," "Cyr a no de B~reerac," "High Noon," '1Death of a Salesman," "The Caine Mutiny." • Since "Not as a Stranger," he hb also directed his fil ms, not always on an economical scale : ''The Pride and the Passion." ''Tbe Defiant Ones." "On the Biach," "Inherit the Wind," " udgmenl at Nuremberg," •• t's a Mad, Mad, Mad. Mad World." JllS LAST BIG winner was lbe ~pbUQl·Tracy-Poiller "Guess W}Jo's Coming to Dinner" In 967. After months of preparing •• alse the Titanic" for Sir Lew rade, Kramer departed over he usual "artistic differences." ecenlly Hollywood was sur- rlsed by reports that he was eavlng town. "It's lruc," Kramer said over e telephone from Seattle. "I old my house to Neil Diamond. and I'm closing my office at Sunset-Gower studio. I've owned property up here for a number of years, and I want lo make this my home. "What attracted me? The air. ome people I know, the general tmosphere. I have a hou!>e with U!O-degree view of the water. "ANO l'lH GOING to make fi)ms the way I used to. 1 have A~W ........ HEADING NORTH Stanley Kramer taken over a Boeing airplane hangar l wiJJ use for a couple or films I plan to make. I have the financing from Mel Simon. So I can make the pictures the way I want lo." 'Tm terribly inlt:rebted m the community. I'm writing a daily column for the Seattle Times on buch subjects as nuclear plants, Spencer Tracy, junk food in the ~chools. I've got a two-minute !>pot on the news at st ation KlRO. "Films cao make money if they're made at a price. I've picked properties tllat can be film ed in a confined manner, the way 'Equus' should have been made -the way I would have m adc it if author Peter Shaffer hadn't disagreed with me. "I CAN MAKE pictures for under $1 million. I won't have Robert Redford, but I wlJJ have someone witll identity to the European market and the even- tual TV sale. .. Yes, this is a departur e for me. But I've got two young kids with my second marriage, and it's a good time to get away from Hollywood and find a set of values. Where does everything fit? I want to get a line on my life." HELD OVER By JEJtRY BUCK LOS ANGELE.5 (AP) -When an actor comes down with a severe case of bilabial split fric- tives. he usuany turns to one doctor for the cure: Robert Easton, O.D.A.S. Easton recenUy returned frym Swit zerla nd, wher e he spent eight weeks treating Jill Ireland during the filming of "Love and Bullets. Charlie." 1l was Miss Ireland who laid the 0 .0 .A.S. on him. It means, "Orkensaw DlalecLs a Special- ty." Easton is dialect doct.Qr to the stars. HE HAD BEEN called to Europe to teach the British-born actress to speak with an Arkansas ac~ent. On bis de- parture, she presented him with a leather-bound script holder with hls new title. He is better known as the "Henry Higgins of Hollywood," transforming cockney-accented Liza DoolitUes into fair ladies. Or vice versus. He taught Beau Bridges to speak like a n uppe r class Eng li s hm a n for "Four Feathers.'' And Laurence Olivier to talk like an American for "The 8eLsy." Gregory Peck came to him to acquire a German accent for ••The Boys 1''rom Brull." JUST PRIOR TO an interview at his Pasadena home, East.on had a rush call to help a young actress, Sally Boyden, lose her Australian accent for "Lassie, My Lassie." Easton, a lanky Texan with red hair, mustache and spade beard, was in 56 movies and hundreds or television shows before his dialect coaching began to squeeze out acting. "As a character actor I had specialized in dialect roles," be said. "I alway& lost the leading lady. In 'Coming Round the Mountain' with Abbott and Costello I walked around saying, 'I wuz kicked in the bead by a mule, ha, ha, ha.' Intellectually stimulating as these r?les were, "DERsu·· "In The Realm Of The Sen1ea·· 1:100nly UZALA" ....... w.tietetJ A moYing sto~ A romantic story. A story of c~ hatred, friendship, triumph. and love. 4 Golden Globe Nomfnatlona BH t Picture-Orama BHt Actor In Supporting Role-Ai.c Guinn••• Bett Dlrector--Oeorge Luca• lnducflng Wlnnar of Golden Glo~ Awerd tor Beat Orlglnel Score I . I At Spedally SelectH Tt.e.ere. Aed Ortw·lnaf ONLY SUNN COMPl.IMDCTARY PAUU ACCIPTEO SEE DIRECTORIES FOR SHOWTIME• AMO zND FEATURES MESA. Ctsta llal • 541-5125 n CAMINO. TIStil • 544-1191 CDtTUIY 21, _.. • n2-192 MllAMAI. S. a..tl • 492 .. WESTllOCI, C... hi • 531-4411 FOUNTAIN VAWY, f_. Wiiiey • IS150I SUILWCI. 0 Tn • 511• ORANGE MAU, hltt • 137-1341 CYPIESS, C"'1U • ln.1&U fOUMTAIN VAWY Dl~M. f..tJlll YlllJ • 112-2411 UMCOUI .... "-Patt • 527·2223 I wanted to extend my re· pertoire. "THAT'S WHEN I began working with other actors, stu· dying phonetics and taping dialect all over the world." Al~ough largely self-taught - he had to overcome his own Tex- as twang -Easton studied phonetics at Unlversity College in London during three years he lived there with his British-born wife, June. He also teaches at the Unlversity lof California College of Continuing Education and Sherwood Oaks Experimen· tat College. Virtually every room of bis home is s tuffed with books on dialect -17,000 volumes In all. "I kid around with the dialects when I teach," be said. "I find that when I have to be a dls· ciplinarian I am more comforta- ble doing it in a German accent. ••1 yust follow ze orders.' ··orFFERENT DIALECTS have differ ent psychological overtones. Emotions are better expressed ln French, Italian or Russian. Scottish is very im- passive. Knowing the right gestures is also Important in speaking a dialect correctly." E aston still acts occasionally. He was last seen as the muddl- ing preacher in "The Last of the Mohicans" on television. "I just had a weekend to spend with Beau Bridges," Easton said. "He has a phenomenal ear. It was remarkable. He had no reservations about being the on· ty American ln the cast." HE SAID HE looks for the best way ,j:, put the dialect across. "We go over the script and eel it on tape so he can listen to it later," he said. "If an actor ap- proaches me, I never have any trouble. But if a producer sends for me to ball someone out you may get resistance. It's an ego thin&. Three-fourths of the battle is wanting help. ... He aaid hJs most exciting ex- perience was working with Olivier. He said, "We flew to location ln Rhode Island on the same plane and I coached him all the way. They filmed at night and I would be on the set listen- ing to every rehearsal and take. If it wasn't right, I'd whisper to the director." Working with Jill Ireland was more difficult -but only because the dialogue was con- stantly being rewritten. "'SHE HAD TO HA VE a very specific dialect of the hill coun- try of Arkansas," he said. "A lot or what is considered dialect is merely the retention of the very proper Englis h of Chaucer's time. It's the upper class that has constantly changed. It's con- sidered very chic to use new forms." Lindsay Wagner came to him when she had to play a lookalike with a Southern accent on "The Bionic Woman." He coached Cicely Tyson for her role as Har· riet Tubman in a television mov- le. She bad to speak in a ,.p..,..... 'THE RINE IN SPINE• Dlalectlclan Easton particular black dialect or the 1880s. He taught LeVar Burton a rural black accent for "Atmos' a Man," on the Amerlcah ShoJ't Story Theater on PBS. ' ~ . He 's Really Bugged by His Work LOS ANGELES (AP) -Jim Dannatdson, 62, has an unusual occupation. He trains insects for television and film. "Behavior control ls a better description than µ-ain ," says his wife, Beth, who often works as his assistant. "Train sounds like teaching a dog tricks. With ln· secLs, you know their habits, you know how to handle them, an~ '"1MI OMI • OMl Y'* .... A -rNIOMI Ir ~;r " ,,., "'OH CIOO" ., ........... llAU..,.. ,,., •• you know what can be expected. of them." . .. . .. l When director George Stevens called upon him to work on .. Gunga Din" some 40 years ago, Dannald.sbn was curator of reptiles at the University of Southern California. taching fake hoods around the snakes' necks, then raising them up cobra-like with hidden bam· boo poles. He imported Iguanas and othe r reptiles for Hal > Roach's original "One Million • l Years, B.C." He helped tu rn h armless eopher snakes Into cobras by at· His latest assignment was . Robert Aldrich's "Choirboys," for which he handled a duck and a multitude of cockroaches. In person. or by gift.certificate in any amouht. At your nearby ••• 9'/uatl~ JllZ.*GK .A.B'GV• ..-TALMANT'a. ~gonnafeelgood inside:: .... 17920 Brookhurat Fountain Valley .. ·I A Cart Reins Film • HENRY WINKLER '· • -DAil V Ptl.OT Monday, -Fet>1#fttdl tF' ENTERTAINMENT I POP MUSIC I HY GARDNell By The Anoela&ed Press The following are Billboard's hot record ruts for lhe week ending February lB as they appear In next week's issue of Billboard magaiine. HOT SINGLES 1. STA YIN' ALIVE -Bee Gees lRsO) 2. LOVE IS THICKER THAN WATER -An- dy Gibb <RSO) 3. JUST THE WAY YOU ARE -Billy Joel <Columbia) 1 4. WE Al\E THE CHAMPIONS -Queen <Elektra> · 5. SOMETJMES WHEN WE TOUCH -Dan lull <20th Century) TOP LPs 1. "SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER" Soundtrack (RSO) 2. BILLY JOEL-The Stranger <Columbia} 3. QUEEN-News Of The World <Elektra) 4 . EARTH. WIND & FIRE -All 'N' All <Columbia) 5. ROD STEWART -Foot Loose & Fancy Free (Warner Brows.) EASY LISTENING l . WONDERFUL WORLD -Art Garfunkel with Paul Simon & James Taylor <Columbia) 2. EVERYBODY LOVES A RAIN SONG -B. J. Thomas <MCA) 3. JUST THE WAY YOU ARE -Billy Joel <Columbia) 4. I CAN'T SMILE WITHOUT YOU -Barry Manllow (Arista) 5. LADY LOVE -Lou Rawls Philadelphia (International> SOUL SINGLES l. TOO HOT TA tROT -Commodores (Motown) 2. ALWAYS AND FOREVER -llealwave <Epic) 3 . WfflCH WAY IS UP -Stargard <MCA> 4. IT'S YOU THAT I NEED -Enchantment (United Artists> 5. OUR LOVE -Natalie Cole (Capitol) COUNTRY SINGLES 1. DON'T BREAK THE HEART THAT LOVES YOU -Margo Smith (Warner Bros .} 2. I J UST WISH YOU WERE SOMEONE I LOVE -Larry Gatlin CMonument) · 3. MAMAS DON'T LET YOUR BABIES GROW UP TO BE COWBOYS -I CAN GET OFF ON YOU --Waylon & Willie (RCA) 4. WHAT DID J PROMISE HER LAST NIGHT -Mel Tillis CMCA) 1 5. WOMAN TO WOMAN -Barbara Mandrell (ABC-Dot) Sequel Stars LOS ANGELES (AP) --Tim Conway and Don Knotts will team up again for "Trail's End," a sequel lo Disney's •·App l e Dumpling Gang." THEATRES-ORANGE CO SENIOR OTIZENS S2.00 SO. COAST PLAZA JflUm .. ~1111 flU,.. "SE.Ml TOUGH" tll DAILY ~ .-...-00-1~ ,..,.s..ti.... ,.,,,.....~-- SO. COAST PLAZA ,.,,..,se. ... 2111 .. ,.... "SATUIDA Y Me•H'J FIVB.. •• f MWT !IO fAUl'l f $:J0-7:JO.f:30 UJ'-'_, .... ,_.~, .... SO. COAST PLAZA ..... .. OH GOD .. IPG I 'fAIJ.Y-l•lt ....._._.,...... .... "\OVlaS & nTMllt ST'IAMGBS" ··~t.iif-·1-.41n,1111 CIHEMALAND ~ ~e Recycling .ol· a S~perstar Singe ... • "All he needs is a hit record and be could be one of the new supt!rstars," the show.wise friend s1ttin&: .next to us whispered. He was talking about the sioecr who had -just thrilJed a capacity crowd for an hour thal seemed more hkt 10 minutes. The voice was full and rich and throbbed with emotion. He sang songs of today. And then went back to the big ones of yesterday. The audience (al the Miami Beach Theater of the Performing Arts) reacted with smiles of leasure on their faces - and applause that sounded like thunder in the tropics. After o while, they brew requests up at him -and ht' responded with poise and gentle humor -- some of it setr- deprccating. You could feel the warmth reach out from him across th e footlights to the au· dience. And you could feel th e audiencl' respond with equal warmth and delight. It . FISHER built up to one or those rat e occasions when a standing ovation is both i.pontaneous and sincere. Though he's been through hell -both career· wise and In his personal life -he could be one of the great pop singers of our time -again. By the way -his name is Eddie Fisher. Later. in his backstage dressing room, Eddie told us he's writing his life story. Soon to be published by Harper & Row. Laughingly he said, "I think I will call it 'Star Wars.' After all, any man who married, then survived divorcing Debbie Reynolds, Elizabeth Taylor aod Connie Stevens earned that title!" or course, it also happens to be the l)ame of the movie that made a star out o{ his and Debbie's daughter -Carrie Fisher. Eddie grinned as he kidded himself about his People Magazine Says: "'The One andbnly' Is hllarlous and Winkler Is wonderful!" I • . J U.A. IJiVIES 4 U.A. saµTH COAST CINEMA WEST • er. Mall 990-4022 *Costa ..... • 540-0594 * Westminster 892-4493 STADIUM DRIVE IN * °"9 LA •RADA DRIVE IN * LI Mlrldl 63N770 523-9310 A TRUE LOVE STORY .. - For everyont who believes in happy endings A flLMWAYS l'ROOUCTION I A LAllllY l'llllC1'·EDWAllD S. RlDMAN fll.M Writt•n lry DOUGLAS DAY STtWAltT • M9* lry Lll HOUllllOCE 0...ct«I lry LARRY PEtllCt P~ lry £0WAll0 S. f'U.QMAN A UNIVERSAL l'ICTUll£ ·TKHNICOLO_.. ~~~·--· F • M!W>.- 'Glad You Asked That' by Marilya met Hy G_.... peal also reported that the wUl, prepared by El ls last year, granted his father Vernon (also reeet' y divorced) absolute control of the estate. The ttirfe principal beneficiaries were his daughter Li a Mnrie.~hls irandmolher .M.lnnJe Mao Presley ... d tii father, Vernon. · • marriages ... One thing I don't do In my Q: Wu"'l there a movie about Fanny B~ee uct ... When I smg a medley of Jolson songs and before llarbta Streisand ma~ • bit bit on '"e d? 'Mummy' I can't get on my knees as Joley stale aDd In pictures wkb "Funny Girl"! -{I. did. -.I realize that's how I got into so much trou-Repn, Long View, 'Tex. ~ ble through the years!'' A: Yes. Thero was such a movie based on 1n- Q 1 In what mbvle did we &N atlress Faye ny's lite in 1~33 called "Broadway T~~ a Dunaway wear a monocle'! -Janet Jarvis, I,.ong Keyhole." Avollabfe for TV, the movie was wru en Beach, Car. by the king of keyhole peepers -Walter Wln~ti I. A· ''Voyage of the Damned,•· in which Faye Send JIOur. queslions to 1111 Gordner, "C~!d'-" played the elegant wife or a Dr. Egon Kreisler A11red That,•• care of thll newspaper, P.O. Ba:t: •· I COskat Werner). Pllblicity re Chicago, Ill. 60611. Marilyn and I~ Gardner t.Olll ;r I. leased at the time suggested ~ as rnony quations af lheJI co~ m their column, mitt'~ that perhaps Faye would start volume of mail mokft per.Jonal repliea lmpoasible. , another fad. <Background : -iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiliiiiiiiiij~ifi Joan Crawford launched the square-shoulders fad. Veronica Lake ~ the eye-covering hairdo. Marlene Dietrich start- ed women wearing pants. And by removing his shirt in "It Happened One Night" (reveal- ouMAWAY ing no undershirt), Gable start- ed a fad among young men which drove un- derwear manufacturers to distraction. I Q : Where Is E lvis' daughter, Lisa Marie Presley living since her dad dJed'! And what was the value or bis estate as filed lo probate court last sum mer? -IUrs. L. Dietrich, Columbus, Ohio. A : About $10,000,000 is the tag, with 9-ycar-old Lisa Marie Presley named to inherit all of the estate eventually. She is living in Los Angeles with pop's divorced wife, Priscilla Cwho was left out or the will entirely). The Memphis Commercial Ap· ''The Other Side of the Mountain Pert 2" Sa.ring Maril~ HH .. tt ''AcrOMthe Great Divide" (G) .. -.... -.. -.-------.. -- (PG) (iiirilfiHiliiiiill _____ .. MEL BROOKS "'NC1'eO ..... -'" IOllY _.fllLD'"' : ..,..,_Al• r1ia a .... . • -·-·· ..... ·-· ...... , .. @191 .a'°io I ~;:..:;._~ cftM .1a li:?a!~r:~ <3111.eiol ~..r-· COMICS I CROSSWORD WiRMADUKE lty Brid Anderson BOOMER "Marmaduke! Turn it on and leave it on!" NKY WfNKERBEAN ~ ME.A~10~ 11-\AT <,lOU'RE 1bTAU..Ci> AGAINOT 5TIJDENT6 OOTlNG IN HIGH ~L~ GERIATRIX GUt:~~ 5+-1£: "11/t-!'T Wt-NT 1DWAK~~ CHl\..D2E:N 1 MISS PEACH l""A I I 'V& ••&N l)(PIGTIN(; A VAL.INTIN' ~OM ¥OU ... GORDO A FTER HAVING ORIVfN All. THE WAY MCI< INTO TOWN. SAM OECtOES TO RETURN TO SPENCER FARMS! l~INTM& MAIL., MA"CIA- IT~ IN-rME MAIL..// by Tom Batiuk HOW COUl.D VITAMIN C DO THAT? ' . . •• by Wm. F. Brown and Mel casson I e Wi I . ;; \ l i l • f by Mell 9YANV~, POI~ vouir ~AT~i~ OWi MY ,fafHI~ MONl"'I? DOOLEY'S WORLD OR. SMOCK Gee:, WHS'.._. MOM SAIP IHIS GUY HAP A WAY Wl"f'H K IPS, .]:. -rHOUG>Hi" SHe: WAS PU'lllN ' Mff; ON.' MOTLEY'S CREW 16 YOUR CULIUAAL ~XCMA~6~ wo~eR fROM RU5&1A HA\JIN6 A)tf ~OOl.EM6? , .... • Mondly, Flbrulty 13, 1918 DAILY l'tlOT 87 PEANUTS by Charlts M . Schulz WHE~e·s /.¥/ CALENtAA? I CAN'T FIND NH CALENOAR ..• GOOD! I LIKE TO . GHECK OVT 'THE WfEt< by Roger Bradfftld by George Lemont OKAY, NOW coveR vouR RIGH"T"' E:AR ANP -rei...t.. Me: IF YOO CAN STll-t.. HeAR IHe eRe:AKFAS"T"' C SReAL. POPPING by Templeton and Forman .. WOM!aN WOR~'£> 0Re55 JU~f LI~ 'f~ MeN .. TODAY'S CIOSSIDID PVZZLI ACROSS 54 Struggle 58 Solieilous 1 Price paid 62 Private 5 Raciog team teecher 9 Actresa 83 lacJ(ino tact 14 ~r~~ ~-64 ~lg eltctlOn Prefix 66 Rlc1d~Jo 1 5 SIUdy 11ten-~l'Hf hvely 1a.embly '6 E~ine 87 Re-Mw Ind 17 Clt'tus amend cloud: 2 68 Fl11'111uee wordl 69 Mindi 19 Mr. Zola 70 Buttona and 20 Encourage Barber 21 Reduced 71 Laiaure 23 HackMYed UNITED Feature Syndlclllf Saturday's PUU!e-Sotwtd: ~w A s I t ,., I~ t: ,., c: B E R ~ II D • IC , .. A t I p s t: IJ :is I\ ~ 11 ~ t I 1-R N u '"" I I BA p AL • I 1 n t. II" I ,, v .. s ~ JJINJ f IU" e INIDI H t N S A 11>1 lfl l t: t. ll 2worda DOWN 18 1 lt54 tr•ty: 48 Stupid~ 25F1Mced I Two-Abbi'. 47 Of an laland 26 AirHne 1bbf1. 28Makeup one's mind 32·--··1!111: S.wbuek 37 Of the kid-ney, 38Upward: Prelh1 39 Non-ex· l)felS 41 Actor··· W1llllch 42 Cotlon fabric 45 F1nH 48hr 501~ 51 ···-Minis- ter:T11.1• dMu'atille llyef9d gem 22 Pistol: Slang 49 -plell: 2 Attack·· -24 Lotty . CaVll tldn 27 Spill O¥er 52 Mlddl9 dJs.. 3 Valuable 29 Feminine tance run-llddle: lnb. l"9IM ,,., mal 30 Glen 53 Eaclpe bv 4 Got 31 W'lffenooof• deceit wltdoma 32 USSR news 65 Steps over a s Ship's on agcy. lence 8 TtiotOuQhtare 33 Endlno for 58 Mineral 1 N. Amer. I~ c8d 0t Infer ~lta dlana 34 Aata'a 57 Bulld 8 ~11_,s mlttr111 58 Arlhflllc aid AaQuel-·· 35 Golft(a 69 Accurately 9 "Ral'I rah~ drum fitted al'loui.r 38 Hinch.I sirin· eo Melody 101.oWalfalr c:.11 810kll.cffY • 1 t 8cilntiflc 40 Miik: Prefix I~ Orunkardi• j auffl• 43 Hl*ted dlseaae: In-• 1 12 Caprl. •·O·· 44 Sllaa and tor ma I 13 NectHity otl'lert ·. .. DAILY PILOT Mond111. F.OruafY 13, 1178 AT YOUR SERVICE I NATIONAi.. . . WASHINGTON (AP) -Consider, in this town of lobbyista for just about any concern you can. name, the Portable Sanitary Association, a trade • organization here that Usu among Its members an Oklahoma City Outfit named A Big Green John. The as60Clalion members rent and service a "Got.a problem? Then write to Pat Dunn. Pat will cut red tape, getting the.answers and action you need to 1olve inequities in government and bu.nness. Mail your question& to P.at Dunn, At Your Service, Orange Cooat Daily Pilot, P.O. Bo:r 1560, Costa Mesa, CA g2626. Aa many letters.a& pos!iMe will be answered, but phoned inquiries or letters not mclllding the reader's fuJl name. address. and ~.ss hours' phone number cannot be con.ridered. Tins column appears dai· ly nclfJ( Saturdays." Hospital C~ BUI Woes DEAR PAT: I just received a bill from St. .Joseph Hospital of Orange for treatment received Aug. 9, 1976. The Medicare payment was issued by the hospital Sept. 30, 1976. Now it's too late to sub· mil the $37 balance to my other insurance com· pany. This doesn't seem fair, and I want to know why this bill was not processed wi\hin a reasona- ble lime. F .C., Costa Mesa The hospital's accounting department spokesman said that somehow your bWtng "jut slipped throagh" and was DM malled to yoa promptly. In view of this error, the $37 balance will be cancelled. • Late U.Ut• L.oat1 L.iaMHtt1 DEAR PAT: I moved lo California two months ago, and I want to establish credit. Before incur· ring any debts, I would like to know if there are maximum limitations on finance charges in this :.late. T.G., Costa Mesa Yes. If the amount financed ls less than $1,000, the seller can charge no more than five-sixths of 1 percent per month of the amount financed (this will show on your contract as 18 percent simple an· nual interest). For example, If you were to purchase an Item which sells lor $300 and planned lo pay for It In six months, the seller can impose a • flnaace charge which ls no greater than $15. In any -: Installment contract, the seller can make a : •minimum charge of $10 U the contract ls eight months or less, or $12 tr lt ls longer. Therefore, lf ; you were to purchase an item which sells for $50 · and planned to pay for It In six months, you could • be charged as macb H $10. U &be amoaDt financed ls greater tbao $1,000, the seller can dlarge no more than two-thlrds ol 1 per- cent on tbe amOGDt financed which eaceed.s $1,000. , AssumiDC Ulat yoa purcba.sedanltem wblch sella for $1,500 and plan to pay for it lD ln.stallmenta during a U·moatb period, the seller may Impose a flnaace' charge which ls DO greater than $148. Old DUcs Stlil A 1'allaltle DEAR PAT: I've looked everywhere I can think of for several old record albums that came out in the early 1950s. I've heard there are a couple of old record specialty stores. in the Los Angeles ~rea, but I don't know their names and addresses. S.G., Newport Beach · See if Music Man Murray has the records you want by dropping a card lo SSH Santa Monica Blvd., Los Angeles, Calif. 90038, or by pboalng (213) 466-4000. Another source ls Rare Records, 417 E. Broadway, Glendale, Calif. 11205 (phone: (%13) US.037t). Yoo also might want to coatact. members of the Orange County Record Collectors Club. They meet at 1 p.m. on the third Sunday of each month at 9628 Garden Grove Blvd., Garden Grove. Dedttetfott llJfl'ltt u.dted DEAR READERS: There are 1peelfic restric·. tlons on the rlgb& to "repair and deduct" wMa a landlord refusea to make repairs. This remedy ean be ased only ll your place substantlall1 lacks uy of the foUowlng +CC 1941,1): ettectlve waterproof· ing and weather protect.Ion of roof ud exterior walls. Including unbroken windows and doors; plombbtg facWUea maintained in good worklag or· der; a water system wlaJcb produces bot and cold . • r runnlDg water! llea&lng, UgbUng and wiring mU..· :· talaed In good working order; bulldAa aad· gnulls clean or trash, rodeata and vermtn; an • adeqaate namber of garba1e can~ and &rash bar·. " reh kePt dean and repaired, and Ooors, stal"'ays · ~ and ralllags mal.ntalaed ln good repair. Yoo are q allowed to 11.1e this remedy only if yoa. • keep &be premlse1 clean and dlspoM of refuse; u• "'· eledrical, gas and plamblDg fb1ara properly ud. • , • keep &bem clean. Yoa also cannot permit DJ ": perlOll • the premises who woald caue wlltal dlmage, ud each room must be used oaly for tbe •• ·' purpose lateaded. Remember, tbll remedy c.-a be .. ~ · ased "Only once a year and cost of repaln deducted. ...,., • cauot exceed one moath•s rent. ... product wltbout whlch, they 11~. th construction industry mlaht elow down sa4ly as workers tOok lon1 hikes to the nearest faciU~. Spectator com· fort would drop sharply at muy outdoor events. .. WE'llE A SllALL INDVSTaY but an impor- tant one," said Larry MUltt, e~ecutive director or the 200-member IJ"OUP which includes Sanl-Hut of Reno, Nev.; Kwik.John of Plato, Mo.; Rent·A· Potle of Walla Walla, Wash.; and Comfort Castles of Newtonville, Mass. You don't hear much about the firms, but . Porta-John or Detroit made news In 1m with a "Here's Johnny" Wlit. Still pendlnc is a suit filed against the company by television personality Johnny Carson. . Pouable sanitation ls a $100 million industry in the United States, Mlller said. Buildin& sltes ac- count for 90 percent or installations. flssocialion members also service golf courses, boat landings, fairs, air shbws, rock concerts, carnivals and races. And, Miller said, business is picking up with an Lncrease in construction. THE MOST PRESTIGIOUS LOCATION for a portable toilet bas been the White House groupds. The first temporary installaUoo there \ltasn't by White House Service of Rochester, Minn., as would have seemed appropriate. Sanl·Kan of Crof· ton, Md., got the job before it was taken over by Jbtmny-On-The-Spot Inc. of Bwfal<?t N.Y. One notable association job on tne White House grounds was for the 1971 wedding of Tricia Nixon. Another assignment was a rush job for a contrac- tor installing television wiring during the Nixon presidency . DURING THE KENNED\. administration, un- . its were placed for groundsmen caring for Caroline Kennedy's pony, said Georae Melitzer. local representative for Johnny-On-The-Spot. Thal company is one of the largest, with five branches throughout the country. Still other mem· ~n include Midwest Potty House, Champaign, Ill.; Handi-Joy John, Macon, Ga.; Redford Honey ,Buckets, Tacoma, Wash.; and Hicks Comfort Sta· tions. Vancouver. Wash. Foreign members are in Canada. Australia, West Ger~any and Nigeria. Like other progressive indU5tries, the Portable Sanitary Association holds conventions, trade shows, midyear operations seminars and boards of directors meetings. TOPICS DISCUSSED, MILLE& said, include stand~rd contract forms, sewage treatmeni. mat· · ters, accounting procedures and public relations. Members have some problems ln dealin& wlth the federal government . "We've been in constant liaison with the Oc· Former Alabama First Lady Cornelia Wallace, 39. with the help or Billy Carter, has signed an agent to represent her in the entertaln- ment and ad· vertising in· dustry. cupational Safety and Health Administration, ------~~jiiiiiiiii;~~---~ about everything from the type of seat to how many people can be assigned to a unit," Mlller said. But relief may be on the way for the associa· lion. Jn December, OSHA proposed eliminatAon of many standards, including one governing seat shapes. Ot.her ntleiJ say: .. THE BUILDING SHALL BE of fly-tight con- struction, doors shall be self·closing ... The seat top .a ball be not less th&I'\ 12 inches nor more than 16 Inches above the fioor." Gra((iti is a tough problem. too, JohMy·On· The Spot's Melltzer said. For variety or content and difficulty of removal it easily matches the indoor variety. Y Offers Bod~ Class A body awareness c l ass, featuriog moderate exercise for women, is being offered al the South Coast YMCA in Laguna Niguel .. Classes meet Wed· nesdays Crom 1 to 2 p.m. with cost to members set at $10, and $12.50 for non-members. The ex· ercise clas!; ls conducted by YMCA phys ital director Sandy Goldberg. For more Information, on the eight-week course, call 881·9622. Let ftoeer'• Florist helpyoUUow your sweetheart that you really care by Hnd1ns an elegant VALENUNE'S. · BOUQUET. .A .".!£?•· San .loAQ1tln •I M.c:Arthw • """"'°" lhaC:fi h""6tim ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~"":""""~~~ San Juan Seniors' Class Set 'Classes are being of· fered through February a t the San Juan Capistrano seniors center, 26971 Spring St Each Tuesday's schedule includes an ex· ercise class Crom 2 to 3 p.m . followed by art ap- preciation from 3 to S p.m. On Thursdays from 3 to 5 p.m., dancer Kathy Stirling will conduct a .cl.a~.s on basi~ folk danc~g. , For further informa- tion on the clases, ppone 493-1171. NEED A LAWYER? Low4PIFH •Divorce • Bankruptcv •Criminal • Wiiis.Probate • Incorporation • Accident-Injury •Eviction · 640.2107 YIH A. CONIULTATION-t10 fHR lfTY ... ·\ •. tall 812-5871. , .... ,.,, word• to .Vtlt for ·ou. '' ' .. "I like the taste of a good cigarette and I don't intend to settle for less. But like a lot of people Tm also aware of what's being said. And like a lot of people I began searching for a cigarette that could give me the taste I like with 1<!&5 tu: "I thought there would . ... , if:1 be a lot of brands to ch~ ~~1;~~~\ from. There were. Until I tasted 'f.-1'~~,. them. Then I knew there was no -~-M choice at all. I either had to stay with my high-tar cigarettes. Or suck ait 'Then I found Vantage.Its everytlling · ilie ads say it is. A cigarette that doesn't give you™8t a lot of promises. ~tit . ..._.. __ _ really gives is a lot of taste. And with much l~ tat than what I'd smoked before. "Whatamr doing about smoking?l'm smoking Vantage:' l!J.~. O.S.Cooper Edmonds, Washington I .. ' 1 t I INSIDE: •Ann Landers Dally ~ll---~9'k119NICMlll• Doug Elson talks to a couple in Huntington Beach Community Clinic waiting room. People Clinics Low-cost medical care offices have survived the '60s ' says one director, because they meet ba~ic needs. By JUDITH OLSON Of 1"9 D•ilY Pilot Si.fl Free clinics have been around since the late '60s and are busier than ever but they still have an image problem to overcome. While they may have started out as places to treat the "street people" or hippies, who were using drugs, they are today clinics for the whole community. They treat a wide range or problems and give assistance to anyone in need. "There is still a reeling that 'you must pay for what you gel,' said Mary Stack, director or the Laguna Beach Free Clinic. "There's still the old Calvinistic influence " Donations are accepted at both the Laguna Beach clinic and the Huntington Beach Com- munity Clinic, which s tarted as a free clinic, but no one Is turned away for lack of money. . "Most or our people work," Ms. Stack said. "T hat's one of the misconceptions. The people who complain about getting something for nothing are sometimes the employers who pay the low wages." SOME OF THE patients at the Laguna clinic make only $400 a month, whlcl) is barely enough to pay the rent and buy food. Medical care is prohibitive for them except for the clinic There is also a fear , on the part of the com- munity, that "the people who use these places must be different." But many of the patients or clients are senior citizens whose pensions haven't kept up with inflation. Free clinics today serve another important function. in Ms. Stack's opinion. "A lot of people ar~ afraid of 'institutionalized medicine,' or 're· gular' doctors' offices. They will come to us and we can get t hem to go. We reassure and refer." Some st udents come because they ar e em- barrassed to talk to family doctors or college <See CLINICS. Page C2) Penny Corradine a~ Los Alamitos: The biggest pmb/em is finding a ladies' 18Stroom. Penny Coffadine is one d a few women Who have, infiltrated the heretofore all-male world of-'quarter-horse training. some people wtw think they have in- somnia really have thfl blah~ one doc- tor says. . . ·, · BJ ClllU8 ROBOTS PHILADELPIUA <AP> -Each night thousands of people who Me convinced they have insomnia count sheep and pop pills in search of a!Hp they don't need. 'llbey're simply trying to b1oclc out life's blabs, says Dr. Joseph MendeJs, bead of a newly fol-med lnaomnia clinic at the University of Penntlylvania Hospital. "Prom a physiological point of view these people are getung enough sleep, they just don't tblnlc they are... Mendels said in a re- cent. lntenriew. 0 Tbete bas been a dramaUc incftaae in free time ln our aoeWlb and people are becom-inf very boreit. 'How mahy times ean you· watch the ntnu. rerun of 'I Love Lucy?' Al 9 o'clock these people sa.y. 'I think I'll 10 to bed: and tMy can't. They want to get away J roro tbe emptiness and boredom Jn tbetr life... . Meadels. a medieal doc:toract a 'p(ofenor of paycblatry at Penn, said that aoo.t 30 of every 100 peo. ple wbo say they eouldn't sleep would fall blto the pseudo lnsom· nia category. Another 20 percent, be said, would have a treatable illneu like deptwkln Uaat wu eamm1 sleep. leuness. • Of tbe l'elt; be said, 2S pel'Mlt woeld be ~' sleep dlf. tie\llties bec:aae tbeJ bad built up a resJstance to medication, 20 per- cent would have undiagnosable sleep problems, and 5 pel'cent or less would suffer from a rare s:rn· drome in which they stop breathiftg when \hey fall asleep, causing them to Jer" awake lmmedlateb'. Mendels discounted the notion that everyone bas to have ellht hours Of sleep to stay healthy. "Thousands ol little Jobnnys are told each nlgbt to go to bed and get their beauty sleep or tbey WOD't grow up to be big and stronc like daddy," he said. "Kids are beinJ trained from early childhood ti> equate eight hours sleep with IDocl health. "Actaall.Y~ many people aleep s ix hours or less at night, some as little as two or three hours. For them that's adequate. They're quite bealt.bJ." At the insomnia clinic, whm· teer 1ubJeets spend the ni2ht a4 are staclied. Mendels saia brain waves are monitored, measuring *such tbinp as the time patients fall asleep and bow soundly they sleep. He said the dlnlc's goal ls .to tdeatifJ Ud treat the ca-. ol lll· aomnia. not the symptoms. ''Too often eomeone comes tn the doctor's qff,ice and sa11. 'Hey Doc, 1 can't 1leep a wink.• So be gives the patient some slMplng pllls. We want to go beyond ~t." 1 • ·-OM.Y Ptl.01 Monday, '•bruwy 13, 1971 · . •• (From Pa1e CO . •: beallb centers about birth COQtrol or venereal ,_.;disease problems. ' • • ~ I 0 WITllOVT 1'RE' CU1'1C Olity pn>bably would I~ their problems for a considerably longer ~nod ot tlme," Ms. Stack emphasised. .. Basic medical care ls offered at both • cllnica. The Huntinaton Beach facility ls heavily involved tn Jl6ycholoatcal councdlng and the Laguna Beach clinic also offers health educa· •·. ' Uon, legal counseling and dental services The clinics have survived and 'grown • because they meet several basic needs, accord- -ing to Doug Elson, executive director of tM ..... • Huntington Beach clinic. One is immediacy and ':"" another is longer hours. i ... ;.· For older people on Medical or Medicaid ~·.:1het"e is less red tape at the community clinic •·::-than a county offlce, for example, and for a girl ..:.~ •• wlshln& a pregnancy test there ls almost no " .. ·.wall. ... · · Elson said his facility also serves a large ·.;senior citizen population, some of whom have had no medical care for years. . ThE CUNIC HAS a day for senior screen- in& once a month and Elson hopes to add nulri· "lion counseling because many or the older peo- ple have poor diets. . ..One man hadn't had his eyes tested for five years," Elson said. "We referred him to an optometrist." Elson, who has a B. A. degree in sociology from Northern Arizona Unlversily, emphasizes that free cllnlcs were not started originally because someone wanted to give the "hippies" somethlng for nothing. see trained health counselors after the doctor'a • eum in Laauna Be•~h. The patients are told !!Thia is what you t)a\•e1 thlS is '*tat ;you have to IP and here is how to not getlt .caln, "Ms. 5'ack aald. The eounselol'S" *ltrally are pre-med atu· dents or students actU•llY In medifal school •• Both cllnlca rely heavlly on voJuMeers for almost every phase bf the work, froinsarpentry to dentistry and b~ control eounsellftg. BOTH ELSON and Ma. Stack supervise a small staff and approximately tso volunteers per month. Both say their cllnlca always need volunteers. Patient yiaita rqn-up to 1,000 a month ao it's evident that the cllnlct' .are lining a need. Both clinlQS are cheerful. bust.ijng plac:,es that bear lltUe resemblance to the white walls of most doctors' offices. The HunUngton Beach clinic ts located Lil a remodeled bulldine owned by the city and tbe Laguna clinic occupies an old house near the downtown area. The Laguna cllnic especially ts a visual treat. It is a barrage or posters, plants, stickers, b~ttons, plaques and a general hod1epod1e of lhmgs ~d. people. It's pleasant, lbouab, and seems like 1t wo~ld not be intimidating. In both clmlcs there is the feeling that someone cares and an altitude Qf concern on tl:le part of the staff. E~N. SAID HE probably could find a bet· te~-pay~ng ~ob but he llkes the challenge or the clinic. 'Thts is a different type Qf caring for _, people." he said. "People come to you and· Y?U 're able to help them. It makes me feel good tn- stde. They were founded in San Francisco's Halght-Ashbury district by u doctor named David Smith who recognized that thec-e was a .. big problem with contagious diseases and drugs that needed to be controlled among the coun- terculture youth. "This is a people place. If they don't like it they don't have to come. But they want to be Mte. 1'his is a business that does something good." · Ms. Slack joined the clinic as a volunteer when she was introduced to it as a patient several years ago. She was 3,000 miles from home, broke and marginally employed when she discovered she t\ad what could have been a serious medical problem. I • I •'I "There were no health clinics to serve these street .people," Elson said. "They were put orr by going to the clinics run by 'the establish· .ment' and felt th.at the free clinics were 'for us.· . "Thal form was copied in the west and J!nally all over the U.S. As long as clinics could find funds and staff they flourished ... MS. STACK·BEIJEVES the free clinics are alive today because they fill gaps in the U.S. health care system. "Some day, ideally, they will nol be n~eded," she commented. "Theoretically there ~ill be health care legislaUon. It would be nice 1f it fllled all the gaps." One or the gaps ls health education. she added. Most of the free clinic he'alth counselors , spend a lot of time explaining how the body works to people who have not been taught al home or in school. • All patients ~Ith communicable diseases . Wit~in a few days she was treated, teamed tl was~ t as bad as she thought and found herself interested in the clinic. Her move to director was natural since she had had experience in doctors' offices and at one time had been contemplating a career in medicine. "I'm leaning more toward the administra· t1on of health care systems," she said. . Both she and Elson stress that the free clinics are part of the health care system in the U.S. right now, whether people want lo admit it or not. They may be, in fact, the prototype of a new medilal care system ~signed with all people in mind. • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a itrl. 16 years old, and I have a twin sister. My prpb.. lem is that some people think of twins u~ one person. The teachers so,i:ietlmes give us the same arade even thou1b one did better. Some people a11k. "Where are the twins?" as if we are Siamese. Others stare at us and ( try to tell which is which. My sister and I are very different. I don't even thi.rtk I look J By8YDNEYOMABR , 'TU$8DAY, FEB. H ' AllJES <Maf.Eh 2l·~prll 19): Emphasis on purcbues. effort.; to make We more beautiful. money, famlly and home. Basic S\ll'totindinas are more Important than usual. Make con- cesslQn to family member lJ1 the cause. of peace amortg lQved one1. !AlJllUS (April 20-May 20): Lunar cycle high -take initiative. Heed your own counsel. Element of decepUol\ could be present. Some- one wants somethlni for nothinlC -and you could be a prime target. Pisces, Virgo persons figure ln scenario .. GEMJNI (ay 21-June 20): Check behind the scenes. Obtain valid hint from Taurus message. La.y out plan~, d.evelop concept, submit format, brmg pr1o~it1es mto (OCWJ. You tnay be given a secret assignment. . . CAN~EB (June 21-July 22): Accent on fr1endsh1p that becomes something more Money, desire, romantic interlude -the.se could be fealW'ed. You are reassured concern- ing abilities, attractiveness. Aries, Libra figure prominently. Yes, the mission will be a success. even if it apec;ars to be impossible. LEO (JUiy 23·AUg. 22): Emphasis on get- ting ~here .Y?U're going, how you relate to superiors, c1v1c dulles, unique honors. Another Leo could be in picture. Creative endeavors suc· ceed. Imprint style. Lead rather than Imitate. VIRGO (Aua. 23-Sepl. 22>: You gain rare in- sights. You establish sense of direction. Journey. language, pollcy are part or your personal scenario. Cancer, Leo and Aquarius figure in picture. You gain through special publication. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): What seemed a dull detail could become fun and games. Accent on marital situation, partnership, legal status or money claims, ownershtp. Gemlni, Sagittarius figure prominently. Now is time lo expand horizons. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Accent on circumstances, the way you look to others. partneTshlp, bringing together those whose ideas oppose each other. Partner or mate con- fides problem. Don't rush to judgment. Con· templation, meditation bring desired resulls. SA01'M'Aa1us <Nov. 22.nec. 21>: Em· ~hasize service, improved techniques. adsii- tional areas or communication. Gemini !l1ures prominently -so does the aumber 5. Qoe who depen~ upon you has much to say. Listen and evaluate. There could be a role reversal. CAl'alOOllN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Some may accuse you of being self-indulgent-they are en· vious, slightly bitter. Buy luxury item. Enjoy beauty. Love and b~ loved. There will be change, variety, travel, a glimpse of truth that daizles. You're blessed. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18): Stick to the practic~l where finances, home, basic s.ecurit1 enter picture. Real estate, property command attentlon. PISCES .(Feb. 19-March 18): Ideas can become solid· concepts. Close neighbors, rel- atives ~eem to be part of today•s pattern. Be versatile without scattering your forces. ANN LANDERS I HOROSCOPE like her and she doesn't think she looks like me. Maybe you know how I feel because you ar e a twin. Please tell the world that twins aren't carbon copies. They are unique individuals with dif· ferent ideas. opinions, capeblllties and goals. I hope you will print my letter and wake certain people up. -I AM ME DEAR YOU: Each set of twins rnut wake ap tbe Ir own hlenda, te•claen, relatives and whoever they come lnto contact with. First, II you are dreH· Ing alike, atop It. Second, If you are lD the same classes at school, ask to be changed. Separate schools would be Ideal ii such an ar- rangement is possible. Each or you should de- velop your own In· terests, you own friends and your God-given talents. \'ou should not use your twtnhood as an •ttentloo·ge&tlng device. It you and your sister re· ruse to be a sideshow at- t.r a c tlon. people wlll think of you ab In- dividuals and not as ••Kate" and ·•oupll· Kate." DEAR ANN: I'm 20 and planning to marry Ed in June. His car ts old and he's been having a lot of trouble with 1t lately. Tuesday Ed was supposed lo pi ck me up at seven o'clock. • The next ~iftl Ed lelephooed al\d ae\ed like nothinc happened. I asked hlm why be stood me up. He aaJd, "I had trouble with my brakes.'' \Vllat: does this 1ound like to jOu. Ann? He does thia kind or thing every rew weeks and I'm eetting .fed up. Am 1 being overcriUcal? -ELJNOR FROM ROCK lSLAND . DEAR EL; 1 lllnk Ed has more tban JHt br•ke trouble. lie Hems to bave a proble• with his 1tarter. too. If 7ou are planntns to ••rry tbls flake I au11e1& you )lave a Utde &att with blm aboa& a n old· fubloaed vl.rtae called ••tellablllty.•' U Ed behaves um way dutng ('OUrt hlp be'll ~Ive )'OU flt• afLer yoa•re mar· ried. DEAR ANN: This is not a joke from a Yale undereraduate. I have no sexual hangups. I don 't covet my nelJthbor's wife nor do l have a drinkin& prob· lem . All I want to do is remurry my first and only wife on ow: wed- ding annlvet'l>acy which Is coming up soon. Are there uny legal ramifications'! DQ we need a license? I've bad 30 wonderful years with lbis girl and l want to marry her again for sen- li m e ntal reasons. - SAN GAB RI.EL VALLEY I got dressed and wail· ed for him until 11 p.m. He didn't show up und didn't call. I decided not to call him because l was afraid I might wake up his mother. DEAR GABE: Aclual- ly what you want to do ls reaffirm your vows. No license Is needed for this . Call your clergyman and Lell him what you have in mind. Aud Happy An· niversary, Mister. It's a joy to bear from some· one who appreciates his wire ao mucb be wants lo m arry her again. !\lost peo,ple I hear from are trying to undo the firs& one. I· "01 'I II I "'""' \I 1'01(-. ((I Ill' • j. I• )• /, '" l ,,,. , . " " • 1, '1' •,,'11,' S&an Belag TlleWomu You . Wu& to Be! ' J• Robert Po wen Does your· grOjlp need to raise funds? PERSONAL DEVELOPMENT & MODELING SCHOOlS ORANGE If your noo-profit organlution needs help raising funds, c:all HuntlnQton Center anst aak us to lf'Sil ~IJDity tfelp (formerfy Charity Fair) details. S, Town a Country '714) 547-1228 Pllope 897·2533 ---" *FOUR MONTHS MEMBERSHIP $38.00 *REGULAR PRICE $88.00 ,._,_ MILO"EO SHHHAN °""'It IN ..... ..,__., Ml--to b<oey at""""9 ......,_., _ l9l'OIOll __ .,, ..... lo llllllllOl-Mlolcwolo.IMy ..... tNllY'*'"° -.... -llM ... ll!I0-1!>1t"°"91tl ........ Mnc>ll'• ........i .... olO ...,,, llul .... , ,_.,.. .. ,,,.., ....... 1 .. 1now•""'°" v.,,...orr~on010011.-M•ldl1e1<0lil<l•'I "-.... wit Of ""' 1111 Ml-had1tudl<odn1111tlloo_l/le_, ~ttndWl'ti\'tNV1N1edloliwUllOIVCCfflhd -otnei.l~le<I H-.MllO•ICI .... •-• ,.,., 101_ 1,,. 11.,,..._.,,. ........,,.,own _.,,. ..... '-n..11-flelOl!erw• ~llllWltllJo•~ll'•-·-"'* ..... '°'""' ___ lllghllt~• "'9 v ....... dlllltl••tvOMIO'*lto"""'r11 "Mllcloto uldlMell>lhl-WOl'ltfUOIUl>ed•I ... »llOti*UOt _...__..., .... ........ .-...v..... .... llM- ~--.... -·-IO"'I~-.... ----·--. .... 11e-.-.......... __ ,_ .......... _ .,.,_ .,,.,_..,.ia,.. .... -.. 1t· .,. _ ____ _,, __ ..,.~ -• ....,-,-.... -.... 1"9-v----...,.,_ ....... ,,,.., .,., ,.._ )0 .. "" .... . " . . .. a ""' • Ullin°"'' • £c.tytM"l lltd""4 flt 138.00Pnu . "'•,..,,,.,,.. ,.,_ .. • C...trolhcl °"' ,_ w'""'' '-•M-'-£~,...,,_.., * ,.__,_,.,,... trooll I ..,,,... bf 'ol-ffl.I/. •f'l•ltllldncoea 1 I • NATIONAL I FOR TH~ RECORD Monday. February 13. 1978 Boardwalk Aw&its Sweet Whiff .of Si.D. . By JOHN BARBOUR .. ~ ............. ,. .... ATLANTIC CITY, N. J . -The herringbone gray tweed of the Boardwalk is stitched neatly between the slate Atlantic and the bizarre jumble of shops and hotels, a melancholy whisper of a time that used to be The old hotels are mostly e101ed now. The tired prom· enade is only four miles long, ball its former length The last afternoon tea. the last evening musicals have played out at the Marlborough-Blenheim hotels. Tbe gracious halls under the turrets and domes are empty, save for the ghosts of the Mam Line rich, the shadows of ladies in gowns and men in evening clothes dancing to violins and cellos. THERE'S A BATED breath in this town as when an aging lady down on ber luck gets a racelll\ in expectation of a new lire, solnething richer, more ex- citing, a Utt.le more dangerous. For Atlantic City, lhe future means gambling -craps, twen- ty-one, baccarat, slots But it will lake awhile Eve ryone expected instant miracles when New J ersey voters agreed late in 1976 lo a modicum of "sin'' to revive the town. Everyone expected a storm 1of big spende r s t o descend and bid up the price of everything. No such thmg. EDITOR'S NOTE -Allantic Ci· ti/ ii prepanng fOT IU gambling da111, though tM /trat co-"no won't open /or a whi~. Most people •H 8JJlendld chongt11 aheod /or tM old reaort, but new Atlantic City may have no place /or the poor and elderly. a 11zable part of fts populace today IT WILL BE Easter before the first casino opens -at the earliest In the meantime, s ome speculators make money. But really bag lenders, needed to flo:at the casinos, build the new hotels, have been staying home. Cam bllng is legal in Atlantic Caty, but it's not the investment fashion of insurance company shareholders In Kansas City. Di sappointment has had a long run here. The booms of the eurly century and the '20s and '30s gave way to a long decline. The rich tourist gave way lo the middle-c lass weekender. The beautiful people of yesteryear gave way to conventloneers. The airplane did it, most say. Pel)ple with money who used to motor to these beaches now ny over them on their way to Florida. STILL, SOME out·of-town money is buying up Boardwalk shops in expectation or the gambling surge. Property values have tripled and more. A 125-room hotel which -~ ... -;.i::.;:~ ......,,. NEW ERA TO DAWN FOR FAMED BOARDWALK Gembllng Ca1lnoa to Replace Bizarre Jumble of Old Shop• • brought $871,000 in 1964 sold re- cently for S2 mlllion. An old house that wouldn't brine $.3,200 when ll was offered 10 years ago sold recently for US,000. A lawyer who was offered a large apartment house as his fee 10 years aco rues his refusal. Behind the occasional fast buck and the golden visions of much more lies the city's bleak, perplexlng present. ATLANTIC CITY HAS ac· cumulated a higher proportion of old people than any city ex· cept St. Augustine, Fla. The population of about 42,000 ID· eludes 10,000 school cbUdren, a work force ot 19,000, half of them 0ttl Of work <a naure unchanged since the gambllog vote>. And there are 10~ senior citizens. They li~ old houses and cooverl~otels. They sun themselves on the Boardwalk and eat While Tower eggs for dinner. Old men prowl the beaches carefully in age-measured steps, movinl their metal detectors back and fortb like maclc wands, looking for the buried treasures ol last summer, IQSt coins and watches, rings aDd things. Most carry small spades to dig into the sand. OLD WOMEN MOOCH passes to the convention hall where In· duslry shows Its wares, and despite tight security they go home with shopping bags loaded with souvenirs. But the old wUl not be able to afford tbe new Attanlle City whe n it materializes, and already there is a perceptible changing of the' guard. Poor blacks wbo live in the big ghetto north of Atlantic Avenue are beginning to move to the mainland. The city has blocked most evictions of the poor and old, but they are dwindling as time and money run out. Mercballita who skinned out an existence on the Boardwalk a.re going out ol buslneu or relocat- ing. Most voled for the casinos. AT 1223 BOARDWALK, one oC the more gloomy shops that front the Chalfonte Hotel, in the com pl ex of the first promised casino, wears a gilded sign that says Wing Fat Co., Chinese Im- porters. The Ivory and jade are gone. The interior dissolves into mists and shadows. Alone in the dusty show windows is a hastily print· ed epitaph: "After 44 years in buslness, First and Last Sale. All Reasonable Offer (sic) Ac· ceptable." The store next door that specialized in linens and gifts has its own melancholy message: Last Days. Door locked, windows empty. BUT A LOCAL merchant, leaning over the counter of Marietta Trlplclan's candy and cookie store, says, empty ~­ dowtt notwltbstanding, there are takers for every shop on the Boardwalk.· M arletla, whose family bas been on the Boardwalk since 1905, agrees. Things have been'. rough, but now £here's hope. ~be thinks that new landlords have a right to ral.se rep,ts to insure pro-· . fita on their investment, even: BegiJI "Welcomes u~s. Mediation in Mideast ( INSHORT J JE]\OSALEM (AP> -Prime Minist«lr Menachem Begin, in a con- ciliatory mood after harsh weekend crltlcism of the United States, said today Israel still welcomes U.S. medlatloo Jn the Mideast despite "very serious, painful" American criticism of Israeli policy. Radleal Sea.,___ Men o like To.· Whisf/e WT•~ -they WOrk Speaking at a news conference, Begin adopted a markedly soft tone compared with his sharp reaction Sunday to Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance's latest appraisal of Mideast developments. Vance, in a Washiniton news con- ference Friday, c;atled for disband.lnc of Israeli settlements tn occupied Arab.Janel, Jsraetl withdrawal from the war.woo areas .rad e1tabliahment of a Palestlnian homeland. Grtllf• te ~-A,,..I• DETROIT (AP)-6en. Rebert P. Griffin, a~IOch,, t!hanced his mind and amaounc«l today he wnt nm for ""9lecUon. Grtfftll, the minority whip, is the 1 • aecoDd hl~t.rahking Republican ln the stftlte. Re~ ln the House ot J\•p.....Utivee from 195'1 to 1• WMB M WU QpQinted t.o the S..a; ff... f'e·eleoUon UJJ~cement WH ·•Me at a beWI ~ff fD b1a SYDNEY. Australia (AP> Newspapers blame the Anand• MaJ'lfa, a radical lndiaD sect, tor a born b that killed two aanltaUoo mea early today outsid' the hotel in which lndtan Prime Minister Morarji IJelal and others attendine a 12-natloa CommoowealUl summit COoference we~e sleeping. • Si~ other people were inJured. but none of the conference dele1ates was among them. A spokesman for t.be Anand a Marga denied the ·group wu responaible. aatilei~ BEIRUT, Lebanoa <AI'> -Hea91 artUlery ~bangea wen reported • southeast Lebanon today. ~ '• Retirees To Meet . . .. u ..... ATLANTIC CtTY POL)CE PATROL BOARDWALK IN ANCITIPATIQN OF CUSTOMERS . Police Are Gearing For Influx Attracted by LegaJlzed CHlno Gambllng though she isn't sure she'll be able to stay lf her rent goes up much. A little ways down, a shopkeeper who pays $14,000 a year now faces a new lease that will cost $50,000. MOST OF 111E people who swing this town agree that gambling will be only a part or the changes on this island of 12 square miles. Reese Palley owns several opulent jewelry and glft shOps, advertises himself as "merchant to the rich,•• learned his economics at the London School, serves as chairman of the State Lottery Commission <•'Where we mostly sit around and dream up games"). He notes that Atl8.11tic City is uruqueinseveral ways: -Because of environmental regulations, it's the only place on the Atlantic shore from Sandy Hook to Cape May \...,. a stretch of 140 miles -where'hiah rises can be built. · -It commands precious coastline. "THE LAND ,HAS achieved new functfons, •' he. sa'y s . "Gradually, over the next five or 10 yeaMh land that's been used for low income and senior citizen hou1ing will tiecorne so expensive it wJll fipd h.igber use. No one will be able to stay here on tbe same balfls as before. Rents wilf weed out the Boardwalk. What will not ct\ange ls the need of the people to get t.o the beaches . . . Having people Uvein Atlantic City has lhe same lqgic as having the people who work in Disneyland llve in apartment houses in the middle of the Park." Al Marks, an investment specialist who for years has run the Mi.45 America Pa1eant, dis· agrees. .. SOME SAY THE whole island wlll be turned over to gambling. That's fallacious. There's room for both casino gambling and housing." Most, like former Mayor Joseph Bradway Jr., an Atlantic City banker, expect that conven· lion business will greatly expand, and that it ultimately will push the poor, the elderly, even many of the middle class out of the city. But it will happen gradually. The current mayor, Joseph Lazarow, says, ''the only misgiv- ing I have is the anxiety of the people, that they may not be pa· tient enough to wait for things to cometrue" FROM IRS seventh-floor office in City Hall, he can see the Atlan- tic and the dead hotels to his left. The Spanish community and the inl:eHH'e behind him. The bleak row of ghetto houses are to his right. More than half of them are over SO years old. Most are classified u~ubstandard. ".Look." he says, "all those houses are old, wooden, impossi· ble to repair. Y-0u have to build a new city." Right now, the city finds itself betwixt and between. Carpenters and carpet~ayers hammer away al Haddon Hall. site oft~ pioneer casino planned by Resorts hi· ternational, which operates gambling houses in the Bahama.a. Playboy, lhe next on line. is dig· ging into a tiny plot near Conven- tion Hall. Caesar's World, out of Las Vegas, has Boardwalk property vacant and waltiJlt. BALLY, THE SLOT machine maker, has a lease on the Marlborough-Blenheim. Tbe wooden relic, the Marlborough, will be tom down. There ls no announced decision on what to ~o to the extravagantly m edieval BJephelm, the first re- inforced concrete building in America. These bastilles of opulence. closed in October, were th~ final notes in the ballad of old Atlan- tic City. The lady who played the piano to the .soft strains of violin and cello in the evening musicale looked around at the genteel women listening to the themes of their former lives and asked, ''Where will the old ladies g~?" AND NO ONE HAq an answer, least of all the ladies themselves, nodding to the songs of the early century. While the past is closing out, everybody has notions, h9pes, and worries about the future whose shape is still nebulous. Bartenders wonder how m_~h more work -and more .,.PS - the casino era will bring.1f!Otne ciUzens worry a~ orgaolM!d crime moving in ('1ficlsta&ereg- gulations of gambbng are *Im~ to forestall the llafia). A lot of people worry about simply being • priced ,,ut of town.. t I MAJtKS DOESN-1' expect Jhy real economic impact for the next four years. "Everybddy's talking pie,.in the sky." be says, addl-.g, "We're in a period of jocke,y{ag, trying to outguess lh-e f'4u•e. The future is bright,. b t brightest for those who ar t-ing.·• t4 Jeweler Palley sees the a bustling recreational with as many as 50,000 • rooms. hu1e convenUon c ty, all sorts of leisure activit "Gambling is a tiny pi it, but it provides the sweet of sin that makes ever else a little bit better." For ·the Record ~ . Marian Mid 0.ilft AllllOn; Rl!£5, 8onnl e Kaye Md IC.enltetll 'TlWlclddR; SMITH, ,.r .. ~Jr. -0Yl't EllHbttll; WM.TIER, E~ G. encl o.bo<'•ll A.; MOE$0f, IUta E. and Martin A , WEI. TY, Oaftllt I.- MIO Rancly E_.... PATRICK. Mery Louh• Ind Ef.IOeM A • WRIG+tT. Palrtci. A. and Cary H.; LAWSON, Kathleen Paula Marie ltlO Jolln SIOfl 111: WARO, Rlcl\arf L. end Vicki: SMITH, ~ L. -J-E.; RSAOER, SuHn Lee Ind Ronald Oun; PAYNE, Norma Rost aftd Muroocll; KEITt. Hall<y Ellen -Jacll Reymono; NELSOH, TMres. A. and ltokrt G.; JOHNSON, ,,_l)lllM -09Y\0 l.M, LEE, Ells• M. end R-'1 E.; LE't''I'. I.Hiie G. end Glor•• A.; TOHINI, s...r.tta Fr...CH ano Carl Fred; ALCUS, Loretta """ and EdWard Gouldlno; ICllll(PATAICK. Myre H. -Ray; Mc:COAMICk, La .. re"c• "'•ncl1 and Sllaron l.VMIW; HAMPTON, °"9orY 0 . -541-. C.; 'TA'l'l.011, Juelltll M«ll~ -Theron ~; ORU£81EAT, TWORI(, Palrkl.I L. -1.1.0'l'O, 8e•erly and KAYE$, Lynn Marie ead tUcl\ard; ADAMS, Miidred AollertWaYM;l.ANIBRECH de Kay and James Wiiiiam; Rl<Mrd Roy end ae .. r1y f'tlefJ ... _.,. LEHACK, Slllnr, alld Way,..; NKOONALO, Ali.rt Lola Sun•11na; $WINO, Lo11tu and Rlc:hard ·t KRUIGER, ilMl»I Marie Mi R•y: FIGG$. Blllle 8. ~ W.; lll!EO, ..lameSW • ..O B AOAMS, ..,,,..., ..I. -BAl(l!A, RUJMll lM and Jiiflft; TATE, Paula SI• TllJIOlh'f J.; JOH ES, Loi•. Larr'(S. *• NOBl.E, Dominique "- Oeflnls L.; LINO, s.Mra 0.11nl1 A.; 8AU., SN,,._, M . .._, ErnHI J.; Ml!TKOVICH, Manln 1M Clauclle; LINDSAY, Ullda L. -lllontld L.; PEll'aR, ,.,.,,.,., and Edw11rd ; ALE~Dl!R, eonni. J . llftd Petk C.; HEAMANOIU. Terew JU.rta Inf ~d V19'1; EVANS. •'. , ... die ......... ~ ............ ~-·······~'°" .............. f~ •.•• ., ...... "-"'-W. ~.':" .. ~ ....... !~.~~ ....... ~~~ ....... ]~~::~.~~ ...... . ••••••••••••••••••••••• A .. 1001 •• H tOOJ G 1002 ·-• 4111 • G1•rtl I 002 .._, ...... , .... I 002 ········•······•••····· .............................................. ••············································ AIAMDC>Mm SPAMISH ISTATI 'l•ACU Private cul·d•·nc I · ~ archwtya lead EQUAL HOUSING to private courtyard and OPPORTUNITY ~uded entry! Red We .. n>ofl Cathedral ceWnpl ~11._.,1 Moller. Cracllllnl fireplace I A)! real •tat.e advertiled CarMioa klt.tben ! a Mam· i tbia newspaper ls aub· motll bedroorml Vacu\ to the Federal Fair 4s available. Try l'1MO usha1 Act or 1868 total down. Call t1ulcllf ch makes It lllegal to M'l-«110 advertise "any pre· Ol'fNlllt•"HUHro111 N<C1• terence, lhnltaUoo, or .-crlmlnaUon bued on race, colQf, religloo, aex, or national origin, or an·-======--=-~tenUoo to make aoy web preference, llmJta· Uon. or discrlmiliaUon." MEWPOlT HllGHTS Thia newspaper wut not I UWITS inowlnflY accept any '1 advert aln1 for real 15%DOWN estAte which II In viola· Eilhl Ubl'ta btinl totally \\ I '.', I : '1 » TAYLOH CO. I\ I .. ·\ I I ( ' ~ : .· l ; '' I I .•. , , , ............ 11 .... Tip of the Island with 113' f.rentage on the . big bay I Spectacular tt'ater vtew from most roo.mt. Approx &.IOO'aq ft often the ultimate in luxury Uvlng .. Finest ol construction wltb band-carved woods, impOrted 1tone, tile & marble. S Beclnns suites, formal di.Ding rm, tam rm. den, recreatiCJG rm, elevator, sauna, dramatic pool• jacuzzi. $1,375,000 including the land. Call for Appointment WESUY H. TAnOI CO.. UALTOIS 2111 S. JnQ I ........ HIWPOllT CIHTll. M.L 644-4tl 0 EXECUTIVE ENTERTAINMENT Ocean view from the finest custom built home we have seen ln Corona del Mar & definitely one of a k1J¥i I Built especially for executive entertalD.ing wltb its exceptional & W1usual double ldtcben, built to accommodate the huge raised formal dtning rm. or the s•en family rm. with frplc. & wet · bar. Modem elevator services 3 car garage & 2 upper llvlng levels. Shown by app't. only 759-0811 Clonoft.helaw. refurbt.abed, to be de· c. _. aoo• Ge-r.. 1002 ..;;___;_ _ __; ____ 1 llverecllnllke·newcondl· •••rw a -•Ir.o NEWPOHT CENTt 1 H DHIV E 7&90811 1 . Um. :ruu pri~ $239,900. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~=~!!!!!!!!!!~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~-~!!! mS: ..,.......... = =~;i u•u•f'l'B-1·m' min ·-· 1002 ..... ,.. 1002 ~ clled ...... .. UN1T BUY IN AREA. lftRIVMlltft •••••••••••••-•M•H• ••••••••••••-• ... ••• .., -,..,.. .,.. Pleuecall962·7788. NEWPORT 9r1N1 ron l clalelr. Tiiie JQ.I K€Y • -. . UM#H PILOT .. _. V RE:ALTORsh A prime opportunity wi~h an for ... flnt IJt. · outstanding real estate organization ........_ Oflly. • UM19UI IH 71 + high earnings! Experience is a -------•I no.~ 1.bouabl appeal must. P~estigious l~cation. All to you . If ao. eonalder applications held in strictest HOllMtfol-S. jolning the prestigious . 1y Ad #68 ••••••••••••••••••••••• omces of Unique Homes conf 1dence. Please rep to • Gwaal 1002 f« a fantudc 1978. Ac· Daily Pilot. P. 0 . Box 1560. Costa •••••••••-•••• .. •••••• celerated commlaaion Mesa CA 92626 -------• acbeduJe, ln-bouae awlng • loans, creatl ve ulea ~~!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~ . FIXER UPPER aids. computer te~: G1•r.e' 10021c...~ 1002 UDO IS&.I Newly temodeled 4 bdrm., den, 4 baths, livin" rrn. w /cathedral celling. Lge. master bclnn. suite. , 11• CANYON 4 BR, fam. rm., 3 baths. Beautifully decorated Broad moor Plan 3 w /patio views from each room. $325,000 IAYl'IOMTS Several fine bayf root homes with pier & slips tHH OH THI ..... A spacious,. rambling 4 bedroom with 4000 sq.rt. or living and 4,000,000 sq. mi. of view (approx.> high on a blll overlooking Emerald Bay. Vacant and ready for a large family and their decorator. Features include decking on all floors, a fantastic wine cellar, white water views and the many Jo11 of life in Emerald Bay. Presented at MS0,000. U~l()UI: li()Ml:S REAL TOR~; 676-6000 2443 Ent Coast Hlghwey. Coro"a del Mar also In Mesa Verdt, at 546·5990 f Ol~f •; T I OLSON ... c..I ...... ..._ lotJ1;._ ___ _... ___ _ MUST SIU.I Beautiful 4 Bdrm now vacant. Owner m aking double payments. Just about 4 years new. $97,~. Cal 64CMl61 WAIM FAMILY HOMI for the special f amUy who like& to entertain, formal dining area, cuual dln1ng er veranda enjo)'lllfGL A beauUful ' bdrm home In Mesa Verde. Carpeta & storage galore. Separate maida room Slal,900. c.114"4141 ~;1·r11111q C 1·.t.1 M1" .1 lr11111• H111it111qf.,11 1!1·.tt It t~1 WI• •rt ll• ·"tr Fn~ro;Tr OLS ON IMCMYA&Ull I ..,._ P.lmala Pt. ltllll9tobeac:la.•- Newer Otta• 'flew daplex, Dan• Pt. Bargain hunters, see this ~!r:1trvetlootralnin8el nl • ·••••••Jt•••••••••••••••• dis 4 Bed lit. a . u que " aster. ed rm, 1 ln'78wilhUoiqueHomea llACHYll.&.A GRACIOUS •••r91 1002 •-•II IMI I Bdrm , Coroaa ~.' n~: a :io~!~0~t~d Rea1WoodEatta67te,; £e!taJct J~~ $I 05,000 UNDA ISU •••••••• .. •• ................... ••••••-•... Rllblaada tll!,_IOO . BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J.11 P.oy""'' f>,,v, N I\ l'i I'> ~ltd .,. .• vo,&;~ HERITAGE at $60,900. Call 546-5880 a .,._,.,.,, aciua Unbelievably low price! I ~!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! _ _._ $51,900 prhate bHcbf Wot'ld Haodlemanat546-5990 Juat blocka from the 5000 Sq ft + allp. Pool. = ~~ ""9ellrotenfD.4MI water. Xlnt Newport Jaci.ml,uwua,GBR. G1Mrill 1002 G-rtl 1002 Two l •bdnD. uDlta on Well malataldiedJ--'----..__--._._ • • REALTORS .,. .a. 'UR p .t. • ., Bnm·· I~. ~~·,!Pl'•mwel·. 0 ••••••.•.••Y•ROMT••••-••••••• •••••••••.···--··?••• aodl Jot~ fff Jud In townbome ID coaftllMDt•----•-• • 11UU AAR> .. .,......__. _,, bo Wiit Newport, JI.Wt slept location. Btfl ll'OU.lldl PMCllmUCTIOM ~~~~~~~~ 1i Spaces, 2 houses & a Wood deck entry. Off to'belt "beacbl .A.akioi w/mature \uu 6 SI.HI ¥Al:IMf -;. 1wtmmlngpoolona211t. Spacious livin1 area, feellilllld a.zs.ooo 1bruba. IBd, 2Ba, Plaleanta•canae ·~WHER MUST SB.L acre site with Iota or wUh masaive fireplace, -··~~......:.:i Balboa's beat location! 2 ~ • z UMT$ "/clabbouae. pool 6 + worbbola.' bdrm. z Lovely 2 bdrm., 2 bath treea & landacaplng. ruadc family room. Open ~ Bdrma .. 2 bat.b condo ID =Y~,1\ ~~~ 2 Bdrm. -.. wttb cute a a u D a • 0 w n • r ......._ + IOXID dea on rondo; FP, A/C, lge. Boomforupanaion&of. beamcelllnpltwetbar. adult, all security bldg. wbenyoucanbuyforon-bachelorapt.,ooeorner tranaferred. Mut ..U 1>11 Jot. la 1ood patio, around floor. fered at SllS,000 wltb Circular stair leada to BalboalslandRuhy Walk lo oce~n •. pier, ly $l7SO. down 00 a lot.nearwater.Prleedat NOWf..._77U netObarllood. lluatMll .H-~I 833-9781 SS0.900 very favorable flnanc-fantastic auo deck. AXD6Ji':'i100" vWqe, shoppUlg, boat tBZOOO home or Vets no P.500 ful fw OlllJ *•'°°· inc. CALL 751·3191. Hurry on tJlia ooel I Call allp avail. All this for c1oWn. Euy to qualify 873-a.1 ea.ms Eveit Call: I! Hestet'-Brown ~ Pl A llQM~ -=SELECT <WN 1tf9•HH uN ro llffl"'' BALBOAPENIN Sli:.._,... OaD.todayformoreillf'. .· RelllDltaw ICOITUAL1T T'PROPERTIES :m ...... inr a..:... Ji,~~~M'Wi ~Jiii ~ , I ftllr _,. '.-"I MOii.i Hoti9 ' llllllll ... lllllllllllll-l!illllll ... llllllllllll .... ~ ... ~~~· ~~~·~· 'neaoendoqa t.u abelter * 67$.7060 '* ·--v: ,~, lo prime rental area.1--------1~=~~~~~~ ·- Xlntcood. Vrr daip 2 bdrm malt .......... ThilkSfrila! 4 IEDIOOMS Sl4S,too IMYESTM9CT 1~~~~~~1 ma btO park ID lntM. ~ $74,tOO JACOISUALn v· ETS ... orstarterbome;aharp IAYCllST :::di..:.::rc.~D ~~ .. Great Coat& M•a loca· 675-6670 & nice 3 bdrm .. 1~ bath lbunacaa.te I Br• deo, bowlln1, bllllarda. fam rm. I ...... V.,y tion, abort walk to . home; xlat Garden 2~ ,Ba, lee lllteben, cor· clabrmi • bob= rm. Sllarp Ro••· Qa• of . IChoola &cahoppt.n1. Well CHARMING NEIGH· Grov• nei1bborbood . ._.(pie,~ _ept'd, Won't ut at ,500. Cll'ltllllllt--.Oner malataioed&wellpriced BORHOOD a Br, bdwd Bett.erhWTJllU,7IO beMLJard.SlJl.IOO. fbo1Mt today to pect. ii 997 aataa Aaldaa spacious family home. Ora, oven1'd lot, Sad· fRE~ C. F. Cn'ttllllrthJi ~ .._.CAU.UINOWI FcJr detaill please CALL cllebact acbl diatrict. _.. a2090. Owner mu\ sell VA/ MALTOl.S '40-00 0 CSELECT mA terma. Call aet, GI .. IPROPERTIES1..;.HJ.8062.;.....;..;.._·___ U:::.."°.:C:' FMILYHOME ..... ,.... ... 1)·111 Wh1 1, H,·.'11~r .. · ,J 11t,, 1 "'" 1 "• H . ~ . . \. -Walkt!r 1: 11:1: Sl=~~IO ~ In a INatnet&hborbood. cDf"::lz' r':zw ,,. •=.?~!.ts ..... • ___ ,-'....., ............ ..__ TOl'ALDoWM ~Bl&~ dlnlAI rm., UNIT execuUft reward • trem WlndlDI roadway to Move in Free :~·::t.bt!:ci~~: 8o. olll'w>', I bdrm, 2 b• hllla, blue Paclflc, • MIW co1•ot eoariftl 2 atal7 retreat! AJI Prices erec1 patio. See quiet, cottaie wl~ bit cosy home to make It all COITA llJ:IA.. "-* to Prtvaa. IJ'OQDdl protect EASTSIDE ulllnl Nt,500. Call flnlUce. Iott ol natural wot1bwblle. Ccl'on• del ...-... Partr a larse MCludtd entrJ to lavish COST' .a. Ml5A , MO-lW wood It abUw. New 2 Mar at it'• beatl 108 bdrmt, JMI lta,. frplc. Uv~ room. Gourmet A All Areas bdrtA unit &a rear over 4 Key\ltew. Open dan, ttU lliierowue. au.. l>tll at· kltcben ovetlooka sun· Beautiful i 7ear old car parkl••· xara eold•,ooo. tadlecl pr. Year own ablne llOUJtyard! Wind· duptd. Eacb unit bu JHE 1toraae " laundry Jll'Cl ..... .,.,_waft. !°'~r~~*-:::ri =: ~~ HOME STORE ~~~~~~~~I r:;:5R';rn-;;s:r: :· do lt! 1 Seller._ aoxloua. ftreplace, bullt·ln elec--REALIY-MJJpOI • trtw ~ J uat l~~~~~~~~I ~,l~o-u like a • SH8,500. (coll 24 hol.-s) 542·5211 -.!ro~IT 964-2455 67Wll t 19461 Brookhld H . onBeoch' &UllFS !nll md&, X·Plaa.1'mala Vllla former moct'el. __.. a BB. 2Mt'ba.• fam. rm., form. die • .,_..E;~~ IU~llllii IM&.toa 644-0134 OCUA IONT IBUCID $11,0H ~~gi •--------• Qwner anxlotaa. low l!i don, ........ Prial •· •m.tor llf.G21 $1.&2 per DAY That's ALL JOU PJJ fora 30~-4 I ~I )~F. cc f ~ OL ~ON I ---BOND REALTY oollAM•llW a brm; cticl ..t/bat, 1 ba, 2' stt. 2 frpl, paUo1 lrl tUfttieci ovfrloollllll --.... ~~~-+--i Marina. Ma"1 erlras. Quiel HlldtnU.I area OR uc:.U•t tnvestmeAt et tlllS.000. aal81 Za.raJto l hOWft' by •PPl. on. ~~f1 IJ\veat Co. •PRICE ILA8HliD ~ WalkP.1 ~~ l HP. OWNERS ANXIOUS · F~T Esc•ow· I 1•MCHllWTY Hf-1000 red hill .. , ~ ·,: -,~.n ll ....... ,.. -.... ---_.......,_. --..... a.-•. ,,,, ...................... 1 ' .-. Cl DAILY Ptl.OT Mond~. 'ebru.y 131 1179 "-" U•fw9a•1~ A.pa ISA•b u.fwa, Ap)li l••h u.M.. Ap• lll4•h u.tw., ..... t., SI.re 4300 ........ ~I'd/ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• _lta9' • G "-tUwfwa11...., , ........ .,.,. .. ,, ... , ......_u.tw '••• .. W1 t '1tv JJt •r••il boa c.N.._. MM -... M4 ~i lb ·~~a ..... -........ ~ ....... ••••••••••••••••••••••.f •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .......... ;;\.. • ••••• •• H••• •••••••·•••• ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'ftoc ~a 1~1l pooj Ct· ... t,fl I .... , ' J, U07 P ,.,..., JZJ4 ,..,_... 311f Great 3 t'r• :a b • LM ,ac-, lbll ~. J~tobdd\. Avail. now. S.'Ml-ZINOc.Geoe ' ' ' Ct r 1111Mf 1005 • --··••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• wtt•mlly toea.. trpr&. 'l'J 1'1$J New p. patnt. blw. 1 *23S. 2 br $285. 21e .... 1i ................ . 3 •. clMe to bay, yrly Tiburon JhllbLl 2Br, t:ltH 5 Br home. Woods. dlbwshr,kidalspetO.K. ft Lit cpia ~ paijo. No peu. 1 UthSt.22012thSt. Gal to ahau Park ~TSELL! ~a~t. IM."95/mo. famil)'rm.coodo.t>lnina A/C. Beach tea.n.11 club. MIS/mo.llCMll'IAtt·No A ..... S.-.ke aml cllHd olr . Nr. aa.tto,beach.3 br.3ba. Newportapt,U>t,swlm· Market. Net ~.000 yr. -.aoGorMe-2533 rm. z car car .. pool. lmraedoccap.'700.Can fee. • Yt.iC",.. Plllrvlew • BeUr. !rplc, encl. car. Fnc:d mini pool, tennt. courts A&ent.U-41811 ... ',C JI I wwwlHdlUll "15/mo.~1 PaelflcaRJtyno-cmi c ta 1!1&1 » • ~..._.,.. ~wttr.scis.21102 :;;:c~~o~~~! AMT19UISTOd · ....................... , 3 tir. 2 ba detac:bed t.ohle. \Mu .1111• 3421 WI CMIAltAMTU 2-er unturn. AduUs. oo t. ga-0771 '44-~all pG\. U> Sq n.. Good OdN *· '• 3bnnhouse,trpl,2 ba,1rw 1 ... 1agt.1eect1 lJ40 f"nn.,frplc,A/C,elub ....................... •W14estselectionJ>09s. pet., CloM tq sbopploc. 2 br 1~ ti. in fou:rplex, lmaleroommatesneeded By owur. ~2341 OT yrd,$375. ....................... Ll!el'Qvp.871·-WES'la.IFJ'an..JBr,2 •lnbousecomputersys. Ms483& near8"chlsSlater.$240 . ....,.. 6'1$-0DI. as-5600 .._._,..._.. J26f ba, f~Jc. 1>4Uo, Pool. •Dallytelephooeservice 2 Br 1~ Ba cpta d'115 mo. Call 962·4697 or =gfs• B~~-~;i;i;i;;;;;~~~ji;ii;i;;;;;;;; C.O. .. Mw 3222 ENJOY ... :;::;: .............. Mto.'lsi.1'79914M-0029ev •Vac11ncietverlfleddaily at9ve, ga~baae' dlap: 962-0465 dent. $1S()m~~~t lcl~~: C..Oll~-- .11 . ...................... THEllACHUFI NOFEEIKouM..c~olldoei T•···-·~us:f~c::elors Water paid. Cblld • '"'-,, 3144 54.5-3'57 Eatabllsbed bG•td as : -2 BR. 1 ~ .• frpl, beam New 2 story 3 B1r ... ~~ duplexes . Rcqt• .&aitkcfJO • 3121 :....:ren1.tcouns;... ~~.~.l pet. OK. $215. ••••••••h••••••••••••••-m-~--w-oma--n-w----t_..-~ bomo bmliMiili lA . . cal., pvt patio. $42$. Agt rm. 3 Ba, rrplc,. a ........ ,. Pavi.bon,67S-491ZBkr. -•..-•·--·-••••••• .n.-..7d S·Q0..8·00" ......-3 Br. 2 be. l114r>', bl\nl, 2 " ... -C.M \ «·S..67~ hook·up, d~I. 1ara1e. ...._..5 ... YIEW Hqnth11tba.1htb aBr. __... .. ays · · atoey. PCIO/mo, lit" toshr4 rhsewttotbu. , $$2:5/mo. Child/pets OK. "5 '"' -1"'8&, i, Uv tm 4t din RENJIMES 11.:AMCA luL AvalJ. now. 963-2187 Sl7S. CM. S48-91'10 •l 2 Bri. l bath on nice st. Agent, 946·1311 or 3 Bt 2 Ba, pool, tennb, rm. bJtnt nfflf,. pobl LACASA 1_._. ~a.a• ,.....&~ Frpc Is pool. $375. No ~161. Jat,'$84Syrty.675-05Cl2 lltfl cond's:aso-mo NJ .; . ..._,.,._A~Mow ...,........r-., ..,. ---pet..O.UM4-7129 petl ~ • Qr,ptoleaalonalServ1ce All utils pd., cl)\.t, drpl, ....................... U•illglxf1•"1 Lachenrr~~ :1 RNW't~ Inc f,\1. l\/H '>~" J4bJ . LOVELY j BR .. z Ba .....,_.Sllores ' Call 898-0771 poo&, lndry fac'•· Adults Bachelor apt, modern Sbareab0mecraptme12t •• ,S3508 /mo.IMdlrud bomde. 1 ~~.Do~~kiAd/i>t;t 3Bt28a~ly decor'd, D:qlr ....... HOO ' oasroney over 35, DO feta or bath.ookitcben,uliJpd. "-··i m.uuw·-···-Uft!...¥"9UtCIMSIS , r +eec u e gar en. vn... ~ · ........_, gen .. SMO.MD-ii:lill~ ••••••••••--•-•••• "" cblldreo. Ca I Sue; Sl10mo.494"'154 ~ • ~TUI ,......_ ,',. Sty firelrie.Cpt.s 4'df'J)ll. NoCee. Untu.milbeclaopln 1401 Wft ..... Mr 5!16·7707 or Henrr; llk'1«~~ OnnfetJHaJeOocktalla Adltaooly. 759-0358 2br 2b i,.; 1 to b h Bil t.Jlyoa Townbome. 3 :tBdrm. l~9a btand (2blocb E . ol Bea<th) &42-913T Lower 4uplex, 2 brm, 1~ cu~ ~e;wq $11,7SO ~ JASMINE CREEK DI S3lis a.gar, m c Bt.pool.Convenlentloc. new crp_tlo~ ;drapes AC.Hf.Corp. SmFee ba, carpets, drapes, Forover6yra.832-0:M AitC2131272-«3'9 · x Byowoer. &M-5187 refrlt ~ 2 door forced air beat. •rs prtv. Colleet. .:. 2Br +den, cpta, drps. e Smote Uarm. l ..... P11!1i11 .. , ll07 Nwptfflta.new28r2Ba, petio,enclosedpr,clote Female rcnmte, lee $600 mo .• 6 mo. lse. 3br. fam rm, lrg master New Broadmoor Se.view If~· I Caauo ..... , ... •••••••••••••• all elec. Bllna. pkng. to beaeb. wm lease. Emerald Bay Terrace Saodwicll ~elherJ "l S.7138 bdnn,pool,$47!1 Hme,mglal)' •• lklBa. BeO\ !om a1u al B ODd B f t KldsOK.?350&~ Walk .._..l Hm, own rooat Ir bath. Serrice.Serrinfhltid. c..t.Meso 3224 2 fplc's, dbl gar, all elec Rdac · •4!!..,P~m:. ~ :00. ~~~~J:.· to 1'7lh st. eu:u"; Friendly atmospbere, Short hrs. _,ooo ao .. 4br, pool,~ sn.l to ocean, k:l~b, pool, tennia, spa, erea~ •-.-·-· ...__t'~u • U ~""" · --1-wa-a 3152 Sl""' _._ u. ..... ,..,._ ~ 'b'-.de fOJ' T Oil £Z ...................... $62:5 view of Oran1e Co. All childnm or~. NQ lease -.... p .!~• · _.., mo. .,,....,,_ · ~~......... ~1 "" ........ _..--.. ter"ml Pvt pt,)' MCMlm EASTSIDE, new 3 Br. 71~5866. Bob Graf tbia lo a pvt ard comm of required. Available Feb. GCS-4203; ~1103 2 Br deluxe ~tudlo, uUl pd. .N\ce 16! BR $265& up. «Mr-Mevea.' ba, 2 car gar, Pool/· NB. SB:iOmo. 15. /\a k tor S .a 1 1 br apt 1 blk to beach BJtm, crpta, pool. $Z'IS. Quiet area. Pool Male 23+ Qule\, stable • jactmi. f'ncd yard, frpl. SUPER 4 Bdrm, 2 ba 963-nllor96MGI· Bernardlnett8f·1'181 Very cieao. $2'5. mo: 1111 Maple. 548·&118, 83t.7'1t& matw"e$150pluautil. l.R. E. M. MSG/mo. Kids &pet.s ok. w/frplc, DW, crpt. fed 6'1$-l<S • eves645-5647 6'WM5 ~1716 675-667 yrd. $425. 963-4!167 Agent, lif lwills r. .• ,., .._...,. IHdt lHt FrwbiM for sale, W. MESA WOODS nofee. ON WATER. 2 Bdrm ·-•••••••••• .. • .. •••• C....dif Mtr 3122 l Br, cpt.s, drps, atove, ••••'-••••••••••••••u• F to share w/ume acra Itta Bell &Ra. U you'Ye 3 Bo 2 BA, bi" fenced 3br, cpts •. drpe, frplc, dbl OJndo W/Yiew. Side tie .... ......, 3706 ....................... ~ .,!k• no peU. $225. PAIK ~POIT ~7~67~::M ~ .u~. = ~:~rT!.~ I ... • tio. (ncd d.~ avall.'850/mo. 1 ....................... .,..._,, Bachelors, 1 or 2 .,:..,.. Call , . ~~fi~~1t $.SlS/mo. f.,~~;Mz~ · DOVER SRORES area. Dlx I Br, pr, yrty $650. • ~~ 2 Br, 2 Ba,~ mo. 98S BedroomsflTownhouaes Offlct...... 4400 --84-7...:n _____ _ Lup 5 Bdrm, den, dlo· Adultnldy ~· (€?'' Miu Ion Drive, aee From~.SO ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• ,.MT SHOP CSELECT Sharp 3 Bdr1 dm. 2dba,,ow, ~rm• pool. $UOO/mo 87WOS3nalw1°'ds ~ "tor~s Manacer.Aptl. Spectacular spa. tot'11 Rm Dental, a Rm Ntl'SP580/MO T' PROPERTIES crpts, c yr · 39S. ...,_ , 4 .. • ......... recreaUoo p.-otram, Medical. Prof bldg. Alt Busy Blvd. tocatiob. IO~ --------1 963-4567 A1ent·N0Cee CORONA DEL MAR, .... ,, • .a 3701 'GARDEN APTS . E/Slde 2 Br 1 Ba, newly socialprocram. 7pools,8 (714)488-0680or499-2237. RepeatbualMSs. T~:. New 3 Br 2~ Ba, 2 ca 4Br2Ba,nrGoldenWest Cbarmi!li28r,famnn,Z ....... , • ..., .... ._.... <X>BONAD.ELMAR de«>r'd,~.ist..t~t.+ temUaCOW'ls.AtFuhlon . 'TIME 751·1400 gar. fplc, cpls, drps, &Slater.LseatSS25.lsl babouse.Walktobeacla IALIM>Alt4M 2,lk:Townbouse frplc $1.00.Nopeta.494"'534 kland,Jamboree&San llitaitl•ea.wlrtc r · E/Slde, ~. 6.'U·0303 & last, call 536-3145 or $S2S/mo. • ~ r.rUl'Jl254275 J>oci&e.uw, Som~ ocea~ ~E OWnef' tn>e apt lo Joaqubl'Hills Road. Ofc apace ln Newport· Plants" Gifta • ml>OrtS. • 646-'fW 847-0293Avl:m. W•wfrCMtltto.s mo.1C151lainSt.6'fHZto &Catall1la 'views. Close trtplex, adulta, no peta. 11141644-1900 AirportA.rea. RecepUon. Good locaUon • &tcel. ..1-c.16ll·ll00 -n-1...:...~ '• 'tb ftiblon bland• Cine Ntabopl.$00.C37-8128 ~-"-.. .:·borvie·w.-n· phone sen •• CODI~~ lease. Term.a· ...ocm. 1 Br, cpta ........ 2 enc. COZY 3 bdrm, 2 ba. _,, ... ~~ oae ---w rm. ldtcb, secyserv,Wc:· 5Sf.7185 -porcbea, fncd yd. $300. w/cpt, fed yrd, kids & r.lcoa7. 1 boaae rom beadl..AllolBr.M4-as11 WISftAY1IJPt..IXIS do. 2Br, 1~ ba, brick tatini "copy machine ... '--w~ •otO 1 l 1 Wtrpd. 8'15·5810; i42-G393 pets ok. sass. 963-4!167 SEAV1EW. 3 Br ~ 008llDfroat. Jlfo p.u. = · COSTA MESA pit.lo, 2 c=•r., all kit. From$29C>. (7H)752·n7o-w -• Agent, No fee. Bar Harbor 'Prime oen 1mo. Winter~ Walktobcb. cooven sauna & ................. .-... ... ldeal 3 br, 2 ba new 2 vu$87S.5'7·TOt4;asa.321.5 ,,.._._......__: ,1 • _2 · U.1-,-m2l00sqft N~~J'~ILY Jacuiii: shr/dryi;. 'yr THEEFFICIEMT Boulique,IQuallfted c:lient fit.or)'. SSBS/mo. Will ls IEACHHOUSlollr. --~, v.•a. 5G8Ac.cla6'$-704I · · • he. Avail lmmed. u911!a~u .... VE seeks well established opt. 835·3437, eves S4:i0mo S36--09S2 ~/lease,BlgCanycin,3 .......... -.......... cOJ• Private back yarda, 973-125Sor'97·2UIO ,,_..,~.. profitable·boutlque la Luxury living by the sea, Temds, pool 6 jacuul. Ii vfewa, only steps no pets. Near South Dlx Jbc' h lower dplx. 1 Rec e Pt . • • r v • , Seo( deta1i. to coosut~ 673-8484 · BR. Z ti. $795. By ownr.. ' !filbr w/mlni ocen prages.. 2 cblldreo ok Mo. to mo. rent l!)cl: Oran1• Couaty are•. Best MESA VERDE area. exec S Br, Din Rm, Fam S.U.Ql,831-3231 to a Cove. "25/mo. Coast Plua. Rant.al ol blk to bcb. No pets. $450. persooalized pbooe ~v· taat, Box 151, c/o Dally ·· Delu.xe4Br,2ba,fa~rm. Rm, lmmac + grdnr. 8'5-2Sl5or751-017 ficeopeadailyl01oS.820 lse.~ erage, coJtf. nss. mail P\lot, P .O. Box 1560, ·: ~~~{,rp~i~=e~a~~~ ~~~Avl March 1. ~~~r~~~.D.J"lJ:. ~ =::t!..~~."' "·of ~U:~prlt1 O!fa"e'·.Ca.'*8 • ~3604 Beautifully (lecorated. • TION MIWPOITHlfCMtTS BACHROR APJ THEEXEC\JTIVE lllueAM .. . 2brmCONDO,newpaint, Patio oo water. Comm. PRIME LOCI • SUITE,64C).Sf70 C,pa;'-'ty ',IOIS Nwpt Hgts, 2 Br. den, very sharp. Pool. Nice pools, tennla. Yrly i.e, BEDROOM I I $350 2Bdrm +den or I Bdrm. Al.J.UTILS PD! -.. • .. ••••••• .. ••••:. huge Yard & gar. area. $::!M. 1st & laat + fam.1815/mo.After&PM 2 • pc, Completely redecol'ated 100' from lhe ocean. 250sq.ft.delux.eolfice.W. AteYoQlnterestecll.libuy- mo. 61>Z305 aecur. ~5705 ~3370 with new c'arpetinc. Semi fltl"niakd. Avail 19th St. C.M.,SUO mo. loi meat' d.irect\Y 1rolll - •I • ICIOS & PITS OK ! Br 1 Ba unfarnlahed house, Jge fenced yard. $350 per mo. cau sue, $58.7'107 Pvt l Bt. utll pd., lldult.a, .. . no peta. $300 . ... ~~~~~~~~· refrlg . .& pelat.. No nowl.,tE.Ba.lbotBlvd. Tom,~2200 thef~rz ... ..cwrt ----...--...--1 ...; cbildrenorpeta.64S-3'7-4 Yrly 1250 per mo. NO ~ •llDCAIPO'* Ft:E. Call: Sue a t tote. 1025 --------• Sll&T107 aQJ\lme Oc Airport..,._ • ••••••n•••••••••••• on MacArthur Blvd. J.t.W&JNT.D.'1 _LUXUR ____ Y_B_A_Y_F_RO_NT __ • PreaUge omce space, LOANsAVA!U.BLE br ... _ 4200sq .• ft. Attractivelm• ~J>Oproble.ID. 2 ,JU11,lrpfc,1ep.elec. provementa, Broiler. .___ 75•1t0• aarage. ~er bo,at dock n4-S58-1'701 ---· .,. • avail. $.'550 mo. 673-6336; l.ii_ii.i ______ ,f::=:-· -r.::;;~:;i-6052:;1:--=-:::: 642·9886 Monet Avai b e, many --------• 8 .,. .. CH YEARL.Y TOP DIC sums aourcei, a l ·p{oJecta.. ~ Pel'IODM services for all ,_ae>K __ mlo_._7 ____ _ 3 Bt, 2 ba duplex with types ot businesses: Swing,-.t•ardTD'._ ~Oeil::nt:.:.i:r'f-Pb 011 e co Ye ra Ce , I ajy'iJ>P""al 1 --------• aecretarial Hnices, re-·Creditootl~t. I "' . ~.Br 1 Ba, fncd, car, Luxury lchl1t 2 br, St.epa to ceptloaiat.. much more. comtructlOo le BuaioesJ • ' ·= .... of Hwy '290JDb. bc.b, oceao vltw. $425. Ex.cellent loc.ation near Loans ·i • ' 1 bath. clean 6Ts.&420 up. $515 Rlv•r Ave So. Cat Plua "FrwJa, CalUbry.f7f.12U'7 I 8e2S8f CalJ 979-21Q toda)-. ......... vi/oc~(A ylew. Incld1 Luaury 2 Br 2 Ba, 111....,.1111.,.....,._.,._._ 1Nfl trPlc, W/D, blto.s, crpts & F.aa11D.de coodo1 prof de· CLOSE TO BEA CH, IXPAtel• 711 DeWI. .. .1031 4rDh f Un porch " COl''daircood.auacbdbl alnate $216. Util incl. Teniflcrateestartat63' ................... , ••• IU!fe· ~/lie. 675-6061 881' w/opnr, adlta pref'd, 1510\v. a.Iboa,C'7~7101 In the· dyoaml~ N.B. ., t01W£SJ .... _~L ~· , 1 .... b'"· f-m "nc> pet.. $36$ mo. Call Airport•bus. area. S~ce • -.. 711 &Al> • v ~ Owner'• una,sacriflce ail LS33 to aaoo ft beacll, mo incl. uW. L"e 2 bl', blghly up. av : aq. • ......... ..... 41M-3324 ca Cod..,_.__ • Call Prop. Mgr Judy , ... "'~· ..:&...;;.. pe ".,........_ graded, 50' &o l>esl beach. <lark, 83341813 or stop by ._.. '-~ Lrg 2 brm, ele.c. kitchen, 2Br, 1~ba. patio, q\iiet S3tS. 1'1nle'J'. 673·20!11 Commerce Park. 4100 WT.D......._ adlts.$2165/oio.131-3186 Patty; or eves & wkods BirchSt. FalrestTermnloc.uq ~48 s......~ ... AIRPORT OFFICES l & 2 room suit.es, all '42·2,71 61 I associated II • •• '• "' ,, - -- DAILY PILOT I 8'dricAlf .. • ' 4 ....... AMUu• c.,1 °11 C1111 il/Cn~r ... -I Ta Pa:tkl/P••"'9 /l...W ~ ...................... . ................................................................................................................................................. ;[.~~ .••..••••.••••......•••......... Pric. bUIW' onJy $UBS; USTOM FRAMING, All t_y9u concrete, • .. ....... 8tdtk CHgAPEST J1aultn1 la . T.-Service wllb PET!:RBPAINTlNG PA'l'CHPLAST!RING R(dt ~Le$s. All types 1b:30 Md.Ilion lnclud• com, Rea, rm •dda, blockwork, planters UclZ'JUI "'5-61n• town. Fr...,, CHMPJ • Sinilt. For eveninl Expr'd. Reas Rates. A 11 t Y Pe•, Free Uc/bond·d . Insur. l"ruc all tabor and materials flni1h " repair work cuatcnn bric.It He It &a-2185orl6-t!i0 appt In 1our bome1 Free Eat. Call Gene estimates. CaU~ ealhnale. 19•·0421 or pl111 l~ bank flllaQc' M14M> boDded.142.-C. EL!X:TRl~·Priced . --~ S.'52-0C:SS PLASTERING _53'7_~-----~fcwfreust.lmateul c.,.tStnlU Csll:edor ript-free estimate on S::: !~~~~ =: All PROF~SSIONAL Homes, additions; re• Tl9 llauey~ · ............. •••••••••• •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• =mall~~ t84-711118fJ~ •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• P•inUna, lpter/Exler. stucco, free esla, low •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• ..... a.,... carpet Man will l•Y youn a.J.Huffman • Soo. Gas U di , LANDSCAPING. J(eu. wOC'k auar642-0388 rates. 5116-4892 Ceramic Tlle-Spec. in ....................... or mine. Repairs & Cciatt.CuatomAJt•Add1 L• '91 ··~~!:: .... !......... Rlaaoaa.blepricet. Palntiaf. Extr/lntr. Ex· Dry Wall FlnlslL Hane . enltfes•noors,25.vnex Has rain damaiect your cle~loo! Gl.l&rwork f>atloa , c:abloeU, ~ .. ••••••••••••• ... ._ ••• W aREA.ll.YCLEAN .._OC'U7·"'8 pr'd, booeat, neat, reas. T•pe . Spray. Quality per.162·1883 __ _ asphalt? Call U1~2440. al b111er 11vinp. Free fonnJd.Newconat. Ra PnlfJ•pueseLandscap· 8'8t,sE? Call Glntiha ••urr Ut'dllM·lCMSDave controlled. Richard, CERAMICtlle Neworre Boode¢lic.,lt1RJ'11d. est,6'5-3646 & eotnmJ· M5..ff4.4 or lnalttanle:Glat-lhlnt. Girl Free tMS-sm m ......................... 9&CHT87Freeesl model Free est SmlJbs M,Ma -..c_~.._.. poo • steam clean 54M541. c • booded. Mid. DIO'Wiq, trimming, . es ~It Small jobs YOUNG MAN. 5 yn ex pr Pl ..... welco.;,e 536-2426 aft 5 ...... __ -Col brl ht ht. ,..__ ..-.. ~-... ~. weeding. Eree Houa•cleanloc wltb a ~-·-.. _. i. ln wallcoverlng. Free:.aa g . or 1 enera; w uaa. .. vu .. a ...... , new, a ... eatimata..~'1072 ~ 1 h R f ......... --• esta.MS-8S76Aody ....................... y,...s.-,~ ... ·-••••• .. •••• cpl.110 min bleach. Oe•n d!Uons, temod .• res.. ==~~ e •· Irvine.1'7Wl75eves. HOMES.AVERS. Plumb· ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• $15.ANYM.\Tl'ER llY, din rm. halU15. Av1 comm. Free eat. Call J~cudener,1.Syrs AJnlS110MASONRY Fine Exler. Pab\Ung by ina • HeaU~ Free est Tr hi 1 1 J!lvelcwkndabyappt, rm $7.50, couch $10, chr Spiro5C'1-Q20t exp, Maiotenaoce Ir _.. ........ ..u.t. w-•.. 1 • •-R.51.no{.St.llc.,lns. Try .. 0 hr u-•t.A:reliabl~ ee m1 m ng, ~par. Del~··'t Di "' -au eUm pet odor .,.. __ cl•• .. -up •• ., ........ ~ .-.ways, p a11~en • .... -"'"'"'"' ..... _ ~ · ·~-· remova • o~er ... yra aw / vorce $1.'1.,• .... ar r' Dlq ..... • -._.. _.....,_.,, PaintiQllsrepaln. w.U.. Lintel laod.acape ....................... -..... aervl~. BofA, MIC OK. combinedexperm.&381 CoUeetlom 30~* CptDo rep~. 15 ~11 QPR 1· ••••••••••••••••••••••• a.EAN·UPS/HAUUNG "5--1118 M2-8808,ukforCarl. Quality PablUng. Lowest. 751-31.50or847-03113 Dnmkdrtving $300 wor .. myee . e a S 1 o..,_,_,._ .. , __ .,_ •-i to.._ ...... l Tree &c yard work misc (up to tri•I) 531-0101. Drapery Fabric • .... __. ........ ..._.., -...... 5 .... .a_t-a... ~ '}.,.,. n wu ... ree es . PL UN BING . Free Dum ,_ ...... , ;.I .: d . Unl · f7000yds in s10Ck mu.st Freeest. 642·9907 •--••-••-..,_. .. _, o1ackt'1$ot338/8'1S.T280 · w k p.,.,.;. '"' p..,a er. wfldetainer·delaull Carpets & uphob\ery ..; .old! 7K Hvblp la--r&aldenlial • ofrlee "••••••••••••••••••••• , eslimate. or _r.uar.· 831·1~7 $1.50.00fullprice steam cleaned 3 1'ms ventery red Uon au~ 1111 W~ cleanlnc apeelaJlsta "Two Ilea Will Move Prof palnl g 4r P•Per fut. serv. &U l700, Shnplewij.la $3S.OO $14 95 (400 tti Chairs lit qua.lit XCeo au«~ .......... ••••••••••••• Booded inaund. l'ree 'You" Wti haodle lrJ " llan1in1. worlt guar. 8,Ul·lOPM Tree removal, cut Is haul •Court~~s~\tt $10: Lie, ins~. gw.L ·l-Drapery fuo E . Edina-BANDYllAN:Carpenlr)', ests .• 952:5 1Qll movea-olflcf " Free eat. 536·'383, Poo'5enlu,I.,... :;~epalra. Charlie ~7200/art7p.{· F·E Systems. 831·5350, Santa Ana 5'1·0203 eleetrlcal, plum&lnt II, bouaehold. Distaqce Ai ...... •••••••••••••••••••••••r--------call(213)434-19U 64.5-3939 5'1·20!0 · Ooon.IM7·2787,557-4!!0t H~F..CLEANINGlsour local, also packing. P•raaon Pool Service. n.tort.g HANDYMAN H " bus~aea]~a~ll~ble Loweat legal rate. P .. YomrCa• Complete awlaunlng ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... S..lce c-..t/CCMiCt .. • c.tom dnpa, spreads, a ti Con~c1:i::.~u.a aervice. ' ce a •I· Uc/lm:rd. Cal T 111-Mt. Spedall.dna iJ1 realden· pool maintenance. uilar lessons, quallf1ed ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... •••••••••••••••••••• sbutttn II all wlndo• J.n.tQ)all CallMS-0302 1ed.>'Annaatl6-ll00 PhlC'1·72'18 tial homes. lnt. & ext. 6'75-W7111 teacher your home mtping wkly, monthly ln Conettt.e, MasoflfY, slabl, coverlogs at discount · General Houle d•anin& llOVING lfAULING 6 PlHH cbe~k our re· mine. ~y492-41'13 ' your oil Karen Hannah foundations, b1g1lwalls, prices. Shady Deal, 743 Ge •!I Ask foe Maria • feNDces. Lie • 820881 ..... & ._.,.... (71' )642-8748 (114 > paUos, Licensed Eve!! Baker St, C.M. $49-3325 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 543-4926 CLEANUPS. lteatQQ. Guar., lnard, free est. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 567-4891 • ~1 a.........&....l-....1 SKJPLOADER Dump Free esL Coll, audentl. Ted.131-'lOIS Carpentry, cabinet. elec ....................... . 11 C l k ~ tru k HAULING •--HOUMcleanlog 611-2457 B&B.673-ll&6 • plumbing repairs. SPARKLINGCLEAN RESUMES, preparatlo11 a ily ~men wor ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• c · • ......... After 4 P.11. Have own ,..._./a.,.... AJuminated celUn ln· W'Uldows & bousedean- " 'YPh~I of your. re· dooe the right way. 18 ELEcnuCAL SERVICJ!; ~· cradlnt, demo etc transpotta&.IQD. , ....... •••••••••••••••• stalled alao. Exp. f: all. lnc . .-.sa.., 536-7711 eumiea.548-7180 ' Yrs uper. Call Jeff CALLSSUhr,•SMALL 83l12S7 •w ... S.tkft VERYNEATPATCH J .Wallard.QJ..%251 --------1586-4452 JOB.SMZ.aaa.3 ...... Expu. bouA cteaner. By ......... •••••••••••••• JOB.SllTEXTURE lndowa cJuoed, re ~ C:.pewlwr , ....................... the day. Olimtraalpar\a· NUNe aonsuttant IO yrs ~est. 893-1'39 looflMJ asona~ltt, buslnessei., •H••••••••••••••••••••c1assllied Ad 11 bi K·'Mel Electric. lod.,OOCStod t.1!4T truck UonSU.eaza ap.llriv.dut.yw/family ••••••••••••••••••••••• bomeslc~.8'74461 Master Cr a flam an . items, s malls itseeau 0~ cctnm, res, &maint.11vs. Trash.:! tri 'llanclY oriented cue. Call SELL •ldJe lterm with a ROOFS inatalled factory · · Specialty: Rem()deling, anyilem 642.5618 Hooest Is reliable. Pree fC2.S103. ~ Find what you wani In 213/887-677Uor Inform•· DallyPUotClaaaifledAd. direct; estab as yn. eau Have !IOmelhJ,p( ~ sell? riniah "~pair. d9-~105 · · est. ~ Daily Pilot ClassJfteda. tklll 6 appt. eG-llli8. Harold Gwua 549-2961 <lassified ads~ it well. a.o.t&Fomd HflpWoated 710 HefpW-.tt,d 71tOHelpW..ted 7100 HefpW..tff ·J 7100 HllpW&ltcl llOQ ..... W..tad 7100 tWpW..... 71 HtfpW..tacl 7100 • ..........•......• ,~·· ......................................................................................................... ~ ............................................................................. . LCSI': ~eb ~lg. Reward ! Acctni Bkkpn& ~1~lae~ 1!,J ASSEt-.a/MICH'L ~.:':~Fri~~';:~· ~ Wub Cashier, NwPt . ia 1£11> Ta11tH Male S1amtse, dart Sea ........,_.... ..... .1 t C t Small co located by oc f , " .. t •,x.asuna Area .. P&eaae . .......,.,. ~ Point, Vic. Cra.nd ~nal. ·•--v-• Ple 0 maa~ce . 0• • Alr rt· baa lmmed re 1 DOD·S1Da1'. call"'"'460 Immed. poslUon avail Balboa Island. Pl ase Register Today to •ork . Mesa 10 umt bwJdlng ~ .. fi lndl / : SS6-M31.. HAVI YOU. OWN OflllCI for abarp lndlv. wbo iii call6'15-!8'11 Jtl onvuiousaccount1.n11& -near all convenlencea. _...... or v. w ex • OhUd care " soJ!t• u..Jr&-.. i t.ryl 1 an me bookkeiln• usl1n· No children. no pela. per. hl aHembly by Bar L1dy, no eaper ~leaDJ.nl SuQJM_, Operate an established office in a ~ .or.prodan~ eveh LOST . 0o· be Pl call """"77 blueprint " checkout of neceu. By oeacb In H.B. Mast ... · tr ~ pos. as ucuon tee . rmu pu_p ,~meot.s. ork dose to ease . cloe• tolerance equip.. Mellow place. B&W. -.e own •ot. ~rinre Costa Mesa area with profit forrepairdeptfEQCdepl Fefrl, 5 tnO. nr Mabl/l'l your home. Figure Al!ch/Plilll/P:ssn/Gr aphlc call f .i r •pp t. 536-3300 ~~6'4.iOOOwk= rewards and without any major casb ol O.C. electron.lcs mlar. St. HB. Nda med. attn. Cler~• to Sr. Accoun· -Full llln• tecDP flex 714/557-1051 EOE ask for va or 07· 1nvestment. · Creative advertising & 1 Yr uper. or 2 yri; Reward.980-21N ., tanta needed thruoul hn,~ •• · • · BEAUTl~ ew:t&ewknda schooUng req'd. ~Int OrangeCo . Asalatant to relieve. CM Shop Fri.sit. eau sales tralQlng provided. Exciting beoeflta 1 Jud edf ;~~~fd: ~~e~ t~,~h ~~all's 1 mao•ier's 2 dayslwk al att6J)ms4Mno. Olriea1 opportunity if you yearn for greater dental inau~~ e m · ~ber eyes .. Nr Placen· 500S~C:::,,~S't~SOt ASSDIBLERS attractive .. uolts lo BEAUTY OPERATORS-St nPIST income through sales management . DISC tia&Supenor,N.B.o No.Tower,UniottBank ~TralneeAuembl91'1 H.B.Ama.7SZ.1583 forbusysboppin&~tu. and an off.ice of your own. IC IMSRUMB4TS 2/9/71.MS-2351 Jn The City.of Orange Neededlmniedlate&y rent sp1tce, need own mctapboDe interested phone Jim Wood at'675-6000 102E. Baker St '~' • .'SJSO 714/835-003 LoncltSbortTerm AUTO followinc 536·1738 aft :'Stat CoataMesa 979-5300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Aas!gament.s ALT.STAITB 5PMor536-G44daya. '1Bll~ve EqualOpporEmployer · 3~-VaDable. ·-••A.-ntepro !>fln~ln,problem? AccomtlllgClertl Mustbaveowntransp. ,._,_._ Beauty Operators de· f'rechnkal ;'p; " Ca24Ub.raAJeohold Relp3830Une Sharp person w/acc;tng C.Todav SSM520 PEnu TOPP Y slred. Please call for NEED D ~~~ ••••• ?!!! ~-~~ ..... ?!!4! l!:LECTRONICS • •Y badCJ'OUfld. Min 2 yrs -.... 1'o1> p1 v p -· A • •ppt. OIKEDIAT£L Y exper. Adding mach & ••-·._op ay. ac ay PAIDVAC,INSUR, 963-0717 lAJGC 6 Sbort Tt1rdl As· · 1--------•1 MSI Data Corporation, •MICHILLl-S• some typing -req'd. VktwTe..,a:•, PROl'ITSHARING/ alpmeata. Holiday 4' Companion. woman, 2 an established expand· Out.call Mnsaae Engineering planning & 5er¥lcft RETIREMENT PLAN IB 1 MAM v a c; a l I o n p " y day week; lovely ocean· DESIGNER d l 10.UC·2AM 731-44 consulting 'llrm w/xlnt Div Walter Kl4de &Co . Good benefits,. contact Hos •tallaalion pla~ front bome, l'i'pt. Beach. ;:!s:~ tb~~0P1P~~!fi0: --------....-t benellts.ContactPerson· 20825.E.Bttatol ~WlatStSanlaAua Holiday Inn, Laguna Lt.boutekeeplng&coolt· YSI Data Corporation, S11triW ll.-.. ne17141751-2110. ste lG Newport Bea~ llllls, ~ext 345. la-C. Non· a mo It et. an est•bllsbed, """'•""· terminal bualnese has 'ConM!r t Bm&ol 4s 67W1Sl -J::"":"-lmmediate(lpelli.ogs for: 181.5So.EICaminoReal AalUft..-. ... ~st t r.__!.L..Ji..t_... •Auto mecbanlc, font.• .. Boatllanufactllrel' in1 and-proaresalve 4 San Clemente. F\illy Uc. AC:Cvv" • '"""" -~ lll'l:IWN -leader jo the a_pplluUona S .. IOlt J'orappt.'93-'f296 J()perO'-e8yte,aoantemes'!!2.:..~~oo' 1'¥frJr) ~-=:'::.~:=~ ERICSON YArffJS vtt~~o'!ats1 ter~~.!...,l!>dus~, has TICtHC ... M ~~~:!~r ~=~.~· ~s;~ ~t"f .,, "~-~~ :=e~~~~!..'t~: ~~t~~m;;,.~'~0:.~ ~~teo_.&tora ~t~~~J~:fr~: Outea,11~4"-5111 • 20-offB'furr ' .._L.nwlllllr per'd be1p, W•PI baaed apeakin&~Pri.Dge..ApplY Must create dealtn Tedmiclan.Atolldback· AifX'TSPAYABLE' llUI~ ~Ct I «• ooexper. LlnwlJco Laba, 21<18 S&youterromen&Jpeertna fP'OUDd ln digital elec-MASU&I CLERg ASSfMBtb' PNlilr woman wtth auto FDISH UMI Newport Blvd. C.11. input.I and/or product. froalcs logic and systems FIGURI .,.ODB.S Immediate openlnc for $' •als.·rentat, leutac or CAltPIM11IS apeclflcatlon "blcb along with a proven pro-- ,.. experiencttd a4counu otJMir aales uperlence. c=---COOK -eibbUstres the bub for nctency in t14ing 0-Sc:ope ORTS payable cleric of expand· IOEDED Guaranteed' aalary -" ~ Dinner !louse exper. AP· the required eqhleertnc and oCher test devices to AL&.OMLY ing construction Ce>'. I!IMEDINl'ELY ·~ commlaalon for perm&• AS 9.S ~nOMOfC pl)' In person, Sam'• dra•ln.ga. R~ulres 5 tr o u b I e •boot · 631· ii I Previous experteoce Ci TOf'PAVl!l nentposltlon. Neat. well· HAltDWAla Seafood U, 3901 E. Co~t years' of drafting plus 2 mlcroproceuor b~sed ortlce machines skl1l1 All~. djy, awinJ ~ aroomeci•~~llke IMSTAU.BS ASstSTAMT llwJ,CdM _ years' design ea· tennina1a aod receinrs DANC&OFFUN oeceuary.Muatbe'able g ·r•te Include• peDOD need y ap~y ............. F/timepolitloaworkin1 pertence. tothecompooenllevel ls BU\ ollde girla dance t ~ a a a u m e ~. ~ & abort for this on with .,..... lit ntreaUoo olc at large Coot, exper. full Umi?, required. 2·3 years ex· rap_ Hssion. lOArt11 t idponsiblUUee. ~sual -term &11l1P1C!Jlts. Holi· ' w e J 1 • o o w n &t STOCI( ltM CU(S •Pl complex. Clerical dinner house. We offer an excellent perlence preferred. 3AM Jloo-Sat. 12PM t alJDosptiere.'Salarycom· day & vaefa.llon pay. established leul.Da com· .......,TOUCHUP aldlls • knowledge as &U-"34 _ salary ud company IPll&ul,~N.~uclld, nitl'lsurate w/ •X· Hoap\k,U.•UOa plae pcaQY.(slnceUS.).Apply DlfAlla$ well as some artlatlc • beneflta inchuUn1 a DIGorTAL Anah.SSl:flSO 1 perience.Seadreslidleto avail .. , • ' to Bos 183, c/o DtiUy Full beneflu med.teal ~blli~y pref,'d. Enjoy COllllSPOMDB4CU modern worklnl en· TICHMICIAMS FRE~SlttiSJONW/AD ~ 154, c/o Dallt Pilot, Ii ~11 Pilot, P.O Box 1560, dental, bptic~.· Pleue ~ w/v-arious age vironment.. Please aeod Thia ia an u~Uent.op· -------~ {>.0. Box 1580, Coata •• · OoltaK!'f.-a. a&JPl7lnperscmat aroups. Buaytel~es. SICl.ITAllY resume or call Saundra porlunlty for Dliltal *SANDl''S * ft\eaa. Ca.~ _ _, _ A-. PM. ~ty Offtce =to W«ll ~ " ::e"~T:" ~!!1; Johnson <nt> ~HUS. Technlclans with 1·2 OutcallJi...,e =... C <~ Mcm lllCSOMYACMr-pJei.CaUMC-S381 Vl~ ()pent(llf' in worod years experience in .j13-0:,129 , T•\ T '*vi Ul:Jll)een.\ye,S.A.• lun"tilNoo. =q center.~,.. ,. MSI boa.rd level teat. Recent =~ . ...~ ....... -1 1 , 01ot~ o vo 4ealer -.-.Vl .... CO" ILl<::.'8$ ... _...,e • technical achool E , • --:'!';'.:!~~· <Acrolfl'l'oc6 needa uperieneed ,.... ._ • "" l..uu4 •• araduates or individuals ~"ui:u =n~. ~: .-=e=-=:r;~!=" -~ :..~r:=...: ~~.=w:~~ c:::E~e:c =-.. :;..:~:~: ec"th• •kill•• en n.. .. ,:;:•:.•n_,~. ,__.... sltll.lr lncludinl' cram. Co.ta lleai. CAl2621 thuaiaam • in~iy.. ~"! ... ~ ~ mar, S'pell.lq, editing '" We offer an excellent Calf$herrle 6'I). IOO ..... Mwallbaw ~-Will train. Eq1l,al()pportunl\y salary and company ~CeAtetDr.N.B, Erk9paYadU ~= EmplOyerll/Ji' benefits ineludln& 71'!'5tfl00l 'l'Hllll-CO. modern worldn1 'en-;;:;::;t;~;::;:-;:j~~~~~~~~:I •""15 vlrooment. Please send ~CenterDr Deat Clerk Full • p/t. resume or call: Saundra ~t~•~C.92683 ~ abUl. Ambusador Johnson m•>S:tM~ F.qu1 gpr: EIDJllo1er Inn, 2808 S. Brtatbl. SA MSI I DISHWASHRS COUNTER &lRL, Pull Tra &..i.t... F/ti DATA llml•pt.Umelcrwkdyu wu{ ~Jcio eo':!: COlPOUnON •Sat. 17>-5315 • C.Ot.-r, 1SS5 Superior 1 MO Fischer Aveoue CUITOolAM Ave, NB. MS-7'7k Coata Meaa, CA 92627 Expa1eoNd M hn pes• DISHWASHR Squa10pp'EmJ>11rm/t a----------:T--I d •7 e • r u' a I red F/tlme. Hospital ezper. j~~~~~~~~~ IOO«te• R . · AD ab• 1 m are a • belplul, but.not oec:. Muat i--------• . PAYBO~ %1J.lll.-O bavt neatappea.r. Apply DBIYllY la.,.,_. Su Clemente 11...,ef'/Courter General Hoapital, 654 Camino de Loa Mar~, s.aa.m. --- DAILY PllOT THE CITY OF HUNTINGTON BEACH m,1o, ..... ,,.... ............ . .\onounce1 Optru0p For Th• P01ition1 ol LANDSCAPE MAINTENANCE TRAINING PROGRAM .. Salcry $3.J0-$4. I 5 Ptr Hour Thei.e are CF.TA funded 1)0s1llon!I & require Huntlhllon J\each residency & 15 weeks unemployment. Apphullont1 wall be accepted unlll 8PM, Feb. 27lh, 1978 ot lhe Employment & Tralnlna Center, 5.'18 Main Sl. JhmtlnclCJl'I Beach. (Many Po11tlons to be tilled 1mm~otely) ~~~ ..... ?!~~ ~!!~ ...•. ?!!~ Gen'l one, varfoua dullell, 8:30·5. 11u1t be 1ood typist. Pls call 642·1593 GllLS .... ID Sand•lcb deUver1, $ • dQ9 wk. ' bl"I day. Owo tran1p. Earn o\lr S3.SO br. Call l1m·lpm, M0-1339. GUAlDS F\lll ft p/Ume. All areas. Uniforms f\lm. Ages 21 orO\'T. Retired welcome. Apply Universal Protcc· lion Service. 1226 W. &tb St. Santir An1. Jntervw hrs 9-U & 1-0&on· Fri. HAIDRESSERS W/followlng, prime beach locaUon. 641MM34 6548-3520111t for DJ MAIR STYLISTS F /time w I cllentele only SS~ & benonta. 648·~ ' . 13. 1971 ' . , ~c•··-IOI ~........ 1i~ ~...._..w__._-' -•••••••••••••••••••••• .. '"-.. Trenl '170 ---tSto .... ··~ ....... porttd Mond!x· F•~rx 13, 1171 DAA.Y PILOT ,.,...~ ~ •' I 9030 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ LUCMl-ACilTAGS ~ .................... ·73Tu "elMuhtTen\Trlr, WIWIUIU't Capri t71S W.. 9731 Allto1,IMporhd ...._Used ..._Us9d .,..~ frotn vnur buatn'"' .. ('U....... J bnm. pnc~l> fur .mt u•t!(.i tUPti 6. likl' nt:"' YOU. DATSU.... • •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ,~ _.. .na o l>OO·E\lnrudt-0 8 ~5221 " V.-&.-Q d ...... ...,. s..d ~card tor each mown. zu ~~ PAJDFOROJUlOT '73 QlpriV6 A1roewtlr.. _.w.,.. 9170-r 990l °'9•1 .. ef 9920 tac J)li. one llpare We . ..,., ~lf contained 31' IO • TC>P DOUA• M&l\Y exll'U S2l50(). c.1i ~······················ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~-e.t.,urn perma n ent I) lkMlts, ,ow.r 9040 putt $8,995 liy owner i°' CAltS ~ t11 VW BUG ~y &ood. 78 G SC Suburban S1crrn '76 Cbe\etl". bt'llt' brn -...ed attracu ve lMt: ....................... &&2·2841 ~ ~-runs ltlnt. $1100 Ill ena & Cla.sslc. "•Ton. e\el'')' opt tweed tnt, alr. M fo'M, strap, meetan« a1rho ~ CJIRIS CRAFT 1· · iii.Mii ·n caP."· I> C)'I. 4 s pd, 6000 trans. Must sen $1300. Pb avai.J except 4 whl dr tad ~ mi m<>biJe 1 1.0. requiremt:ol:> Pre Aft l·abin duul -ittihon 17 · Ko m fu r t . ) c If · ml, like new. Must llt'll 9G3-S338 Incl du:il air U!>~ rt• ~ 6TS·1'.»4,673 ~·1 ' vent IOb • Lhef\ • fo'u r a Twto Cbr):. \II i. 2 hci.<1~ cont.uned. uJ.r. $2395. ..:._ __ :,. __ $U75 Call 759·1206 ---eular 6Jb , $78,00 or ofr -~l'MJIUl.bzed ht& t:nclua ttauJed. sur,ey Al, pntd SS6-679l • VWW..ted. 962..-!i ·;2 Monlt.> Ciarlo . x lol ~allpape.~. fabri c o •$12,oo> AY646-9000 WE BUY i3 C<lpn, ~-6. AM/FM, 74 Jlluda Rotary Pkup. N~running preferred a....1-1.. rond ,\ C New tires Day Glo paper & ~ l~pe,, 1!1 ml l>. xlnl 1..-ond. sharp 11hell, ma&ll. stereo 642·2073 --99 l 0 Vin top Ste rt.'i) r11d1u. wiU back & lnm you ._ 5-Ylu, ,.,... CLEA.MCA.RS Call 4!JS.Sl60. tape. lo mi, $JOOO or ofr. . . ---••••••••••••••••••••••• Must sdl $19!>0. (.'all tlt'f lap , Or try two card.'! YOUR &AccesMrin 9400 & TRUCKS ·73 Qt ri pp · 962·28>5 76 VW RABBIT. A~i/FM '72 Buick Lt Sabre. ll , 833·U St or 11 ft s. backlDbnck. FISHING ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~p .... 41,000 m1 , cuss, new hres, 32,000 Colledor will 1tll, eltt 64.5-2293 PRIC1';.5 '64· ·77 Used M uatoog 554•0035 Mere.-letll 91:40 rru, $3600/bst 492-3751 tric blue convertible $2eaor 3/S5 IOA.T!! Parts. 990 No. Parker, CONNELL ------••••••••••••••••••••••• white t.Qp & 1nMr I 4/5tags St 60 28A. CHAM.-iOM Orange. Call 997.2000 ·73 2600, AM·FM c;1bb, nu '74 4.SnSLC S pasb sports VolYo 9712 f9aculate 7141S40.77~4 Qrpler '9ZS 6/9tags$1:so~: CJ.'541788. t'lybndge. --CHEVROLET radial!!. nu clutch. xlnl coupe . l~mac.' t'ully ...... ,.•••••••••••••••• asltforRaiphor Sally ~:·••••••••••·~~~·••••• 10ormore Sl.40ea binii le i.crew, gallc),VWp:u:Lti,allkindB, "'COnd.$2300.S4H 084 eqwpped incl. tuctory llFOalYOUIUY C. ttl~ ?:tCNewdJ>l)lrt, l ,S, P/O. S.Ues Tux Included head. biol tank. Sleeµ-. s. CHEAP 2828Harbor Dl "d clec. s unroof, stereo A US9 VOLVO.IC :. A/ • rn o, li5,t)OI> mi, gd NO CARD'! Eni;me complctely re-894-9404 COSTAMESA 0-.... , 9720 casi.ette, leather In-See ua at Southern ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'Clell1 .. P/P $750.&t0·0003 Draw your own or i.cnd bwlt EleclrvnJc gc•U m· -----541>-I 200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• tenor. P.P. 640 9323 Ota.Die County's Vol vu s name, addre1>s, phone & cl. depth finder & brand AMtos for Sah ----* DRIVE A *. Headquarters. ecw.t"""'tal 9UO we·u make one curd per new. unWJed 2·way FM ••••••••••••••••••••••• WE PAY TOP DOLLAR LITI '77 Mil 4SOSL MA19UIS VOLVO ••••••••••••••••••••••• laJ.Add25<each rad.Jo & RDF. $7500 or 1tecreaHDllCll FORTOP USEDCARS * LE ... * Silver. blue Hhr int, M.l~IONVU:JO "75 Mark I\' Executini Send check or money or be:.t offer. Call eveb & V.wdft 9530 1''0REIC N, DOM ESTIC SAVE A LOT stereo cass, alum whls. IJl .. 2110 495-IZIO car. loadl.!d All blk derto: wknd.s.645-9376 ••••••••••••••••••••••• or CLASSICS AU xtras. like nu. PP. • ~-4707 e\•ei. & wknds · .-iLOT l'alHTIMG 9 c.onvt 4 seat lilreet legal U your cur 1sextra clean SHOP &OO?tJPARE 499-3613 OAAMeUOUMTY 0r.rJt C...ty's t213) lrl6-3317 dJ}S ' P.O.Boxl560 1 78 dune bugey. $800. Call seeusfirat. 1'65MYCB>l$ VOLVO .~..a.center Cclnetht "U Costa Mesa , Ca. 9'..!G2G ~8486 IAUEA IUICll 190 (gas> 2S MPG, xlnt EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO • ••••••••••••••••••••••• Coobnr1!. Stamlesi. . 20 SEA RAY .. Cos~~~bor 8~.2500 ~ S2SOO/Best offer. Largest VoJvoDealer OVER I 00 •CORVETTES ·• pcs, 3 ply, new <:-Ost 30•.......a.t-.~Drh" tlSO n.78'J4nu~ o inOranJeCounty! C•DIL• •CS 19781 $225, i.ac $79. 830-~ nr-•...,-••••;~••••••••••••••• """""' '67 zst6E $4000 or best of· BUY or LEASE A ~ NlCL' SELE,_.l"''N .' '•h Loaded COST • .-. ..___,..... Allmode.lafscol0rt. , DJRECI' To,.~-FIOM "" ..... "" D-f . $ s I Ow ·M--s· _....,.... -I .............. er. Mull sell qu1ck! 'Wnvv~ How~aDCL.......-.l.'.1-t .•. •>e na. u oo. a ad bar ner's Demo ,.. .. ,.. ....................... w-. 7ll...O;S56-8000 AT A1.L TIMES " _ ... ...._ ~~{u!E!J~ ~~~'S :.i;.~ ~~;~·;:;:~~:;; ~:.:',:":~"' -=:.~.~~::.~·J:~'. ~2025tf •s.'~ Nabers ~j~~1:~~ PM SIA RAY ...-mi, /.,JC, tape deck. Best aavi.ogs on all remaining S48-311&1, Eves: 493-9188 ~ 1 3101 Coast Hwy N.B. too gallons of lat wlth of'r. '7&1:§111 or8Z6-2610 '77model:dnst.ock. Anahei Cad J) Miscel•HUS Ul·2547 :1~~wi~~-:d:~:eep AMdl 9707 1~~~P.u~.=·~:n m 750 - 2011 i ac Vetle '60. rei.torcd m elt· cell. l'Ond. throughout. 61!i-989'J •• ~~••••••••~~!~ 23' glus In/out, sips 3. 5~ ... 023 ••••••,•••••••••••••••• 642-3216 lt,75 VOLVO 2nUO H.tt lh•t Blvd SHOTGUNWANTED t railerablt'. $4250 2524 BOR BLVD ?JAUDI IOOLS ~ 97 .. ~ I 44DOOR Cu-i.1 Mc\,1 ;,111•111"1 Ford 9940 Pr efer 12 g a . w/full _!135·3437day,67J.8484 eve COSTAMESA · Autom•lic trans. with 284.SHARBORBLVD. =••••••••••••••••:~ SEDAN. Automatic, air ••••••••••••u•••••••••. choke. l6.5 R C fl Fl 1 only 4'7,000 ortflAal 540.6410,40.0213 '70 MGB-OT, Nu clutch, cond. le 8 track tape. ~-~~~~~~~ 642 . 2073 ayson ra , ut >0t 77 Jeep CJ7, h ardtop. miles. (610GWX). Now nu eng. Will sell to best (119M NA) · Aver a ge '74 Cad Eldorodo Conv. ------tom. Tandem frailer . wheels·rims, AM /Jo'M ONLY $Z I 50 otrer.615.2978 bluebook-$5690; our All xlras. Reg. gas. Good Want to buy : King 'fut new upholstery · Les:. cass, $5600 or bst offer. price cond. $S200. 7SS.l616. tickets. .moto r. $850/offe r . Ask ror Chris Brown ....,,.. ... Mfrs MGI t744 JUST$4995 645-0804 aft 6pm 540·6852 days 956·1897 53'7·Zl71 ' •flJrbor. ~ta Mes '77 Cle•w• ....................... MAtqUIS VOLVO '76 Brougham. Lesa ll\an WANTED man's not top eves. T,.U t560 6G07'1 Demo & execuUve sale 1967 MGB·new engine. MISSIONVIEJO ~~:.e~.'4J'~~ lnj desk w/ file drawer Ill) '71 GlasslrOn 17', 170H ••••••••••••••••••••••• nowgoingon-burryl paint, top, Int erior le 111·2180495·1210 drawer , che1p. 673-Ti1z Volvo eng, 270 18/08. Before )"OU b11Y or lease '741001.S, 4-door. 888 DOVE STREET stereo. In cherry condl· ---------'71 Cpe De Ville, lite blue . ......__1_~ Very good cond. $3000. your new Mar., slk. 1Slereo cua. (Near Mac:Artbur Blvd. tioo. (983HDE); Pri ply. Swedlab VOivo Mechanic vin. top. Good cond. -... h_...... 1011 673-7529 lt71TR•""'I $2300.640-23S9evet. &JamboreeRoad) C&ll8n·S78'7aftertpm. now at Ivans Foreian Sl600/bstofr.MZ·9602 -----NEWPORT BEACH Pone• 9750 Car repairs, 1995 Harbor ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1976 SKJPJACK 20', lik C •LL USI For sale 1973 Audi 1001.S, 133-1300 Bl d CM 845-1.982 Beautiful '74 w~ Ir blk ~~::.:.::~~t.!:.~..._~:.:= Spc. Ludwig Vista-Lile new, fully ~quipped , A • AM/FM s tereo, 60,000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• v · · Cpe de Ville. loaded. Lo ______ .....:.;.;,;.... Paiste cymbola 2002 • w/cu1tom trlr, $10,000 646-0226 ml. lllnl cond. $2300. Alt 6 '18 2+2 280Z, only 2300 '74 Porsche 914 U . Im· m1·s. $4600. !ifl6.S$40 67 F rd F . 1 ood S49-l660 551·3056 UMIV&11tr. .a.a orwlmds 831·2SllO ori& mi 's. 3 yr warr•nty, mac cond le mual sell. AlllM. UMCt o air ane. g ~~ 1975 AUDI FOX new car. Lower than de· PYtpty, 498-1528 ... •••••••••••••••••••• '74 CdV._ rully loaded, cond . S5SO or best ofr SAX TENOR SELME R 32' Udnlfllte 1!175. likl'; ne 20:.!SHarbor, Costa Mesa aler's price. 963·7171, ••• C b 1 t C Q 1 ud tto I leather ml .• xlnt cood. 95$-3619 aft lOAM M .. ~xin't d~s· loa ed. Auto pilot. 4Door Sedan.AutomaUc <W!">2333 e\•es V• a ro ~ onv. $4750 675 07U av•s •-61f1m.. con -· Radar. sona r+ man '63 lntem'l PU. Shert box, tr a 0 1 . < 3 24 M x I >. .....,.. · AM/Fl.4 8 tr•ck, rood ... •••••••••••••••••••• wtcod5 · "" .. ~ "' '75 Granada Ghrn. 2 dr, ' xt ras. $48 ,1)00~ P I wbt1polte whls, lra knob· Average bluebook-$3800; •74 260% cogd, riiustsell. SGSS/bsl auto. 8 cyl. green w/larl 4 • GUITAR (Glbs on) Lei. 894·Sl5l Du)s, 840.447 blea, 4-cyl eni. Ofr. our price Super clean. low miles, olr.09626 PROPERTY ·m Cad.ill•c. PS, PW, PB, dau lop 13,000 mi. P /S. · Paul Custom. XJnl cond Eve.'! &wknds 979-0183or754-0146 JUST $2195 Must sell $4600/bsl ofr .• 68 PonchetllL. MOOO. or AC.1ood cood. $850, best P 1 D. P W, A/C. bucket Dlkbodyw/1oldplckups. lS'VALCO aluminumfis.'77 Ford PU I SO V-8. MAJlOUISVOLVO 673-32'19 best offer. Yust sell Rm'llf'JION ofr.64&-MG seat:. Radials. Make or~ $4SO w/cas e. 152·7626 h ln i: b o at , & t r lr . PS/PB,jumbotires. l5M MlsSlONVlEJO '77 Datsun B210, xlnl quick.731-4449;556-8000 "" '71 Cadillac El Dorado Cer.49'7·l~ • eves. w/cvmplete acces~. inc mi. 642·4097, 642·4736 131-2110 495· 12 I 0 cond. under_wmty. $3100. ,61 PORSCHE l600, new $11£ Coovt. Xlnl cond, $3800. '71 Torino. xlnl cond w f Yamaha EM 100 2 bout cover & awning, 6.11 UY><aft 6PM fl JaN. Must sell as soon as tune-up Mubl sell 1976 Ford ~ Ton truck IM' w 9712 .,,,,_, brks, tir"", runs great, ~ Mllchell spkrs, mike & 15hp John:.on motor . ~ · ..... ~ J'f!P cements re· poss1ble644-6194 768-4978 s tand , x tr:i s $700 trollmgmotor.ba1ttank. ~VS. auto, PS, dual••••••••••••••••••••••• '7!i 210 Htchbck. Lo mi, needs body work. qulretheD•llyPilottoll·l--.-------546-4199All&pm . cpt'ng & much more. ~· ball & exhaust. AM ·FM. orig ownr, 42 $8,000/Best642·1088 quidate12PlymouthSla· Canmro 9917 ·m Ford LTD Wagon, 8· reul steal Ill Sl89!i. Call Sliding ~ear window. mpg. $2300 or best orr. 1973 911T, elee. sun roof, tion Wagons from exist-••••••••••••••••••••••• trk, good cond. $700. Bundytrumpel btwn 9-4PM wkdys Tacoma nms, AM/FM 8 1/639·2744 dys, 675-4424, alloy rims, AM/FM, 5. inginveotory. '61 New 396 with ever-644·6000,640·0200 $125 714-!146·0348 ' · ~~\s1:~~ t::t~o:i 615-8127 eves/wknds. spd, 10 ml, must sell. ylhlng. P06i rear. 4 speed M.cwy __ 9_9_5_0 :i ----494-·24-17---loclh. Soil 906 498-3!57 aftSPM '76 Pi c kup, orange, Sl0,400ororrer. 644-6}33 197 6 AM/FM Cassette Stereo ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,..,.,.. __ F &&. • ..,,i. y-• ..e.g5 ?:_.S.770013. or Bst otrer ORANGE COUNTY'S • ~ .,.,,.... .... ...... ............. 1...,..ers, excellent cond. 1967 9115 Tara a Classlc. ~ ,_. ' .,..,...... 8015 FUJI • YAM.A.HA '7&. Ford Cc!prter • 22•000 $3SOO. Eves. 768-82!13 New clutch, brka & rear 3 lD choose from. All with . . MIWEST ••••••••••••••••••••••• DEALERS ~:~r1l,$3950Flrm, 19788MW's 191so•TSU.... sort window. Mags, factoryairconditioning m:mv.a,auto,air,P/S, UNCOLN·MERCURY Y HERE "" " Bl "t AM /FM 318 en1lne. luggag~ P/8, 1 owner. lmmac. Dealershipis now OPEN Solld wood d achtBrolrerage NOW•. 121os-Aw aupun.. • "' 548-lSOlda 1 eska $65. 4' UsUngsW•nt.ed! '76 Ford P.U. ~ ton D ~ -""d ·-mustseU. besl olfer. call rac\.1, traller towing yson y. RAY FLADHOE • PHIL LOOG FORD Fluorescent light fix· s.thwnhn w/abell.AM/Fld.$8900. 2 oor. • sp~e ... Stephanie 645-3167 paaa1e.AM/FMstereo. a.-.r.. 9920 LINCOLN-MERCURY tures $10. Draftinc tbls ~~ COMPLnl AM I F M r ad t Q • ' 2 equipped with power ••••••••••••••••••••••• 16-l8AulOCenterDr. $70. Drafting chr$25. Ex· Yacht Sales IOOYSHM (025NLB). Average .....,. t755 windows. Priced from: , . SDFwy-1.ake Forest exit .•· ec cbra $2S. Drartlna 2616 Newport Blvd. MUST S ELL '7\ Ford l;>luebook·S2800; Qur ••••••••••••••••••••••• $2175 76 Monte Carlo .• Mint IRVINE • I i 'h l s $ z 0 . c . E . N(~~~::i~~b ~ri~~ $1300 firm. HOW MEN priceJUSt ·--395 TIS~uD•clV~ ~UI {Uc.nSSIPCW) , :.:: ~~~~ A II 130.7000 SURPLUS OFPJC E DCB.LENT ~ "" FURNITURE. 2044 New 24 • Amerlcan '69 ~, ton Chevy w / SB.ECTIOMOF MARQUIS TOYOTA OFTHEYEARN 1976 '7 5 Monar!J~ Ghia. V8. Placentia. CM. 631·2570 Sailboat. Take over pay· camper i bell & boot, nu IMW RES MISSIONVlEJO Good . . G• ........ FURY ...._ aut,o. air., dPWT1, st.ereoh or831-27Tl' maita.lh.strlr.493-2612 trus.$1595.IM7·3I03 A.LES 131·211049S.f210 uwentory1n slock. ~ ... it s1 ve r r e e at We may b.ave your next 81DT)'whilelheylasll St•llon Wagon. 2 t o it ,. $WOOPP Ph 494-7765 or car in our inventory. Ca 11 Atilt 9725 MllAC&.E choose from. 440 4 bbl. * ,. 497·2113 ,..__ & in.--1090 Must sell 16' Venture cat. '72 Courier. Runs like -· ,,_ Rudy lo go. $600/ bs new! $1400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ofr. 493-4110evs &l.S-2S29 New Brand Name Pianos 10%overcosl. 21' AURORA SLOO Cbev. :1.• T. '69, 350 eng. Beach Music Center Fbrgla $1000. 17406 .Be•ch Blvd, H. 8 . Head, sips 4, Seagull O/B Phone 552-4839 147-8536 $USO. A Y646----~...:..:..:..:.... ___ 1 _______ ..;.....;..;....i•'71 El C•m. F.atate, air, YAMAHA SPINET KlTEN0.598,hetssalll, P/S, P/8, tilt wbJ, posl, Xlotcond$12SO C9Ver,$$(1().Goodcood. =· CB, runs x lnl. • 675-5853 • 673-7529 .135-4612 Art ·. SparflllgGooda 1094 lotlh. Sfl .. / V-9570 ••••••••••••••••••••••• DocU 907 ...................... . Penn Senator 6/0 f1J1hln1 ••••••••••••••••••h•• IU Chevy 20 Redlcamp reel, like new $40. NEED SIJP ror 11tw 34 RV. Sip 4, xlnl mech, 900-4853 ~at. Mr While new pat. 1 owru:, 76K mi, --~-8'7;..;_:_~=139~3=---~i-Alkl-~n~g~$3ll00;....__·846;...._·~1803:.:..:..:.~ Nordlca Meteor ski boot.I, mem,siJ~ ... ~17 Tn ••artaffolt tm Star Wars van, ._. _ le T,O.P. ($6400), ----~~---4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Askfor.Jira. 751-0939 Shn, lest..-..t, C.:lfGrs. S./ , ____ ;.;;...... ___ _ ... IOtS Rtftt t 120 '71 Dod&e BlOO, under ~••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• WarTanty, 4-spd. Call aft ~ liebted showcases, 6' Alaskan C.mper a• ln 5:30, 543-0llU long, mlm>red, k>cldn,g great abape. $1000/bst '74 Chevrolet Van Gold doors & drawers. 4 mo a ofr. Call John aft 6, ·custom Interior custom old $200 ea. 644·7700 675-!i691or675-2170. paint, flares, craiera, Taylor Model 710.22 so ~'J..~/ , $5,895.842•3379 ice cream or yo1ur 9150 Allloa W..e.d tStO macbinet Ute new. Glenn ••••••••••• •••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• Mon-Wea. s.s&-1981, Tb· SUZUKI RM 3'70M.X. Leu Fri. 87t-2'10t btwa •· than 5 bn runnlDI ume. TOP PM. locludlnc 1 aet CJf tie DOLLAR TY ....._-downs, a ramp • a bike PAID t.lf. Shree IOfl ~r.5°' call aft CPJI l'Oll a.EAN ···••··•••·•····•••···· 1...ouc•1s ;5" RCA Color TV, 1 yr. '71 Su.1uld, 125Scc ,.. \urranty sns. For odcinl'a.Xlnt~ ALLMODll.5 service al10 8'2·534 $l50 • M5-85$ C.M. ....__._. ---------4.._.wu 100 Like new 1974 $125/ofr. Lovely ater 900 mnea $850/olfe cabal Ollabol), w/ablv•, 95S-G8lll doan ar lift up ctr rw ---------1 componemta. Great for "l8 Honda ~preu. 8*Grap Cll' UM u bar, new. 2!rf miles. $2:ie), ca btcaM etc. MS-78S1 _ .. _13S3 ______ -I 5pm. '1 Cellf' TV w. .. c ..... U7L Ideel f~2nd TV U'''bblba R.taDafor ... ts ~-olell1clo 711 .... .......... .,,, ii ....................... 8iawl t0a ~-~:~·1 ~-· J ,~ 1 . fH A1 11 H' ,, f ••I "'J • I ~ .. \ • • ~ ,j 'I f t. I •• l .' •• ~ 1 ... l ~ ., i. us today! ••••••••••••••••••••••• MADA/IB4AULT engine. AM/FM stereo, 1 * 831-2040 495.4949 "751'\atSedan. Very clean 21SORarbor Blvd. power windows, roof * inside as out. F.nJine r• COSTA MFSA racks and factory a ir * ceotlJ o verhaule d . 645-5700 ~'::/llonlng . Priced : ~Al or Jim ... Roye• 9756 & 1 ST • llC>f.DWAY 1971 12' Spader, All/FM ••••••••••••••••••••••• SAMtA AWA radio, P/a.nteMa, tuark, •t DEALER IN U.S •• . 83.,...171 xlnt cond., 10 K.:C:C ROY v~ oraqe w/blk int. ~ TH1umMATIDl!NINGM•cH1N1 firm. 752·1119 dya, or CARVER •U58) IMW't* 75Z-7896evea. ROUS·ROYCE ~:::.tu'%5:il':?a 73Fhlt 121SL ::'~= '75 2002A Set. 2236 $1350. AfU, e48-\f95 MN444 '76200241pdS/lU4SNLF r-tt,tfflAT ClOSfOSUNOAYS ''TU20lAS/R177RSK Xl/f COUN XLNTBUY CREVIER $2150 (Lie. J600PCY ) lt75FUIY Custom Suburban Waaona. 5 to cboose fro.m. All with factory air, roof nets, 3IJO 4 bbl. eqlne. OOferent choice ol extr., on each car. Priced from: Slt75 We. JZ?.3.MCG > '70 6 cyl, 3·spd. air, AM FM cuss. 70,000 mi's. Ortg ownr. Xlnt cond $ll00. Eves & wknds 6.11-4206 CllMcl 0. 5-days 4 apMd, •tereo • radio. Shup '66 Silver Shadow• oaA*HCOUMTl'S '213KRR). Avera1e white. R.R.-Rl&bt bud 1976 'm Mustang, 6 cyl auto, OLDEST bluebo.ok·fHlO; •ur dr. Xlnt coDd. $1.J,900. has lots of TLC. lo orig., • price CallPatrlck,~C RAN FUIY great cond. Best orr & NST S2ft5 Ta,oN 97' Cultom Sllburban. F•c· _61_5-_3063 ____ _ , MAIOUISVOLVO ••••••••u• .. ••u•••••• tor1 alr, 310 ' bbl. ---------la....owa. H55 . ~ON-VIEJO llFOUYOU enline, h1.11a1e rack, f Ad Act" ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sales.servtce-LeaaSnc .. Jl-2d04t5-1210 ~ YOUll heavy duty abocb, tint· Or 100 '64 Olds s t <t w gn. Bola:vcyc~e ,lltc.B ... W I.&--'-t727 TOYOTA. ~· &Oki metallic f'all a 0 y n a m I {' 8 8. ·" :1111 fto .,. .._ $I .,.. radio/healer & power J.54()Jambon!le .................... SEE "5! ru tSO Cf' o~ly Pilot Good cond. $600. 540.5397 Newport.Beach ~ lrmdtfew'77 ~TOYOTA c.t'1'99N > m PRIVATEPARTY ·~.wA~~Mi ~;~ HON~vCars 131.nao•~~to 1975 AO.VISOR t.ess ~~n~~~Lmues .. . ~-~Hm 644-5111. •e°noieR....--I . SPQITSFUIY 642 5678 Original owner & very ..., .. _,~ •' ----~ 1976 TOYOTA w.,... AM/FM 1tereo, • , clean. Never damaied. UNIVERSITY COlOL&.A WA.GOH air cond1Uonln1. aeo 'I~~~~~~~ Factory air, power steer· •. 5speecl•1-.0 cuaett bbl. aillne. tiDted.tJua, Ii lng & brake11. AM/FM , J.mDII.opdtJlrcond, Ollk•-11 pla1er. (118P1T). powec windows, ·Silver USE THI radio, vinyl roof, good • · 8tract1ter«>. \301RUX) .._. C... • •MC Aver.,. blaeeo.t$UO; COlld OMtalllc ftbi¥.. Ures. Asking sacrifice · ; im D>l, ' apd tN.ns, TNca. ourprt~ 1, ' SZZ2-5 DAILY PILOT. price! 644·0468 1te reo ca11, blue _u __ ....._8,vd. JUSTP2fl '••c.oiHl..ilauPQ) "F .... ST '• _ .......... ..,~nt ··-........1 _,oai-uw-'' .,.. ~ · "' Olds '72 Toro. loaded ail · 61 ~C t lw.&nlVlo ,.___ II-• 1U1A -A/C(u A> ~ -_.._ M..=ISTOYOTA llSULTu pwr. 50M mi. Michello ' AU can aaay bl lnapect· t.i • 1975 lOSIA Auto ttua, lt71HOMDA ONVWO eel bl Ph!:c.,. uea. Ast SllVICI ~. real cream puff! AM/FM 1tereo. allvcr c-c IJl"'211G4tl-1210 l«IUckot' . S200 under Blue Book. ,, met.tile P•lnt, •lloy ,..., ~COAST DlllCTOllY Ortgownr.673-0233 thm, blue le.th tntr. ' s peed • radio . ~ · 97'7 o••·y"LOT For Result ............ tt57 ~ ......... _ CltON.JP). Avera1e •-••••••••• .. -•••• -,.._ ............ ::·-<-ww>,1teert.n1 blueboot·UOlO; our 1911 Trlumpb Spit· 8IOWeetBa1Street Service Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• •' .... -... -·· sirtce fl Colla llen 642 5671 '74 Pinto Waaon. Lull•fe • '15 610 IA. Auto trio.a, JUST$2-49 re·ZO,OOO mllea, J'I • rack , mag whee & .1 auaroaf,Allrad.lo.Wblte I AM/'?i'....-.O~AiD or=Uorl: M.lJZ lwlde>. &·track tape I"' w/bhaelntr. CISCTC.J> MAIOUISTOYOT4 :::.J~~o.:_~o.n --::;::::::;:=;;~~;::~=:;::;:::=== deck/ r.dlo, auto., white '11 QO IA. auto tram lllWOMVIEJO cl». cau d..11Q otedor. blue interior,-: ~ A/O. Power •-"n1 ~ Hl-2ll04tl-12to ::..:· ~nss ~ ~lA,.. 'f_, s• 50KmileJi.$179S.&U·33'19 ·~ bntel, 8 track a teNO. ....... 9730 __ .::........_· ----I TAG# l1tttlg11;,,, W olfl Gome witlt o Cltudle SUvet metallic wltb blue ... -.................. YCllss••• 9770 ..,.. ~ °"' .. ~ -----bl&r •• (014a). • ••••••••••••••••••••••• IOI Nd AlaG fl XU:. NMrl.1 reatOred. HUGBSf!LZCl'IOM ·=·:.~~ .... '! ~ IMWl4C. =.=..-. m.w• HICWt.Ol&DCARS ...,,.._._..,... .... 1714t UJ.IDJ '" at l•looe Cl111le wQllt6'1·'701 14500 or beat oUer. I I l 0 MED I I I ~ I MA FER I I I r I L 0 C N 0 Y I I I I' I "75Wagon, 4spd, AM/Fil. 11r. mu radlala, xlnt • cmd. $2600. 1-49&-7332 • , • ...,...... ,,, . • •••••••••••••••••••••• ll7C Pl)'. S.tetnte &a: J nJ W1g. 9 pau., P IS, PIB. t " Air, Od. Urea, traM. - Cooler. atr s hocks, ' tn.ller hitch. CB Radio 1r incl. Good Cond. U.800. $.1t<8. . . . t .. , ! • . • t £J• DAH .• YPllOj ·. cl ~ • - Monday. Febtu.y 13, 1971 • ' .. .. . ,. . . .. . . . r tighter in taste..~tower in tar. I • And still offers .up1ti1Same:qil81i1y·:, that has made Marlboro famous. Atso available·. n ~inc s'ze. • 7 VOL. 71, NO. 44, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNU~ MONOAY,~EBRUARY 1~1W8 Afternoon N. Y. Stoeks · TEN CENTS Still Another Storm'.Looms , Off Co&st .. By Tiie Assodated Pres• Another storm ls brewinc in the Paclflc Ocean. and lt could hit rain.weary ~utbern Calif ornJa as early as Tuesday night, say forecasters at the Na· lional Weather Service. "Ir it continues on its present course, it could hit the West Cout on Tu~sday night or Wednesday," said Roger Hill, a weather service technician 1n Los Angeles. Such ·~ews can only bring SIERRA SNOW NEARING RECORD:MOREOUE-A5 sighs or fatigue to residents in the mud-soaked Pinecrest Estates area of La Cresceota. The residents bad been braced , for the worst when a storm caught them Sunday afternoon as they were still cleaning up from the waist-deep mud and debris left by l'Tiday's torrents. About 100 families in the well· to-do residential area were ad· vised by the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Departme nt t o evacuate their homes Sunday. But only about hair heeded the warning, with the rest atll)'ina to try to lessen the impact of ex· pected floods and mudslides. .. Flood control officials ad· vised that the Shields debris bash .. has not been cleared or mud and debris from the pre· vidus storm," said Sheriff's Deputy Carl Rierert. The basin overfiowed Friday, and when the rain fell Sunday. resldenta were laced with the same danger. Although heavy rains COD· tinued through Sunday 1l!gbt, the weather service aald the wont of the storm had passed -with less than haJr the rainfall that drenched the area two days before. Riegert said Sunday that ris· iilg waters washed out hillside , roads and cut ore residents in the bard-hit Tujunga Canyon area just a few miSes northwest of La Crescenta, but because the area • Is so sparsely 90pulated, no one was evacuated. Mayor Tom Bradley declared a state ot emergen~y In Los Angeles on Sunday, noting that Friday's storm had caused an <~ MORE, Page A2) , Storm ·nalllage at $3 Million Trucked to LA No Penicillin In Local Milk By KATHY CLANCY °' -o.lly ~·let 11.tft Orange County Health Depart· ment officials said today there have been no reports or illness so far from p e nicillin· contaminated milk eackaged Ull· der the Adohr label. Robert S. Stone, county direc· tor of environmental health, said the quarts and pints of con· laminated milk apparently were Eight Lost On LA.Area Ski Patrol MOUNT WATERMAN (AP) -Eight members or a volunteer ski patrol were reported missing in this area of the Angeles Na- tional Forest. and a sheriff's rescue crew began searching for them today. Los Angeles County sheriff's deputy Ron Malneck s aid moun- tain r escue personnel from the Crescents Valley sheriff's sub- station, aided by a helicopter, were seekine the missing U.S. Forest Service volunteers in the rugged and snowcovered hills. "Two ski patrol people were missing since Swiday," Malneck said. "Six people went out Sun· day afternoon to go find them and now they're missing." M alneck said il had been snowing all night in the Mount Waterman area. about a 30-mile drive from Hidden Springs which was devastated by Friday's deluge and flash fiood. <Related story, photo, AS) He . said the two · people originally missing were on a routine patrol, but carried backpacka which would enable them to survive for several days. }{e said the six searchers had been expected back by Sunday night, and the Sheriff'& J)ep.art. ment search team was sent out this moml.ng when they Jailed to return. "Tbe volunteers are pretty well trained for dealing with snow condlUoas "1d first aid, in case they were to get lost for a night or two, .. Hid P hyllis Alvarado, a clerk at the Oak Grove Raneer Statlcm of the U.S. Forest Service. not distributed in Orange County markets as originally suspected. While there have been some conflicting reports, Stone said county health officials were \old over the weelcend by Adohr Farms executives that the SUS· p eel milk was shipped to neighborhood markets and home delivery routes in Los Angeles County. Stone said the quarts and pints in question bear a Feb. 21 ex· piration date and are coded with the number 06-08. The contaminated miUc could cause an allergic reaction to someone sensitive to penicillin, Stone said, but would not affect those who are Ml alleraic to penicillin. Adobr spokessnan were not avallJble fbr comment today. Stofle aatd county officials re- cei ved an anon)'1noUS' c-11 Fri· day from someone claiming to be on strike against a Los Angeles dairy. The caller said a shipment or mlUc headed for Adobr bad been contaminated with penicillin, Stone said. As a result, county health crews tested milk at Adohr's Santa Ana plant then impounded 3,500 gallons or cream. 1,410 quarts and 1,873 pints ofmUk. But another 1,600 quarts and 1,027 pints al~ady had left the plant for distribution in stores and alorsg delivery routes, he said. Rescue Effort Planned for 3 At Twin Lakes " AP ........ RICHARD LOWE, SONS ERIC (CENTER), KU"T READY FOR ANOTHEltWEATHER SIEGE La Crescent• Family Vowa to Remain After Mud •nd Boulder• S"maah Home 'We're J~t Eine Now' Neighbors Spend Nighi AJ«Jiting Mud Slides LA CRESCENTA (AP) - Richard Lowe and bis two teen· age sons took turns during the night watching I for new mud s lides in l 'At-ho\Jr shifts. This morning they were grateful, because no mud came "We're just fine now:• said bis wife, Gerda, who spent the night al bet' in-1aws dq.wn the street and ~turned home at 6 a.~ I Her husband,· their two sons and several friends spent the night buddied in the Lowes' garage, two days after a sea of mud and boulders smashed into the home. "We've had an earthquake, a fll'e and mud here, and I prefer the first two," said Lowe, as he waited SUnday night for the new storm and possible mudsllde. "This man went through a * mg, trying to get ready for the next storm -due Wednesday - alid clean up the mess from F riday's disaster. "The only problem is W's go- ing to rain all week." she said. "We bOarded everything up before last night I moved all the furniture against the walls away from the windows. When you prepare for the mud with boaTda, it does help a lot. It's just terrible in here, boards all onr lbeplare. .. T here's no end to the mud," she said. .. At least we got it away rrom the doors. so w" can get in and ouL" Mrs. Lowe said sfie hasn't slept 1n four nights because the ra1n m ..ites ber so nervous. "There's fust nothina you ean do when tbe mud col'bes," sbe Aid. • Houses, Trailers R11ined ByJlOBERT BARKER ot ... o.ity f'ti.t S\lft Damages in Huntington Beach are expected to hit $S million as a result of last Friday's eady morninff windstorm, Civil Defense Director George Thyden re- ported today. Thyden said that structural damag~ to the Huntington-By- the-Sea·Trailer Village bas been estimated at $1.i million alone. Fourteen mobile homes were destroyed, 24 sustained maJO!; damage and 40 more had minoP damage. · Thyden also reported that dam ages to residences ln the southern part or the city have in· itially been set at $100,000 ••but will go up." In addition, a travel trailer park adjacent to the devastated mobile home park suffered $50,000 In damages and com· mercial buildings incurred another $100,000 in losses. Tbyden said the figure will go up to $.1 million when contents ol homes, damage to cars, out,.. sheds, landscaping and falling trees is totaled. He said that 500 to 1,000 trees · were uprooted in the city. Fountain Valley also 1ufCe~ some major residential damage. Hundreds or trees were reported toppled. No official estimates or damage were available tod•Y· Thyden said the state and federal d isaster teams were tallying up the damage in Huot• ington Beach Saturday. He said that iC a disaster is ' declared. victims could receive l federal assistance in the form Ol i grants and low-interest loans to repair homes. Tbyden also said that be ex• pects victims would be ellglble for loans from the Small Busl· ness Administration. He said that loans generally are one per .. cent for the first $10,000 and .3 percent for anything over tha\ amount Thyden said about 200 people were initially made homeless when the 90-mpb tornado-like winds rampaged through the park shortly before 2 a.m. He said that most victims, found places to stay with rel- atives and friends or. were placed in bo\els and motels by insurance corbpanies and by the Red Cross. . • Thyden said that eity crew«. . wbo worked around the clock 4 the scene, repaired some of tb4l homes and a number or the vie· tims, mosUy elderly, were able to move bade in Friday night Oniy six persons au!fered .. minor lnjurieS Vand it was •· miracle,'' Tbyden said. He said that gas mains were ripped and many bot electrio"1 wires were downed. No fires were reported. Tbyden asks that any resJ. dents who suffered damage la the storm to contact. him at 536-5470. SCIENTIS'IS SlllJN IU:JNOIS c I f ' A~WI,..,... WORKERS LEAVE BUSES IN BOSTON AND WALK TO THEIR DESTINATIONS All Prlvate Cars Banned Since Blizzard of Last Week Covered City -Plenty of Room' .Foot of Snow Hits Mitboost, Moves to East Da01s Still Down In Orange Co~ty By JERRY CLAUSEN Ol Ille 041lly "''°' ,, ... Des p1h• saturated ground. hl'avy runoff and continued ra in s. flood control dams throughout Orange. County havC' pl<.'nty or room for more water. 11rr1c1als reported early today Thl' county nood control Villa Park Uam IS lesl. than half ru11 . .... :ud Kurt lir1tain, county En· '1ronmental Management Agen· cy's operations maintenance ~upc rv1sor. Agency operators have been rcleasmg about as much water daily as nows into the racili ly. he said. The U.S. Army Corps of E ngineers, which maintains Prado. Brea, Carbon Canyon and Fullerton dams. reports that none of ils fac1ltt1es is close to capacity. The onJy major flood control problem reported today was w1l h a Santa Ana River drop structure (check dam) designed to e liminate scouring and erosion along the river in central .ind southern Orange County. Britain said Santa Ana River Woman Injured lnHB Crash During Stonn A Tustin woman suffered cuts Sunday ni ght in a Huntington Beach traffic accident directly blamed on the latest storm . Dorothy R. Nagel, 40, of 15742 Williams St.. was treated at Pacifica Hospital for her lacera· tlons and released following the collision at Beach Boulevard and Pacific Coast Highway. Investigators said she was a passenger in a car driven by Donald Hacker , 25, of 235 Moun· lain View Ave., Laguna Hills. when it collided with a second auto. A power failure caused when a patio roof was torn off by high winds and hurled into power lines near the intersection or Newland Street and Hamilton Avenue had just plunged the in· tersection Into darkness. police said. Investigators said Hacker was making a left turn from south· bound lanes of Beach Boulevard onto Pacific Coast Highway when the accident occurred. Damage to his car and the other vehicle involved, operated by Gary W. Jones. or 9731 La Tierra Ave., Fquntaln Valley, was listed as moderate. Police say neither motorist will be cited because of prevail- ing blockout and weather condi· lions at the time of the accident. ORANOI! COAST Hll' DAILY PILOT water is eating below the struc· lure which Lies across the river 's width between Anaheim and Orange near Katella Avenue. If the check dam collapses, he said , the only problem would be with river bank erosion. Lee Jauma n . Corp~ of Engineers reservoir regulation unit ~hier. said in Los Angeles that Fullerton Dam contains oo· )y 34 acre fed of water. "a very stnall percentage or what it can handle." Brea Dam contains only 1.5 acre feet, he said, and Carbon Canyon Dam is nearly empty. Prado Dam, the Corps' major facility straddling the Santa Ana River in southern Riverside County. is considered less than half full, he said. At the dam itself, water is 47 feel deep and would have to raise more than 53 feet lo crest the facility. Waler is being released from Prado at a rate of l ,500 cubic feet per second, Jauman said. During the last major storm ln this area, 1969, the Corps re- leased up to ~000 cubic feet per second into the Santa Ana River, he said. While large capacities remain in county·area flood control darns. agricultural water collec- tor reservoirs such as Irvipe Lake are reported overflowing. An Irvin e Co mpan y spokesman said water began spilling over lrvine Lake dam Saturday morning for the first time since 1969. * * * F roMPage A J RAIN .•. Rai-n watcher J:Sberman Den- ny measured .98 inches in Hunt- ington Beach, bringing the season's total to 17. 76 Inches. compared to 8.90 Inches last year to date. The Laguna Moulton Treat- m ~t plant ~n Laguna Niguel tallied 1.48 inches overnight bringiog the season total there t~ 19.77 inches. Last year the Laguna Niguel area bad 5.89 in- ches. Progress Told UNITED NATIONS <AP> Secretary of State Cyrus Vance reported some progress In weekend talks on plahs for the independence of South-West Africa. But South African Foreign Minister R. F. Botha left the talks early, saying his gov- ernment would not yield the dis- puted territory to the nationalist movement recognized by the United Nations. By Tlao Aasocla.ted Pre1~ ' A s now$'lorm from ~he Rocky Mountains moved across the na- tion's midsection today, leaving a foot or more or snow in parts of Kansas, Nebraska and Mis- souri and threatening points east. By nightfall, portions of southern Ohio were to be under four to six mches of new snow. Freezing rain was forecast for the remainder of Ohio, and por- tions of Illinois, Indiana, Ken- tucky and Pennsylvania. A light dusting or snow was forecast for New York City and other sections of the Northeast hit by ? record snowfall last week. A meetin1 or six New England govetoors set for today in Bo.ston was canceled because of dlfflculty traveling to and from the city. · Althouah larger accumula- tions were expected in the snow belt slates south of the Great Lakes, forecasters gave no indication that the latest storm's effect there would be anything lo compare with the blizzards and near blizzards of the past °'w weeks. · Rain sf)owers were expe<:ted In the Southeast and light snow in the Rockies and higher eleva- tions in Oregon and Washington. Elsewhere, partly cloudy skies were predicted. FrorR Page A I MORE ••• estimated $22.6 million damage. destr oyed five homes a nd severely damaged 120 others. making it one of the worst storms 1in Southern California history. llo s aid the city would apply for ''appropriate s tate and federal assistance.·· Gov. Edmund G. Brown also must d ec lare· a s tate of em e rgency lo make private property owners and the city eligl ble for recovery funds. Meanwhile. the search con- tinued today for about 30 corpses unearthed when a section of the · Verduao Hills Cemetery in Tu- junga collapsed during Friday's s torm. Coroner's officials re- portedly recovered about half of the bodies by Sunday, including one found in a supermarket parking lot. Police officer Don ZerilJo said the ;:em aining bodies were buried under the mud. The cor- oner's office, fearing a health hazard, was supervising r e· covery of the bodies for iden· tlficatlon and reburial. In the Delta Flats area of Big Tujunga Canyon a woman's body was found two miles from where she reportedly bad been pulled into a wash current while ·attempting to cross lt. I Oran~e County coroner's of-ficers have Identified a body found ln Nlguel Beach Park over the weekend as that of Karl Chan· cellor, 20, of 1848 Park Sheffield: Place, Newport Beach. The certificate issued today by the coroner's office determines the cause of death as murder by a person or persons unknown. Sheriff's Lt. Rick Drake con- firmed that his omce is dealing with a murder case. He said Chancellor, whose body was found Saturday near a snack bar In the Niguel Beach Park. was killed by a series of blows to the head. No weapon has been found. ''Those blows were undoubt~· ly the cause of death," Drake said. "There was no sign of a struggle at the death scene but we are still checking out the area." Drake said his investigators are satisfied that Chancellor was killed at the s pot where his fully clothed body was found. Investigators said the victim attended Orange Coast College, Costa Mesa, until recently when he decided to temporarily e nd his studies so that he could travel in Australia. They said the victim's family , and friends have been qnable to enlighten them on the reason for his presence in Niguel Beach park. "We believe he was taken there by someone who planned to kill him but we doh'l know why at this point," an in· vestigator said. The last time Chancellor was seen alive by members of his fam ily was al about 1 p.m . Fri· day when he left home to go to a party, an lnvestigator said. 'Jfhere Tall Com Grows SHELBY, Iowa <AP> - The Community Club in this southwest Iowa town of 868 people is planning to erect a 76·foot·hlgh steel corn stalk beside Interstate 80. "Iowa's the Tall Corn State, isn't it?" said club member Dwight Eckel. "Well, wewanttobe able to show visitors some tall corn." The cornstalk which will be equivalent in height to a six·slory building, will also hllve eight leaves, a tassel-top and an elght·foot ear of com. Half a bog and half a cow will also grace the stru ~lure. Kidnap, Rape Stirs Manhunt NATIONAL CITY (AP) - Five men were sought today for kidnapping a young Chula Vista woman and a sailor, raping the girl, and shooting both persons. The pair were found in the trunk of a car. The womab, identified only as being 23 years old, was in critical condition in University Hospital with shoulder, neck and che·st wounds. Police said she had been raped repeatedly after being kidnapped. with the sailor from a bar. The sailor1. Michael Smith. was in fair condition in Naval Hospital with bullet wounds in the hip, mouth and throat. He is an electronics technician aboard the destroyer USS Orlick. Farm l.imit·Eye d SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Sacramento Bee says the U.S. Department' of Interior is con· sidering a proposal to raise the 160-acre llmltallon on federal water to 1,280 acree a family. Whose Best Friend? A police offioer keeps his dista nc<.' from the overturned car of Cheryl Sambuco in Waterbury. Conn., as h(•r dog keeps rescuers at bay. Finally Mr::.. Sambuco. who s uf- fered only minor injuries. was rt•leased after her husband arrived lo calm the largt' animal. Jarvis Backs Plan Before LB Audience I By S1EVE MITCHELL >Of-Deily Piie! SUit Sounding more like a Midwest preacher than a reured busi· nessman. tax reform initiative author Howard Jarvis assailed state legislators and a Superior Court judge opposed to Prop. 13 on the June 6 ballot. Jarvis peppered his hour-long speech before taxpayers al Laguna Beach High School Sun· day with anecdotes and humor , but would not give one inch to opponents or the tax reform measure. "They <legis lators) are tell· ing us up in Sacramento that there won't be any tax r eform m easur e this yea r ." th e e nergeti c Los Angeles homeowner said. "Leo McCarthy (Assembly s pe a ke r ) says they can '( because lobbyists won't allow them to do it," he s aid. The 75-year·old Jarvis also charged public e'mployee unions with holding up tax bills favora· ~le to property owners, claim mg that the majority or state legislators receive contributions from the unions. "In other words, this isn't a government of, by and for the people. It's a government or the goverment, by the government and for the government." Jarvis called a lawsuit by Orange County Superior Court Judg e Bruc e Sumner "frivolous" and claimed the judge is caught in a conflict of interest. Sumner recently filed a suit claiming the Jarvis initiative deals with more than one subject. "The attorney general de- termined that it covered only one subject," Jarvis s;iid. He also said Judge Sumner Is is an employee of the state, "and as s uch reeeives his salary from ta>.. sources. He is directly involved in a conflict of interest when he ac· cepts tax money and fights a tax reduction proposal." Regarding his tax measure. Jarvis assailed current property tax limits, saying they are well above the taxpayers' ability to pay. ''The property tax structure today prevents young people from being able lo buy a home at all," be said. And it has forced the closures on 7 ,500 homes a year in California -most of them owned by older folks on fixed incomes." He defends the estimated $7 billion that would be cut from the state's budget should the bill pass by saying, ''It's not taking ASSAILS OPPONENTS Tax Flgher J ervis $7 billion from the government. It's putting 1t back into the hands or the people, and they arc the government." ''There wi ll still be $33 billion. for the state lo conduct its operations." he said. "It's a 15 percent cut and they call that a disaster.·• ·'The real disaster comes when thousands of peoR,le in this state who have worked all their lives for the homes can't afford to own them." But it's the benefits tbal J arvis likes to point out. · "Sure. this bill will knock out downtown redevelopment proj- ect5. Jl will also put an end to join t power agreements and force politicians to trim their sails -cut out the fat." But. he said. if the measure passes, "there will be the big- gest boom of remodeling on homes in the history of this sta te , because p eople fear higher assessments after obtain- ing a buildrnA permit for an ad· d1tion lo their homes.·• Th at alone would m earr employment for thousands of state residents. he said. T he tax reform crusader told Lagunans to "get on the phone, write like hell to the newspapers here. and pass out literature t<' get this thing pass~d." "What really bothers the J)Olitlclans," he said, gleefully, "is that the peonle are finally going to have a say in the opera- tion of this state." I •7 I t t t " ., J d ii fl w . J ( . r (, c ' " ' ..- Ii p J u h• u in ~ C:' vJ le « U\ I • Today's Clo lag N.Y.Stoe~ · VOL. 71, NO. 44, 3 SECTIONS, 2S PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY,F EBRUARY1~1~8 TEN CENTS Storm.s Delay SB's Irvine CaDtpus Severe storm condlllons along the Orange Coast have delayed plans lo open Saddleback College's Irvine campus next fall. "We're really burtine.'' a col- lege source said today. "The rain h it us al a really bad lime." He said coostrucUon workers at. t.he site were poised t.o gour coner~ foundations In January just before t.he latest. round of storms began. He estimated construction would be at least one month behind once t.be campus site - located at Irvine CJ!nter Drive and Jeffery Road -is dry enough to pour foundat16ns. Administrators are worklllg on plans to utilize schools and in· dustrial buildings in the Irvine area on a contingency basis to go ahead with fall classes i.n the northern area. The so-called north campus was scheduled to open for classes in September. A district spokesm an said north campus classrooms prob· ably would not be ready before Another Storm Due for Coast By The Associated Press Another storm is brewing in the Pacific Ocean, and it could hit rain-weary Southern California as early as Tuesday night. say forecasters at the Na· lional Weather Service. "If it continues on its present course, it could hit the West Coast on Tuesday night or Wednesday," said Roger Ifill, a weather service technician in Los An~eles. Such news can only bring sighs of fatigue to residents in the mud·soaked Pil\ecresl Estates area of La Crescenta. The residents had been braced SIERRA SNOW NEARING RECORD; MORE DUE-AS for the worst when a storm caught them Sunday afternoon as they were still cleaning up from the waist.deep mud and debris left by Friday's torrents. About 100 families in the well· Vniversitg Town Civic Center Site Picked by Planner lrvlne Planning Director Ed· die Peabody will recommend • t hat the City Councll select University Town Center as the prererred site for a permanent civic center, at Tuesday's 7:30 p. m. council meeting. Also scheduled for debate at that meeting are the recommen· dations by city administrators about how to spend $1 million for new projects next year. Peabody's recommendation that the civic center be located across from UC Irvine, orf Cam- pus Drive, hinges on beeinning of construction within five years. If the 10 acres needed are not acquired, and building not begun within that time frame, Peabody rfcommends an alternate site at the southeast corner of Jeffrey and Barranca roads. Coast Youth Victim of Bludgeoning As cooceived, the civic center would comprise several single· story buildings linked wlltl atriums, covered walkways and gadtens. An estimated 180 peo- ple would work there. (There are now about 170 city workers.> On next year's budget mat· ters. city administrators estimate there will be about $1 million or the 1918-79 budget not previously earmarked for ex· penditure. A list of 14 prospective proj· ects, listed by priority. will be presented the council. Topping the list is the most ex· pensive project, a permanent ci- ty corporation yard for main· tenace operations. Estimated cost. is $450,000, for purchase of the land only. Estimates for the first.phase building or the yard facilities - a building and equipment -are $1.9 million over the next five years, which includes the land purchase. Other projects on the manage· ment wlsh-list fnclude initial planning for the civic center, the full costs of which have yet t.o be estimated; nine new policemen t.o expand law enforcemeQt' in the northeast section or the city, at $260,000; and expanded main· tenance operations, at $300,000. Progress Told UNITED NATIONS (AP> Secretary of Slate Cy~us Vance reported some proeress in weekend talks on plans for the in<l.ependence of South-West Alilca. But Soutb African torei111 Minister R.F. 1'9tb• left lM talks eart.Y, HYlnt Ida eov- eroment would not yield the dls· puted territory to the natlonallJt movement recognbed by the UJlfted Nations. to-do residential area were ad· vised by the Los Angeles County S h e riff 's J)epartment to evacuate their homes Sunday. But only about half heeded the warning, with the rest staying to try to lessen the impact of ex· peeled floods and mudslides. .. Flood control officials ad· vised that the Shields debris basin has not been cleared of mud and debris from the pre- vious storm," said Sheriff's <See MORE, Page A?> * * * Rain Slows Field Work In Irvine Wind and rain continue to hamper harvesting on Orange County ranct\e:; and are delay· Ing the preparation ot ground for new crops, an Irvine Company spokesman rePorted today, but he salct the ts.• lncbes of water falling on neldl thls season is doinJt more J(ood than harm. 0e·an Buchinger, Irvine Com- pany orchard manager . said rield workers still can't get into broccoli and celery fields or lemon and avocado orchards. Continued rain is also result· ing in rungus on strawberry plants and mold on lemons, he said. But the water is great for leaching salts from plant and tree roots and for greening up pastu re lands hit ha rd by drought. Last week's wind$ knocked an estimated 500 to 1,000 field-boxes of a voe ados rrom trees and top· pied approximately 100 eucalyp· tus wind·break trees across roads and onto producing or· chard trees, he added. Buchinger said planting schedules are being pushed back because of continued rain total· Ing 19.S inches so far this season com pared t.o only six inches last year at this time. Scheduled for planting are tomatoes and com, be said, and delays with those 'crops will re· sult in additional delays in gel· ting other rotaUon crops into the ground next fall. Buchlnger ls optimistic about. ranch grazing conditions as a re- s a It of the season's rain, however. Earlier, this yur, an Irvine 1\aneb 1'Pokesm*111 said bl• company would have to buy large quantitl~ o( hay to leed the 900-head c9w herd and 1,000 range catUe expected to feed off ranch grua~. Saddleback's second semester next January. District otficlals, however, are pressing plans to open classes in the northern area this Sep- tem ber as planned. A formal announcement re- garding the contingency plans is expected to come this week. Saddleback College President Rohen Lombardi bas aaid the north campus is t.be district's number one priority. The facility -located on a 20-acre site -is supposed to house 3,000 students and :>.S-full- time faculty members. The 20-acre s ite wa s purchased last year from the Irvine Company for $900,000. The district bas an opUoo to purchase an additional 80 acres .,.., ............. " .. nidl O'.,..... SLOPE SLIPPAGE IN NB ENDANGERS PHONE CABLES Probl•ma for Big Canyoo ,ncr Newport Center Only Minor Damage .In SUnday's S.t~rm By JACKIE HYMAN Of .... Dally l'llot S\aff Rain soaked the Orange Coast again Sunday and today, but caused only minor damage com- pared to the storm that raked the a rea last Thursday night and Friday morning. ln the area of Huntington Beach where a trailer park was devastated early Friday morn· ing by a twister, another strong wind hit at about 7:50 p.m. Sun· day, picking up a roof from a metal building near Hamilton A venue and Seaforth Lane and fi. inging itint.o a power Une. Although power to 2,0SS customers was cut orr. a Southern California Edison spokesman said work crews already in the area were able to restore most of the power within 18 minutes. Flash flood fears abated in Silverado Canyon, where evacuated residents have re- turned to their homes, officials report. Roads there are open to local traffic. Lagun a Canyon Road was closed again this morning because ot fiooding. More mudslides closed Pacific Coast,, J:Ughway north of San Clemente again today and low· lyl~ streets'. were flooded in Irvlne, Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley. A weekend mudslide on Bia Canyon DnvfJ ln Newpon Beacb ripped out. .µnderground telephone ca.bles. cutting telephone setvice to some Newport. Center offices. Pacific Telephone Company workers today were checking out damage from the mudslide, which closed part of Blg Canyon Drive. Electrical problems caused by wind damage were evident in Laguna Beach. where a power pole on Coast Highway across from Emerald Bay ignited at about 9 p.m. and another at. 450 Glenneyre also burned, forcing the evacuation of three rooms of t.be Laguna Nursing Home. Winds were measured at up t.o 45 miles per hour in Newport. Harbor, where harbor patrol crews continued to mop up aebrts and damage caused by last week's high winds. Sunday's winds also blew out a plate glass window at. Arby's Restaurant on Broothurst Street. in Jjuntington Beach. The National Weather Service today forecast overnight clear· ing and fair weather Tuesday, with another storm moving ln on Wednescl•Y· . * * * Here~s List Of~s al the site for further develop. ment. · District officials are plann.ing t.o develop the campus in 20-acre p~rcels each year be&inninl this year. Construction under way at the initial 20-acre site is expected t.o cost $1.2 million and provlde 30,000 to 35,000 aquare feet. ol classroom space. LaivyerS' Ability ~ried · NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Tbe Am e rican Bar AssociatiQn backed down today from · wSJt one deleeate to Its national con- vention called a "snarling cat fight with the chief justice or the United Slates" over his charges that many trial lawyers are in· competent. By an overwhelming voice vote, the ABA's House or Delegates voted down a resolu.- tioo Crom the Illinois Bar As· sociation demanding that Chief Justice Warren E. Burger either "publicly repudiate•• comments made last July or provide proof of their accuracy. In testifying before an EngliSb legal academy, Btirger estimat· .ed that half the U.S. trial lawyers a re unqualified to represent their clients. / "sponsors of this resolution lack a sense of humor and a sense of propriety," said del· . cgate Lee Loevinger or Washington. He said the association should "not start a snarling calfight0 with Burger. Delegate Carole Bellows, .pres- ident of the llllno~ Bar Associa· lion, had urged passage of the re- s o 1 u ti on b ecause of a ''deep concern by lawyers of oor association." She referred to Burger's com· m e nts as "stressing the negative" and added that the comments had s ubjected all lawyers to ridicule and dis· repute. <See LAWYERS, Page A?) • Suspect Milk Not Delivered To Cormtians. By KATHY CLANCY Of llle DAiiy .. ,._Si.ff Orange County Health Depart- ment. officials said today there have been no reports or illness so far from penicillin· contaminated milk packaged un· der the Adohr label. Robert S. Stone, county direc- t.or of environmental health, said the quarts and pints of con· tamlnated milk apparently were not distributed in Orange County markets as originally suspected. While there have been some conflicting reports, Stone said county health officials were told over the weekend by Adobr Farms executives that the sus- pect milk was s hipped to neighborhood markets and home delivery routes in Los Angeles CQunty. · Stone said the quarts and .Pints In question bear a Feb. ~'ex­ piration date and are coded with the number 06-08. <See MILK. Page A2> Coast Wead1er Showers ending tonight, becoming fair and a little warmer Tuesday. Highs Tues d ay 60·6S. Lows lonl1ht 44 t.o 50. INSIDE TODAY r .Atlcmflc ~·· &ordwalk, old . and tfr«f, ii holding ii• bttalh M. Ol'dfdpcdfolt of tM U/•·ffofng forc1 of t~al . oorobU..11 maw bavc.a long ~ wa!t. s. f'aff o . lil••x • Mond!y. Februarx 13. 1171 Six in .Ski Patrol Located Buu..E'l'IN MOUNT WATEaMAN CAP) Sb mlsshtg memMn of a aDteer ski par patrol were tiled today in a ncsed area Monat Waterman la lbe 6aceles National Forest, but • o&.llen wett atlJI mlasta1, a eriff's spokesman said. MOUNT WATERMAN <AP> Eiebt members or a volunteer akl patrol were reported missln1 in this area or the Aneelea Na· tlon•l For-eat. and a 1beriU's rescue crew began 1earcbin1 ror them today. Los Angeles County sheriff's .deputy Ron Malneclt said moun- tain rescue personnel from the Crescenla Valley sheriff's sub· station, aided by a helicopter, were seeking the missing U.S. FOTest Service volunteers in the ruued and snowcovered bills. •'Two aid patrol people ~ mlnin1 since Sunay," Nalneclt said. "Slx people went CMlt sun. day afternoon to go find them and now they're missing." Mal neck &aid it bad been snowing all night in the MC>unt Waterman area, about a 30-mile drive from Hidden Sprines which was devastated by Friday's deluge and flash fiood. <Related story, photo, AS) them lo aurvlve for ae·v.rll day a. He 1ald the six searchers had been expected back by Sunday night, and the Sherirt'a Depart. ment search team was sent out this morning when they failed tu return. UCI Priest Backs II e said the two people originally missing were on a routine patrol, but carried backpacks which would enable "The volunteers are pretty well trained for dealine with snow conditions and Jirat aid, in case they were to get Jost for a night or two." said Pbyllla Alvarado, a clerk at the Oak Grove Ranger Station ol the U.S. Forest Service. She said no avalanches bad been reported in the area. Womenr;· A UC Irvine Episcopal riest says he strongly supports he or· dainment or women. and pre- dicts the Catholic church will come to accept women clerics- right after it permits priests to marry. T he Rev. Larry Rouillard, of University Interfaith, s aid .. Celibacy will go first. There'll be an optional celibacy for clergy. "Then women will b e or- dained. /\l first, there will be a great many sisters ordained." The Episcopal Church has or· dained women since 1974. There are only 60 to 70 today. Rouillard told a Univers ity Forum luncheon gathering of UCI facul· ty this week that it's been hard to attract women l o the priesthood. Rouillard said there 1s no "Biblical or theological reason why women ~hould not be or da1ned The line of bishops, priests and deacons 1s supposed to have extended in succession from the apostles or Jesus-an unbroken Jine of clergy ordaining the next in line. "But 'apostle' is defined as one who saw the risen lord, and was commissioned and sent by him." Rouillard said. "The person who most particularly fits that description is Mary Magdalene." lie allded. "I sec the ordain- ment of women to the priesthood and the deaconlle. as the com· plelion of apostolic succession in the church." Rouillard said the increasing pressuring or women for accep- tance into the higher positions of the church is part of the overall feminist revolution. "I really believe that the Holy Spirit is operative in the vast bulk of the women's move- ment," he said. Thi.eves Hit Irvine Area For $2,085 Burglars got $2,085 In goods in crimes reported over the weekend in Irvine. !\lark C. Scott, 27, a self- employed businessman, said someone forced open the elec- tronically controlled garage door to his home at 4382 Manzanita St., and look a commercial pstage stamp machine, and a bottle each of brandy, tequila and whiskey. quila and whiskey. Scott valued the merchandise at S360 Antique watches. bracelets, earrings, broaches, a clock, a transistor radio, jars containing 500 pennies, and a green and yellow floral print ptllow case were taken from 6131 Sierra Bravo Road. Owner Faye Hillyard, 68, a house.wife, valued the loss at $1,000. The burglar broke a rear bathroom window to get ln. Rand tools, valued by owner Thomas r.tazelln, a 39-year-old salesman, 'at $725, were stolen frotn his home at 411? Escudero Drive, from an Wllocked 1arage. O"ANOI COAST' DAILY PILOT Clergy OMly~SUlf ...... SUPPORTS WOMEN Rev. Larry Roulllard Panels Eye Wrridor Plan Tonight Th e Saddleback Area Coordinating Council. Orange County planners. t he South Laguna IDlls Homeowners As· sociation and the public are to review the route-location study for the San Joaquin Hills Transportation Corridor at a meeting beginning at 7 o'clock tonight. The meeting will be al Peoples Federal Savings & Loan com· munity room, 23688 El Toro Road, El Toro. The county will present the latest revised plans for the cor· ridor. planned as a high- capacity, high-speed vehicular transportatton route. The cor- ridor. a segment of the county's master plan o f arterial highways, is approximately 13 miles long. It is to extend from the San Diego Freeway near Saddleback College in Mission Viejo to the future Route 73 Freeway in the vicinity of MacArthur Boulevard in Newport Beach. Construction is not expected before the mid·l980's. Environmental Management Agency <EMA> spokesmen said the study is being conducted by Gruen Associates Inc. in two lS·month phases. The first phase is expected to result in the selec- tion or a basic route for the cor- ridor by the county board of supervisors. When a route is selected, phase 2 is to provide more d~ tailed analysis or the facility within the selected corridors. Estimated costs and rigbl·of· way requirements also are to be determined. Last of 40 Yachts End Mexico Race By ALMON LOCKABEY Several other yachts suffered .,.. .. ,......._.... minor damage fr om MANZANJLLO -The last or knockdowns and from plungln& 40 yachts which started the San down steep seas. Tbe yacht, Diego to Maruanlllo race Feb. 4 Whippet, skippered by Dick Pen· dragged into port al the Las nington of the Long Beach Yacht Hadas Marina at 7:30 this morn· Club, finished with her steering Ing, writing finis to the second wheel lashed on deck. Her crew biannual run to this Mexican had steered the last 24 hours seaport. with an emergency tiller. A re9ersal or weather condi· Last boat to finish was Tenaci· tions in the Gulf or Callfornia ty. a Cal·39 skippered by Mike Saturday scrambled the fleet Abraham of the Windjammer and sent the Class C boats hus-Yacht Club. She had been re- tling to the finish line to knock off porting herselr about 12 miles the Class A contenders for over-from the finish for the previous all handicap honors. 24 hours. The handicap winner was Reisende, a stock Ericson·35 Race officials here at the Las owned and skippered by Mike l~adas .Hotel spent a sleepless Satterlee of the San Diego night with computers to come up Yacht Club. She finished early with the following octicial han· Sunday night. 1v.· cap standings .. A brief storm in the gulf sent Ov~rall, 1. Retsendc 2. Bones the yachts across the finish lin~ V,. WtllJam Chapman, San l'!an· in large groups Sunday. There ca~co Yacht Club. 3. Audac1ous, were several dead heal finishes. Mtke Kennedy, Dana Point The storm hit the fleet without Yacht Club. . warning after yachts had been Class A. J. Merhn, Bill Lee, drifting for more than 24 hours Santa Cruz Yacht Club 2. in almost dead calm. The easter· Drifter, Harry Moloscho. Long ly winds clocked at more than 30 Beach Yacht Club 3. Ragtime, knots g erated steep headseas Jim Phelps, LBYC. and had some of the boats in trouble. The yacht Renegade, skip· pered by Sandy Purdon of San Diego, finished under power Sunday with only the stub of a mast showing above her decks. Dick Kelton's Chance·37 sloop, Kori II out of the Los Angeles Yacht Club. finished late Sunday Class B. J. Re~ardless, Robert Cole. St. FYC 2. Free Spirit, Richard Ettinger, Newport Harbor Yacht Club 3. Mirage, Les Harlander, Richmond Yacht Club. Class C. 1. 'Reisende 2. Bones V 3. A udaclous. Maose Best Friead? A police officer keeps his distance from the overturned car of Cheryl Sambuco in Waterbury, Conn. as her dog keeps rescuers at bay. Finally Mrs. Sambuco, who suf· fer ed only minor injuries. was rclea::.ed after her husband arrived to calm the large animal. Front Page A I IRVINE .HOUSING. • • Cox said the 200 detached houses would be reserved for UCI staU aod faculty. Five hun- dred of the apartments proposed would be sold at normal market rate, and be available to anyone. or the remaining 500 apart- m ents, Cox said, 300 would be in- tended for off-campus buyers, and 200 units for UCI faculty, start and students; this would be low-income housing. In all cases. the units would be purchased. No rental housing is proposed. Said Cox, "Rental housing generally presents greater maintenance problems and could deteriorate into .another Isla Vista (Santa Barbara cam · pus> situation." Cox said ownership of units would create .. a more s table community." The 80 al'rcs involved would be l ea~ed. rather than sold, to the Irvine Company. Cox characterized his housing plan ~ "more rational" than the preferred lawsuit settle- ment. ·'Why did they pick on the uni- versity to solve their own prob· lem?" Cox asked • "We have never been party to. <the settlement>. We were never · consulted al alt. Only after the court approved the settlement proposal were we told about lbe alternatives " Asked why he s upposed the Irvine Company and the city didn't include the university in the negotiations, Cox · said, "l think they wC'rc just doing their damnedest lo get some kind of resol4Uon to the lawsuit." with her crew bailing after the yacht started taking on water when the deck separated from the hull in heavy seas. f'ro• Page AJ LAWYERS. NB Woma~· Marine Linked to Thefts lie emphasized that the uru- versily proposal is a concept for discussion, but said tbe university is prepared to support it and pre. sent It to the regents for approval. None of the parties involved in the settlement agreement of- fered comment on the proposal; each is studying it. Ir a compromise between them and the university proves unworkable, that would leave the second alternative, the "escape valve." of the settle- ment agreement. • While the ABA's hierarchy has kept a low public profile in the controversy, President William B. Spann has called Burger's s tatistics ·"grossly dispropor- tionate" and "exaggerated." Spann said ABA s tudies showed the figure lo about 20 percent. In an obvious answer t0. Spann, Burger said in his Sun- day "speech that "even if only 20 percent ..• we ought to be do· ing more about It.': But Burger added, "l stand firmly on the position I ex- pressed" -the SO percent estimate. · About one in every 10 U.S. lawyers spends any time in the. courtroom, and Burger em· phasized that bis remarks were not aimed at lawyers in general. "In each situation special training and skills are not sim- ply desirable, they are im- perative in the publlc interest," he said. Burger said incompetent trial lawyers cost ''consumers of justice" money and more. San Francisco area lawmen are probing the possible link ·between the arrest of a Newport Beach girl and an El Toro Marine and a series of recent burglaries in Marin County. Glorla Jean Swanson, 18, and Stanley Wayne Berkey, 21, were arrested in Corte Madera by FBI agents who said they found burglary tools, three guns, a variety of disguises and false Identification papers and $20,000 in cash in an apartment oc· cupied by the pair. At present the two race federal charges 9f maklng false state- ments in passport appHcaUons, whicll carries $40,000 bail. A spokesman f~ the San Francisco office of the FBl said they were arrested one week after applying for passports at the San Rafael poet office Feb. 2. They allegedly used birth certificates or .. deceased in- fants'' as idenUficatlon for the passports, the 1pokeaman said. Berkey was identified as being AWOL from the Marine Corps' El Toro air station a!ler his ar- rest. accordin& to the FBl. burglaries of wealthy homes and the discovery of the tools, cash and disguises in the apartment shared by the pair has led to the investigation of their connection to the burglary cases. The woman was released from custody after an unidentified relative posted bail. Berkey and Miss Swanson are slated to return to a federal magistrate's court Feb. 16 for a preliminary hearing on the federal charges. SCIENTISF GROUP SHUNS ILLINOIS WASHINGTON CAP) -The board of directors or the American Association for the Advancement of Science voted today to move its 1979 annual meeting from Chicago to Houston because the state or 11· linois bas not passed the Equal Rights Amendment. That alternative calls for the Irvine Company lo provide sites for 725 low.In come housing units on up to 41 acres, in either the Woodbridge or University Town Center developments. Besides the land, the company would build major site Improve- ments-streets, sewer hookups, landscaping and such. ThC' city of Irvine is com- mitted to $329,000 in its share of · the improvements package. E'rot11 Page Al MILK ••• The contaminated milk could cause aa allergic reaction to someone sensitive to penicillin. Stone said, but would not atrect those who are not allergic to penicillin. . Fro•PageAl Law enforcement authoriUes in Marin Coun~ said they have been plagued by a serie1 of "We have been quite con· cerned about the ERA and have passed a resolution indicating our strong support," said Dr. 'William D. McElroy, chairman or the board or directors. Clayton Gome. Adohr division manager, said today all or the re- tail outlets sellin~ Adohr products have been asked to remove aJI goods dated Feb. 21 from public sale. MORE RAIN COMING. • • Deputy Carl Riegert. The basin overflowed Friday, and when the raJn fell Sunday, residents were faced with the same danger. Although heavy rains con· linued through Sunday n.tght, the weatber service said the worst of the storm bad passed -with less lhan half the rainfall that drenched the area two days before. Rieiert said Sunday that rts- in& waters wa.abed out hillside roads and c\Jt off residents in the har'd·hlt Tajunga Canyon area Just a lew miles northwest of La Crescenta, but because the a.rea is so sparsely populated, no one w11 evacuated. Mayor Tom Bradley declared a atate of emeraency ln LoS An1eles on SUnday, n0Un1 that Prlday's storm had cau.aed an t1UmatecUt2,8 million dama1e, deatro_yed flv~ hom•• and .everely da~••ed 120 oU..n, ' rnalllnc il one ot tbe worst storm• in Southern California 11lstof1. Re Aid ~e city would apply for .. appropriate state and ftcleral ~.·· Gow.~-G. Brown tOclaJ · detlei"ff macb of Soutbera' CilMCilliailiil&ftv.•tllm.U ~-~ OWMn liilil ... city or Los Angeles eligible for re- covery funds. Meanwhile, the search con· t.jnued today for about 30 corpses unearthed when a section or the Verdugo HJlls Cemetery in Tu- junga collapsed during Frlday's storm. Coroner's omcials re· portedly recovered about ball of the bodies by SUnday. tncludjna one foUbd in a supermarket parktne lot. Police officer Don Zermo said the remaining bodies were burled under the mud. The cor. oner's office, rearing a health h.aurd, was supervisinc. re- covery of the bodies for Iden· tlncatlon and rebu,rtal. ln the Delta Ftata area or tS1g Tujun1a Canyon a woman's ~Y wu round two mUea trom where ahe reportedly bad beer\ pulled tnw a wuh current white -.ttempt.'1tg to croaa tt. Th• \llc{lm, BOnnle Koploy ot Sunland, had report'edl,Y bee vlalllnf a friend in tho area f'ri .. d•y when UM meldtnt occurred. T iie California Hl•hway Patrol cloted down hl1hwa11 acrou the eouthe"' McUon or tho &tali, ~J>ttlllly In m°'41\tain Ud Cal\Y'Oft rtlioaa Where u.. il•nt•r of m\id and rock 1llcht Wal .._.~ .. lddftr Cb\lek M1riilltl! .::.---------" OPENING TUESDAY, FEB. 14th at Mission Vieio Village Center E915HOE REPAIR Pwsn&LaiwmgeToo I ·I I Another · Widuw Murdered COLUMBUS, Ga. (AP> -An elderly widow who attempted to fight off her assailant before be- ing choked to death apparently is the a~h victim of a killer who bas targeted a fashionable 15· block area and women who live alone and are over 60. The assailant who killed Mildred Dlsmukea .Qorom, 78, eluded heavy police patrols spurred by an unsuccessful at- tack on a neighbor woman the day before. Mrs. Borom struggled before her death -a broken lamp was found on the hallway floor near her nightclothes·clad body, authorities said. o.llJ .............. PARRA ADOBE WITH PEG WINDOWS BUILT IN 1850 WAS ONE OF TWO STRUCTURES DAMAGED San Juan Capistrano Received Funds to Renovate One of Hlstortc HouHa She was the fifth widow in the Wynnton neighborhood to be m urdered since mid-September. Coroner J . Donald Kilgore said Mrs. Borom was strangled with a venetian blind cord. She probably was kllleq Saturday, be said, but was found Sunday by police who were called when relatives were unable to get Mrs. Borom to answer h er doorbell. 2 Structures Attacke.d Vandals Strike tU San Juan Wina Grant '"It was a venetian blind type cord," said Kilgore. "lie got his tool inside the home -that was the venetian blind cord. lie cut it inside the house." By, WILLIAM HODGE Of Ille 0•111 l'llol Stlll While San Juan Capistrano ci- ty officials were fighting to ob- tain restoration grants for two historical structures, teen.age vandals were dismantling them to build skateboard ramps. Cit v Ad minislralivt! aide Pam Hallan said the vandalism d1i. covery came four days after state officials notified the city of a $20.000 ~rant award lo ren ovate one of the structures. "Whal we thought were going to be minor Mructural stabiliza- tion and modifications have now turned into a major project," a dlsgrunUed Mrs. Hallan pointed out. "We may have to apply for more funds." The two structure:; an old adobe and a farmhouse locat(.'<f about two miles east or In- terstate 5 on the Ortega Highway -are on the Nation;il Register of fl islorical Places. They co ntainl'd unique features In relatively good condi tions. "We felt very fortunate," ex plained Mrs. Hallan, who works o n cultural heritage matters. "The adobe had windows dating b ack to 1850 t h at were handcrafted. "They were fitted together with pegs rather than nails." Damage to the two structures was discovered recently when a local historical SO<'icty member happe n ed on a ~roup of teen-agers m lhcold farmhouse "They Wt'rc ins ide? th<' farqihouse having :i wonderlul time rcmovm~ the• \\00<1,"' Mrs Hallan said. "How much of the damage was done before, l don't know." The farmhoUSl' ceiling 1s literally dismuntled. Large s heets of wood arc strewn around the floor among bits of broken glass. Green paint is s plallcrcd across sevt'ral of the turn-of-the- centuray farm house walls. "We were hopin~ becnuse the building had been infairly good condition that a group might b~ able to oecupy it and do some minor mamtt'nancc work,·• Mrs Hallan said. "The Capistrano In dian Council was interested In us- ing the farmhouse as an 9ffi~~-·~. nee.'' She said the restoration effort would continue. Kilgore declined to say whether Mrs. Borom was sex- ually assaulted, as were four or the victims. The body was found only a day after another widow, who lived only two blocks from Mrs Borom, successfully fought off a masked man. "lie never uttered a ljnd." said Ruth Schwob, 70, the man who attacked her be re dawn Saturday in her s tately brick home. "I awakened on the bed ... and he had his hands on my throat," Mrs. Schwob said. "And then he wrapped the pan- tyhose all the way around my neck. "I didn't get a look at him at al l. His face was covered with a mask," said Mrs. Schwob, who frightened her assailant by trip· ping a.burglar a!arm. Police said ttiey could not de termlne how the killer entered the Borom home. Driver Killed As Auto Hit~ . Stalled Van WORKMEN PATCH VANDALIZED HARRISON HOUSE Youngsters Used Wood for Skateboard Ramps A 57-year-old San Juan Capistrano man was killed early ·today when his car slammed in· lo a stalled van on the rain· soaked San Diego Freeway, In· terstate 5 north of Crown Valley replace some of the thfngs we thought could be retained," she ,explained. "Replacement could be a reconstruction of old things in the st~tures. : "Bil\.. \ve. might even have to use tprriethlng modern becal,lSC ofttie ~ostinvolved." . The two stru1t.tures-referred to ~s the Parra Adobe and the Harrison House-are scheduled ~ be donated to the city. •Tfte current owner, Robert Maurer, reportedly has not de- cided whether to press charges against the teen-age vandals. "The sheriff's department is patrolling the property regularly now." Mrs. Hallan said. "We've also got workmen out there board· ingupthewindows." she speculated. •·People prob- ably thought th.e buildings were going tobctomdown." Bandits Rob Grove Market Parkway. The dead man's name was withheld pending notification of next or kin. Seven people in the bus suf. fered minor injuries In the 6:40 a.m . accident, a Highway Patrol spokesman said. Names of the injured were not Immediately available. A CHP spokesman said (he Thr ee armed bandits h eld van stalled in an Interstate s traffic lane during a downpour. customers in a Garden Grove As the driver of the bus attempt· Thriftimart store at gunpoint ed lo restart the vehicle, the Ill Sunday evening while they fated San Juan Capistrano man robbed the store of an un· smashed into the auto's rear determined amount or cash, end. pollcereportcdtoda.v. Four of the inJur-ed were Officers said there were transported to Mission Com- "numerous" customers insi~e munlty Hospital and three more the store, at 13922 Brookhurst St. were taken to Saddleback Com- It's Here Sonaeplace Motorists in Kalamazoo. Mich .. have to climb some mini-mountains to feed parking meters these days. Ron llarvev found it easier to attack the job from the rear. At present, the city has 3-t inches of snow on the ~round. Colllllluter Train's Debut Run Readied Local and state dignitaries will h elp welcome the El Camino, the new San Diego to Los Angeles commuter tram, when it takes its inaugural run Tuesday morning, making three Orange County stops. The new Amtrak-operated train was purchased and re· fu,rbished with Los Angeles County funds and will be operat· ed the next six months with u subsidy from CalTrans and Los Angeles County. The train will leave San Diego af 5:45 a.ro., stopping in San Juan Capistrano at 7 a.m .. Santa Ana at 7:22 a.m. and FuUerton at 7 .42a.m. It arrives in downtown Los Angeles at 8:20 a.m., and two evening return trains leave for Orange County and San Diego at 4 :30 and 5:30 p.m. Among those scheduled to be on board the train when it leaves San Diego will be State Senator James Mills, D-San Diego: Ca!Trans Director Adriana Gia n turco; Ralph Clark. chairman of the Or~nge County Transit District (OCTD) board of directors; OCTD Manager Ed Loritz, and Baxter Ward, the Los Angeles County supervisor who led efforts to obtain the new services. OCTD officials said brief ceremonies also are planned al the three Orange County stops. OCTD Directors Al Hollinden a nd William Farris plan to board the train at its Santa Ana stop for a trip over part of the route. schedules are convenient to those who work in downtown Los An~clC'S. lntroduC'tory discount fares for round-trip transportation arc S3.40 from Fullerton, $5 from 1 Santa Ana and $7.SO from San Juan Capi s trano wit.h a newspaper coupon or mer. Clark noted the standard-sized automobile costs about 18 cenL'>,, a mile to operate, making the • train fares a bargain now for Orange County lo Los Angeles - commuters. Judge Delays Celia's Trial To March 14 ' SAN DIEGO <AP> -Thetnal ~ of Santa Ana hospital ad- ministrator Louis J. Cella Jr . charged with e mbezzling S2 million, has been delayed until March 14. The one month delay was ap· proved by Superior Court Judge l:dward T. Buller. A defense at- torney said assembling hundreds of witnesses and thousands or ex - hibits will take extra time. Attorney Micheal Cappizz1 said he already has subpoenaed 225 witnesses including many ouU;ide California. "We're going to have lo "I guess it was just through ig- norance that this happened," when lhe stocking·masked trio munity Hospital. enteredat7:15p.m. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.....-~~~- Clark has said Orange County residents r.. •1ld benefit most from the n~"' train because Cella, 52, was named in a 127·count indictment returned by the Orange County grand Jury two years ago. Many of the funds allegedly embezzled from two hospitals went to political campaigns, pro.';ecutors claim. Burger LevelS Charges Trial Lawyers Lackm.g? ·NEW ORLEANS (AP> - Stoked by the nation's highest. ranking jurist, a controversy o~r charges of extensive in- competency by trial lawyers awaits the American Bar As- sociation's eovemine body. The ABA's House of Dtlecates was expected to consider today what could become the first ol· flcJal rirt between the 1nfluential professional group and Chief Justice Warren E. Burger. Delegates at the organiza- tion's national eonvenUon will hear a resolution from the JI. linets Bar AssociaUon demand- inc that Butter either "publicly repudiate" tOQllDebta made Jut. .July dlsparaama t.he com~ cy of many trial lawyers or pro. vlcf. proof of their accuracy. Jn testif1tal before an Entll•b lttal •C8denly. Burier esUmat- ed batt t.M U.S; trteJ la•yen are UDquaUftecl to represeat ellents. Ste~ to the ADA on SUn-dar. Bvpr acknowledS~ the l*Hlln1 re.elution but reluled. to batkdown. Be ealled trial lawyer lncom· petitftty "one Oft.he mott 1erious prp_b.ltma faclnc our pro· ,..._,., mtd added, ''UnUl we -..blisb •pedal ~•rda for dMi rllht to • .,.,..,. In the court.a, Jadi ......... 'Clf.MDllllOll to UM .. the. a11igator. .. rar:i fur~ his ihvorite shi1:'t, mad~ ·m f'me all cotton witn land. tails. eolid. colors of red, whlt.e;navy, lt. blu.e,a~WJta, melon,~undy, ~lrow, dertmoutn,and brown. by~ I I I I ~· I j 1 l I I I l I I i r i . . .t-1 DAILY PILOT tla.t ~ CO. ting,~J "'\ @ .. ~~') wld1 Tom arphiae ~ . ' ~ THE RETURNING: When you • exit our region for a brief • weeltend these day!>, you come 1 1 home shaking your heud. You , begjn wonder where reality is •located. Our coastal sector has 1ust • b een whipped by the fourth , .-storm in less than two weeks. • .. 1 Gale warnings were posted ·• again. Damage reports contmue ,,, ,, to pour in from places like the Laguna and S1lvcrado canyon!>. And yet across Southern California, many locations have ~ ,, , had it worse Like the Hidden Springs retirement village, where an entire community was wiped out by flash flooding. The death toll may go to nearly two • doze n persons before the searching ends. AGAINST TlllS KIND or a backdrop, it could be suggested that only two kinds of people would take lo the mountains over this pasl weekend: skiing fanatics or crazies. Well, I was .. among them. And I don't ski. -. ~ The tiny community of Big • ;, Bear, nestled high in our • n Southern California mountains, had its problems with the big , storm fronLc;; too. But here. it • • \ was more hke a winter won· , derland than a story of horror in • mudslides and flooding. Snow made the place appear to have been bleached 10 a • sanitary laundry Dy nightfall Friday. 1t was Just a question of whether you had the right of \\ ay or 1f 1l belonged to the s nowplows The s nowplows • ' always won. It was no contest. The plows continued on with • their meehanical shoveling. You .. could hear them groaning and .., . huffing through the night. • -•· By Saturchy morning, even • the side streets were cleared. • The skiers. the other fanatics of . ' ~ ~ 1 the mountain, were loading up gear. scraping orr windshields : • 1 and with clank in~ ti re chains, • .,.1 heading off for the slopes. •· . M EANWlllLE DOWN at the ., : town Safeway store, the local • lady civic leader was com plain· mg to the manager that few • citizens had showed up for the i Heart Fund benefit at the Elks ··~Club. • He sympathized. ll must have ,. " been the storm that kept them ·~ away. The local paper had noted ·~ they were giving away a bunoy ·~. rabbit, complete with hutch and • 't"' feed, as one of the main door prizes. Maybe that's wut kept ~he citizens away. A clerk approached the store manager to ask how they should prepare for the day. "Not too 11 any made it up the mountain," 1c suggested. "The storm re· .>orts will keep them away." Sunday dawned clear and sun· 1y bright. Everythin&t was a ·efl ection of clean white. Mother tature's laundry was still hang· ng out. MORE SKJERS were hilting lie slopes. More vehicles poured nto town from the flatlands. By Sunday afternoon, the :loud cover had come again and , .l few snowflakes dri(ted in the 1ir . You load up and start back >ff the mountain. Into the rain. And more rain \nd by the time you reach home ~ 1l Balboa·bY·the·Bay, it's com- ~ ng down in sheets and blowing a ;ale. ~ a.... And you really do wonder '!• yvhcre reality is. ., .. _..,._ Monay F•bruaiy 13. 1978 Miiier A••alled Union Council Rejects Pact By The As!MH!lated Press Coal stockpiles continue to dwindle and the United Mine Workers union a ppears divided , but the 70·day nationwide coal strike goes on. By a 30-6 vote Sunday the UMW bargainln& council turned down a tentative pact. This means an end to the strike ls apparenUy wffks away. Negotiations will have to start again and emergency power preparatioris have begun in several hard·hit states. Interviewed today on the CBS Momin~ News. United Mine Workers President Arnold Miller said th~ vote was not the way the rank·and·file would have gone. Jn Charleston, headquarters of Miller's home dis trict, a spokesman for a group seeking his ouster sa id e nou g h i.ignatures have been colleeted to begin the unionls recall orocess I NATION I WEATHER ··1 TIIlNK 90 percent of our workers want lo work and they would have accepted this con· tract," he said. "Jf the mem· bership had been given an op- port unity to accept or reject the contract. l would have felt bet· ler a bout it. .. M 11ler said he wanted a quick resumption of the talks aimed al :-etlling the longest nationwide strike in UMW history. But there was no word when they would resume. BUT MILLER denied today that the bargaining council vote wes a ma1or defeat for him or that he was losing control of the union. "They've been s aying that for about the last five years and there's nothing unusual about that." he said. Luggage dots the snow-covered runway where 41 died when a Pacific Western Airlines 737 touched down. then jerked back into the air to avoid a snowplow at the airport in Cranbrook. British Colum- bia. The plane hit· a snowbank and ex- plode d . Sixpassengers and a crew me mber survived Saturday night's crash. An investigation was under way. Meanwhile, as Miller claimed rank-a nd-file support for the contract he negotiated, a union leader said the UMW president was losing support in the coal fields . "Telegram after tele- gram" is arriving in Washlngton urging Miller to quit, according to a member of the bargaining council. Wichi~a Fears Killer of Seven WICHITA, K a n . (AP) -. • -' De s pite several hundred 'BTK St J 'W • R •d B ~ -.-.. telephone calls offering possible rang er rites; es1 ents uy ~I.Im clues over the weekend, police · .. , WOULD SA y -Without go· 1ng through them -that there hav~ been telegrams from every disltict asking his resignation." saJd Donald Lawley. are still in the dark about the himself the "B.T.K. Strangler" tribuled but the man was never identity of a man who has writ· has threatened to kill again. The located. ten letters claiming responsibili-k i ller has indicated that La Munyon said the initials ty ror seven murders since 1974. "B .T .K." stands for "Bind. "B.T .K." were used in letters "We have so much inlorma-Torture, Kill." received by the Wichita Eagle- t ion now that 1t )"ill take days lo Police said the letters co.n· Beacon in 1974 and on Jan. 31 or run down ," said Police Chief tained information about the this year and, most recently, by n ichard La Munyon, who has slayings that only the killer or KAKE· TV last Friday. placed a 30-man detective task someone present at the time of POLICE~UA.VE contacted de- force on the case. "But there's the killings could know. tectives in--New York and Los "Tbe man plans what he ls planning to do," La Munyon said. "He is quite organized." The police chief noted that in each of the six identified slayings the killer was allowed or forced bis way into the victim's home or broke in while nobody was at home. One miner from Walker Coun· ty, Ala., said of Miller . "fle's disgraced us and we don't feel he's capable of representing us anymore." been nothing new that could T-he stx victims named In Angeles for information on their point to any one person... three separate letters lo local investigative methods in ~he nov 0 ...lllrr7 ..Ill •I news media were strangled in "Son of Sam .. and "Hillside ~ .-iAW ni LaMUNYON WARNED Fri-their homes. The killer did not Str a ngler" cases and have day night that a man calling disclose the identity of the warned Wichita citizens lo re· D...lll'F"'rrES F1RE seventh victim and challenged main cautious and alert. .«n...I i IJ Composer's Pen Stolen Key Relics . . Recovered in Van BAY VIEW. Md. CAP> -Valuable memorabilia of Francis Scott Key. including the pen and inkwell he used to write the "Star Spangled Banner," that were apparently taken from a museum have bee~ recovered from a stolen van. Maryland State Police said today. Also among the S6 recovered items were engraved silver, jewlery, K ey's personal books and papers, his sword and a pair of blue ceramic vases decorated with lacquered cranes, accord· ing to Willi am Clark, a police s pokesman. AUTHORIT I ES HAVE cstim ated the value of the goods at "$150,000, probably much more, and historians tell us some of the.,..ilems are price· less." Clark said . Clark said troopers found the historic items as they were searching the rear of a van, al- legedly stolen from Baltimore. that had been stopped after It was spotted weaving near here on Sunday. "When we realized the items were of historic importance, we started to call around lo see if any museums bad reported similar item s missing o r stolen," Clark said. "AT FI RST WE got no response, but th~n Frederick Ci· ty Police contacted officials at the R oger Brook ~aney Muse um. They checked and found the museum had been broken into and the items taken." The it.ems had not been report- ed m issing before their dis· covery in the van. They were ap· patently taken over the weekend. · Officials of the museum were al the slate police barracks near here checki ng on the recovered valu ables. th e s pokesman added. He said authorities had been told the recovered items were "unq~estionably" those· t aken from the museum. Two New York City m en who were In the van h ave been charged with auto theft, Clark said . He identified them as John Bermejo, 25, the driver, and Robe rt Addison. 39, the passenger. police lo do so. ''Yes, peo.ele are scared and LaMUNYON SAID detectives we certainly don't blame them have reviewed each of the city's for being scared." said Bill unresolved homicides since the Cornwell, deputy police chief. January 1974 slaying or four Hardware stores and retail members of the Jose ph Otero gun dealers on the city's east family, the initial victims of the side reported increased weekend B.T.K. Strangler. sales as a result of Friday's an- "We've come up with four nouncement of receipt of the possible ones," s aid LaMunyon. KAKE letter. One of the tour, he aatc\. was ·JIM WILUAMS OF Wlltiams 20-year·old ~athryn Btl&ht, Hardware Store said "a sigrufi- killed in her ftome in April 1974. cant" number ol locks. bolts and Her bfother was shot twtce ln' chain locks were sold . An · the head by1lbe intruder bat sur-employee of David's Parklane . iv~. The description fre gave store said more customers were of the killer was widely dis· asking about firearms. . . . a HONOLULU <AP) -Drought· stricken Hawaii is failing to benefit from the rains that-flave s wept across 1.het...F~clfic Ocean and creaLed havoc§the U.S. mainland. Hawaii i ot getting the rain because lands are located in the 20·degre latitude r ange, while the storms march along in the 30· to 40-degrj?e range .. State officials launched an air assault Sunday to bait a fire that has blackened 6.000 acres of grazing land in the drought· stricken area of North Kona Oil the island of Hawaii. ·.~ .... ·-Snow Blankets Kans8s Ever since the very first course by newspaper was offered five years ago by UC San Diego Extension, Daily Pilot readers have been able to participate. r-- \ 12 lrrelies Close Sclwols, Clog Higlumys ! l ...._Temperature• , . • HOfll .. tHd, l'lt., lo " be-•I Cut Bank, Mof!I, I I ' I I I • • • 11wny .J/I 1bu'ou• llmtrfllo ,, .... 111. 'll•nll B•llltnor• 81lmtr<k &oiM *Ion Jrownnlll• ~telo !!NrbtnWV "''ctOO :lllKlnMll =·-••1141 ,.,.,,, 'Wtrl )t"""'' ~l~lna ,.,,.." '. j,1111" •t tr .. nkt ttl'ttwel ···-•°'*"'" I l •-ion ne•_.u, _,, :en•1(1ty ... v .... .IUlelll.clt ......... l\tttnl AllwMM o\11141. ~­, ... o,,_ ... .... fife l l 24 .02 0 2" l4 ,. ·°' 58 ,, 44 4S ·" "° 17 14 ' .02 » 2t u tt " 4J n n .01 ,., n 17 SJ ).tu ,, ,, u az u1 11 ' Al ,. 21 .u l l 10 aa ~ ti • 94 tt u ·• .. ·" u .... ,. 11 .. , J7 10 » i. .74 SS • ,1' • • .n S1 .,,., .. .s tt 14 27 11 ti• A »• 41 27 "'' 21 '7 .S4 ~u .. 41 ).t 14 J4 4 41 ,. .ot u •. u so ,. ,, " .. ..... .. St .Sf " ..... S1 41 JO tt 4S l' f;•Ulonda Another "°""' btew1,,_ In the , Pt<lllc ~ could lllJ rtl~IOAH Sovt ... "' Ctllfwlllt 01 -ly .. T-O.y 11l11ht, ..., ,__.,. .. Ille ..... 11on.t1 W•tt,_,,.,,,~.. • "II II conttnves on 111 "''""' <OW'st It <Ollld Mt tM Wttt C..tt Tuesday n~ Of ~city,",.,. llloOtr Hiii, e ~--.Ike fttdW· clan. A I tllo"tfl .... ,,., ralM Col.tlnuM lft -per11 llW'llUgh S-S.y nltM. Ille .. tlhtr ... Mid U. -.t of: Ille ttorm llW ,__ -Wfttl ._, tMn hall Ille rllllftll tllet -~ tMafMtW9~.....,a. c ... tel W'eatlter &llowen elldl111 '-"tlM ~ ... , alld _ Tiie.....,. Hundreds have earned college credit and thousands have enjoyed the authoritative essays by leading sctiolars. . On Saturday, Feb. 11, a IS.week Cours~ by Ne~spaper focusing on POPULAR CULTURE began in the Daily Pilot. _. . . Three Community Colleaes g,ant credit for Course By Newspaper • Residents of Coast, Rancho Santiago and Saddleback Community College District;; may register by requesting registration materials from colleges serving their area. Register at Coastline Community College by phoning 96.'J.OSU; Santa Alla College by calling the admissions office at 8.1s.3000, and Saddleback College by calling 831·9700 or 495.4950, Ext. 291. To earn ~redit, the colleges require completion of midterm and final ~nmlnations. DAILY P'LOT 7 Lag11na/South Coast Afternoon N.Y.St~k • * VOL. 71, NO. 44, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNlA MON0AY,FE8R UARY1~19n TEN CEN'JS .Jarvis IJrges Lagunans to Baek· Bill By STEVE MITCHELL OI tlW Dllllf 11'+1 .. Si.tt Sounding more like a Midwest preacher than a retired busi- nessman, tax reform initiative author Howard Jarvis assailed state legislators and a Superior Court judge opposed to Prop. 13 on the June 6 ballot. Jarvis peppered his hour-long speech before taxpayers at Laeuna Beach Hieb School Sun- day with anecdotes and humor, but would not give one inch to opl'onents of the lax reform measure. "They (legislators) ~re tell· ing us up in Sacramento that there won't be any tax reform m easu re this year,'' the e n e r getic Los Angeles homeowt1er said. "Leo McCarthy <Assembly speaker> says they can't because lobbyists won't allow them to do it," he said. The 75-year-old Jarvis also charged publlc employee unions with holding up tax bilJs favora· ble to property owners claim ing that the majority ~r state legislators receive contributions from the unions. "In other words, this isn't a government or, by and for the people. It's a eovernment or the goverment. by the f{Overnment and for the eovemment. •• Jarvis called a lawsuit by Oranee County Superior Court Judge Bruce Sumner "frivolous" and claimed the judge is caught in a conflict of interest. Sumner recently filed a suit claiming the Jarvis lnlUative deals with more than one subject. "The attorney general de· , termined that it covered only one subject," Jarvis said. He also said Judge Sumner ls is an employee of the state, "and as such receives his salay from tax sources. He lsdirecUy involved in a conflict of interest when he ac· cepts tax money and fights a tax reduction proposal.'' Regarding his tax measure, Jarvis assailed current property tax limits, saying l_hey are well above the taxpayers' abiUty to pQ. ' •'The property tax structure today prevents young pec>pfe from beine able to buy a home at all,'' he said. And it has force.d the closures on 7,500 homes a year in California -most of \hem owned by older folks on fixed incomes." He defends the estimated S7 <See JAllVIS;Pa1e AU Another StorDl LooIDS Off~ Coast 87 Homes Damaged Laguna Said In Emergency Eighty-seven structures in Laguna Beach were damaged in last week's winds and rains, ac- cording to city omcials, prompt- ing City Manager Al Theal to declare a state or emergency in Eig ht Lost On LA Area Ski Patrol MOUNT WATERMAN <AP> -Eight members or a volunteer ski patrol were report~d missing in this area of the Angeles Na- tion al Forest, and a shetlff's rescue crew began searching for them today. Los Angeles County sheriff's deputy Ron Malneck said moun· lain rescue personnel from the Crescenta Valley sheriff's sub- station, aided by a helicopter. were S<'ekmg the missing U.S. Forest Service volunteers in the rugged and snowcovered hills. "Two ski patrol people were missing since Sunday," Malneck said. ''Six people went out Sun- day aflemoon to go find them and now they're missing." Mal neck said it had been snowing all night in the Mount Waterman area, about a 30-mile drive from Hidden Springs which was devas tated by Friday's deluge and flash flood. (Related story. photo, AS) He said the two people originally missing were on a routine patrol, but carried backpacks which would enable them to survive for several days .· He said the six searchers had been expected back by Sunday night, and the Sheriff's Depart- ment search team was sent out this morning when they failed to return. the city. And Police Chief Jon Sparks says there are probably many more homes that surrered severe wind damage during the storm that have no~een report· ed to his office. "We'd like lo h ave those homeowners who have not con· tacted us, to do so," Sparks said Sunday. The city is attempting to compile a monetary damage fig ure to present to the county's office or Emergency Services Sparks said. The problem is. the list is due at noon Tuesday. Sparks said damage assess ment teams are s~ouring the ca ty in response lo calls from rest dents and business owners "If reaidents think the damage to thetr property la 1ubstantlal they should call the police de partment immediately " he said. Mayor Jon Brand said the city has sent a telegram to Gov Brown asking to declare Laguna Beach a disaster area "That might enable us to re ceive low-cost loans for re construction of homes and reim burse us for some of the flnan· cial losses we suffered," Brand said today. But the city must have damage figures in by Tuesday at noon. To report damage, or for more information, call the police department at 494-1124 Progress Told UNITED NATIONS <AP> Secretary of State Cyrus Vance repoJ'led some progress in weekend talks on plans for the independence of South·West Africa. But South African Foreign Minister R.F. Botha left the talks early, saying bis gov· ernment would not yield the dis· puled territory to the nationalist movement recognized by the United Nations. . ..., .............. BODY FOUND AT NIGUEL BEACH PARK ABOVE IDENTIFIED A8 NIWltORTJtl.Actt YOUTH lnveatlg•tor• S aid Young Man WH B•at•n to D•dl .,_.., Le•Ylng ~fM fat a P•rty Newport Man Officers Identify Niguel Park Body OranJ!e County coroner·s of· ficers have identified a body found ih Niguel Beach Park over the weekend as that of Karl Chan- cellor, 20, of 1848 Park Sheffield Place, Newport Beach. The certificate issued today by the coroner's omce determines the cause of death a\ murder by a person or persons unknown. Sheriff's Lt. Rick Drake con· firmed that his office is dealing with a murder case. He said Chancellor, whose body was found Saturday near a snack bar in the Niguel Beach Park, was killed by a series of blows to the head. No weapOn has been found. "Those blows were undoubted· ly the cause of death," Drake said . "'There was no sign of a struggle at the death scene but we are still checking out the area~" . Drake said his investigators are satisfied that Chancellor was killed at the spot where his fully clothed body was round, Investigators said the .victim attended Orange Coast College, Costa Mesa, until recently when he decided to temporarily end his studies so that he could travel in Australia. They said the victim's family and friends have been unable lo enlighten them on the reason for his presence In Niguel Beach park. "We believe he was taken there. by someone who planned to kill him but we don't know why at this pQlnt. •• an in· vestigalor said. The last time Chancellor was seen alive by members of bis family was at about 7 p.a,.1Fri· day when be lef't home to 110 to a party, an investigator said. · SC Suspect Arrested in A San Clemente nr.ln was ar· rested late Friday. after a police officer said he opened a buck knife and displayed it in a threatening manner. Robert William Boomer, 26, of 117 .E . Escalooes, wa~ arrested for exhibiting a deadly w.eapon unlawfully.-a misdemeanor of. fense. Officers reported contacting Boomer and two companions Friday, as the man appear~ to loiter in the area of Avenida Granada and El Camino Real. Tbe J>uck knife was lying on lhe ground. but all three men denied any knowledge or it, of- ficers said. When one patrolman picked the knife up to log it into police property. however; BOomer claimed it was bis. When the knife was banded to him, Boomer epened it. and dis· · played it in a thrutening way, officers said. A scuffle was re· ported to have ensued. Officers took the k n\fe away from · BOomer, wbo was then taken to . the city jail. ·' May Hit County Tuesday By The Associated Press Another storm is brewing in the Pacific Ocean, and it could hit rain·weary Southern California as early as Tuesday night, say forecasters at the Na· tional Weather Service. "If it continues on its present course, it could hit the West Coast, on Tuesday night or Wednesday," said Roger Hill, a weather service technician in Los Angeles. Such news can only bring SIERRA SNOW NEARING RECORD; MORE DUE-AS sighs or fatigue to residents in the mud-soaked Pinecrest. Estates area or La Crescenta. The rt!1idents bad been braced for th4f worst when a storm caught them Sunday afternoon as Uaey were still cleaning up • from the w•lst-deeJ! • mud and debris left by Ftklay s torrents. A bout 100 families in the well· to-do ~idenUal area were ad· vised by the Los Angeles CoWllY S heriff's Department to evacuate their homes Sunday. But onJy about half heeded the warni~. with the rest staying to try to lessen the impact or ex- pecledlloods and mudslides. "Flood control oCficials ad- vised that the Shields debris basin has not been cleared of mud and debris from the pre- vious storm,'' said Sheriff's Deputy Carl Riegert. The basin overflowed Friday, and when the rain fell Sunday, residents were faced with the same danger. Although heavy rains con. tinued through Sunday night, the weather service said the worst or the storm had passed -with leas than half the rainfall that drenched the area two days before. Riegert said Sunday that ris· ing waters washed out hillsid~ roads and cut ore residents in the ._ ·d-hit Tujunga Canyon area Jlis~ a few miles northwest of La Crescenta, but because the area is so sparsely populated. no one was evacuated. Mayor Tom Bradley declared a state of emergency in Los Angeles on Sunday. noting that Friday's storm had caused an estimated $22.6 million damage, destroyed five homes and severelJ damaged 120 others. 'm aklnk it one of the worst storms in Southern Califomla history. He said the eity would apply for ••appropriate state and (See MORE, Page A2> Coast Showers ending tonight, becoming fair and a little warmer Tuesday. HJghs Tuesday 60·65. Lows tonieht 44 to 50. INSIDE TOD" Y AOa,.uc CU11'• Boardwalk, old .0'94 tired, u holdmg its br.atl& m.onffcfpatM>n of the tff l•glving force of legal oomblfno. It mar bcwe.o long ao!Ut, Se.t e. Cl. llltlex ' ,, ,I Dallf ~lla4 Slalt - Ofllcer Lauded Laguna Beach police in· 'c~tigator (;cne Brooks has been honored as Policema n of the YC'ar by the Laguna B eac h E xc hange C lub. Urook ~. a 17 year veteran of t ht.: clly·!'> police de part· m c n t. li ve~ i n Lag una Niguel. Road Hazards Reported in San Clemente Ori\'ing wa~ hazardou!'> todllj in parts or S::.in Clemente, where police reported flooded intersec· 11ons and roadways under water or slipJ><'rY mud. Flooded intersections were re· ported along South El Camino Real. Calle del Commerc10 in :,outh San Clemente. just inland from El Camino Real. was un· der a fool of water, police said Drivers were urged lo use ex treme caution in the area. Six inches or slippery mud covered l\venida San Pablo to· day, from Avenida Acapulco to Calle Cuervo. in the south San Clemente hills. inland from El Camino Real. pol ice reported Pacific Coast HiJhway was closed at 5 p.m. Sunday and re- mained clo:.ed today, as minor mudslides from the north San Clemente bluffs continued lo lit· ter the roarlway. Bowling Lane Due in Capo A 40-lane bowling center. geared lo serving families. will open by Sept. 1 in Capistrano Be a c h , its hackers told a Capistrano Beach Cha mber of Commercl' mcclin~ Wednesday. The Sl .6 million recreation .-enter has been approvl'd by all environmcnl~1I regulatory agen- ('tes. including the Coastal Com· m ission, s aid owner .James Hurst. a Saddleback Valley in· ... uranC'<' mun. Hurst soid he expects l)le C'Ounty to issue a building permit within l>IX weeks. with construc- tion starting by April. The four and a half acre s ite Is localed on Doheny Park Road. between Vic toria Boulevard and Do· mingoAvenue. Man Crushed Under Truck /\ 53·ycar-old Anaheim man died about an hour after the truck he was working on tn a parking lot rolled on top or him. Anaheim police reported today. Gilbert Dean Autry or 21291 Autry Drive, died at 6:35 p.m. Saturday al West Anaheim Com· munlly Hospital, police said. He had been working on the engine of his truck in a parking lot at 423 S. Brookhurst St., police said. The truck beCID to roll backwards, Autry ran to stop it, police reported, but be slipped and fell beneath the front tire. OftANQI COAIT USC DAILY PILOT Monday, February 13, 1971 Mexico Racers Finish Rv ALMON LOCKABEY OllllY PMll ... lllOI Wrltw MANZANJLLO -1'be laat ot 40 yachts which alarled the San Dieco to MamanlUo race Feb. 4 draued into port ~t lbe Las Hadas Marina at '7:30 this morn· Ing, writing tints to the second biannual run to this Mexican 5.l•aporL A rt•venal of weather conda· lions In the Gui! of California Saturday scrambled the rleet and sent the Class C boats hus· tling lo the nnish line to knock off the Class A contenders for over· all handicap honors. The handicap winner was Reasende. a stock Ericson-3S owned and skippered by Mike Satterlee or .the San Diego Yacht Club. She finished early Sunday night. A brier storm in the gulr sent the yachts acron the finish line an hrge groups Sunday. There were several dead heat finishes. The storm hit the fleet without warnlng alter yachls had been drifting for more than 24 hours in almost dead calm. The easter· ly winds clocked al more than 30 knots generated steep headseas and had some of the boats in trouble. The yacht Renegade. skip· Pt!red by Sandy Purdon of San Diego. finished under power Sunday with only the stub or a mast showing above her decks. Dick Kelton's Chance-37 sloop, Kari II out or the Los Angeles Yacht Club. fanlshed late Sunday with her crew baillnC after the yacht started taking on water when the deck separated from the hull in heavy seas. Several other yachts suffered minor damage from knockdowns and from plunging down steep seas. The yacht, Whippet, skippered by Dick Pen· nington or the Long Beach Yacht Club. finished with her steering wheel lashed on deck. Her crew had steered the last 24 hours with an emergency tiller. Last boat to finish was Tenaci· t y. a Cal-39 skippered by Mike Abraham of the Windjammer Yacht Club. She had been re· porting herself about 12 roiles from the finish for the previous 24 hours. Race officials here at the Las lladas Hotel spent a sleepless night with computers to come up with the following omcial h~n· dicap standings. Overall. 1. Reisende 2. Bones V. William Chapman, San Fran· c1sco Yacht Club. 3. Audacious, l\t ike Kennedy, Dana Point Yacht Club Class A 1 Merlin, Bill Lee, Sa nta Cruz Yacht C lub 2. Orifler. Harry Moloscho. Long Beach Yacht Club 3 Ragtime, Jim Phelps, LBYC Class B. t. Re~ardless. Robert Cole, Sl FYC 2. Free Spirit, Richa rd Ettinger, Newport Harbor Yacht Club 3 Mirage . Les Harlander. Richmond Yacht Club. Class C. 1 Relsendc-2 Bone5. V 3. Audacious SC Film Set On Mrica N alrobl. Mo-unt Kenya. Kilimanjaro, Victoria Falls and Ethiopia are fe atured in an African travel film planned Tuesday In San Clemente, sponsored by the Rotary Club. The mm will be shown at 2:30 and 8 p.m. at the San Clemente community clubhouse, 100 Calle Seville. Tickets are $3.SO for the evening showing, $2.50 for the matinee and $1.50 for students. Proceeds will be donated tO San Clemente se..Vice orcanila· lions, said Phil Ellsworth, publicity chairman. Additional information on the film is available by calling El· lsworth, 496-9329. HEADS HOSPITAL BOARD Dr. Vincent Carroll I.BDoctor N8111ed Head Of Hospital Laguna Beach s urgeon Dr. Vincent Carroll.has been named president or the board of direc· tors of South Coast Community Hospital. The announcement follows the defeat of a slate or directors two weeks ago In which four of nine candidates for vacant board seats were nominated from the floor. A board sour ce said the "palace revolt" was the result of personality conntcts and the manner In which board presi· dent Thomas Thornton handled the resicnation tut August of administrator Bernard Carr. Dr. Carroll replaces Thornton as head or the South Laguna hospital's board. Carroll wu first vice presi· dent of the hospital board last year. He is former chief or staff or the hospital and has been closely identified with the leadership at South Coast since its inception. Other officers named to ex· ecutive positions on the board in· elude John Downer. a Laguna Beach attorney, as first vice president: Larry Hunt, second vice president, Mrs. Jody Bill· ings, third vice president; and Richard Jahraus, fourth vice president. Also named were Robert Mc Donnell, secretary; Connie Northland. assistant secretary: and Bert Kampeft, re-elected as treasurer. LB Pageant, Ti.ckets Set - By Mail Only Publl<-ticket sale!> to thf' 1978 Pageant of thP Masters go on salP Wednesday, but Festival of Arts officials will only b<' accept· mg orders by mail Pageant spokeswoman Sally ReevP saul ticket order forms may be picked up al the festival office> weekdays between 8:30 a .m and 4:30 p.m. Those who wish to have forms mailed to them should send a self-addressed s tamped en· velope to the Festival of Arts, 650 Laguna Canyon Road, Lag11na Beach, Calif. 92651. No telephone ordecs wtll be ac· cepled due to the large number of requests for pageant Uckets, Mrs. Reeve said. The summer festival will be held this year from Jul)' 11 to Aug. 27. Walkers Protest COLFAX <AP> -The Indians on "The Longest Walk" to Washington, D.C., made about SS mites during the first day and a hair. The two dozen Indians are protesting against pending federal leglalation they say wou Id end treaties with American lndlan tribes. Philip.Duda TV Appeartmt!e Rainfall Perih Drops Wand and rain conlinue to hamper harvesllna on Oranae County ranches and are delay. Ing the preparation of cround for new crops, an Irvine Company · 1pokesman reported today. but he aald the 18.• Inches or water rallin1 on fields this season is doing more good than harm. Dean Buchin11er, Irvine Com· pany orchard manager, said field workers still can't aet into broccoli and celery field• or lemon and avocado orchards. Continued rain Is also result· ing In fungus on strawberry plants and mold on lemons, he said. But the water is great for leaching salts from plant and tree rooli and for greening up pasture lands hit bard by drought. Last week's winds knocked an estimated 500 to 1,000 field-boxes ol avocados from trees and lop· pied approximately 100 eucalyp- tu s wind·break trees acroas roads and onto producin• or· chard trees. he added. Buchinger s aid planting schedules are being pushed back because or continued rain total· ing 19.5 inches so far this season compared to only six inches fast year at this time. .. Scheduled for planting are tomatoes and com, he said, and delays with those crops will re· suit In additional delays In get· Ung other rotation crops into the· ground next fall. Buchinger ts optimistic about ranch grazin& conditions as a re· suit of the season'• rain, however. Earlier, this year, an Irvine Ranch spokesman said his company would have to buy large quantities of bjy to feed the 900-head cow herd and 1,000 range caUle expected to feed off ranch grasses. Buchinger said this morning that the cattle ah doing well and that only a small amount of hay was purchued before the season's heavy rains broke a three-year drought. Management Plan Goes To Trustees Capistrano Unified School Dis- trict trustees will be asked Tues- day to approve management ol). Jectives proposed by Superinten· dent Jerome Thornsley. Tuesday's meeting is planned for 7:30 p.m. at district offices, 32972 Calle Perfecto in San Juan Capistrano. The proposed objectives for 1978 place emphasis on refine· ment of the district's Learning Experience Appraisal Program, commonly called Project LEAP. The program is currently be- ing used in district schools to up- grade students' basic skills. In· dividua.lized instruction and key· ing students to a dislrict·wide grad11aled instruction program are features of Project LEAP. SCIENTIST GROlJP SHUNS ILUNOIS W ASlllNGTON <AP) -The board of directors or lbe American Association for the Advancement of Science voted today to move lts 1979 annual meeting from Chicago to Houston because the state of II· llnols has not passed the Equal Rights AmendmenL "We have been quite con· cerned about the ERA and have passed ~ resolution indicating ·our strong support," said Dr. William D. McElroy, chairman of the board of directors. ASSAILS OPPONENTS Tax )lgher Jarvis F~•PageAJ JARVIS • • • billion that would be cut from the state's budget should the btll pass by sayin,, "It's not taking S7 billion from the &4vernment. It's putting it back into the hands of the people, and they are the government." "There will still be $33 billion. for the state to conduct ib operations," he s aid. "Il's a lS percent cut and they cell that a disaster." ·'The real dis as ter comes when thousands of peopfe in this state who have worlted all their lives for the homes can't afford lo own them." But it's the benefits that Jarvis likes to point out. .. Sure, this bill will knock out downtown redevelopment proJ· ects. It will also put an end to joint powe r agreements and force politicians to trim their sails -cut out the fat." But, he said, tr the measure passes. "there will be the big· gest boom o( remodeling on bom es in the history of this state, becaus e people rear higher assessments after obtain- ing a building permit for an ad· dition to their homes." That alone would mean employment for thousands of state residents. he said. The tax reform crusader told Lagunans to "get on the phone write like hell to the newspape~ here, and pass out literature to get this thing passed." .. What really bothers the politicians,'• he saldf gleefully. "is that Ute people are finally goinc to have a say in the opera· ti on of this state." - Fro.a Pase AJ MILK ••• said. Stone said county officials checked with local markets late Friday and Saturday but turned up none of the suspected milJc. It was late Saturday, he said, that Adohr spokesmen told coun· ty officials the milk had gone to Los Angeles County instead. Stone said county health crews are· continuing to test all new milk shipments coming into the Adohr plant but no other con· laminated milk has been round. He said county ofrtclals do not yet know bow the milk became contaminated other than what the anonymous caller told them. Flags Dip for 13 WASHINGTON (AP) American flags at the many Agriculture Department offices across the country were nown at half-staff today in memory of the 13 federal grain Inspection service employees killed In elevator explosions ln recent. weeks. Showers . Add. to Damage ~~ '•"' ... .... By JACKIE HYMAN ~ Oltlleo.llYPIW"9ff -. Rain soaked the Orange Co : a1atn Sunday and today, b'"! caused only minor damage corn·: pared to the storm that rake.l the area last Thursday nlght and Friday morning. -: In the area ot Hunllngt()(l Be~ch where a trailer park w14 devastated early Friday morn • ln'g by a twister. another stron1 wind hit at about 7:50 p.m . Sun· day. picking up a roof from a" metal building near HaDlllton A venue and Seaforth Lane and rt-.. mg Ing it into a power ltne. Although power to 2.oss c ustomers was cut off, a Southern California Edison spokes man said work crewS' already in the area were ~ble lo rt'Store most or the power Within 18 minut~. • Flash flood rears abated in Sllverado Canyon, where evacuJH!!d residents have re· turned to their homes, officials report. Roads there are open to loc3l traffic Laguna Canyon Ro ad was closed ag:un this morning because of flooding. More mudslides closed Pacific Coast Hi ghway north of San Clemente again today and low· lying streets were flooded in Irvine. Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley. A weekend mudslide on Big Canyon Drive in Newport Beach ' ripped oµt undergro und telephone cables', cutlini t e lephone serv ice lo some Newport Center oHtces. Pacific Telephone Company workers today were checking out damage from the mudslJde, which closed part of Big Canyon Drive. ,.,.... PageAJ MORE ... .. federal assistance." Gov. Edmund G. Brown also .: mus t dec lare a s tate of ·' emergency to make private property owners and the city • eligl ble for recovery funds. Meanwhile, the search con:· • tinued today for about 30 corpses unearthed when a sectJon of the : Verdugo Hills Cemetery ln Tu· junga collapsed during Friday's •1 storm. Coroner's officials re-- portedly recovered about half of ' the bodies by Sunday, including one found in a supermarket' ' parking lot. · '1 Police officer Don Zerlllo said the remaining bodies were buried under the mud. The cor-' '1 oner's office, fearing a health 1' hazard, was supervising re· covery or the bodies for Iden· • tification and reburial. In the Delta Flats area of Big , Tujunga Canyon a woman's " body was found two miles from where she reportedly had been ·' • pulled into a wash current while attempting to cross It. • • The victim, Bonnie Koploy of ... Sunland, had reportedly been visiting a friend in the area f'rf· • day when the incident occurred. '' The California Highway · I Patrol closed down hlghw~ys ,. across the southern section of · '1 the stale, especially in mountain • · 1 and canycn re~lons where the • danger of mud and rock s Udes was ever·present, said officer Chuck Meredith. By Sunday night. the National Weather Service had recorded more than an Inch of raln ln the Los Angeles area. bringing lbe:.r season total to 21.42 inches -.. • almost three times as much as the 7.21 inches that had fallen by the same time last year. Normal rainfall for this Ume of year is 9.01 inches. forecasters said. OPENING TUESDAY, FEI. 14th at Mission Viejo Vlftage Center I Expert SHOE· REPAIR N ... &'-111pTeo Rne LEATHER GOODS ,,. 7 Orange Coast EDITION " I .Today' ~los1-g N.Y.Stoeks VOL 71, NO. -'4, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALlFORNIA MONDAY, FEBRUAR~ 13, 1978 N TEN CENTS Lawyers ~hnn Battle Over Co1npetency NEW ORLEANS (AP) -The American Bar Association backed down today from what one delegate to its national con· vention called a "snarling cat fight with the chief justice of the United States" over his charges that many trial lawyers are In· competenL By an overwhelming voice vote , the ABA 's House of Delegates voted down a resoJu. tlon from the Illinois Bar As· Another Storm Expected • By The Associated Press Another storm Is brewing in the Pacific Ocean. and it could hit rain ·weary Southern California as early as Tuesday night, say forecasters at the Na· tional Weather Service. "tr it continues on its present course, it could hit the West Co ast on Tuesday night or Wednesday," said Roger Hill, a weather service technician in Los Angeles. Suc h news can only bring !>lghs or fatigue to residents in th e mud-soaked Pine cres t Estates area of La Crcscenta. The residents had been braced SIERRA SNOW NEARING RECORD; MORE DUE-AS for the worst when a storm <.·aught them Sunday afternoon as they were still cleaning up from the waist-deep mud and debris left by Friday's torrents. About 100 families in the well· to-do residential area were ad· vised by the Los ~geles County Sheriff's Department to evacuate their homes Sunday. But only about half heeded the warning, with the rest staylng to try to lessen the impact of ex- pected noods and mudslides. .. Flood control officials ad· vised that the Shields debris basin has not been cleared or mud and debris from the pre- vious s torm." said SheriCf's Deputy Cl.VI Riegert. The basln overnowed Friday, and when the rain fell Sunday, residents were faced with the same danger. A I though heavy rains con· tinued through Sunday night, the weather service said the worst of the storm had passed -with less than half the rainfall that drenched the area two days before. Riegert said Sunday that ris· ing waters washed out hillside roads and cul off residents In the hard-hit Tujunga Canyon area just a few miles northwest of La Crescenta. but because the area <See MORE, Page A2) Group Seeks • Building Halt In Newport sociaUon demandln.r that Chief Justice Warren E. Burger either "publicly repudiate" comments made last July or provide proof of their accuracy. In testifying before an English .legal academy, Burger estimal· ,ed that half the U .S. trial lawyers are unquallfied to represent their clients. ·'sponsors of this resolution lack a sense of humor and a sense of propriety,'' said del · egate Lee Loevlnger of W a_shlngtpo. Delegate Carole Bellows, pres· ident or the Illinois Bar Associa- tion, had urged passage of the re- solution becau s e or a "deep concern by lawyers of our association.•• She referred to Burger's com- ments as "stressing the negative" and added that the comments had subjected all D.ily .............. .., '-"1dl 0'0-11 SLOPE SLIPPAGE IN NB ENDANGERS PHONE CABLES Problem• for Big Canyon •nd N•Jlport Center Only Minor Dam~e ID Sunday's Storm By JACKIE HYMAN Ol IM O .. ly ~I« St.tit Rain soaked the Orange Coast again Sunday and today, but caused only minor damage com· pared to the storm that raked the area last Thursday night and Friday morning. In the area of Huntington Beach where a trailer park was devastated early Friday morn- ing by a twister, another strong wind hit at about 7:50 p.m. Sun· day, picking up a roof from a metal building near Hamilton Avenue and Seaforth Lane and n. inging it into a power line. A It hough power to 2,055 cus tomers was cut off, a Southern California Edison s pokesman s aid work crews already in the area were able to rt'store most of the power within 18 minutes. Flash flood fears abated in tSee RAIN, Page A?) Colpse lden~ified As Balboa Resident A man whose body was spotted floatiqg near the Newport Harbor Department of· fices Saturday, today was ten- tative ly identified today as Balboa resident, Frank Montmorcy. Police said the man apparent· ly drowned and lhey speculated that his body might have been the one spotted a week earlier near the Balboa ferry landing by two teen.age boys. Tbe boys told Harbor Patrolmen they spotted a man's body while Cf\aisln& in their boat, but the body disappeared under the wake or the ferry. A ccordlng to police, the 60- ye a r -old Montmorcy disap· peared Feb. 4 after buying a small boat docked near the Balboa Pavilion. According to police reports, Montmorcy was "heavily intoxicated" when last seen alive. Poll~ snld positive identifica· tlon will await bonfirmation through use of dental charts. They said no foul play ls sus· pectea In the death. According to police, Montmorcy snared a home with hi.a nephew at 150$ E~ Balboa Blvd. lawyers to ridloule and dis· repute. While the ABA's hierarchy has kept a low public _erome in the controversy, Pres"1ent William B. Spann has called Burger's statistics "grossly dispropor-· tionate' •and "exaggerated.'' Spann said ABA studies showed the fagure to about 20 percent. In an obvious answer to Spann, Burger said in his Sun· day speech that "even if only 20 percent ••• we ought to be do- in1 more abouUt." But Burcer added. "I stand firmly on the position I ex· pressed" -the 50 percent estimate. About one in every 1<>' U.S. lawyers spends any time in the courtroom, and Burger em· phaslzed that bis remarks were not aimed atlawyers in general. ••tn each sltiiation special tralning and skills are not Bim· ply desirable, they are im· perative in the public interest,•• he said. • Burger said incompetent trial lawyers cost .,consumers o! jusUce" money and more. "I am persuaded that one of the major reasons for congestion and delay in the courts ••• is the lnade· quate performance of many lawyers who come into the courts," he said. Youth Sll;lin Niguel Park Body Identified I Orange County coroner's of- ficers have Identified a body found in Niguel Beach Park over the weekend as th'at of Karl Chan· Cellor, 20, of 1848 Fort Sheffield Place, NewportBeacb. The certificate issued today by the coroner's olfice determines the cause of death as murder by a person or persons unknown. Sherifrs U. Rick. Drake con- firmed that hi! office ls dealing with a murder case. He said Chancellor, whose body was found Saturday near a snack bar in the Niguel Beach Park, was killed by a series oC NB Police Chase, Nab 2Suspects Two suspec:\I who led police on a iS-mUe ltlgh s-peecl ~ along wet Otange Coub(y freeways were fmally stopped Sunday n1gbt wben a sheriff's deputy, firiDI his revolver left· hand~ shot out one of their tires. Police said the risky maneuver by the unidentified deput)" came alter the suspects in a Newport Beach liquor store holdup had rammed two dep-. uties' auto& when they tried to force the suspects' car o!f the · road. The shots were fired after California mgbway Patrol of· ficers set up a roadblock to keep motorists from inadvertently straying into the path of the SUS• pects and their pursuers. The two men were booked into Newport Beach city Jall on cbarges of armed robbery and aksault with a deadly weapon. They were identified as Der· rlck Johnson, 19, of Los Angeles and Calvin Burnett Graves, 20, address unknown. According to police. two ban· dits bad taken $400 from the Dover House Liquor Store, at Dover Drive and Pacific Coast Highway, by simulating weapoqs in their jackets • Their victim. clerk Roy Wilson. 40, immediately • telephoned police and cave them a description or the bandits' car which was last seen heading eastbound on the highway. Officer Tim Rile1 spotted a car matching the description a few minutes later at about 8 :30 p.m., heading northbound on Jamboree Road. With two fellow officers for backup, Riley said be tded to pull the car over, only to ha~e it accelerate aw&)' froll) him. Accorciini to Riley. the Std• pects bit. speeds ol 70 m.p.h. oa. ' <See atASg, ... ,. AJ) tau outlets seltm& Adohr p~ have bftn asked to remove all tood• dated ret. 21 ftOm public aale. • blows to the beatL No weapon has been found. ••Those blows were undoubted· ly the cause of death," Drake said. •"'lbere was no sign of a struggle at the death scene but we are still checking out the area." Drake said his Investigators are satisfied that Chancellor was killed at the spot where his fully clothed body was found. lnYeStigatoft said the victim attended Orange Coast College, Costa Mesa;until recenUy when be decided to ten>porarily end his studies so that he could travel in Australia. They said the victim's family and friends have been unable to enlighten them on the reason for :his presence in Niguel Beacb park. ..We believe he was taken there by someone who r._lanned to kill him but we don t know why at this point," an in· vestigator said. The last time Chancellor was seen alive by members of bis family was at about 7 p.m. Fri· day when be left home to go to a party• an investigator &aid. Teen Charged Theft Victim Hospitalized •A 16-year-old boy from • Monrovia has been charged with ••9' wltbery in eonoecttoa with a $1 purse anatcbinl last montb in Corona del Mar that U . lla 80·:J"ear-oJ« -vlctloa ~lritll a brQtell hip. Detectlve Ken Smith of the Newport Beach Policie Depart• meat said the s uspect was booked into Orange ~ounty Jannile J!all Friday. lronica.Uy. Smith noted the youth bad been picked up by Newport .Beach police about two weeks before the attack. Smith said that because tbe youth was picked up for being a run•way, be could not be de- tained, Because the boy's patents did not want him returned home. Smith said he was taken to a hoine for runaways in Garden Grove from which he fled almost immediately. , The detective said the youth l apparently retumed to the t Coronadel Mar area andou .Jan. 27 allegedly eommltteed the =~theft for which he was The .tctim, Helen Clark. was Injured when she was thrown to the ground by the suspect who accosted her near her home on Marguerite Avenue. Smith said she ts likely to remajn hospitalized for another two months. The detective said the youth'& identity was given to him by an. anonymous informant and tb& department's patrolmen werp told to he on the lookout for him. Patrolman George Coe said he spotted the teen·ager Friday af· ternoon near the Irvine Coast Country Club and arrested. him. Last of 40 Yachts End Mexico Race Whippet, skippered by Dick Pen- nington of the Long Beach Yacht Club, finished with her steering wheel lashed on deck. Her crew bad steered the last 24 hours with an emergency tiller. Last boat to finish was Tenaci·. ty, a Cal·39 skippered by Mike Abraham of the Windjammer Yacht Club. She had been re· porting herself about 12 miles from the finish for the previous 24bours. Race officials here at the Las Hadas Hotel spent a sleepless night with computers to come up with the foUowing official ban· dlcap standings. (See YACHTS, Pase AZ> • . Coast Weather Showers ending tonight. becoming fair and a UtUe warmer Tuesday. Highs Tuesday 80·65. Lows tonJcht 44 to so. INSIDE TOD.4. Y Atlantic CU11'• Boardwalk. old.and· Urtd. u hol.dlng fta brf<lth bt.OftlldpotWll of the U/•·fhifng forc1 of l•oal gambling. If mclV bove.a long waff. &.«~Cl. · ,_•ex ,-IJ DAil f PllOl N Proposal Varies From Settle~nt By PIUUP ROSMARIN Ol_o.ltY,.....~ lrvlne Company orficials hope to meet with UC Irvine ad· mlnislrators this week lo discu!s a UCI proposal for raculty, stu- dent and community housing that nixes preferred terms of a lawsuit agreement. Nearly three ye1trs ago the Irvine Company and the city of Irvine were sued by Orange County Fair Housing <OCFH> and seven Irvme residents over the proposed development of Irvine Industrial Complex-East. OCFH and the residents com- plained that the complex would Fro•PageAJ MORE ... is so sparsely populated. no one was evacuated. Mayor Tom firadlcy declared a state of emergency in Los .\ngeles on Sund a), noting that Friday's storm had caused an estimated S22.6 million damage, destroyed five homes and severely damaged 120 others. making it one or the worsl -,torms in Southl'rn California history. lie said the city would apply ror "appropriate• s late and federal assistance." Gov. Edmund ·G. Brown today declared much of Southern California a disaster area to make· private property owners and the· citv of~s Aniteles eli1t1ble for re- ('overy funds. Orange County is included in the action. Meanwhile. the search con- tinued today for about 30 corpses unearthed when a l-.ection of the Verdugo Hills Cemetery an Tu- JUnga collapsed during Friday's storm Coroner's officials re- portedly recovered about half of thr bod1el-. by Sunday. including o ne found in a s upermarket parking lot. Police officer Don Zerillo said the remaining bodies were buried under the mud. The cor- oner':-. officr, fearan~ a health hazard, was supervising re- c•ov ery or the bodies for iden- l 1rication and reburial. In the Delta Flats area of Big Tujunga Canyon a woman's body was found two miles from where she reportedly had been pulled into a wash current while attempting lo cross it. The victim. Bonnie Koploy of Sunland, had reportedly been visiting a friend in the area Fri· day when the incident occurred. The California Highway Patrol closed down highways across the southern section or the state. tspec1ally an mountain and canyon regions where the danger of mud and rock slides was ever-present. said officer Chuck Meredith. Fron& Page Al. MILK ... Stone said. Stone said county officials re· ceived an anonymous call Fri- day from someone claiming to be on strike ngainst a Los Angeles dairy. As a result, county health <'rcws tested milk at Adohr's Santa Ana plant then imrounded 3,500 gallons of cream, 1,410 quarts and 1,873 pints ofmilk. But another 1.600 quarts and 1.027 pants already had left the plant for distribution an stores and along delivery routes, he said. Stone said county officials checked with local markets late Friday and Saturday but turned up none of the su~pected milk. It was late Saturday. he said, that Adohr spokesmen told coun- ty omcials the milk had gone to Los Angeles County instead. Slone said county health crews are conUnuing to test all new milk shipments coming into the Adohr plant but no other COD·' taminated milk has been found. lie said county officials do not yet know how the milk became contaminated other than what the anonymous caller told them. OAAN~E COAST 11 DAILY PILOT ~-............ INNtlftt Ldhlr CMrtot ... "'" ........ *" ..... ~ ............ ... violet. at.te nqulremtftt.s' for. low-Income bouslnc, and provide inadequate housing op- portunities for proapectlve employees. ln an aizreement worked out last September, signed in No· vember, the lawsuit was settled out of court. 1t provided two alternatives for setting up opportunities for low income housing. The first -and preferred involved the construction or up to 1,400 apartment units on 78 acres or UCI land, which was to be resold t.o the Irvine Company, which deeded the land over to HAVE YOU SEEN HIM? Drawing of NB Bandit Mesa Bank Heist Link 'Uncertain' Newport Beach investigators remained uncertain today whether the man who robbed the Westcliff branch or the Bank of America Friday afternoon is the same m an who has pulled four similar robberies In Costa Mesa, or is merely a "copycat." Detectives said there are :;,o me definite si milarities between the four Costa Mesa robberies and the Newport Beach case. However, they note that a composite drawing of the sus- pect in the $1,200 Newport Beach robbery is slightly different from photos of the Costa Mesa suspect. . Those photos. which were taken by bank cameras dunng holdups. were shown witnesses in the Newport Beach case and police said the witnesses failed to identify the Costa Mesa sus- pect as the man who pulled Friday's heist. ··n could be a case or someone picking up on the publicity about the Costa Mesa cases to copycat that suspect," said Detective Sgt. Ken Thompson. Like the Costa Mesa bandit, the man in the Newport Beach case wore a dark blue windbreaker a nd light-colored pants. He handed a note to the teller and urged her to hurry in filling a paper bag with cash while simulating a weapon in his iAl'ICl>t SCIENTIST GROVP SHUNS ILUNOIS WASHINGTON <AP) The board of directors of the American Association for the Advancement of Science voted today to move its 1979 annual meeting from Chic ago to Houston because the state of 11· linois has not passed the Equal Rights Amendment. "We have been quite con· cerned about the ERA and have passed a resolution indicating our strong support," said Dr. William D. McElroy, chairman of the board of directors. Crops Periled? tbe university for ~ou1tn1 purposes ln 1964. Halt the low or moderate· priced units would be reserved for ucr faculty and students. But the university working proposal, copies of which were deliv~red to city government and the Irvine Co. late Jut month, includes only 500 lower income housing units. The proposal calls for a total of 1,200 units, 200 of which would be s ingle family, detached homes. L.E. Cox, UCI vice chancellor for business and finance, who prepared the proposal, said it ''creates a more economically balanced community with a lower percentage ot the housing being subsldired lower income units.'' Cox said the 200 detached houses would be reserved for UC! staff and faculty. Five hun· dred or the apartments proposed would be sold at normal market rate, and be available to anyone. or the remaittlng 500 apart· me n ts, Cox said, 300 would be in- tended for off-campus buyers, and 200 units for UCI faculty. staff and students; this would be low-in•:ome housing. In all cases, the units would be purchased. No rental housing is propos<.'<i. Said Cox, "Rental housing ,renerally presents greater m aintenanae problems and could deteriorate into another Isla Vista <Santa Barbara cam- pus) situation." Cox said ownership o! units would create "a more stable community." The EK> acres involved would be leased, rather than sold, to the Irvine Company. Cox characterized his housing plan as "more rational" than the preferred lawsuit settle· ment "Why did they pick on the uni· versity to solve their own prob· lem? ''Cox asked. "We have never been party to. (the scltlemenll. We were never consulted at all. Only after the court approved the settlement proposal were we told about the alternatives." Asked why he supposed the Irvine Company and the city dldn 't include tb.e university in the negotiations, Cox said. "I think they were just doing their damnedest to get some kind of resoluUon to the lawsuit." lie. emphasized tbat the um· versaly proposal is a concept for d1scuss1on, buts aid the university is prepared to support it and pre· sent at lo the regents for approval. None of the parties involved in the ~etUement agreement of- fered comment on the proposal: each 1s ~tudying il. µJPageant Tickets Set - By Mail Only ·Public ticket sales to the 1978 Pageant of the Masters go on sale Wednesday, but Festival or Arts officials will only be accept- ing orders by mail. Pageant spokeswoman Sally Reeve said ticket order forms may be picked up at the festival office weekdays between 8:30 . a .m . and4:30p.m. Those who wish to have forms mailed to them should send a self-addressed stamped en· velope to the Festival of Arts, 650 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach, Calif. 92651. No telephone orders will be ac· cepted due to the large number oC requests for pageant tickets, Mrs. Reeve said. The summer festival will be held this year from July 11 to Aug. 27. -t'"' Rains Slow Work In Irvine Fields W\ncl and ratn continue to hamper barvestinc on Orange County ranches and are delay· ing the preparatlon of irouod for new crops, an lrvtne Company spokesman reported today, but he said the 18.4 inche. of water falllng on fields this season is doinl( more &ood than harm. Dean Bucbinger, ltvlno C<>m· pany orchard manaf.er, said field WOl'kers sUJl can t set Into broccoli and celery flelde or le mob and a\'Otado orchard1. Continued rain la also rttull· in• in f\lftlUI 00 1traWMt'ry plant. and mold oa. lemoea. be .. td. B\lt tbe water la tn•t rw leachlol salta from plant and ttee ~ aad for 1"""1ne up puhare land• blt .a.aro u 1 droucht. Lut .... ,,... boclUd .. ati•Mlll•-. i.• ......... ill n1erl11 '""trell ucl~ pled approximately 100 eucalyp- tus wind·break trees across roads and ~to produclnc or~ chard tree., tie added. Bucbinger safd planting schedules are belne p0$hed back because of conUn~ rain total· int 19.5 lnehea ao tar th1t MMOft compared to only six inches Jut year a t this Ume. Scbe~uled for ptaatin1 ~ tom a toes and corn, be said and delays with those crop• will rt· aull in additlot\al detQs in get· Ung othct rotation crops Into the around next rau. Bucbto•er Is optlml•Uc abOUt ranch '2'aalnC ~ona u a ft• a ult of the uason's rain, however. EUUer, this year, an l"lftt Railcb 1pob1mao said hb coml*Q' Would laave to buy Iara• quanUUet ot hay to feed the__. ~ Mrd Md 1.000 ren1• tllllllt.,...... '°, ... off .... ~~. Whose Best Friend? A police officer keeps his distance from the overturned. car o( Cheryl Sambuco in Waterbury, Conn., as her dog keeps rescuers at bay. Finally Mrs. Sambuco, who suf- fered only minor injuries, was released after her husband arrived to calm the large animal. NB· Woman, Marine Linked to Thefts · San Francisco area lawmen are problng the possible link between the arrest of a Newport Beach girl and an El Toro Marine and a series ot recent burglaries in Marin County. Gloria Jean Swanson, 18, and Stanley Wayne Berkey, 21, were arrested in Corte Madera by FBI agents who said they found burglary tools, three guns, a variety or disguises and raise identification papers and $20,000 in cash in an apartment oc- cupied by the pair. Two Men Face NB Charges Of Robbery Two men arrested in a Capistrano Beach motel on charges of auto theft and hit and run driving face additional charges today of armed robbery m connection with the theft of a purse from a Corona del Mar .woman last week. The victim. Anne Hauk. 26. told police she lost her purse and S34 In cash Thursday night after a struggle with a man who ap- parently followed her from an East Coast Highway restaurant. Miss Hauk said she was knocked to the. pavement near the intersection of Narcissus Avenue and was dragged about 10 feet before losing the grip on her bag. Police said a nearby resident spotted two men in a dark_, colored new car with a spoiler on the back. He told police one man had a purse. Early Friday morning Highway Patrolmen arrested Keith Douelas Courville, 18, and John Edward Dolan, 20, at the Swallow's Motel In Capistrano Beach in connection with the auto theft and hil and run case. Newport Beach detectives began Investigating the pair when Miss Hauk's credit cards and identification were found in the car the pair allegedly had stolen. The car is described as a dark· colord J>t?nUac TransAm. F,...PageAJ OIASE ... Jamboi;ee, zoominc through traffic and around rain pu~dles. The omcers said the car turned onto the southbound San Diego F'reeway and reached speeds or more than 85 m .p.h. while allegedly runni n g motorists off the road. As the cai. aped down the freeway, Ute chue was Joi.Deel by CHP and Orange County sheriff's units. The chase continued onto the southbound Santa Ana Fre.w~ UirouJh the Saddkback Valley to Crown Valley Parkway where the 1u1pect.1 got off the freeway altd then back on ln tho north· bound lanes. 1t wu at Crown Va11ey that htahway patrolmen Ht up a· roadblock to llMP northbound cara aw~ from the punult. Th• .ttempt lllt', ~eputfes to aq_ueeae the car off Ute toad ended when tbe 1U1peeta 1Wer.tc1 into thtt'fOp.tnll ears. At present the two face federal charges of making false state- ments in passport application:;., which carries $40,000 bail. A spokesman for the San Francisco office of the FBI said they were arrested one week after applying. for passports at the San Rafael post office Feb. 2. They allegedly used birth certificates or "deceased in- fants" as identification for the passports, the spokesman said. Berkey was identified as being AWOL from the Marine Corps' El Toro air station after his ar- rest, according t.o the FBI. Law enforcement authorities in Marin County said they have been plagued by a series of burglaries or wealthy homes and the discovery of the tools, cash and disguises in the apartment shared by the pair has led to the investigation of their connection to the burglary cases. The WOl19'1' was ~leased frpm custody after an unidentified relative posted bail. Berkey and Mis~ Swanson are slated to return to a federal magistrate's court Feb. 16 for a prelimin ary hearing on the federal charges. Boy,9,Kidnapped CHICAGO CAP) -A Chicago woman, Ronda Coleman, 19, has been charged with abducting a 9-year-old boy, drugging him and holding him captive for $.500 ransom so she could pay her rent bill, police said. The child escaped. F,....PQ9ftAJ RAIN •.. Sil\ erado Canyon, where evacuated re:.idents have re-• turned to their homes. otftcUaMit report Road:. there are open"t>. - local truffu: Laguna Canyon Road wa~ c lo:;.ed again t~i morning becau:.e of Ooodlng. - More mud.Mades closed Paci Coast me~way north of S Clemente again today and low- lying :;,treets were flooded In Irvine. Huntanglon Beach ~ Fountain Valley. • · A week~d muds ide on aJg. Canyon Dnve in Newport Beach ripped out underground telcphonc cables, cutting telephone service to some Newport Ccnter orlices. Pacific Telephone Company workers today were check!~ ·1 oul damage from the mudslide, which closed parlor Big Canyon,1 Drive. Electrical problems caused bY" wind damage were evident in Laguna Beach, where a power pole on Coast Highway across from Emerald Bay igniled at about 9 p.m. and another at 45Q G lenneyrc also burned, forcing- the C\'acuataon of thrt>c rooms oC• the Laguna Nur:;.ing Home. . ,., Winds were measured at up to• 45 miles per hour in Newport Harbor, where harbor patrol crt'\~:;, l'ontinued to mop ~ debris and dam1tgc caused ' l last week's hJgh winds. Sunday winds also blew out a plate glass window at Arby's Restaurant qn, Brookhurst Street in Huntingto~ Beach. · The National Weather Service today forecast overnight cl~f ing and fair weather TtiesdC!lf \ with another storm moving in 6n Wednesday. However, a spokesman said the new storm is expected to be weaker t.hao. • Sunday's. The count_y Harbor Patrol t measured 1 02 inches of rain in ,• Newport Harbor during the 24 •. hour period endaniz this morning.. Rai0n watcher J. -Sherman Den1. • ny measured .98 inches in Hun\1• ington Beach, bringing tb,e,. season's total to 17. 76 inche~ •. • com pared to 8.90 inches last i. year to date. The Laguna Moulton Treat· ment plant in Laguna Niguel ! tallied 1.48 inches overnight. bring-.g the season total there to 19. 77 inches. Last year the • Laguna Niguel area had 5.89 in· , ch es. ... Fro. Page A J . ' YACHTS ••• .,, ,1 Overall. 1. Reisende 2. Bones '· V. William Chapman, San Fr&l'· cisco Yacht Club. 3. Audacious, Mike Kennedy, Dana Point Yacht Club. Class A. 1. Merlin. Bllt Lee1 Santa Cruz Yacht Club 2:· Drifter, Harry Moloscho, Lonf' Beach Yacht Club 3. Ragtime, Jim Phelps, LBYC. ' " Class B. 1. Reurdless, 'Robert"'' Cole, St. FYC 2. Free Spirit!' J Richard Ettinger, Newport:' Harbor Yacht Club 3. Mirage, Les Harlander, Richmond Yacht• Club. Class C. 1. Reiscnde 2. Bones·'· V J. Audacious. ' ' ShOttl~~er Uaaf, tbt un-named »Uiaect aleftllDde &ht n••1 veh•e,. uuV·llffcl HYetaJ .... Wbicb Miwwt ear"• 1"1111& ....-*9. ......,. fare .. -.u.e...,11 ... ~ ..... • ' •'*lft.; Motorlats lft Ka11mazoo, 11.flcb., havo to climb aoma .1m11' mlni·mO\mtatn~ lo feed parklng meters these days. Ron "" ' H~rvei foUDcl it easter to attack the Joi> from tbe rear; ,,. · At presem. the clty has 34 inches or anow on the growid. . . . . . 7 ...... ·---------- Saddleback EDITION * Afteraooa N.Y. Stoek8 VOL. 71 , NO. 44, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A MONDAY,FEBRUARV1~1W8 TEN CENTS Storllls ·Delay SB's Campus Severe storm conditions along the Orange Coast have delayed plans to open Saddleback College's Irvine campus next fall. "We're really hurting," a col· lege source said today. "The r ain hit us at a really bad time." He said construction workers at the site were poised to pour concrete foundations m -:l--uary on plans to utilize schoo'5 and in· just before the latest r~~d of duslrlal buildings in the lrviue storms began. area on a contingency batds to go ahead with rall claase~ ln the nor them area., Ile estimated cons truction would be at least one month behind once the campus site - located al Irvine Center Drive and J errery Road -is dry enough to pour foundations. Administrators are working Th~ so-coUed north c.mpus was schedu1ed to op'""· for classes in September. A dii;trlct apokesman said .Dortb campua classrooms prob- ibly would not be ready before Another Storm I Due for Coast By The Associated Press Another storm is brewing in the Pacific Ocean. and il could hit rain-weary Southern California as early as Tuesday night, say forecasters at the Na- tional Weather Service. '"If it continues on its present course. il could hit the West Co as t on Tuesday night or Wcdnesduy," said Roger Hill, a weather service technician in Los Angeles. Such news c an only bring Opponents Assailed By Jarois By STEVE MITCHELL Of._ Dally ~,_ St.tff Sounding more like a Midwest preacher than a retired busi· nessman, tax reform initiative author Howard Jarvis assailed state legislators and a Superior Court judge opposed to Prop. 13 on the June 6 ballot. Jarvis peppered his hour-long speech before taxpayers al Laguna Beach High School Sun· duy with aAecdotes and humor, but would not give one inch lo opponents of the tax reform measure ·'They (lcgislatol"S) are tell· ing us up in Sacramento that there won't be any tax reCorm m e a s u re this year, " l he e n e r g etic Los Angeles homeowner said. ''Leo McCarthy <Assembly s p e ctk e r ) s a y s th e y can 'l because lobbyists won't allow them to do it," he said. The 75-year-old Jarvis also charged public employee unions with holding up tax bills favora· ble to property owners, claim mg that tho majority of state legislators receive contributions from the unions. "In· other words, lhls isn't a ~overnment of, by and for lhe people. It's a government or lhe goverment, by the government and for the government." Jarvis called a lawsuit by Orange County SOperior Court Judge Bruce Sumner "frivolous" 'and claimed the judge is caught in a conflict or interest. Sumner recently filed a suit claiming the Jarvis initiative deals with morethanonesubjecl. • 'Tbe attorney 1eneral de· termined that it . coverea only one subject,'' Jarvis aaid. He aJso said Judge Sumner ls ls an employee of lbe statcf. .. and u (See JA&VIS, h1e A?) Weather Showen ending tonight, becoming fair and • Uttle warmer TuesdtJ. Highs Tuesday 60·H, Lowa toni1ht 44 ~et. sighs of fatigue to residents in the mud -soaked Pinecrest Estates area of La Crescenta. The residents had been braced SIERRA SNOW NEARING RECORD; MORE DUE-AS for the worst when a s torm caught them Sunday afternoon as they were still cleaninf up from the waist-deep mud and debris left by F'riday's torrents. About 100 families in the well· ASSAILS OPPONENTS Tax Flgher Jarvi• Coast Youth Victim of Bludgeoning Oranite County coroner's of. ricers have-identified a body found in Niguel Beach Park over lhe weekend as that of Karl Chan- cellor, 20, of 1848 Port Sheffield Place, Newport Beach. The certificate issued today by the coroner's office detennines the cause of death as murder by a person or persons unknown. Sherifrs Lt. Rick Drake con- firmed that his office is deaJln& with a murder case. He said Chancellor, whose body was foun(l Saturday near a snack bar in the Niguel Beach Park, was killed by a series o( blowa to lbe bead. No weapon hubeenfound. · ''Those blows were un40tlbted· ly the cause of death.'' nrake Hhl. "'lbere was no algn of a struggle at the deatb scene but we are still checking out lhe area." Drake said his investi_aators are satisfied that Chan~ellor was kilted at the spot where his fully clothed body was round. InvesUgators said tbe victim <See VICl'IM, Page AU \ to-do residential atea were ad· vised by the Los Angeles County She riU's Department to evacuate their homes Sunday. But only aJ;>out half heeded the warning, with the rest staying to try lo lessen the impact of ex· peeled floods and mudslides. ··Flood control officials ad· vised that the Shields debris basin has not been cleared of mud and debris from the pre- vious storm," said Sheriff's <See MORE, Page "Z) * * * Rain Slows Field Work In Irvine Wind and rain continue to hamper harvesting on Orange CountY ranches attd are det•Y· ing the preparaliQI\ or ground tor new crops, an Irvine Company spokesm$1l reJ>ortect today, but 'he said the 18.4 inches of water falling on fields this season is doing more good than harm. Dean Buchinger, Irvine Com· pany orchard manager. said field workers still can't get into broccoli and celery fields or lemon and avocado orchards. Continued rail'! is also result· ing in fungus on strawberry plants and mold on lemons, he said. But the water is great for leaching saltS-from plant and tree roots and for greenjng up pasture lanas bit hard by drought. Last week's winds knocked an esUrnated 500 to 1,000 field-boxes of avocados from trees and lop· pied approximately 100 eucalyp- tus wind-break trees across roads and onto producing or· chard trees. he added. Buchinger said planting schedules are being pushed back because of continued rain total· ing 19.5 inches so far this season com pared to onJy six inches last year at this time. Scheduled for planting are tomatoes and corn, he said, and delays with those crops will re- sult in additional delays in gel· ling Other .rotation crops lnto the ground next fall. Buchinger it optimistic about ranch grazing conditions as a re- s u Jt of the season's ra,in, however. Earlierl this year. an Irvine Ranch apokeaman said his company would have to buy large quantltlea of hay to reed the 900-bead cow herd and 1.000 rllnge caWe expected to feed off ranch grasses. Buchinger aaid this mornlna that the cattle are doing well and that onlY • amall amouat of bay was purchased before the season's hMYf rains broke a three-year clr'>utbt. * * * ·Saddleback's second semester nex.t January. District officials, however, are pressing plans to open classes ill tbe northern area lbls 'Sep· tember as planned. ~ formal announcement re· gardlni lhe contingency plans is ex~cted to come this week. Saddleback College President Robert Lombardi has said the north campus is the district's number one priority. The facility -located on a 20-acre site -is supposed to house 3,000 students and 25-fuJl· time faculty members. Th e 20-acre s ite wa s purchased last year rrom the Irvine Company for $900,000. The district bes an option to purchase an additional 80 acres Delly ............. ...,...-.. O'~ 1.0PJ! SLIPPAGE IN NB ENDANGERS PHONE CABLES ~· for ... c...,_ efMf Newport Center t!Mly Minor Damage hi Sunday's Storm By JACKIE HYMAN Of ... Delly~" ... Rain soaked the Orange Coast again Sonday and today, bul caused only minor damage com· l>artd to the storm that raked the area last Thursday night and Friday morning. In the area of Huntington Beacb where a trailer plrk was devastated early Friday morn- ing by a twister, another strong wind hit at about 1:50 p.m. SUn- day, picking up a roof from a metal building near Hamilton A venue and Seaforth Lane and fl· inging itintoa power line. A llhough power to 2,oss customers was cut orr. a Southern C~llfornia Edison spokesman said work crews already in the area were able to Woman Slain; Mate hijured A Buena Park woman was shot to death early today by her husband. who lhen turned bis sho\aun on bimaelf, police re- ported. Offlc,ers a.aid the woman was killed at 7:15 a .m . at the couple's borne, 6421 Cerritos Ave. Her .husband was beh\I treated for gunshot wounds at West Anat,elm Community Hospllal. accordlog to poUce. who were withholding the couple's names. al lhe site for f'Urther develop.. ment. District officials are planrtl~g lo develop the campus in 20-acre parcels each year be&inni,ng this year. · Construction under way al the initial 20-acre site is expected lo cost $1.2 million and provide 30,000 to 35,000 square feet. ot classroom space. BLost On Ski Patrol I I I MOUNT WATERMAN (AP> -Eight members or a volunteer ski patrol were reported missing in this area of the Angeles Na· tional Forest, a11d a sheriff's rescue crew began searching for them today. Los Angeles County sherifrs deputy Ron Malneck said moun- tain rescue personnel from the Crescenta Valley sheriff's sub- station, aided by a helicopter, were seeking lhe missing U.S. Forest Service volunteers in the rugged and snowcovered hills. ·•Two ski patrol people were missing since Sunday.'' Malneck said. ''Six people went out Sun· day afternoon to go find lhem and now they're missing." Mal neck said it bad been s nowing all night in the Mount Waterman area, about a 30·mlle drive from Hidden Springs which was d e vastated by 1-~r1day's deluge and flash flood. (Related story, photo, AS> He said the two people originally missing were on a routine p~trol, but carried backpacks which would enable them to survive for several days. He said lbe six seucbers had been expected back by Sunday night. and lhe Sheriff's Depart· ment search team was sent out this morning when they railed to return. ''The volunteers are pretty well trained for dealing with snow conditions and first ald, in case they were to get lost tor a nig ht or two." said Phyllis Alvarado, a clerk at lhe Oak Grove Ranger Station of lhe U.S. Forest Service. She said no avalanches had been reported in the area. Suspect Mil" Not Delivered To Countians By KA111Y CLANCY OI Ille o.ilr 1"1!04 SIMf Orange County HeaJlh Depart· ment officials said today there have been no repot'U of Hlness so far from penicillin· contaminated milk packaged un· der lhe Adohr label. Robert S. Stone, county direc· tor or t vironmental health, sald the Q'i rts and pints of con. laminated milk apparently were not distributed in Orange County markets as originally suspected. While there have been some conflicting reports, Stone sald county health officials w~re told over the weekend by Adohr Farms executives lhat the auS- pec t milk was shipped lo neighborhood markets and home delivery routes in Los Angeles County. StoJie said the quiarts and plnts in quesUon bear a Feb. 21 ex· plration date and are coded with lbe number 06-08. • <See MILK. Pa1e A!> . Actress Held On. Drug Rap · LOS ANGELES <AP) -Judy Came. who became a star as the .. Sock lt to Me" airl in lhe original .. Lauah·in .. televlsiOft series. tlas been arrested and booked tor lnvestlgaUon oC posse_-sing narcotic• for sal~. ' Sherlfrs Lt. Gene Hayes said Miss Came, 38, was .rrested Sunday niaht. by deputles who an11werad her eall at her West Hollywood home for i_sslalance ln a domestic dlatarbance. Haya aal.d tM d.,UU• found a pla1Uc bat in the ...-.. CM- talft!n• What t.My beU.nd to be a quaut:v ct am...-••• IUI· late ID ..... ol .._ WOiW ron1ldered aeeoP.t•bl• far penonil UM; \ .-12 DAil Y PllOf SB Mot\d"L 'e!u'Y!t\'. '" tt'TI JARVIS SPEAKS ••• $0cb receives bi!. salary rrom lax sources. He is directly mvolved in ,a conruct of mlerest wben he ac· Hpts tax money and fights • tax reduction proposal." Regarding his tax measure, Jarvis assailed current property tax limits, saying they are well eove the taxpayers' ability to cway. "Tht! property tait structure Marine, NB Woman Arrested San Francisco area lawmen are probing the possible link between the arrest of a Newport Beach girl and an El Toro Marine and a series or recent burglaries in Marin County. Gloria Jean Swanson, 18, and Stanley Wayne Berkey, 21, were arrested in Corte Madera by FBI agents who said they found burglary tools, three guns, a variety of disguises and false identHication papers and $20,000 in cash in an apartment OC· cupied by the pair. At present the two face federal charges or making false state· ments in passport applications, which carries S40,000 bail. A spokesman for the San Francisco of£ice of the FBI said they were arrested one week after applying for passports at the San Rafael post office Feb. 2. They allc~edly used birth certificates of "deceased in· rants" as identification for the passports, the spokesman said. Berkey was identified as being AWOL from the Marine Corps' El Toro air station after his at"· rest, according to the FBI. Law enforcement authorities in Marin County said they have been plagued by a series of burglaries of wealthy homes and the discovery of the tools, cash and disguises in the apartment ~hared by the pair has led to the investigation of their connection to the burglary cases . The woman was released from c ustody after an unidentified relative posted bail. Berkey and Miss Swanson are :;lated to return to a federal magistrate's court Feb. 16 for a preliminary hearing on the federal charges. Search on For Aircraft ONTARIO <AP) -Authorities launched 31' air and a ground search today for a plane that may have crashed in the vicinity of Mt. Baldy with four persons on board. The plane. reportedly piloted by Randy Dowling of Temple Ci- ty. disappeared from the radar screen at Ontario International Airport Sunday while on a flight from Apple Valley to El Monte. San Bernardino County Sheriff's Sgt. Robert Cordy said the pilot of another aircraft re· ported later picking up a signal from an emergency locator tr ansmitter. Such transmitters ;ire activated by a crash, Cordy said . SCIENTISI' GROUP SHUNS ILUNOIS WASHINGTON <AP> -The board Of directors Of the American Association for the Advancement of Science voted today to move its 1979 annual meeting from Chicago to Houston becaUBe the state of IJ. linois has not passed the Equal Rights Amendment. · "We have been quite con- cerned about t.he ERA and have passed a resolution indicating ·our strong support," said Dr. WUUam D. McElroy, chairman of the l>oa.rd or directors. OttANQI COAST H today prevents y9un1 people from being able to buy • home at all," he said. And Jt has fo~ed thecloaurea on 7 ,500'homes a year in C&lifomia -most of them owned by older folks on fixed1ncomes. •• He defends the estimated $7 billioq thal would be cut. from the state's budget should the bill pass by saying, "It's not ta.king $7 billlon rrom the government. ft 's putUng it back into the hands ot the people, and they are the government." "There wiU st.ill be $33 billion. for the state to conduct its operations," he said . "It's a 15 percent cut and they call that a disaster.'' "Tb• real disaster co~ when thousands or people in this state who have worked all their Jives for lbe homes can't afford to own them." But H's the benefits that Jarvis likes to point out. "Sure. this bill will knock out downtown redevelopment proJ· eels. It will also put an end to joint power agreements and force politicians to trim their sails -cutout the fat." But. he said, if the measure passes. "there will be the bi&· gest boom of remodeling on homes in the history or this s tate, because people fear higher asses,ment.s after obtain· ing a buildiQ8 permit for an ad· dltlon to their homes." That alone would m ean employment for thousands or state residents, he said. The tax reform crusader told Lagunans to "get on the phone. write like hell t-0 the newspapers here, and pass out literature to get this thing passed.·· "What really bothers the politicians," he said. gleefully. "Is that t.he people are finatly going lo have a say in the opera· lion or th.is state ... F,.._PageAJ VICTIM •.. attended Orange Coast College, Costa Mesa, until recently when he decided to temporarily end his studies so that he could travel in Australia. They said the victim's fa mily and friends have been unable to enlighten them on the reason for his presence in' Niguel Beach park. "We believe he was taken there by someone who planned to kiJI him but we don't know why at this point," an in· \·estigator said. The last time Chancellor was seen alive l>Y members of bis family was at about 1 p.n,. Frr· day when he left home to go to a party, an investigator said. LB Pageant Tickets Set - By Mail Only Public ticket sales to the 1978 Pageant of the Masters go on sale Wednesday, but Festival of Arts officiaJs will only be accept· ing orders by mail. Pageant spokeswoman Sally Reeve said ticket order forms may be picked up at the festival offi ce weekdays between 8:30 a .m . a nd 4:30 p.m. Those who wish to have forms mailed to them should send a seJC.addressed stamped en· velope to lbe Festival or Arts, 650 Laguna Canyon Road . Laguna Beach. Calif. 92651. No telephone orders will be ac- cepted due to the large number of requests ror pageant tickets. Mrs. Reeve said. The summer festival wilJ be held this year from July 11 to Aug. 27. Man Attacks Six TOKYO (AP> -A man with a kitchen knife and a wooden sword usaulted six junior high school students, killing one or them and injuring four, police said. · A police officer keeps his distance from the overturned car of Cheryl Sambuco in Waterbury. Conn .. as her dog keeps rescuers at bay. Finally Mrs. Sambuco, who s uf. fered only minor injuries. was released after her husband arrived to calm the large animal. Fro•PageAI MORE RAIN COMING. • • Deputy Carl Riegert. The basin overflowed Friday, and when the rain fell Sunday. resident.£ were faced with the same danger. Although heavy rains con- tinued through Sunday night, the weather service said the worst of the storm had passed -with less than half the rainfall that drenched the area two days before. * * * Fro111 Pag~ Al WATER •.. ' itself. water is 47 feet deep and would have th raise more than 53 feet ~ crest the facility. Wat.er ls being tel eased from Prado at a rate· of 1,500 cubic feet per second, Jauman said. During the last major storm in this area, 1969, the Corps re· leased up to S,000 cubic feet per second into the Santa Ana River, he s aid. While large capacities remain in county.area flood control dams, agricultural water collec- tor reservoirs such as Irvine Lake are reported overnowing. A n I rvine Compa n y spokesman 51lid water began spilling over Irvine Lake dam Saturday morning for the first lime sin ce 1969. * * * Fro.Page Al RAIN •.• window al Arby's Restaurant on Brookhurst Street in Huntington Beach. The NationaJ Weather Service today fort!cast overntght clear· ing and fair weather Tuesday, with another storm moving in on Wednesday . However, a spokesman said the new storm is expected to be weaker than · Sunday's. The countf Harbor Patrol measured 1.02 inches or rain in Newport Harbor during the 24· hour period endin~ this morning. Rai·n watcher J . ~Sherman Den- ny measured .98 inches in Hunt· ingt on Beach, bringing the season's total to 17.76 inches. compared to 8.90 inches last year to date. The Laiuna Moulton Treat- ment plant in Laguna Niguel tallied 1.48 inches overnight. bringing t.h& season total there to 19. 77 inchea. Last year the Laguna Niguel area bad·S.89 in- ches. Riegert said Sunday that ris· mg waters washed out hillside roads and cut off residents in the hard·hit Tujunga Canyon area just a few miles northwest of La Crescenta, but because the area is so sparsely populated, no one was evacuated. Mayor Tom Bradley declared a s tate of emergency in Los Angeles on Sunday, noting that Friday's storm had caused an estimated $22.6 million damage, des troyed five homes and severely damaged 120 others. making it one or the worst storms in Southern California history. lie said the city would apply for "appropriate state and· federal assistance." Gov. Edmund G. Brown also mu s t dec l are a s tate of eme rgency to make p rivate property owners and the city eligible for recovery funds. Meanwhile, the search con· tinued today for abolJt 30 corpses unearthed when a section of tht" Verdugo Hills Cemetery in Tu· junga collapsed during Friday's storm . Coroner 's oHicials re· pol"tedly recovered about hatr of the bodies by Sunday, including one found in a supermarket parking lot. Police officer Don Zerillo said ·the remaining bodies were buried under the mud. The cor- oner's office. fearing a health hazard, was s upervising re· covery of the bodies for iden· tification and reburial. In the Delta Flats area or Big Tujun ga Canyon a woman's body was found two miles {rom where she reportedly had been pulled into a wash current whHe attem pling to cross it. The victim, Bonnie Koploy of Sunland, had reported~y Men visiting a friend in the area Fri· day when the incident occurred. The California Highway Patrol closed down highways across the southern section of the state, especially in mountain and canyon regions where the danger or mud and rock slides was ever·present, said oCflcer Chuck Meredith. By Sunday night. the National Weather Service had recorded more than an inch of rain in t.he Los Angeles area, bringing the season total to 21.42 inches - almost threeUmes as much as the 7.21 inches that had fallen by the sametimelastyear. NormaJ rainfall for this time of year i s 9 .01 inches , forecasters said. lrvin:e Priest ' Ba~ks Change A UC Irvine Episcopal priest says he strongly supports the or· d alnmenl of women, and pre. diets the Catholic church will come lo accept women cJerlcs- right arter it permits prieSts to marry. The Rev. Larry Rouillard. of· Universit y Interfaith, said "Celibacy will go first. There'll be an optional celibacy for clergy. •'Then women will be or- dained. At first, there will be a great many sisters ordained." The Episcopal Church bas or· dained women since 1974. There are only 60 to 70 today. Rouillard told a University Forum luncheon gathering of UCJ facul· ty this week that it's been hard to attract women to the pries~hood. Rouillard said there is no Biblical or theological reason why women should not be or. dained. The line or bishops, priests and deacons is supposed to have extended in succession Crom tbe apostles of Jesus-an unbroken line of clergy ordaining the next in line. ''(Jot 'apostle' is defined as one who saw the riseo lord, and was commissioned and sent by him .'' Rouillard said. "The person who most particularly Cits that description is Mary MagdaJene.'' He added, "I see lbe ordain· ment of women to lbe priesthood and the deaconite, as the com- pletion of apostolic succession in the church." Rouillard said the increasing pressuring or women for accep- tance into t.he higher positions of the church is part or the overall feminist revolution. · ··I really believe that the Holy Spirit is operative in the vast bulk of the women's move· m ent," be said. Management Plan Goes To Trustees ·Capistrano Unified School Dis· trict trustees will be asked Tue6· day t.o approve manacement ob- jectives proposed by Supeiinten- dent Jerome Thomaley. Tuesday's meeting is planned .for 7:30 p.m. at district offices, 32972 Calle Perfecto in 5an Juan Capistrano .. The proposed objectives for 1978 place emphasis on refine· ment or the district's Learning Experience Appraisal Program, commonly caJled ProJeel.LliP. The program is currtntly be· ing used in district schools to up- grade students' basic skiJls. In- dividualized instruction and key- ing students to a distrlct·wide graduated instruction program are features of Project LEAP. Fro.Page Al MILK ••• The contaminated Dlilk could cause an allergic reaction to . someone sensitive to penicillin, Stone said. but would not affect those wbo are not allergic to penicillin. Adohr spokesman were not available for comment today. Stone said county officials re· ceived an anonymous call Fri· day from someone claiming lo be on strike against a Los Angeles dairy. The caJler said a shipment of milk headed for Adohr had been contaminated with penicillin. Stone said. Olillr ,.._. Si.ff ...... SUPPORTS WOMEN Rev. Larry Rouillard Panels Eye Corridor Plan Tonight The Saddleback Area Coordinating Council, Orange County planners , the South Laguna Hills Homeowners As · soolation and the public are to review the route·location study foe the San Joaquin HUI~ Transportation Corridor at a meeting beginning at 7 o'cloc~ tonight. The meeting will be at Peoples Federal Savings & Loan com· munily room, 23688 El Toro Road, El Toro. The county will present the latest revised plans Cor the cor· ridor , planned as a high· rapacity, high.speed vehicular transportation route. The cor· ridor, a segment of the county's ma s ter plan or art erial highways, is approximately 13 miles long. It is to extend from the San Diego Freeway near Saddleback College in Mission Viejo to the future Route 73 Freeway in the vicinity of • M acArthu r Boulevard In Newport Beach. Construction is not expected before the mid·l~'s. Environmental Management Agency <EMA> spokesmen said r the study is being conducted by Gruen Associates Inc. in lwo lS·month phases. The first phase is expected to result in the selee· lion of a basic route for the tor· ridor by the county board of supervisors. When a route is selected, phase 2 is to provide more de· tailed analysis of the facility within the selected corrldors. Estimated costs and right-of· · way requirements also are to be 1 determined. Soma/,i Cal/,s For More Aid NAJROBJ, Kenya CA P > -, Somali President Mohammed Siad Barre has called on every Somali who can shoulder a rine to battle advancing Soviet- backed Ethiopian forces In Ethiopia's Ogaden region, of . ficial Somali radio reported to· day. • Slad Barre made the mobiliza- tion call at a mass rally in the Somali capital Mogadishu, telling the 200,000 crowd: "Death is som etimes preferable to life, "the bfoadcast monitored here said. DAILY PILOT Prinee M1•1n OPENING TUESDAY, FEB. 14th at Mission Vleio VIHage Center ,.. ExpertSHOE REPAIR Philip Direks TV Appearance r.ws&~Too fine tEATHER GOODS .. ·-·· • STOCKS I BUSINESS 1'1onday's 2 p.m. (ED'I) ' .' NYSE COMPOSHE TRANSACTIONS Pnce:a 0..-IAI•-""._. ........ .,,. .... v .. -. Mlclww••· "~" .. · ... w. '9ot .... a. .... ~ Clflt•-11 •M<" • .,...,.....,_._,.._.,.,._Net••• A1-i.1i.nett.Kllrille1 0.•lwt ~ lt11U1111t. lo!I\ ""' p.(~I 0... ("9 t ,, • ..,,., Febtvaty 13. 1971 s DAILY PILOT .48 U.t Provided Not All lncoiiie May Be Taxed Not everythln& cl~:>l>ifles as taut>le income, accord.ln.: to Commerce Clearln1t House, national reporting authorlt)• on t ax and busine:.s Jaw. Many wpayers receive Income lbal is not taxable. CCH Usts i<>me or tbeae iltms: -ACCIDENT AND HEALTH INSURANCE proceeds .altributabletoempfoyeecontributlons. -Annuities (to ex- U!nt or investment) . -Bequests and de· ( J vises. rr~v nPS -Damages re· .I.IS.A covered for personal in· -------------" juries or sickness. -Dlsabfllty payments, but not for loss of wa,es. -Dividends on Wtmatured life insurance policies. -Dividends (up lo $100). -Employee's death benefita (up to SS,000). -Gifts and inheritances. -Interest on bonds or a at.ate. qJt.y or other pohltcal 5Ut1division (excluding certain municipal bond issues. -Value of lessee's improvements to lessor. -UFE INSVRANCE PROCEEDS paid on death of insured. -Meals and Jodgln1 on the business premises and for the convenience of the employer. For the value of the lod1· Inc to be tax·free, the lodging must be accepted as a condi- tion of employment. -Old-age and survivors benefit payments under the Social Security Aci or Railroad Retirement Act. -ScholanhtpS and fellowships <limited where reci· ptent ls not a can'dtdate for a degree). -Sick pay ror persons under age 65 who have,relired on dlsabilily and are permanently and totally disabled ( Hm lted lo $100 per week). -STOCK DIVIDENDS OR STOCK riebts, unless dis-proportionate, or in lieu of money, or on preferred stock -Tax refunds (state or fe4eral) of taxes not_prevlou.s· ly deducted. -Unemployment benerits under Railroad Unemploy. ment Insurance Act or s tale unemploymenl compen&at1on laws. -Veteran's dlsabWty pensions. -Workmen's Compensation payments. Nut: Chitclc deductbaa Family Earnings Mean Affluence ; NEW YORK (AP) --Becoming arouent in America is ·• increasingly turning into a family affair, a new study on J the demo·graphics of the upper income class suggests. The Conference Board study finds that more American households currently qualify as "affluent .. than did 10 or / 20 years ago. Even when acljusted for innatlon, average family income bas Increased broadly for those households com prising the wealthiest 20 perceot of the country. BUT IT AIM> SUGGESTS TtlAT it is more difficult : t~ ever for a family supported by only one worker t.o l climb up the income ladder. , ''An extraordinary 77 percent of our upper-income families have at least two persons in the labor force, while i only 22 percent have a sln&le earner," writes the study's , author. Fabian Linden. director of consumer research for > · the non.profit business • resein-ch organization. ( J .. More often than 1 ~E"/S ~N ~L"SIS not, the additional wage n w. ,... ,.. Jl, earner is a working wlfe. In some 54 per- cent of all homes in this bracket the women is employed, up from 34 percent in the mid·'50s. In addition, there also are many instances where three persons, and sometimes more, are contributing," he finds in an analysis ' or data from 1975 and the preceding two decades. In 1965, 30 percent of households in the top income bra'cket had only one person working and 20 years earlier. the figure was 3S percent. ALL OF TIDS, OF COURSE, DOES not account for the fact that actual s pending power depends on bow many peo- ple must divide up the paycheck or paychecks coming in. And from that point or view, the economic pinch may still be barsb on families that staUsUcally qualifY as aUluent. But lt does suggest ... greater democratization of the relatively wealthy segment of tbe population,"· sAys Linden, noting that 3.8 million of the upper.income families In the most recent year studied were beaded by a blue.collar worker with a wo~g wile. Based on 1&75 ata~ct. Liftdeu found that 11.1 mUUon households were earnina $22,20" -: more, wbicb qualified them U ·among tbose In the t.G. filth. A decade before, 9.6 million families were in the top 20 percent but tt took Jess -$17,600-in comparable 1975 dollars lo make it int.o the upper·income bracket. IN UIS, A UOUSEBQLD WOULD have had to bring in at least $13,200 to make tt into the ranks of what Linden re· lers to as the income .. elite," and 8.4 million homes did. •'The living standards of the average family have just about doubled since the end of World War II. In no other comparable period of the nation's history did we ex· perienoe such an tmprovemen~ of such magnitude ... he • says. But wblle ho nndl that tbe eeonomlc Improvement was · widespread. the study notes tbal It was oot enjoyed equally bJ all popuJaUoo sesmenis. Blacks and ot.ber racial minorities, which make up aboulll pettent c'4 the popula- Uon, accounted for Just S petcent of tbe upper-Income clan. TblS is~ increase from a.~ perce"t tn 196$ and 2.3 percent In 1955. ••TUE IMPOltTANCE OP WOMEN among the af- Ouent has actually decreased. In 1955 close lo one out or ever110 temale·bcaded. bomes was in the top fifth income brac.lcdi today tbe ratio is only one ln 20." Linden com· men ta. . Tbale bouleboldl tbat roanacecl to inalntaln upper in- come atatus wlthoul anyone holding down a Job scarcely cbanaCld al all'" ftmatnln.& ft dD8e to 1 J)Uceot of the total affhant cl-. tw the past two didcada. • AJ•OAllV PILOT ~nday. Febf~ 13, 1978 .. ~ • ~ ~Chevrolet Monte Carlo ' • .. . ... ' Grand Prix and .. ese A • • r a ·new 1111ension • •• -mvaue~ \ . I New car nam~ crop up all the time. And quite often .: , · ~ · rear-seat knee room. 1There's alsp more efficient use of they cli_sappear just as fast. trunk spa~ this year. But when General Motors began redesigning the Third, as a group these all-~ 1978 models show · ~t cars you see listed here, we knew we had a tradition an impr~ve 34% '1Jel-economy improvement over tci uphold. • 1975 models, ba5e41 on EPA figures. And that's the To provide as much value as we could while still kind of value you can easily appreciate. delivering the excitement and styling these names are Fitially, there's resale value. And while it's impossible famous for. to predict what ·these cars will bring in years to come, Now, several years and over a billion dollars later, we we believe that in engineering, styling, roominess and think we a~mplished our goal.·~ with these band·' efficiency, these cars are designed to offer resale value I some new cars selling by the hun~s of ~ousands, you people traditionally look fQr in General Motors cars. seem to think so, too. So, l<><:>k. If you want value in What kind of value can you look for? First, there's your next .car, you owe it to yourself ' · value in our durable new construction. Extensive to test-drive some of the most corrosion-resisting treatments will· help these cars·~ popular names in automotive history. their good ·looks. · ~ · You'll also be following the lead SeeOO<l, while thCSe cars are trimmer.outside than last of so many peQple who thiilk $ey're ~~, ttiey offer traditional head room, leg room and the way to go for '78 . • , .