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1978-02-20 - Orange Coast Pilot
I ~ ... . . . MONDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 20, 1978 VOL 11, NO. 11, J SaCTIONS, M f'AOal 3 Teen Boys Found Slain DES MOINES. Iowa (AP) - Three ~•ee boys who were doing remodeling clean·up work were fatally wounded by shots in \t)e back of the bead and left 1ide-by·1ide in a downtown building that had housed an adult boobtore. Three blocks away, a clerk in AA adult bookstore was Jater found shot to death. But a•thoritiea said they had no rea- son to believe the 1hootln1s of the boys were· related to the . death of the clerk, who they said ~as killed during an apparent tobbeey. lh.. Two of the boys were dead at Jpe scene Sunday, the third died )Ater in a hospital. They were round. lyina face down in the jqrmer, bookstore which had ""osed a few months ago. Assistant Police Chief Billie Wallace, a 27-year veteran, 4'1tscrlbed the scene as "the moat aruesome 1 have ever teen." T1 Wallace speculated that '1Jhoever shot the boys may have been looking for something in tbe vacated bookstore building. , !l'he young shooting vlcUms 1",ere Jeff Beavers, 14, and Jeff llbffman. 14, and hla brothet. Q.8rald, lS, all 0( Des M~. Jflf Beavers and J eff Hoffm~ were dead at the scene, G~alcf Hoffm&Q died after aurpry SUn· 4'-'!aiPL ~Polk County Medical Ex· •mtaer R.C. Wooterl said the :1M>11 were all lbiot lll the bead. probably with a large.callber .... volver. No 'weapon wu found at the scene. The youths were taken to the downtown buildin& Sunday morning by the Hoffman boys' father, Gerald, a1 contractor wbo,ae fthn, is reroodelln1 the building into a restaurant. Police aaid they knew of no motive.in the abootint of tbe .boys. . "We know robbery wasn't the motive.'' said Wallace. Police were searching for three men in the slayinp. One was seen in a nearby dru~re Sunday and the third was seen in an alley. About five houri after the boya' bodies were found, police were called to the Adult Caller booksto!.e.z. where a clerk, William IS81Gwin. 30, was lying (See KIU..INGS, Pas~ AZ) Nude Victim FkesRaput, In Huntington ED .Ant £cul11 l'Wcs Mrs. Carmen Romano de Lopez-Portillo (le!t) chats briefly With hostess at Laguna Beach .Art Museum during whirlwind tour of Mexican art exhibit SundaY.. Baja Califomia Gov. and ,,Mn. BobertO de la Paet ~~~~1~~.~entative Madrid (center) accompanied the Mex- ican f_irst lady on tour. 1be Mexican vis- itors also toured Newport Harbor An Museum Sunday. ~ • ·o tt-act . Reached WASHINGTON (AP) -'!be striking United Mine Workers union today reached a tentative contract agreement with a ma- jor independent coal producer as Laboi" Secretaey Ray Manhall began conaultlng with con-gressional leaders about ••cte- ~lUve.. act.ion to encl the 'lT• daf .old soft coal strike. AdininlatraUon officials and union leaders said they were hoping the tentative agreement · with the Pittsburgh and Midway Coal' Co. would break the stal~ate in the national strike. P&M, wb1ch is owned by Gulf OU Corp. ts not a member of tbe Bituminous Coal Operators As- aoclatlm. which represents Vae large coal companies. BCOA members rntne about half the oaUon's coal P&M baa 800 to 1,000 mine employees and six mines iQ Kentucky. Missouri and Kamas. 'file tentative P&ll pact anm be approved ·by the unton•a bargainlnl cotmcil and them- lon "I membenhip. 11 lba contra(l is approved by the mlne.as, Pldtl could begin producing eoal, helping to ease shor~a1es in some areas. But more Importantly. the ten~tive agreement I• expect~ to in· tenaJfy preasure on the BCOA nd the UMW to c:ome to terms. (See COAL, hge AZ• ",2 Q,t,IL Y PILOT S Mond!J• '*'*f ,20· 197a 'Cyprus to· Free Egypt FOr.ces .. " In Jet Assault NICOSIA, Cypru1 (AP) -The government said today il la re- leaslnt the aurvlvln& Eeyptlan commandos whole usault CID a jetUner held by assassins of an influenUal E1ypUa.o editor was foiled by Cypriot troops. But of• ficials rejeeted ECYPt'a request that the captured terrorilts be sent to Cairo. A spokesman ai.o uld lbe Cyprus government, angered by the foreign military operation on its soil, demanded lbat ErYPt re- call its military attache from J'Jicosia. Funtls A8ked For Reward BERKELEY (AP) -A campaign la under way to raise $25,000 in reward money for information leading to the capture and conviction of a Berkeley rapist n ick named ''Stinky." The City Council baa pledged $5,000 toward the reward fWld. Fund·raisers said they hope to raise $1 from each Berkeley res· ident. Police say the foul- smelhng man has raped more than 60 wome.n since 1973. Last Request; Son Torches Father's Boat FAIRFIELD, Conn. (AP) - Police said they charged a man with breach of the peace for fulfilling what he said was his father's dying wish to bum his boat in "sort or a viking funeral." Police said that J 11ne1 Flanagan Jr. took bis father'• eight.foot dinghy to Fairfield beach Sunday night. doused it with lighter flµid ~~d .is~t it ablaze. He told them hl.s father, J ames Flanagan Sr., who was buried Friday, made that a last request. People along the beach thought a boat was in trouble and called the Coast Guard which dispatched a rescue helicopter. Nothing was found because the small boat quickly sank. · The younger Flanagan told Jl()lice he did not thlnk anyone would see the final tribute to hls .. father. He was released for a court appearance at a later date. Sun Heats. Up North State By 'l1le Asaoclated Preas Norihem California will con· tinue to enjoy almost summer· Jike weather as a protective s hield of high pressure remains strongly entrenched over the state. The National Weather Service s aid the nearest Pacific storm ls located about 600 miles west of San Francisco but it ls expected to weaken considerably by the time lt reaches the coast on Tuesday. On Sunday, above normal maxhhum temperatures were ,;ideapread, with nadlnc• raq· 11'« mostly in the 60s an4 108. OAANGI! COAST DAILY PILOT Cypriot forces stopped the E1yptlans' attempt to storm the plane at Larnaca Airport in a bloody batUe Sunday night that left a reported lS EgypUan com· maJ.tdoadead. Interior Minister · CbrtatodQulos Benjamin told a news oonferente that Cypriot and not Egyptian courta would try ~ two Arab terrorist.I, who began the two da'ys of bloodshed Saturday in a Nicosia hotel by killing Cairo newspaper editor Youssef el-Sebaei, a confidant of Egyptian Presiderit Anwar Sadat. The pair, who seised hostages and fook over the Cypt'iot jetliner after the ldlllng, were formally charged with murder today. Benjamin sald the four dozen E11ptian soldiers. cap~ ln the battle at the airport, 30 miles s9u.theast of hen, woU)d. be al- lowed to return boJne wllb their arms. An Egyptian C-130 military transport arrived in Cyprus to· day to pick them up, along wlth the bodies Ol their comr"1es. Jt was not known when they would leave. The C.130 that Dew them to Cyprus Saturday was badly damaged in the battle. Besides the 15 dead, the gov- ernment said, 16 Egyptians were wounded, two were missing and 41 others bad been held as "military prisoners." It said six Cypriot soldiers and a West Germ an television cameraman also were wounded in lbe battle. A Cypriot goverqmept spokesman said today President Spyros Kyprianou has de- manded the recall of Col. Suleiman Hadad, military al· tache at the Egyptian Embassy here. The reason was not offieially announced, •but a Cyprus Airways pilot told a reporter that an "Egyptian military at-· tacbe ordered the assault Jn de- fi an ce of the Cypriot' gov- ernment. The source of the pilot's information was not known. The two terrorists, who had been holding 11 Arabs hostaee aboard • Cypriot jetUner after a fuWe attempt to find refuge in the Arab wodd, surrendered to the plane crew as soon u the shootinl llarted. · The hostages and the four members ot lbe plane crew were unhurt. ; The Cypriot govemment today issued a statement on behalt ol the terrorists wbo claim~ to be Pale'stiniana, saying they belonged to no ortanlzation. The Palestine Liberation Organization, which deplor"1 Saturday's asaaaelnation, charged in Beirut, Lebanon, that the two acted for the lntelllcence se"lce of Iraq, a bard·lille Arab slate opposed to Sadat's peace dialogue with Israel. A pro-Libyan neW'llpapel' in Beirut said they confessed they were ordered to kll1 Sebael, chief editor of Eaypt'a aemt- officlal Al Abram newspaper, by Iraq-based Palestinian renecade guerrilla Abu NldaL Short Circuit Closes Eatery A shorted electrical circuit was blamed Sunday for a .$1.000 fire at 1 p.m., wbicb closed Denny's reat•urant tn San Clemente for~ rest of the day. Coffee and d.ou1bAut1 only were available !9r b,reakfaat customen today, u e1'ttrldans worked to make repatn. necessary to run .the restaurant's cookin1 appliances, said operator Mark Bennett. Ha said he upeded to be able to serve dinoera todAy. The flN was out 1'hen San Clemente firemen arrived, Bennett said. No one was in· jured. ---__ .., .... _,.. .. ~~·-........ _ ,,,...p ... AJ COAL ••• ll w.s not Immediately clear how lOli8 lt will take for the tent•tlv• P&:M contract to be voted on by the min rs. Tbe prtnelpal UMW ne(Otfator ln the PU talks wu Thomas D. O~. a frequent critic of UMW Prelldent Arnold Miller. One toutte said Miller "was not . l o v o he d " hi t.b e P & M necotlaUoos. Merlin Breaux, Gulf Oil's vice prealdent for induatrlal J'e· laUons, said the tentaUve PU . contract represented a eom- promlse between what the UMW wanted and what BCOA wanted. The tJMW's bargainlnl council previously rejected a BCOA of- fer because the union obJected to clauaes lmposlng penalties on mlnen who co out oo wildcat atrikes. Breaux said other coal com· panies have three alternatives: follow the P&M contract pattern, continue necotiatona with the UMW or stand by and let Carter intervene~ Mary Smalley poses with her 68-foot twin- diesel Mariner II yacht which she $kippers around San Francisco· Bay, serv- ing elegant dinner parties. When her airline executive husband died of a heart attack four years ago, she used the estate settlement to prchase the yacht and spruce it up. Story, Page A7. Sources said. the tentative P&M contract does not provide fines for miners participating ill wildcat strikes. Wages could rise a maximum of $2.40 an hour over tbr~ yean, including cost-• of-living allowances. UMW mlners now averace $7.80 an hour. • «:"'' I .aguna: Cops Hunt Yzctim's Mom Carried Putol One source said the contract calls for P&M to suarantee the health and pension benefits of miners and their dependents. }Jowever, a aecood source said tb6 contract wu unclear on this point. The laue ol benefits bas been a .key atickina point in the necoUatlms between the BCOA Knifing Suspect FRESNO <AP) -Tbe mother of one Chowchilla kidnappJng victlm carried a pistol to a court hearing last fall but surrendeted tt before entering, a newspaper reported today. Laguna Beach police are seek· ine a man they believe jammed a hunting knife into the stomach or a transient following an argument at a party early to- day. FriendJ rushed Gerald A. Mc Nutt, 25, to "South Ooaat Commaoit.y Hot!lpital in a van 1 following tt>e 1 :20 ~.m. ~tercation in an apartment at US Bent St. He was reported in stable con· dilion following surgery for knife wounds to the stomach, hospital officials confirmed. Police Sgt. A.J. DeLuca sald he and Orficer Linda· Phillips pulled up in front of the Bent Street address just as a private van roared away from lbe curb and down fhe street. •·we radioed for a patrol unit to follow the van to the hospital," DeLuca said today. Police officers round a hunting knife on the &round outside the C..Orpse Found To Be Mummy BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) -The case of the bag· 1ace·room corpse bas be'n solved. It turned out to be tbe mummy of an ·tnca that bad been shipped from the northern city of Salla ln 1976. • l'he cue becan when bus com· pany employees iospectlng un· claimed parcels at a depot in Cordoba discovered a nearly 'wrapped body and called police. Arcbeololist Francisco Emilio Sola said be malled the mummy, which he believes is about 500 years old, to a col- leacue in Cordoba for ex- amlnalioa, but it d.laappeared. YwkntCrime Rate Steadies WASHINGTON (AP) -A federal 1Urvey shows that the' rate of violent crime dJd not in· creue substantially in 1916 O'fer the previous year. The Jusijce Department•s Jaw enforcement aaslatance admtnlatralfoo reported on Sun- day that 1978 l'ates for ra~. r9~bery, QHult. theft aft..d burMlary 11iere \firtually un· chanted from ltn5. The report said the only major change was a sharp decliD~ or 15~ percent in automobile thefts. The survey Is based on. a poll of people 12 and older in • representaUve national sample of 60,000 households. The study also surveyed 15,000 businesses 1n 1875 and '2,000 in 1976. ·apartment and arrested one aw.- peel whom they ,later ftleued. Detectlves are seeking another man who was present at the Bent Street party but said they did not want to identify the suapecL The knffe-wteldiog suspect faces cbar&ea of assault with lo· tent to commit murder, DeLuca said. Police believe lbe incident was sparked by an arsument over a woman. ll"legal Ali,en Crossings Up . U.S. Border P•trol agents al the San Clementb checkpoint re- ported apprehending 287 aliens Sunday, up from an average of 170 arrests logged on recent Sundays. "We think this ls the beeinn· In& oft.be llllidpaMd HUOna1 Increase," aakl John Weuon. acent·in~cbar1e. "Wltb crops nearlne haneat time, tbo Carol l(anbalJ. motber o( the oldest •f tile ~o;,1aterP kidnapped lo Jal,. , Ar· reaclered tbe .25-eallber aUC.Omatic and • cu ot MAC& after nodci.DC .a met.J} Oetectct- at tbe eatraoee to U. Alameda COunly courtroom, tbe rr.nO Bej npol1ed. • Tia•. Uaree ........ fDUnd dllty e»l 1-Mtlly wur,.~la0ct ~rederis Wooa ._ James. Sehoeoltld were MDteeCed lut ' week to ~in prillOO without possibility of parole. Richard· Schoenfeld, who was 22 when the children were abducted, was sent to prison under a youth re· habilltation provision which could allow him to be paroled eventually. I',.... Page Al KILLINGS. • and the union. · Tbe ~In the P&K eoatraet came .. adinlnlst.ratloo offlc:tal~ wne txplorlnc the po11tblllty of eocouratlnt in- dl vlchal setUemeott between BCOA computes and local U)t W units -Oe government eould prov{de mediators for 1ucb an _.ffoit, for example, 8khoulb Uda proceu would be \lm•~· Manhall, .. 'he belan b1a coo-- suhatlau wlth coure.salooal ltadtn. aald no cleelaloo bas been made on what alternatives the administration might pro- pose to Congress. "We are just trying to get some idea what members of Congress are think.inc," be said. Marshall bldicated he wanted to find out bow quickl1 Con~ g res s mtebt act on any administration proposal. White House officials aay the .. admlniltratlco will coo.sult with the congressional leadenahip on number c:A We1al &Uena Jumps dead behind a .counter with a ln the sprint. We expect the gunshot wound in the bead. number will juat keep climb-Police said robbery was a inc." possible motive in the shooting. a series ot options including temporary federal sei%ure of the coal mines, binding arbitration or invoking tbeTaft·Hartle1 Act. · M exlcan nation all •P· The compartments of an open prebended ~ they enter the cash drawer were empty, but ·United Stat.ea Ule1alb' are re-there was still some money at turned to the border, where they the back or the drawer. Police are released, Weaaon said. , said an estimated $160 was So11tte1 said Carter Is likely to recommend a combination of these. Oxnard Klan Fights Aliens OXNARD (AP> -The Ku Klux Ktan ha.a held a closed meetinc at a local motel to dla-cuu atrateetes that Include ex· pandlne its crusade a1a1n1t 11· legal allem In Ventura County. Tbe Klan bu been patrol.ln& the Mexican border tn an effort to keep the undocumented work en out ol the country. Gabriel Serrano, chairman lot' the Ventura County Chapter ol Lr Raza Unlda, a Mexican· American civil rl&hta 1'°'1P, heard about the a.alon and let \JP pickets in protest. taken. "You have to have a lot of tools in this bag," said one source. Calls Probed FCC to Check ReCorded Ads WASIUNGTON CAP) -Rep. Les Aspin says a· growing number of Americans are upset with un- wanted phone calls that drag them from their dinner tables to hear aboµt products they do not want. Aspin was among five members of Congress on Sunday asking the Federal Communications Commission to investigate "junk" phone calls. Other groups already asked the FCC to do something about the unsolicited recorded advertisements, usually made to telephone numbers in a computerized sequence. The· American Gein Society of the United States and Canada takes pleasure in announcing the apPC>intmcnt o[ J. C. Hu~~h!ot~!v{ewelers COSTA MESA NOW t,o Rre~t eouege A.ct . After ~.. Cox objected to possible con"8St advertl1lnf in the campua newspaperi The Sipp0st, ec1ltor Val 'WJ llams ~anceled eQl\test Ida that \vould bave appeared Tuesday. William• ••Id the •ds would ''.undtrm,ne the pa~ .. r'• eredlbllltytt Md did not want the nW1paper eonnettecl with tbe con teat H asad M 1potHman Dali Rieb ltNaled that bOth .... could up up for the conte.t. KO •••• nudltJ wolil1 ot ~· pnmltted and partlclpanta would bl j~ tn 1WfmRltil OT T·1hlrta. PrlH• would b awarded. kb aald tM women's noan ha4 ''1o1ttbeli ..... o1hwD«Ji· .. u REGISTER.ED JEWELER AMERICAN OEM SOCIETY @ ,VOL 71, NO. 51, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGB -l~hree Teen Boys -A1nong 4 Killed • , APW~ THESE BOYS FOUND SHOT TO DEATH IN DES MOINES Jeff Beaven, Jeff Hoffman, Gerald Hoffman (from left) SerVices Scheduled For Ex-Mesa Mayor Funeral services will be held. ednesday for former Costa esa Mayor Arthur H. Meyers. no died Feb. 18 in Canon Citv. ev., of an apparent heart al· ck. He was 84. • 1 Former Costa Mesa mayors obn Smith, Alvin Pinkley, Ulard Jordan and Claire elson will be amonc the pallbearers at the 1 p.m. 1e,cvice1 at St. Andrew•a Presbyterian Church in Newport .Beach. ·Before mariDt to Canon Qty ·elJbt 7ean .so.. Mr. lleJWN ltied for rr iean ID Costa Men. Re aentJ4 CID tbe e!\f Plamd1" Commlaslon •nd tbe City ouncU, becomina the d~'s fourth a mQOr from 196CM2. Jn private Ufe, Mr. lleJ91'1 "Was employed at C local amlnation firm. He was an avid rapsbooter and a lona·tlme member of the Costa Mesa Uons I Club. Mr. Meyers is survived by bis widow, Helen )(eyers and dauchter, Betty J. Jena. both.of Garson Ctty; brother, Robert Xeyers of San Fernando and sla- . te'r, Gertrude L. Knott of ,Jl()Ctford, Ill. Mr. Meyers also ~avea four aranddilldren and . ...., ............ SUCOUM8S AT 14 Former M8yor Meyere three ~ancicblldreo. The f amity baa suuested memorial cootribuUons to. St. Andrew's Presb)'ta'ian Church. • )Joaaa Igaored Rim j~:Top Carter Aide '.';·AcCU$ed of Spitting ,....., ' .. WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter'• chief aide. HamUtm Jordan. is denying a J'9P0rt by a Wublqton Poet col· =Dlat that be spat a mmt down front ol a youn1 woman's louse aft~ she acorned bis !iidvancea. • ••1 did not spit at w. I can ~ate that cateaorically." i,Sotdan said ln ~·to RudT" rMasa•a "Fl'Ciat P8'e'People" eol· • D that appeared in the Post OD day. Coast DES MOINF.Si Iowa CAP) -Three teen-ace boys who were doing remodelin1 clean-up work were fatall7 wounded by shots in .the back of the bead and left side-by-side In a downtown building that bad housed an adult bookstore. · Three blocb away. a clerk in an adult bookstore was later found shot lo death. But authorities said they bad no rea·. son to believe the ahootinp of the boys were related to the death of the clerk. who they said wu tilled during an apparent robbery. Two of the boys were dead at the scene Sunday, the third died later in a boapltal. They were found lying f•ce down lo the former bookstore which had closed a few moothl ago. Assistant Police Cblef Billie Wallace, a 27-year veterau. described the scene aa 0 the moat gruesome l have ever seen." • Wallace speculated tbat whoever shot the boys may have been look:lng for eomethlnc lo the vacated bookstore bulldJ.ns. The young abootln& victims were Jeff Beavers, 14, and Jeff Hoffman. 14, and hia brother, -Oerald, U, all o( Des liolnea. Jell Beaven and Jell Hottman were dead at the scene, Gerald Hoffman died after sorcery SUn· day Dlpt. Polk County Medical E•· amlner R.C. Wooters 1.Ud tbe boys were all shot in the bead., probably with. a larJe-eallbet re- vol.,.,.. No we~ wu .-.4 et the scene. ....._ '!'be JUUf.M ... tateD tit -dowat.wi · ,buUcU9j 1 .. •d•~ mCll'DIU W tbe1JWliDAD "°J&' fatber, Oen.I•. a .-v.etor wboee ftrm la ~ tbe buildlnl lato. l'eltaaraaL Police said tbeJ knew of no motive la the abootinC of the boya. · "We know t'Obbery wasn't the motiTe," said W~. Polle• weH searehlDI for three men ill the a1utn0. One wu seen. in a neart>Y draaston Sunday and thethlrd WU aem bl • an alley. Abodt flye boon after Ute boys' bodies were foand, police were called to tbe Adalt Center book•tore, where a clerk. Willlam BUfwiD. ••WU l1iftl dead beb1ncl a eCJUllter with a 1un1hot wound ta th• head. Pollee Hid robM.Q' waa a poaible moUvetn the 1boottng. Tb• ecmputmenta of -oPeD cub drawer were empty, but• there wu atm some moneJ at. the back of the drawer. Pollce said · an eaUmated $USO was taken. Oxnard Klan Fights Aliens· OXNARD (AP> -Tb• Ku Klux Klan has held a doled meeting at a local motel to dia- cusa stralAlliea that include ex-· pan~L: crusade ·=~ legal In Ventura • 'the IQm hu beell pa the Mexican border ln an effort to keep the undocumented workers out of the eount1'7. Gabriel Serrano. cbalrman for the Ventln Couat;J Ch~ of La Rau Unida. a llulcu- Amerlcan dYll rllhts 1roap, heard about the senton -.id• up plctetaba ~ · t'l'ax &lief · · . Hippo Roams Again ·Over Coast Ter:rain • By PIDUP aOSllA&IN Of .. o.11'1 ""' ...,. • . How you gonna keep 'em down on the farm, after they've seen Lagunallllls? That's the question that's gnawing today at ofllclals of Lion Country Salad. where Bubbles. a wanderlmt-1trucli: three-tan hippopotamus. today a1ain sneaked under an animal compound cat.e and went for • stroll Leon Unterbalter, manager of the park, said Bubbles bad been spotted at m1dmomlng, after a three-hour search, ambllnf across an open field toward Leiaar,W(ll'ld. _, ·-. . Part t'Ulen, armed wtth a tran9ulll&er aun. crossed the field ID Jeeps and planned to herd Bubbles back to the park. Fallinl tb•t• ran,.en were prepared to fire a dart Into the wanderlq hippo to put Iler to sleep. tbeD scoop her up lo a front-loading eartb-monr for the ride back home. . BobW. uc.pett hm tll• ~ lMt'held.Q. ICl.,....,,,,I ... -• ~ Kl'llDllf U.81n Dlel'O Cnek =-d. -.t • a U.. ClOulltzy rlftr area, That tlme 0alleto0t)aer~ber. Irvine P>Uce. -pa.rt ranaers * * * and county sheriff's depuUes scoured the bills and nearbyrea· identlal neighborhoods in search or the African duo, but saw nary a wiggling ear ol either mother or child, who wandered back ootbet.r own. . Unterbalter ·aald that after that incideDt, an ovemigbt hold- ing area was used, with a locked sate. to pen. the anima1a-plus seven-fellow hlppos-wblle some way Is-found to fix the oreelc fence. • · Lock-up last night waa 10 p.m. Unterbalter aald a hippo count· showed everybody tucked in fOI' the nichL But a determined Bubhl• •• who appar.mJy baan 't ticked her ur1e to travel, leaped, or 1DCl'9 likely, dragged, herself over •: four-foot &at.er made her way down the creek and got out the aamewuabedldlaatweek. • •'Wheo we catch her .,..,. ~ inc te lock her up eoo4 um Ume,'" Vnterhalter aaict. "iDd 1et ber~to~ Jaoln• .. nYil~-~,.. . tJlia an~ deStre t.o ""* Leisure W.tll7 • Said Vnterhilter, -rile lf'llD ts gr~ on U. other aide, I pess.•• * * * Gator Fo1•11d Jungk Creaiures on Prowl Ask miy Irvine police olftcer: It's a Juneie wt there. BESIDBS ONE loose Llon Country Safari hippopotamus to worry about today, officers bad been kept busy over the weekend t.rackin& down an alligator. Saturday, Unda Pounds ~alled police to report she cQturecl the reptlM ID San Joaquin Marsh. Nobody at headquarters wanted to touch It with a 10.: foot pole until llra. Pounds said It was only 10 inche1 ton1. OFFICE& LINDA Torkelson drove out to Mrs, Pounds' home to bring it back alive. Said Mrs.. Pounds, "I eo often to the marsh to feed the ducks. l'v• never Men an alllaat6r there before." Neither had Jrvlne police, who promptly carted the srowing alligator to the animal shelter .. "WE"VB BEEN asked to pick up some weird reptiles," said Debbie Moser• animal services officer. ••but this la ourfint alligator." She t.beoriJed the animal bad been sold by a pet shop, then tu.med loose by ita owner who noUced lt was getting blt1er. ' .,·caay GllAMVILLE ............. Mental bealtli official• esUmate that • _pereeot of tbe adult IncJoehl=•e Nlqeea llv· lnl in Orange County aaffer tro111 eltber depnukln. anxiety reactlom, psycboaomaUc ll1· nenes or alcohol abase. "Given the maf.11tude ot prob- lem condition• • amone the adult reftafees. officials aay tbey -wfll uk the federal eovernment.· for tu.ndine to hire six additional blllngual mental health workers. It is estimated in a report to the county Bovd of SUpervlaora ·that 20,000 to 21,000 ref\leees from the Indochina wars now live ln Orange County. They began arriving here in 1975 Sn the wake of the Vietnam War. And the mental health prob- 1 ems. cited in the Human Services >4ency report to CO\m- ty supervtsars aren't the onl,y problems facinat the refugees. They also have a housing prob- lem. "Jn the main, the refugees have found jobs paying below average salaries and have slipped between the cracks ln Orange County's housing market." according ·to the r&- port. ••Many Southeast Asian families living ln the county ex· ceed federal s~arda for over· crowding (2.5 persoua per room)," the report said. i ' . It noted that ·m8JlY ~ families are large, run.mug • high as from eight to 10 penam per family. And in Orange County'• hous- ing market the bousing Deeds for famWes of such size is appanat.. • ly exceedloc the refu&ea' abili· J *17w~. l'he report pointed out also that maey refugees are bavina • dlffh:ulty movm4U::::t the • COUDCIY clue to 0 aD4 ~ readJqbarriera. A ·•herlff'a report. for ex· ample. nld aome refugees tend · to wander about in traffic without bowing the rules ot the road. As a result, a high number ot them have been involved in auto versus pedestriap accidents. A poll of law enforcement agencies throuabout the count;y showed that most newcomers from Indochina "are lawa· bidinf citli.ens." Tb involved in skirmishes with c;:, law have, in the main. been suspected of minor o!· fens ea such as shoplifting. Police observed that in ean. frontation with other groups tbe • refugees ••can take care ot themselves'' due, in large part. "to their prior existence in a war-tom COC1Dtr7. •• The report indicated theie Is only one law enforcement officer in the county who can meet Southeast Asian .. langua1e needs." "'H«>Wfter, be cannot meet the lanauaee need of the enUre Oraqe County law enforcement com mun.It)', .. the report aald. It foresees an increase Sn the • number of refugees IlviDC in tha FV Blaze Briu_gs. ·co=~~:n:.:,-l $7 ,200 in Damages Corporati'on 1 Spontaneoua combustion "'We WOl'ted the lnftlttaatl<n Proposal Eyed within a pile ot dirty diapers all the way clown to tbat. .. the WU blamed today for a $1,JOO ftff department spokesman add· By T--~ees 1ara1e fire ln Fountain 'Valley ed, pointlna out all other a.-u.rJ., Sunday. potential cauaes of the 11:18 The blase at the Mlcbael a.m. gata1e blase were· AnthODJ home. 9Z25 La Grande eliminated. Clrcle. eaufecl •bout $5,000 He said after the suspect dam ace to the •arage, which diapers ai the bottom of the pile wH eniulfed la flames when of rubble were •cooped up and firemen arrived. • depoalted .away from the C011tellb of tbe tuaie lllclud-. Anthony bome, tbq burst Into ln1 an older automobile, which flames of their own accord ooce wu destroyed. added an ad· a«ialn. • · dltlOnll ta,500 ~ the AnthollY famu1•a 1011es. flremen Newport'1efesa school trasteea will meet in speelal aesslma Tuesday ~t to review a pro.. posal to form a non.proftt cor- poraUoo for the sale of d.latric:t.. developed educaU011al JDaterials. Pouible . • estlm~ District officlals say a nm. proflt corporation must be lormed in order to eliminate poeslble lawsulbs from private buslneues because of district competlticxl ln the marteUna cf education.al material. , A fire departm•t 1po'kennan Aid tt ia rare for chemical re-- acUou wttlaln ICl&.ltd dlapert ~ result la apoataaeoaa com· buatlon Into flam.. bat con• fti'mect there are other euea on ~ The plan to be outlined at 1:31» p.m. Tuesday at Andersen School lo Newport Beach calla for transtonntn& the current dis· trict lntormatlon and Computer Services Division into tbe Newport-Mesa Educational Research Corporation (NMERC). In addition, the dis· tric.t would reCelve an additional ~mputer from a manufacturer .. , partial payment for tbe rieht to market NMERC products. Dlatrlct officials estimate the district'• aeneral funcl wou.ld .benefit by about '520,000 annual· q UAder &Mnew llttup • . ,~ .Five Make Eight Snow-covered figure-8 tells the story for the Kienast quintuplets of Liberty Comer.· N.J. who celebrate their eighth birthday Feb. 24. The quints, children of Mr. and Mrs. William Kienast, are, from left, Amy, Gordon, Ted, Abigail and Sara. One Contract Near? Miners Reach Tentative Accord With Firm · WASmNGTON (AP) -The striking United Mine Workers union today reached a tentative contract agreement with a ma- jor independent coal producer as Labor Secretary Ray Marshall began consulting with con: gresslonal leaders about "de- finitive" action to end the 77-day-oldsoftcoalstrike. · · Administration officials and union leaders said they were hoping the tentative agreement with the Pittsburgh and Midway. Coal Co. would break the stalemate in the national strike. P&M, whic.h is owned by Gulf Oil Corp, is not a member of the Bituminous Coal Operators M· sociaUoo, wblcb represents the Jarge coal companies. BCOA • members mine about haU the nation's coal. P&M has 800 to 1,000 mine e mployees and six mines in Kentucky, Miuouri and Kansas. The tentative P&M pact must be approved by the union's · bargaining council and the un- ion's membership. If the contract ls approved by the miners, P&M could begin producing coal, helping to ease shortages in some areas. But more importantly, the tentative agreement ls expected to in· tenslfy pressure on the BCOA and the UMW to come to terms. It was not immedJately clear how long it 'tlt'ill take for the tentative P&M contract to be vot~ on by the miners. The principal UMW negotiator in the P&M talks was Thomas D . Gaston. a frequent critic of UMW President Arnold Miller. Ooe source said Miller "wu not i n v o Ive d .. 1 n t.h e P & M negotiati()JlS. Merlin Breaux, Gulf Oil's vice president for industrial re- lations, aald the tentative P&M contract represented a com- promise between what the UMW. wanted and what BCOA wanted. The UMW's bargaining council previously rejected a BCOA of. fer because the union objected to clauses lmpoaln1 penalties on miners who 10 out on wildcat strikes. Breaux said other coal com· panles bave three alternatives: follow the PAM co11tract pattern, continue 11eg0Uatons wlth the UKW or 1tand by and let Cart.et intervene. Sources said the tentative • PU contract does not provide fines for mlnera participating in . ' c: DAILY PILOT ,. .. _...,.... UNION PRESIDENT Arnold Miiier wildcati strikes. Wages could rise a maximum of S2.40 an hour over three years, includin1 cost- o f -living allowances. UMW minera now avera1e $7.80 an hour. One source said the contract. calls for P&M to guarantee the health and peoalon benefit.a of min era and their dependents. However. a second source aald the contract was unclear on ibla point. The issue of benefits bu been a ~ey ~cklog point in the ne1otiatiom between tbe BCOA and the union. The breakthrough in the P&M contract came as administration officials were exploring the poaslbillty of encouras.lng in· dividual settlementa between BCOA companies and local UMW units. The 1overnment could provide mediators for such an effort, for example. althoup this process would be tlme-cooauming. Manhall, as be be&an his COG· sullaUona with con1re11ional leaden. aaid· no declalon bas been made cn what alternatives the administration mlaht pro-pose to eciavess. . . "We are just tryln1 to get some idea what memben of COIU[reea are tblnkln1," be said.. M&nhall lndlcated he wanted to find out bow quickly Con- gr es 1 might act on any admlniltratioo proposal. White HouM offlclals say the admlnittration wtll comult with the ~leadership oo a series of options includin1 temporary federal seizure of the eoal mlnel, binding arbitration or lnvokioitheTaft-Hart\ey Act. · SoUl'ffB said Carter is likely to recommend a combination of these •• ''Y oa have to have a lot of tool• in t.h1a bag," said one source. l.aguna Cops Hunt~ Knifing Suspect Laguna Be8cb police are seek· iog a man they believe jammed a buntlnl knife Into the stomach of a transient followin& an argument' at a party early to- day. Friends rushed Gerald A. McNutt, 25, to Souih Coast Community Hospital in a van following the 1 : 20 a.m . altercattoo In an apartment. at. 4.55 Bent St. He wu reported in stable con· dllion followin& 1ur1ery for knife wounds to the stomach, hospital om~ conflrmed. Police Sgt. A.J. DeLuca aid be and Officer Linda PbiW~ pulled up in ftult of the Bent SV'eet addre:u jmt u a private • van roared awQ" from the curb and down tbe street. ••we radloed for a patrol unit to follow the T&D to the hospital," Detuea sad todq. Police oftlcen found a bunt!Jii bite on the in>und outside the apartment and anested oue 1\11· pect wbom they later released. Deiectlve• are aeetlnf· eother man who wu present at • the Bent Street partT but said· they did not want to identify the suspect. The lmlCe-wielding suspect faces charges of UNult with tn. tent to conmllt murder, DeLuca said. Police believe the incident was sparked by an ar1ument over a woman. X.mtedFilm Cance& Job . PHILADELPHIA (AP) Dallas Alinder says he is reslp· in1 from the Philadelphia Cultural Allain Council because ot bis appearance in an X-rated movie. · Allnder portrayed a rich man 1D "The Divine Ob1e11ma," which wu ftlmed lD 197•, and is plQtna In tbeatena here. He ap. pears In the tum fU11y clothed, however. TONIGHT COSTA MESA C ITY COUNCIL -Regular meeting, City Hall. 6:30 p.m. TUESDAY, FEB. Zl CANDIDATES FORUM -. Kiwanis Club noon meeUne Costa Mesa Women's Club. • 1 .. BEHIND THE HEADLINES" -Dr. Giles T. Brown lecturer, OCC Forum. 7:30 p.m. Frmds.tbked For Reward BERKELEY <AP) -A campaign is under way to ralae $25,000 in reward money for information· leading to the c..,ture and conviction· of a Ber~eley rapist nicknamed "Stlnky." The City Council bas pledged ~.ooo toward the reward fund. Fund-ra.laers said they hope to raiM $1 from each Berkele)' rea-ideat. Police 1&7 the foul· smellln1 man bu raped more than eo women since 1973. REFUGEES cur over the oat three )'ears.. Cited as ruaons for anUcipat- i.n.C added refuaee ml&r•ti<lo to Orange County are: -EU.U.c concentration or Southeast Asians wbo tend to at- tract others to their com, munlUes. -Oraa1e Cout7•1 low UD· employment rate, S.7 percent In January .. -Oraace Co•at1'1 usually mild climate. --coodnlq mlo'atloa to the U.S. by refugees from Thailand. a wave of mterauon that ls a- pected to deposit about 20 percent of the newly arrived rel- uieea in OranleCounty. UAW Aids Miners DETR01'11 (AP) -Local Z2 of the UDfted Au&o Workers is col· lecUD1 food and cln«htn1 to aend to •trikiac West \'lrllDJa eoa1 miners. UAW Local 22 Pr.:ldent Frank Runnels said the loeal's 20.000 members will caravan the 1ooc!1 to the coalflelcls and Join miner picket lines. Short Thief Bags Beer lrrine poliee IQ they'd ' like to collar the buralar wbo'1 been dartinc in and out of ll1ra Socher'a· DotoDoor. . !llra. Socher, 32, bas been victimized a half· do1en tlmel by a buqlar wbo each time acoota throuth the swlnlinl door, ateala a little liquor, and ICOOU back out. The latat bur&Jary at the Socber residence, 29 ·Ash Tree Lane, was Fri· day, when several bottles of German beer were a.tolen. police said. Dlltr .............. ·wadaillgtoa's Beae.li D1Jg Beacbgoers soak up sun in Newport Beach, where springlike weather during holiday weekend made winter seem remote. Uf eguards estimated th-ere were 20,000 people on the city's-beach's Saturday and 35,000 Sunday. There were more today. Air temperatures at the beach hit 64 degrees, with the' water temperature at about 60 degrees. Surf was small. Nude V-retim FleeB &put In Huntington A 23-year·old female hltdlhilter told police she wu raped. beaten and cut In a Hunt- ineton Beach lnduatrlal area by a man wbo picked ber up SUD· day Digbl. Police said the nude rape vJCUm fled from the rear of a factory m Cl8)' Avenue when sbe aaked her attacker to ntrtne ber dotbes. ! Tbe man had forced her to dJs. robe at m11..,,,mt. The woman uld the bid from beT attacker and later broke into an olftce at 7601 Clay Ave., and telephoned police. Tail's Tal.e: . Why Take It? TOKYO CAP) -Horse- tail thieves have struck at the Hlbino Riding Club of Osaka, cropping the tails of 13 o! the club's 15 horses. "We're anable to ex· plain why." a club offlcia1 said. "Hone talla don't command fancy prices, although they are used for violin bows, f1Shing tackle and shoulder paddin& 1D. dress sulta." · • It takes at least three years few. horse to crow a full-lensth tall, he uid, and asked, .. What are they going to do to swat flles in the summer?" A. Peek Booed NOW to Picket College Act OGDEN, Utah (AP)- Weber State Colle1e is planning a "cleavaae cont.est" to ralae money for a campua lltfrary magulne. The local chapter of the NaUonal Org~zatlon for Women says it will picket the contest if it lakes place. President Cathy Cox of the Ogden NOW. chapter aald the contest, s cheduled to be held within the next week or two, wu "offensive to many students .. and would exploit people. H and M Body Works, an off· camplll group sponsoring the contest, said money it received would help fmance the annual student literary publication. FirstStooe. After Ms.· Cox objected to possible contest advertising in the campus newspaper. The Signpost, editor Val Wllllams canceled cootat ads that would have appeared Tuesday. Williams said the ads would •'undermine the paper's • credibility'' and did not want the newspaper connected with the cont.est H and M spokesman Dale Hicks stressed that both sexes could sign up for the contest. Be 1aid nudity would not be permitted and participants would be judged in swimsuits or T -shirts. Prizes would be awarded. The· ~merican Gem Society of the United States and C~nada takes pleasure in announcing the appointment o( J. C. Hu~'f?fw'!ot~~v{ewelers COSTA MESA aa REGISTERED JEWELER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY @ c I' ( d .. ~ • t J I • . • A;t ~:~yPriots to Try Arab ·1Jerrorist~ ~~"4Wrly Reel-We Gives Up QUINCY, Maas.. (AP) -An elderly recluse who bad kept P._Qllce at ~ tor 12 days with a iibotlUQ was taken into cuatod)' • ls afternoon. Quincy Police LL Jamea Fay Hid Mary Re&ina Connor, 71, wu grabbed by patrolmen when •he opened the door of her home. No abota were fired, according to Fay, who saJd that the loaded eu.n waa found near Mra. Connor. The woman. who had been charged with aasault arter threatelll.q two boya with the 1bot1un. was taken to Quincy Ci· t)' Hospital, police said. Quincy police were called to the home Feb. 8 when the family next door complained Mrs. Connor threltened to shoot their two sons over a dispute over fees for snow shoveling. Officers bad staked out lbe house every day aince. Mrs. Connor, a retired telephone worker who baa rarely been seen by her netchbora in the last decade, sald she would "rig up the gun to kill myself if • anyone tries to come in.•• She said she had a rifle with a telescopic sight and a shotgun. Police had not seen any weapons, but say Mn. Connor's late husband, Eugene, owned weapons and taught her to shoot. Officers said they bad put off a direct confrontation with the woman, hoping that she would give up. A warrant was obtained for her arrest after the alleged threat. LB Winter Festival· · To Contimle Artists and craftsmen con- tinue to di.splay their works on the Festival of Arta sround.s tJm week du.ring the 15th annual Winter Festival in Laguna Beach. The Chamber of Commerce s ponsored festival includes work.a oC more than 125 artlsan.s,· including an exhibit by four con~ temporary artists of Mexico. A pbotograpri1c anow s p o nsor ed by the Laguna Greenbelt will be on display con- tinuously throughout the 17-day run of the festival. That exhibit includes photographs of the gr eenbelt a re as surrounding Laguna Beach. The winter festival is open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily through March 5. Admission is $1 Cor adults. Children under 12 :admitted free. ·sun Heats. Up .North State By The Aasocla&ed Press Northern California will con- 'tinue to enjoy almost summer- like weather as a protective shield of high pressure remains strongly entrenched over the state .. • The National Weather Service "Hid the nearest Pacific storm ts ·located about 600 miles west of . 1San Francisco but it ia expected to weaken considerably by the time it reaches the coast on Tuesday. On Sunday, above normal maximum temperatures were widespread, with rudJngs rq- ing mosUy in the 60s and 70s. SIGNS FOR THE TIMES Wordamlth Hano UmyonRoad HOMirds Eyed ByLagunan Lagunan Arnold Hano thinks he bas a solution of aorts to the hazardous condiUons on Laiuna Canyon Road. And he's con- vinced city councilmen to form a committee to look into bia prop- osition. The c i vic activist and freelance writer wants the city to initiate a sign-postine pro· gram for the scenic roadway to get motorists to slow down on the winding highway. It's all done with words, in Hano's plan -and tbe first thing he'd-do is c hange the canyon road designation from "scenic highway" to "scenic road." "Highway means epeecl, ·· Hano told council members. H.la plan calls for a sip al the San Diego Freeway exit that reads: "Welcome. You are now enter- ing a sceaic road. Slow down and enjoy it.'' · How do you 1et all those words on one little alp? You doo't. Hano su11eata the old·faahioaed Burma-Shave sip concept -a aeries of aip.s along the road to 1et. the menace acroaa. Hano aays the sta11erecl alp concept forces motorietl to slow down in order to read the message. His other preliminary posUn1 plans include: -Deer --cl'ONing elpa that read: "Deer aqd humans abare' Ulil apace. Let's respect them both.'' -No Paastnc Zone 1i1na would be repla<:ed with .. No- Passing Zone ..• Please." Hano goes turtber wltb a followup alan paat the 1one which would read: "Thank JOU for not passini," addinl that be prefers •'tbe auiar rather than the fly-swatter technfque." -At the entrance to the city, Hano would bani a atp that reads, perhaps: ''Tb.is is an art colony, whose ueatest art ls the art of living." -Other signs along the city's portion of the seven-mile roadway would include pointing out features of the canyon, such as the 50-year-old cottonwooda, or the Indian caves. All thilr for the purpose of slowing down the motortsts. Hano admits h1s signs would not conform with those of •'the great aicnmater in Sacramento:• but he believes a local alp committee mi.ht be able to convince CalTraos Director Adriana Gianturco that the plan ls feasible. Oswald Assisted Russia? NEW YORK (AP> -Lee Ha"ey Oswald may hue pto. .vlded the Soviet Union With aecret lnlormaUon about the American U·2 plane, enabllnl It to ahoot down Francia Gary· Powen' spy plane in 1960, ac- cording to a boolli. by author Edward Jay Epstein. Epatein al.so a~s in his book, ..Le1end: '!be Secret World al Lee Harvey Oswald," that tM FBI, anxious to support its flnd. ings that Oswald acted alone in the assassination of President Kennedy , r,lied upon statements of a Russian defector who may have been a Soviet secret agent trying to dispel any connection between Oswald and Soviet intelligence. And in an interview in the New York · magazine, Epstein says that in 1962 a Soviet official attached to the United Natioo.s duped former FBI Director J . Edgar Hoov• into thinking be had defected as a Soviet· secret· police officer and fed Hoover falle information about Russian acUvtties, information that was pused oo t9 the White House. Epstein says Hoo'ver believed that with the help of the oftlcial -code named •·Fedora." -he could compete with the CIA, and that Hoover did not pass the in- formation on to the CIA and re- futed to disclose "Dedora's" identity to the agency. Epstein says that from 1962 lo 1m. "Fedora" provided the FBI with misleading information on a wide range ofsubjects. . Two excerpts of Epstein's book are in the Mal"cb issue of Reader's Digeet, which will publieh the book in April. LB Woman Succ11mbs to Crash Injury· A young La1una Beach woman wboee unborn baby was lialed as ., traffic f atallty last week beame the second victim of the same accident when she died Sunday In Mis s ion eommQnlty Hospital. Veda Fresquez, 18, of 220 Paclflc Coast lll&bway, Laguna Beach, died from injuries auff ered Tuesday night in a · · motorcyde accident, according to a col"Oller's report. The woman wu a passenier on a westbound motorcycle that !'ilpottedly went out of control anct crashed as it rounded a cune on Ortega Highway about 14 mU. east of the San Dieco Freeway. After ahe was taken to Mission Comruunity Hospital in critical condition, doctors at the hospital attempted to save the woman's unborn baby's life through caesarian surgery. The 8~-month-old fetus did not survive the surgery. Wllliam Parrish, 21, of 394 3rd St., Lafuna Beach, was the ~iver of the motorcycle that crashed as it rounded the Ortega ·fflch1ny au.rve. Parriab waa allo taken to the hospital In M118lon Viejo. His ln-~ juries were described as less : serious. Nixon Call Recounted HalJeman S<.iys He A.Ired fo~·Watergat,e E~ NEW YORK (AP) -In th& following excerpt from hla book' ''The Ends of Power," B.R. Haldeman describe• a phone call in which Nixon told him be was resignlq the prealdeoc)'. · Wedneadq mornini, Aus. 7, 1974. Jo and I were ba~111n early breaklut at ber f '1 beach bouso in Newport Beach.. The telephone rans and I answered. The Wblt• H;o111e operator wu on the Uno an4· aaid the president wu callln1. • The usually •trool, reaount voice was •ub4ued, ttrtd, d• teated. .. BOii I WANT YOU to know: I need to cOoti.nu.e to tunctlon as president. Abd l can't let tht country be tom apart and our foretoa pollcy destroyed by alx montb1 or more of an lm- peacbment trial" •. ·• cowitry and especially for your succeaor. "I realise this is a minor point ln contrast to what 10u ate now faclq but I thinlc U ls very Im· portant.•• SILENCE. THEN NlXON ,.id. 111 baven't had a chanc• to • atve tbat ~ tboupt, but I aa· lure JOU I wtll. I just don't know •bat abouJd be done." I 1u11eated that I prepare .ome written recommendations -"d aet th•m to btm. l a~lted, "Wben do you ~tu to mate an announcement? ' . . Nbon l.lehed ancl ,.Id\. '1'm juat bot SUN, Bob. Not DelOre toalpt, ucl probably not uDtll tomorrow." I cOuld see ttiat 1 wouldn't ha'N iiiudl Ume to~ pare an1thln1 .•• : 1 11ld1 .. Whatever ~;·.1 wllll )OU tb• .,_ Mr/.~ I Wiiia 1 could dO~to belp." He hid. 'tlw aMli Ulllft'a Dot ma _,... ea dO to Map no•,•' Ud ttie Jl.lat.orlc ..natal ...W. . . . -. . . _.., PlllC ...... "' LM ,..,_ RICHARD SCHLEJCHEA DISPLAYS FLAG DESPITE THEFT Somebody Stole the One He Normally Fnea. FI~·waving Exampk Won't Be Thum1ed Hunt.tniton Beach resident Richard ScbJeleher thinks there is nothing so beautiful as the sight of ''Old Gloey" fluttering tn the breeze. 4 SCllLEJCHEll, A retired aercSpa~ en1ineer, bu been flying the U .S. Flag 24 hours a day in order to do his bit "to wake up America.•' But thieve.a scaled the concrete wall surrounding h1f home at 9601 Castine Drive Sunday night and made oU . with the three bt five-foot Flag that new proudly Crom .. 12·foot pole. ''Thls really burns me up," be said this momlng. "You try to set a good example and do .some 1ood and this is what happens." SCHLEICHER SAID HE is willing to forgive and for1et u long as the culprits bring back hia Fla1. · He said that today being a national holiday is especial· ly m eanineful lo him. He has a backup Flag he ls display- ing for the occasion. Police Chase Leaves I Dead LOS ANGELES (AP) -A hiCh·speed police chase ended with one person dead and three others injured, one critically. Police oCflclal.S said a police car was chasing a car driven by Horace Hays, 28, of Los Angeles, In the south·central sectloa of' the city Sund.ay, when a third car reportedly ran a .red Ught and hit the pollce car head-<>n. The car then bit another vehicle which in turn bit a pedestrian. The passengec in the third car was pronounced dead on arrival at Mornlngslde Hospital and the driver was lilt· ed in extremely critical con- d i tl on. Victims were un· Identified. NIC061A. Cyprus CAP> -TJ\e p~ U1d todQ lt " .. 19aa1DC the aunh18' BDlidan eom111andoe wboM lliiaQli -. • Jetliner be1d by M1t1atn• ol an balluential £Oj6llD •editor WU lollid'by CyijrtOt'·troope. But of. fklm ~ ·SO'Pt·• nquest tUt ta. c:apQft4 1-'ori* be HDt to Calro. A •pok:etm _..allo laid the CJDrDI ~ aqered by tbe fOreiCD IOllltary operatioa OD ita I01L demanded that Egypt re-call ltl m.Wtary attacbe from NicOllL Cypriot forces atopped the E1)'Jlt!ana' a~mpt to atorm the plane at Larnaca Airport in a· bloody battle Sunday ni&bt that left a reported U E&YPtian com- arandos dead. • I~terlor Minister CbristodoulOI Benjamin told a news conference that Cypriot and not El)'Ptian courts would try the two Arab terroriats, who becan the two days of bloodlbed Sa"1t'day in a Nieosia bote1 by ldllinl Cairo ~ editor Youssef el-Sebael, a eonftdant of E11pUan President Anwar Sadat. The pair, who sehed hostages and took over the Cypriot jetliner after the killlnl. were form ally chareed with murder t.oda)'. Benjamin aaid the four dot.en Egyptian soldiers captured in the battle at the airport, 30 miles southeast of here, would be al- lowed to return home with their arm a. An ,Egyptian C-130 mWtary transport arrived in Cyprus to- day to pick them up, along with the bodies of their comrades. It was not known when tbey would leave. 'J'be C·130 that flew them to Cyprus Saturday WU badly dam aced in the battle. Besides the 1S dead, the gov- ernment aaid, 16 Egyptians were wodnded, two were miastnc and 41 otbera had been held as "military prisopers." It aaid six Cypriot soldiers and a West Gennan television cameraman alao were wounded ln the baWe. A Cypriot government spokesman aald today President SpyPOa Kyprlanou has de - manded the l'ecall of Col. Suleiman Hadad, military at- tacbe at the Egyptian Embassy here. lflegtil Ali,en Crossings Up U.S. Border Patrol agents at the San Clemente checkpoint re- ported apprehending 287 aliens Sunday, up from an average of 17-0 arrests logged on recent Sundays. · , "We th.int this is the begbm· ing of the anticipated aea.sooai ·increase," said John Wesson, agent-in-charge. "With crops ne1rlng harvest time, tho nam ber of illegal aliens jumps in the spring. We eipect the number will just keep climb- ine." Mexic an nationals ap- prehended after thef. enter the United States illegally are re- tumeCf to the border, where they are released, Wesson said . ..... To ... M .......... ltJCKY 11CK1' POLITIX: n ta coma~·irt.bat custom in our coastal retioo tba\ "h• eJvlc perlOM put themselves up f<r public oftlce. ~ beeol!lil fair l&m• for au ldnda of outr•le<M.11 treatmenl · The polittclan once be bas declared undldacy. thus bocQmes Ute target for all ~ ol vituJ>erative ecuDment. He la subjeet to the verbal altltp and amrn ot bartenders, barbers, columnl,st$ and conni~ators. oppollna politicians ancJ resuiar people. IUNG·WISE CANDIDATES are •ware ol this. They learn to :slip vetbtl p&mohel, slide alone the ropes and roar away )Vltb verbal countel'·Jabl. It's all part of the \k>Utical thrust. and parry. political thrult and parry. Ttiere are WWJe t.b,lnp, however, that can bappen to a cUldJdat.. for public office. Tbe Wont cut of all ls to be lpored. T1ds bas apparently bappeDed in one in· stance to Jon Br.and, the curnmt mayor of Laguna . Beacb, wbo 1s a (andidate for the state senate from oUr 36th Dt.utcl Brfmd seeki the Republican nomination. in the upcoming primary aQd flnda..bbnself locked in fairly warm combat for it. The HA state senatorial chair ia belnt vacated by the long-time Mr. Bit of thla arena, Denbla Carpen\er of Newport Beach, who bas become ~uated b1 bein& re-elected so many. times. So Denny baa chOlen not to run. This throws the race falrly wide open. , The 3Sth District virtually rambles from .one end ol our coastline to the other and la considered relatively safe for those of Republican persuasion. J..URJDNG OUT IN TUE DEllOC&ATJC winW, however, is the preaenee of Assemblyman 1ton Cordova, wbO hU toed for the senate oo the other Ucket. and is a noted lmoclur:r.otar o( GOP favorites. But tis another story. .... But. back t Laguna Mayor Brand and the distuteful lnstance Qlj~«lllr:l"~UUl-~mit.y. ~ Brai:id is locked in thla f-800 for the GOP nomlnatlon with o&ber candidates of note. There is George ~ well re1uded u a Fountain Valley councilman and former acbool person; ~ F. Holden, an insurance executive; John G. Sebmits. former OC· cupant of the state senate seat; and GU FerlUICJD, an ex-Irvine Company exec who beats the drums for a bualnell-labor eoa1WoD. NOW rr DEVELOPS that the Ora.nae Count.y Bepubllcen Central Committee bas beeD distri~st.t ol its e..,dldatea to civic groups who might waut to beartbe apeU. And that's what. broullbt the bowl indipaUon from .Joo Brand. He claima he got left olf the lists beinC clrculated. Thus Brand find off a letter to the Central Committee types, screaming foul. He wrote in part, .. I can onlY suspect that tbe central ~m mittee is deliberately impeding my campaip or is pllty of arou negligence. My campaign will be a low-cost volunteer effort-The cost of campaigning in Orange County is an outra1e. I do not need to be hindered by the central committee." Mayor Brand sent me a copy of bis letter and attached a note with t.be observation, "This is really unfair and tries my patience." . FROM THE SOUND ol his letter to the GOP bigwigs, bis patience got tried beyond the hold1ng point. Friend Killed Son Sl,ays Father To Rescue Family AKRON, Ohio CAP) -A gun dealer killed a friend and attacked his own family before be wu abot to death by hll IOD. police NJ. Officials said George Loveless, 38, ot nearby Barbartm, opened fire Sunday an u Akron bome wbere his wile and two teen.ace children ware visitlnc. Police said Loveless' wife, Nancy; her cla\aabter. JW. 13; her soa. Jamee, 18, and Salan Epling, th.e owner of the house. fled to a J>ack bedroom when . the, ~• I.AJVelea approacbiQc the bouae. omcera aald Lovelea was armedWltll a machine CUD. " an autoa,.lllc rifle. two platols , an4 a NaMleer ol ammunWan. • # POLICE SAID Adoif Teclca\llS. 31. a. friend of the family and ..,uier guest lo Uae bous,, stayed rn the llvi.Qa robm and was shot. to death. According to police, James. shot bis father In the .stomach with a shot&uD wbeD the man entered the bedroom~ The teen- ager toot tbe rifle fr:0m hi.I father and coDUnlMd 1booting frlm until th& gun was empty. police :saiCI. Mn. Lo•eleH and ber dau,ehter were unharmet. Ila. EpllDe WU 6ot in tbe Jee ad waa in aatlatactory conditloD. Cbaraea have not been ftled again.st tbe boy, wllo wa ~ leued from police custocb' after quest1ontn1 LOVELESS BAD been caim- mlttecl to Falls View lleatal l{ealtb. Center in Akron, but waikecl >-Wl.1 Ihm tbe fadltt7 Friday, Polite SQ be threatened Saturdar to kill bia wife. daaahter ad am. Loveless held a federal Ucm1e to manufacture and aell machine IUDS and often sold weapons to local 1>0llee de- J>'rtments. Be was a aun C!Ol- lector as well as a firearms. dealer, police eaid. ~•Dfl!I No one likes to have his statue covered with snow on his birthday, and George Washington is no exception. So Mike Tempone took shovel in han4 to clear the statue at the Freedoms Foundation in Valley Forge, Pa., seem· ingly in answer to a prayer. NATION / WEATHER HARTFORD. Conn. (AP) -Area residents are "moumint" the death of a loved one -the collapsed root of the Civic Center Coliseum. Three Ulilvenity o( Connecticut psychiatrlata aay people are tak· me the collapse ao hard th.at they will formally research the re- action. They also are urging city of!lciab to set up an Information line to relieve fears abo1.1t other roof" collapsina. Tbe 1,•00·ton roof caved ln Jan. 18 under the weisbt of Ice and snow. No one was injured in tbe early morning disaster wblcb did millions or dollars in damage and closed the facility, used for 1ucb events as hockey games, concerts and the circus. THE PSYCIDATBlSTS, Drs. Allan Tuman, David Goldberg and Mablon Hale or the uni· versity'1 Health Center in Farmington. say they have found indications of a "stress wave" in the community, but they are refusing furtJ\er public comment until their research is complete. _ The Greater Hartford Chamber of Commerce Is COD· sldering the doctors' suggesUoo to fund an information llne for calls corning ln from people with rears about roots collapsing on them. Chamber spokesman Robin Hogan and civic center director Frank Russo said the doctors told city officials that the re- action studied in the Hartford area resembled that observed elsewhere after a catastrophe. .,THEY SAY WE ARE now in a denial phase just like a person who bas someone close to them die would be," said Russo. Russo said the doctors also have noted signs of the second phase in the traditional reaction cycle of loss -anger. He said sortie politicians have already reached that stage. Abonfun Clinic Bombed -~· ''They <the doctors) also said that feelings of guilt are in- terfering with the denial phase for some persons, such as perhaps the architects, engineers and steel company ex- ecutives," Russo said. links Sought in Hunt· for Pattern of Violence FOLLOWING THE anger stage of mourning comes grief and then the recovery stage. CLEVELAND (AP) -Of- ficlala are cbeckin1 for a po•t1ble link between· the weel:end flrebombiDI of a Cleveland abortion cl1nlc and • $200,000 fire at a Columbus abortion clloic last montll. Aurelia Elliott. 48, a worker at the ConcemedJWomen'• Clinic, suffered chdmical bUrna Satur· day when a man entered the clinic and threw a bag at her. The bag, which bit her ln the face, wu believed to contain guollne. pollce uJd. TBE MAN ALSO tossed a de-vice that 5larted the fire, caus· ing $30,000 in damages to the clln1c. '1be fadllty bad only re- opened Friday alter being vandalbed Weclnesdq night. In that incidmt. iocline WU thrown on tile walls and floors and telephone cord• were cut. Damage then wu put at '500. Two abortion rtpta leaders blamed tbe incident oo the in· fluenc:e ol tbe Bomao Catholic Cbureb. •Trom the palpft we•re being· ealled tm11delas." said CarolYn Buell, executive director of th& Preterm Cllnic in Cleveland. WILUAll a.uao OF New· York City, founder of the Abortioft Freedom Leque, said the 11tuaUoo wUl "turn into another NortMna Ireland unless the Roman c.tbolic:s stop !eed- inl the winds of hatred." But tbe Be9. Frank KOHm, dlrec:t« .ti DeW11 for Ute Diocese ol Cle"11Dd. aaJd violence eoes .,atmt c.tbolidlm and the pro. life tnovemmt. .. At tbe Mme time, we have no cOatrol over" people wbo do ir- rational tblqs, but we can't cco- done tbem," Koeem uld. •'Jam son')' this bas happened. It la DD· forbDMl&L'' Snow Trips Mines KUNICH. West Germany (AP) -Authorities Saturday blamed pressure from deep snow ror sett.inf off 300 1mcl mines oo the East German lide of West Gennany'a border in Bavaria. CLEVELAND BATTALION Fire Chief James Higginbotham sald police are investigating a ~aslble link between the two Clinic •Ua9.s. "I undentai)d there was a similar deal in Columbus a few weeks ago and they are t.ryin& to see if there is a connection," said Higgenbotham, wbo was al the fire scene. Investigators on the police arson and bomb squads could not be reached for comment. Tbe Columbus fire occurred last mooth at the Northwest Women's Center. .. THE aBPOllT never said arson, but when you have fire set in 10 different locations, it's appanmt that somebody set the fire:• said JUiee McCoy, in- formation officer for the Columbm Fire Department. A pattern of attacks on abortion clinics across the country bas emerged, said CbrlaUne Brim, public in- formation director for the NaUonal Abortion Rights Action League in Washinlton. In a telephone interview, sbe said her organiiation has re· portl tbat clinica in New York; Omaba, Neb.; Minneapolis; Anchorage, Alaska; Baltimore and Fairfax, Va .• have been the targets ol violence this year. In t.be incidents, she said, people who identified themselves as anti-abortionists entered the centers and pushed and threatened employees and patients. City officials say th~y bo_pe ~covery will be speeded by plans to rebuild the roof. ~·we even have a target dale Cor when the new coliseum will be finished, and the doctors told us this is helpful in dealing with the blow to the community's self.esteem," said Russo. Union Leaders Get Prison, Lashings ISLAMBAD, Pakistan (AP) -A military court in Labore sentenced seven union membe~ to a year in prison and 10 lo is lasbes ot the whip for taking part in the occupation last week of government television stations.· Employees seeking blgber wages aDd other benefits toolc over the stations in Labore. Peshawar, Quella and Rawalpind.i- Islamabad Thursday and operated them until the police stormed the stations Friday and arrested the workers' leaders. A management spokesman said a "sizable number" of the un- ion members have returned to work. Those who bave not have been warned they face dismissal. Mirror of American Life The watch. The . a Course by Newspaper televlsion shows you The ~t ,in Deep Freeze To earn two units, residents of Coast, Rancho Santiago and Saddleback Community College Districts may register by re- questing materials from colleges serving their area. Register at Coastlin.e Community College by phoning 963-0824; Santa Ana College by calling ttie admission office at 835--3000, and Saddleback College by calling 831-9700 or 495-4950, Ext. 291. .Bediril fQUii EXIAmd ~ugh Giil/ COO.t Area Of course, Daily Pilot readers may read the weekly articles for enjoyment. To enhance that enjoyment, Coastline Community College of- fers lectures, community forums, festivals and workshoPS on topics related to Popular:' Culture·course materials. For in- formation · call the college at 963-0811, extension 256. Bridie Fare Hike . 'Illegal' SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -The , txtrll two bits Golden Gate 1 Bridle commuters have been payln1 in fares since Nov. 1 was • collected ille1ally, a judee bas ruled. San Mateo County Superior Court Judge Melvin Cohn or- dered tile brid&e dlatrlct to kick the $1 fares back down to 7$ · cents within ten days after he is- sues a formal ruling. In his decision, Cohen said dla· trict directors were deceptive throughout a series of public · h~arings on the rate hike because they concealed for too long how a chunk of the added revenue would belspent. Crcula Probed MORGAN HILL (AP) Federal Aviation Administration investigators sought today to find out what caused the· crash of a light plane in which four persons were killed about two ' miles north of this San Jose area community. Lt. Dean Madeira of the Santa Cla.-.a County Sheriff's office re- ported the private plane crashed into the muddy wall of San Bruno Canyon just before 4 p.m. Sunday. The pilot was identified as Gary Machado, 23, of San Jose. Also dead was Edward Giss.«ill, 22, of St. Louis. The names Of a brother and sister killed in the crash have been withheld pend- ing notification of their parents. Search Eltfled LOS ANGELES (AP) -A 1 100-member sheriff's posse has failed to find any ot the dozen persons still missing in the flood. swept Big Tujunga Canyon and the search has been calJed off. officials said. The searchers probed the craggy canyons along Big Tu· junga Wash on Saturday. but failed to find any of the vicUms of the Feb. 10 flood, a sheriff's spokesman said Sunday. M~t or the missing were from the tiny resort community or Hidden Springs. which was washed away by the flood. C'IALfuTold LOS ANGELES (AP) -Links between the Central Intelligence Agency and the University of California, dating back to at least the late 1950s, have been revealed in a s eries of documents released by the CIA. according to a newspaper re- port. QUEENIE ~ ,.,. ......... PAIR BOOKED IN AUTO THEFT, DRUG POSSESSION ActrH• Judy Carne and &-tlu1band Robert Bergmann Actress, Ex-hubby Held·· in Auto Theft SANTA MONICA (AP) -JuclY Carne, the "sock-it-~me" girl of the comedy show "Laugh'ln," has been rele•sed from jail follow- ing ber secondarrestln leu thana week, authoriUessay. Sgt. Robert Legerski said Mm Carne and her ex-husbaod. Robert Augustus Bergmann, 31, of Beverly Hills. were each booked Sunday for Investigation of grand theft auto and possession of a controlled substance. M~ CARNE, 38, posted $1,500 bail by Sunday afternoon, but Bergmann remained in custody in lieu of an equal amount, police said. . The couple were stopped in a car early Sunday morning after they allegedly ran a red light. Legerski said. A routine license plate check by arresting officer Frank Fabrega showed the car had been reported stolen Saturday, Sgt. Legerski said. MISS CAJlNE was carrying an ounce of marijuana and about a gram of a while powder in a vial. The powder reacted positively to a test which determined it was "some kind ol. opium de- rivative," Legerski aald. Bergmann was carrying SMeJ"a.l capsules of codeine for wblcb he bad no prescription, the officer said. LAsr MONDAY, Miss Carne was arrested at her Los Angeles hom e by county sheriff's deputies whom she bad summoned to settle a dispute with a boylrlend. When they arrived, the deputies ClllDfiM:ated a plastic: bag filled with powder and assorted narcotics paraphernalia, lllcludiq a sifter, measuring scales and spoons. However, the powder turned out to be a powdered laxative In Kidnap Of Woman NEED A LAWYER. LoWUgalFee •Divorce • Bankruptcy • CrlmJMl • Wiiis-Probate • lncorPOratlon • Accident-Injury •Eviction 2.~0 0-----..----: "I troG't eveo uk for a doale-bll-1 don't have a permit to cany a eonceeled ... pon." , "Mentally ID' Ir i Felons Studied ~ • LOS ANGELES (AP) - Sheriff's detectives have dis- missed speculation that the killer of Cindy Lee Hudspeth, the 13lb Hillside Strangler victim, was lurking inside her Glendale apartment when she returned there for the last time. Investleators said Sunday there we.re no signs of forced entry or a stru&Sle at the $160-a- m on tb apartment \bat Miss Hudspeth, an attracUve 20-year- old strawberry blonde, shared wlth a roommate. THE NUDE BODY of Miss Hudspeth, the first Strangler victim thla year, was found in the Angeles National Forest Fri· day. Her body -the upper torao bearin& signs of a struggle - was found in the trunk of her own car, pus hed off an embankment on the Angeles Crest Highway. The bodies of previous victims have been found -nude or partially clad -tossed under trees and bushes, but otherwise, according to a police source, "it fits the Strangler's pattern exacUy." SPECULATION that the killer was waiting inside !ifi.ss Hudspeth's apartment, or was acquainted with her, grew out of s tatements by a downstairs neighbor, Betty J05epb. Mrs. Joseph had said Miss Hudspeth returned to her second-floor apartment about 4 p.m . Thursday, and later opened the door and asked someone: ·'What are you doln&here?" MRS. JOSEPH bad said ahe sounded surprised, but not dis· turbed, as if she were greeting someone she hadn't seen for a long time. But S unday , sheriff's Detective Frank Salerno dis· counted the nei&hbor's version as "a case of honest confusion." Salemo said someone did ask "What are you doing bett?" but that it was not the viotim. He s aid that person and anolher person who hevd tbe con- veraatioo were quettiooed. POLICE SAID tbat tbe strangler or ltUnllers bad left a "alp.ature0 in Mias Hud.lpetb'a munier -but did not explain the identlfyi.ag element. Miss Hudspeth lived in a quiet Glendale residential area. diredly acro&S tho street from th• apartr:neat of aaotber straneler Ylctlm, ltriltina Weckler. Police bave not ruled out the possibility that the straneler may have known one or both glrls and may live in the im· mediate area. POLICE SAID they have not identified a man Mlss Hudspeth had been datine whom sbe had described to friends as a sheriff's deputy. Bob Young, a fellow student of Miss Hudspetb 's at Glendale Community College, said she began dating the man, identified only as Curt, last summer. He said be was doubtful that Curt was a deputy because of his long, dirty blond, hair. DAILY PILOT . • • . • . . • . MISS HUDSPETll was deacribecl b>'. friends as a frle.Dct- ly ai.rl wbO loved to dance and tuJd taken precauUons aialnst the unbown killer. "It m~ have been aome<Jll! she knew and trusted," clal_T ... ~ Wanda Huff, Miaa Hudapetb • close friend. "If anyt.hing, Cindy WU t.oo careful," Miss .Huff said. ''!ill& locked the doors, never picked up riders she waa juat careful" . ~ Boy, 11, Bume(l Aping Rock .Star ·. MONTEBELLO (AP) -An 11-year-old boy bad to h treated f()f bums after he tried to emulate the fire-breat.hlng lead euitarist 8f; the rock group Kiss, police said. The boy, Danny Mares and a H-year-old friend, bad cov~ ~~ faces with petroleum jelly, filled their mouths with llebter fiuld 8114 spit the fluid past a lit cigarette lighter, pollce said Sunday. Inmates Free Two Guards Held Hostage SAN PEDRO <AP) -Two prison guards were freed unhurt alter being held hostage by two convicted bank robbers at ~ermlnal Island federal prison, officials said. · An all-night negotiating session ended with the release of the two guards early Sunday when the inmates agreed to re- turn quietly to their cells. THE INCIDENT began when tbe two prisoners, armed with a small knife, ISeized the btfo un- armed guarda late Saturday night, sald Peter Hecht, ex- ecutive assistant to the warden. The pri&onen took keys from the guards and released all 91 of their cellmates on the priaoo block. The inmates used the guards' radios to necotiate with tbe u.- sociate ward~ J.R. Johnaoo, askinl for a car and time to 1et away. The two obys claimed they. created a fire-breathing eff~ ~hen they first tried the ~ cedure Friday. BUT A &EPEAT perform an.at.· attempted Saturday in a bact area ot tbe older boy's house, was Jess successful. Some of the lighter fluid dribbled down the ll·year-old's cbln, burnlnc bis . chin, neckaDdcbest. • cbeaL Armstroa1 said the boy WU ~ken by bit parents to Beverly Hospital, where he wu kept overnight for observatiOQ. Hospital officials said hil COC)o diUon was not serious. THE OLDER BOY told police tbe stunt was. inspired by a fan magazine article on Kin led guitarist Gene Simmons, Wbo breathes fire during the group's act lo which other fantasti~ costumed members pretend tJ> vomJtblood. . The petrofeum jell)' w4s supposed to protect their faeell from the names. the youth added. • • ( NIC~ Tl;llMlll'SOI) :": • ' 11THOUGKl'FUL In the DAILY PILOT . . ... ·. We've made available for the home seamstress the same luxurious fabrics available to Sevent~Avenue Designers. Our special guest designer-commentator, Charles Kleibacker, New York coutour designer and lecturer on fashion design will show you how to create an entire·Spring wardrobe with mix and match separates for day and evening. See silks and silk blends plus 100% Qiana® in Vogue pattern creations with designe~ styling that beginners can sew ' . . • J,loard Plays .With -: ..... :Campaign Reform "'. ... ~ Orange County s upervisors have decided now is the ""'ur for them to do something about county political c-.mpalgn reform. Supervisors' timing on the issue borders on the lbtticrous. First they waited until two citizen ~roups, their own .t\tizens Direction Finding Commission and TIN CUP 'ffime Is Now, Clean Up Politics) came up with ~roposed r~form measures. Before that, the county grand Jury sent out a call for obviously needed reform. Then supervisors he mmed and hawed over their own version of a reform measure while, at the same time, th~y speeded up their own personal drives for campaign 16llars. I Supervisors finally came up with an overly elaborate ~rdinance of their own that gives them complete control ~ver a fair political practices commission establis hed in ~he ordinance to oversee correction of campaign abuses. : So what's to say? If the five men who occupy seats on ~he Board of Supervisors really gave a tinker's darn !~~out overhauling the political system that has brought Fgrace to the county they would have done so long ago. , . As a result, when supervisors sit down Tuesday to :eriact their own ordinance they'll simply be paying lip ~ervice to a public demand brought about by their own !abuses. : Their wirnngness to be aggr~ssive players in the !continuing game of.campaign dollars speaks louder than :•.heir words. ! · Be not deceived by what you'll hear coming out of the ;1Joar<! of Supervisors m eeting room Tuesday. All the :;upervisors will be doing is laying down ground rules for ~>thers they r efused to impose on themselves. . ~en Laws Conflict · A decision to be handed down next month by the : tale's Fair Political Practices Commission <FPPC> ! ·ould have a startling effect on the operations of the 38 : egulatory boards that control businesses and professions • broughout the state. ' Under the Business and Professions Code, each of h ese boards -they regulate everything from os m etologis ts and contractors to veterinarians and ccountnnts -is made up of a mix of public members ind members of the business or industry being regulated. vith public members in the majority. But under the Political Reform Act of 1974, which is 'ffm mistered by the FPPC, politicians and members of cgulatory boards are not permitted to vote on issues in 1hi ch they h ave a substantial personal economic ·"ltercst. ,\ test case arose when Robert Treubaft, a ·on-industry member of the state Board of Funeral Jirectors and Embalmers, proposed a regulation that 10uld require writte n permission from the family of the eceased before funeral homes can embalm a body. He then pointed out that the three board members 1ho own or operate funeral homes would not be entitled. ndel" FPPC rules, to vote on the proposal because lley benefit from the $100 embalming fee. · The industry members objected strenaoasty on rounds the regulation could involve a huge cost for :meral homes in the event family members are not eadily available to grant the permission. In order to ecp bodies from deteriorating most funeral homes would ave to invest jn costly refrigeration equipment, they rgued. Furthcrmor<.', they c harged that Treubaft is rcJ udiccd against undertake rs. He is the husband of uthor J essica Mitford whose book, 'The American Way of >ca th, was an all-out attack on the funeral industry. So they decided to take their case to the FPPC for a uling. Wh atever that may be, it could set off a wave of urther test cases in the 37 other state regulatory boards 1hose industry m embers are more than likely to have an conomic interest in the regulations being formulated. And it's hardly likely they'll be willing to give up heir voting rights on the various boards without putting pa figh"' · A clear case of two apparently s ensible laws adding p to one major conflict. • • • 'Pinions expressed 1n the space above ar9 thou of the Dally Pilot. >ther views expressed on this page are tho~f their authora and rt1sts. Reader comment is invited. Address 'Jhe Dally Pilot. P.O. lox 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642....a21. . Boyd/Mules _, ByLM.BOYD Mules were pretty pecialued once. In their lay. they were bred and rained for particular Jobi. :'here were sugar mules, log- :tng mules, potato mules, nining mules, wa1on mules. r hat may have had :ometblng to do wttb their re- ,utation for 1tubbornneH. !bey balked, if a skinner rled to test them outside their education. Question arises u to what ".he word "jaw" meau to a )Ool player. Also, what •'the ·:ue ball on a ltrinJ" meaps. ·) Jaw is the opelllnl to any ~ket on the table. lt the ~ter aQ'I the clle ball .ls ~ a 1trinf, said expert !'ans the ball ii ~ J.1P t,.-~~~--~~---- Dear Gloomy in position well after each abot ao u to lead to another shot. Q. ..Why Is the capital ot The Netberlanda called Tbe Hague?" .. A. Means "The Count'• Bedee." Used to be a huntlq lodge in the middle of a wood a. Q ... Haw lot>g does IUide doc tratmna take?" A. Three months for the dog, one month for the mutes.- Q . ••ffow soon after they re- tire do most men die?'' A. About 30 months ls average. Between the qult· Una and the 81.vln& up takes two and a half years, accord· tnc to the cynical staU.U· clans. But too mucb bu been aaJd about lt already. It'• almost insolent to analne ~he tad fatiaue of fl'• 1ood men who go wben the11r. reed•. _ _.._~ . . ... . . • • Rowland Evans/Robert Novak . Jaworski's Th:reitt TactiCs Alarm· I \. ' • • w ASHINGTON -A spasm or fear Is running through major allies or the United States that escalating demands on South Korea by famed Investigator Leon Jaworski threaten to UD· dermlne established diplomatic practice and jeopardize their own relationship with the U.S. By using threats t.o force a· former South Korean am- bassador to testify in the House Ethics Com mlttee's Korea scan- dal probe, J aworsld bas alarmed not only foreign a llies but leaders of the House. His threat : if the testimony is withheld, be will insist that the House vote t.o shut off U.S. aid to Korea. But under the Vienna convention, approved by the U.S. Senate in 1965, no foreign diplomat can be compelled to give evidence. Former Ambassador Dong Jo Kim, now an aide to President Chung Hee Park in Seoul's Blue Howse, is wanted by Jaworski as a material witness to the alleged bribery of U.S. Congressmen. Israel, Iran, Saudi Arabia and other lar1e-scale recipients of American aid have quietly in- formed congresalonal leaders lbat they, too, would feel threatened tf Kim submits to J aworsld'a tbreata. A SDDL\ll Jaworski threat against the U.S • .SOUth Korean military alliance is partially responsible for persuading the Seoul government to order Tonesun Park to testify fully and freely before the Ethics Committee. Actually, the deal that ls bringing the money- dropping Park back here next week was mainly stitched t.ogetbeP by the Justice and State Departments. The Vlenn ... Convention, now reinforced with quiet but rislng pressures on Wubin&1oo by U.S. allies to observe It scrupulously, bars tbe U.S. from even ap- proaching the Korean govern· meat wltb a similar deal for Done Jo Kim. U.S. Ambassador Earl Waters Richard Sneider was ordered back to Washln1ton last weekend for talks about tho posstbWty of ''persuading•• the Koreans t.o let K.lm submit a statement. However, pressure la out of the question. The present Korean am· bassador, Yong Sile Khn, told House speaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jan. 31 there would be no chance whatever tor the U.S. t.o coerce Seoul Into eompelllne Dong Jo Kim t.o tesWy. When· O'Neill asked whether that ruled out a ''dialogue" -presumably long-distance -the ambusador said nothing that violated the Vtenna Convention •Ould be , possible. That leaves tho· ball JD ttie court of hard-drlvtna <.:ol. Jaworakl, Watergate hero turned Korea scaodal prober. Even House leaders prlvatel,y aro fearful of millt.ary·forelcn policy lmpllcatlons of con- greutonal reprisals e1alnat South Korea for retu.alng to pro- duce Done Jo Khn. What, then. la the 1ouree of J aworskl '1 power to carry out hla threat of reprlaala? THE ANSWD ... partly b1a towertn1 reputation u the na- tlon'•Jreemlnent proseeutor of oftlcl acandal. Beyond that, bowev•. lt rests on Jawonkl'a fiat statement OD ••J141et tho , Press" Feb. 4 Ulat "there are a tew" present members of Oo.ngress who could be cbare~ With "criminal mtacOD<luct•1 tO the Korea scandals. JuaUco Department probers definJtety have not )'et reached that corf· cluslon. and may never f'eacb tt . But bavin1 labelled "• fevl" •ittlng members as likely t.o bO found IUilty of bribery or per. Jury, faworeld bu covered the whole eoo,rets wlth deep suapi· don. "Jaworakl'a threat (of COD· greaslonal retaliaUon againet South Korea) la a moet drast,ic on.e lo the case of Done Jo Kim," a leadlnl Democrat oo the House IntunaUonal Rela- tions Committee told us. "But we are so senattive t.o the inte- grity problem that be could~ liver on it." ONE BOUSE Republican leader privately admits the true reason Congress would risk alienating ita allies and 1ravely damaging Its vital defense 4l1reement with Korea: "It's not total cowardice but it is a little bit craven. Gtven the low e:steerp of Congress, it's the equlvaleqt of Richard Nixon aaying, 'I ai:p not a crook,• and not daring to tell Jawora.ki that he's 101DC too far to prove it." . Tbls Republican leader -never remotely touched by ~ upect ot the Ko.rea scandal ..._ would deftnlt.ety vote to cut ala to South Kena lf Jawonki pres.. sea his case tha~ far. careful White House and State Depart- ment head-counters see no cbanee at all of defeatlnc Jawonkl if such a vote were held today. There ean be UWe doubt that Jaworski will make good on b.1a threat lf South Korea protects its diplomatic right• under the Vienna •venUon. Be tella any Congressman who aaks that failure to get testlmonJ' from Dong Jo Kim will eompe1 Jaworski to inform the American voten hia lnvestig_., tlon cannot succeed. Such madcap investigatory antics may further enshrine Leon Jaworski in th• hearta ~ his countrymen. But the cost t.o American interests throu~ tbe world could be exorbltant. Automated Phone Soliciting Under Fire Althoagh final action probably won't be taken that sooo, the Public Utilities Commission bas set March 3 as the date t.o re-· celve pro· posals to re- gu late com- m er c 1 al telephone sollcitaUons. Tbls un- precedented move to con- trol the number of phone calls that can be made b1 anyone was prompted by tbe unbridled ieal ot commercial marketeers who rely upon the telephone to conduct thelrbualneues. Householders fo?' many years have been haruaed by increasing num berl ot unaollelted telephone 11lea pltdlel whlcb, u everyone bu experienced, always beckon oae to the phone at the moSt in· convenient time. But the 1traw which roused the Ire ol the PUC wu the in· ventton of an automated record- M8ilbox .ing derice which pminit.s phone solicitors to place llterally thousands ol calla dally. To heed of( what the PUC beli9"lll waald be u unwanaot· ed iD9'1iGD d tbe privacy of hom• Tia tel~ tbe com-miaslonert ftnt conaldered in- verted ru. ror uceaive phone call.I. Ora reflecUoo it turtber considered licmstna ot aollctton and the automatic devfcee and, alternatively, the outright ban~ both. IT 18 NOW~ the effect of unl1mited automatic devices on overall telephone service, wbethet' the automated dmces disconnect when a receiver bangs up, and whether su~ scribeTll abould have the rlpt t.o be prot.ect.ed from recetvtne w- aollcited phone calla. lt also ls· studying appropriate ta.rllfs should such calla be allowed. Beblad the whole tread of thought .. to develop a plan wbereb~ harassment of telepbolie aubserlbers caii be eliminated. Sa11eated I• a . ayatem permlttlna aublertben · lo notiff the phone companies of their wish ~ to be bothered by commercial solicltation.s. Under that _plan sales organizations would be required to obtain such llats bet~ eomnienetne a cam- paip and purge their owu lilts. TBB Pt1C bad been eo.nstder· Inf thlt type of regulation even before a bill on the veiy subject wu Introduced last month by Senator John Stull. ms meUlll'eo co-authored by 24 leglslaton, almpJy ~the phone COID• pantea to matDtal.D lists of aub- acriben who don't want \ID· soUctted sales calls, requites sales ftnm to obtain the list 8lkl refrain from calllbg those persona. Violetiona carry sUff penalties ot up to $1000 and 30 days in jail for each offense. Stall's __ proposal closely · parallels bills before Congress authored by Senators Wendell AncJeraon and Congressman Lee Alpin. Bath meaauree, end Stull'•· exempt charitable and pollUcaJ organhations, public z=~ polls and media rating While Stull is fulJy aware q the federal bills he saicJ California Jbould 10 ahead with Its own regulation st.nee the fate ot the ConlresSiooal measures cannot be predicted. ' MEANWHILE PUC Com- missioner Vernon Sturgeon bas put forth what may be an ~ better Idea. M least it is more almpllstlc than the others. Sturgeon aaya. ..Wby bother wlth m~1 everybody say tber don't want the phone calls? l · su11est we require the phone companies to publish a directory of tbose wbo speclflcally l~ cllcate that they do want t.o re- eet ve unsolicited commercial pbone calls." A former businessman and stete Senator, Sturgeon bas deft.. Jy pointed t.o the least expensive way for everybody. The total cost to the phone companies to compile a list ot persons wbo would request to be tncladed in a dlnctory to~" unsolicited sales pttehes could hardly be enough to buy a bag of Jiminy Carter's peanuts~ Handicapped Tots, ~arents, Need This Program.:. To the FAtor: I am very eoocemed about ProJed Nuen bein& discon· tln\fed In June, 19'78. due to insuf. nclent tunda. Project Nueva pro. Wies an elleotlal aervice by of· ferln1 an infant stimulation pro1ram to developmentally dis· abled iD.fantl, 0.3 years old. Over the plat two years, Project Nuev• bal aerved ovn 100 in· fanta and lheir' parents. Babies and motbert participate from S•nta Ana. Tuatln, Garden GroH, Colta Mesa, Newport a..•, Orange, Anaheim, Hmit· inston Beach, Weatmln.ster, ~ AJ1ml~ and Fountain Valley. lbice IO many districts are Mned by thll proaram, I cannot 1Utder1tanc1 why all dlatricta do' not comblne, rather than on.e dlatrict. Oeean Vlw. beinl ~ Pffted. to pick up the cost -which It Will not. . · I VNDatSTAND there li no le1al riiipOIWbWtt t.o provlcs.t pro1ram1 to eblldren undw three 1eara wbo are Jaea- *'•Plld. Ml ........ tMr'9 li ............ .:f ..... llllUtaW.enda Nrtat' time l'hen they will benefit mosL My husband and I are the con· cerned parents ot a 29·moatb-old baby CJuoa) .. who haa cerebral paliy. PrQJect Nuna bu helped us aa )laftlllta o( a special dliht to learn what wa1 beat for Juon and lt • llC'OYldod a cbance to tallt with odser parente who a1lo had a handlcapped chltd. We talktd end shared our •x· perle~ and tbla helped m tQ col)• 'wlth our new ru- ponalblllty. It 11 wttb these WD11 ln IDbld that we feel evert effon to ... tba~ Project Nueva i• made a CODUn·~..;:.P_,.."'· .... ~ ·-mNE B()O'J'JQ; lng quett.loD&: 1. SHOULD tb ere be agricultural land preserved 1n Oran1e Oount)t? 2. Should tbe 45.000 acres pro-posed for preservation be purcba.ed with public fUndJ7 3. WOQ14 JOU auppon a $U$ mllllon boad issue? 4. Do }'Ota believe thae lands abould be aoned .J>VmaneoUy acrlcultural wttboull>W'eh'50f a. lt so. lhoul4 tbe property owner-farmer be 1tv~n some p~ert.y tu relief1 b. Sbould be be ptovt!IH with reclatmed water for tn1gatJon? c. At *uced retest $. Do 10\.l .hav• ~ '1llla--tloat abOUt aQrlcUlt'1rat land preHrndon! I'm all fQt it. It should be done iirtmartlt wtth aoninc and the larm~ ahoulcl be ~ tu re1W and reelatmilid waW' for~ at b&rSaln rat.et. ANDY WING 1upport for Instructor Paul BrennaQ's pc»ltlon on taxpayer "oosts for frivobaa counes In ow: local educational systems. We have paid beavllJ' for buildinf and upkeep of these schools ~ colleges. A O"Ht deal of their re- source• have been spent oa ••entertajnme'nt" cour•ea. A home I~ coune, tor col· le1• cred.lt yet, ls about to be televiled OD Channel SOI . l aupport classes iladb' which teach the basic ABCs a.ocl ea.m- in& skills. 1 evtn sqppart classes tn trivia. lt' the etudenta would pay a fw coanneq.1Urate with the c:oata of .auch cl.uaet. 1'• for tho Jarvll lnltlatlve. [ •lrned. It as 1. prOt.est a1alflst my rtslna property taxu. lf the propo1ltlon paaua, county attncles. ac~ to J~ wiU bo c.a back u i>el'ffllt. S9 ~h•tl MY tU4ll have '°"o iq> 3$>~rcent1lDceU10l • £. 8 . QUILTER I 'l f l .I d . ~· CALVIN KLEIN • DM.YPtLOT JolJ' Eooks IJ9 Eloatlng Meals. "~ operational aide of my bualneu laaChed, and my attorney Hid I and finally admits he'd like to re-waa out of my tree," she aald with sl1n bil position and spend the rest a cbuckle. "But. aomebow, I kziew of bis life as a charter board I bad to dolt." skipper," she said in an tntuvtew. Sbe lnltalled oriental ru1s, a run ''They view it u pure escape. bar. televl1lon, stereo, and a Believe me, it tan't althou1b I . aalley to whip up 1ourmet meall. can't think of anythlni else J'd · "We have several menus but rather be doing now.•• vlslton prefer the seafood to the· When her alrlloe executive et.b.nle d1nners we ofter.'' abe said. ~u1band died of a heart attack four years aao, Ms. Smalley used the estate setUemeot to buY the 1969 model vessel and 1pruce it up. "WREN I TOLD lllY banker altout my boat acbeme, he ... SECU81NG COAST Guard certlflcatlon to aet llablllty ln- auranee lhe hired seven pencns to b•l.P bW prepare tbe meals and 1erve tbe aueata .. tbe )'acbt crutaea paat Alcatra1, AD1el Island and the Oakland estuary. Meals coat '20 a person and usually include 1ucb delicacies as cracked crab, O)'lterl OQ tbe half. shell,, Clnler chicken and Hut.eed scallops. An open bar C08ta $10 per person and the rental of tbe vessel ia $125 an hour, with a lou.r-bour mlnlmum. .. Ha'rinf a party for 30 people, using that menu, would run around $1,400, Including t~ee and tip," she Hid. ••rt would nm about the aame at any first-rate restaurant, without the 1eeneey and the inviaoratin1 salt air." CASTING AN EYE to t!t orange-tint.cl Golden Gate Brict;-.; Ms. Smalley mused, "We never· sot oulside th. e Golden GI because It can get too roi:~ there ls ao mucb to aee Gate.'' In t=.~ean of operaUon, ~ two I · have 1otten aeuick, Another had to much to drtnt alal atum bled into the bay u he d1l"I embarked, · ' She said 1be avera1e1 !OM' parties a week. · "I don't know lf I 'd want ~ than that because I 1et peopl# out," abe said. • ··~ '\ Collectors will recognize masterful restraint ••• CaMn's signature. This i$' $ilk crepe·de Chine, a creamy rosebud print ••• and nothing more than a dirndl skirt, 4-1Z $156 And shawl collar wrap blouce, cream, 4-12, $124 Slmpltt; and sensational by day or night:· Meet his envoy this week; South Coast Plaza Show, 11, Thursday the 23r<b · Innovators:· ' . ' • . · .' .. I .. .. .. , .... \ ' ·!.' '.' ·.· ~ •!' ... ~ . :•: ... . , • .• . . I , 1 .I ;j ' ... • • -"' .. '-_....., __ '3~·· I 'i . DAllY PtLOT Monday. F9bruwy 20, 1971 Sailor .to Raw to A.ustralia San Diego Adventurer to Launch 7 ,000-inile Pull NNll! M4."a~AIUIOLO, , .. I of C.oat.a ~. Cl. PllUH hey tbrlHU"f "' 1971 .i Ille ... Of M. llffd wlft Of~ Arnold ot Cott• , C.., lcrtlng l'll01htt' of Vl"91111a en Of a.Ma Ana, Cl., 4'lld Gery Id of All~Y. c. .• •llltr of rtllfl •• u ...... Ok..._.. Joe "'II•• of EK4Nldo, C.., Mldot Of ~ ea.. " .. o.t'°" of G ~"' Q., ... _...w4 llY • SltltrS 9111 She"• of Oki~ St.tie &allanttr of SM f'ran<bco, ca ... ..., s granckNldr•. Mrs. Arnold ••• t111 _, et Arnours "9odlt Ptla<.e al U40 ~ &!Yd., Cotta Mtw, ca. llt 2S.,...... SN was elM • "*Ober of CM'HfY a-t In CotlA ~. CL .. .,,,., .. --•Ill t>e ;-.:: ~~ :;..~!t~i1 ·~..::. ciltf °""4. 01 I!. 11'1\ St., Co&IA • CM, wltlltlle ltev. Otucll Smlthof Calvary Cll•11•I oflltletlnt . ,...,.nt wlll •et £1 Tore a-t..-, T-.ca. "''-wllOwlslltopey ~Ir .._n mey <•II el Ult 5"\lth Tuthlll Lamb w .. tchfl Cll•Ptl on Wtc!MS.S.y, Ftbt11¥V n , 1911 '"°"' 12 · ,_ to S 00 PM.. Smllll Tutlllll Lamb Coate "'"• Mor1u1ry dl,..<tors. ................ . SllLIY MAltY HANNAH SEELEV, rHIOtnl QI Clplllr-llffch, Ct. P .. wd •••v • on l'tbrutry ti, 1'11 et tllt .., of 9'. A ' nttlvt of EllQl•net. SM Is aurvlved by • lier son Clltrlts *l•Y Of L•Oli.,. ' Nlouel, Ca., •net one orendclllld. ' Graveside .. ,vices wlll tM l\tld on ; WtdMIO.Y Ft.,,_.y n, 1'71 •I 1\:00 ' A.M. tt Htrl)O( U -C.,.,.ltry In • Cosla Mtu. Ct. with Father Htrltn Coyktndell ol St. Jt""'S EPIKOIMll • C~urcll In ...,..._t Buell, Ct. Offklet· ' tn<;1. Fri-whO wl>JI to PtY their • •HPtCh -y cell et lht Smith Tutlllll ' &...mb We11<htt (Nopet at 41 E. 11th • St .• Co1te Mn•, Ce. Ofl Tuudey ... .,,...,, "· .. ,. from SPM to I PM. I Smllll T .. tMll Limb Colle Moe • Mor1U.t'Y d•r..-lon. -UUMGAltTNllt C •RMEN MARIA BAUMGARTNER rold.-.t of ~n ' Ctementt. P~\ed •w•y on Ftbf ... ry ti, 101 s .. rv•••O by ~" lofty • B•um~rtner ol ~ 0.mtftte, C. , son W•ns ~towr of Lo. ""9*t.s. c. .. orane1-r....., ee....._t"'r .,... • "'•ny brot,..,.. -11>len. -u Of , C.11rl1tlen flurlet wlll w It 1 JO P.M.. Mond•1 F--y lO. ""' •• °"' Udy •of F •ti m•,. S•ft Cl ttn•"l•, C• SAN DIEGO <AP) -Pat Sattedtl! thinb be has a new way to quit•~· ing -get in a row*t, aim it toward Australia, start rowi.ne and don't take alon1 any cigarettes. _ SaUerlee figures the 7 ,000.mlle pull should Uike about el1bt to 12 months non-atop. He's spendin& the weeks before bis planned March 31 departure vstlng his borrowed boat. "NOW THAT I know 1 have the rieht boat," the 26-year.old San Dleao adventurer commented. "I know I can make it." He will attempt the grueling trip in the 35-foot Britannia 11, no straneer to trans-ocean crossings. The boat carried British sailors John Fairfax and Sylvia Cook to Australia in urn in a year-long voyage. Fairfax and British custom shipwright Ian Lallow have agreed to Joan Britannia II to Satterlee for the journey. "I DIDN"T ~ven get my hair wet," beamed Satterlee after a hoist roUed him and bis boat over twice in San Diego Bay to test it.s self-righting properties. While Britannia ll wasn't completely self-righting in test.s, Lallow said the craft would be once loaded with water and provisions . •'The tests showed everything is watertight," Satterlee said. NEITHER THE enlrepid Fairfax,, who has several cros..ocean rows to his credit, nor Miss Cook cared to make the long row again. But Satterlee, who bas planned this trip for five years, can't wait lo get st.arWd. ·'The big thing for me is to row all the way across the Pacific," s aid Satterlee as he stood on the dock beside his boat. "Jt has never been done before by one person." · Fairfax bad some unhe4lded advice for Satterlee. _,..,..,,,,_~ .... BArTANNtA It Tail ED FOR BIO ROW ACROSS PACIF1C Pllt SettertM, 21. Hopee ta Be Ant tn Fe•t .. WHAT I ADVISED him is to take a glrl with him," Falrf ax winked. "But be won't have anything to do with it.•• The trip will cost about $20,000, ac- co rding to Britis h Marketing Enterprises, which is financing the ex· pedtuon with bopea for a book and possibly a ftlm of Satterlee's escapades. "Wbat I'm really looking for is being by myself," be said. G.tevolcH ten1ce1 wlll be held on TllfMl•Y •I 10 OD A "' et Peclllc View ~morttl P•••· In lleu of flow.-s ''"'""' re41ue•h meMorl•I con-trOlutlOn& w ,_ to IM AnlfffcMt C-.nter Soclely. Potlflc View Mort""'' d1rteton OANllU Midwinters Winding Down FRANK t... DANIELS, r•ldtftt Of , .. , .... C•. PtHed -•Yon FetlrlMrt • 17, 1'11. Survived i., Ill& wile Vlrofnl•, son Ro""1 ~s ot DI-8¥, • ea., d•1>9hler Nancy !.toll'" of ,,,,,.,., •C&., tnd • qr_,,iieren. Mr. Oenle41 ·•es • retw.d •41111or vke P'"kllnt of tl)e Union a-......... U.S. N .. , Veluen Of WOrld War 11. Ml"-1•1 :.orvlces Wiii M held on T ... Mlty Ftbruery 11 1'11 •t 2 00 PM. ti Pet:lloC Vltw 0.-1 In Heu of·-· t•mlly requuu memorl•t con· triDUllOflS 10 IM A,,....lcen He-1 .U- :.oc lt UOfl. P•clllc View Mort""'' chrec.1or". MIYlltS ARTHUR H. MEYERS, ''"lcleftt of C..rson Clty, Nevlldt.. P~-.. ,, °" Februer1 II. "71. S<lrvl-.d by 1111 wife Helltfl Meye~. a....QMer 9eny J. ~· ot C•""" City, Nevtdo, brollltr Robert Me.,.n of Sen l'<tr-, Ct., sister G«'t""" L. IC_. of Aecl<,_, llllnol• •• ,,_,.._ -J ... -•-<Plhdr .. s....,;ces will be Mtll.,. ~..,.., F_...,., 21, ,,,. .. l:tl PM. ot St ~·s Pt~ Cliur<ll a.-1 with Rev. J.-Tioemls otflcl•ttno. Ml Meyers was • ..,_. r'"IJ<tnt of c.Mt.e Mtta. ca. I« 17 ,...," •net lie ••-tor !he i.t 1 years In CM\Ofl City, Ne¥"6. Mr. Mtyen •M I -ol tt.. C..ta jllW City Caw>cil end torn.r --jll;J~t .. I. ~ .... t --ol !fie lh lvedere Muonlc lode• •H. Bel-re, llllnok -t -of T a~le Sl>rlne l ....,Pt. PtlMIN,..,t fer M•, Mtven will bt Elllt l'ortet. ttfrold Simon. end ,.,...,,.,. Mavor• ~n Smltft, Alvtft PllW!ln. Wlllerd 11 enet O•I,. Nelson. In lleu of " l,_. MIO Wll.ll ,.,.y me•• atlona t o St. '-"drew '• ~4'1tabyterllll'I Cllurcll /Mnwl.el Fund. "'er~y~cll~ .... ~ Hl'ICUUA ·1; 8 VELLI! MAltY !!SPICUZZA. 6', _,... _., Oii hbruery 1'. In lier -lft TOAtln. Sufvl..., IP( husbtf>d AoY f:.Sf>lc11a• of IN -Mio•. She wa hat ..._...,. Of S.a ~le l'lor-.a Clll-Home of BY ALMON LOCKABEY o.ily'11et~--- The 49th Southern California Yacbt- in g Association Midwinter Retatta wound up at 1S yacht clubs Sunday and the sailing extravaganza will wind down to a close at Los Angeles Harbor Yacht Club today when the ocean rac- ing classes conclude three days of com- petition. After a month of blustery winter weather, the we a therm an relented for the Midwinters sailors with pleuant 10-12 knot breezes and temperatures that bad the crews shedding their foul weather gear in favor or the summer aaillne attire of shorts and T-shirts. PLEA.SANT WEATBEll was also forecast today for the windup at LA YC. Mucb ol the Midwinter-action 11ru centered in Orange County with eight yacht clubs hosting some of the mOlllt popular classes. Newport Harbor Yacht Club and Udo Isle Yacht Club teamed up to conduct races for !11 boats in seven classes -in· eluding the popular Naples Sabot; Balboa and Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club handled 89 boats iD eight clusea; Dana Point and Capistrano Bay yacht clubs supervised 84 boat• 1n elebt classes, and Huntington Harbour Yacht Club rode herd on Z1 boats 1n tour classes. "c-.ty, -P.u °"1"".,°' ALAMITOS BAY-Yacht Club had the ~~~a:! c;:: ': ~ largest number of boats with 21S bt 10 a.-A,,,....Ooacll• •ue0r-o1. classes and California Yacht Clab ,.,... Siar. UvM ........ """'"· bandied the o~..-pic -'-··es at Marina ror 20 ,...,.. ..., was a-.lllled yu.. ~ tile A~t S.Cwlty "8tlonal ._ del Rey . .,.1:,~,.s::,-:,.-:=n ~1:; A new perpetual trophy bonorln1 the 11 _, .. c-in...,._ J,. Jate Jim Tyler of Balboa Yacht Club ~:'rv':.."':::':..":':.::= was won by Charles Cummings of F•bn»rv».mut11.•A..M.• Alamitos Bay Yacht Club in the etly 0-0., wltb Rev. Mildred Lido-l(A fleet of 24 boats . ...,1, C>lolrQI, w1tfl Ith. Miidred 11-J uttk&atlftt. [1....,,.,.itwlltt• Local sailors brought bome 1u.,t pace l!norewoad "'''"••l•t Park hardware in several cl&sses. They were ~!::M!:'::.t , .. duct" .,., Keith Dinsmoor of BYC in the Cal-29 • PmC8 •OTHIU !• SMrTNI' wonv.AIY ~ 827 Main St. !• Huntington Beach • •' 636-6539 .. •• PllKFAMILY ~OLOMIAL FUMllAL HOMt :: 7801 Bolsa Ave. •• Wettmlnster 893--3525 PACIRCYttW MINOa!AL PAii Cemetery Mortuary Chapel ; 3600 P.ctflc View Drive ~ Newport, •• catlfornla !.. 844-2700 • ~ IALTZ•e•OM N•M.,._ R:IOtOf'la def Mtr e~ • co.ta M-. e.e44M ~ -IU.llOADWAY NOllNAIY 110~ co.r.Mesa ..,_.,IO clus; Chuck Queen, Voyagers Yacht Club 1n the Laser B; Dave Ullman, BYC in the 5-0-5 class; Karen Fa~. BCYC, Laser A; Gary Moon, BCYC, Luer B ; Mike Schachter, BYC in PHRF-B; Gayle ~1 BYC, Rbodea-33; Richard Rauff, ::iOtnll Shore Yactit Club, Wooden Hulls; Roger Meiainge!.t . I'.'l,HYC, Etch~; J3ob Ball, BYC, nu.sue. OTBft LOCAL winners were Jeff AJ. Jen, BYC, Santana-2C>: Allen Stewart. Voyagers YC, Jslander-30; Rltk SYan1y NHYC, Shlelds; Doug Ha!MJ. UCI Sall· ing Aasoclation. Windsurfer; and Alan Andrew&, BYC. B.anpr-33. Tropby-wiDDers ID all claslea were: ., ... _._..,...,cue Ol ..... t.._l ..... ,.,.. 00-1. ~. o.w ..... ,.,. Y<: t.""""""' Wll Mco-.11, IUf'f'C; a. i-. e.dl"°""" W'rC.i ._ Sol-. LwrY ..... ICWf'CI S. DllMllW, M ~ ltHYC. , PMa ... a ff> -OI-~ • ._, ~ ICM't'Ct t. ,.,.. ....... ---. .... ~--~ .......... MaYC. PM a~ 9'>-t. ..... °"""' er_.,AJllllMll, MY'JIC': •, ....... "" ._.~ KHYC:r a, 5Uf!tW, WnJ ac...-. f/11/YC. •MUMMJt•ao Ch -1, 111111• illlfl, OlhW Mcc.i. HY9'Cr '-er-, Jee~ WYC. ,::i~~,;~~= .. =~ci: ._,.,. ...,._, ICYCI ........ llllt U-. OlllM ~ • ltHYCt ................. Lf\'C. ....... CU) -t.,...... ,._,., ~ AaYC:J I,= ~IM. MM O.U. OY(: *. IW aM ..,_, ....... .._ ave:: ... tte"""""' ~ OtQr .,..... Yllliwt • Cllllt, • ...._ Dllal, .... c.ria. ~ CO•OttAOOG (6) -1. s-1«, &II Olftllf, A8YC; 1. Gordo, o. .. Prb,a<:VC. Cl.., ..... ,, C7)-I. ~ 11,AI ,..,..,., 51 aYC12. L' AINe, ,....111et11e11. s1 ave. MOaA 1111 -I, JalMled A9al11, Al ~. OIYCt 2, SllU. GnlO H•rrh, llYC; a. s.ien-Hawk, ~L BYC. CAUl'OflNIA YACMTCUIS ........ a-. IOL1NO 11•> -C.W, A...ole ...,_, S0\'(1 I. Lulu, M""' It.....,, st. FYC; ~ ... -, JllM Ofllcloll, SOYC; 4, Oy-, Joltn °'11. SVC; s. TllAI "'-'~.._,St. FYC. SU" cat -1, Lady l.lldt. Olrls ca.,. NHYC; a. Kerl. Stwt c;.,._ CYC; J, """"'"-lllU ~ SIY(I '-W. "-tlet PM, ICeft YOMftll, CYC. TaMPUT (1) -'· Evlt, ~ ...... .....,, Tam o.i-. $CCYC; 2, F-. Odlll Ir~ ~(; >. Cl• CH&. aa Trlolltr. SCCYc. TO•lfA.DO au -1. OI ....... ~,.,...... CSYC. 1. 0.... ltllll\ ~_....,I, Sii. FYC; a, 0..., ,,...,,_ II. Art N...-, CYC C..-,......,, ._ ...... """*' a«llllllMw~; S. El'-•"°"" .... d!IWolC, CYC. llfnllNATICINA&. COWRNDe• tat -t, OW ..... JIN ~ ..... AlteYC. ~1'4* MAjteGUll YACRTCUI• Cl7 ...... •0.-) .oacN m -t, .... ....,..., cave; z. .. ~ UYC. IMA&.&. .,_., &awra&•'f Pl -~ it.-,..._, ~2. .,_.II, Ger~ HffYC. CYC:&.ANte ffl -1 • .._ .., v-. ~. WL YC; I. Mr"9 II, 5Mw £a-. Wl. YC.: it~ Ollll lltlltfeot, W\.VC. ,,.. SCOW WI -1, Urrt w.-.. "9A. Boatl>unen Wamedo/ Citatioru Boat owmn at atate NCJatlan area lakes 1n Southern C.ntornla are beiat waned that wtni motor bcMID that do not meet !IDile level requlremell!I ean nscalt la eb•t.w and fines. BOATING I NATION I OBITUARIES Coal Cited Dollar Drops To Record Low LONDON CAP) -The dollar tell to new trad- Jnc lows against the J apanao yen, Swt.u bnc ancl West German mart on European forelp ex- chan1e1 today, and dealers blamed the U.S. ClOal strike ln part for the sharp fall tn the American ourre'l\cf. The new onslaught on the dollar sent plcl bullion prices soaring. Other causes cited by dealen for tlw dollar'• declloe were speculation thal the Japanese IOY· eTO.ment hu ablandoned • efforts to keep the dollar ( :]· near 240 yen, and a JN SHORT · generally peaaimlstlc world trade ouUook. The dollar bit record- '°9 levela qalnst tbe Japanese yen iD London this mor:ntq, quoted at 237.95 yen, down from DUS late Friday. Quicer t• \'bit Dela10are WASIDNGTON lAP> -President Carter, who beean his campaign work in this political year with • viait to Rhode Island, is movln& Oil to aomethlnc a little bigger: Delaware. He JI to fiy tonight to Wilmington for two abort apeecb4!1$ at a Democratic Party fundraiser an~ a eathertna on beb11lf of Sen. Joseph Biden, who la runntnc for a second term. Bredlll~ Win• /tl1Htaf11 BOiier MOSCOW CAP) -President Leonld r. Brezbnev w.as awarded the nation's btgbest military bonor, the Order of Victory, today and be pledged to work to safeguard peace, the Tass news agency reported. Tass said Brezhnev received the award, on the ne of the 60th anniversary of the Soviet armed forces, for b1a contribution to the "victory of the Soviet people and Its armed forces" in World War ll. Brez.bney served as a political commissar and rose to the rank d major general. TorrfJ~• 'Olten' Brotlaer WASHINGTON CAP> -Panamanian leader Omar Torrijos, in an effort to win backing for the Panama Canal treaties, reportedly bu offered to turn over bis brother to face U.S. narcotics charges or jail blm ll be is shown proof of the al· legations. "I have begged for proof," Torrijos waa quot- ed in a copyright interview in Sunday's editions of the AUanta Constitution. "U such prool exists. I would put my brother in jail," be added. AmerlealU Support Sadat NEW YORK (AP) -A majority of Americans feel that Egyptian President Anwar Sadat baa done more than Israeli Prime Minister Menacbem Begin or President Carter to achieve peace in tbe Mideast, according to a ~e\Y&Week-Gallup poll. The poll, released Sunday, also showed that American support for Israel bas declined since peace negotiations with Egypt began in No-- vember. Slogans Invited The dead.llne is s p.m . March 3 for entries in the Americanism Educational League's eighth Annual palr1otic slogan contest Walter Knott ls boaora.ry chairman of the contest. which offers $1.SOO lD schola.rabJpa. The contest ta open to high acbool seniors. Additional i n· formation may be ob- ta lned by calling 828-5040. PVBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE SUPllatoa COURT OP TIUI STUil CWCAUPCNIMIA FOtt THIE COUWTY Ot' CMlAltGa ...........,. MOTICll 0 .. 1tR.\•11te Of" PITITION "°" Pa.OeATa Of' WtLI. MD lllTTllflS TUTMdlrTU'f Elltte of Wll.UM' ~ltlCk llEESEMYER.o.c....d. NOTICE IS HEREBY OtVSI Wwt FltAHK W. 8EESEMYtll ._ fl ... Pltreln • oetlllofl for Pr--. el WWI •net tu-ot ._....,. Te.st-...ry to the Pttltlofwr. ,..._. tD ""'9lldl S. made ,., fur1lwr -tlcuMn, - -tM llm• -pl.a ol _.,. tlla -has Ileen ... tor Mattlt .., "71.. et tO:OO •·"'·• In lht ,...,...,_ ef Depart,....,. Ne. > ol ..... <tw1. at 11111 CIYI< Center°"""·'" Ille Ctr of S...C. AM, Cal lfonll&. Dated ..__., 17, ""'' WILUAM E. 91.IOMN, CoulllyOetll J . OltANNISMOMlt""'1UI tNc:. 1r:J.O ....... Mllilt- 4'U1Htli ............ . llrltelH• ............ Cillltlrllla w.71 ., .. 1 11111 .... .......... :....._ Pllllll"'911 OrM9t OMtt Dlby Piiot. Ffll. 29, 21, fJ, 1'11 ..,.,. PUBUC NOTICE TODAY IS THE LAST DAY OF THE ~ OflANGE COUNTY AUTO SHOW . oaANOB COUNTY. CALIF. -The B~ StiectH01ar Oranae County Auto SllOW hu tu dq TODAY, Wubiqton'a Blrtbft)'I ()peGiQg at 1 •.•. ud,..., richt throqb 10 p.m.; J'OQ'll bn.C JOUt lat qiportunlty to s" rr makes of the tm-automotJUee. both domestic and foreign. In additlotl.- ln a Ooocoan 4•£lt,1a.nce lbow of classics ._ apeclal tnt..t ean,.;too'll find tbe best examples Of·award-WiDJllAf autolnoblles. Don't mlu a 1825 Lancia Lambda Jta~ aa.-.., painted flre.e.nllne red. that'• aa ~ u tU era !tom which it came. And a Packard V·lt Sports Sedan that la abso1U1ely lmmaeulat. in enry detail, better than off tbe showroom floor. Tben •• tbeff U..le\'el'al "'Movie World'• cars, a Packard· Vl2 Comwtlble Sedan that was Franklln Delano l\09aeft1t•a "Parade C•r( plua the BeaUea. ~. llDcl Cbarh Chaplin a Bolls-Royce wJtb i~· tpee!all'Olld6r IMltt. ;. DWt m. um fabulobs Auto Show, where~ ear ii U. Start •· . Oeneral •dmlaalon: .,a.so •dulu; $1.SO for.~ clail4Nn e-11 aDd MDlor citiama GGD: children \Do. det 11.S. tr.. J>llcoqpt eoopou .. allable from v .. , .-.._.. llarbta, bcl ·1rom )'QUI' Onnte ~: AlltDDMIS'. : .. .. ...... ( ' - .. . LOCAL I NATIONAL. .... ... DAILY PILOT ·Police Teams Teach llB Students AMNOUMCIMEMT: llf you.,. a m111e Of femalf, hwa 11'1 lntereat In 1ht '*'9mecfical Of l)ltttegal n.ics.. tnd If YoU .. unemp~. on w.lfere or • v.twan, you may be CbUdttn ln Hwillncton Beach schools are iet: • Unc demonstrations on how police officer Btu • Mamelll and his pantinc, 1vory-toot.be4 partner do team pollcework. M amelll and his partner work graveyard shift, from 9 p.m. until about sunrise, when the atreets are cold and often toUjb. . HIS PARTNER'S NAME IS Wolt1an1 and be' slobbers a lot. Clearly, Wolf1ang -who can come on like a gang of wolves -waa the star performer i.n tbei.r act. The ltida loved him, even When Wolf1an1 loped ott in the ru!dd.le or the demoa.stration for a com· •fort break before conUnuina. One thine they apparently dldn 't teach Wott1ana in his two yeara of police trainin1 ls that one doesn't c:Ommlt a DO·DO a1ainst the wall of ApM L. Smith Elementary School. NOT wtTB AN AUDIENCE of about 300 f ourtb and fifth·craders anyway, but the youncsters dldn't alve it a second thoupt. ............... snJDENTS LEARN HOW POLICE, CANINE PARTNER WORK TOGETHER Patrolman 8111 Mametn, Wo"gang Hold Audience Spellbound Women's Role Emerges Stiuly Shows Hunting, Too£.making Actimty WASHINGTON (AP) -Prehistoric women m ay bave provided most of their families' food, iD- vented tools and shared equally with men in mak· fog decisions, according to a University of Wisconsin scientist. Dr. Ruth Bleier said that male aclentists have ignored .valuable information about the historical role of women to satisfy preconceived notioaa about male dominance. SCIENCE JS LARGELY a male inaUtutton. and investigators use themselves and their values as the yardstick for evaluating those they are studying. she. told a meetinc ol the American Al.- .soclation for the Advancement ol Sdeace. "He and bis fraternity become the norm against which all the otbera are meaaured and ln· terpreted." Ms. Bleier said. "WitbiD that eootext. everything relllting to women comes out in men's (!Wture in footnotes to the main text.'• SCIENTISTS J.,OOK AT LOWER animals, _primates and primitive people for indications of the evollJl:icGary be1tmdnp ol buman trait&. But ,HlectlDg tbele bflba'Yior mocs.ls and lnt.erpret;lq the observadona cu be influenced by cu1tunl pr. Judice, abe sud. A Uvorite primate model of mal• ldmtlltl II the savaimQ baboon. which orcanbel Itself Into groups domlftated by an aureutve male ~th a ' harem ol females, she said. ,.. .. "!pored ls the fact that. lllbOaf babooDI wbO UH 1D forests and amon1 cblmp.U•ea and aorillu, perbaPI our dol9t relaUws, ~ . betweenmalellinre," lb.B_.aald. ' more than the males. "Since lt is likely that tbe earliest woman was like her gatherer·hunter stater of today, abe pro- bably 1rmated qriculture itself, a1oq with the first diuera. lnera, cboppen. food C011talners and pottery,•• Bleier said. . 197i CARS I and TRUC~S e OMPLETE local aporta 1'Dellvered · d•llY .. lfttM DAILY PILOT -,,.,. t Wolf1ang, you aee, ls a hulkln1 German shepherd police doc aulaned to the K·t Untt pat.rot car wlt.b MameW. He and the policeman, aloni with offlcer Bob Archey and hla canine partnet' Puba, ant belin- rung a program of showlnc school cblldren bow man and man's best friend team up to deal with lawbreakers. A fair number of Smith School puplla tnay have sworn to remain law·abidera forever after seeing Wolfaana Ln action. HE AND PABBA ABE the department's two police dogs, following the cancer death of Arcbey's dog um 18 months ago. A fourth, Barry, bad to be retired due to injuries suffered in the line of duty. Barry llvea a peaceful Ule at tbe home of bla eligible te) train for one of the following ptograma: * tw•l•ICY MiDtcAL llCHMICIAH * OPatA,.. IOOM TICH. (ACQr9dlttd by tM A.M.A.) • llSNATOIY 1'M8APY TICH. I * LAwYllS AIS1$TAMT • CALLMOWt 17 I 4J 547-0305 A~ cou.MI Ofl PAH.-.CAL ilTl_.~IS 1 ... M.MOADWAY SAMJA AMA. CA ta1°' master, officer Lee Camp. ---------~-------.-One of Mamelll's points wu the devotion of a pollce dog to his master, whom he protects, lives with oft duty artd literally wonblps. "I don't have any script. I just 'wing ll' ," Mamelll told Principal Al Rumuasen before bis talk. SECRETARIES EMERGED P&OM admioiatrative offices and a portly custod.lan with a busby moustache even strolled over to watcb. "These dogs are trained for obedience and to respond to auresslon. You can trust these dogs a lot farther than you cao an ordiDar7 dol on the street," Mamelll explained. Wolfgang leered lovingly at him, as the fourth and fiftb·graderll -at first afraid of the behemoth -warmed up their pettJng bands for a personal introduction to Mamelll'a buddy. Hamelli explained how a dog's trabdn1 takes two years of Lnatructlon in personal protection, tracking auepecta and obedience and diacipllne. THE KIDS THEN WATCHED police cadet .Jeff Ne19on strap on a protective arm cuff and saw wbat happens to anyone who makes a violent 1eeture toward their policeman-partner. They were obviously awed by Wolf 1ang's powerful lunge into tJelson, with fanp k>ettn1 into the protective cuff. Mamelli then dem~ bow police clop are fitted with different collars and sometimes a tracking harness and thereby know the tut they are beinl assigned to perform. He scattered several personal items around the athletic field and Wolf1ang t!u~l anlfled them out. lying down obedlmU, each to signal be bad made a flnd. ••J ROPE HE DOES!ll'T find any marijuana • • •• " Rasmmsen quipped joJdncly. Once tbe demOllSUation ccmcluded. Wolf1ang · and about 300 youngsters proved that a dos ia a dog and kicb are kids. They swarmed around the big German shepherd. And be loved it. Free ~ enlargement otfec ~~ " . .. ... . •. ~ .. ... •, .. ~ ... 1770 Newport Bl~d"' Costa Mesa , ; --=-=!r.~: I V 11 j• .... a..t•...._bfNs •'• ... .· ... .. .. .. -... ~ ' ... .. : . .~ :~: I ... , ., . 1110 East Chlpmaa A~ SUtte 109 Oran11&. CaU.fomla 8tieee .. ... I I " -·--~ .... -.... -"' ...... ... .. . . . .. . ...... Viii'• •• -· ••em~¥•• t nasr-w AJ• OM. y PILOT ~~Ill a1e.(:~ Creuefl 111'1 .. ~ DEAR PAT: I was taken to the bOspiW by t bulance and treated in the emergency room for hycardla (a heart coodltion) on June 21, 1971. other ambulance trip, emergency l'OOm treatment and hospitalization followed on July U . J submitted all my bills to Blue Cross of Southern • ~Ulonlia. Since then l. 've been oven QDe excuse ter another as to why my claims haven't. been d. I also phoned the Los ~eles offtee five ~mes to fmd out just what my policy COVtSn. Each -ume I was told that the computers were broken: ~wn and they couldn't check into it for me. ., •. ~ M.P., Huntington Beach ,. .; . ., :;· Blue Cron gave AYS a fall explaaatfee of tbe •edlcal ten'lces covered by your pelleJ. Your · ~ow opUoa plan" cover"e P&JS lot pereeat ol Ute tospllal'a charge for outpatient deputmeat caftl. .IJf accldenta within 7Z boan ol u lajlll'J ud · :lor ml.nor aurgery, but tbere ls no co.etace for out-iatlent department t.reatmeat of an ll.baea. Your .ilagnosls was neither u aeddeat 90I' ma.or IV· .jery, 10 tbe emerg~7 room clalma wen correei-· 11 rejected. Your policy paid It perceat of your ID- 1JatJent hospital bills dlrectl7 to tbe bespltal ud t5 per day ror doctor vtsJt.a wblle lo tbe 19ospltal. Blae1 Cross bu no record ol tbe ambaluce blUa, alMf ap io $5t for tbe ambalaaee trip lllvohed iD•JOV hJy Z5 l.apatient admlnton will be paid If JM 11lbmlt tbe bill. Blue Cross alao aat a booklet deserilltq. yoar coveraie. a_,, B•lder Btalflled't DEAR PAT : What do you know about -~tandard American Builders? I've seen their ads, ~d we are considering a room addition • • S.D., Mission Viejo AYS hasn't bad UJ .:::.c.a1at.a, aboet tbls tle•erly Hllh·bued room eo.tracior, but lbe attorney ceneral •~· Sal& wu flled reeendy la Los Angelee Superior Coan cbarlbaa Cite con- tractor and aenral otflcJala wttb eqaclai la aJ. Jegedly QDfalr aad fraudulent bulDesa pnctices. It w aa dalmed OIDDibus ladutrles, dobal bulaesa '' Standard American Ballden, coetradecl to Hild aamerGa room add.IUona, colJeded m.aor aDef~ JDODeJ from eoanmen, bat dld U&&le wen. Tile salt al10 claimed Ute defeodaata Hued ...._ to. .. JaomeowMntltat1aa7re.ada...anS1-..... 'fte. aUoraey geaera.1'• oftkle •I.JI rwmlll ... ril be aoapUor~dlJm.. • .. .ORANGE COUNTY I AT YOUR SERVIC£ ,,_.~ ~OC ·comrliittee I • Afternoon ResJJlte . . Pigeons on the beach near Newport Pier. have found a friend and a coast resident has found a way to celebrate the return of sunsbine to the Orange Coast. For those who can spare the hour, it's a wonderful way to spend the time. ~ . Standard· Re"Ct> ds Due •J... Seeks Voluitleers ~ ,,.-. : Vohmt~ to fill poaltloos on the county .. Social Proerams Advisory Committee are bda. sought by the Oran1e County Board Of Superviaora. . • Tbe committee reviews grant appllcattons W makes recommendaUona to the aupen-lson f~ social programs such as day care cent.en, aenitr citizens, cris.i.s·botllnes and juvedile pfQtectlon. • · . . Interested appllcanta should aubmlt a resume ·to their county supervisor at 515 N. Sycamore St.o San~a Ana. C.11142-H7t. Put a few word• to work for ou. Couniy Issues Student Health ~ards to·Doctors. Orange County Health Department officials hope to see the day when lbe 4omunization recorda for all county school children will be contained on one easy-to-understand health card. As thinp now stand, they ex· plained, families often maintain records for required vaccinatioos on various forms obtained from private physicians or forms issued at COUJllY·SpoDIOred lmmqniutioo; .clinics. Mary Johnson, a county health aide, said county offlclala now are issuing st.a ~supplied record forms to physicians upon re- quest. BUT BOTH COUNTY and state health officials hope to COD· vert the record·keeptn1 to one permanent form that 'trill s«ve as a simple reminder to abo"t when boosters are needed and to aid school authorities in verify. ing that required lmmunlutioos have been obtained. The state-supplied recordl Appraiser Hired For Lawsuit Work Orange County supervisors have agreed to spend up to $10,000 to hlre an appraiser in preparation for an upcoml.na $4 mlWoo lawsuit. The suit was filed in 1974 by Shelter Industries Inc., a firm that once planned to build a mobile home park on 46 acres lo El Toro, a report to supervisors said. ... SUPERVISORS ISSUED A permit for tbe put. NVOtei:l it three years later when development hadn't occw1ed. then re· Instated iL But the park never was completed. U.. report uld. In the suit, the firm contends the l'ffOCatloD wu improper, and caused the company to lose flnancini for the pro~ and the site, resulting in a loss or future profit. were ordered by the School Im· munization Law, Senate Bill~. pused by the Le&islature last year U ND Ell ST ATE LAW, liiiiiifillllll--iiiialllallllliiiiiitil children must be vaccinated for ~~jiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~-pollo. dlptberla, tetanus, whoop-~ inl couab and measles before; re1lstiertng for school. ( Be1lnninc in September, 1 parent.a will be asked to submit~ proof of their children's lm· munbaUon before they enter school or dQ-care centers. Tbe state forms include apace ~ for the youngster's name and blrthdate as well as for a list cl • allergies or vaccine reactions.- They abo provide space for list· . Ing the dates vaccinations were given and when immunizations are due. MS. IOBNSON SAID that; dur· ing the next 18 months, county · and school officials will be at- le mp Ung to convert all youngaters' records onto standardized forms. Local scboola also are· auppllN with waiver forms for . parents who, for religious or health reasons, do not wish their . cblld.ren lmmuniJed. Buena Park 510 SoUth Beach Blvd. South of Linooln Avenue (714) ~6-0381 CostaMeea ~Harbor Blvd. Harbor Center (714) 549-3368 J3'aolDO 17031 Ventura Bmt West Of BllbOi (213) 986.6330 IS YOUR BUSINESS :woRTH 'TW01HOURS? • j I A free lecture designed to eliminate cosUy mistakes and unnecessary problems for the small business· · man. Whether you are currently operating a business l or considering starting one, you can't afford to miss this learning experience. Topics include financing, growth, greater protits. FREE • · NO OBLIGATION · ~.,.u.1,.... IOOMewpMC....,.M.-e ....."-7:,~ c .,,~ Limit.., •Htlng -Fot ,. .. tv.tlona ~It: 558-7194 Sponsored by: Center For Economic ~wareness. Inc • Huntington Be.ch 18585 Main Street Main St at Beach Blvd. (714) 842-14.51 Long Beach 4101 Atlantic Blvd. Comer of Ou-son (213) 426-8874 Nodh 6 Weet Vall9J" 9143 De Soto Ave. atNordl'df (213) 882-5912 .. Ora.ngie 622 East Katella A~~ West of Tustin Ave.." <n4> 639-2441 Weetmiuter 6757 Westminster Ave.: Westmin&er Center ~ (714) 894-3381 ~- Hollrwood ~· ?080 HOll~ Bl ; c.o..ner Da8rea Ave. Safa Medial Center •· (213) 469-6207 I • • • tNSIDt:: •Comics •Telev1slon •Movies •Entertainment f • . \ 1 Tanner Blitzes Ranrirez PALM SPRINGS -Roscoe • Tanner started with a bang on the final day or the $225,000 Tennis Games, and when the smoke cleared, he had won the s ingles championship and teamed with Ray Moore to take the doubles UUe. Tanner opened by winning all but one of the first 12 points in his singles finals match Sunday against Raul Ramirez, and went on to take a 6·1, 7-6 victory and lhe $35,200 first prize. He rested briefly, then came back to collect $6,600 more for his and Moore's 6-4, 6-4 triumph over Frew McMillan and Bob Hewllt in the doubles finale. P~Nlpped MELBOURNE, Australia - Australian Guy Wolstenholme beat sentimental favorite Arnold Palmer on the third hole of a sudden-death playoff Sunday in the Vic torian Open golf tournament. Wolstenholme gained a tie for first place at 284 with a final r ound 69 to Palmer's 71 Sunday. He won the tourney with two putts from 35 feet on the third playoff hole after Palmer ,. missed the green with both his } second anti third shots. {. Box~ Near Death 1 t • MADRID --Doctors said to· day Sparush middleweight boxer Juan Rubio Melero was reported near death from severe brain and lung damage he s ustained Friday 111 a bout that has been highly cnt.Jcized as a mismatch. Melero, 23, was knocked down three times in his ninth pro· fessional fi ght by national c hampion Francisco Ramos. Melero underwent surgery Saturday but never regained consciousness. .. •. .: Ccutlllo 1t'l11• ~· CARACAS, Venezuela -Mex- ican challenger Freddy Castillo won the World Boxing Council's junior flyweight championship S unday night. knocking out Venezuelan champion Luis "Lumumba .. Estaba in the 14th round with a combination left to the head and right to the body. Pro1'1~92-74 PROVIDENCE, R.I. - · Dwight Williams scored 16 points and four teammates also scored in double figures to spark 13th·ranked Providence College to a 92-74 college basketball • 1 triumph over Boston College ' Sunday. The victory gave the Friars a 22-4 r ecord while Boston t CollegedroppeJltol4-9. • 1M1nnnoia, 7Z. 11 MINNEAPOLIS -Reserve guard Bill Harmon scored all five of his points in the final 2~ "' minutes, sparking unranked 1 Minnesota to a 72-n upset of ninth-ranked Louisville in a non- • conference basket.ball game. .. • Sid• Marie Mlaed SY DN.E.'Y, Australl a Swimmer Michelle Ford of Australia missed her 800-meter worlct freestyle record by 2.53 seconds in a special solo attempt Sunday night. Last month she set a record of 8:31.30. • IUdera Keep• Opea LOS ANGEL~ -Speculation that the Los Angeles Open golf tournament would be moved to a new site ended with the signing of a contract assuring Riviera Country Club the tournament for the next three years. SC Top• Dodger• , : LOS ANGELES -The, National League champion Los Angeles· Dodgers held their first public workout of the season See Briefs, Pal{e B·! MonciJy, Ftb<Ully 20, 1971 DAILY PILOT . .. _ A.J. FOYT IS HELPED OUT OF H1S WRECKED RACE CAR AT DAYTONA 500. Prayer No Bad Omen Allison Survives Crashes, Wins Dayt,ona 500 DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. CAP) --Bonnie Allison said a little prayer for her father last Friday before be and Buddy Baker wrecked in a qualifying race forthe Daytona 500. "It weighed on me," said Bobby Allison, "I don't like to have a child's prayers not answered." He took it as a bad omen but everything turned out great SWl- day for the Hueytown, Ala., native and the lS-year-old girl when be won the world's richest stock car race and the $56,300 first prize. Scare.ely anyone would have predicted Allison and Baker would race to a showdown for the top money after they crasbed·Friday and were forced to start from far back in the field, Baker in 31.st place and Al- lison in 33rd. They ran as a tandem from the start. but a mile behind the early front running trio - Richard Petty, David Pearsoo and Darrell Waltrip. TheJI Pf.tty blew a tire and the three apun into each other and the concretAJ ~miles into Lbe race. They were unhurt but A.J. Foyt wasn't so fortWlate when he took a spectacular barrel role down the asphalt at 180 miles an hour in a chain-reaction col- lision. Foyt was hospitalized over· night. but doctors found no broken bones and said bis worst injury was a possible separation of the left shoulder. Benny Parsons, who blew a tire, triggering the Foyt mishap. dropped out or contention after s pinning into the infield. Baker and Allison wa~ed a duel with defendln& champ Cale Y arborougb through the last half of the race until valve trouble slowed Yarboroueh- The bad hack that bas plagued Baker foe 11 )'Ul"S in this race struclc apin five liu>a from the f'aniah ~hil Qglne blew. AWson finished 11.2 aeecnds ahead of Yarborough. One lap bact. Parsons nosed Hutcbenoo 1n a photo finish for third and Dick BrooU took fifth. another=DCL It was '• ffnt victory in the Daytma 500, after 19 yearr of trying, and bis fint victory on Warriors Tamhle . · .,..,_ 0 : ,' " "' Dantley, Lakers Happy With Trade · the Grand National circuit since 1975. Also, it was the firat time a Thunderblrd bas been in Victory Lane here. The popular 40-year-old veteran didn't escape trouble, which bit so many cootendera. "One of the orange cars (Hutcherson) put me into the wall late in the race," he said. "I radioed my pit a back tire wu Oat and a fender was bent on the ttre. The crew did a great Job of cbanglnc two tires, beod- JDg out the fender and fueling m e.'' Some ol t.be newer-macbfnes -the Oldsmobtles of Yarborough and Parsons, Baicu of Foyt and Hutcherson and Petty's Dodce Magnum - rae rut but bandied less ef. fectively. • Follow1ne the froat five lo the finlsb, In order, Jrere Dave Mards in a Chevrolet, Baker in an Olds , Blll Elliott in a Mercury. Ferrell Harris in a Dodie and Lennie Pond ln an Olds. ------- NicklaUs' Fold,) . ~ S8ys Morg8n :.:-. .... \. LOS ANGELES (AP) -M 1 Arizona and Hawali. now heU student optometrist, GU Morian for Florida and the $250,000 studied the 'eye charts. As a Inverary Classic at Lauderfilll &oiler, he says he doesn't ev~n where Nlctlaua ls defending look at them. champion. But his vision was aood • Nldclal&S was dolng weu UObl enough to see that Jack Nicklaws the 15th hole. Then bis seCOJld had shot a do\lble bogey on the Shot went into the crowd at the 15th hole and a bogey on the 16th< left of the green. He chipped in tbe Los Angeles Open short ot the green, then to flve tournament. feet of the bole. He inlsaed that Dr. Mergan readily admits putt and it was a duffer's dooflje that aa an eye doctor be couldn't boaey. On the next hole, • JS!I" make the $40,000 he collected three, he hit into a sand trap arid S u n d a y for w inn l n c lb e there was a boaey. tournament and he figures to That's what opened the eye&9f keep playing eolf until he ls 40 the optometrist. ·~ • "or unW I'm not co111-petltivtt." The winning score was ~IJC The doctor. who went into golf strokes off the tournament~- instead or optometry althoueh ordsetbyHalelrwlnin1976. • t he is licensed In both bi$ home Nicklaus collected $22,800 fer state of Oklahoma and ln second place, F~ler recei¥~ Florida, never trailed at the end $14,200 for third. of a round over the par 71, LHdlnt _... '" ,,.. lM Anoei.s OllM .- 7,029-yard Riviera Country Club =~:.°:"O:,: I*" 11• 7.on-.w11 "~• course. He led the first t't~ 011-..,..-0.oao ..... ~ round and was ~lee!. wL. :,:::::c,:wt.: ~~11~ Nicklaus at the end of the third a..rlftCOOcSyP.IOO n-n-n~as round. Lyn LotU7.IOO ... 1._~ 1 " I d id n • t Io o k a t t b e ~;,~er.;:~.., !~;t~ ~ b d " h a·d after Tom P\lf'IJwS.S.2U 1t'69-15,. • score oar s , e s 1 Ml••M<Ciif*4hSJ.ns ,._..n.JJ....:a winning with a final round 70 Gary KochS.S..r» 10-n-1ua:. and a 278 total. "I play a course, u""Yw....,.s.s.m ... , ..... ~ not an individual. I heard the :;:-:_ ~== ~~:;_: ... crowd and figured Jack had ... ,. ,,..," a.wo n-11.~11-111 Al1Cly H0tll\Sl.U> ~12·7J.-'a1 made a bogey at 15. I was w.11, A"""'°"'"'·-n>-n'*1~ shocked when I got to the 17th ~;vas:_~,::., :~:~~~ green and saw what he s hot. I ,,."" McGMU.JOO 11.1 .. 1r.1J-1ia expected to come to the last hole 11 .. c.1~1 u.soo 1H2-*7t Jim Sl-Ul.500 7)-71-12-7>-W one shot behind or even.'' Per ... Oottlf'hUI• u.~ 11-11-1?-1...._ As it was, Nicklaus finished Jao A•-ll.ns 1<-1HU1...- wl.th a 72 and 280 total, and Joe 11•m•~suu 1C1-n.11.1 .Mrf'y Pa .. $1,12S 1..._7"1 Mdtgan had posted the aecond c;.ne L1111.-si,ns 1s.1,_,...., victory or his PGA career even J!: ~~~'.J'O ;.t~;~• though "I was nervous drivine Low o •• ....., ''.l"O ... 1s.1w~ On the 18th and didn't shoot well Tom w .. "'°"' "·"° u~1s.1.._. ltro.Ka Ll<rtU.11.J'O n .72.70.,._. and took a bogey.•• e111, c;..,,..,,,,* n-1i-~ As a crowd or 32,000 watched Cral9Stadlr'1,m ""''"~ 'Ilk~ 11 .... -'1.o:n 11-1'-1~ under sunny skies, just the Ont 0eryOr01t'1.0U 11*1~ three finishers were under par. ~":::.:::i w:l ~t!!~~ Forrest Fezler shot a final round • Ron COf'NNM 1~1z,1'-11-'Zll 68 for 283 and third place. •-Amateur Morgan's wife, Jeanine. said she would rather be married to a golfer at this time thao an optomctrisL "This is what be wants to do, so this is what I want him ta do," she said. "I go to nearly evezy tournament with him and follow him on every round. He may not see me, but he knowa that I am there." Asked if her husband's nomad life was better than beine home with an eye doctor wbo bad a 9-to.S schedule, Mrs. Moreen said, "Yes, at this time lt is." "It was strange to see that Nicklaus had shot bad," Morgan said. "I never expected it." The eol!ers, bavin1 ended their sojourn ln California, YODER LEADS sO ' PASr JAPANESE DAILY PILOT CIF Wrestling Finalists Billy Tu~ lor of Edison High <Hun~gt~n Reach> 1s in grasp of Western Highs <Anaheim) Tim Character in 115-pound wresllm.r! bout. Both advanced to the CIF finals this Saturday at Westminster Hi~h as Character won a 4-2 decision in sectional meet last Saturday. Prediction Comes True For Los Loi; Ami(;04' <Fountain Valley) High basketball coach John 1'eating has proven himself an ;.iccurale forecaster until now, and his pre-season. thoughts in- clude a second round CIF 3·A playoffs victory. The Lobos of Los Amigos, with· a 21-3 record and the Garden Grove League championship in hand, duel Corona del Mar Tues- day night (7 :30) at Fountain Valley High. ••Every year I give my equipment man my predictions and this year 1 said we'd be 20-3 Area Sports Calendar going into the playoffs," says Keating. "I even predicted who we would lose to, except I thought our loss in league would be at 01-u.i."" _.._ v.11.., MIP From Colla -..i. -•I"" Yl<lort• or ...,.,.,. lo 811tfWlrcl .->Cl Mn <!OM Sc,_l louted at 1111• '"""'"' Santiago, rather than al home to Santiago. "Yes, l predicted bow we'd do in the playoffs too, but I 'II only say it includes a second round victory." Coach Actually, Keating's ability to predict isn't too startling-since he has the talent of 6-6 Orlando Ward, 6·9 sophomore Clayton Olivier and guard Warren Ellis to draw from Ward 1s a first-team All· Orange County and All·CIF 3-A caliber player who possesses a soft touch. fluid moves and ex- cellent rebounding ability. Too, Wnrd L5 qukk. as are starters Tony Zuloaga (6-4 ), Angel Fuertes and Ellis. Oil vier has the hei~ht and muscle to dominate inside, and be 'II move to the high post and score with consistency. Ellis keys the attack and Keat· mg says: "To me, Warren Ellis is the best gua rd in Orange County. Ile can do everything and anything. A lot or people don't r ea lize the ac· compllsbmenl of averaging 15 pointa a game when you're ln the same lineup with Ward and Olivier. ·cv-Knighis Victor Title Favorite? RIVERSIDE-Notre Dame High basketball coach Mike Val\ta labels Tuesday night's (7: 30) venture to Capistrano Valley High ln CIF l·A playoffs action as a pivotal contest, one which could produce the eventual ch ampion,• The two collide ln the second round of the eliminations and Vanta states! "The winner or this one hu a good chance to wln lt all. I know we can play with anyone and although I haven't seen Capistrano Valley, I've heard a lot about them. "I'd prefer to play the eame on at neutral floor. But I 've beard about Capo's traps and ·cam bling defense and that's some of the things we do, too. I• m anxious to see what happens." While Capistrano Valley's ma- jor strength is ln the backcourt with the Charles brothers-Bob and Robin, Notre Dame's best punch is ln the front line, led by 6-3 forwards Bill DrachsUn and Chuck Brown and 6-4 center Dan Debevec. "Drachslin is our leading scor er , but we're very team- oriented," says Vanta. Drachslin's scoring average la 18.2, followed by Brown (11.5) and Debevec (10.6). On the boards, Debevec and Dracbslln are equally tough. Only one team has oulrebounded Notre Dame ln its 19-S campaign. Point guard Kevin McCarthy gears the attack from an assist view, and in one game was cred\ted with a school record 17 assists. This is Vanta's third term with the Knights and the third Ume he's guided them to the playoffs The last two seasons have pro- duced DeAnza League champions with a combined league record or 23·1. "We usually use a full court man-to-man press," says Vanta, "but we may have lo change some thin gs considering Capistrano Valley's guards." NOT•l DAME (lllYlllS1Del 1H .. 8••• Jt" 41 " YIKC• Vallr( ... Onlarlo OW' " JS 8098ur " Y11<0Y•lley 44 13 Aq .. IN• ... Ontart00w SI 10 ........... cs AQlllNU 0 ..s ttP•I- 10 •t•ltol> 1S " 8l91'1ur )9 LA Lllllwr., .. I .. Y..cuV-4 .. y s• LA • ..,.,,, 0 " ,, ........ 0 ltov P'olv u H ,, .. ,.,._ s• a •• .,.._. • ,, trvlnit H•Qlf\ Ml Coton. IJ (Ill M S.IHI"" .. II £1,.nor• ., ,. P••""' y Pirates, Rustlers Clash in Baseball •• JI 51 41 M ., 6l SI s. 40 ~ Orange Coa.~l College tries lo snap a long Jinx Tuesday when the Pirates host arch-r ival Golden West m baseball action at 2:30. Both teams had 3· 1 records entering today's play. Coast met Los Angeles CC while Golden West played Saddleback. GWC's Rustlers have logged" 7-0-1 record over Orange "Coast in the last five years, including three victories and a lie last season. Orange Coast was rated the No. l team in the Southland prior to the start of the season. 4'. . . BASKETBALL I MISCELLANY Faces Verbum Dei Huge Challenge For Huntington LOS ANGELES-Verbum Del Higb's Eagles, with 6-7 Leonel M a rquetti and an' all-star supporting cast to back bJm u~. await Hwitington Beach H1lh 1 Oilers Tuesday nl&bt (7:80) •l Compton CoUege in the aeeond round of the CIF 4-A 'basketball playoffs. The Eagles of Verbum Dei coach Ell Hawthorne boast Just about everything one could ask for in a basketball team. They are 24-1 tor the season and It's another jugeernaut in OI~ •'-""'• ~ Nottll CW! SM 0Mgo f'f-•Y I.OSI te l.*'9 he<ll ,_, m. Nortll on 1 • Ar1MI• Blwl. Tur11 left CW! Mesla ~ proued wn1 to c:.an.- Gql ..... loCftlcl Oft ....... the style of what tbe past has produced from Verbum Del: A 10-year record of 263 wins, 21 losses. Aside from Marquetti, who averages 19.6 polnta and 14 r e· bounds a game, the attack ln· eludes 6·7 Maurice Williams (deadly from out.side), 6·8 Junior Cliff Pruitt (17. 7 scoring average), point guard Carmel Steven and 6-4 freshman Dwayne Polee. "Carm el controls o~r of- fense," says Hawthorne, but of course Marquettl is the man . Williams is accurate in the 15-22 root range and likes to go inside, while Pruitt penetrates wt?ll for his height and is very quick." Verbum Del's only loss was a 75-73 decision at Long Beach Poly and Hawthorne aaya: "It's probably the best thing that cou.ld happen to us. We know it's possible to lose, although ln the Poly loss we had our Jut two baaketadl.sallowedbytherefs." The Eagles run a 1·3-1 offense wltb Pruitt at the bl&h post and Polee and Williams on the win11. Defensively, Verbum Del bu always been a man-to-man setup. Polee, the freshman, is a de- fensive gem and Hawthorne says his job is defending against the oppo6ition 's beat guard. Verbum Del's shooting ac· curacy from the field ts in the 52 percent range and among the Eagles' victims this season are Fresno Roosevelt, Pasadena and BallardHighofKentucky. Verbum Del bested Pasadena, 73·63, but Hawthorne points out his team was up by 24 at one juncture. y ~UM 011 IM-tl ~ " ll•llOP Amel .. 1J LB Poty n " IU~ll,_., ICM. • 71 c-twOll 51 11 e.,11,1.,. ... 71 M"rpi.y •S 71 Oalol-T.O. s. 11 sai.i ... " IO ,,_-... 7' " Sane 60 76 o--~ ff Sl.Bw_.d • n ......... 4l '°· c.n1-11 60 .. • ...... (K.tftt ) .. IJ Murplly S7 .. Arrovo " .. s.ws1.-. .. 76 Lynwaod s. .. Serra SI ... M Of'RlftOilele ., 12 r.1. &erftard JI .. M uir " '" ... F_I..., ve11.., ff .. Not,.0...-56 Estaneia Foe 12-11 Blair Quintet Has Deceiving Record PASADENA -Afte r 23 basketball games, Blair High of Pasadena still does not have a set starting line-up. ··we have eight guys rotating around. We haven't bad the same starters all year," says coach Cleveland Buckner of the Vikings, who t ang le with Estancia <Cos ta Mesa) High Tuesday night in the second round or the CIF 3-A playoffs. A~ of this morning the game was tentatively listed for Arudia High. Bhur, say~ Buckner, is just an average team . The Vikings currently sport a 12-11 record that is perhaps a bit deceiving. They've won their last seven games, including a 58·55 over- time decision over Valencia ln the playoff opener. Crlag Bowlin and Barry Caldwell, both 6 ·5, are the t eam's top scorers. Bowlin averaged 13 points during the rel(ular season but scored at an 11 .8 ppg clip during Foothill League play when the Vikings were champions with an 8-2 mark. Caldwell avera~ed 12 points a game while 5·7 ·guard Victor Fuery, the team's playmaker. averaged 11. Blair would prefer to set the offense up rather than ruq, says Buckner, who stresses neither offense nor defense but a balanced game instead. ''You've got to play 50.50 to win," be says. Buckner did not have a scout _ at Estancia 's playoff game Fri- DI~ te Art Mia Mlp Nortll Of\ SIM>I• MC ,,,_., Ul lo Sal\~ ... IU11tr fr-a v ('°'l N«lll °" 60J to P•---. ''"W•Y OIOI II\ Ou.,,. Pree--on flt lo Senta A111ta 81Wd t-1 T""' tell -P"KR<I IOUlll on S..la AnO• -tum r lgllt .., o..-A4. day the but needed only to look at the score to be impressed with the Eagles. Estancia de- rcated Los Altos. 64-53, while Blair l06t to Los Altos 82·62 mid war, through the season. ' They must have some type of a defense to hold Los Altos to that few points," Buckner said upon learning Estancia ls a team known mainly for its of- fense. The two teams had two other common foes this season, Los Amigos (Fountain Valley) High The Lobos operate out of a double post offense and ('refer a ~ne defense. The fast break ls keyed by Olivier's outlet passes and the quickness of Ward and Ellil Fuertes and Ellis combined for 33 points Frida)' ln Los Amlaos' victory over Santa Ana. Dragsters Compete E<UJt-West Duel Set Saturday · and Foothi 11 (Tustin) High. Los Amigos defeated Blair S2-35 and Es tancia 65-54 while Foothill beat Blair 59-57 but lost lo Estancia 82-51. But both of the losses came in the first half of the season when Blair was struggling with a 2·8 record. Since then, the Vikings have won 10 or 13. T.-.BBPest Darrell Stillwagon bas been selected athletic director at Huntington Beach High and will replace retiring Elmer Combs ln September. Stillwagon is a former activities director .at the school and teaches in the social studies department. :-Cage Teams Tabbed John Canon of San Clemente (South Coast Leapo), Ro1er Holmet of FoQntaln Vallty· (Sun.set Leaiu•> and Sentt.e <Anaheim) Wah'• Mike Witt (Angelus Leaaue> were cboHn balketball playen of the rear ln all-leacue aelectlona bJ tho toacMI. Coach~ the 1NJ" ta unit 80 to Coron~ del Kar'• Jack Bmon <South Cbalt Letgue), F0\11'ta1n Valley's Dave Bro.n (Su.nMt Lca1ue) and S.rrite'• Larry Welk.-<Ancelua Le•Cue). ~ The tiff is a remalcb of the 1977 aecond round duel between these two-only thls time it'• Los Amigos with the heralded bll m en. ·•we're looktne forward to tbe matcbup," says Keating. BfilEFS. • • C...uaaed Prom Pa'e Bl Sunday, dropplna a five-iDDlnc exblbltJon pme to the Unlveni- ty of Southern CaUfomJa, 3-0. Southern Cal pitching ace Bill Bol'dle7 betd lb• Dod1en bit- Je11 lbrOQlh three lnninl'I wJUJe his relief, Brian Hayes, allowed only a ltadOff alqle iJ1 t.be l1tlL The Tr0Jan1 got alt t•q nl!eded In tbe nm innlnf \lritb a two-runt.. buea·loaded 1ln1le by L•rr1 J'"obba oft Dod1era ace Don Sutton. Sutt()C, catcher Steve Yeqer and tnneJder Lee Lacy were the only replara to .ee acUoll for tb• Dodaera. . 'A•• 1'1•"" Se• ARCADIA Stre~b·~ Vlron, provtni be ·1 u fu\ on tb• dlrt u be la oo th• turf, r• tO a tratk record Sundu ln nnlnc the sm.1c.11u.n Antonio staket. 8'ml'Alilt&. A: •JUMN lotm•IJ' ~ u ....... ~ll•t. vi.on C!O\'• end t.b8 l\.t·mll• Iii ·1:41 ~. tr Orange County lntemaUooal Raceway will host the cream or the crop ln drag racing Saturday night when the annual East- West confrontation la staged at the Southland's most popular drag racing strip. It wtu include fUf\DJ car, fuel dragster, rocket, Jet and wheelatand championships featuring virtually every top driver from all categories. Leading the Eut team will be Sbtrley Muldowney ~nd Don Garlits. 11\e West t.eam baa Don Prudhomme, Kelly Brown, Tom McEwen of Fowitaln Valley and John Lombardo amon1 others. Raymond Beadle, aurprlae Wlnternatlonal runnerup Tommy lvo and Canadian Gordie Bonin form the East funny car trio against Prudhomme, McEwen and Lombardo. Muldowney holds the track rec- ord at S. 77 seconds elapsed time and 253-mUes per hour. In the rocket compeUUon, it wlll be Kitty O'Neill of Chicago aaalnst Ray Alley of Garden Grove. Jack Ehnnantrout of Ohio ln the famed Hemi Under Glass will race Wild BUI .Shrewsberry ot Glendale in the whee Islanders. Gates open at 10 for lime trials and qualifying wlth the Eaal- West showdown set to start at 7. For further lnformaUon, cont.act OCJR at 652-5511. Blair has two key in- dredients-team play and quick- ness. The 6·6, 6-5, 6·5 front line has good leaping ability and the guards, brought up from the junior varsity, are extremely quick. au 111 ttJ.111 flO Arcedla •S 11 Gl•l\Clate .. Jj Los Amloae u •s Hoo11tr 60 u covlt1a " n e .. rrOUIM s. n Et flM><ho .. ~ ... -S8 61 Monl-lo n '° MOl\rovla .. s. A rttoi. S7 )I 01....S.I• ., Sl s ... MMlftO u n Noo11tr .. jj llOof-•S 7~ a .. ,....,. ., 51 flOOllllll ff '2 a ... -so 6J l••Altoe a 11 ~·· ~ sr WorktNlll ~,,. )6 Ar<~ Valeftda coo s.s ~~~~~~---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Pro Cage, Hockey WILi.ASE AMY.THING OM WHIB.S ~POPU&.Al MAD AND WOO& s \ ... i t COM1CS I CROSSWORD MARMADUKE ' BOOMER MISS PEACH W , NOW THAT )t)l.tVfi C0N(¥U,ftEP ~" "AC~IA"-)0()~ FeA" or: MitlG,..T-MA'i YOU.: 1.1FIE 1MPlrOV!C1 ? .. .. . ........ . . . . ............,. . J,bMSiy. FebNWY 20. 117t OM Y PtLOT llS PEANUTS "He's treasure hunting!" FUNKY WINKERBEAN . 9CX.J lru'.)().) I FUIJ K<,> I ti)M£ 11 MES I FEEl UKE I'M t-OTHING (Y'()RE THAN A CHARACTER IN A COMIC STRIP l CASEY MOON MULLINS GEIUATRIX ;rusr A FLAT, 1W0·DtM£N010tJA CREATION wrrn 00 REAL UF£ • OF rff.J CXJ.lt-1 l GORDO by Tom Batiuk <it>U CERTAINL..(,) HAVE A WILD IMAGl~AilON J by Ch1rtn Roctrtgu••. by Ferd and Tom Johnson JUDGE PARKER DOOLEY'S WORLD ~~ING1bN RODE A BfAUTIFUL ~lTE HOllSE. DR.SMOCK .----------.----. WE!!L.t.., :t't...L.. AP.Mt-r' 1"0 HAVING PIZZY SPSL.t..S, IF YOO't..L.-FOR<Se-r Aeou-r MY S1"0MACH CRAMPS, oKAY ~ by Roger Bradfiefd II SAYS RIGfr HERE~ • • WASHI~~ fNJoVED HIS MOUm' VERNDN ! fOR MAt.N YEARS~ by George Lemont by Templeton and Formal\ YOU 511COl.D\ ~~~ewAR~ .. ' by Gus Arriola ·TODAY'S CROSSIDID PUZZLE by Harold Le Doux · ACROSS to UNiTEo Fte)ure Syndicate 1 Shotmaker'a 60 Oerahwln, 81turdlof'a Puzzle Solved: lofm Sankey.et at SSounded 51 Taraource crow-like 52 Standl of 10 Poaea treea 14 Voyaging 55 Element lSWlnby--50Uaableon ml)oflty both •Idea 18 U S.. 1ennl1 81 Neo9hYlt 17~=~1191 82 ~.!,•man 18 U.8. poet 83 Wli>e out 20 Rich 64 Siller ot 22 P1a<:e1 In a Aru 23r~: 86eaae,:: 24 freefrom 69Thlnner dlductlona: 87 Gallic name 12 Nofse goes 42 More e1t· Brit. 13 Stitches treme 25Gawktd 19Comelnto 440tgreat 28 Foraaken DOWN 21 Customer length 32 Airline lor 24 More recent 47 Former Helalnkl 1 Buddhlat 25 More AtriCan VlP 33 Pick up. as monlt buhful 49 Hockey' a <>Piion• 2 On 1 28 --Mater: Mr. Patrick 35 Call!. specific Mothef 51 Thfob rocktlah: dltt: 2 Earth 52 Cavern: Var. worda 27 Attack Poel. 38 Angered 3 Number OM warning 53 Repetition 38 WOl'ked up 4 Higher in 28 Sit ls' op-54 Stove '40 Part of atature poaltt cNimbet Q.E.D. 5 Machine lot 29 Weary 56 Steel 11\ape 41 Made a P"Hlng 30 From lhe 58 Br. wheel mistake 8 OfY aa • -11me part 43 Kind of 7 Be without mother 5 7 Clay pipe alcohol 8 Work: Prefix 31 PHH tend 46 Summer In 9 Challen1191 34 Blue Jays 58 Faetal Paris 10 Allan and Orlolel future 48 Certain ahip ahrub: 2 37 Tht "O" of 80 Ir. Rel)llb. ropes words · "C 0 O." Army 48 Gave 1h1pe 11 Land mua 39 9ot11 E I I Mn L l ISIC A lj II I.&~ Tll ,, __ I • ' N• I • IT• H 11 s N fjlS N i:: v-r T E TA RE IE SE II & D -I I' IN r. OF E II A I R I EDD AS In f N • II l'I& v • ~ T p E ' SYASP IE AS I E ~ i ~~ UH~ TIO II " A II G ER ; , · l ' Tele1'ision. TONIGHT'S ~ATEST LISTINGS uo11c..~ a1:::.0VOHl!t 'l'tlt men ol 8qued It .,. flooded ~ • ..... ot -'-1llfliOh lttlp them ~ G MOVIS . * * * .. TIMI Wand Ot Hen· ry °'*11° Cl9MI Peter ~. P~ PrenllM. TllWO t~ come to a 1>91Mr uMeraltndillg wUh ''*' parenta .ner cflulng • yeJn ~. (2 hi•.) • THI MADY 8UNCH ' .,.,. bUy9 ...... wig. • THI "°°4ICa A gemblet kllls Illa ~itot end Ul9 Cflrne .. wltnMMCI i JlllDM!ko lllCTNC COMPANY Ht8TOfW °' MtOOCO .. T raNltlonal Period 01 P~Meltlco .. 9 A8CNIWS U08 MOVIE **~"Dying Aoom Only" (t813) Ckwte LMChman. RoM Mwtln. Denger 1o1- low9 when • WOf'MI\ •• hus-- band Cl~ in the washroom of a dingy dlMr Intrigue Brewing (1hr ,30mln ) • BEWITCKED S1manth1'1 naw baby rliMa eyebrows 1n Iha helYWll and on Earth. Jamie Farr as Corporal Klinger and David Ogden Stiers as MaJor Winchester try to nail down an informer in their midst tonight on MASH at 8·30 o'clock on CBS, Channel 2 • OVEREABV ~t· Carol Channlno I!) OIMEN810N8 IN OULTUAE "Culture" Cl) UNTAMEDWORLO ··e-g1eC1ea 2" @ MERV ORIFFlH Ouea11· 81try Ma,,1low, Lon,,le Stiorr 7:00 0 HBC HEWS 0 LIARSCLU8 0 A8CNEWS QI I LOVE LUCY Lucy at1d Ethel believe they are entitled to equal right• with men. Cl) ADAM·12 Ollleera ~alloy and ~eel ·-alter two motorcycle porae anatcher9 E1JI MACNEIL/ LEHRER REPORT C!) COLLECTIVE BARGAINING OOES TO SCHOOL (J) TO TE.LL THE TRUTH Chann~I Listings 0 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles 0 KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles O KTLA (Ind I Los Angeles 0 KABC lV (ABC) Lo s Angeles (I) KFMB (CBSJ San Diego 0 KHJ· lV (Ind ) Los Angeles 1~ KCST (ABC) San Orego CD KTTV (Ind I Los Ang1>le~ Q) KCOP TV (Ind J Los Angt'lt;!. fD KCET TV rPOS> Los Angele~ ~ KOCE TV 1PBS1 Hun1tng1on Beach 7,30 0 CONSUM~A 9UVLINI 0 N!Wl VWEO OAME U THATS HOLLYW,000 'Funi"y You Should Say That" Q) THI! 8RAOY BUNCH BoOby think• lhal he's been eMpoHd lo mumpa Cl) AOAM-12 · Otttc;er Malloy dalee Ille naw glrl In Ille ateno pool whO la the nMICe ol • fellow otticer flll LI IHTEAa.iANOE Popcorn' Vlrg1n1a Hochberg s MalrOirnaf 1s pruented C!) FREHCl-i~EF F1an11ng Fla/I .. (R) (J) 1100.000 NAME THAT TUNE @I WILD. WllO WORLD OFAHIMALS "~Country ' 8.'()() IJ Cl) 8ABY. l'M llA~ 0 LITTLE HOUSE OH TWEPAAIRIE The Strangar • A,, unloYiid wealllly l>Oy leern1 about lamlly low w!>en cnartea hit.. twm 10 dO odd Job• durtno l\la trnpOMd Ill'/ In WlllnU1 Or-. ~ P«9Cft .-.=: * * "TM Dion arou.tra" ( 1874) Stacy l<Hcll, Fr9dfflO Forrell. Two brOthWa. -• bUbble gum lectory WOfbr. t.he OtMr a coel llliner, pel1jd- pale In a rf(bt.y and begin to Ilk• tllelr new e!,.Oletalon. (2 hra.) • 9 Ill< MIWON •DOU.Aft MAH ··the Demon Machine" Stave muat outwit an ln«edlble machine Ulll tlweet-national MCUnly by tailing control ol c:orn- C>Utera thlt ti.ndle the 111tlon'• •ecreta li"d money. Robet1 Walk• Jr • E1alne Gittoe QUMt 11ar (Part 1ol2) 0 JOt<f.A'8 WILD • CAAOL BURHETT AHOFRIEHDS Cl) MOVIE * * * '-0.ya Of WIM Ar>d RHll.. t 11113 1 Jacl< ~. L .. Remlcil A publtc r91atlo!>I man pulls hi. wile Into his own aloahOlltm, but can't lead her baCk when he over· ~ the p<oblem (2 hra I fD THE PRISONER .. Tha G-81" Tiie Pr1'"1· er anempi. 10 di1C<>ver th• identity cl a mya1ark>Ua. u,,HOnllgure C!) QUE PASA. U.S.A. 7 Pepe and Juana are upaet wnen Carmen comes home late, but pardon Joe ol the aame aln untll they !Mrn the bad news 8:301J(J) M'A'8'H Colonel Pott•. learning ol treachery wi thin the 4077th. retuma from Seoul just In time to lnterrvpt the ~ah annual Oetby Day party Md «op a bOmbahell-• 0 CONCENTMTION ., 1 128,0000UESTlOH m> OV£J\ EASY Gu.t· Carol CllllnninO 9:00 fJ (I) PEOPLFS Ct«>tCE AWAR06 TUBE TOPPERS NBC CD 9 :00 -"The Awakening Land : The Saga of an American Woman." Elizabeth Montgomery and Hal Holbrook star in th.e second chapter of the three-parJ. TV adaptaion of Conrad Richter's work. CBS 8 9 00 People's Choice Award!/. The nution ·s favorites in the entertainment field are chosen in this fourth annual cerel'Jlony ,hos ted by Dick Van Dyke and Amy Arch~td. ABC "' 9:00 "Wild aod Wooly." Three women escape from prison and head for a new lifr in the West in this pilot film fo1• a new TV series . Van Dyke, Army Archard oo-llOall 0 MOVIE .. The Awakenin<J Lend The Sao•. 0 1 An Amencan wom.,, .. (Part 2 ot 31 In Tl\e Flelda t lie lll)d beeom•• CIYlll1e<1. Iha WhMlen nave Mver&I c:Mdren. a Churctl and achoOI ate bu<lt, POf'tiUI h• en '"'" with the ac:hoolteac:h« fJ 9 A8C MOVIE "WUd And WOOly .. (Pram lera) ElyaH 01v1101. Suaan Blgelow. Chila De LI... Ttlr .. young WCNTlM escape from pri9on Ind took IOtWard to their new lreedom. but auddenly flnd tllemM4vet In a r-to p<-t the uaual,,atlOI! ol PrMldent Theodore RooMwlt. Ol~OE lronalde r!Mt• hla own Mle 10 prow 111 elderly herm<1 was murdered Q) MERV ORIFFIN Gue.ta· Barry Man110w Lon"le Shorr Suaan AntOfl. Stan Kann Cl THE OUTTI:RIHG PNZE8 A Double .Liie Adtm Morris. now a eucQellM ~-".• I novella! with a auc:ceutul marrrage wonders Why ha ... ,.... lnc:omC>lele • I!> DAVID SU6Sl<IM> Part I "Are Crtmlnals B«n Of M.CS.?" Pari II How To Saw YOAll T•h Ct1.rrted eway by 1111 role In an amateur ptey. Rllpll ~ ha .. h9adad tor HOiiywood. but a tlllent ICOul plcll• Allee lnt1Md. ~30 4D CB HEWS ED THE oNGINALS: WOMENIHART ..Sl>'fn Catcher • TM M Of Betye Saw" ~ bl809 attlat 8etye ...... ""'°"' r......ia Mr lnt•eat In the culture of Ille Carll>- .,_, and '-faadnetkln with the mystical. 11:00808(1)9 NEWS Q LOVE. AMERICAN BTYLE ·I.AMI And The lntrvder'' DolorM Ileen a burglar and wak., up her -huaband. "Lova And Tiie Mllllo...alres" John and Allc4I Ilka 10 pretend that they're mlHlonalrM. 0 MOVIE • * * ·'Tiie World Of H8n- ry Orient" ( l!HM I Peter Sellen. Paull Prenllas T-IMnagera -10 a better und«ttanding with •'-pa1en1a alter chasing • y..,, mutoaan. (2"" J m TME 000 COUPLE F811k la lorc:9d to depend on OtCllf · • help 111 the lonalt ot • OOOltlng contest bee.-of a ,,.,,,. condl- llOft In 1111 arm, I LETS~ A OEAl. otCKCAVETT OuNt-Dee S..a-n. author OI ··eury My Heart At Wounded KnM. •• G MACMEIL/~ AIJIOM * • * Attack On Tetror Tha FBI 11..-The Ku Kaili Klan ( 1876) ,.. .. Str-., Ned Beelly On the nlQllt ot Juna 21, 18" thrH MIH IHlppl cMI right• WOfk«I .,. bNtlllly murdered by 1 band of hooded l<JM111ntn, (Part 1 of tl(R) 8 T()NIOHT Guest hoet: St-Manin. GUMll! Kenny "°OWi, Andy l(aufm.rlpl D L(>VE. AMERICAN ITYl.f. I .. Love Ancf Th• )lotej Cepet'' JoM .. mlatMenly lremed tff a photoofapher an<! a mofll. "tow Altd The Well-Qtoomed Bttda" o-oe ..,._ onto Uy. jual ~ n 'a to rMll"f Sid~. 89 ~STORV ··~ .. Two pollct- men IYy to Cl~ wtlO the madman 11 that ln1tinda 10 blow up • ~ bll9 t......,al. Tony Lo 811~0. Qon Meredith i:atar.(RJ THATGIRL. GET&MAAT "TM Mummy" &I CAPTIOHEO UC NEWS MORNING 12..-00 8 TWILIGHT ZONE Gunther Lutze return• to Iha IOWll OI Dacnau •lier spending yNta In South America. Q) Cl4089-WIT8 CD MOVIE * * "She'a WOfklng Her W•'f Through College" ( 1862) Virginia Meyo. Gene Nelton A bufleeque Iler creetea pandemonium when Iha decldel to get a college education. ( 1 "' • 30min) 12:30 D MOVIE * • "Mountain Rhythm" I 18311) 0-Aulry. June Storey A tinging cowboy encolH!llln ,_ dUf· ong hie tr..,... 11 t1r I GI ALFRED HrTaiCOCK "Tha Older Slater" 12:37 0 ITARTIME "One Embamement And Two Margar1taa .. MldlMI Alnnle, J.ai l(tily A ,.,,.,... !)'-owned I>-* hlr ... dlt- crMI detect!Ye to ,_ tlvM million dollar. atOlen The fourth annuel ...... tainment awards speaai honoring the nauo,,•a lavomM In tha flelcla OI 19'eYlalon. motion poc1ute& and mustc aa ..iected by the AIMrlcan public OICk 10:00 I G NEWS . HONEVMOOHVIS 11:308 Cl) C89 LATE MOV\E -by a bar* all~ t1I IAOHSIOE .. AcolcMnt" • De's What's Up, li•e= . . . Mel Blanc Gave Birth to Coumless Cartoom By JAY SBARBU1T LOS ANGELES (AP I -While a ty~~ in °Por\hmd, Ore.. Mel Blanc began doTng tunny voices Sofllelimes he dld them in school. His teachers didn •t voice dilapproval of his voices, tbougb. Oddly, the JOb didn't require him to do whal he does now. He Jus t s ang a comic song , .. Juanita." In his normal voice In the oud-th1rties, he and has gift for the odd sound arrived an Hollywood when he started on a rad1~how nm by Joe Penner. a comic famed for inquiring. ·wanna buy a duck .. other week and tried again The guy kept sayine no. "FINAUY HE dies, so J wenl to the next guy in charge, Treg Brown, and bl! said. ·sure. let's hear him " The hearing led to hi s first Warner Bros. cartoon voice, a drunk bull, for $15. In 1938 he was on his way as the voice ol Porky Pig and 'lJugs Bunny. How'd he cook them up Tttendat1'• Dat1tlaae ,. • .,r~. · MORNING 11:30. ** "MelkOtllle A11eno•f' (11151) Jeflo Oetall, .JOd)' U-eiq, A men cliagullM hlmMlf' .. the Collnt of MOflte ~ altat Ille Auatro-11~ In «"9r to rout trlllOn ' from CUllYI-. (2 hf.,;.O min) -:: ~~..., AFTERNOON -• • t2.«> o ••K ··e.ti. stwr":; · (1841) 0.,,. Tierney, f{M! dolph Scott. A dllliOo woman INYW,,... home to become the leader °' II\ outl-band at the ctc.e of the CMI War. (1 hf'.1 30 min) J:OO 9 *ft "Or.Q;la Va. Franllanlleln.. 41871) J. Carrol Nallft, LOfl Chaney. Oraculll.,.,, Or.~ stein rwrw hlla morwttr In UCl\ange for 111•~ lllg blOOd eerum. ( 1 "' •• 30 "*'·I uo D ••~"Gitt&' Glrtar 01r111" (1N2) BW1 ..... St• S'-. A~ ,.,.., ....,_ lo accept W glrttr'9nd·1 ~ gllt Jo"'tll another man II\._ IM-.(1 hf.,30"*'':) ''They always used to laugh, then give me lousy marks ... re· called the ex-tyke. who gradual· ed to become the famed cartqon voices or Bugs Bunny. Porky l>ig ~d .00 others in a career now in its Slat year. On Thursday at 8 : 30 on channel 2 he has five of his best· knQwn voices in a CBS special, .. A Connecticut Rabbit in King Arthur's Court," a Bugs Bunny lakeocr on the Mark Twain classic. BLANC BECAME the duck. and in time one of radio's busies t one-man collection of dialects. comic animal voices and sound effects. At one point. he estimates. he was doing 18 network radio shows a week .. Well, I see the character Mlt first," he explained. "Contrary to what you'd think. lhe voices always come first in a cartoon. ~~: .. ~~...,,~~~~,~ .. "r• APWI .... BLANC, 67, HAS been in t,how business -but rarely seen by the audience-since 1927. Fresh out. of high school, he made hls debut on a Portland radio show, "The Hoot Owl Program." But that success didn't come until his debut al the studio whence came his greatest fame -Warner Bros. That happened in 1937 and only after he'd spent 1 'i!r years trying to get bis voice 1n the door. ··1 was doing radio here, and this guy at the studio says. 'No. we got all the voices we need,"· Blanc said. "I went back every Then they draw lo the voice. Bost• Tonigltt They show me a character, say what he'll do. "They said Porky was a timid Jittle guy, so I gave him a timid voice. Bugs was a tough little stinker. I figured he was either Brooklyn ot the Bronx. "So" Blanc slipped into his flat, nasal Bugs vqice. "T put da l wo of dem togedda and 1 got Bugs.'' Comedian Steve Martin will be the gues t host for Johnny Carson on the Tonight s how. airing tonight ill ll :30onNBC'. Channel 4. Martin has been on the show .29 limes in the past five ) ears. ----------··. "Clan le Eastwood •.• fast. furious and tunny "· IMPRESSIONIST MEL BLANC SURROUNDED BY HIS CREATIOMS Though Rarely Seen, His Voice Is Known by Almost Everybody "Jane Fonda and Vanessa Redgrave are close to perfection. 'Julia' is moving in its glowing commitment to the power of friendship." ROO#ll EIMtt. Cl'wc4l)O S.-T.,._ ---~- TV for Congress Vetoed?. WASHINGTON (AP) Tncky lights and fussy microphones will keep television coverage of congressional floor debates off the air waves, pro· bably for the rest of this year. But to set the stage for later broadcasts of Congress, radio will cover the Panama Canal trea- ty debate in the Senate. (KVSC-FM 91.5 carries the debates, KCRW, 89.9, presents a summary at 6:30 tonight.) Immediate television coverage of the House of Rep esentatives wa!f vetqed after a 90-day private test showed congressmen that the process is a . UckUsb Uchnical task on a gavel-to-gavel cov- erage basi11. "The overhead lighting currently in the c hamber often results in unflattering and sometimes unreco1nlxable pictut-es of the Sipger Hosts Sliow LOS ANGELES (AP) -Slnger-comJ>Oler Paul Williama will atar in a situation comedy pilot for NBC tn which he plays the host ot a children's •bow on a Denver TV statloa. Jn CM show his 1irllrtend will be a member of tb• Colorado HJthway Patrol and hil closest friend wlll be a devious, fast-taltlnc lawyer. BruH ~ane ia ~ tile .,not for P'tnt Artlatl TeJevLstoa. members," says a draft report froiv a committee s tudying the question. ·'The ·raccoon effect• <1f overhead ll1ht. creates deep shadows at the eyes and chin," says the re- port from the Rules Committee. "'l'his effect ralles particularly cruc;ial pro- blem' for black members. Petradox.tc.Jly, the brighter' the overhead Jl&bUng, the worse the sbadow'efted\ecomes," ••15 the ~rt. The resulC ol Uiese and other problems -such as unsure camera worlt and 1oices t.hat faded wbt!n apeaken \urned away· from the microphone -are sending tne proJect l>ack'for moreplanning. "It would be irrespodslble, a disservice to the pu~lic, as ~ell u an embarrusmen\ to lhe House, to broadcast coverage or the House rtoor until these probl~ms are reasonably resolved," the re- potl says: But technical expena have promised solutions. ~ -News ... aek MllPJ!loe lZ;;J ............ , E 'J~-~t"' 8eNd on • true tlc>fy ~ 0 ................. LlllJ. ----~ P.ff""'Uflh \0 ""\•fl\ (\tit*M ! ~ . A TRUE LOVE STORY .. For tWTyOnt who btlitvtS in happy ttulings ; ... -... ---.. ·-··· .~ ENJ'ERT AJNMENT I MUSIC "' . . . • Get~g Little Goats ,.,.Wt ..... STANDING TALL Composer Newman 'Short People' Boosu Composer By PETER J. BOYEll LOS ANGELES (AP) Randy Newman has 1001 been a pop music gadfly. bw:zlnl our eart with satinis on the cruel and usual ways of man, singing gruff-voiced novel 1on1s that lampoon prejudice and l&· norance and other bad thinas. The outslzed characters Newman makes are usually sacb complete buffoona that we have to laugh at them, in much the same way that Norman Lear would have us laugh at Archie Bunker, NEWMAN NEEDLED rasctsts with bis "Sail Away" in wbicb a callous slave trader asks Africans to come to America where they can 'drlnk wine and sing about Jesus' and "Yellow Man," a bigot's raving about the inferiority of Asians. He ridiculed Yankee hypocrites with his "Rednecks," ln wblch Southem blacks were invited to come up North where they'd be "Free to be put in a cage in Harlem, free to be put in a cage in Roxbury in Boeton, free to be put in a cage in East St. Louis." It all wor"ed well, and Newman ~ame one of pop's few major figl.lres that could re- peat edly ~et away with "message" songs, rare in this day of Shaun Caaaldy. Each new album was eagerly awaited by the relatively small but hard- core group of Newman fans. It worked, that> is, until one oC Newman's crazy tales became a hit. "SHORT PEOPLE'' ls Randy Newman's first real succeaa in the AM market, and it's left rolk• both amused and confused with lyrlca suth u these: "They abort people got little baby legs and they stand ao low, you 1ot to pick 'em up Just to aay hello. They got litUe cars that ao beep, beep, beep; they got llttle voices going peep, peep, peep. They got grubby little fingers, and dirty llWe minds, they're aonna get you every time." A ridiculoua little song, true. But ob, bow folk.a got riled. Two stations in Boston refused to play the song because of a flood of calls and letters from listeners who thought it was in· sensitive. The five-foot-seven station manager of both stations explained that children might begin to see themselves as "creepy little folka." AFTER READING that his song had been banned ID Boston, Newman wbo'a five foot 11, by the way laughed and said, "I don't understand it, this is really aurprlsing to me." Dylan 'Explains' ~eaning of Movie "It seems so obvious that the song's so overdrawn and exag- gerated. The fact that tbey could think anybody could really t.b.lnk like that, that'• a problem. It's aa if there's eome Blg People's. Guild out there somewhere, out to get little people. It's ridiculous." Then there are thoee fans who, understanding their favorite artist's genius, have interpret- ed the song u being a satire on short-sighted people -spiritual midgets, you might say. By MARY CAMPBELL NEW YORK (AP> -Bob Dyllln, who has given fans and detractors hundreds of song- lyrles in which to dig for deeper meaning, bas made a four-hour moyie that is a meanlng- diqer's bonanza. ' the movie "Renaldo and ·," Dylan and his wife are played by musicians Ronnie Hawkins and R o n e e Blakley . Renaldo and Clara, a couple in love, are played by on.•" Bob Dylan and Sara Dylan, who was his wife at that time. The movie was shot while D> Ian and some musician friends were on a concert tour, .and scenes from on-stage performances are included. On 1'tage, the man we know as. Dylan and the movie knows as Renaldo wears a mask or whiteface "to shield Renaldo's identity," Dylan says. D\'LAN SA VS HE ls satisfied with his creation. He says it's not close to his original vision of the movie, but "t.bls is it. It was outlined at the beginning Just the way that you aee on the screen. "Most people I've heard from th~ it's a little long. That can't be ~elped. I dido 't know how lo°' it would take to tell that pa4J.cular story and make it ef- fective. I knew it was not going to be a short hour movie because we couldn't tell that story in an hour. ; "Originaijy I couldn't see how we could do it under seven or eight hours. But we just sub- tracted songs and scenes and dialogue tmtil we couldn't aub- tract any more." THERE ARE 55 musical pieces in "Renaldo and Clara." Allen Ginsberg reads poetry and Joan Bae% Is seen several times. The acted scenes aren't in logical sequence, and there seem to be more that aren't about Renaldo and Clara than there are about t.bem. The audience doesn't always know who the characters are or exactly what they're doing. SUJI, despite some mystery, lbere la a unity about the film . "All the scenes are connected on a sub- lim inal level," Dylan says. And be says the. overall meaning is clear. Robert Reed Set For New 'tv Role LOS AtilGELES (AP) - Robert Reed atars as a psychologist in "Operation: Runaway," a new limited NBC series from Quinn Martin Productions. The stories will be based on the cases of an estimated one million people nm away every year. "I GUESS YOU could say I was talking about inensitivity," Newman says, "but giving the song even that serious import ts giving i1 justice lt doesn't de- serve. "I dld a television show with a gay who kept wanting me to say the song was about the narrow- mindedoess of people toward short people. Baloney. What narrow-mindedness? There Isn't any prejudice against short people." If anythiJli, Newman's "Short People" seems a self-parody, a message song ao absurd it makes you want to laugh at message songs. What.ever, the tune is a bit. and lt'a the first time Newman has aeen ooe of bis songs ln the pop chart.a. ''IT'S A BIG hit, and that sur- prise• me," he says. "But I'm still waiting fOT' It to make me happy." Newman, who first became known for writine the Three Dog Night hit, "Mama Told Me Not to Come," says he's bothered by the scrutiny "Short People" baa been subjected to and you get the feelin& be almost mlss~ the relatiye anonymltb be en- joyed when the only people heard his music were folks who knew what to expect. "Some ol those other songs did worried me; 1 thou&ht I might have tome problem• with them," be says. "Can you im· aglne what would have happened ll one of those had gotten as rar u this one 'Short People'! I'dhavegottenkilled!" c:1nename Ei scAEen 63U 2ss·1 tamPLEX C11a..-.nA" • S.ft\a AM .. ,... ... ,, MATINEES SATURDAY l SUNDAY . ------_......_._ Mondly, februaty 20. 1171 DAILY PILOT 115 ·w1NNER 4 GOLDEN GLOBE AWARDS lncdudlng BHt Picture L ...-.. (eofP*Sr or ••••ll t.- •• GI~ (PG) Marah8 Maeon Richard Dreytun IDWA"08 SCHEOuLe DAILY 7:11 1:11 . l'At ·=~!...!~· 10:11 SATAR.INJMUl'f J:OO, 4:00 •• •:oa. 10:15 MEL BROOKS Delly 7:00-9:15 Friday S:OG-1:15-10:30 set/Sun. 1:3~:Gt:oo.8:15-10:30 Mon. 2;15-4:45-7:1 M:30 edwards HUNTINGTON HACH AT II.US. H.I. 848-0381 4 Golden Globe NomlnaUone 8"t Plc:tufe-OralM BMtMtot 111'1 tuHorttn1 Role-~ OulnMM 8"lD~Lucat Inducing Wlnn•r of Oold9n GloM Awatd .., .... OrttlMt... - Newport FHhlon l1hand Newport Cent., Between Mac Arthur• Jamboree . et Pedflo Coalt tlghwey M4.a7tO llCMHO •u•rON IQUUS111 ru•~•i. 1111 a .... a.tf4UM & _ 1 ... I 4.U e 11U I ..... SH WNO lOVID •'°"fNt IMC*l'f & r.l UfefflNI .... ~· """._..., .. ~.:. I a:=.o~: .. ~~""~~o~ •-ll-•11-1Mi1-a.:cc:4"iil:1.1=-' nu 1a1M1a111 ID-MfTIUH I --lllAIOM -~~) '~==· ........... uu .... --.. .. ~~I ':=s::=l:· i 1 I ./ i t ................................. .. liiJ 1•4C• ... ,. ---.....~ -.. . . .... -""----=--- I -DAILYP1LOT Monday. February 20. 1978 llyTbe A.tsoela&ed Preas . i The following are Billboard'• hot record hits t tor lbo week ending February 2S as they appear In neat v.:ee1t'1 llaue of Billboard maaazlne. . HOT SINGLES 1. STAY1N' ALIVE -Bee Gees <RSO> 2. LOVE IS THICKER THAN WATER -Andy Gibb (R.$0) 3. JUST THE WAY YOU ARE -Billy Joel (Columbia> 4. SOMETIMES WHEN WE TOUCH -Dan Hill (20th Century) at 5. EMOTION Stock) Samantha Sang <Private 6. DANCE, DANCE. DANCE, YOWSAH, : YOWASAH -Chic (Atlantic) 1. WF; ARE THE CHAMPIONS -Queen <Elektra) ,..,. 8. NIGHT FEVER -Bee Gees CRSO ) ' 9. LAY DOWN SALLY -Eric Clapton <RSO > 10. HOW DEEP IS YOUR LOVE -B~ Gees ... <RSO) 0 TOPLPs "U 1. "Salurday Night Fever" Soundtrack <RSO) )o 2. BILLY JOEL -The Stranger (Columbia) 3. QUEEN -News Of The World (Elektra> 4. EARTH, WIND & FIRE -All 'N' All .,, (Columbia) By ROBE9lT OSBORNE -........ ...,..,~ The posslblUt.y of returnlne from the dead ls, to say the least, an in· triguing subject and its box office potenUal hasn't been lost on Sunn Classics, the Utah-based company lOOJ committed to maklne G·rated films with heavy exploitation potential. · "Beyond and Back," the latest Sunn release. takes up the dead-and· back topic, while bringing up rt'· incarnation and purporting to ex· plore what lt'1 like to go "on the other side." The end result neither enlightens nor entertains; it only Limps along and bores. THE PROBLEM HERE is that producer Charles E. Sellier Jr., scr1pter Stephen Lord atfd director J ames L. Conway are trying to pass off kindergarten q ueatlons and answers as if it's holy law, etched somewhere in granite. Their recount· THE PICl:VBE DOES have ope ing of "actual" cases through the positive asset: Sunn Classics alms to years also has a ring or hoke because leave everyone with the lmpreulon everythine is re-enacted for the that going to the crave ts quJle a camera, mostly by actors who ap· warm, happy experience: something A"AC:IOSS MIAT DMDI"' V "YOTA• TO nt• BHH'I ' Ofl'IMIWOti.r .. " ----iUd•ZOOpM.', T cm CINftl CIMIMASI S...•.~.!..SJ.:!I ENTERTAINMENT/ MOVIES/ MUSIC 5. ROD STEWART -Foot Loose & Fancy iFree (Warner Bros.) COUNTRY SINGLES pear to be amateurs. that comes as a comfort lf you don't tlr.-1r..r•l':W~- Prior to the credits, n1~a~rr~a~to~r~-h~os~tiiliii~in~s~is~l~on~v~e~rifi~'c~a~u~·oo~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!i!!!il!i!!i~~~i!iiiiiii~~~ MOVI• e S e t .seE 1T AGAIN Foh THE FOURTH oR 1. DON"l' BREAK THE HEART THAT LOVES .. OU -Margo Smith (Warner Bros.) 2. MAMAS DON 'T LET YOUR BABIES. GROW UP TO BE COWBOYS -I CAN GET OFF ON YOU -Waylon & Willie CRCA) 3. DO I LOVE YOU -Donna Fargo (Warner Bros.) FIFTH TIME. YOU WIU. DISCOVER NEW PLEASURES EACH TIME YOU In 4000 "ANNl~eHALL'' 4. WHAT DID I PROMISE HER LAST NIGHT -Mel Tillis CMCA) 5. WOMAN TO WOMAN -Barbara Mandrell (ABC-Dot ) EASY LISTENING 1. WONDERFUL WORLD -Art Garfunkel (Columbia) 2. EVERYBODY LOVES A RAIN SONG -B. 3. Thomas CMCA) 3. I CAN 'T SMILE WITHOUT YOU -Barry Manilow <Arista ) 4. BEFORE MY HEART FINDS OUT -Gene Cotton (Ariola America) 5. JUST THE WAY YOU ARE -Billy Joel (Columbia) SOUL SINGLES I. IT'S YOU THAT I NEED -Enchantment (United Artists) 2. FLASH LIGHT -Parliament (Casablanca ) 3. ALWAYS AND FOREVER -Heatwave <Epic) 4. TOO HOT TA TROT -Commodores ~<Motown> 5. WHICH WAY IS UP -Stargard <MCA> WASHINGTON -A film set around the year 4000 A.D. is next up for p roduc e r Arnold OrgoUni, who bas just wrapped first urut photo· graphy on "Meteor," now planned for Easter 1979 release in the U.S. via AIP. Orgol~he will collaborate on his next proj ect with science fi ction writer l!faac Asimov and space and science artist Robert Mc Call Scheduled for a TV m inis eries is "The Fortunate Pilgrim." from the Mario Puzo autobiography concern· ing an immigrant who comes to New York In . the 1890s. HENRY WINKLER SJ-• u _.11 -u .... •1JH1n •m-1211 ALPACINO MAKJHEJCEIFR AT edwards LIDO CINEMA NEWPORT ILVD. AT VIA LIDO NEWPORT IEACH 673-8350 Newport Faahlon llJ1nd Newport Center letwHn MKAll!lw ind J1mborH It PIClfle Co .. Hlgtlw1y '44-0710 .. ' . . . ....... --. .... _ ...... _...,_ .... ___ ,!_ .... ..._. __ .... _ .... _. _____ -------~ INSIDE: •Alin Landers •Lifestyle •Horoscope •Classified .............. ......,._ The Andrews family of Mission V1ejo participate in a Latter--d~y SailltS>'homeYWenlng. Mir,.. ... ~.., ,..O'.,_. Dick Platt: Back in his law office. A successful lawyer, Richard Platt has also been drawn to the carnival. By CHERYL ROMO Olt•D .. l'tP• . . ftts.¥00 ~ .. -.... T .· T-~hirts are walking bumper stickers that cover the body with words, mottos, sayings, advertising' your lifestyle. B7 MARCIA FOUBEllG Ot .. o.t.., ........... T·ahh'tl were once just slmpte, abort· sleeved, comlortable, white cotton underw&ar. But over the years, the lowly ltttle T-shirt bas turned into a major story in fashion literature. ' TodAly, T·5b:irts make a 1tat41nent. They are a meant of expresalOD, of cooununieatlon, of advertiaemeoL. TREY ABE walking bumper stickers that cover the body with words, mottoe, saying.a, pictures and artwon. Tbe T ·shlrt you wear 1.,s a lot about 70Ur penonallty, your bobby, your Ufestyle, your social class. The fellow who loves the Dallas Cowboys, the woman wbo feels like a f'OX7 Lady. the kid who bero-wonblps co&nle boc* cbaracwn, the t.eena1• wbo caa't live wit.boot Shau Culidy -all hue a chance to reaffirm their devot!Oll by paradldt around ID the particular 1blrt that sulta them tO a T. PICTUSES OP atan, ~ lf'OUPI and famous people are a.mon1 the favorites. GQ)'S who once wore thetr beartS on thelr 1leeve11 now wear Farrah Fawcett·MaJors on their chestl. Women who are bot for John Travolta can keep him close to their hearts. Donny and Marie, .Willie Nelsoa, the .Eagles, Roclcy Balboa, even Beethoveii line up aa pol)ular portraits. Words and saying.a on T-ehirb are cllrect wa1s of getting the m•age ac.ou. Remember .the old Bull.shirts? YOU CAN GET -T•shlrt w{th JUst about any school's nun~ on tt. or aDT make of car (the Bolls-Royce shirt la dr•matn: blacrwttb statua aUver letterlni>, •1 apart ('11 Got Tellllla Feve.!"fu 1 Ski Bum; Sunltl.c llrritttlooal. U.S.A. Drin Team>, or any place ( .. l'n been to Yellowatcoe''). Movies -0 Dartb VMS« liv•," 0 We ~ Not Alone." Fads -K1U Tut. tM Hobbit. Maplftque1 SuperlaUva 'm foreiln Jucqac• -Fantasticot You name it, mOlt T·sbirt abopa wUJ print lt. For e.xamplel. Judy Busa, owner of Tbe'Fad Shack in South GOUt Wlage, says that ori&lnal artwork can be reprOduced m the ahlrla, u well <See T-6Bl&TS, Pap Cl> By JUDITH OLSON Qf .. Delf ........ TM ra.t of tM klhgdom ii Jn U.. .UU. T'M roOI of the date ii in the JamU11. The n>OC of U.. lamllfl ta· Pl the penclfl ot iCa Mod. . NncWI fm.t!I B.C.) It has been aald that the famUy ls the backbone of the ..-tion. Aa the f amUy pes, IO &oes thenaUon. Plenty of peaple are won1e4 about the state of the family in the U.S. and what will happen to the tbls country if a lot of Band·Aids aren't put on the alUng unit in a hurry. There may be good reasoo to be concenH!d. The dlvorce rate is high, crime seems to be it\· creasloe and many people Just plain have .tfiluble copiDc with tlle complexities ol modern life. While the concept of family seems sbaky nowadays, there is bope·from the efforts of two· c11urcb bodies, one an old proeram and one very pew . The old emphasis ii from the Cburch of Jesus Christ cl. Latter-day Saints and the new --........... -·-··--,--...~--.... - . .. :: .. :-.. : · . .. .. .. . 11 Mondi;, Febf\!al'Y 20, 1078, DEAR ANN : Shice u have already print· aome variations of ; urpby'a Law. perbapa -:1ou oueht to 10 full ;:eJrcle and give your •• ders the st.ory from ~~e beginning. ~·-~ Ever slnc e C. • •• .t tlae time aad &bat la· HttlC:ieD&. SICK INSIDE • ~ orthcote Parkln1on o;~tabtl1hed hls famous DEAR A NN LANDERS: I hate to be a stool plceon but tb1B la beclnnlnc to get to me. I work for a fine or- 1antsatloll. Our new bulldloc ls one of the s . It you ex.Plain 4. The planning fortbe flne1t in the country. something so clearly .su111mer "quiet perlod" I've seen employea walk that nobody could must be baaed on the out of bete with pos1lbly mlaunclentand. actual time after July .t ypewriters, addinf somebody WW. 4tb and the onset of macblnee, lamps, pal.nt- w of bureaucratic • Atowth -namely, work ~panda in order to ac- om m odate the ttme : allotted. to it - several "'-: dmlnlstrators have •• ·~e e n In s pire d t o ~·•stablis)t. laws of their Labor Day, which la two Inca. everytblnc they 8. Once • Job ls fquled week1. -KEN S. OF can lay tbelr hands on. up, anytbln1 done to Im· W-"YLAND, MASS. What can I do without prove it w1U onl7 make DEAR KEN: I ea-namlnc the tblevea? 'pwn to explain why :&"uman beings behave ~~e way they do. I hope ~ u wW share their Jaws it worse. Joyed C.be dlance of pace · This J ref"'9 to do. - 7. When too much aad laope •Y readera DEAa INSIDE: You emphasis is placed on dld, too. c:aa write • .Sped letter delegation, responsibW· And now I llave IO tlte pft9Sclelat of tU ty like sediment. alnka ·aa~ ••t.aw•• 1e11t ID firm ... AUed be ••· to 'the bottom. b7 a Memphis reader: •IP puda to &Ile nlta. ~~ lth your readers. z~oblem. day after day 7. an ~come tiresome, ' en to a dedicated soul ~ e you, Ann. A change ~Df pace will refresh your . Wby U1e7 laavea't 8. The lenith ot dis· You cu fool tome of alread7 dme IO II. "'9 cuss ion ~ any item in a the peeple all of Ute Ume · el1llt-woader of t•e proposed budget wW be an•allot&llepeop~IO!De world. in inverse proportion to the amO\Dll of its cost. (Example: A decision to spend eight milllon dollars on real est ate will be reached within three minutes or lea.a. A $2,000 difference tn the type of wastebaskets wlll be argued for five ,5plrlt. Print them, please. •· 1 . Chisholm'• First L a w o l Human l oteracUon: 1l anything can go 'WI'Olll. it will. 2. When things are go- . . 111 g we 11 • e-x p e c t <somethlna to explode, erode, collapse or dis- appear. hours.) Unfailing Law of Second·Ratedness: 1. Never be fl.rat to do anything. 2. Under controlled ·: ·: 3. When you've come ·. 'o the conclualon that \hiDIS can't pouibly get ·..any worse you will be proven wroo1. conditions. organiama . _ 4. Your motives for do a11 they damned well ~oinf whatever 1ood please. deed you may have 1n 1Dind will be interpreted a. AlJ thine• betnc d l f f e r e n t 1 y b y :equal. )'OU are bound to eom e body. lose. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Palmer. . :j?sth Anniv_ersary PaUl and Ruth Palmer celebrated tlMdt IStb • .-ectdlng anoivernrr on Feb. 15 at bome wttb u lntlmate dlnner paiV. ' . Tbe PalmVI were married In Detroit Mlclll8U la 1913 and lived there for anfti years. : MClll ot their married life bu be.a spmt lD : '.'Callfornla (tbe at.a1e ot Palmer'• blrtb -Mn. 'Palmer was born in M.lchlaan) and IDClet ot that time ln Newport Beach -permanenil7 alnce 1935. " Their famllY of four daQlhten produeed ·•,even grandcblldren and ten treat· 1randchlldren wbo live In e}tber Callforn.la or Haw all. Guests Included Mr. and Mn. Emery Hanson. Mr. and Mrs. Murray Roberti, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Sliva, Mrs. Jean Preston, Alan Nicholson, and Agnes Blomqutat. lltMt ....... ( TUESDAY. FEB. n 87 SYDNEY OllA&a J AIUFJI (M~ch 2l·April 19): Full Moon position accents work, health, dental-medical appointment.a, cbectupa. Attend to baat·c matters -be positive conc•rn.ln• detalll. Tboroupneu now ls your all7.. · TAU&tJS (April »¥a7 JO)! Make diaqes baaed oa written Information .. Build on IOlld structure. Be speclfic. thoroqb, deal wltb Aries indlvidu.al. Older penoa or autbority flpre ap- pears ltUbbom. liut hu your belt lnte:reata at heart. GEIDNI (May 2l·JWM 20): Fall Moon poslUon coln.cldea with flnllb, the teat1DC ot a product -or relationship. Adjustment ln bome area Indicated. CANCD <June 21.July 22): Accent on deal· inc• with close relatives, a,bort trips. Deftlle terms, be sure meanlqa, Intentions are eryatal- clear. You gain lnalgbtl lnto motive. You Jeana limitations and develop areate.t respect for Potential. Very producUve -lf you ao penntt.. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Full Koon 1'prel- sure" la on area related to~. lneome lolti articles, valuables, personal po11e11lons. Priorities come Into sharp foct.a. Your love Ute and flnances blend -practical dilcuaslon CCD· cernln1 coeta, energy expended and fUtur& proapeeta spotlighted. VlllGO (Auf. 23-Sept. 22): Full Mooa in your sign dep eta personality. lnltlatlve. personal appearances, magnettam, popularltJ, confidence in bunches and Jud&ment. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0c:t. 22): Areal wblcll laad bun dark receive benefit ot JN&ter UOt. Bleakness is tramlonnecl lnto aebltt:r. Almalt mlraculoualy, you perceive poteuUal. 11D· dentand that some fears, doubta are ot paper- tlger variety. You are on tb.redotd of 11- lumloaUon. You'll be inspired bJ aecond ·~hance. scoaPJo <Oct. 23-Nov. 21>: Aceeat on friends, hopes. wilhea -OM who aided and taught ID put ls 'VffrJ much pnaent. It ta. OD· ly a note 6'om you -and tbe ball wU1 be rollq. Throw aside lma&lnary. mlddle-el.au pride. Malte a atralehtforward requ.t mad 1'0UI' needs wW be fulflllect SAGITrA.aWS <New. D-Dee. tl): RlpH.,.. IOdal life, fua. O¥era1I -riew, popatar appeal. advancement, cUmbllaf to more elewat.d pol.ltioa. Y-. ,ou can mat. room tor,._...., at top. GernlDl 11 ln pletun --80 .. uotMr ~ ·. CAPIUCOltN m.c. D.lan. )I): "'ftlll'ws Oil tnftl. pldJ!.....,, educadca YCM ea Dllll don Rat""' ..... "*2-..S to nit Jc: actuallY need. 0,. llDee ot oommnaka Aqua~ Leo and Scorpio cota14 ft&u. JliOID • • AQUAalUS (Jan. »Pft. 18): CclDoeril With occult la Indicated. You lean &boat obleUN or Jtldden maifen, attain. Be prepand to alk and amwer qU..UOU. · .. PJ8CB8 (l'eb. 19-Marcb IO): Go llow, lie low. check bidden clauael, cbl't llttempt now to domlna1e cl.rcumatances. SpoWlht on lefat acreementa, arran1ementa, partnerab p, marriage. Flnbh rather than begin. Get rid of false notions concemine ••man oo white horse." ••• Fa•nily <From Pa1te Cl) however, and famWea are eneouraeed to aet their own priorltles. While the 1oals of the two procram• are similar, the.approaches are dlfle:renl. IN THE CATBOUC emphas~ accord1n1 to Fr. Colleraa, tbe prlorlt7 ts to atren,u,.n the ~ latlombtp d t.be couple u head ot ~ family. Be, la faet, recommends that couples •Ueftd a Maniac• Eneounter weekend before ~ ma to tbink o(famlly actnitiel . 41U parents lOYe each other and !XR,._. it ... ll's aotn~ to rub off oa their cblldren, he ex- plained. 'Oommuolcat.ion ii the key. It'a more tban cblt.ebat back and forth." · Fr, Colleran 1-Uevea that parent.a too often fet boned down b1 tbelr toles u mother and father and fall to nurture their marltai re- laUon.ablp.. .. You bave to be actively involved with one another. You baVe to diaeovereach ot.berftnt." 11 arrlaff aboUJd be "1e1WMI as ••more \ban ~ license, .. IM esn.ph11bed. ''Marrlace is a sacrament too, )Ult lib tbe Ebc:bartlL We don't. nvereneeitM'()lagb '1'BBllB 18 A. real excitement for sne u a prieat ID IDOdvat!U huabandl and wivea to aee what tM,'re c~file of, and to come to pips wlth the ~aOnll.narJ 1~ invested in Uaem~ Jmbaacfl 04 .ive. cDacover th1a deep aod l.ICNd relatlomblp there wU1 be "an ur•ency to ebare.'' Fr. Colleran ... d. •41bat is the key to parentine. Too often pa.rents mp talltlnf to ooe another.'' What It all bolls down to id spouses haW1C an "uncohdlUonal love" for one another, a Jove similar to Cb.rilt't love. Fr. Colleran contends . .. There im't any other way. Thet'e are no shortcut.a." ••WE HAVE A tot of poteiJtlal here in Orange. People are comma alive to their pot.enuan and needs." Tbe Latter~ Saint emphasla ls. on the family as a unit that will last forever. Family Home Evenlnp, tbere!ore, focus OD tea~ eblldren ways lo C>bta1n eternal Uf e and with a secoadAr7 loel ot bWJdJD1 Mr'CJ08 lam.Wes fOI' a atrona natioD. M amaa1a with programs OD IUCh topics u bouorlDI pareDtl, the "wer of aratltude, respect for aneeston, prayer and aett-wonn are distributed free to all cbureh f amllies each· year. Children are encouraged to participate in the leuom and make auegestlons about what to do durtng ~ eveniq, so the cbw'cb also views the e.eniqs u ''training erounds" for future citlsent~ • <From Paa Cl> as penonal messaaes like "Oldie But Goodie" for a SO.year-old hubby. 8BB ADDS THAT many adults favor say- ines with double meaninas, and coupl• often create their own matcbln~j=· · 8W Nickel. a n&tlVe pblatl DOW liv· ing l.D Westmlnate:r, bas a eoUecticn ot mOC'O tbaD 50 ot Che eouon word and plcture canvases. "Everybody in Califonda seems to have a fuorlte T-ablrt." be says. "'TbeJ've tot to be the cheapest form ol advertisement cotne ... be notes, adding that many bars and restaurants oiler them fOI' 1ale. He'• alw.,a b.ad a buDcb ot T4hirta, but bis eollecUon cnrrr after be and a ~worker de- cided to bave a contest to see wbo could wear a dltrveat lhlrt every day wU.bout ever duplicat· ing. COME IN TODAY. I THERMOIHOR·E· By Battle Criile • Christian Dior · • f:lore of Italy •Ncole •Pierre Cardin ~ • 1Glle of Florence · . . . ANN LANDERS /HOROSCOPE F amilies are not fleelUlred to preffl_\t 1esa003 each Monday evenln1, bowever. Some pact a picnic for the beach, attend ad*' fu.nctiona to•etber or plan ao ••enlnl of 1amu to alternate with the lessons. TBE EVENINGS areft't llmltecl to nuclear families, either. People ln Leilul'e World •et '1'0UP8 toaetber and •incles with famlllea on.- meet. . . . '"'"'-• .,,_.. la nner a reason for an.YOM ti t11e cbllrch to feel alon....-.we•r• all part 9'. the •cburcbf amlly, ••Mn. An:4eraon &ll«ted. ramu, unity would be poulble 1rithout u.. • scheduled Monday meetlDga, Ille ~ed. but "tt •Ou.Id require a lOt more attendcD to detail. Tb1s la almply a more fulfllllnl experience." What has chaaied ao that famllie1 no ionaer are cl01e? Many thine•. accordln1 to Kn • Andenon and Fr-. Colleran. •urbere are thousands of c1use1," Pr. COlleran said. ••First, I don't \b1nk we credit parents with their abWty to parent. They have let too many other agenclea do It.. 1'Tbe untqueneu of the couple bu beell ove.rlooted. We dou•t focus eooulb OD tbe quallUe1 ot a buaband and wile u a eouple. 0 And, I don't think we really want to be m. •olved with people. Peopl• don't trust eaeb otbel'. Wbe:o people deeply communlcale Wnca cu happen." · Many cultural changes have happened In the last two decades too. Belcre tbe 1980'1, when th~elag~tt~a~MmoottbatthinpatarUd to change for the familyt _people bad leu money, fewer can and televwoo setl and more Ume at homo, augaeated Marcia Starr and Carol Gardner, offtcen tn the .Uef Society. "Play wu simpler and more creative,"' Mn. Starr .&led. 1'Kidl are smarter DOW a.at not u inlqtnative. They rrow up too fut..'" She also noted that there are more ICbool acUvlties and sporta to keep cb1lclren awaJ from home. "School baa become a MYaMaJ• ..-acUvltT.'' lbe 1ald. ~·Aftd cblldreu expect th1np now. Tbe7 don't want to work for them.•• Mn. Anderlon conceded that ber chlldnn have been conaldered old·fub1ooecl becauae ot their lo9Clvemmt In Famlly Home Evemna bat sbe 1911. "1 tb1nk our kids are bappler." Wltho'1t family empbula, and itl mcral and rell1loua tratnlne, there soon wlll be ... generation ot kids wit.bout faith.'' Fr. ~ warned. •-we have to re-think a lot ot old proerams. We're foi.ng to have to really move or we're ao- inC to loee a lot of parents who have faith.'" ••• ~arny (From Pap CU · • Platt stated t.he mood 1S similar to that of 111 old·t.lsn• revival meeUog -and little by little, once 1kept.lcal people are drawn Into the COD game without even reallzl.ng lt. .. Pretty · soon everyone la thrown off balance, and thinks they will get something for notbin1 • • • How often in this society do you aet sometlilng for nothing?" be asked. • "Tbe carny's line is •Remember folks, believe In me, I believe in you' ..• They eet the trust theme 1oing -lt'1 very popular today ••• and then tbey start escalating." Tho attorney said be watched in fasd.Datiou as people -who had come to the fair stone- faced and resistant -walked out later with a S60 sewing machine they bad paid ~ or $600 for. Why do people come to the midways! Platt r eplied that be feels people aometimes like to throw their money away and like to experience .. the glitter." He aaid some of the .. Jam Auction" customers return year alter year - even though they 0 sometlmes walked away • scratching their heads , wondering what happened.•' Platt 1ald tbat at first he identified with the customers -and not the midway barkers, but alter bis firat few carnivals, he too, looked upon the custom.era as .. marka." *THREE MONTHS MEMBERSHIP $38.00 *REGULAR PRICE ·. $88.00 Tn trodudnc- SUSIE HARPER .................. .-.11 ....... __ -------loolied__, _ ____ ,....,.... ___ .... _, ~-........ -. "'9tolio.d•---·---..., .. , _wt!Olll_.... .... __ " __ _ ___ .,. __ _ ___ .._,.,.,,," ............... _ ....,,. . .......,..._"" .... ........, ..... _ _ ... ..,_ .... ___ ....... ., __ .. .._ ___ ...,_, ... __ ...._. ~ •""""" ......... °".-......... "·---·IMll!y .. ""Ohlr_., _ 11'lf ___ ._ _____ °' -·--.... ,,..,.,..., __ ......,_ •lllO-ofllOI_...., ____ . ___ "°'..,.... __ _ Ot11¥f~jell)'&-1001 Tadlf.__ ... _.,...,. __ _ """"68-oN.-•ROll-.i, ....... ... ---·"°-. ..,.-.... ., ..... ........ v-.... -v.-.... -... .. ._ ..... .. .. : = II t 1' • ti . ., ----••ttt• l / i CAlJFOANlA Note: Mo.11 tran.nt bl CaJifondo. A dream in South8Tfl CaliJomJa. and Cl. nightmare m the San FrancUco l:Ja11 Area? An A11ociated Presa team ez- amJnea Uw tuccuse1 ~and setbocb. By The Associated Press In San Francisco you can leave a sleek, computer- controlled train and take an escalator from lhe modern un- derground station lo Market Street. DOdglng buses and trolleys, you can dash to one of the city's fabled cable cars and go clatter- ing -at 9 mph -over the hills to the docks. On the waterfront walls a turbine-driven ferry boat, ready for a high-speed sprint across the bay. IN THEORY, MASS transit can take you just about anywhere. But is 1t practical in the Golden State? No, seems to be the response from auto-addicted Californians whose mainline is the freeway even if it doesn't move during rush hour. to Cal· I UNDER AN AGREEMENT with Amtrak, the state pays for two round trips a day wblle Amtrak picks up the teb for three round trips. He aald 46.000 people are riding the trains each month, compared with 20,000 a month wt)en lbe i;ervtce began in Aprl~ ot 197$. "And those t11ures are for a corridor that'• typically a sLn&le . person per car," Freidman said. Davia termed the state's in- volvement in the train "ooe ol the best investments around.'' ONE ADDITIONAL DAILY round-trip between San Diego and Los Angeles was added th1s week with the fundlne split between tbe state and the city of Los Angeles. In the nine-county San Franclseo Bay Area 5 percent ol all trips are made by mass transit. RUSH HOUR FEATURES MORE BRAKE THAf.4 RUSH Cat"ornlan• Love the Auto, Even When It'• Standing Stf~ creased by more than one-third the last fiscal year. only ran twice a week on some routes. At least that's better th~coping with bus drivers wh swap steering wheels for picket · . wheezing brake systems that shouldn't have cleared the draw- ing board and bureaucrats forced to juggle government subsidies and fare revenues to retain solvency. 'MASS TRANSIT ISN'T A PRACTICAL WAY TO TRAVEi.' That'• the View of Advocate Sen. Jame• Mt"• And the use of mass transit systems bas Increased by 34 percent the past five years, ac- cording to Lizette Wells, San Francisco MetropoHtan Transportation Commission representative. SHE SAID MORE than 50 percent of the federal transit funds coming into California go to Northern CallfornJa. "We have our act together.'' she said. "WE'VE BEEN DOING some signilicant improvem~nts,'' said Don Winton, .. Fresno transportation director. "We not only eipanded the area of service, but also improved the frequency of service and picked up some additional riders.'' The district ls one of the few-in the state not receiving federal funds. ERNIE DICKENS, general manager, saJd most federal fuqds are aimed at purchasin• new equipment and the relatively~ district bas yet to replace any "MASS TRANSIT ISN'T a practical way to travel," says State Sen. James Mills, D-San Diego, president pro-Lem of the senate and a mass transit ad voe ale. "People say Californians are in love with their cars." be said. "They're really victims of a shotgun marriage. The average Californians have to use their automobiles. They just have no choice." Mass transit in most cities, Mills said, is characterized by poorly organized routes and in· efficient management. A KEY PROBLEM, says state Department of Transportation spokesman Dick Freidman, Ls that no central agency coordinates transit planning. Instead, each district does its own planning, scheduling and route design. As for nelghborlng districts trying to book up routes in the most con venient manner, Freidman said : "They say they're interested in coordination. But frankly, they really aren't. "If people have to make two transfers and take up 2Y, hours to go the distance they can drive in 2S minutes, they aren't going to take the bus," he said. ( AN0'111ER PROBLEM stems from the computer age, Freidman said. Many districts are com- puteriied to some extent -but with radical changes In the com· euter industry since the 1960s many systems, such as the Bay Area Rapid Transit district, are using equipment that was ob- solete by the time it was in full operation, he said. In Los Angeles, where the auto is king, voters have ~Uy turned down ballot requests for money to build or improve mass transit system•. Most of the work force drives every day, and only 5.7 percent take the bus and 8.C percent ri~e in car pOOla. * * * DESPITE THE PROBLEM of juggling route.a, fiodine the money for a new fl eet of streetcars or stopping over- active automatic traln doors from slamming shut on passengers, Californians generally are taking to mass transit in increasing numbers. State officials attribute the jump to several factors. Districts are adding more buses. expanding schedules and "catching more people in the process," Freidman said. "And gasoline prices edging up for the last four years have certainly been a factor." be said. MANY DISTRICTS, IN hopes of increasing rldenbJp, have used a number ot promotional campaigns: -In Oakland, bus riding bas been touted in television com- mercials starring Raider linebacker Phil Villlpiano. -Bay Area Rapid Transat trains are promoted in humorous commercials featur- lnc Mayor GeoT1e Moscone, former Ger Coach Moote Clark and attorney Melma Belll. -WREN SAN DIEGO bought new buses about 10 7ean ago, t ransit officials sponsored "Color the Bua" eontesb. -San Franduo's cable cars have been promoted b7 n~· one from Tony Bennett to the video homewife wbo serves her family Ri~A·Rml. Promotiom also ean take tbe form of 8dditional services. For example, the rapid transit district in San Dleio often a• ... Dial-a·Bide" service which coven 108.,000 square mlles with 12 buses and nJ.ne vans. About 150,000 ride.rs telephone for service each year. including about 40,000 haDd.leapped riders. SACILUIEN'l'O SEGIONAL Transit operat8 Ills amall bmea with wbee,lcball' Bfta for Ute baadleapped OD a ••.DlaJ-a-Blde._ basil. Wttb the aHiltance of • $100 ,000 federal 1raat, Sacramento oftldals wt1l be~ motlng $12 monUllt pasaea * * * through a variety ot promotions, inc luding encouraging employers to offer the passes in- stead of provldlnc parkinc for employees. Clogged freeways have pushed some people in the direction of mass transit. and by most in- dications, future developments and innovations will focus oo mass transit -not hlghwa)'s. "CAUFORNJA BA.S already achieved the ptonacle of succ~ on the planet. In terms of freeway construction," said Gray Davis, top · aide to Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. "Our freeway system ls unsurpassed . . . . Our goal is not to pour great additional expanses of cement. across California." Most districts report increas· ing numbers of patrons and the stale claims at least one success story. Roundtrip train service between San Diego and Los Angeles bas mass transit of· ficlals boasting ol a •·runaway There are other successful systems. BART, despite its less than impressive mechanical reliablli· ty. hauled 36 million San Francisco Bay area passengers in 1977, a s.s percent increase over 1976. The San Francisco Municipal Railway, whose arsenal includes buses, trolleys and cable cars and soon will feature under- ground rail cars, hauls 450,000 passengen a day in the city of 650,000 residents. "THAT'S PARTICULARLY sl,10Uicant In terms of per- caplta ridersblp.'' said Robert Rockwell, Munl spokesman. He sald the district -locked on three sides by the ocean and the bay -was "static" with service Unea unchanged for manyyean. In Fresno, bus ridership in· The San Diego <llitrlct boasts more than 30 million riders a year. In the Lo.5 Angel~ area, the five-county Southern California Rapid Transit Oistrid reports one million boardings a day. The district, which serves portions of Los Angeles, Orange, San Bernardino. Ventura and Riverside counties, operates 24--bour.a-day service on many lines. TUE STATE'S LARGER cities don't have a monopoly on maH transit. For example the Mendocino Transit Authority opera~s five 23-passenger buses on routes serving Ukiah, Willets and Fort Bragg. Most of the routes have buses tunning four times a day. When the district began operations in April 1976, buses BART, DESPi iETIJ MECHANICAL PROBLEMS, IS DRAWING MORE RIDERS Commuten w .. fn the Embncadero StllUon for the Next Train to Concord buses. · Tbe Monterey Peninsula Transit agency serves several cities, including Monterey, Pacific Grove, Carmel, Seaside and Marina. Ridership bas quadrupled to 1.2 million a year since the agency took over from a priTate company that folded. in 1973. said Tom Albert, executive director. 'Ibe agency operates about 20buses12 hours a.day. ALBERT SAID SMALLEtl districts face the problem of an "adminlatrative burden out of proportion to the size of the dis- trict. "The paper work i.a about the same 1r you're applying for three buses or 300," he said. Steve Ruggenberg, auistant manager or Golden Empire Transit in Bakersfield, found a posili•e aspect to the same pro· blem. •'WE BANDLE ANY com- plaints on a ooeoto-one basis," he said. ·•And everybocty from the eenerai mana&er on down. can give out bus schedule in- formation.'' He said Golden Empire, which serves the lSO·square·mile greater Bakersfield area, carried 1.6 million passengers last year -a 6 percent incra.se over 1976. Since Golden Empire took over the mass transit operation from the city in 1973. radership bas .. gained j~t tremendously every year," Rug- genberg saJd . He said part of the credit was due state fundin1 mechanisms that made money available to transit districts but not to municipalities. Los Angeles, perhaps tile stereotypical auto-dependeot city, bas had more than its s~ of difficulties with mass transit. Los Angeles voters have bia- toric ally been cool to spending money for improved mass transit. * * * BART, Less Than a Mirack, Gains Ridership OAKLAND <AP) -The Bay Area Rapid TraDllt system WU to be a mass transportation miracle -aleet alUJninum trains hurtling down shiny rails at S> mpb wi~ a seat fttever, rtder and no walta lOnger than two minutes. , .. The reallty. more than five years alter BART~~ ls far from mlraculous. the llltrqiolttan Tr~ Commlssloo said BA.BT bas not lmpro'fed the transportation picture, bu not contributed to the area 'S 'eCODOJDiC lfowtb •nd continues to be funded dis· proportlonatel,y by the poor. t: MECllANICAL PROBLEMS WERE underscored when the: system won a lawsuit aglllnst Westinghouse, Rohr Industries.: which manufactures the can;. and ha engineering firm. BkBT tal· $15 million rtom the suit and was releued from claims totaling -..: additional $13.7 million. · 'l'ed Lane, BART manager of computer systems ~eerlDI~: says recent Changes in the Westinghouse computer guidlnt th• trains will let BART operate up t4> so traina at nash bou.r bJ mid·l9"1'8. Current capacity ls 33. Ile adds that a computer, desiened at BART. will be install811 . In.about four years, giving the system the ability to run 10 or 81': tralns three mlnut~ apart. . . A stumbling block to tbat goal is the braklnf QStem, a ~ · ·slant aource of'fallure. Work ll under way to cure that. too. ' 1 ! . • PUBUC NOTICE Honea TO Cltll>ITOH SUPllUCl't COUltT 01' THlr STATI CW CAUl'OltNIA POlt THI! COUHTYOl'OUHGIE --Ell•I• el PEllCY HEWEl.l. PEI.LETT, ...... P N, PEI.LETT, H• PEAC PELLETT, OKH...S. HOTICI! IS l-ll!AEIY GIVEN to the <.....,llon ol lllo -,......., llK_I tt1•1 •II Ptl'\Ons .,.vino <l•lm1 ~"'"'' '"" HICI -«• requir..t 10 Ill• ....... •1111 tlll '-C9'Mt"Y VOUCIW'1, In tflt olllce OI the clerk of llW •Dow IMl,ltled covrt. ~to_, hm, "'"" the Mtttwrv _,,.n, 10 uw .,... <Mf\lgned •t IN oflke ol A081!AT HVMPHREYS,•1 Oo¥tr ~ •• !'>ulteJ:J, IV•POt'1 -"· C.Hl<><nl•'2 .. l. wnlc" 11 ,,,. Piece of bu~MI' of lro. _. oen19,...<1 In .ott .... n .... s-r1•1nlnt to .... Ht.le of Yid--· wllftln 1-mo<IU" •hM tlll f lfll P•olbllUllCft of IN I -~-0.lff Fellt"'*'Yl. ,,,. ROBERT L HV"'PRllE'I'' EHCUl~OI n..wotrof "'-..., ... Mmecl ~· 910111tT MUMf'tllllTS ..,O.wrDr .. WieU ..... -' .._, C..•-· ._, T•l:"4t-21• •twMY I• ,re "1• ,..._ p,.bll\lled Orenvt Coest 0.lly ,., .... F•b. 20, 27 end AMr. 6, 11, 1'11 PVBUC NOTICE --- ' t I t • • EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY '4 ..... '•Metler. AD real mate adverlla In um OftlpaJ)tl' 1a aub Ject to the Feclual Fa Hou.alng Act of 196 whlcb makes it Ule1al advertise ··any pre ference, limitaUon, o diaedm.inallon based o race, COior, rell&Jon, aex, or natlaaaJ origla. or lntenUon to make any sucb preference, limit.a tka, cwdiacrimination." ~····.a .............. l ... , 100 ······-···· .. ••·····•· llACHYIUA SIOl.000 Un~bb' &ow prlcel I Juti blockl from tbe water. XJat Newport •aeh locatioo. Sprawl· lna eon\emporaey bome. Wood deck eotry . SpaelOua !f vhlJ area with Dl&tliveD..repla~,rustic fami.11 room. Open beam eelUn11 • wet bar. Circular 1talr leads lo fantasti c 1un deck. Huny on this one I l C.U toda,y 6'8-7171 Ol'fN 1119•II S IVN10 11( Nl('f• 'l1m newspaper will no ~ WOOOS Jmowln1ly accept any NISIO adverU1ln1 for real INTS CUMI '01 LA CllMI Incredibly beauti.WJ 2 bedroom and den Irvine townhouse on the Rancho San Joaquin Goll Cow-se. End unit affrds pnvacy and a view of the golf course and l~e. This is a San Joaquin model that has been upgraded and air conditioned. The price is a reasonable $.130,000 and this is the creme 'de la creme. U~lf)UI: 1-ff)Ml:S REAl TORS~ 676·6000 2443 Ea.st Coast Highw•v,Corona del Mat also in Mesa Verde, at 546·5990 eatate •hlch ii m viola IAIGAJH tionatthelaw. Reduc:edSSOOO.Seethl.la .-... ,... 1002°0 ... ,., 1002 '."".11-8-.----W.---~ bdrm + alfice + l&r1e ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• family room + dinin~ ................................. . •• .. •••••••••••••••• •• Many xtraa. Beal buy. G ••• tll I 00 Close to South Coast ; LIDO ISLI ••••••••••• •• •••••• •• • • nt---... an.o. c-. -·"""· Newly .r~modeJed 4 bdrm., den, 4. MIWPOIT 400tU-~. . roa AU baths, livm~ rm. w /cathedral ceiling. HEIGHrS CJl:::::::==: MLU Lge. master bdrm. suite. I UNITS ;::_. :. • .... ,, llG CJ.HYCH 150;0 DOWH ~~~~~~~I 4 BR. fam. rm .. 3 baths. Beautifully Elht unit1 beinl totally -decorated Broad moor Plan 3 w /patio refurbished, to be de-j) \'Jews from each room. Si25,000 livered In like-new condi· • •v-oNTs tioa.. F\JU price $239,900. -ra Q ,000 Down payment. Several fine bayfront homes Owner will trade. BEST --with pier & slips UNIT BUY IN AREA. Pteue call 962· T788. ~ KE:Y ··- GEJZ P.E:ALTORS~ llACH Y Al.UIS 5 Bdrm Peninsula Pt. SteJ:8 to be.ch. $191,.500. Newer Ocean view duplex, Dana Pt. $149,500. lily Trio BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR J.l 1 !lcr y~•J•· Orov1• N B 675 6161 IFYOU haft a Ml'Vice to offer or IPOdl to aeU. place an ad fn the Daaly Pilot Claaslfied Seclaon . . . Pbooe &C-5171. Newport Pier Reotty &itms1111M111JI 2005 Balboa Btvd. Newport 8ch. 67>2051 S©\\.~~-/J,£~s· Thal lnfrlgulng Word Gome witlt o Cltudle a.-... '7 DAY L POU.AN o•--.. ._...,, .... ...... ...."""-d _. be-..,., ....... ._..,.... _. HOSNAM I I I' I I HATE"' I _l.__.1 l.__.l.__.I.__. t -.L_A _R.,;..H_S___., ~1 I' 1-I I _: ..... -..... ..---... ._.... ..... ___ ·- MIQOmfS GAi.DiMS 3 IDIM + POOL -This elecant home bas it ~11 I Breakfast nook, formal dining, large . separate famJJy room with fireplace, lovely pool and yard. Try to match at, $127,500. C41114Ml41 OUll LOWIST PltlCID HOMI -Enjoy huge grounds at the end of a cul·de.sac. 4 Bdrm, family · JlYing. Owner moving out of state. Only $74,950. C .. 64CMl61 St>rv1nq Cu-;I.; M e~a·lrvin e Hu11l1nqt11n Bl·.tch-Ncwport Be.:..ach .... ,., I 002. GeMr.i I 002 ..•.................... ······;;,:,:············· {J.te /Jarrell Reaft'I prt16flnl6 PACIAC OCEAN PANORAMA COIOMA DB. MAR OCiAH'IOMT Above secluded cove in Cameo Shor es. Ocean, pool. sauna and jacuzzi -your own health s pa! 2 Beautiful fireplaces. den, 4 bedrooms -each with its own bath. Also S car garage. Shown by appointment only. SACHS Just 8 minute. to Dana Point Harbor, wltb a beautiful ocean vie•! Room for horses; the place to butld your ~m~ SSS0,000 67M.OO H•RBOR 642-5200 A TQUCH . OF NEW ENGLAND . you'll love tbls nearly new home. Just 4 houses removed from Ocean Blvd. 1n Cd.M. It's an exceptionally sharp New England style 3 bdrm. & formal dining rm., also brkfat. area. There's a cozy frplc. & all rooJD.1 nave cathedral ceilings. lt'I fun to alt on your pat.lo & view the blue Pacific, with the beautiful aallboata passing by. Only $289,500. 759-0811 "50 NE~POHT CENH:R OfilVE 1&9-08'1 Ge•rtll • 1002,G••r.. 1002 ....................... ····~······· .... ······· \ \ I.~ I I 'r '.\ TAYLOR CO. HE1\l.TC )l\.S -.1:111· l~l·lfi CAMIC> SHORES-VIEW SJ I 0,000 Gorgeous view of the ocean & sunset from this ~ bdrm contemporaey home. Large step-down living rm, den w /wet bar, master bdrm w/separate Mr. & Mrs. bath, formal DR & great pool. WESUY M. TAYLOR CO .. UALTOllS Ziii S.J~Hllslood HEWPOltT CEMTa M.I. f44-4t I 0 C:.-.. Mlr. 1012 ....................... cozy *'· Iba + l\IUl -... Frpl, l patio., M lot. Prtn. ccly. $111,000. O\lroer' 641). 7030 ()cea!) aide. Im mac 3br. 8ba. F.a•llf coovert to z ~. Prime R·a 10<!•. Dea, form dbl rm w/wet. bar. $225,000. Pe117 Taylior Realtor, 4M--lOU· c....w.... 1014 ....................... DICOIATOIS will dellibt ln re· furblallilll lhll prime llOlf CIDUl'M ata. -4 BR, a BA.. .UkiDI $125,ooo • <rnbmted. 67H5'2. HAl.PIMCHIM BEAi.TOR FltlSHMEW ''; USTING HO. COSTA MESA Qraclcq livln& lo tldi Jae .2 story' bd or 3 + de1l home w/lee fmly rm • 1lamoroua pool area. &mdeck. Den couJd ~ 2ald mstr bdrm. Don't wait. Call qulcklf"! ~N91 ~ Walker G ler. fiAMOltOUS laOOICY•W Immaculate 3 bd unat w/fm.ly rm. Central air coad. Attl'active atrium. Balcony, upg raded eartbtones thruout. Pool. tennis, rec rm. Priced for immediate sale. Doo'\ hesitate. Phone oow. 645-9491. ; r='OREST E OLSON ... . . ..~ VA at FHA t«Du! Super •·--~ ~ payments under Mesadellrlar,byowner,4 aew FHA procrams ! BR, Pool, xlnt cond Fantastic 3 bedroom, 2 Owner will carry 2nd. batb bomel ..,,000. 9C7 Presidio Dr. RED CARPET7S4-J202 Call anytime 979-2251 $41,000 E /Side Cu.tom home. ThLsisnotaml.sprinlllt 2000Sq.rt., JBr, buge I.a a auper 2 Br twnhme, fam. rm., 3 car gar., on w/poolt.. ~lubbouse &: _R_·_2l_ot_._Agt...:;._646-__ 11_1_1 __ sauna. nime end unit location w /pvt patio, •EASTSIDlh clo&etosbopplnJ. J BR, 2 ba •• (rpk. Super 754-7100 dean! Next.to part. Best ~in area, $72.500! STUART FtMi llALTOR '31·5454 ... '4.SLom REDUCED. Altr. I Br+den. Ml to bea~h. Ne.r landscaplni. cpts a m,.. Makecfr. SS7·2005. • e • ,. lo-• • .. " • • ' ' t ' "tl ln Califom1a'' a.._,.. 1026 •l'f······················· Sprl.-iMcmloft Uaique Dana Point lanchnark has been ~on· verted to 3 unlts. Perfect !or owner occupation ... plua income. Ocean ' • View, tmp~slve facade. $215.000. ' MOllMS UALn *494-1057* F01Jat•Yaley 1034 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IXRUllY• 4BDRM.+ J'Ald·8ll Grut home for a bl1 family or an entertainers deli~t. ~a cllninc Olft, ~.I baU.. Vault· td telllnp, aod abate root plus sparklln1 pool Open Sunday 1·$ IGG,'3L-.Dr. ~ I I .., h lrill FI \I I \ •111 "'''" SI liunt1n11u·: Buch lt.'at.ike EREE. • Popular 104 in \be Qalllornia Homes. Ideal· 11 located 3 bedroom homo wiUi formal dinina room. Aaklnl only 81S,OOO. S.Uera will ,.,. ~and ~t. B!ST 8UY IN IRVINE TODAYIJ RANCH llALTY 511·2000 mcunv1 SIOIM ONLY $111,000 MONEY gre:~=~f:: lieht. Frml din rm, ovu- alz.ed f~ rm, a ba\ba, vaalted C!eUlnii Ir "bvy UA.-••• 1 ... ,_ c b shake root • Lvly t~a ... .....,.. you •---. r crta · this aubdina\on 2 ~ beauty with tam r~ 7:!9-~ · & Swedlab Frplc. See to ~-.,.·_,_.,.,__ ~~or:T!t s:;~t c~•wnmaamrna this price Real Fa tate fl·d hi\I - ', ') / • •,I) I -------- SUPER BARGAIN lbr Ocean view home in ~th Laguna w /super ehar&n, and Y.et'Y livable. $89,000. ·M ~ Y 0 C .K COl\POl\4T10N 380 GlE,..,EYRE LAGUNA BEM:H (714) 494·2148 ....... 1044 ~.... I041 ............................................... YllW HOMllMCOMI Gorceoua canyon It ocean vie-\lt', Legal duplex nesUed in JJ·l A(ea. 2 Bedroom, 1~ bath-. large llvtog room wilh fireplace, up. One bedroom. 1 bath, livin& roocu. ~-Great value atS185000 ~ Coldwr_>I' Bonker SalODOWM N>a YOUI 200K DllAM HOMl!ll Spnt1••1•r• .Loeat.ed In e:tClualve 1lari.Derl PCl&nt. Vlilw of ---....-----oceu • canyons, Ch Mlil'CW Spanlab tOe roof, formal pt Cflf'ty 1600 dininl. pme It familY .... ••••••••••••• ...... ===-~·Open Sat, SAM CLIMIMTI 675-7390 ~ 1 Rm Den&al SU1tea a am ¥ecllcalSnita 115 AwnueSeml .,.,,, .. c.. llACHDOLLHOUSI ._4'MM0 ____ 4fM __ Zl_'1 Walk to IUvlera Beach. Co1d1--:~..._ On natural CB.DJOll with ........ a 700 ~view. S BR, 2 BA -•••-••-•-tritb atra ~ Jot. Never Speclallat: ~ aplnatonlYS125,000. bdrma Hu11Un&to11 B~=y Beach. Pouutaisl VaOey. Zl5Del Mar 48Z-4121 -.ZZ97 « __., A&l- Executlve ' br, plush Br, 2Ba. JJuntloctoa formal din rm, lluge lam Land_marlr Condo, up-nn. wtraatasUc view of S..J.IM ll'aded S'12,500/0fr By Nwpt!lv.631~Alt-c:..,lt"-1071 owner' ~9-laa& .-., •• ••••••••• •••• •••••••• •• ~2712 eves MIWOMSSS YllW 1100 . - . ... ,...,' .. ,.. .. 11.f ' ' '. ,, • bcMllft..,.... Larae 3 br owner'• anJt, Anaheim. Pvt cul.,._e St. 1..ar1e. apac. .mta. Jluat see to ap~c~ Pri* '° sell~ CaU Brolternowl a . ~ I• • : I ..... ,.,,..shed ••••••••••••••••••••••• a...-leoch 3141 ••••••••••••••••••••••• I ----_,-.-~ -. Q DAI YPt OT ~~.!... C " I........_ c-.. /C11 ... ~ • 1 I I I' a tde•ll1 ......... • PaAL l/Plfll... ........ ........ ....................... ..................... .........•.....•••...•• •••••••...••....•...... ....................... ....................... ..........•............ . ..................... . ~ ":ic:11~:s· 0.~ 6 abel•lq for Jemodelto1, HW ~. r.:tJX:rlUCAL SE.RVlCE SKIPLOADER. Dump General Houaecleanln1 MOVING RAULINO a p ... y_.c •• ROOFS 11tltalled fad0f7 all labor ud tat ~ 1ar Ir uUl. nm, calm fowidaUooa. hltbwallt CALl3 Sl5 br, •SMALL truck. HAy!.lNG, tre« exp. Call aft• 4 Aak for CL&ANUPS. Reaaon. ~.11.,._ .._ 1 .. _ di.reel ; est.ab 1$ yn. Call ~ 1--b-~ ,._ a.u =-·•TL5HN-95G Uc Om Coalr. 65f.a41 JOBSl&ma worit, er•dins, demo etc MadaMMeal nee-. Coll lt\ldtm. ~:..• 111 r• '"'n· HatoldGunns.t-2111 -.,.,.,. aua 1wanc eva.. 8'1·1257 • • ....,.._, lnt. Is ut. ,forfreeestlmatec C.,11tw IM,nlllctftc YeOldeCbarLad BlrB.'1J.lUI Please cbecllc our re-RoallPWI.-.Alltnea. DonlllwyMl-all:W. .. ..................... C.emmt~~veway1, Ucmlll ~• M ' I Houlecleantn1&enfce. Mal1 ... S..lcet ferenea. lJc t &20A1 Uc/boad'd. Inaur. ,.._ .... ....... Independent. ~a~nter. Patloa. Wii.fifii Beu. ....................... l40.a30 ....................... Guar., lnll'd, free •L e1tlmate. IN-OUl or ..... :=............ R-u:odel16 ~t~ODI, Frt»bLIS6o ~~-Priced 00C Stment. 414 T. truck. Houlecleanin Mao coaaultut ao 11"1 Ttd.C.'IOIS $17"'131 'Wlbr dnr cbbWlhr re-pai cvn •c· ClllM C... .~~frM eetl(JW• on Trash, tree trim, Randy f ~· a:p. Pri•. dut7 w/familY o-t PabltllJC, Catm at pain .. kea1. t48-5UI ~.~~work.. ............... •••••••• uC:.:.tmalljobt~ 60-S'J03,979"489 gua!s~S::::. :we!:: oriented care. CaO /lnt., alrleu apra)'lna, ••• .. •••••••• .. •• .... •• llD)'tbne Cblld-care, bomekeeplnl, ;:.. ~ 211*'74'1'11 f« iDl«ma· C..Q12 O.ramlc Tll~t»H· In c.,.tS..lce llv•ln pref. 6'0..011 . lt·Mel Blectrlc. Ind., lh•tdl•t.latg · dan•appt. tDUt••floon,~•· A P••1t•lll• ......... ••••••••••• .. • Rderence1. eomm.ne.•malnt.1v1 ........................ --.Ta ...... ~,._,.._ ....... 11-P* per.•:&m ....................... Carpet llao wlll 1~ Joun C: I uc:lor 1-..t .ts Teliab&e. Free Waat a REALLY CLEAN ............................ ~~!f.'!:'!'!••••• ....................... CEBAIOCtlle Newarre-~ff d~·.ti .. l:c'g' ~ne. Repaln " ........................ eat.'7M542..S!UOlsthr. HOUSE? Call Glntbam Vfould~ ~er a PIOo PETER.SPAINTING ~is'HfA~: model.Freee.t.SmlJbe &>oded Uc.. lnaured ' at"'•&!_ too,.'.Y~ ~ R.J.Hulfmao ck Son. Oen ...... Girl. Freeest~5123 ~or even apypnt •1D"!,· Eapr'd. Reu Bate1.1 !.~~~est~ __ _.!183-~l~.,.~ll:::wdco:"""--:me:=.:::53&-:-::-JUl--aft-5_ ' ' · .... ... .. ... .-. "''""' Oantr CustomAltlsAdd ..... •••••••••••••••••• "'' · 1 Fr•• &t Call Gene1-· .. ..-.1t-·'-.. ..1 eat,M5-3646 • • Want• REALLY CLEAN home, 881-11112 m.0&58 • . • .. -Trtes.r.ke ~-• .,.,....,res .... ac· patlos, cabln,t1, Prof1apeoeaeLandlcap-HOUSE? Call Glnlbam PA~P&..ng&ERING ..-•••-•••••••-••• Ing. 1eal-eoat.. atripina. Shampoo it ateam clean. formic&. New coruL R .. Ina le &ardenlng.. Maust. Girl. FreeestMS-51.23 L••u••I All PROrESSJONAL All t Y pe • • Pre• d. cedb .tor • ComlQ/~et. Frt:e eat. CoJor bdtblenera; wbl ck comm'I. 145_.8" or lncl. mowiof, t~mmi.o1. •••••••••••••"•••••••• P&lnUIJc. Inter/Elder. estimate..CaUstCM82S matdmiJa. m: Alloreva.8'5-32U cptalODlinbleacb. Clean ~.Uc Ir bonded. 1pra.yin1, weedioe. Free Houaecleaniog with a LANDSCA!'JNG. Reu,wonpaeG03M PLMTERING Prd&tU.rr.. Eat.6 ~ At':'~ ~lcn Uv, din rm, ball SLS. Ave Gen.. contractor new ad· eatlmaU.. 545-7072 personal touch. Ref1 . R#MM"Mprtt98. Home• actdltlou no ~~ • rm S'1.50, couch SlO. cbr dltioM, remOcs., ;ea., a.EAN·UPS/BAULING 53M721or546-3'20 B1'113or547-a.e h1nt1Di. Extr/IDtr. Ex· atuceo: free au.' low -4 ....................... $S. Guar_ elim pet odor .• comm. Free est. Spiro Prunlnl·Planting -.... !== w-G1..1.. t• 'I pr'+ am.t. ant. nu. ndel.51f.4882 ~ • w Cll•k I .,.._ .. ~ .......... ER Cpt repaar.1.Syra expr. 5eMZSO·SCT~ Fr t a.2990? •--••-• Ka I Llc'cl*»Ul>!•• -.................. . .--nn" -.iu & Do work myaelf Refa ' e. es . . For storm cleanup with a ••••••................. ft '1 I _._d 1 d Evelcwtnds by appt. ~1.0 01 • DI I L mile. Bonded · ed. Brickwork S all Jobs YOONG MAN 5 Jn GPI' " .. owe e nae • re-Default/Dlwrce $175* . 1 . CI" and 1 ca p • 1 tor m !,.. ts ., .. " ~.!o.sur ~ ~~~ ..... ;_ tn wallco~ l'rff ........... •-••• ..... • uoaable, bmlJle11e1. Collectlom 30"'-• ,. _ _,./C t ••••••••••••••••••••••• damale. free tllL rnaln· ... eees . .,...,.~ ·-.. --. ,.,.._. -.eaa • .... -HOllESAVERS Plumb-hl>l2*•apta ICT~ .,. __,. -09CI'• • D • J te 11. 'Ki ' Jrvtne 87W175eves eiu.--·· ·............ · Dnmkdrivin,c $300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• raper)' Fabric Sae nance ava • ms HOUSECLEANINGlsour • • inl~Beatizls. .r~•t. (up to trial) 47 ,000 7ds in lloc.lc muat LaodlcQe KalnteD&Dce. bu a I ne 91 . a e 11 a b le ...... Pine z.ier. PalDtJDI b7 '10 hr. Hone1Us reli.able UnlwOdetai.oer.Gefault Quallly Cement wort be IOldl 70% aavinp in-S38-6mO service. Janice's Rae· •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• R. !lnar. St. Uc., ina. Trt ..-vtca. BofA, M/C OK. Sl.50.00fullprlce done the right way lS vent«y reducUon fuar. Q_.9'~ eedyADn'sat64.s.t800 ''Two Meo Will llove me.83U5."55Jebn. 7St.ll!OorlCT.o3U Slmplewills $35.00 Yrs exper Call ielf l.sDrt quality. KeoE !!~~r ••••••••••••••••••••••.• You" We budle Ira " Prof f.alat'I le paper •lfffr:........ 6 .. 17 * Courtcoata e11tra • apery 1510 . .o:.u..u•fer Luun. Esper. reliable Japanese 1 ffl •· -., nmoth,yLaahlee Atl Sll6-MS2 Sanl• Ana 541-0203 niuuiY'llAN: Carpentry, lady will clean your am movea-o ce • baag DI, work 1uar. •"" ••• .. •• .. •••••••• <n•>e38-7200/aft7pa{· 11 541.2080 electrical, plumbing & home. Needs trans. H.B. bouaehold. Datance " Free Ht. $38-UU, ,_ n1ea • ae:rvlce. all C213Hst-391S A types concrete, flo0n.IC7-2'78T,557-4.S04 842-43119 local, also packl111. 53IJ.f780 n.Hable, boneat work. c blockwork, planters Custom drapes spreads Lowut le&al rate. Cal1Ernle5'3-1585 custom brick lie: & shutters & ail wlndo~ HANDYMAN. ~ome1 & Have time for yourself, Uc/inlrd. Cal T W-Nt. Selling anytbln( wltb a 1---------1 Trade your old stuff for bonded. 6'2·6894 coverings at discount ~ Co"J~:=s oall the Moppetts Clean-Pb8'M278 Delly Pilot C1u1Jfled Ad SELL idle Item• with a new goodies with a Wet.Ads Call prices. Shady Deal, 7'3 man. a ing Service. 5'6-2393 re-is a almple matter .... DallyPilotCl.aaslfledAd. $1.62•DAY 'lbat '• aif ,.OU pq for a ao day ad ln tbe DAILY PILOT SRYICI DlllCTOIY DO IT NOW! 642-5671 Classllled ad. ~-5678 , 642-56T8 Baker St, C.M. 549.3325 Clauifted Ads 642-5678 ferrals Sell idle ltema Ml-5671 Just call MZ•5678. &4U678. ~--------·-----------~--------~~ hldilltrtall...tal 4500 Lod&Fo.lnd SlOO Pen•~• 1350 tWpWMfed 7100 HefpW..e.d 7100 tW,W..eH 7100 HeipW..ted 7100 HalpW..ted 7100 HalpW..ted 7100 ............................................................................................................................................................................................................... MOVE IM MOW! Lost or Found a pet! Call RELAXING MASSAGE . Dhtl820aqll-overlAtor Animal Assistance BobJames-UcMuseur Accu Payable Clerk for Al:,M~ai;1~own~1:2 8)atllanufacturer lice. M·l zone al 1ooi Leque537-2273,nofee. outcall&-9,494-5111 tuy Cowltry Chlb ore. N ,..!_·tB ~179e3S, ERICSON YACHTS W _.. "'-ta .._. Some acctn'I exp nee ·........., wy, ._.... est liw, """" ... esa. LOST: Male Cocka .. _.._... Senlces 5360 844.540t · · Z1" sq ft. wht w/bm 1pot 00 back, ••••••••••••••••••••••• •AUTO LOTMAM Hal t.be followiAc f\all- RJGHT IULTY no JD, maybavebffnin· Roy•lty Llmouaine Acct.a Receivable clerk to Exi>e;rlenced person or time opaia~ for ex-979-t5JJ ju red ln accident on Service. Daily, Hr ly, opera ta Baste 4 Com· we -:t" tram. lmmediate pcr'd belp, aa-baled Goldenweet H.B. TbW'S Weekly rates A lso puter for busy O>untry openlll&-permanent Poel· ooaperieoc.. Stonage 4550 nite.IC7-GS7 special.a to Lu Veau 0; Club ofc. Will train. ~ c:au Sales Mer. for AMISHUMI ••••••••••••••••••••••• San Fran. "Be A Kine M.540f mt.erview. CAIPIMTllS We are looking for a l.olt Doberman Pinlcber, For A Day ... LuxW')' +In A p A R T M E N T 137-4100 49).4511 c:..-.rSHOP ~ble ~Coagetor.._.dqu. male, SS It., ean oot our new custom built MANAGER-Retired cou· •1UT0 ...... •SH ASS8 • •s ._e gara1e lD s • -eH cropped, vie 11th" Santa Lincoln town car I ~ r-vw area. Power av•ilable. Ana. 548·1504: 833-2801 li In n4/S23-Wl Pe to manaae Costa F/Ume-BusySbop HA.ltDWAal Private Party not a bual· , mous e. · Mesa 10 unlt bulldina Metro Car Wash IMSTALLBS nessMS-5913 LOST: Male, CockaJIO:O. Get what you really want near all conveniences. 2950 Harbor Bl, Cl\1 --.-...,. •M a.ical Sl TYPIST IDtctaphone /Stat IIBK ExecuUve IB.epto /TecbQkal . • NEEDED JlOIEDIATELY Looi • Short Term .U· 1lpmenu. Holiday Ir vaeatlon pa7 . ~~itallnllon plan COUNSROR Perma•t poaltloo, our Newport ofc.. No exper. neecfed. will train to test. interview appllcanta. Mu1t have good telepbooeabWtJ. Notyp- lne. Salary +com- mislion k xlnl comP&QY benelita. eau foe appt. Vlctw Tc "a,..., Senlcn 1714JHMSZO l~~~~~I ~oodisb/Ute b~. Vic. in life Barksdale Self. No children, no pets.1-------..;....___ _..__ ...,. W.t.d 4600 Fordham and Fatr. Ans. mitee~Cntr 751.uu Pleaaecall&48-44'M. -Autorent.aJtralnee. F\ill benellu, medical, CUSTOMERASSJST ••••••••••••••••••••••• to "Josh". 54!>-3712 · . Oppty. for intelll1ent, dental, optical. Pleue Learn decoraUo~ll et VOLT Working woman desires SodalCW.. 5400 Artilt for perspective frieodl.)', neat appearing appl)tiopersoolll pdfoC'lt.Smfut I to relocate residence SCRAM 'ETS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ctr.wing 00 pools• •pas. 1oung man over 18. Security<Xfiee 3141 C..... Drf•• sJx>p needl stea y part· •''"''"••''"' .,. "''. D.ECTllCWt JOURNEYMAN NEEDED IJOIEDIATEL Y Looi l.erm auipmenL HolpiUI Is vacatMID pay. uc:.r.ltallutloo pl an VOLT '' "-"'"• tl•AI• .-·~1 I•. ll l , 3141C ;m Drf•• 546-4741 (Acrou.P'r'om Oran1eCo. Airport) Equal Oppor Employer nearer lo her work. Hun· "L CHRISTIAN DATING _6'4-6 __ !94 _______ 1 Previous exper. not re-atCSOHYACHTS l4M74I tJmer for wallpaper " tinglon Beach to C.Osta ANSWERS SERVICE. For io!onna-Art Me.cle Work Qd. Start With lot man 1.IS1 ~ A.ve, S.A. (AcroM From w Ind ow b 1 i D d s . Electrmics u .... a ar•a Trailer or tioncall ....,....,.... duties, advancement~~~~~~~~~ Decorator n......., 581 W. b"'"":..-lor ~ ·• ...,50 Hansom Wheat ,.._.......... Mature resp. adult with avail. to auto rental .... OrangeC.O. Airport) 19thST CM.,.,.. INSPECTORS ac • .., a~~ up lo•• --expr. in needlepoint, counterman. Good driv· Boatmen. exper, full Equal()pporEmployer · · · prefel'T'ed.. eed by Apnl Snarl -Candor -... w..e.ca. 7075 "-el" lmltUn• wanted Oftg ~d. "-lJ 831· ........ for time Wed thru SUD ... 50 •a ·-y M ...... l. (2l3)598-9966 HANDS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ .. -.. ... ...... ..... .._, • • .... .,_,.,.~ "'" TECHNICIANS Kids t.o?-Y fall into t~o Bookkeeper avail. lndlv. for position In Art appt. hr, Bllboa,873-7130 ----------• Must be husky for We are lookina for a categones -thoise with or Im business. Pickup" Needlework Special\)' __.:;..;._________ IC>OtCKm'a Cftical·Oen'l ore duties. furniture delivery, dean ASSEMBLERS worlublestorageordou· theireyeswideopenand delivery or your bm or Shop. Some retell expr. Autorepticarbuitderneed Accur. typist. Oppor for up"Olidjabl. FUii-time. ble 1araie in C.osta Mesa ,..__ wilb their HANDS .Jc. ..... -. required.. ~3'93 wkdys parts runner. helper for TRelta. Balura:~. EllpetA.pthru~ly. adv. 549-1767. Apply ln person, 1931 CDI Corp hu aeveral P -'I bl .,........, "" _.._ afttAM. apprenucesbip. VW exp. ucaired. J N-BI d CM area. ower av., a e wide()pell. ..._, Victor H•-o r •• an ff a.-t1 -.-a'D .. -..-· v , openings for people Private Party not a busi· __ .;..:,.... _______ Uve-in coot or childcare, ~pful. 631·2991 -......., ----1·-"d el _ _. ___ , Dr. La1una Beach . .,._ ... ~y ... , ...... _.,ft .. 0 fc . ...-JM .,,..,.. ~cuper. oesa~S913 Lost tin1 white male non-smoker or driAker. ~S8t81.£1S Gt-IM'T7 Apply, Moo thru ~ .... u,':-ba~e-~ pu~b!-in" -"'Y1IW•••••r These are local lone Malla• dotl w /no tap. exper'd, reliable, ref. PH 11._-... ~ .... ..... "' Permanent part-Um• Job term Jobs w /dnt pay • Sin g I e ear • e e or Vic Bil OIQYo_o 00 Wed. cn4> •91-J.S02 50Tr-'--•-·-bl-AYON · .....,,.... nper. Duties Include dellverina early morning -eq_uinJent. for storage. 2·15. Face " backend1~---------........ ,.,...... ,._,. buvy pbcne, tn>io& ii LA nines to homes ln rat.es. Preler NB or Cll area. clipped short. Ao• to B•bysltter, cbildun/ Neededlmmedlately nme on hands, tired of lo:Ot npar/Cltrfl clerical. Type min Irvine/NB areaa. Must CALL TODAY ~S5 name ol c.easar .. Very elderly any houra. Lonc•Sbaltterm lt.&)1.Dg •l home! lleet Duties i.octwte poat.ln& to 55Wllm-berellable&havedepen· old. Family !01t without Westclilf area pref. A1ao Aaipmenll people, make money " led1era, lite typtnc 6 llasteTSc>eclalUesCo dablt transportation. Cll CORPORATION .. 650 him. SlOO reward. sec•y work. Mature, 3ShUlaAv.Uable. have fun. Become an percenta1e computa· l540MonrovlaAve Sala.ry$32Smo.546-0Z35. ,. 644-SS34 Germanlady.S42-34ll Muttbaveowntransp. AVON representative tioru1. 10.Key a must. CM. 6'2·Z4Z7EOE 3303KARBORBL.N ••••••••••••••••••••••• ------------1-......,..---W-__.._..--'----7-1-0-0 c.IT9MHMl20 For more information Xlnt loc & beoeflu. ----------Dental Aaa't, ortho. chr, 005TAMESACA.92J626 We are look Ing for a Found: JCeeshond type • ....,. --Free. Top JSay. Vac Pay call 540-7041 or Zeruth &44-m4 Cltrtl/S..slHlllu NB. 4~d)'11. Ortho exp. & 17t4t 556-1022 workable storage or dou· dog, Mwlon Viejo area. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Viet T 7-USI. AccepUnf applications R.D.A. req. 6'2·21626 ble garaeeln C.osta Mesa &»~ C:-~·~r..y I~~~~~~~~~ Bookkeeper. Permanent for Clerk/Substitutes. Electrmics area . Power available. ---------• Accountinl __.._. PIT work ln your home. Koowled~ble lo office Dental Aul, school Alli YOU HIP? Private party not a busl· LOST: lrisb Setter puppy. Al9AY AILI Cl.I OlvWaltttKldde le Co Babysitter. full time for F\IU charse bkkp'1 tbru -~"-•-·u•-to ._,,_ u trained, noexper n~. 2 mo old vie Lynwood• t • -s. E. Bristol 2Ya )Told cirl. <:are for T!B. checi: writlnl, Ute -... .. • • .., .,..., .... 4 * .....,"' 1IU>I\ • Irvine electronics mfgr. ness~59U · • Heavv lnput to com· -· .. _.. in .....,. ........ hr A'ttto· _.,.. ..-., -Allso,C.M.&42-6064 puter'i•ed P•Jablea StelO NewportBeacb your cbild as well as tre•· ~-,.ume · -r-· --· · ---------•Is starting p/time Help • (Comer of Briatol ll mine. N.B. 644..ao'll cl d rel• to Brian Bax-Ir.vine Unified ool Diamond setter. Ex· in Production proeram ....... /ht'fest/ Blk. grey & wht fem. cat 1y1tem for d7namic Campuabehlnd , eodenOo. 331E. lnhSt.., Diltrict, 294.1 Alton Ave, periencedonly. for: All•c• w/wht feet. Silver collar erowlna rutaurant Olrl'•lr> Baby1lUer I Mother 1 CMt::!SZ'7 Irvine. 714 /556-4900. 714-979-6122 a ~oulC ••••••••••••••••••••••• w/betl. Nr Rea Sehl. chain. Salary ~Om·1~~~~~~~~~ Helper-Ute bouaekeep----------Equal()ppOC'Employer. ~'" " ...... 64.5-7008 • menaurate w/exper.1: tns. 1.a Mon thru Fri. IOYS·CMll.5 1 ________ 11astiwuher, M/F. Cull or ASSEMILEIS Opp:a rt.wty 5005 Restaurant bactgouod SZ.25 hr. Non smkr. Refs. U.11 yean ~ qe. Even· a.rt p/t. Good bra, lood P•Y" Loading le aoldering or ••••••••••••••••••••••• l.olt: Palrorhe.vyprtsm helpful. Apply, Jolly AIM~ Owns trans. Baycrest inf wort. OblaJb new bendtta. Irv. area. c.au PCboards,wirina•wtre SANCLEMENTE len1 glasses w/dark Rofler.Inc.,a.5pm,.llon· 20 tUIN£E aruNB.~l~ aubecriptlomfortheDal-UJOJEM focappt97S.~7 twnes.sing. Mus\ know GroomiDa " Pet Shop. frame. CdM beach. 1\1. 170'2 Gillette Ave. I)' PUot wwkiDI wU.b ao DomelUc Help needed by color code 1 read Retiring after 7 aood 548·1Z16. 2/17 Irvine. Banldna adult aupervbor. Earn Cmnnlence bachelor father. Latuna blue/:srinta/ apeu ft read yean, fine location It ~SEMBl.OS f\ill·tim~ for Sill. l20 to $30 J>e'C week or Nlguet area, 1-5 dys wk. Erl& b. I ::': cu ~k client.de. 188,500. f' .________ NEEJ>D in ..,__. Bc:h. Ex r axn. Call (21J) 597~ U-"•t Must have trans, I will min. ol 20 per .. _ BERTHAHENRY WIOll .. I 5350 .,..~..,. ... .,...,.y n-r perpre . noon to Spm. (211) ...... pav mllea1e .. Ref'1 don't let yc>Ur skiO. - R'f!ALTORS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ACC"'~ ..-..u-..u~~ Typin1 r-eq. Xlnt eo. •Jf11. S\)m·9Pm. Call Ptll1t1ooa now avail. 2nd " rust;y!CallmTODAY! 215De1Mar 4112-4121 Dri.nkingproblem? uununa TQPf'AYlll beod'lll. Gd worki111 •t· C.OUect. "ant Sb!IU at all our ~· 493-21.82, m.534.5 DICC Call Alcohol Helplille t'I rM All ehift.I, day, awing & rno.pbere. Please call ---------~ ~t.iona. Start $2.6~$.'I 54 ...... ~ 1 ~t~~onck~~: 3tbrsaday83$.3830 A hill ~"':.u1oo b ~!J;J.. ~i::.,::~ ~~~m.lOOfor BUSBOYS ~~conducted avr.°~:.~elect·1·-----".·--- tease. Terma -&48-0037. *MICtBLl'S* uallable for ao in· lfnD asaJcnmenta. Holl· ....,.al SCIY"'9a Bu1bo11 needed ror 1.M42Lampaon, mecb, mechanlc1l, ck ~71f}S Out.call Munge di•idual who llkH to day le vacation pay. E/O/E M/F/H days. apply dally UAM, Gal'denGrove537-41tO PCB deta.11 1c assembly Enilneeriac 10A.M-2AM 731-4462 won with fil\ll'el and Ho3.ttallntlon plan Ml Olaa, -E. 17th St., We promote from within drawlnas. Mu1t have INSTRUMENTATION TRA VB. AGEHCY bas a blCb level cl 1klll, aY • BARMAIOS.S:S/Rr · + for C.M. Equal Oppor Employer IOOd line work • letter-FIAHCHISE SpirihMI a.-r accuracy aDd speed. Of· sharp Jirls, Port 17, C.M. --------1 int-Xlllt pay Ir benefits. JECHNICIHI Start your own Travel 181S So. El Cami.Go Real fiee espelttnce la .-n· 64&-3&81 Qafet~ t!/F ~ull o c:-AfL EOE. SclenUfic Drilling lftn Network a1mcy. Be a San Clemente. Fully lie. llal _.!or tblll position. Bar Maid. pt-Ume, No ex-~~eflt1. Ir;,,oe !~!.. -· Controls, 4040 Campus part of the growing .FOl'appt.C92.'12M ~~· in p eullabnt end-pernec. C.llfora.-t7W257 • WAITllSS Dr, N.B. 551-9051 ask for We have an immediate travel lnduatry. Startup, •uvomeot W 100 ... c ..... Drf.. U7·5411 _. Cock\&Uwaitretaneeded KathyTiemann. 0 p e D l D f { 0 r a D ' I • u.&•5.&~1 toaqWlYbeoefitamclwS· 14M74t -""""' .. .,., .. n foreveniJl&sca•ppl)'d.Uy -.--:.------• Inst:rumentationOIUbra-tralnins, tecbn ca "' ~ ~• •-a 2 wHkl vacaUon ( -'""'"', .. ~r.n• ''"u Ill ..... E "" fl ""-I ti T b I l b dilln' support U AA.rlS "' AcnlA nvm $5Hr + Booua $: 30-t: 3 ~ sa, -.. . '"rwwww1 www,...r on e c n c a n • mere an ota1 FKiU Mvv~ aft«oneyear,companJ =="'~rt) UUMll'Ml•lfM?I c ll 5 a 17thSt.,C.M. 5 "--~ tn PCB• Respomlblliltles include provided. T lnve.tt· ~~ orovp ·--.. ra"'Ce, nu.,., TV p .m . • . p.m. --~-----· .... "' • tbe -"b .. __ .. meat ii $30,000. Tele. Mr. ESCOllTI ~ t•u·-·-";!!_~A:..'~ .Equal EmploY~ Doel tbe t.boulb& appeal D-2881 elect-desip Ir de· c ... ra .. on ...., re. Be 714/831-t3'2 OUT'CAU.OHLY at·. .._, """'' ,~OJ ----------to you? u IO, consider CodltalW....... tall. Dulles will Include pair or phy.lcal, elec-Jolnina the prestigious Olr Waab Ol1b1er, NWpt $cMol mechanical detail le H · tronlc and analJtical lab .....,to &.o. 8021 ___ 6_3_1_•Jl_l_.l ___ r OllANGI COAST ASse.IURS ottlces of Unique Homu " Lal\&D• Area. Pleue Da:f/.ve clauet. Place-aembly draftlna. Must related lmtrumentatioa .. •H•••••••••••••••••••• DANCE OJ' FUN . DAILY PILOT Ute fact0ir1 uaembly. for a fantastic 1978. Ac· caUM4-4480 men\ A.Nit. 751-1194 So. bave tai:blllarlt)' w/cur-QualillcaUona must. m- Mooey Available, many Btn nude ..t.J.a dance. 330W "'""ST Immed need •liood celetated commi11lon C...._ Call f Cock ta l 1 rent mll·1pec1 for PCB elude physics, elec- sourcea, all proJ•ct1. ... ...-...:.AMEsA. ltUtint wacea. Frlnae acbfldule. iA-hoWle 1w1na "--WaltraMa.lrvln ~i n. Xlnt say & l..rocUCI, cbemiltry and _,,.emln 7,..,..,....., rap 1e1aloo. lOAM to vu•n. bloelill.CallMCM1'17ror loaoa, creative sales F\ill or p/time. N. B. ___ __, __ e_. __ , •·. EOE.r-entlf1·c mathemalic back· -· -».M Moo-Sat. UPM to Between tb• ~ours I tn•-'-.,. c...nc1 .... """ -'---------1 p K Call 1 ... •ovw ap.,.. aids. computer termioal restaurant. _. resume Compaol~ kind • un-Drilllnl Controls, 4040 around, with previous in- SwinC-2nd 6: Srd TD'a. :!'n~ N. &Uclid, ~~· orap---.. --... """-"'~--11 ..... ---"active tralninf & ad· to: Cluauted ad no 147; dent&DillnC to care for Campus Dr, N. B . 1lrumentatlon ex-,..2.~notyaplm~~ .. t. FREESE'SSION-/AD .......... 1 ....... 27.._ Liii-·· mlniatraUon. Be unique c/o Dally Pilot. PO Box my motbtr. 813-5858, 551.9051 ult for Kathy perience. For more in-..,...,. ...,. ..... .., --· --. • Some cleric work in· ln '71 with Unique Hom• 1580, Costa liie•a. Ca MIMIZ1t nemaM. tonnaUoo, call· Construcr.:!BuaiJleH •SANDv·s* ~Btil.-,..r ~~().~. p/Ume. =~t~tactJlm 921S2JSD -RAP--ER-Y_O_P_E_RA_T_O_RS_ OlllMary.t'll-121'7 OutcalJM..,aie ·~~~~~~~~ICbild care needed, I.art PMIVrU'llOUll· -exper'd. The Claulc Cathy Fereyman (714) 540-5000 ext 2C11 ~ A.111 illtu1 1-time my bome, .E . WftJl,ftll 1UU. Draperin, 38S1 Birch St. MOMIY WeWIUTraitl Btkpr, mln s yra Hunt. Beh, ! children, LOAN Cl.Ell N.B. 5'1-1431or759-1648 HYLAND LAIOIATOlllS •-•-f t•i;:-at .,...,.. · automotive up. Waati 1:30-5:30.91&'1011 ,_.. ra-as r·-· DRIVER aale boat part.a Dependable. ooHt CIM Ctwlu • beled Oil up. " ability. Q.EANING &ao.1\118 •stock room trainee. Sol ..ntee.!Dd'a.ard'•,•Yf• NoSpedallJcreq'd. E..O.E.•UIM..MnOOl• J..,.._. ~ lad1 CalJlltranoBrncb 3300 Hyland Ave Costa llleaa, CA D62l5 -.--Bob. W..._.. ~dforlO,weeklY tn ~ poalUoD for Cal, 193Z E. Pomona St, " Call ... u .. -_. .. _ who -=-S.A. (Edi.ogerex.ltelf5S) ......,W..... )(ac:Qrqcr ••cb&Corp ev.:-.,,_ ,... uaJ()pportunlt I ••••··-··-··•••••••• 1atPlac:,DUa.cv ---------• 1*h JJUbUe ud • ..,.tweSll11deft ~· tlveA~ contact. Requlr .. 40 Beach area. P'/tlme, finmE ~A WPM t;yplac and 2 Je&rl perm. Some wlmdl. Mr. m.,..,yer collect or equlnleat l.2wood,tn5-4>150. work ·~~ Send rue Clerk,~Ume, lite NUme or lett.er cl •P. EldierlY .woman to "" ln tniinl 1r • 11aiure llllcau.tto .. Qimmo • eompanlon to Hmi· reapomibe HI* on'1 tal)l1traao, IJJt .luaa lnullcf. Lite dutlea, ~ ' · Ca~ C&.875. cJUnlng, cooldnl & llv·•--------llll medicine In n · R.OWB SHOP eh&nae for room It priv. MAMAGll ba. i'allbrook area. 1 1~~~~~~~=~ (UC) 721-8575 a.1w Salary commensurate I· ...;.....;...;.. __ ..;...;..•-----• w/uper. Westmln1ter ILICTlOMtC Memorial P•r\'. Florut. Euln_.. Technicians 18Wil2l Ext 205. A:'A11embtera. Back-A.RDENER, rellab'9 for 1round In dltltal • amall apt c:omplez. $60 ~~~~....:.~~2..;.!J aaa_lO.J· olreultry . mo.'1»Ul4 Dt,.....,,. '""" load l.n ·---------~---.... ~ofll· ~~KINl:TJCS DA Vicll«ta. CUL .,. &.O.&. I I 'j 100% FREE c,...,. ~ to $1000 You can om UUs &rOW· llll 11.rm you have com· puter bltgd Is lite 1en'I olc Uilla. XIDl potent. can am. ~ Mm.AllilttoSl200 TbU top potiUon for l*'90D W/lood lkil1a Ii mani lltsd 1n CODltr'UC· ticn fsreal est field. canauu ~ \ I Cl. DAI y PILOT I • OYalOO CADILLACS tOCHOOSIPllOM AT ALL TIMIS Nabers Cadillac ' r I B1 GUY GUNVJLLE OI • l*lr ...... 5'.tf Mental health orrlclala ea Um ate that 60 percent of the adult lndochJnese refugees liv· ing in Oranae County suffer from either depression, anxiety reactions, psychosomatic ill· nesses or alcohol abuse. . ·'Given the magnitude of prob· •lem conditions" among the adult refugees, officials say they wUJ ask the federal 1ovemmenf lor t\lndlng to hire six addiUonal bllin1ua1 mental health workers. It is estimated in a report to the county Board ot SupervisOrs that 20,000 to 27,000 telurees from the Indochina wars now Ii ve in Orange County. They began arrivirJI here in 1975 in the wake of the Vietnam War. And the mental health prob- ~·Skyjackers Charged leUla dted ln the Human Seryices AceJ1cy report to court· ty 1uperviSdn iren't the only problema ra~ the reru1eea. They a1ao bave a housing prob- lelll~ "ln tbe main, the refu1ees have found jobs payin1 below average salaries and hate sllpped between the cracka in Oraage Co.unty'a housing mark.et;" accordinl to the re- ~·. Cyprus Will Tey Arab Terrorists " NICOSIA, Cyprus <AP) -The ' government said today it ls re-, leasing the surviving Egyptian ~ eommandos whose assault OD a jetliner held by assassins ot an influential Egyptian editor was fbJled by Cypriot troops. But of. ftcials rejected Egypt's request that the captured terrorists be sent to Cai.,. . ,, A spokesman also said the Cypna.a government, angered by the foreign military operation on its soil, demanded that Egypt re- call its military attacbe from Nicosia. Cypriot forces stopped the Egyptians' attempt to storm the plane at Lamaca Airport in a bloody battle Sunday night that Flag-waving • .. Example· Won't Be Thwarted Huntington Beach resident Richard Schleicher thinks there ls nothing so beautifw as the sight of "Old Glory" nutt~ing .in the breeze. SCHLEICHER, A retired. aerospace enelneer, bas been flying the U.S. Flag 24 hours a day in order to do his J bl\ "'to ~e .., A9'erlca." " But thJeves.scaled the concrete wall sW't"OWldfng his home at 9601 Castine Drive Sund-., nilhl * made off witb tbe three by Jlv•·r~.ftai &.bat new proetdlf lroe a • lz.loot pole. "This really bums me up.'' he •aid this mornina. "You try to set a good example and do aome good ancf um 15 what happens!' . SCHLEICHER SAID BE ls willln& to fon\\'e and forget as Jong u tbe culprits bn.n. beet bi.I~: He said that today being a national holiday la espeC'lal· . ly meaningful to him. He bas a backup Flac be la di.splay· ·ing fo.r the occasion. Three Teen Bofs riAmong Four· Slain , : ~ES MOINES, Iowa (AP> - Three teen-age boys who were ~oing remodeling clean-up work re fatally~ by shots in back ol the head and left e-by-slde in a downtown ildlng that bad hoµsed an ult bookstore. '.· Tbree blocks away, a clerk in t• adult bookstore was Jater qund shot to death. But 14thorities said they had no rea- s9n to believe the sbootinp of the l>oys were related to the ~eath of the clerk, who they said 'was killed during an apparent ~bbery. -1, ,.Two of the boys were dead at ihe scene Sunday, the third died Juer iJl a hospital. The)' were found lyin1 lace down ln tbe former bookstore wbich )l•d. doeed 1 few l'QOQths •10. Assi.st.ant Police Cbiet BUUe Wtlllace, a 21-year veteran, ertbed the acne u .. the ~·t 1rue1ome I have ever •n." . left a ftp9l'1.ed 15 E~u com· mandol dead. ~ Interior Minister• · Cbriatodoulos BenJ•mln told a ne•s conference tbat Cypriot and not Egyptian courts would try the two Arab tem>risU, wbo began the two days of bloodshed Saturday In a Nicosia hotel by killing Cairo newspaper editor Youuef el-Sebaei, a confidant or Egyptian President Anwar Sadat. The pair, wbo seized hostages and took over the Cypriot jetliner after the kUUng, were form ally charged 'With murder today. Benjamin said the four dozen Egyptian soldiers captured in the baWe at the airport, 30 miles southeast ot bere, would be al- lowed to return bome with their arms. An EapUan c.lJO mlUt.vy tr•11• lo o,,.,. to- day to pldt them up, alont with the bocliel of ~ It. ............. ~ lean. 1!Mt"Ot1Jlf t .-tbem t() C1pr(at &aturday lral' badly aamatied la tM MUJ~ f• • BMfcld thlt 1S 4did, the IOY· enu:uem.Uid, lt tcntians.were wooded. two. wen m .. s&ic and n oUtera . bad. beft ~Id as .. °'llilaly Jll'iloDers!' l~ •aid six Cypriot aoldien •al a \fest Genna ~ UJ1Mr1&nan alM were~ la t.bt ~ClJe. A Cyprlot 1o•enment spokdma Hid today Prtaident Spyrol K1prian4u b .. de· m 'anded the rec•U of Col. Suletmt.n• lladad, •millt•~ at· tacbe .t tlle. £apUu Embassy here: " The nuoa-was. Dal. ofndaUy a•aollnced. but 'a. 0Jpns Air"~':d • •re'pOrttt that an mllitary at-· ladle tbe aaault. ID de- fi aoc• or tile Cypriot IOV• ernment. 'the •ovce of tbe pilot'• informaUoa was not <See CYPatJS. P11e Al) Bl1 ENOS AIRES, Ar&entlna (AP) -Tbe cue of the baa· gage-room corpae haa been aplved. It tumtld out to be the mum)DJ Of an IDc:a that bad been *"'*' frqm Ute Dor1hem c~ty of~ ill 1118. .. The q111e ..._ .. ••bas eom· pany •pla;eel lnapectiq •· clattned percela at. a depot ill ~ordoba ctiHOVend a aea.rtr wrapped bQd;J 8Dcl .Ued J)Q)lce. Ar~beololllt l'tandlco hllll.o &oJa aal'.~J.lle .nailed tbe t,nummy. ~b M believ. ls abc*t .. JWl'I olct, to • ~· leas•• lD-~'CordOb• Lor ••· am~dali. Mt tt:~.1J1Pe•nd. OaanilJer J.,,eaders These are the folks who'll be guiding the · activities of Huntington Beach's Chamber of Commerce for the next year. They in· elude <from left) Je rry She~ first vice ' president..; Jack Feehan, president; R;alph Kiser executive director; J oyce Rollings, treas~rer, and Bill Compton, second vice president . Coal Mhiers B.e_acb Hitchhiker Raped, Cut u-···~,,.~")!!ln HB Area . . OK on One P.act WAS~G'l'ON <M'' -flrlltJnj ·Ualted ·lime o,_. union today reat.bed a teni.tive ~ttaet ~" wjth ...... ~~~~ucerlll Labor Secretary Ray M~ betan conaultlDC wit-con· 1reniopal leaden about ••cte. fmltive" action to end &be T7· FY Garage . Fire~ea Ttdly $7,.200 Spontaoeoua combuetlon Wltbln a pile of dirty di•pen was b)amed today f~ a S7i1GO 1ara1e fire in Fowibin Valley sunctay. • The blaze •t the Micba,il Antbpny hoaMa, 9225 La Gf~e Ctrtle-, tauaed about $$,000 , A 2 3'· )' e a r • o l d r e m a 1 e blt.chhikt.r tc)id police she was l raped, bea(en and cut In a Hunt· Jncton Beach JnduatrlaJ area by a man who picked her up &m- day night. Police said the nude rape victim fled from the rear of a factory on tlay Avenue when she aiked her attacker to retrieve~ Clothes. The man bad forced her to dJs • ~be at trl11epoint . 11\e woman said she hid from her atta~er and later broke into an olflce t1t 7601 Clay Ave., and telephoned pollce. Th~ suipeet, believed to be re- ~naots Cited MOSCOW (AP) -Soviet COS• moH\Jll Ywt Bomanenko and ~T&Y Greebko are iJl tbelr 10th week'·lo a~ed•bave reed"4 a ~ « praise f.rom three American veterans of tbe Sll;flab ' 1Jpace ltatlon. ' ' l: I • , • ' , ~. First Ladg Visits Mrs. Carmen Romano de Opez-Portillo, left, chats briefly with hostess at Laguna Beach Art Museum during whirlwind four of Mexican art exhibit Sunday. Baja California Gov. and Mrs. Rol>erto de la ·Madrid, center, accompanied the Mex- ican first lady on tour. The Mexican vis- itors also toured Newport Harbor Art Museum Sunday. · OC Firm Armed· RecluSe, 71, Sends. Team Keeps Cops at Bay To Arabia Teams of engineers. architects and planners from an lrvine frrm are en route to Saudi Arabia under provisions or a new $7 million contract to gather preliminary information for the design of 25 vocational trainin& centers. VTN Corporation's affiliate, VTN International, and the San Diego ar chitectural firm of Frank L. Hope and Associates recently were awarded the con· tract by the Saudi government. · The contract coven the first phase, including cost analysts, of a project that could run from $500 million to $1 billion. Nearly 100 U.S. firms bid on it. · A spokesman tor VTN In lrvioe said the current project includes gathering information and preparing some prelimlna.ry designs for the project, wbich will include planning new dormitories, schools, roads, utilities and mosques and up- grading existing facilities for the educational centers in 18 cities. The spokesman said teams will take at least a year to com· plete their work. including t.ak- mg aerial photographs and in· frared photos of the terrain. The San Diego firm will do the architectural design. be said. and VTN will handle engineer· ingwork. F,....P,,,,eAI ~LUNGS. • Sunday and the third we:s 1een In an alley. About five hours after' tbe 'boys' bodies were found, police were called to the· Adult Center bookstore, where a clerk,- Willlam Baldwin, 30J,wu lying dead behind a counter with a gunshot wound in the head. Police said robbery was a possible motive lo the abooUni. The compartment.I of an oPen cuh drawer were emptJ, but there wa1 still aome m~ at the back of the drawer. P01lce said an uUmated $180 was Uken. O"ANO& ca.r "'" DAILY PILOT QUINCY, Mass. (AP)-An elderly recluse -armed and believed to be a trained markswoinan -kept police at bay for the 11th straight day by threatening to kill anyone who approached her home. ' Mal')' Regina Connor, 71, told The Baston Globe by telepbOne Sunday that she would also kilt herself if police attempted to enter her house. Quincy police wen called to the home Feb. 8 when the family CoaatPanel Takes2for .. C',,eorge's Day The .South Coast Regional Coastal Commission didn't con- vene in Huntington Beach's Civic Center today, aa it usually does. The state-appointed panel dido 't meet laat Monday ln Torrance as it usually does either but gathered the previous Thursday for their de- velopmental deliberations. Since commissioners who COD· trol coasUine building meet 1n both Los Angeles and Orange counties, on alternate days, the policy requires that they must take a George WHhlogton'1 Birthday bollday off 1D each county. ''Put lt tbll way," said a lone switchboard operator at the empty realcmal offlee 1D Looi Beach, explainlD1 bow the system worb: ''Some of us aot a bollday ... -llkgal, Alien Croaings Up U .s. Border l»atrol agenta at the San Oemente checkpoint re. parted apprebencllna 28'1 allena Sanday, up from an averaee of 110 arresta lolled on recent Sundays. ''We think this 1s the beebm- in& of the anticipated n..w increase,., sald John Wesson, agent-io-c)lar1e. "With crops neartna harvest tlme, tbo number fl' Ulepl aliens lumps in the spring. We expeet the number fitJl Just ko'p ~b-in .. . • ~ exican nationals •P·. prebended alter' they eater the United tba. fil..,.U, are re- turned to the border, where they are nleaHd. Weaon s-1d. next door complained Mrs. Connor threatened. to shoot their two sons over a dispute over fees for snow shoveling. Officers have staked out the house every day since. · Mrs. Connor, a retired telephone worker who bas rarely been seen by her nelltbbors In the last decade, said she would "rig up the gun to kill myself if anyone tries to come in." She said sbe bas a rifi.e with a telescopic sight and a shotgun. Police have not seen any weapons, but say Mrs. Connor's late husband, Eugene, owned weapons and taught her to shoot. Offtcers say they have put off a direct confrontation with the woman, hoping that she would give up. · A warrant was obtained for her arrest after the alleged threat. F,...PageAJ COAL ••• clauses imposing penalties on miners who go out ob wildcat strikes' Breaux said other coal com- panies have three alternaUvea: follow the P&H contract pattern, continue nerottatonJ with the UMW or stand by and let Carter intervene. Sources a.aid tile tentative PllM contnct doel not provide flnea for miner'I partlclpatlN in wildcat strikes. Welea could rise a maximum ot $2.40 an bDur over three years, 1Dclud1Da cost· of.living allowancH. UMW miners now average $7.80 an bout. One source eaid the ccotract calls for P&M to guarantee the health and peoaloo bendita of miners and their dependenta. However, a second source said the c;ontract was uncl~ on Ws point. The issue ot beDefita bas been a key attcldng point lo the negotiations between the BCOA aad tbe unioG. The breakthroUlh lo the P&M cOlltract came u admlnlltratlon offlclals were explorla1 the polsiblllty of encourallna lo· dividual settlements l>etween BCOA companies and local UMW unita. The aovernaiat cbuld provlde mecUators. for sacb u effort, for example, ~OU~ this proceu would be timo-conaumln1. Marshall, as he beian bls COD4 sultaitona with coneresalonal leaders, said no decision bU been rnlde oo what alernati"J the admblliW' ·li:alpt pro-pose to~. ·A youog La'suna Beach woman whose unborn baby was listed as a traffic fatality last. week became the aecond victim of the same accident when abe died Sunday lb Mlulon Community Hospital .• Veda Fresquez, 18, ot'220 Pacific Coast Highway, Laitma Beach, died from injuries suffered TUesday night in a . motorcycle accide(lt, according to a corooer's report. The woman wu a p111enpr on a westbound motorclcle tbat reportedly went out o control and crashed as it rounded a curve on Ortea• Highway about 14 miles east of the San Diego Freeway. ~ After s~ was taken to Mbsioo Community H01pital in critical condiUoo, doctors at the hospital attempted to save the woman's unborn baby's life through caesarian surgery. · The 8~·monlb-old fetus did DQt survive the surgery. William Parrish, 21, of 394 3rd St., Laguna Beach, was tbe driver of the motorcyele that crashed as it rounded the Ortega Highway-curve. Parrish was also taken to the hospital in Mission Viejo. Bia in· juries were described as less serious. Tail's ·Tak: Why 'Take It? TOKYO (AP) -Horse- tail tbleves have at:ruck at tbe Wblno Riding Club of Osaka, cropplog tbe tails of 13 or the club'• 15 bones. "We're unable to ex- plain why," a club oUldal said. "Bone tails don't command fancy prices. although they are Uled for violin bows, ftsbing tacldti and shoulder paddtn1 in dreu IUlta." • It takes at least three years for a bone to pow a full·lenitb tau, be said. and asked, "What are they goin1 to do to swat rues in lbe aummer?" . F ... P ... AJ CYfR.US ••• known • The two tenoriltt, wbo bad been boldtq ll Aram bmta&e abolrd a Cypriot Jetllner after a . fuUle attempt to ftDd refU8e in the Arab .urld, surrendered to the plane crew u IOCIG u the abootlnl started. The boetases and the four members of tbe plane crew were ~urt. The Cypriot pyemment today luued a stale!nent on behlf ot the terrorilta who claimed to be Paleattpiana, sa1tn1 they belon1M to no orpnlution. The Palestine Liberation Or1anlutfon, •hleh deplored Saturda7's a11a11lnatlon, chatpd in Beirut, LebaDoa. that tbe tn 8Cted far tbe fbteWeence service ol JraQ, a banl·li.De Arab state oppoeed to Sedat'a pace dialop 1'Jlb larae1. A pro.Libyan newspaper to Be~ aid tbe1 eoafeued they were ordered to Ir.ill Sebaei, chief editor of Egypt's seml- oftlclal Al Ahtam oe-.i>aper, by Iraq-hued PalestiJd.M renegade guenilla Abu Nidal HIPPO AT LARGE AGAIN TODAY IN LAGUNA HILLS BubblH ti•• Blown Out of Uon Country C•ptlv"y mppo Dijinks Bubb'les Views Leii.ure Workl By PHD..IP ll08MAlllN °' ... Dlirr l'Mlt IUllf How you gonna keep 'em down on the farm, after they've -seen Laguna Hills? That's the question that's gnawing today at oUiclals of Lion Country Safari, where Bubbles, a wanderlust-struck three-ton hippopotamus, today agaln sne•ed under an animal compound gate and went for a stroll. Leon Unterhalter, manager or the park, said Bubbles bad been spotted at midmorning, after a three-hour search, ambling across an open field toward LelluJ'e World. . . Park rancers. armed with a tranquilizer gun. crossed the field in jeeps and planned \o herd Bubbles back to the park. Failln& that, ransen were prepared to fire a dart into Ule waodertae hippo to put her to aleep, then scoop her up in a front-loading earth-mover for the ride back home. Bubbles escaped from the part lut. Tuesday, squealng UD· der a fence across lbe San Diego Creek channel, used as a Lion Country river area. That time she took ber daughter with her. Vwknt Crime Rat,e Steadies WASHINGTON (AP) -A federal survey shows that the rate of violent crime did not in· creue substantially in 1976 over the previous year. The Justice Department's law enforcement a1alltaoce aclmlniat.ratlon nparted on &m- day that 1976 rates for rape, robbery, assault, theft and burglary were virtually un- cbanaed from ms. The report said the only major change was a sharp decline ol IS.5 percent in automobile thefts. The sunrey ls based on a poll of people 12 and older in a representative national sample of 60,000 households. The study also surveyed 15,000 businesses in 1975 and 42,000 in 1976. Oxnard Klan Fights Aliens OXNARD (AP> -The Ku Klux Klan ha held a closed meet1D1 at a local motel to dis· cu.u strateaiea that include ex· pane&, Ila cruaade atalnst ll· le&al aliens in Ventura Countr. The Klan bu been patrolln& the Mexican border in an effort to keep \he undocumented workers out of the country. Irvine police, park ranrers and county sheriff's deputies scoured the hills and nearby res- idential ne1gbborhoods in searcll or the African duo, but saw nary a wiggling ear of either mother or child, whowanderedbackontheir own. Untert\alter said that after that incident, an overnight hold- ing area was used. with a locked gate, to pen the animals-plus seven·fellow hippos-while some way is found to flx the creek fence. Lock·up last night was 10 p.m. Unterbalter said a hippo count. showed everybody tucked lo for the night. But a det.ermined Bubbles. who apparently bun 't kicked her urge to travel, leaped. or more likely, dragged. 1iti:self over a. four-foot. eate, made her way down the creek and got out the samewaysbedidlutweek. "When we cat.ch her we•re go- ing to lock her up good um time," Unterhalter said, "and get her accustomed to stayinc home." • Why is Bubbles afflicted with this uncontrollable desire lo visit Let.sure World? Said Unterhalt.e!', •"The grass is greener on the other' side. I 1uess." Froat Page Al REFUGEES been suspected of minor of· fenses such as sbopllftine. Police observed that in coo- frontatlon with other groups the refugees "can take care or • themselves" due, ln 111'1• part. •'to their prior exls~e in a war-tom country ... The report indicated there is only one law enforcement officer in the county who can meet Southeast Asian "lan1uage needs." ..However, be cannot meet the language need of the entire Orange County law enforcement community," the report said. It foresees an increase in tbe number of refuaees living in tbe county. an increase likely to oc- cur over the next three years. Cited as reasons for anticipat- ing added refugee migration to Orange County are: -Edit.lag concentration or Southeast Asians who tend to at.- tract others to their com- . muniUes. -Oraaie Couty'• low un-employment rate, 5. 7 perc:eat in January. -Oraase Coa11i1•1 usually mUd climate. ~tlJHtbag mlga&ioe to tbe u .s. by refua~ Crom Thailand. a wave of migration that ii ex- pected to depo~lt about 20 percent of the newly arrived ref- ugees lo Orange County. T .he American Gem Society of the United States and Canada takes pleasure in.announcing the appointment of J. I:'. Humnhries Jewelers ~ 1'2iitEWPORT BLVD. COSTA MESA as ~BOJSTERED IEWBLER AMBRICAN GEM SOCIETY @ . VOL. 71, NO. 51, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES By PIDLJP ROSMARIN oe-. DlllY """ .. .,. How you COM& keep 'em down on the farm, alter they've seen Lagunallllla? Tbat'a the question that's IJlawinc today at officials of Lion Country Safari, where Bubbles, • wanderlust-struck three-ton hippopotamus, today acain sneaked under an animal com pound gate and went for a stroll. · Leon Unt.erhalter, manager of the park, said Bubbles had been spotted at midmorning, after a three-hour search, ambling across an open field toward Leisure Worlq. * * * Park rangers, armed. with. a tranqulllzer 1un, cro11ed tbe field in jeeps and planned to herd Bubbles baclc to the park. FaillnJ{ that, ran1ers were prepared to fire a dart lnto tbe wandering hippo to put ber to sleep, then scoop her \IP in a front-loading earth-mover for the ride back home. Bubbles escaped from the park last Tuesday, squeeltin1 un· der a fence across the San Diego Creek channel, used as a I.Jon Country river area. That Ume she took her daughter with her. lrv!Jie police, park rancers and county sheriU's depuUes * * * Gator Fo1•Dd Jzmgle Creatures on Prowl Ask any Irvine police officer: It's a jungle out there. · BESIDES ONE loose Lion Country• Safari hippopotamus to worry about today, officers had been kept busy over the weekend tracking down an alligator. Saturday, Linda Pounds called police to report she captured the reptile in San Joaquin Marsh. Nobody at headquarters wanted to touch tt with a 10.. foot pole until Mrs. Pounds said it was only 10 inches long. OFFICER LINDA Torkelson drove out to Mrs. Pounds' home to bring it back alive. Said Mrs. Pounds. "I go often to the marsh to feed the ducks. l've never seen an alligator there before." Neither had Irvine police. who promptly carted the growing alligator to the animal shelter .. "WE'VE BEEN asked to pick up some weird reptiles," said Debbie Moser, animal services officer, "but this is our first alligator." She theorized the animal bad been sold by a pet shop, then turned loose by its owner who noticed it was getlin1 bigger. . ( Irvine Woman Ge~ State Panel Post An Irvine woman who manages Orange County's multimodal transportation study has been named to the new state Transportation Commission," Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. bas announced. Frances Jwalani Mossman, 46,. joins industrialist Norton Simon 1lDd seven other voting members on the commission, which replaces four s pecialiied agencies. "This commission will de· termine to a great extent the quality of life in Califorrua in the next decade," Brown said. Ile said among the changes he hopes to see are an adjustment of work hours in private in- dustry to cut rush-hour traffic. Riverside; Car«>le Ooorn.. M. director of the League to Save Lake Tahoe; Dean Meyer, 51. former director of tJie Golden Gate Bridge, Htebway ud TransportaUon Di.strict; Claude Fernande.a, 58, secretary· treasurer of Local 428 of the Retail Store Employees Unloo ln San Jose, and attomey Judith Soley, 32, of Freano. Also named wae Cb8rles Reid, 46, deputy administrator of the Hu.man Resources Aaency of San Diego County. and state Public Utilities Commi11ion Chairman .Robert Battnorich. 41, or HJOsboroulb. Already appointed were state Sen. James Mills, D.San Dteco. and Assemblyman Walter Ingalls, D·Riverslde. Abolished are the old Highway Com mission, the state Toll Brid ge Authority, the Aeronautics Board and the Ywlellt Crirrie Transportation Board. • Other voting members of the new board include Iva n Rate StetJdiea Hinderaker, 61 chancell_or of UC . ~rpseFound To Be Mummy BUENOS AIRES, ArcenUna (AP) -The case of the bag- gage-room corpse has been solved. It turned out to be the mummy of an Inca that bad been shipped from the northern city of Salta in 1976. The case began when bus com· -pany employees Inspecting un· claimed parcels at a depot in Cordoba discovered a nearly wrapped body and called police. Archeologist Francisco Emilio SoJa said he mailed the mummy, which he believes ls about 500 years old, to a col· leaeue In Cordoba for ex· • aminaUon, but it dlsappeared. Tax Relief Possibk WASHING TON (AP) -A federal silrvey shows that the rate of violent crime dld not in- crease substantially in mt over the previous year. The Justice Department'• Jaw enforcement assistance administration reported on &m- day that 1976 rates for rlJ)e, robbery, assault, theft and burglary were virtually un· chan1ed from 1975. Tbe report said the only major chllll• was a sharp decline of 15.5 percent in automobile thefts. The survey ls based on a poU of people 12 and older In • representative national aample or 60,000 bouleholds. The stodJ also surveyed 15,000 bualneues in 1975 and 42,000 in 1918. scoured thO hllll and nearby res· ldenUal nei&hborhooda in "arch ot the African duo, but aaw nary a wtisUns ear of either mother or child, who wandered ba~k on tbeir own. Unterbalter said that after that lnddent, an ovemlcht bold- ina area wu used, with a Jocked sate, to pea the animala~us seven-fellow blppos-wblle some way ts found to rix the creek fence. Lock-up last niaht was 10 p.m. unterbalts laid a hippo count 1bowed everJbodY tucked in for tile mght. But a determined Bubbles. Company Begins Project Teams of en1Jneers, artbitects and plannera from an ·Irvlne firm are en route to Seuell Arabia under provisions Of a new $7 mIU1on contra~ to catber 'Pfeliminary lnformatlon fw the deal1n ol 25 vocational trabUng centers. VTN Corporatlcm's afftllat.e. VTN ID1emalioaat. and the San Die10 arebltectural firm of Frant L. Hope and Aaaoetate.s receotl)-were awarded the con-tract by the Sad «O¥emmeat. ·. Tbe com.net covers tbe first phase, Jocludina cost analysis, of a project that could run from $500 million to $1 billion. Nearly 100 U.S. flnm bid on it. A •eoke1man for VTN In Irvt.De Mid Lbe cmT-.t pndect IDdudel ptbedq infan111d• ~~m=-= wu lAct••• l••&a• ••• dormll•l'I•-. ... c:Mel roada, titlJltl8 .. m I ta• Wild ap- lfadlftl eDittnc fftilltMI for the edacatiaeal eeacAlft tn 1' dtles. Tbe apotamu nlcl tea,ns will ta•e at last a year to eom· plete tbelr work, lncludlnl tak· Inc aerial llbotolrapba and in· !rared pbotoa of t1'e terrain. Tbe Su DlefO ftnn w11l ~ tbe architectural desttz4. hehald. • and VTN will handle eqineer. lng work. Man Arrested BADEN-BADEN. West Germany (AP) -Police say they .hue ,arrested a man believed to be "')lomleur X," the writer of a Utter claiming raponsibWty for 12 railway de- railments in whicb 20 people were bQund. The ldenUty of the auspect wu not made public. Short Thief Bags Beer Inlne police ·~ they'd like to collar tbe burglar wbo'a been darting in and out of Myra Socber's Doggy Door. Mrs. Socber, 32, baa been victimized a half· dozen times by a bur&lar who each time scoots • through the swinain1 door steals a llWe liquor, ;;;d scoots back out. The latest burglary at tbe Socher residence, 29 Alb Tree Lane. wu Pri· day, when several bottles of German beer were · atolen. police said. who appere:nUy hasn't kicked laer • urce to travel, leaped, or more likely, dracted. herself ovet' a, four-foot 1ate, made her way down the creek and iot out the same wayibedld last week. ''When we catch her we're go- tnc to lock' her up good this Ume," Unterhalter said, "and 1et ber accustomed to staytq home." Why is Bubbles afflicted witb this uncoritrollable desire to visit LeiJure World? Said Unt«balter, "The grass ls greener on the other side, I auess ... 3 Teen Boys Found. Slain ............ UNION PRESIDENT AmoldMller· One Finn Ten1atively DES MOINES. Iowa (AP) - Three teen-age boys who were doing remodeling clean-up work were fatally wounded by shots in .the back of the head and left side·by·aide in a downtown building that .had housed an adult boobtore. Three blocks away. a cledt in an adult bookstore ,was l~ter found abot fd de.ath, But authorities aaid they bad no rea-son to believe the shootinP'Ol tbe boys were related to the death of the cllrk. who thef .Sald was "killed during an apparent rob)>ery. Two ol the boys were dead at the scene &mday, the thi.rd dfed later in a hospital. TbeJ were found ly~ tace down in the f orqier bOokstore whlcll Jaad 'llllfS:~ ...... , .... 1:2f.if!C" ~-e WASllDfOTOR :CM) _.,.. Wallacet • 2'f..7•~ yehran; stdktlle U~ ..... WOl'brt de&etlbe4 di Mcue u "'lite ' union. todllJ reacW a tentative ~ .. 1rue1ome 1 have ever contract qreement with· a ma- j j d------• --a W allac!e speculated fbat or n ep;iLG< ~ Pivuucer as whoever shot the boys may have Labor Sectetary Ba1 Manhall been lootine for somethinl in be&an coasultina with con• the vacated book.store building. g.reaslonal leadeta about "'de· The young shooting Victims fbillive" action to end ~ 77.. were .re!f·'Besvers, -n, ...... ct-Jeff day-old soft coal strike. _,,. Adtnln1strattoo olficlals and Hollman, 14, and his b~, union leaders said they were Geratd, 15, all of Des Moines. hoping the tentative agreemeht Jeff .Beavers ud Jett Ho(fm(ln with tJ:ie Plttlbw'gh and llidw~ were dead at t\e scene, Gerald Coal Co. would break uie 'Hoffman died 8Jer silrgety Stln-day bight. ' ' stalemate in the national strike. Polk County M'~cal Ex· P&M, which is owned by Gulf qu OU Corp, ls not a member of the aminer R.C. WOdlers .... sald yie Bituminous Coal Operaton .\.!I· boys were all shot ln the bead, sociatlon, wblcb repretents tbe . .. ••• laree coal companles. BCOA mem~ mine about ball the natlo'n's coe1. P&ll bu 800 to 1,000 lDine employees and six mines In Kentucky, lliasouri and Kansu. Tbe tentative PU pact must be approved by the union'll ~ bargaining council and the un· ion'• membership. If the contract fa approved by "'1.be miners, P&M could begin producln,c coal, belpin• to ease ahortages In some areas. But more importantly, Lbe tentative agreement 1a ezpected to in· t.enaif y pressure OQ the BCOA and the UMW to come lQ terms. It was not immediately dear how Iona it will a..te for the tentative P&M contract to be voted oo by the miners. The principal UMW neeotiator in the PltM talks was Thomas D. Gaston, a frequent critic of UMW Presll:lellt'" Am.old Miller. One source iald lllller ••was not involved .. Int.be P&M negoUaUom. (See oo.u., Pase AJ> Fum?~l.sf?t Tuesday fo~. ·, Bank Exec Memorial services• for Frank L. Daniels of Irvine, a retired seni9r vice presideqt or Union Bank who died FridJlY at H~g Memorial ~Hosplt a 1, are scheduled at 2 p.m. Tuesday at Pacific View Chapel i~ Newport Beach. He was 68. Daniels, a naU,ve of Chicago who lived in Irvine two years, was a U.S. Navy .veteran,of World War II. He is svrvived by his wjdow, Virginia; son. Robert Daniels or Dlaplond Bar; daug'1ter,.Nancy Stokes or Irvine, and six grandchildren. The family has s uggested memorial contributions to the Am~rican Heart Association. probably with. a large-caliber re· volver. No weapon was found at the scene. The youths were t aken to the downtown building Sunday morning by the Hoffman boys' father, Gerald, a contractor whose fll'D'l is remodeling the buildlng into a restaurant. Police said they knew of no motive in the shooUng of the boye. "We know robbery wasn·t. the motive," said Wallace. Police were searching for three men in the slayings. One was seen in a nearby drugstore Sunday and the third was seen in an alley. About five hours after the boys' bodies were found, police were called to the Adult Cent.er bookatore, where a clerk, William Baldwin, 30, was ~ dead bebip4 a counter with a guHbot wound in the head. Police said robbery was a p<>Asible motive In the shooting. Tbe compartments or an open cash drawer were empty, but there was still some money at the back of the drawer. Police said an estimated $160 was taken. X..rated Film C(meehJob .. PHILADELPHIA (AP) Dallas Alinder says he is resign- in g from the Philadelphia Cultural Affairs Council because of his appearance in an X·rated movie. Alinder portrayed a rich man in "'The Divine Obsessinc,'' which was filmed in 1974, and is playing in theaters here. He ap. pears in the film fully clothed, however. "The word spread like wildfire," be said, announc:ine he'll resicn in April. Instruments Taken Three precision instruments used in pharmaceutical re- search were stolen in an a.p· ~arent weekend burglary of e lson Research & evelopment Co., 17922 Jamboree Blvd •• Irvine. police sald. It was unknown bow the criminal.got into the build· ing. The Instruments are worth $2,600, ac~rding to police re. ports. Fair ~ warm sunny days through Tuesday. Patchy fog along coast late ton.iOlt and Tuesday mornln•· Lows tonicbt 43· to 48. Highs 'l'uesday 68 tQ 73. INSIDE T8DAY To It~ the fOmiIJI unit , .arn clu.,Chu .ore ~W to Id wp FomU11 Home ~·· ~ feaiur-PtQ • POfr CI. llltlex , First Ladg ~isits Mrs. Carmel Romano de Lopez Portillo, left, chats briefly with hostess at Laguna Beach Art Museum during whirlwind tour of Mexican art exhibit Sunday. Baja California Gov. and Mrs. Roberto de la Madrid, center, accompanied the Mex-. ican first lady on tour. The Mexican vis- itors a lso toured Newport Harbor Art Museum Sundity. · F,....PageAJ REFUGEES -Existlni ·concentration or Southeast Asians who tend to at- tract others to their com- munities. -Orange County's low un· employment rate, 5. 7 percent in January. -Orange County's usually mild climate. -Continuing migration to lhe U.S. by refugees from Thailand, a wave of migration that is ex- pected to deposit about 20 percent of the newly arrived ref- ugees in Orange County. FVGarage Fire Damages Ta/,ly $7,200 Spontaneous combustion within a pile of dirty diapers was blamed today ror a $7,200 ga&a ge fire in Fountain Valley Sunday. The blaze at the Michael Anthony home, 9225 La Grande Circle, caused about $5,000 damage to the garage, which was engulfed in flames when firemen arrived. Contents of the garage includ- ing an older automobile, which' was destroyed, added an ad- ditional $2,500 to the Anthony family's losses, firemen estimated. A fire department spokesman said it is rare for chemical re-· actions within soiled diapers to= result in spontaneous com- bustion into names but con- firmed there are other cues on record. "We worked the investigation all the way down to that," the fire department spokesman ·add- e d, pointing out all other potential cawes of the 11:18 a .m . garage blaze were· eliminated. He said arter the suspect diapers at the bottom of the pile of rubble were scooped up and deposited away from the Anthony home, they burst into names ot their own accord ooce aJ(ain. Assad in Moscow ,. DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) _. II Syrian Prealdent Hates Assad new to Moscow today apparent· ly to seek more Soviet arms. OltANCHl COAST DAILY PILOT Top Carte~ Aide Accused of Spitting WASHINGTON CAP) - President Carter's chief aide, Hamilton Jordan, is denying a report by a Washington Post col- umnist that be spat a drink down the front of a young woman's blouse after she scorned his advances. "I did not spit at her. I can state that categorically,'' Jordan said in response to Rudy Maxa's "Front Page People" col- umn that appeared in the Post on Sunday. "I did not do anything that was improper or that amounted to making ·a pass at her." Jordan said. The woman, whom Maxa did not identify, said the incident OC· curred Jan. Z7 at Sarsfield's, a favorite night s pot or some Carter staffers. Jordan, 32, introduced himself to the woman as Harvey Phillips. according to the col- umn, and after drinlciog for an hour, wrot.e her a su«ieative limerick and put bia bancfon her lower back. After the woman removed Jordan's band and ignored his advances, the president's as- sistant filled his month with hi s drink and "spewed it down the front of her blouse," the column said. "l turned around very quickly and he spit again, over a girl's head and down my blouse. I just couldn't believe it," Maxa quot· ed the young woman as saying. The Post said the woman's story was corroborated by ber compan1oo and another witness. Jordan, who is separated from bis wife, waa involved late last year in a llOC:lal controversy con- cernln& the wife of the E&yptlan ambassador. According to published re- ports, Jordan pulled al the front of the woman's dress and re- marked something about "always wanting to see the twin pyramids of the Nile." Jordan aJso denied that report. Laguna Cops Hunt Knifing Suspect Laguna Beach police are seek· ing a man they believe Jammed a hunting knife into the stomach· or a transient following an argument at a party early ~ day. Frienda rushed Gerald A. McNutt, 2s. to South Coast Community Hospital in a van following the 1: 20 a . m . altercation in an apartment at .SS Bent St. He was ~ 111 stable con· ditlon following sur1ery for knife wounds to the stomach, hospital offlclals confirmed. Police Sgt. A.J . DeLuca said be and Officer Linda Phillips pulled up in front of the Bent Street address just u a private van roared away from the turb and down the ltreet: "We radJ.oecl for a patrol unit to follow the van to the bospttal1" DeLuca said today. Police omcen found a bunt1.n1 knite on the ground out.aide tbe apartment and arrested one aua- pect whom they later released. Detectives are seeking anotbtr man who wu present at t.be Beat Street party but Aid they did not waat to SdentltJ the suspect. The ltnif~wielding suspect faces charc• of uaault wttb tn- ieu to commit murder. DeLuca said. Police believe the incident was sparked by an argument over a woman. Wast Panel Takes2for George's Day The South Coast Regional CoaaW Commission dldn 't con-. vene in Huntlngton Beach's Civic Center today, as It usually does. . The state-appointed panel dldn 't meet last Monday in Torrance as It usually does either but 11tbered the previous Thursday for their de· valopmental delibel'atlona. Since commtaalonera who con- trol coutllne bullclint meet tn both Los Ancel• and Orange counties, on altemate days, the policy requires th•t they must' take a Georie Waabin1ton'1 Bh1hday bollday off in each' COUllt.1. 0 Put lt tbJI way," Hld a._ 1wltcbboard operator at tIM eaJpty reafonal office la Lons Beach, explainin1 how the •11tem worb: •'Somo ol ~fol a bollda:y. 0 Five Make Elglat Snow-covered figure-8 tells the story for the Klienast quintuplets of Liberty Corner, N .J . who celebrate t.helr eighth birthday Feb. 24. The quints, children of Mr. and Mrs. William.. Kienast, are. fr9m left, Amy, Gordon, Ted, Abigail and Sara. F ....... PageAJ COAL ••• Merlin Breaux, Gulf OU'• vice president for industrial re- lations, said the t.entaUve P&M contract represented a com- promise between what the UllW. wanted and what BCOA wanted. Tbe UMW's bareaining council previously rejected a BCOA of. fer because the union objecled to clauses imposing penalties on miners who go out on wUdeat strikes. Breaux said other coal com- panies have three alternatives: follow the Pfc)( contrac t pattern, continue negoUatons with tbe UMW or stand by and let Cart.er intervene. Sources said the tentative P&cM contract does not provide fines ror miners partJcipatine in wildcat strikes. Wa1ea could rise a maximum or $2.•0 an hour over three years., iocluclin1 cost- or-living allowances. UMW miners now average $7.80 an hour. One sourc:~ said t.be contract. calls for P&'M to parant.ee the health and pension beoefit.5 of mioen and their dependents. However, a second source said the contract vas t.mclear on th.as . point. The lssue or benefits has been a key sticldoe point in the negot1atioos between the BCOA and the union. The breakthrough ln the P&M <'On tract came as administration officials were exploring the possibility of encouraging in- dividual settlements between BCOA companies and local UMW units. The government could provide mediators for such an etrort, for example, · althooeh this process would be time-consuming. Marshall, as he began his con- sultations with congressional leaders, s•ld no dec:.ialon has been made on wblll altet'natives the administration might pro- pose to Congress. "We are just trying to cet · some idea what members or Con.rress are thiokiog," h.e said. NOW Boos 'Peeks' At Campos Cleavage . OGDEN, Ulah CAP)- Weber State College is planning a "cleavage contest" lo raise money for a campus literary maeazine. The. local chapter of the National Orgaobation for Women says it will picket the cont.est if it takes place. President Cathy Cox of the Nutle Victim Flees Rapist In HWltington A 23-Jear-old female hitchhiker told police she was raped, beaten and cut in a RlDlt- lngton Beach industrial area by a man who picked her up Sun- day ni~. Police said the nude rape victim fled from the rear of a factory oo Clay Avenue when she asked her attacker to retrieve ber clothes. ! The man had forced her to dis- robe at knifepoiot. The woman said she hid from her ettacter and later broke into an office at 7601 Clay Ave., and telephoned police. The suspect, believed tn be re- siding in BuenJ Park, apparent- ly fled in a beige sedan. The rapist and another man bad picked up the womaJS while she was hitchhiking on Beach Boulevard al 8:45 p.m. The woman told police she may have stabbed her attacker with a bent kitchen knife she carried with her ror protection. The victim was treated for c.uta and bruises at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital. She was later transported to an Anaheim rape treatement center. Police have contacted local hospitals in an attempt to locate the possibly injured rapist. Ogden NOW. chapter said the cont~st, scheduled to be held within the next week or two, was "orrenslve to many students" and would exploit people. H and M Body Woru, an off- cam pua aroup sponsoring the contest, said money it received would help finance the annual student literary publication, First Stone. After Ms.· Cox· objected to possible contest advertising in the campus ne wspaper. The Signpost, edhor Val WiUiams canceled contest ads that would have appe ared Tuesday. Williams said the ads would ••undermine tbe paper's credibility" and did not waht the newspaper coMeeled with the· contesL H and M spokesman Dale Hicks stressed that both sexes could sign up for the contest. He said nudity would not be permitted and participants would be judged in swimsuits or T·sbirts. Prizes would be awarded . Hictcs said the women's crouP had ''lost their sense or humor ... Oxnard Klan Fights Aliens OXNARD (AP) -Tbe Ku Klux Klan has held a closed meeting at a local motel to dis· cuss strategies that include ex- . panding its crusade against ii· legal aliens in Ventura County. The Klan has been patrollng the M ex.ican border in an effort lo keep tne undocumented workers out of the country. Gabriel Serrano, chairman for the Ventura County Chapter of' La Raza Unida, a Mexican- American civil ri&hts group, heard about the session and set up pickets in protest. The· American Gem Society of the United States and Canada talces pleasure in announcing the appointment of J. C. HUVJ;f!e~!,t~~v{ewelers COSTA MESA as REGISTERED JEWELER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY @ } l l I ' t .. .L -~ I "' .. I ~OL. 71, NO. S1 , 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ·"County Refugees Sufte~ By GARY GRANVILLE Of ... O.lly ...... $11fl Mental health ofrlc ials estimate that 60 per cent of the adult Indochinese refugees Uv- lng in Orange County suffer from either depression, anxiety reactions, psychosomatic ill- nesses or alcohol abuse. "Given the magnitude of prob- lem conditions" a mong the adult refugees, officials say they , , SIGNS FOR THE TIMES Wordtrnith Hano t'nnyonRoad Hazards Eyed ByLagunan By SfEVE MITCHELL Of ti. o.alty """' StMi Lagunan Arnold Hano thinks he has a solution of sorts to the hazardous conditions on Laguna Canyon Road. And he's con- vtnced city councilmen to Corm a cqmmitlee to look into his prop- osition. Th e civic activist and freelance writer wants the city to initiate a sign-posting pro- gram for the scenic roadway to get motorists to slow down on the winding highway. It's all done with words, in llano's plan -and the first tbi.ng he'd do is change the canyon road designation from "scenic highway" to "scenic road." ''Highway means speed," Hano told council members. His Plan calls for a sign at the San ~~o Freeway exit that reads: "Welcome. You are now enter· 1~ a scenic road. Slow down aA<l enjoy it." .Bow do you get all those words oo one liWe sign? . '\'-0u don't. Hano suuests the oJd:fasbioned Burma-Shave etgn concept -a series or signs along tbe road to get the message aeross. flano says the stag,ered sign eotacept forces motorists to slow dj>~n In order to read the aasage. t1Sta other preliminary posting p aa.s include: -Deer crossing signs that (See CANYON, Pace Ai> will ask the federal government for funding to hire alx additional billn,uaJ mental health workers. It 11 estimated ln a report to the county BQard of Supervisors tha l 20,000 to 27 ,000 refugees from the Indochina wars now hve in Orange County. They began arriving here in 1975 in the wake of the Vietnam War. And the mental health prob- LB Cops Seeking Attacker Laguna Beach police are sedc- ing a man they believe jammed a hunting knife into the stomach of a transie.pt following an argument at a party early to- day. Friends rushed Gerald A. McNutt, 25, to South Coast Community Hospital in a van following th e 1 :20 a .m . altercation in an apartment at 455 Bent St. He was reported In stable con· ditlon following surgery for knife wounds to the stomach, hospital officials confirmed. Police Sgt. A.J. DeLuca said be and Officer Linda Phllllps pulled up in front of tbe Beat Street address Just as a private van roared away from tho curb and clown the street. ••we radioed for a patrol an1t to follow the van to the hospital," DeLuca said today. Police officers found a bun~ knife Oil' th~ ground outside the apartment and arrested one sus- pect whom they later released. Detectives are seeking another man who was pres~ at the Bent Street party but said they did not want to identify the suspect. The knife-wielding suspect faces charges of aaault with in· tent to commit murder, Del.uc• said. Police believe the Incident was sparked by an argument over a woman. Barbecue Flash Burm SC Camper A 23-year-old man, camping at the San Clemente State Part, was badly burned Sunday, when a fu e l be ·waa using ln a barbecue flashed and burned bis upper body, rangers said. Henry. Martines of El Monte suffered first and second degree burns over his ri&bt arm, chest and back, said ranger Jerry Stans ail Martinez was taken to San Clemente General Hoapltal, where he was· treated for the burns. Assad in Mosoow DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) - Syrian President Hates Assad fie.w to Moscow today apparent- ly to seek more Soviet arms. lem a cited in the Human Services Agency report to coun- ty supervisors aren't the only problems facing th& rerueees. They also have a housing prob- leD'I. "In the main, the refugees have found jobs paying below average s alaries and have slipped between the cracks in Orange Count1's housing market," according to the re- port. "Many Southeast Asian families living ln the county ex- ceed federal standards for over- c r owding (2.S persons per room)," the report aaid. It noted that many refucee families are larce, running as high JS from elpt to 10 persons per family. t-nd in Orange County's boua- tng market the bOuslni needs f~ Mrs. Carmel Romano de Lopez Portillo, left, chats briefly· with hostess at Laguna Beach Art Museum during whirlwind tour of Mexican art exhibit Sunday. Baja California Gov. and Mrs. Roberto de la M~drid, center, accompanied the Mex. ican first lady on tour. The Mexican vis- itors also toured Newport ff.arbor Art Museum Sunday. LB Wimer 'F eativa/,' To COnti:nue Artists and craftsmen con· tinue to diaplay their works on tbe Festival of Arts grounds this weet durtni the 15th annual Winter Festival in Laguna Beach, The Chamber or Commerce sponsored festival Includes works of more Uran 125 artisans. includln& an exhibit by four con- temporary artists of Mexico. A pbotograpbac snow sponsored by the Laeuna Greenbelt will be on display con· UnuoUJty througbout the 11-d.ay nan ol1~ testlv~ The winter festival ls open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. dally throucb March 5. Admission is $1 for adults. Children under 12 admitted free. LB Woman Dies I Of Cy~le' lnjllries A yount Laguna Beach woman whose unborn baby was llsted as a traffic fatality las~ week became the second victim of the same accident when she died Sunday in Mission Community Hospital. Veda Fresq'uet, 18, of 220 Pacmc Coast Highway, Laguna Beach, died from Injuries suffered Tuesday night lh •· motorcycle accident, accord.ln8' to a coroner's report. The womatt was a passenger on a westbound motorcycle that reportedly went out of contrOl and cnabed, as lt ·rounded a curve on Otteta Highwa)' 1bout JA. miles eut of the San Diqo Freeway. After she~ taten to Mlsslon Community Hos{rital in critical condition/docto~ at the hospital attempted to save the woman's unborn baby's nre through caesarian surgery. The 8'h-month-old fetus did not. survive the s~ry. William Parrish. 21, of 394 3rd St., La1una Beach, was the driver ot ,the motorcy~le that crashed as it rvunded the Ortega 'Hl11bway curve. Parrish was also taken to the hospital in Mission Viejet. · ~ . Fi.re Alarm Really Bogged . A spider alarmed a San Clemente ~dent today, City firemen were dispatched to a home at 117 Ave. Lucia before dawn, when an anxious resident called to 11y her smoke alattn bad awakened her. No fire was found at the home, so flremen dismantled tbe alarm. Inside they found a large Q>lder, w,hich appauntly bacl ambled across a sensor~ setting off the alarm. r-.. Afternoon N.Y:. Stoeks Among4 Ki~ed i In Iowa DES MOINES, Iowa CAP> -Three teen-age boys who were doing remodeUni clean-up work were fatally wounded by shots in tbe back of the bead and left side-by-side in a downtown building that bad housed an adult bookstore. Three blocka away. a elerk In an adult bookstore was later found shot to deatb. But authorities said they bad no rea- son to believe the shootings of the boya were related to the death o' the clerk, who they said I was killed during an apparent ' robbery. I Two of the boys were dead at } the scene Sunday, the tbird died lat.er ln a bospltal. They were found lyinf face down in the former bookstore wblcb bad. closed a few OJODths ago •. AH~ POI.tee Chief Billle Wall..,.,• lf·r•ar v•teran •. described the acene as fo'tlJe most 1ruesome I have ever seen." Wallace speculated that whoever shot the boys may have been looking for something in the vacated bookstore building. The young shooting victims were Jeff Beavers, 14, and Jeff Holtman, 14, and his brother, Gerald. a, all of Des Moines. Jefl Beavers and Jeff Hoffman , were dead at the scene, Gerald HoCfman died after surgery Sun- day night. Polle County Medical Ex· <See KILLINGS. Page A2) . lll.egal Alien Crossings Up U.S. Botder Patrol a1ents at the San Clemente checkpoint re- ported apprehending 287 aliens Sunday, up from an avera1e ot 170 -arrests logged on recent Sundays. "We tldnk th.ls is the beainn· ing ol the anticipated seasonal increase." said John Wesson. • agent-ln-charee. ..With crops nearing harvest time. tbo. number ol Ulegal aliens jWDps in tho spring. We expect the number wtll just keep climb-ing." Mexican nationals ap• prehendecl alter they enter the United States Illegal~ are l'e'! turned to the border, where they' are released, Wesson said. Coast Pair with warm sunny days througb Tuesday. Patchy fot along coast late tollliht and Tuesday morning. Lows tonight 43' to 48. W&bs Tuesday 68 lo .,~. INSIDE TOD& Y ' Five Makes Eight Snow-covered figure-8 tells the story for the Kienast quintuplets of Liberty Comer. N.J. who cele brate their eighth birthday Feb. 24. The quints, children of Mr. and Mrs. William Kienast, aTe, from left, Amy, Gordon, Ted, Abigail and Sara. OC Finn Coal Miners Reach Sends Team OK oii One Pact To Arabia Teams of engi ne e rs. architecl5 and planners from an Irvine firm are en route lo Saudi Arabia under provisions of a new $7 million contract to gather preliminary information for the design of 25 vocational training centers. VTN Corporation's affiliate, VTN International, and the San Diego architectural firm of Frank L. Hope and Associates recently were awarded the con- tract by the Saudi go'(ernment. · The contract covers the first phase, including cost analysis, of a project that could run from $.500 million to St billion. Nearly 100 U.S. firms bid on it. A spokesman for VTN In Irvine said the current project includes gathering information and preparing some preliminary designs for the proJect, which will include planning new dormitories, schools, roads, utilities and mosques and up- grading existing racllilies for the educational centers in 18 cities. The spokesman said teams will take at least a year to com· plete their work, includin1 tak- ing aerial photographs and in· fr a red photos or the terrain. The San Diego firm will do the architectural design, he said, and VTN will h&Qdle englneer-ing work. Police Chase Leaves I Dead LOS ANGELES (AP) -A high-speed 1>0lice chase ended with one person dead and three others injured, one critically. Police officials said a police car was chasing a car driven by Horace Hays. 28, of Los Angeles, in the south-central section of the city Sunday, when a third car reportedly ran a red light and bit the police car head-on. The car then hit another vehicle which in turn hlt a pedestrian. The passenger lo the third car was pronounced dead on arrival at Mornln1stde Hospital and the driver waa list· ed in extremely crtucal con· dltton. Victims were UD· identified. DAILY PILOT WASHINGTON (AP) -The striking United Mine Workers union today reached a tentative contract agreement with a ma· jor independent coal producer as Labor Secretary RJ.y Marshall began consulUn1 with con· gressional leaders about "'de- fmitive" action to end the 11· Short Thief Bags Beer Irvine police say they'd like to collar the burilar who's been dartina in and out of Myra Socber's Doggy Door. Mrs. Socher, 3Z, has beetl victimized a half. do1en times by a burglar who each time scoots through the swingin1 door, steals a liWe liquor, and scoot.a back out. The late9t bur1lary at the Sod).er resldence. 29 Ash Tree Lane, was Fri· day, when several bottles of German beer were stolen, police said. F ..... PageAI BUBBLES ••• seven-fellow bippos.....-wblle IOID• way is found to ftx the creek fence. Lock-up last night was 10 p,m. Unlerbalter sa1d a hiJ: count. showed everJbocb tu 11) fOI'. the nigbL But a determined Bubbles, who apparenily hasn't ldcted her' urge to travel. leaped, or more likely, drau~. herself over •. four-foot gatet made her way down the creek and got out the samewayabedldlastweek. "When we cat.ch her we're IO- lng to lock her up good thb time," Unterbalter said, .. and get her accustomed to staying bome." Why is Bubbles affllctecl with this uncontrollable desire to Yislt Leilure World? Said Unterhalter, •'The erass is greener on the other si~ J. guess." Search Halted BOSTON (AP) -Tbe Coat \ Guard bu auapende4 a aeardl ror tbe Provincetown trawler Capt. Bill, declared ml11ha1 with a crew ol four when it failed to make port ah days aao. No alp of the SS.foot scalloper turned up In the aureb ol a 13,000.equar.-.mile area off tbe soaithem &bone ot Cape Cod. da7-oldaoftcoalstrike. · Administration officials and u.nlon leaden said they were hopln& the tentative agreement with the Pittsburgh and Midway Coar Co. would break the stalemate in the national strike. P&M, which is owned by Gulf on Corp, is not a member of the Bituminous Coal Operators As· aociation, which represents the Jarce coal companies. BCOA mem ben mine about bait the nation's coal. P&M bas 800 to 1,000 mine employees and six mines in · Kentucky. Miaaouri and Kamas. The tentative P&M<pact must be approved by the union's bar1alnlng council and the un- ion 'a membership. U the contract ls appC'OYed by the mi.Den, P&M could begin prodacloe coal, helping to ease abortaaes in some areas. But more lmportanUy, the tentative agreement la expected to in· temlfy pressure OQ the BCOA and tbe t1llW to come to terms. It wu not Immediately dear bow Jong It wtU take for the tentative P&M contract to be voted ao by the mlnen. p,....P.ageAJ CANYON ••• read r .. Deer and humans share thl• space. Let's respect them • both." -No Passini Zone signs would be replaced with "No Passing Zone ... Please.'' Hano eoes further with a followup ai&n past the IOne which would read : •'Thank you for not passing," adding that be prefers "the sugar rather than the fly-swatter technique.·· -At the entrance to the city, Hano would bang a slan that read.I, perhaps: .. This is an art colony, whole createst art is the art ofllvtna." -Other 1igna alonS the city's portion or lbe seven-mile roadwQ would include poiDUng out features of the canyqn, sQCh a.a the ~year-old cottonwood.I. or the Indian caves. All thla for the purpose of aiowiDI down the motorists. Hano admits his signs would not conform with those of "th& great si1nmaker in Sacramento,'' but be beUevea a local •len committee mlabt be able to convince CalTrans Director Adriana Gianturco that the plan ls feasible. Councilmen agreed to the formaUoo or an innovative dgn committee comprised of members ot the city's board of design review and parking, tranaportaUoo and clrculaUon committee as well aa the chamber's beauUficatlon com· miUee, Vlllap Lacona and tbo Festival of Ana. bee sus~t~ of minor of· ~Mab'u 1hopllrt1n1. Police Obterved that In con- froD'tatloe wtlb other groups the refugees "can take care of themselves" due, in larae part, "to their prior existence in a war.torn country." The report indicated there Is only one law enforcement otricer in the county who can meet Southeast Asian "language needs." . "However, he cannot meet the language need of the entire Orange County law enforcement community," the report said. It foresees an Increase ln the number of refugees llvlna in the county, ao incrbse likely to OC· cur over the next three years. Cited as reasona for anticipat- ing added refugee miaration to Orange County are: -Exl1tln1 concentration or Southeast ~ians who tend to at- tract others lo their com- munities. -Oran1e Couaty's low un· employment rate, 5.7 percent in January. -Orange County's usually mild climate. -Coatbudnc ml1ratloa to the U.S. by refugees from Thailand, a wave ot migration that ls ex· peeled to deposit about 20 percent of the newly arrived ref· ugees in Orange County. From Page Al KIUJNGS. • amlner R.C. Wooters aald the boys were all abot In the bud, probably wlth"a Jarce-eallber re- Yolver. No weapon wu found at. tbe aeeoe. The youths wen taken to the downtown bulldlnc Sunday mominc by the Hoffman bo711' father, Gerald, a contraetor whose firm ls remodeJ.inl the buildtn1 into a restaurant. Police said they knew ol no motive in the abootiDI of the boys. . ••we know robbery wasn•t the motive," said Wallace. Police were 1earcbln1 for three 11um ~ tbe sl.Qin1s. One waa seen in a nearby drugstore Sunday and the third was seen in an alley. About five hours after the boys' bodies were found, police were called to the Adult Center bookstore, where a clerk. William Baldwin. 30, WU bill& dead behind a counter with a guasbot wound la the bead. Police said robb~y wa1 a possible motive In the aboo«ini. 'nle eomimtmenta of an oPen cash drawer were empt.)', but there was still some mooey at the back of the drawer. Police said an estimated iHo was taken. Ollfeer •-•re• San Clemente police officer Rick Downing was honored Thursday by the city's Ex· change Club as Officer of the Year. Downing was chosen by Police Chief Gary Brown for overall outstand· ing performance. Mission Viejo ManNamsdto Water Board A Mission Viejo resident bas been appointed to the seven· member Moulton Niguel Waler District board of directors to replace Forest Dickason. Gerald Buck , a Ron Development Co. administrator, is scheduled to be seated Man:h 16. Dickason quit the board .to accept a new job in San Diego, a district spokesman said. Buck is to ~rve as an appoint· ed director until November of 1979 when Dickason would have been scheduled to run for ~ dection. • He was among tour candidates screened by the board's qualify- ing committee and was appoint,. edTbunday. The district provides water to most of Mission Viejo, Laguna Hills and Laguna Niguel. Directors are elected to the board in a voting system based on one vote for each dollar of as- sessed property value owned rather than by district population. Resignation Filed Mickie Burton, a member of the Laguna Beach Parks and Recreation Committee, bas re· signed from that panel citing time confilcls between meetings and her activities on her Northern California farm. Flag.waving Example Won't Be Thwarted Huntington Beach resident Richard Schleicher thinks there is nothlne so beautiful as the sight of .. Old Glory•• flattering in the breeze. SCHLEICHER, A relired aerospace engineer, bas been fiying the U.S. Flag Z4 hours a day in order to do hls bit "to wake up America." But thieves scaled the concrete wall aµrroondlng his home at 9601 Cutlne Drive Sunday night and made off with the three by five-foot Flag that new proudly from a 12-foot pole. "Thi.9 really burns me up," be said this mornlng. "You try to set a good example and do aome good and this is what happens." SCllLEICllEll SAID BE is willing to forgive and foraet as Iona aa the culprits brine back bis Flaa. He said that today betni a national holiday is especial· Jy meaningful to him. He bas a backup Fla.& he la display. ing fo_r the occulon. NICOSIA, Cypl"UI (AP) -The government said today it ls re- leaslnl the au1'Vlvln1 Egyptian commandol whose assault on a f JeWner beld by auasalns or an lnOuentlaJ El)'pt.lan editor wu foiled by Cyprlot troops. But of. riclals reJeeted E1ypt•a "9Quest that the ca\>lured terrorists be sent to C&lro. A spokesman allo aald the \ Cyprus aovernment, anaend by I, the roreian mWtary operaUoa on its aoll, demanded that ECYPt re- call tts military attacbe from Nicosia. ' Cypriot forces stopped the Egyptians' attempt to storm the \ 1 plane at Lamaca Airport ln a bloody batUe Sunday ni&hl that left a reported 1S Egyptian com. 1 mandos dead. i Interior Minister • Chriatodoulos Bel\iamln told a f, news conference that Cypriot , and not E&YPtian courts would try the two Arab t.errorisll, wbo be1an the two days of bloodlbed Saturday in a Nicosia hotel by killing Cairo newspaper editor Youssef el-Sebaei, a confidant or Egyptian President. Anwar Sadat. . The pair, who seized hosia.,ea and took over the Cypriot jetliner after the killing, were form ally charged with murder today. Benjamin said tbe four dolen E1ypUan 10ldlers captund lil the baWe at the airport. JO iq11ea 10utheut ol. here, would be al- lowed to return home with their arms. An Eeyptlao C-180 mllltarJ transport arrived In Cyprus~ day to pick them up, alcla.g with the bod.lea of their comrades. It wu not known when they would leave. Tbe C-130 that new them to Cyprua Saturday was hadlT damaged In the be.We. . Besides tbe 1S dead, tbe IOV• ernment aald, 11 l!Qptiam were wounded, two were mlMtq and 41 others bad been held as .. mllltary prllaaen." It said six Cypriot soldiers and a West German televbion cameraman al.lo were wounded in the battle. A Cypriot 1overnment spokesman said today President Spyroa Kyprianou has de- manded the recall of Col. Suleiman Hadad, military at· tache at the Egyptian Embassy here. The reasan was net officially • announced, but a CJprus Airways pilot told a reporter that an Egyptian ,mllltary at·· tache ordered the uaault iD de- fiance of the Cypriot IOY· ernment. The source of the pilot's information was not known. Short Circuit Closes Eatery A aborted eleetrical dreuit was blamed Sunday for a it.ooo fire at 1 p.m., wblcb closed Denny•a restaurant in San Clemente for the rest of the day • Coffee and doughnut.I only . were available for breutast customers today, as eledridaas worked to make repairs necessary to run tbe restaurant's coold.ni appliances. said operator Mark Bea:nett. Be aaid be expected to be able to serve dinDers today. The ftre was out when Sm Clemente firemen arrhed, Bennett said. No one was in· jured. The· American Gem Society of the United States and Canada takes pleasure in announcing the appointment of J. C. Hu~'f?e~rc,t~!v{ewelers COSTA MESA as REGISTERED JEWELER AMERICAN OEM SOCIETY @ The RBOISTEREO J~E.LER Ml )'Dct tho ethical :Uid gemologi· cal standards cstablishe41)y bis fellow jewelers in the American Gem Society. An AOS title is by annual app:>intment and must be rcwon by yearly cxaminotion. . " vt)L 71, NO. 51, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES . _:1~ounty Refugees Suffer . ' B1 GARY GliNVIU.E Ol dll _., .... S&Mf Mental health officials MtimAte that IO percent of the IMIUJt lodoc:blnese refugees liv- ing in Orange County suffer from either· depression, anxiety reactions, psychosomatic lll-nenes or alcohol abuse. "Given the mapltude of prob- lem conditions" amon1 tbe adult refugees, officials say they will ask the federal government° for funding to b1tt alx addiUonal bilinaual mental health worken. It is estimated in a report to the county Boa.rd of Supervisors ·that 20,000 to 27 ,000 refugees from the Indochina wars now live ln Orange County. They began arriving here in 1975 ln the wake of the Vietnam War. ,· And the mental health prob- . nt Lad11 ~ts lems cited In the Numan Services Acency report to coun· ty supervisors aren't the only problemJ tacing the refug~. They also have a bousinl prob- lem. "lo the matn, the refugees have found jobs paying below average 1alaries and have slipped between the cracks in Orance County's housing market/' accordlnJC to the re- . , :} rs. Carmel Romano de I.opez POrtillo, t, chats briefly with .hosteu at Laguna each Art Museum during whirlwind tour f Mexican art exhibit Sunday. Baja lifomia Gov. and Mrs. Roberto de la Madrid. center, accompanied the Mex· ican first lady on tour. 1be Mexican vis- itors also toured Newport Ha(bor Art Museum Sunday. .. .·~ F ··t or11m ,•• : (:andidates from districts ... i 'ftit!te and six in the Newport • • btch City Council race will i~k Tuesday morning at a · 1 ~ um sponsored by the. . Atnen's Clvlc League .of· , Beach. 1 .•: be meeting, open to .'.f r • • ·public, will lM!lin with coffee' .•. .;,tjt:30 a.m. and the forum at 10 ~1 in the multipurpoSe room :?fl!~rs IJbr~; 2005 Dover ·: .. Otlndidates must live in the -dlsttlct they hope to represent, . ~ Jlre elected In citywide vol· ·bS•= ··· · .. Running in diltrict three are P'aul Calchvell, Evelyn Hart, Mlcbael Geridg and Frank ~ h~· Candidates ln district six · k'.ttWllllam Dobr, Paul Hummel :~Lucille Kuehn. · :~.Jecause of U,e large number · nndidates, those running in ~ · eta one and r• will speak a second Women's Ctvtc (Ue tonun March 21 at the time and place. Coast Services Scheduled FoF Ex-Mesa· Mayor Funeral services will be held Wedne$day for former Costa Mesa Mayor Arthur H. Meyers, who died Feb. 18 in Carson Citv. Nev .• of an apparent heart at- tack. He wu 84. · Former Costa Mesa mayors John Smith, Alvin Pinkley, Willard Jordan and Claire Nelson will be among the pallbearers at the 1 p .m. services at St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church in Newport Beach. Before m-oving to Carson City eight years ago, Mr. Meyers lived for Z7 years in Costa Mesa. He served on the city Planning Com mlsiion and the City Council, becoming the city's fourth a mayor from 1960-62. In private life, Mr. Meyers was employed at a local lamination firm. He was an avid trapabooter and a long·time member of the Costa Mesa IJons Club. Mr. Meyers is survived by bis widow, Helen Meyers and daughter, Betty J . Jenks, both or Carson City; brother, Robert Meyen of San Fernando and sis- ter, Gertrude L . Knott of • Rockford, Ill. Mr, Meyers also leaves four grandchildren and Corpse Found T~.BeMummy Deity .............. SUCCUMBS AT 14 Fonner Meyor Meyer• three great-grandcbildren. The family has sugaested memorial contributions to St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church. TaxRelwf · P088ible . Oran.re Coast property owners who experienced 1erious dama,e durin1 the recent rains may apply for property tax relief tbrou1b a calamity re- a11ea1ment. According to Oran1e County AsaeuoT Bradley L. J acobl, , ~ppllcatlotta nautt be filed within 60 days of "the Jou and damace must amount to at least $5,000. lnfonnat!Oft 11 available by calllna IM-M22 or writ· 1n1 blm at P.O. Box 1'9, Sota Ana, callf. ..,._ port. ••Many Soutbeaat A el an families living in the county ex- ceed federal atandarda for over- c row ding (2.5 per1001 per room)," the report said. It noted that many retuaee families are Jar1e. running as bigb as from eigl\t to 10 penons per family. . And In Ora.nae ~tJ·• hous-ing market the hoUsiDg needs for families Qf such slze 1J apparent· ly exceeding the retueeea' abili· try to pay. .The report 1>0inted oµt also that many refugees are bavh\c difficulty moviDI about the county due to Janguaee and reading barriers. A "sheriff'• report, for ex- ample.. 8*1d aome retueeea tend to wander about ln tr&lftc ldthout Jmowinl the rules of the t Shot in Head ·- l'Oad. As a l'elUlt. a high number ot .!Mm have been involved in auto versus Pedeltrian accidents. A Po11 · of law enforcement aeenclea ~ the county showed that mo.t neweomen from Indocbtna "'are lawa· blcllq eitllllDI." Tbole involftd tn stlrmlabes with tM law have. in the inain. <See aEftJGB.18, P.ae Az) 1bree TeeD. Boys Aniong 4 Ued DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) - Three teen-age boys who were doing remodeling el9'Jl·UP work were fatally wounded by sbota in .the back or the bead and left slcfe. by-aide lo a downtown bulldiAI that bad houaed an adult~ an alley. , About five hours after the boys' bodies were found, police were called to the Adult Cent~ bookatorei where a cleri:, William Ba dwio, 30, was lying dead beb1Dd a counter with a gunshot wou.dd ln the bead. Police said robbery was a ·possible motive in the shooting. The compartments of an open cash drawer •ere empty, but there was still some money at the back of the drawer. Police said an estimated $180 was taken. Three blocica away, a clerk In· ------------------------an adult bookstore waa Jater1 found shot to death. But autboritit!;J said they bad no rea- son to believe the shootincs of the · boys were related to tile· death of the clerk, who lhey said was killed durinl an apparent robbery. Two of the boy1 were dead at the scene SUnday, lhe third died. lat.er ln a hospital. They were found lying face down in t.be former bookatore wblctl bacl closed. a few ajOOtbs a.co. AMWW ..._. Cllllf BUUe Wallace. a J'J•year vetvaa, de1crSbl4 tb• scene a• •-u.. moat ~m• I UY9 evw Jee9l'• Wallace speculated J.ba& whoever abat the boJt m~ hne j)een loc*iag tor aomethlnt 1n lhe vacated booUtore buUdJnc. HIPPO AT LAllGE AGAJN TODAY IN LAGUNA HILLS Bllbble• H•• BIOwn Out of Lion Counby CeptMty The young sbootinC victims were Jeff Beaven, 14, and .Jeff Hoffman. l4, and bis brother, Gerald, 15, all of Del Kolnes. Jeff Beavers and Jeff Hoffman were dead at the scene. Gerald Hoffman died after surcetJ Sun· ffippo Roalns Again Over Coast Terrain day night. Polk County Medical Ex· amtner R.C. Wooters Hid the bo1'1 were all. shot ln the bead, probably w\tb a lar&e·caliber nt- volver. No weapon was found at the IC!eDe. Tbe 1~ were taken to the downtown bulldina Sunday morning by the Holfmp boys' f atber, Gerald, a contractor whoee firm is remodeling the buildiol into a restaurant. Police said they knew of no motive in the shooting of the boys. · "We know robbery wasn't the moUve," said Wallace. Police were searchlnt for three men in the slayinp. One wu seen in a nearby dnlptore Sunday and the third was seen in ~rporation · Proposal Eyed By Trustees . Newport.Mesa school trustees will meet in special session Tuesday night. to review a pro- posal to form a non·profit cor- poration for the sale of distrlct• developed educational · materials. District officials HY a DOil• profit cori>oratlon must be formed in order to eliminate possible lawsuits trom private businesses because of district competition in the marketlnl of educational material. The plan to be outlined itt '7:80 p.m . Tuesday at Andersen School In Newp0rt Beach ca11.a for tranafonntnt ~ current dla· trict tnformallon and Computer ServAces DJvl1lon lnto tbe Newport·Meaa Educational Re1eateh Oor~ration (NM Eltm In eddlt , U.. dll- trlct ·~ reclhe a addluonat computil' ftom a iitlDuf.ctiirer &I partial a=' ,.. tbe Jttbt. tomaftiit ,...... DlltiMEi ..... tM 411t.r1et ~~,... weaw benefit..,-. ---....,. ........ )fUchrtbiMW ... By PIDUP ROSMARIN Oldlt!Wfy ........... How you gonna keep 'em down on the farm, after they've seen LagunaHllls? That'• tbe question that's gnawing today at offi~ials of Llon Country ..Safari, where Bubbles, a wanderlust-struck three·ton hippopotamus, today aealn aneaked under an animal eompound 1ate and went for a a troll. Leon Unterhalter;-manacer of th., park, said Bub~Jes bad been spotted at mldmoming, after a three-hour search, ambling across an open field toward Leisure World, • , : Part ran(en, armed with a tradquillzer gun, crossed the field ln jeeps and planned to berd Bubbles back to the park. Failing that, rangers were prepared to fire a dart. into tbe wanderin( hippo to put her to sleep. then scoop her up in a front-loadin& e&rth·mover lor. the ride back 'home. Bubbles escaped from the _park last Tuesday, 'squeesinc un- der a fence acrou the San Diego ~reek channel, \.tsed as a uon· * * * Country river area. That time she took berdaugbt.er with ber. Irvine pOlice, park rangers and county sheriff's ·deputies · scoured the bills and nearby res- idential neighborhoods in search of the African duo, but saw nary a wiggling ear of either mother or child, whowanderedbackoctbeir- own. . U nterhalter said that after that incident, an overnight bold· ing area was used, wilh a locked gate, to pen the animals-plus seven-fellow hippos-while some way is found to fix the creek fence. Lock-up last night was 10 p.m. Unterbalter said a hippo count• showed everybodJ tucked in fOC' the night. But a determined Bubbles, who apparently hasn't kicked her• urge to travel, leaped, or more llkelr, dragged, herself over a four-foot sate, made her way· down the creek and got out the same wanhedid last week. "Wbeb we catdl ber we're go- , lng to lock her up good tbls Ume," Unterhalter said, "and 1et ber accustomed to staying <See BUBBLES, Page A%) * * * Gator Found ) ~ j ·1 ~ I I t • I Five Make Eight • The report indicated there la only one law enforcement officer in the county who can meet Southeast Aalan .. laoaua1e needs." "However, he cannot meet the language need of the entlr~ Orap1e County Jaw enforcement community," the report said. It toresees an increase in the number of retuiees llv1n1 in the ·county, an increue likely to OC· cur over-the next tlµ'ee years. Cited u reasons for anticipat-. ing added retuiee ml,ration to Oranee Countf are: -Ed.IUD.& concentration ot Southeast Aliana wbo tend to at- tr a ct others to their com- . munlties. -Oraage Couty'• low un- employment rate, S.7percent1n January .. -Ora••• Cou&1'1 u suall1" mild climate. • ~ mllratioa to the U .S. by refuiees from Thailand. a wave of mlaratlon that is ex· pected to deposit about 20 percent ()f the newly arrived ref- ugees in OranceCounty. • Snow-covered Jigure-8 teUs the story for the Kienast quintuplets of Liberty Comet.· N .J. who celebrate their eighth birthday Feb. 24. The quints, children of Mr. and Mrs. William Kienast, are, from left, Amy, Gordon, Ted, Abigail and Sara. -P-wknt Crime Rate St,eatJies Wasldagton'• Beaell Dag • OC Firm Media Philosopher WASIDNGTON (AP) -A federal survey abowl that the rate of violent crime dlcl not 1n· ·crease IUbltattaU, IA 1'71 over Beacbgoers soak up sun in Newport Beach, where • springlike weather during holiday weekend made ~ seem remote. l.Jfe~ards estimated there wer" 20,000 people on the city's beach's Saturday and 85,000 Sunday. There were more today. Air temperaturee at the beach hit 64 degrees. with the· water temperature at about 60 SeJuls Team Vacations in NB , the prevloul year. ( T6e JUltlce Deputmmt•a law enforcement a11htance adminll:tntion NpOl1ed on SUD- day u..t ms ratea for rape. robbery, a11ault, theft and bur1l&r'J' were virtually un- cbaqed from ~. ~ report said the only m.iot ehan1e was a sharp decftne ol U.S percent in automobile tbett.s. degrees. Surf was small. · To Arabia An Irvine woman who manages Orange County's multi.modal tramportaUon study has been named to the new at.ate Transportation Coaamlaalon,' Gov. Edmund G. Browa Jr. hu announced. Francea Iwalanl Mossman, 46,: joins lndustrlallat Norton Simon and seven other votlnc snembera on the commission, which r e places f9ur speclaliied agencies, ''This commission wUl de- termine to a ~eat extent the quality of life In Callfornla ln the next decade,•• Brown said. He said among the cbanps be hopes to see are an adjustment pf work hours in private in .. dustry to cut rush-hour trt.fftc. Abolished are the old Highway Com mission. the state Toll Bridge Authority, the Aetonautics Board and the Transportation Board. Other voting members of the new board include Ivan Hinderaker, 61 chancellor of UC Riverside; Carole Onorato, 46, director of the League to Save Lake Tahoe; Dean Meyer, ~1. former director of the Golden Gate Bridge, Highway and Transportation District; Claude Fernandez, 58, secretary· treasurer of Local 428 of the Retail Store Employees Unioa ln San Jose, and attorney Judith Soley, 32, of Fresno. • Also named were Charles 'Reid. 46, deputy admlnlat:rator of the Human Resourc~ Agency of s,n Diego County. and state ·Public Utilities Commission. Chairman Robert Batinovlch, 41,ofHillaborougb. · Already appointed were state Sen. James Milla, D.San Dleeo, and Assemblyman Walter Ingalls, D-Riverside. UAW Aids Miners DETROIT (AP) -Local 22 ol the United Auto Worken la col· lecting food and dothiD.g to HDd to strikina West VirlJ,nla eoa1 miners. UAW Local 22 Presideat Frank Runnels said the loul'a 10,000 members will caravan the gqgda to the coalfields and join .IJl!jier picket lines. 87 ¥ACKIZ BYMAN OI fte Dl9f Nil..., Relaxing in the sunshine Friday at bis daqbter Mary's Ne•port Beach home, a con- siderable change from the sub- zero temperatures in Toronto M.anball MclA•han looked men like a diatingullhed older fthn star than the lnternational.ly-known~phlloeopherbeta. In a way, be ta a ftlJD star. McLuh~ played himself tn WoodJ Allen's film .. Annie Hall." .McLahan. ·1n town to speak· over tbe weekend at a con- ference on a satellite linkup between an Irvine school and two schools in the East, said be dido 't know Woody Allen but was intrigued when the com· edian called and asked him to appear as bimsell. In the scene. Allen 1ets Into an argument with a pompous mur while 'f8ltin& in a line for a movie. "The man attempts to back up his pseudo-intellectual opinions by proclaiming that be teacbea a class on Marshall McLuhan. At that point McLuhan steps forward, identifies himself and tells the man be doesn't know what he's talking about. ••we didn't know an1thlng about the picture other than that scene:• McLuhan said ... We bad no idea '1 the title or the nature of the picture." · He said Allen did not consult him about the script but that the tilminl was an enjoyable ex- perience. "l'•e been yery sur- prised at how favorably the whole thing has been received.'' be salcl. It ma,; have been hta fjrat act- ing job, but it wasn't bis luL McLuhan said be also played a small part aa a jud,-e recently in. his daughter Teri's film ''The Third Walker." The film ts about twins <Teri and Mary are ,twins). Being in Newport Beach ii a kind of vacatioo for him and his wife, McLuhan aaid -"We always estjoy the restaurants out here .. -but be broucht bis work withbim. His latest project ta a boot called .. Lawa of the Media," followln1 eloae upob the pu blicatlon of 61 Cltf as Classroom.•• 'the la~1 already 1n print 1n Canada ww soon be publlsbect In the united States ~----------• with the addition of many pictures and visual puns. H DAILY PILOT "Thinp like that were all left out because of the Canadian belief in sobriety,•• McLuhan said. ''The Canadian publlabers consider it • junk book if it bas any pictures.' "City as Clusroom" is a aeries ol exercises to encourace students to 1nveat11at. tbe real world and \JDderstand how lt af. fedathem. In .. L... of the Kedia " McLaban 1Gd, be la explonq' a neweoaeept; TIM idu II tb.at "flrl human arW• M It a ~. a htP· ti.Se btalldlD.1 or 1outp, has fflUID ~ualltlel. . . McLiUn tbe example cit moae1 to Wuatrate Uda ldea. Pint eaell aitUaet eohancea 1ometblai1 ... Moa•y en.banct1 ·~ ol t,ruAetMli, .. be I.set Se~ lt m.U. IOIDeddnc ·el•• ob1o1ete. "J10-.e1 ob· 10loc• 1Mt.Nr• Wllileb ta slow." Thlr4. lt brla1• back somelbln1-1tbat oaee waa ob- aolet•. ''lloa., btl••• badt 1"hat the anthr:opolostftl call ~ potlatch -it'I a Utlft WQ of • ahowtns off tllett' _..,,..ttll "' bum1llC JL •• do ii b1 CIOD- Coal Miners Reach OK on One Pact The survey ta baaed on a Poll of people U and older in a repreaeatative national sample · of 60.000 households. The study also surveyed U,000 businesaes in 1975 and G,000 in l.878. WASHINGTON (AR) -The striking United Mine Workers union today reached a tentative contract agreement with a ma- .,...., .............. DOES 'A arr OF ACTING Bit Player McLuhan spicuom consumption." Fourth, it reverses itself, yieldinl to an oPposing artifact. "Money ntps into credit ... McLuhan bas brought with · him sheets of examples. A zipper~ for instance, improves upon duping, makes buttons and ties, obsolete revives clasalcai sweepina cowns and gives way to Velcro. He calla these four qualltlea tetrads. 11 Forms happen to be- metapbors," McLuhan said. "It turns out then that all human artifact.I ar-. words. A WOl'd bu the structure of a metaphor. You might SQ that the most human· thine about usu our technology. "A metaphor is a bridge," be said. "Our technologies are at- tempts at bridging situations, and tbls is true of slang. The word slang, for example, meant flashy clothing back in 1810. So slanc was itself a slanc word and still is." Another McLuhan concept is that societies are linked to the left or riaht aec:tor of the brainl with the right being aequentlu and visual and the left being aimultaneoua and acouaUc. Such forma ol communication as the telegraph and television are lefi·bemlsphere anct ac- celerate the claab between lelt- hem isphere societies, which tend to develop and control them, and right-hem lsphere societies. "The American Civil War was a separatist war based on the telegrapb,"ldcLuhan said, The same problem emerges with the more rlebt-hemispben French Canadfana. who are seeklJJg separatism from Canada. ho uld. F._.P-AJ BUBBLES ••• . 'home ... 1 • Why ia Bubbles aftllctecl wtth' this uncontrollable desire to visit Leisure World? · Said Unterbalter, ''The grass is greener on the other side, I guess." • Short Thief ·Bags Beer . Irvine police say they'd · like to collar the burglar wbo•a been darting ln and out of Myra Socher's· Do1pDoor. Jira. Socher, 32, has been victimised a half- dosen times "by a bur1lar wbo each time acoota throuth tbe swtngtn1 door, steals a little liquor, and scoots back out. • The latest burglary at . the Socber residence, 29 Ash Tree Lane, was Fri· day, when several bottles of German beer were •to!en, police said. jor 1Ddependent coal producer as Labor Secretary Ray Marshall began consultini with con- 1resslonal leaden about "de- fmlUve.. action to end lb~ 77· day-old soft coal strike. ' Adml.n.lstratlon officials and · union leaders said they were bopin1 the tentative agreement with the Pittsburgh and Midway Coal Co. would break the stalemate in the national strike. P&M, which is owned by Gulf OU Corp. is not a member of the Bituminous Coal Operators As· sociatioo, which represents the large coal companies. BCOA mem hers mine about half the nation 'a coal. P&M bas 800 to 1,000 mine employees and six mines in Kentucky. Missouri and Kansas. The tentative P&M paet must /4,.WI ....... UNION PRESIDENT Amofd Miiter be approved by the union's D. Gaston, a frequent critic ot bargaining council and the un-UMW President Arnold Miller. ion's membership. One source said Miiier ••was not If the contract is approved by i n v o I v e d ' • i n t h e p & M the miners, P&M could begin negotiations. producing coal, helping to ease shortages in some areas. But • more importantly, the tentative agreement is expected to in· tensity pressure on the BCOA and the UMW to come to terms. 1t was not"immediately clear how Jong it will take for the tentative P&M contract to be voted on bv the minen. · The pnncipal UMW negotiator ln the P&.M talks was Thomas Merlin Breaux, Gulf Oll's vice president for industrial re· Jations, said the tentative P&M contract represented a com· promise between what the UMW. wanted and what BCOA wanted. The UMW's bargaining council previously rejected a BCOA of. fer because the union objected to clauses imposing penalties oo miners who 10 out on wildcat strikes. The· American Gem Society of the United States and Canada I takes pleasure in announcing the appointment or J. C. Humnhries Jewelers 11U~EWPORT BLVD. ' J.C. Humpbd• • COSTA MESA as REGISTERED JEWELER AMERICAN GEM SOCJETY @> The REGISTERED JEWELER. has met the ethical and gemologi· cal stnndar:ds established by his fellow jewelers in tho American Oem SOoicty. An AGS dtlo is by annual appolntmeht and must be rcwon by ~arly c~omination. j t ' I ' I VOL. 71, NO. 51, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES : . . ,., .. •.t •1( •'·· • ,•t ~ . . .. . •.I! .F ·' ... .. ,, ~ . : fc .. , . .. • H~ ca ... w, '·u . e~ ·~ bt .. 'I' t a n 01)4 sal 'l vol 1e. .•. ' .-th• .. ·1 . . . ,.. . ..: . • . By PIOUP ROSMARIN Ol tllt o.lly l'ten Melt How you eonna keep 'em down on the farm, after they've seen l..aguna Hills? That's the question that's gnawlna today at officials of Lion Country Safari, where ·Bubbles, a wanderlust·struck three-ton hippopotamus, today again sneaked under an animal -compound gate and went for a stroll. Leon Unterhalter, manager of the park, said Bubbles had been \,potted at midmommg, after a three-hour search, ambling across an open field toward Leisure World. Park rangers, 'armed with' a tranquilizer a un, crossed the field in jeeps and planned to herd Bubbles back to the park. Failin~ that, rangers were prepared to fire a dart into the wandering hippo to put her to sleep, then scoop her up in a rront·loading earth·mover for the ride back home. Bubbles escaped from the park last Tuesday, squeezlng un- der a fence across the San Diego Creek channel, used as a Lion Countty river area. That time she took her daughter with ber. Irvine police, park rangers and county sheriff's deputies scoured the hills and nearby res· ldentlal neighborhoods 1D search of the African duo, but saw nary a wleellna ear of either mother or child, wbowanderedbackontheir own. Unterhalter said that after that incident, an oveml&bt bold· ing area was used. with a locked gate, to pen tbe animals-plus seven-fellow blppos..:....Wbile some way ls found to fix the creek fence. Lock·up last night wu 10 p.m. Unterbalter said a hippo count• showed everybody tucked in for. the night. But a determined Bubbles, • Five Makes Eight Snow--covered fi gure-8 tells the story Cor Jhe Kienast quintuplets of Liberty Corner, f"l .J. who celebrate their eighth birthday Feb. 24. The quints, children of Mr. and Mrs. Willia m Kienast. are, from l~n. Amy. Gordon, Ted, Abigail and Sara. Mission Viejo Man Appointed To Water Post ·A Mission Viejo resident has been appointed to the sev-en- ·member Moultc>n Niguel Water District board of directors to replace Forest Dickason. Gerald Buck, a Hon Development Co. administrator, is scheduled to be seated March 18. Dickason quit the board to 3!FC!ept a new job in San Diego, a qtstrict spokesman said. Buck ls to serve as an appoint-ea. director witil Novepiber or 'ltl9 when Dickason would have been scheduled to run for re-~ction. ,He was among four candidates a~eened by the board's qualify. iii committee and was appoin~ 9'Thursday. -!l'be district provides water to tnost of Mission Viejo, Laguna Wlls and Laguna Niguel. 1111'ectors are elected to the • .,._rd in a voting system based •·one vote lor each dollar o! as-- ..,.sed property value owned "ther than by district population. Cyprus Will Tr.y Arab Terrorists NICOSIA, Cyprus CAP) -The government said today it ia re- leasing_ the survlvtn& Egyptian commandos whose assault oo a jetliner held by assassins of an influential ·Egyptian editor was foiled by Cypriot troops. But of- ficials rejected Egypt's request that the captured terrorists be sent to Cairo. ft spokesman also sald the Cyprus government, angered by the foreign military operation on its soil, demanded that Enpt re- call its military attache from Nicosia. Cypriot forces stopped th~ Egyptians' attempt to storm the plane at Larnaca Airport ln a bloody battle Sunday hight that left a reported 15 Egyptian com- mandos dead. Interior Minister Cbristodoulos Benjamin told a news conference that Cypriot and not Egyptian court.I would try.the twowab t.-rorist.I, wbo began the two days of bloodshed Saturday in a Nicos-ia hotel by killing Cairo newspaper editor Youssef el-Sebltei, a eoa:ftdtnt of Egyptian Preeldent Anwar Sadat. Tbe pair, who seized bostages and took over the Cypriot JeUlner after the k1lling, were formally charged with murder today. Beajamin said the four dolen . Egyptian soldiers captured in the battle at the airport, 30 miles southeast of here, would be al· lowed to return home w\th their arm a. AD Egyptian C-130 military tran1port arrived in Cyprus to- day to pick them up, along with the bodies of their comrades. It waa not known when tbey would leave. Tbe C.130 that new them to Cyprus Saturday WU bad)y damaeed in the baWe. Besides 1'ae 15 dead, tbe IOV· ernment said, lt Eg)'pliana 1'Ve wounded, two were mium, and 41 others had been held as "military priaonen." It satd six Cypriot aolcUers and a West German televfsloa cameramao (See CYPRUS. P..re Al) who apparently hasJt't kicked her · urge to lrav~l. leaped\.or ln0l'4J likely, draaed, herau over a tour·foet cate, made ber ·~ down the creek and sot out tile samewayabecUdlut week. "Wilen we cat.eh ber we'ns fO- inc to lock her up &ood ~ time. 0 Uoterbalter said, "and &et her acc~od to stayiilC home.'" Why is Bubbles afflicted with tbiJ uncontrollable desire to vi.lit Lei.lure World? • Sfid Unterbatter, •'The srau ts ereener on the other aid~ I 1ue111.0 ... Shot in lf.ead· Three Teen Boys A.mQng 4 Killed DES MOIN!Z, Iowa <AP) - Three teen-ace boya who were dotn1 remodelini clean.up work were fatally wounded by shots 1D the back ol the bead and Jell alde-by-sld~ ln a downtQJVJl building that bad housed Ill adult bookstore. Three blocks awiu-. a clerk in an adult bookstore was later found shot to death. But authorities said they had no re&· son to believe the ahootlngs of the boys were related to the death of the clerk, wbo they said was k1lled durln& an apparent robbery. Two of the boya were dead at the ae.e ......,, u. Ulird &cl later In • hoepital. They were found .,_, 1 ... .._ .. tM tor.mer Mc>lt.ltere •tel• hacl cloled a few IDCl8tbl aio. AatsUmt Pollee Chltl BUUe Wallace, a 2'7·1ear veteran •. deacrl.bed t•e acene as ·~h• moat gruesome I have ever seen.'' . Wallace apeculated that whoever &bot the boys may have been looklni for aometb1q in tbe vacated boobtore bulldlnl. The youag shooting victims wel"e Jeff Beaven, 1', and Jell Hoffman. 14. and hil brother, Gerald, 15, all of Des Moines. Jeff Beaven and Jeff Hoffman were dead at the scene, Gerald Hoffman died after 1ur1ery Sun· day ni•hl. Polit Oounty M•dical Ex- anliner R.C. Wooters said tbe boys were all shot ln the bead, pl'Obably with· a lar1e·cllllber re· Short Thief Bags Beer . Irvine police say they'd like to collar the bur1lar who's been dutin& ln and out of Myu Soeber's 0o1111>oor. Mrs. Socher, 12, bas been vicUmi.zed a half. dozen times by a burglar who each time scoots through the •willlin1 door. ateala a llWe liquor, a net SC!OOU back out. T~e latest burglary at the Socher reJldence, 29 Ash, Tree Lane, Yt'U Fri· d•Y .\..when aeveral botUe1 of uerman beor were stolen. pollc:e ..ad. volver. No weapon was found at the scene. The youths were taken to the downtown building Sunday morning by the Hoffman boys• fa ther, Gerald, a contractor whose rmn is remodeling the building into a restauranL Police said they knew of no (See KILLINGS, Page AZ> Calls Probed FCC ~ked to Check Ads WASHINGTON (AP) -Rep. Les Aspin says a .growing number of Americans are upset with un· . wanted phone calls that drag them from their dinner tables to bear about.t>rPClucts they do not want. Aspin wa$ among CJve members of Congress on Sundat asldne· the Federal Communications Commission to investigate "junk" phone calls. Other groups already asked the FCC to do somethi11g about the unsolicited recorded advertisements, usually made to telephone numbers In a computerized sequence. LB Woman Dies Of Cycle Injuries A young Laguna Beach woman whose unborn baby was listed as a traffic ratallly last week became the second victim of the nm~ aecldent wbel) she died Sunday in Mission llkgal Alien Crossings Up U.S. Border Patrol acents at the San Clemente cbeckpolnt re- POrted apprehending 287 aliens Sunday, up from an average of 170 arrests logged on recent Sundays. "We think tb1s is the beginn- ing of the anticipated seasonal increaae," said John Wesson, agent-in·charge. ..With crops nearing harvest time, tho number of illegal aliens jumps in the Jprlng. We exped the nu.m her will Just keep climb· lng.'r M e1tlcan nationals ap· prehended after they enter the Unit.eel Sta~ i1le1ally are J'e- t'1med to the borde11, where they ate released, Wt$aon said. Community Hospital. Veda Fresquei, 18, of 220 Pacific Coast Highway, Lagwia Be'-cb, died from injuries suffered T.uesday night in a· ··motorcycle accident, according to a coroner's report. The woman was a passenger on a westbound motorcycle that reportedly went out of control and crashed as it rounded a curve on Ortega Highway about 14 miles east of the San Diego Freeway. Alter she was taken to Mission Community Hospital in critical condition, doctors at the hospital attempted to save the woman's unborn baby's life through caesarian surgery . The 8'h·month-old fetus did not survive the surgery. William Parrish, 21, of 394 3rd St., Laguna Beach, was the driver of the motorcycle that crashed as It rounded the Ortega ·Highway curve. Parrish was also talcen to the hospital 1n Mission Viejo. His in- juries were described as less sertous. ' . I f • I J f l I . l • • First Ladg 1'bits Mrs. Carmel Romano de Lopez Portillo, l eft, chats briefly with hostess at Laguna Beach Art Museum during whirlwind tour of Mexican art exhibit Sunday. Baja Ca li fornia Gov. and Mrs. Roberto de Ja · Madrid, center, accompanied the"' Mex- ican first lady on tour. The Mexican vis- itors also toured Newport Harbor Art Museum Sunday. · FroaePageAJ REFUGEES -Existing· concentration or Southeast Asians who tend to at· tract others to their com· munities. -Orange County's low un· employment rate, 5.7 percent in January. -Orange County's usually mild climate. -Continuing migration to the U.S. by refugees Crom Thailand, a wave or migration that is ex· peeled to deposit about 20 percent of the newly arrived ref· ueees in Oran&eCounty. Irvine Firm Teams Visit Saudi Arabia Teams of engineers, architects and planners from an Irvine firm are en route to Saudi Arabia under provisions or a new $7 million contract to gather preliminary information for the design or 25 vocational training centers. VTN Corporation's arfili.ate, VTN International, and the San Diego architectural firm of Frank L. Hope and Associates recently were awarded the con· tract by the Saudi 2overnment. · The contract covers the first phase, including cost analysis, of a project that could run from $500 million to $1 billion. Nearly 100 U.S. firms bid on it. A spokesman for VTN in Irvine said the current project includes gathering informaUon and preparing somf preliminary designs for the project, which will include planning new dorm itorles, schools, roads, utilities and mosques and up- grading existini facillUes for the educailonal ~ters in 18 cities. The spokesman said teams will take at least a year to com· plete their work, including tak· ing aerial pbotoarapha and in· frared photos of the terrain. The San Diego firm wm do tbe architectural deatan, he Jmd, and VTN will handle enitneer· ingwork. QflANGa COMl •• DAILY PILOT Armed ReciuSe, 71, Keeps Cops at Bay QUINCY, Mass. <AP)-An elderly recluse -armed and believed to be a trained markswoman -kept police at bay for the 11th straight day by threatening to kill. anyone who approached her home. Mary Regina Connor, 71, told The Boston Globe by telephone Sunday that she would also kill herself if police attempted to enter her house. Quincy police were called to the home Feb. 8 when the family next door complained Mrs. Connor threatened to shoot their two sons over a dispute over fees for snow shoveling. Officers have staked out the house every day since. Mrs. Coftnor, a re ti red telephone worker who hBs rarely been seen by her neighbors ln the last deeade, said she would "rig up the gun to kill mysell it anyone tries to come in ... She said she bas a rine with a telescopic sight and a shotgun. Police have not s een any weapons, but say Mrs. Connor's late husband, Eugene, owned weapons and taught her to shoot. X-roted Film Cancels Job PHILADELPHIA CAP) Dallas Alinder says be is resian· ing from the Phil•delpbUa Cultural Affain Council because of bis appearance in an X-rated movie. Alinder portrayed a rich man in "The Divine Obsessing," which wias filmed ln 1974, and is playing in theaters here. He ap- pears in the film fully clothed, however. "The word spread like wildfire," be said, announcing he'll resign in April. Oxnard Klan Fights Aliens · OXNARD (AP) -1he Ku Klux Klan bu held a closed nu1eUng ·at a local motel to dla· cu'5 sltalegi4'8 that include ex· pandlng its uusade qalnst U· legal alJens in Ventura County. The Klan bas been patrolinf the M~ border in an effort to keep th~ undooamented workers out• the couatry. Officers say they bave·put off a direct confrontation with the woman, hoping that she would give up. A warrant was obtained for her arrest after the alleged threat. College Peek Comest Booed ByNOW ·oGDEN, Utah (AP)- Weber State College is planning a "cleavage contest" to raise money for a campus literary magaiine. The local chapter or the National Organization for Women says it will picket the contest if it takes place. President Cathy Cox or the Ogden NOW chapter said the contest, scheduled to be held within the next week or two, was "offensive to many students" and would exploit people. H and M Body Works, an off. campUJ group sponsoring the contest, said money it received would help finance the annual student literary publication, First Stone. After Ms. Cox objected to possible contest advertising in the campus newspaper, The Signpost, editor Val Williams canceled coot.est ads that would have appeared Tue1day. Williams said the ads would "undermine the paper's · credibility" and did not want the newspaper connected with the contest. ff and M spokesman DaJe Hicks stressed that both sexes could lign up for the contest. He said nudity would not be permitted and participants would be judged In swimsuits or T ·sbtrta. Prizes would be awarded. Hicks said the women's group had "Jost their sense of humor." f9ll'Dl Sues Navy LOS ANGELES (AP) -A $120.8 tnlllion'suit bas been filed against the Navy by Todd Shipyard Corp., which claims the Navy ordered "gross modlficaliona" on four oil t.anten, causl.DI delays and eost lilcreasea. ____ .,, . . .. --......... ~ ....... alJo were Wounded ID UM bAUli A c1pr\ot 1ov erninen\ apoteaau1n aa.ld today Presktent Sp1ro& Kyprianou has de· manded the recalJ of Col. Suleiman Hadad, military at- tache at the Egyptian Embassy here. The ~eason was not officially announced, but a C1pru1 Airways pUot told a reporter that an Egyptian ..,1Ut.ary al· tache ordered the aa1niult in de- f i an c e of the Cypriot gov- ernment. The source of the pilot's inCormatlon w•s .not known. The two terrorlsts1 who bad been holding 11 Araos boataee' aboard a Cypriot Jetliner after a futile attempt to fiqd reruae in the Arab world, aunendered to the plane crew as soon as the shooting s\.aJ'ted. The hostages and Ute four members of the plane crew were unhurt. Tbe Cypriot ,covemment today issued a statement on beball ol 'lbe terrorists who claimed to be Palestlnlans, saytn& they belonged to no orsanizaUon. The Palestine Llberation Organization, which deplored Saturday's assassination, charged in Beirut, Lebanon, that the two acted for the inlelllgence servicl\ of Iraq, a hard-line Arab state opposed to Sadat's peace dialogue with lsrael. • A pro-Libyan newspaper In Beirut said \hey confessed they were ordered to klU Sebaei, cblef editor of ECYpl '• semi· official Al Abram newspaper, by Iraq-baaed PaJestinJan renqade euerrllla Abu Nidal. p,....p-AJ • motl" In tbe aboodq of tbe boJa. .. We know~ wasn't the moUTe," uld Wallace. Police wer' aeafcbJnc for three men in the ala.ylnp. One wu seen ID a nearby drugstore Sugday and the third wu seen ln an alley. A bout five boun after the boys' bodies were found, police were called to the Adult Center bookstore, where a cleric, William Baldwin, 30, was lylna dead behind a counter with a gunshot wound in the bead. Police said robbery was a possible motive in the shooting. The compartments of an open c,.b drawer wen empt;y, but there was still tome money at the back ol the drawer. Police said an estimated $160 wu taken. LBW-inter Festival ·To Conlimre Artists and craftsmen con- tinue to display their works on the Festival of Arts grounds this week during the 15th annual Winter Festival in Laguna Beach. The Chamber of Commerce SIGNS FOR THE TIMES Wordamlth Hano Canyon Road HazardiJ Eyed ByLagunan By 81'EVE MJTCHELL CM .. o.lty ""' ttatt Lagunan Arnold Hano thinlts he bas a soluUon of sorts to the hazardous conditions on Laguna Can7on Road. And he's con· vlnced city councilmen to form a committee to look into his prop- oeiUon. The civic activist and freelance writer wants the city to initiate a sign-posting pro- eram for the scenic roadway to get motorists to slow down on the winding highway. It's all done with words, tn Rano's plan -and the first thine he'd do is change the casayon road designaUon from "scenic highway" to "scenic road." "Highway means speed," Hano told council members. Hill plan calls for ·a sign at the San Diego Freeway exit that reads: "Welcome. You are now enter· ing a scenic road. Slow down and enjoy it." How do you get all those words oo one little sign? You don't. Hano suggests the old·fashioned Burma-Shave sign concept -a series of signs along the road to get the message across. Hano says the stagcered sign concept forces motorists to slow down in order to read the message. His other preliminary posting plans Include: -Deer crossing s igns that read: "Deer and humans share th1s space. Let's respect them both." -No Passing Zone s igns -..~uld be replaced with "No Passing Zone . . . P.lease." Hano goes further with a followup s ign past the zone which would read: "Thank you for not passing," adding that he prefers "the sugar rather than the fly.swatter technique." -At the entrance to the city, Hano would hang a sign that reads, perhaps: "This is an art colony, whose greatest art is the artofliving." sponsored festival includes -Other signs along the city's ~orlrs f1I more ~an 125 artbslUlS, portion of the seven· mile 10cludin1 an exhibit by four CO£;;· oadway would include pointing temporary artists of Mexico. o t features of the canyon, such A Pb o tog r a p bi c s 11 o ~ the so.year-old cottonwoods sponsored by the La1u ,...-(>r the Indian caves. ' Greenbelt ...W be on displa~ tinuously throutbout the .0-day All this for the purpose of run of the fesUval Tbat~x.hibit slowing down the motorists. includes pbotog~pbs f the Hano admits his signs would greenbelt areas aurrou ding not conform with those or "the i..1una Eeacb. . great sign maker in The winter (ettival ia open Sacramento, .. but be believes a from 10 a.m. to S p.m. daily local sign committee might be through March S. Admission ls able tcr convince CalTrans $1 for adults. Children under 12 Director Adriana Gianturco that admitted free. the plan ls feasible. Continue W ASKJNGTON (AP) -The 1trlkln1 Un1ted Mine Workers union today reached a tentaUve contract. aireement with a ma- jol' independent coal producer as Labor Secretary Ray Marshall be1an consultina with con· gresaJonal leaders about "de- finltJve" actlon to end ~o Tl· day-oldaoft. coal atrlke. AdmlnlatraUon off1clala and union leaden said they were bopln& the tentative aireement with the Pitllburgb aruf Mldway Coal Co. would break the atale«n•t.e ln the national strike. P&M, wblctt ii owned by Gulf Oil Corp, ls not a member of the Bi\wJlinous Coal Operators As· sociation, which represents the large coal companies. BCOA mern hers mlne about ball the nation's coal. P&M has 800 to 1,000 mine employees and six mines lo Kentucky, Missouri and Kansas. The tentative P&M pact must be approved by tbe union'& bargaining council and the Wl· ion's membership. If the contract is approved by the miners, P&M could begin producing coal, helping to ease shortages in some areas. But more importantly, the tentative aareement is expected to In· tenalfy pressure on the BOOA and the UMW to come to tenm. It wu not Immediately clear bow long It will take for tbe tentative P&M contract to be voted on by the miners. Iaguna Cops Seeking Man In Stabbing Lacuna Beach police are seek· lng a man they believe Jammed a huntin& knife into the stomach of a transient following an argument at a party early to- day. Friends rushed Gerald A. · McNutt, 25, to South Coast Community Hospit.al ln a van foJlowing the 1 :20 a .m. altercation in an apartment at 455 Bent St. He was reported in stable coo- di tlon following surgery for knife wounds to the stomach, hospital officials confirmed. ' Police Sgt. A.J . DeLuca said he and Officer Linda Pbllllps pulled up in front of the Bent Street address just as a private van roared away from the curb and down the street. "We radioed for a patrol tmit to follow the van to tba hos pital," DeLuca said today. Police officers found a bunting knife on the ground outside the apartment and arrested one sus- pect whoM they later released. Detectives are seeking another man who was present at the Bent Street party but said they dJd not want to idenUly tl)e suspect. The knife-wielding suspect faces charges of assault with in· tent to commit murder, DeLuca . said. Police believe the incident was sparked by an arrumeat over a woman. Quake Hits Japan TOKYO (AP) -A strong earthquake struck central and northern Japan today and police reported 30 persons were in· jured, four seriously. The· American Gem Society of the · United States and Canada takes pleasure in announcing the appointment of J. G. HUV!f!!J,!ot~~v{ewelers COSTA MESA as REOJSl'ERED JEWELER AMERICAN OEM SOCJETY @> ·' .. ··. -· t .. . ~ •..: .. , ... -:~ I I;, • t .· They liove ... It was hard to tell who had more fun at Laguna Beach's annual Patriots' Day Parade Saturday -the participants -0r the snectators. The kids from Aliso School were out in force, although they bad some trouble keeping their ranks straight. Morgan Foster, 13, enjoyed the parade from a front row seat complete -with a pillow for the leg he bro.Jee skateboarding. And Ken Crumley and Kathleen McMullin had a ball escorting Wilbur the pig, who traveled the parade route aboard his own special "float." ,. '• '•'• '• .. ·. •' .. ···. '· ... ~· :. Nixon Call Recounted ;i . ' Haldeman Says He A.bd for Wat,ergate End NEW YORK (AP) -ln the .' following excerpt from hls book ~· "The Ends of Power," H.R. ·'Haldeman describes a phone • call in wh.ich Nixon told him he • , was resigning lbe presidency. Wednesday morning, Aug. 7, ' ·1974_ Jo and I were having an early breakfast at her family's " beach house in Newpart Beach. The telephone rang and I answered. The White House operator was on the line and said the president was calling. . The usually strona, resonant ~ voice was subdued, tired, de- . ·1eated. ....... ~·sos 1 WANT YOU to know . ~that I have decided to resign." The telephone /elt cold In my • band ••••• I aoked, "ls this a final d~ cJsion. and are you sure you are doing the right thing?" Nixon replied that lt was final. .. THERE'S NO USE fighting it any more. I just doa't have the political support 111 Coqresa and I need to continue to function as president And 1 can't Jet the country be tom apart and our foreign policy destroyed by six months or more of an im· peacbment trial." •.. I HAD A HOIUUBLE sinking feeling ••• The man l had seen al the piiinacle of power·. ·. . was now ·at the other end of the telephone line quietly telllng me of his humiliating decision. • . . And despite my Hdness and comp8.58ion for th.ls now-broken man, I felt there wu still one tbinr I should raise with him •••• "I FIR1'fl.Y BELIEVE that :"':Woman Ignored Him Top Carter Aide Accused of Spitting WASHINGTON (AP) - • resident Carter's chief aide, ~ llamilton Jol'dan, is den)'in& a port by a Washlnston Poet col· mnist that be spat • drink down #!• frcmt of a )'OUOlf woman's ldouH after •h• scorned his advances. before you leave office you should exercise your coh- sUtuUcmal authority and grant pardons to all those who have been or may be charged with any crimes in connection with Wateraate. I think it's im- perative that you bring Watergate to an end before you leave -for the sake of the country and especially for your successor. ''I rea!Ue this is a minor point. in contrast to what you are now facine but I think it is very im- portant" SILENCE. THEN NIXON said, "l haven't bad a chance to give that any thought, but I as- sure you 1 will. 1 juat don't know what should be done." I suuested that I prepare some written recommendations and get them to him. I asked, "When do you plan to make an announcement?" Nixon atahed and said, .. rm just not sure, Bob. Not before tonight, and probably not unW tomorro•.'' J could see that I wouldn't have much ttme to pre.. pare anything ..•• I said, "Whatever happens, 1 wish you the beat, Mr. President. I wish I could do 10metb.ing to help." He said, ''I'm afraid there's not much anyone can do to help now," and the historic coo. venation ended. "NEW YORlt CAP) -Lee Harvey Oswald may have prO· _vided the Soviet Union with secret Information about the American U·2 plane, enabllll1 il to shoot down Francia G~ry Powers• 1py J>lane in 1964)., ao- cordlna.. to a book by author Edward Jay Epstein. Epstein al.lo a.ya in his book. .. Leaeod: The Secret Wotld of Lee Hl(Ve.)l Oswald," that the )'Bt, anxious to support lts ftnd. tn1a that Oswald acted &lone 111 th• aaussinatlon of President Ken ne4'1. relJ e d upon stateJnaiQ of a Ruaalan deleetor wbo may have been a SOviet secret aaent trying to dlspel any connectioo between Oswald anct Sovlet intelligence. And in an lnteniew in the New York maguine, 'Epstein sa1• that to 1962 a Soviet oftlctal attached to the United NaUoos duped former FBI Director J . Ed1•r Hoover tnto· thin~ be had de{ec:ted as a &>Viet ret police officer and ted lt90ver false tnformatlori about Rusalan activitie!p, lnformaUon that_ was passed on to the White Hous'e. Epstein says Hoover believed that with the help of the official -code named "Fedor~·· -he could compete with the CIA, and that Hoover did not pasa the in- form aUoo on to the CIA and re- fused to disclose "Dedora's'' identity to the agency. Epstein , says that from 1982 to 1977, ..Fedora" provided the FBI with misleading information on a wide range of subjects. Two excerpts or Epstein's book are in the March ilsue of Reader's Digest, which will publish the book In April. LB Finalizes Community Center~ase Laguna Beach moves into its own community center March 1 after a years-loiig search for a home for the city's diverse groups. City Council members un- animously approved a mast.er leue procram that will see com· munity croupe meetine at the American Leiion Polt Z22 bulld- int on Le1fon and CataUna streets. The lease accord wu reached this mooth between the city, the Council on Aging board and legion offldals. It calls for a $SOO rental fee to be paid by the city, ·as well as munklpa.l fundln1 for utilities, maintenance and re- pairs tothe~year-old buildlna .. In exchange, the ctty will pick up rental fees from other or- ganizations using the two-level 5,000 square foot faclllty, a . stipulatioo that city offlcJals say will make the deal a break-even propoaitJon. But Human Affairs Department Director Geor1e Fowler says be will need at least $10,000 by March 1 to pay for re- pa.irs to the bui1dln1'• plumbing and electrical wlrlna, u well as (he first month's rent. Councilmen told Fowler to come back next Wednesd1y wfth a specific monetary fllure. The council also Ia considering a recommendation that county funds be IOUlht to finance COD· structloo ol a conference room and office additions to the build· ing in the near future. . .,. .......... .C'onaing of Age · . Prince Andrew third child of Britain's Queen Elizabeth n and Prince Phillip smiles for portrait on the occasion of his 18th birthday Feb. 19. Plince Andre~ is s~cond in line for the succession· to the tlu'one. behind his eldest brother Prince Charles. IrVine Woman Gets State Panel Post An Irvine woman who manaees Orange County's 111ultimodal transportation study has been named to the new state Transportation Commission: Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. has announced. Frances Iwalani Mossman, 46, joins industrialist Norton Simon and seven other voting members on the commission, which replaces four specialized aeencies. ·'This commission will de- termine to a great extent the quality of life in California in the next dec:.ade," Brown aaid. He said IUnOllg the changes be hopes to see are an adjustment of work hours in private in- duatry to cu& rush-i>our traffic. Abolished are the old Highway Commission, the state Toll Bridge Authority, the Aeronautics Board and the TranapartaUoo Board. Other voting members of the Counseling Program Set A tree counseling program is being provided to cancer patients and their families at Saddleback Community Ho•pltal, 24451 Via Estrada, Laiuna Hills. Marjorie Smith, medical social worker and Maryjayne Chaney, the h06pital's patient educator. are conducting a series of sessions designed as a support system and to provide help lo coping with the effects of the life threatening illness. Additional lnformatiob is available by calling the hospital at 837-4500, ext. 268 or ext. 264. new board include Ivan · HlnderaJcer, 61 chancellor of UC Riverside; Carole Onorato, 46. director or the League to Save Lake Tahoe; Dean Meyer, 51, former director of the Golden Gate Bridge. Highway and Transportation District; Claude Fernandez, 58, secretary • treasurer of Local 428 of the Retail Store Employees Union in San Jose, and attorney Judith Soley, 32, of Fresno. Also named were Charles Reid, 46, deputy administrator of the Human Resources Agency of San Diego County. and Mtate Public Uti1ities Commission Chairman Robert Baunovich, 41, ol Hillsborough. Already appointe(l were state Seo. James Mills, D-San Diego, and Assemblyman Walter Ingalls, D·Riverside. Tax Relief Possible Orange Coast property owners who experienced serious damage during the recent rains may apply for property t ax relief through a calamity re- assessment. According to Orange County Assessor Bradley L. Jacobs, appllcaUons must be filed within 60 days of the loss and damage must amount lo at least f5,000 . Information is available by calling 834-2422 or writ- ine him at P.O. Box 149, Santa An-. Calif. 92702. ' OAJ\.Yll'll.OT al<X\' TICltY POLITIX~ It ii considered 'tribal custom ln our coastal region that wben clvtc pueoos put tbem1elves up for public office. the)' becocne fair pane fot all k.lnd.s or outraaeoua treatment. ' The poliUcian, once be baa detlared candidacy, tbus becomes 'the target for 111 kinda of vituperative eomsnent. It. la subject to the verbal alingi and arr0-, Of barten4ets, barbers, colummsts n and comm~ntators, opp0slng PollUcia'nl and ·r~ar people. 1 • &ING-WISE CANDIDATES are aware of thll. They learn to tsllp verbal punches, slide alone the l'Ol>el and roat away w)t.b verbal counter-jabs. It's all part ol lhe ~Ucal tbrust aod parry. I political tbrult and parry• • I· Tber.e are worse tbinta, however, that can happen to a c.Jn«ldate forl":lbllc ottlce. The worst cut. of, -11 is to be i~. Tb.ls bu ap~ bapPenecl In on~ in· stance to Jon Brand, the current mayor' at Laguna Beach, who is a candidate for the state senate from our 86tb Dlatltct. Brand aeet.s tbe Republican no91lnatlqn in. the upcomlnc primary and finds himself • )ocked in fairly warm combat for it. Tiie •RA state senatorial chair is be~ vacated by ttie long-time Mr. Jijg Of this arena, Denni1 CUi>en$er of Newport Beach, who hu'become ewusted. by~· rHl,cted ao many. times. So Denny bas chosen not to run. This throws the race falrly Wtd~ open. The 36th District virtually rambles from one end of our coastline to the other and ia considered relatively safe for those of Republican persuasioQ. 1 LURKING OUT IN THE DE-~TIC wine. bow,ver. la tbe presence of Assemblyman Ron Col'dova, wbo bas flfed for tbe senate on the other Ucket. and is a noted tn°"v-offer of GOP favorites. But that is another story. But back to Laguna Mayor Brand and the diatuteful instance of bis alleged anonymity. Brand is locked in this race for the GOP nomination with other candidates of note. There is George Scott. well _regarded aa a Fountain Valley councilman and form.er school penoa; Stephen F • . Holden, an insurance executive; John G. Sclunlt.I, former OC· cupant of the state senate seat; and Gil Fergu.aon, an ex·lrvine Company exec wbo beats the d.nuna tor a business· labor ~tloll. NOW IT DEVELOPS tbat the Orante CoUnty Rel>ubUean Central Committee bas been dlstributiq lists of 1ta candfdatea to civic groups who might want to bear tbe bopefula speak. And that's what brought tbe bowl ol iJldipaUoo from Joa Brand. He claims he got left off the lists being ciroulated. Thus Brand fired off a letter to tbe Central Comm.i,ttee types, screaming foul. He wrote in part, "I can only swipect that the central.com· mittee is deliberately impeding my campaign or la guilty of poss negligence. My campaign will be a low-cost volunteer effort. The cost of campaigning in Orange County is an outrage. I do not need to be hindered by tbe central committee." Mayor Brand sent me a copy of his letter and attached a oote • with the observation, "This is really unfair and tries my patience." FROM THE SOUND of bis Jett.er to the GOP bigwip. his patience got tried beyond the holding point. Friend Killed Son Slays Father: To Rescue Family AKRON, Ohio (AP) -A gun dealer killed a friend and attacted bis own family before he was shot to deatb by hi.a son, police IQ'. , Officials said George Loveless, 38, of nearby Barbartoft. opened fire Sunday on an Akron home wbere bis wife and two teen-age • children were visiting. Police s aid Loveless' wife. Nancy; her daughter, Jill. 13; her son, James, 18. and Susan Epling, the owner of tbe house. fled to a back bedroom when they sitw Loveless approaching . the house. Officers said Loveless was armed witb a machine gun, an automatic rifle, two pistols and a bandoleer of ammunition. POLICE SAID Adolf Teckautz, 31, a friend of the family and another guest in the house, stayed in the living room and was shot to death. According to police, James.. shot bis father in the .stomach with a shotgun when the man entered tbe bedroom. Tbe teen· 1 ager took the rifle from hla father and contimled sllodlDI him until the gun was empty, police said. Mrs. Loveless and ber daughter were unharmed. Ill. Epling was a.bot 1D the leg ad was ia sati.sfactory con~ Charges have not been ft1ed against the boy. who was re- leased from police custodr after questioaiDg. LOVELESS RAD been eam- mltted to Palla View K.ul Health Center In Akron, bqt· walked away from the rac:Otty Priday. PoUceaq be~ Saturdar to klll hi• wlfe, daughter and pcm. Lovelels held a ftcleral liecme to m anuf actur• and sell machine pD.a u4 often aoJcl weapons to local Pollt.e de· padments. ·Be .... IDll co&. lector as well as a firearms, dealer, policeaaid, ~•Da" NATION t WEATHER - City 'Mourns' Collapsed Roof HARTFORD, Conn. (AP> -Area residents are "moumin&" the death of a loved one -tM collap ed roof of the CJvic Center Coliseum. Three University of Connecticut psychiatrists say people are tak· ing the collapse so bard that they will formally research the re· action. They also are urglnc city oCCicialJ to set up an Information 'Chamber of Commerce la cqn- Une to reUeve fears about other alderina the doctors' sugaeallon roofs coUapsinJ:. to {Und an information Une for The 1,400-ton root caved in calls coming ln rt-om people with Jan. 18 under the weiaht of ice fears about roofs collapslnc on and snow. No one was injured in them the early morning disaster Chamber spokesman Robin which d.Jd millions of dollars in Hogan and civic center director damage and closed the facility. Frank Russo sald the doctors used for such events as ~ockey told city officials that the re- gamea, concerts and the circus. action studied in tbe Hart.ford THE PSYCIDATRJSTS, Drs. area resembled that observed elsewhere after a catastrophe. "THEY SAY WE ABE now in No one likes to have his statue covered with snow on his birthday, and George Washington is no exception. So Mike Tempone t09k shovel in hand to clear the statue at the Freedoms Foundation in Valley Forge, Pa., seem- ingly in answer to a prayer. Allan Tasman, David GoJdberg and Mahlon Hale of the uni· verslty's Health Center in Farmington, say they have . found lndicatlons of a "stress wave·• in the community, but they are refusing further public comment until tbeir research is complete. The Gre ater Hartford a denial phase just like a person I" who bas someone close to them die would be," said Russo. Russo said the doctors also have noted signs of the second phase in the traditional reaction cycle of loss -anger. He said some politicians have already reached that stage. Abortion Clinic Bombed "They (the doctors) also said that feelings or cunt are in· terferlng with the denial phase for some persons. such as perhaps the architects. ena:lneen and steel company ex· ecutives." Russo said. lmks Sought in Hunt.for Pattern of Violence FOLLOWING THE anger stage of mourning comes arief CLEVELAND <AP) -Of· ficlals are cbecklne for a possible link between the weekend flrebombioc of a Cleveland abortion clinic and a $200,000 fire at a Columbus abortion clinic laat montb. Aurena Elliott, 48, a worker at the Concerned Women's Clinic. suffered chemical buroa Satur- day when a man entered the clinlc and threw a bag at her. The bag. which hit her in tbe face, wu believed to contain gasoline, police said. THE MAN ALSO tossed a de- vice that started the fire, caus- ing $30,000 ID damages to the clinic. Tbe facWt;y bad only re-opened Friday after being vandalized Wednesday night. In that tnddmt. iodine was thrown on the walls and noon and telepholl• cords were cut. DamqetbeD wu put at '500. Two abortion rl&bts leaders blamed the 1Dcldent OD tbe in· d...aee ~ the Romm Ca1bolla Olurdl. : .. From the pulpit we're being: ealled murdenu," said Carol)'Jl Buell, eecutlve d.1.rec:tor of th& PHterm Cllnic In Cleveland. . WILLIAJI BAJ•D OF New· York City, founder of the Abordoo Freedom League, said the 1ltuattou wm • "turn into another Nortbem Ireland unless the Roman Catbolica atop feed· me the wiDda ol hatred ... But tbe Rn. Frank Koeem. dlne!tor d news for tbe Diocese of CleVeland, aaid violence &oes against catholicism and the pro. life movement. .. At tbe same time, we have DO control over ~le who do ir- nttoGal ~ bo1 we can't con- done them. ~ said. •'l am 9CJIT7 tbls baa bappened. It is UD• fortunate. .. Snow Trips Mines . 11UNICH, West Germany <AP) -Authorities Saturday blamed pressure from deep spow for settlnc off 300 land mines oo the Eat German side of W eat Germany's border ID Bavaria. ~LEVEi.AND BATTALION Fire Chief James Hiegi.nbotham said police are lnvestlgatin& a possible link between the two clinic attacts. .. I understand there was a similar deal in Columbus a few weeks aa:o and tbey are trying to see if there is a connect.ion," said Higgenbotham, who was at the fire scene. lnvesticators on the police arson and bomb squads could oot be reached for commenl The Columbus fire occurred last month at the Northwest Women's Center. .. THE UPOaT never said arson, but when you bave flte set in 10 different locatloos, it's apparent that somebody set the fire," said Mike McCoy. in· formation officer for the Columbus Fire Department. A pattern of attacks on abortion clinics across tbe country baa emerged, said Cbrlat1ne Brim, public in· formation director for the National Abortion RJ&bt.s Action League in Washington. In a telephone interview. she said her organization h.S re- ports that clinics in New York: Omaha. Neb.;' Minneapolis; Ancborace, Alaska; Baltimore and Fairfax. Va., have been tbe tareet.s o< violence this year. Io the incidents. she said • people who ldentified themselves as anti·abortlonists entered the centen and pushed and threatened employees and patients. · and then the recovery stage. City officials say tb\'Y bo_pe re. covery will be speeded by plans to rebuild the roof. "We even have a tartet dale for when the new coliseum will be finished, and the doctors told us this is Mlpful in dealing with the blow to tbe community's self-esteem," said Russo. Union Leaders Get Prison, La,hings ISLAMBAD. Pakistan CAP) -A military court in Labore sentenced ~ven union mem~ to a year in prison and 10 to lS laabea "the whip for t.a.Jcing part in the occupation last week o! eovemmept television stations. Employees seekinl higher wages and other bendits took over the stations in Lahore, Peshawar, Quella and Rawalpindi· Islamabad Thursday and operated them until tbe police stormed the stations Friday and arrested the workers' leaders. A management spokesman said a "sizable number" of the un· ion members have returned to work. Those who have not have been warned they face dismissal. Mirror of American Life . . . a Course by Newspaper The television shows you watch. The movi~you see. The magazines you read. East ~· Deep . Freeze How you spend your weekends. Why yoy lead the life you do. All are affected by our To earn two units, residents of Coast, Rancho Santiago and Saddleback Community College Districts may register by re- questing materials from colleges serving their area. Register at Coastl in.e Community College by phoning 963-0824; Santa Ana College by calling ttle admission office at 835-3000, and Saddleback College by calling 831-9700 or 495-4950, Ext. 291. I l I t , ReoorJ,I~ Extend~· Crill Coaat An?a always-changing popular culture. Popular culture mirrors American lifestyles, entertainment, politics and social chanQe. And, popular culture is the latest course by newspaper of .. fered as a public service by the Dally Pilot. .. In 15 weekly articles, leadlng authors and scholars explore the Impact of popular culture on our ~ 11 ves. These newspaper "lectures" ar:e printed in Satur- day editions of the Dally, Piiot. The course began on Feb. 11. Ad- dltlonal readings, midterm and . final. exams and enrollment are required of readers wishing to earn college credit. Three ~ommunlty Coll~ grant creCllt for Course By Newspaper. Of course, Daily Pilot readers may read the weekly artf cl es for enjoyment. To enhance that .enjoyment, Coastline Community College of- fers lectures, community forums, festivals and workshops on topics related to Popular Culture·course materials. For in- formation· call the college at 963.0811, extension 256. DAILY PILOT '